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Address by
Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Prime Minister of India
at
the
Pravasi Bharatiya Divas
Celebrations
January 9, 2003
New Delhi
My simple greeting to all of you here today is: Welcome home.
Many of you are citizens of your adopted countries. Over 20 million of you
have set up home in scores of countries, near and far. But each one of you
shares a common identity – your Indianness – and a common origin – this
Motherland of your forefathers. Therefore, this great gathering, which is
the first of its kind, is truly a homecoming.
It is also a grand occasion for the country to pay tribute to its sons and
daughters who have succeeded in reaching the pinnacle in so many diverse
fields of human endeavour all over the world.
There is yet another important aspect of this unique celebration of the
Pravasi Bharatiya’s association with his land of origin. Many of you – or
your forefathers – left India in search of fortune for a better
livelihood. Today, India has itself become a land of opportunity. We want
to share with our extended family our achievements, hopes, concerns,
aspirations and goals. Your awareness of our current national course and
understanding of our perspectives would enrich your bonds with India and
heighten your sense of belonging to the global Indian family.
The odyssey of our people to the four corners of the globe has been a saga
of courage, enterprise and character. In ancient times, our forefathers
went to distant lands as traders, monks, teachers and temple builders. A
century and a half ago, Indian indentured labour was sent forth to sugar,
tea and rubber plantations in near and far-flung parts of the British
Empire. They worked on lands as far apart as Fiji and Mauritius, Suriname
and Sri Lanka, Trinidad and Burma, Guyana and Malaysia.
The next wave of emigration was of entrepreneurs and traders who sailed
intrepidly into uncharted waters for unknown countries. Since the 70’s,
young Indian professionals have been migrating abroad to corporate
boardrooms, research laboratories, engineering workshops and university
faculties. The emigration of doctors, nurses, engineers, managers,
plumbers, and electricians to West Asia and the Gulf, has been a steady
growth.
Today, the success of every category of these emigrants all over the world
testifies to the indomitable spirit, which they carried from Indian soil.
It is a tribute to their patience and forbearance in the face of hardship,
rebuke and denial. It speaks of their dedication to their chosen
professions, overcoming various trials and tribulations.
On this day, 88 years ago, Mahatma Gandhi returned to India after nearly
20 years as a Pravasi Bharatiya in South Africa. His struggle against
discrimination, deprivation and exploitation of Indians in South Africa
not only fired the imagination of Indian patriots, it also inspired a
spate of freedom movements right across the African continent. Out of
those freedom movements emerged Pravasi Bharatiya heroes like Seewoosagar
Ramgoolam of Mauritius; Yusuf Dadoo and Monty Naicker of South Africa;
Cheddi Jagan of Guyana; Jagennath Lachmon of Surinam and many others.
Not many people today remember the painful Kamagatamaru episode of the
early 20th century, when a boatload of Sikhs from India were most brutally
left to fend for themselves on the high seas off the coast of Canada.
Today, Sikhs are among the most prosperous Canadians and are increasingly
influential in Canadian politics. In Ujjal Dossanj, we have honoured one
such prominent Canadian figure.
Even the illiterate indentured plantation labourers empowered succeeding
generations through a determined pursuit of education. Sir Vidia Naipaul,
Sir Anerood Jugnauth, Dato Samy Vellu and millions of others are living
symbols of the transformation of an oppressed community to leaders of
society in the space of a few generations.
Let us remember that, unlike the British, the French, the Dutch and the
Germans, India was never a maritime power. All the same, Indians ventured
forth across the seas to set up new homes in new lands. They went in
peace, often with nothing more than faith in their destiny. No country can
claim that Indians entered its territory in the spirit of colonialism.
This also is a glorious tribute to you and your forefathers. Few people
who entered foreign lands can claim such a testimony.
Pandit Nehru once remarked that wherever there is a Indian, a bit of India
goes with him. Pravasi Indians have truly taken India abroad – Indian
culture, Indian society and Indian traditions, not to mention Indian films
and Indian cuisine!
The outside world has also attracted the best Indian talents, skills,
brains and abilities – like Amartya Sen and Jagdish Bhagwati; E.C.G.
Sudarshan and S. Chandrashekhar; Hargobind Khorana and Zubin Mehta. The
Pravasi Bharatiya family today also includes:
Indian writers in English with an international readership;
Entrepreneurs and industrialists with a global reach of operations;
Management and lifestyle gurus with a huge following; and,
Filmmakers, sportspersons, artists and performers of great popularity.
They have dramatically changed the world's perception of Indians, and
hence of India. They have provoked a new appreciation of this land, which
has produced and exported so many achievers. They have built bridges of
understanding between the international community and India.
The benchmarks for success, which the Pravasi community has set, are a
challenge for us in India. They make us examine why the Indian is so much
more innovative, productive and successful abroad than in his own country.
They prod us to create a business, investment and economic climate, which
is as conducive to success as anywhere else in the world.
I assure you that we are fully committed to creating such an environment
in India.
We are modernizing our infrastructure. Our telecom facilities are already
as good as anywhere in the world. The combination of India-based IT
companies and Indian professionals abroad, have made India a premier
software power. We are building world-class highways through our National
Highway Development Project. Our rural roads network is being upgraded. We
have ambitious plans for airports, ports, and railways. Housing
construction has acquired an unprecedented speed. Literacy, especially
women’s literacy, has registered a marked rise over the last decade.
We are aware of the slow progress in several areas of our social sector
development, but we are determined to move faster than before. All in all,
we are guided by the ambitious goal of making India a Developed Nation by
2020, free from all vestiges of poverty and full of opportunities for all
our one billion people.
We would like to create an environment in India which will make you want
to return, not just for sentimental or emotional reasons, but in the
conviction that you can excel in this country as much as you could
anywhere else in the world.
I believe that the Pravasi Bharatiya can be a catalyst for rapid change in
this direction. Each of you, through your network of friends, relatives
and acquaintances can create a strong urge for change in India. Our
collective attention needs to be rescued from the sterile controversies
and trivial issues that dominate the headlines, and focused on the real
tasks to be accomplished, so that India can catch up with the developed
world.
At the same time, you can project the truth about India to the world in a
credible and effective manner. Misleading, one-sided and negative pictures
are often put out due to bias, ignorance or design. Your familiarity with
the Indian reality and with the perspectives of your adopted society
equips you to correct such misrepresentations. You could project a
positive image of India -- not as propaganda, but as a true reflection of
the reality on the ground.
For example,
India continues to have one of the fastest growing economies, at a time
when most developed economies have slowed down.Our exports grew by 19 per
cent, in spite of a global slowdown and a strong rupee.
Till recently, India needed to import food grain to feed its population.
Last year, we exported food grain worth over 60 billion rupees to 25
countries.
About a decade ago, we had to mortgage our gold to tide over a difficult
Balance of Payments crisis. Today, we have record foreign exchange
reserves of nearly 70 billion dollars.
How often have we seen such facts quoted outside the country? It is far
more likely that mindless political gossip or isolated acts of crime and
violence would dominate the headlines around the world.
India has been deeply appreciative of the support of the Pravasi Bharatiya
community, at times of need. Whenever India has faced a challenge to its
security or to its territorial integrity, you have tirelessly championed
its cause. When there was an effort to isolate India after our nuclear
tests of 1998, you came forward to stand by India. Your enthusiastic
response to our Resurgent India Bonds in 1998 helped us raise over 4
billion dollars, when we needed it most.
Many of you have been generously helping the schools, colleges, IITs and
universities, as their grateful alumni. I commend this gesture of Guru
Dakshina. Some of you have met me with interesting suggestions on how to
expand the scope of Pravasi Bharatiya involvement in the development of
India’s educational infrastructure. The Ministry of Human Resource
Development has also taken some initiatives in this direction. Since
education is going to be one of the main competitive strengths of India in
the emerging Knowledge Society, let us work together to seize the
opportunity.
In this context, I will take the luxury of offering a word of advice. The
Indian community abroad often reflects the diversity, which is the
hallmark of our society here. We are proud of this diversity - whether it
is linguistic, religious or regional. Groupings like the Telugu, Tamil,
Punjabi and Marathi associations serve a useful purpose in preserving
linguistic skills and regional cultures. But it is also necessary to
strengthen the broader Indian identity in the country of your residence.
When you are united as Indians, your voice carries greater weight: both
for highlighting issues of your concern in your host country, and for
promoting Indian causes. This is a truth of great long-term significance
for Indian communities everywhere.
I have always been conscious of the need for India to be sensitive to the
hopes, aspirations and concerns of its vast diaspora. It is like a
parental charge. It is also an obligation derived from our civilizational
heritage.
It was with this perspective that we set up a High Level Committee, headed
by Dr Laxmi Mall Singhvi, to examine all matters relating to the
interaction of the community with India. I would like to congratulate Dr
Singhvi and his colleagues for the thorough and exhaustive nature of their
report.
The idea of celebrating the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas annually flows from
the recommendations of the Committee. The revised and improved scheme for
PIO Cards is also based on the ideas of the Committee.
Indians who have chosen to settle in foreign lands should be loyal to
their country of adoption. The biggest challenge facing every immigrant
community is to integrate harmoniously into the political, economic and
social life of the host society, while preserving and cherishing its
civilizational heritage. Over the years, Indians have achieved this
delicate balance virtually everywhere, without a contradiction between
their adopted citizenship and their original Indian identity.
It is in this background that my government has decided to accept the
High-level Committee’s recommendation to permit dual citizenship for
People of Indian Origin living in certain countries. We are now working on
the administrative regulations and procedures governing dual citizenship.
We will introduce the necessary legislation during the Budget Session of
Parliament.
The NRI of today is the Pravasi Bharatiya of tomorrow. The welfare of NRIs
in the Gulf region is of utmost concern to us. A compulsory insurance
scheme for Indian workers migrating to this region will be unveiled
shortly. Parliament is already considering a bill to establish a welfare
fund for the overseas Indian workers. To meet the educational needs of
children of workers in the Gulf, we plan to reserve a certain proportion
of seats in our academic institutions for the children of the Gulf NRIs.
Our preparations for this first Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, and the
encouraging response to it, have convinced us of the fruitfulness of this
event. We will continue to engage closely with the communities of Indian
origin. For this, we are setting up an Advisory Committee, which will meet
periodically to suggest new initiatives to the Minister of External
Affairs.
We are prepared to respond to your expectations from India. We invite you,
not only to share our vision of India in the new millennium, but also to
help us shape its contours. We do not want only your investment. We also
want your ideas. We do not want your riches, we want the richness of your
experience. We can gain from the breadth of vision that your global
exposure has given you.
When you left the country, you carried with you the primary colours of the
Indian ethos. A cross-fertilization of cultures over time has added new
shades to those vibrant hues. Today we invite you to brush in some of
these new colours into the ever-evolving canvas of India’s development.
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