Shashi Tharoor Praises PM Modi's Vision: Overturning 200 Years of "Slave Mentality"

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor offered notable praise for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's recent address. He highlighted how a significant portion of the PM's speech focused on overcoming what he called a 200-year "slave mentality" legacy from the colonial era. Tharoor appreciated Modi's call for a decade-long national mission to restore pride in India's heritage, languages, and knowledge systems. The Congress leader described the address as both an economic outlook and a cultural call to action for national progress.

Key Points: Shashi Tharoor on PM Modi's Speech Against Colonial Mindset

  • PM Modi emphasized India's "constructive impatience" for development and self-reliance
  • Called for a 10-year national mission to restore pride in Indian heritage
  • Described India not just as an emerging market but as an emerging world model
  • Tharoor noted the speech served as both an economic outlook and cultural call to action
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Shashi Tharoor praises PM Modi's address, says it focused on overturning Macaulay's 200-year slave mentality legacy

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor highlights PM Modi's focus on overcoming Macaulay's legacy and restoring pride in India's heritage and knowledge systems.

"A significant part of the speech was dedicated to overturning Macaulay's 200-year legacy of 'slave mentality' - Shashi Tharoor"

New Delhi, November 18

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Tuesday highlighted that a significant part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Ramnath Goenka Lecture focused on overturning Macaulay's 200-year legacy of a "slave mentality" and restoring pride in India's heritage, languages, and knowledge systems.

Tharoor said the PM highlighted India's "constructive impatience" for development, promoted a post-colonial mindset, and described the country as an "emerging model" for the world, focusing on economic resilience and people-centric governance.

https://x.com/ShashiTharoor/status/1990652328224174334?s=20

In a post on X, Shashi Tharoor wrote, "Attended PM @narendramodi's Ramnath Goenka Lecture at the invitation of @IndianExpress last night. He spoke of India's 'constructive impatience' for development and strongly pushed for a post-colonial mindset. The PM emphasized that India is no longer just an 'emerging market' but an 'emerging model' for the world, noting its economic resilience. PM Modi said he'd been accused of being in "election mode" all the time, but he was really in "emotional mode" to redress the problems of the people."

"A significant part of the speech was dedicated to overturning Macaulay's 200-year legacy of "slave mentality." PM Modi appealed for a 10-year national mission to restore pride in India's heritage, languages, and knowledge systems. I wish he had also acknowledged how Ramnath Goenka had used English to raise a voice for Indian nationalism! On the whole, the PM's address served as both an economic outlook and a cultural call to action, urging the nation to be restless for progress. Glad to have been in the audience despite battling a bad cold and cough!" the post read.

A day earlier, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that India's education, economy, and societal aspirations became increasingly aligned with foreign models under the influence of the British and emphasised the need to free society from any mindset of slavery.

Delivering the sixth Ramnath Goenka Lecture organised by The Indian Express in New Delhi here today, PM Modi said his government is not opposed to the English language, but firmly supports Indian languages.

Noting that Ramnath Goenka was often described as being impatient -- not in a negative sense, but in a positive one - PM Modi highlighted that it was the kind of impatience that drives the highest levels of effort for change, the kind that stirs still waters into motion.

The Prime Minister drew a parallel, stating "today's India too is impatient--impatient to become developed, impatient to become self-reliant". He observed that the first twenty-five years of the 21st century had passed swiftly, bringing one challenge after another, yet none could halt India's momentum.

Noting that global challenges have marked the past four to five years, the Prime Minister said that in 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted economies worldwide, creating widespread uncertainty. The global supply chain was severely impacted, and the world began to drift towards despair. As conditions began to stabilise, turmoil emerged in neighbouring countries. Amid these crises, India's economy demonstrated resilience, achieving a high growth rate.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
About time we shed this colonial baggage! Our education system still teaches us to look down on Indian languages and knowledge systems. Glad this is being discussed at the highest level 🙏
S
Sarah B
As someone who studied in India and now works abroad, I can see how colonial mentality affects our thinking. The "constructive impatience" concept is interesting - we need that energy to compete globally.
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Arjun K
Tharoor makes a valid point about English being used for Indian nationalism. We shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater. English can coexist with Indian languages - it's about mindset, not just language.
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Karthik V
The 10-year national mission for Indian heritage is ambitious but necessary. Our youth need to know about our ancient scientific achievements, not just Western discoveries. Jai Hind! 🚀
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Michael C
While I appreciate the sentiment, I hope this doesn't become another political slogan. We need concrete steps - curriculum reforms, promoting Indian research in regional languages, and funding for indigenous knowledge systems.
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Divya L
"Emotional mode" for people's problems vs "election mode" - that's a powerful distinction. If this translates to actual governance improvements, it could be transformative for common citizens like us.

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