“We are all Indians first and Kannadigas or Marathis later”. These were the words of B S Yeddyurappa, the Chief Minister of our state, during his interaction with mediapersons in a press conference with reference to the battle for Belgaum, that seems to be intensifying with every passing day.
These words were taught to us in school. We would utter them in our inter-class and inter-school speech competitions, in patriotic songs on Independence Days and Republic Days, read them in our school text books and wrote them in our school/college essays and examinations as well.
A look at the ongoing tussle between Karnataka and Maharashtra regarding the border issue, is disheartening to say the least. A few from either side of the border have engaged in violence, pelting stones at buses belonging to ‘the other state’, beaten a leader black and blue, burnt effigies almost on a daily basis as part of their protests, and so on. All this, to have the last laugh in saying, ‘this piece of land belongs to us, mate’.
Graphic by: Arron Menezes
We must have read in books or even the email forwards that keep doing rounds, that India is a country that never attacked another country. Some say it never invaded another country. Some others choose to say it never waged a war against a foreign country. We read it and pull our collars up in joy. But a look at what’s happening today between Karnataka and Maharashtra, takes one back to this country’s history, which is loaded with accounts of wars that were fought in South India in particular and the whole country in general.
Most of these wars did involve, what we can call inter-kingdom conflicts (Kannada kings Vs Tamil Kings, Kannada kings Vs Telugu kings etc). Whether they were states, or countries in themselves, is a different subject of debate altogether, which questions the appropriateness of the statement ‘India never waged a war against a foreign country’, for in those days, the opposite kingdom was in fact a ‘different country’. We have the famous kingdoms – Vijayanagara, Kadambas, Cholas, Pallavas, and so on, who fought with each other and, most of which were Kannada vs Tamil or Kannada vs Telugu sort of wars in nature.
Very few instances are available in history where the entire India (the present geographical Indian land from North to South and East to West) was under one kingdom’s flag. A few names that come to mind are the Rashtrakuta kings Dhruva and Govinda who had won wars under the foothills of Himalayas and of course, the Mughals, who had almost the whole of India under their rule. But otherwise, it was pretty much a war between the kingdoms, who would consider their territory as a country and that of their neighbours as another.
We say we all are Indians. We say we are Kannadigas, Marathis, Gujratis, Bengalis, and all that later. If we are Indians first, why do we then fight among ourselves? Why is it that the Maharashtra Chief Minister is restless to get that piece of land as his state’s property? Why then, is the growing population belonging to a particular region, (who we go to the extent of referring to them as ‘outsiders’) in our city, being dreaded? Is Chief Minister Yeddyurappa, who said that we are Indians first, willing to say ‘My pleasure bro’ to Ashok Chavan and hand over Belgaum to Maharashtra just in case the Supreme Court or the Central Government asks him to do so?
Is our ‘One India’ and ‘Unity in Diversity’ stand genuine? Or is it something that has no relevance at all….?
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