MY SHANGHAI DIARY--I: A MIRACLE WITHIN
A MIRACLE
By B. Raman
(Based on the writer's visit to Shanghai from May 6 to 9,
2008, for a discussion on the "Beijing Olympics & Security"
)
This was my second visit to Shanghai. The first was in
May, 2002, to attend an Asia-Pacific conference on terrorism
in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist strikes. The latest
visit was to attend a local discussion on terrorism ahead of
the forthcoming Olympics at Bejing in August, 2008.
2. Growing, growing, growing and still growing. That is the
only way of describing this city of which the Chinese are
rightly proud. Shanghai of May, 2008, is unrecognisable from
the Shanghai of May, 2002. It has developed
horizontally and vertically and continues to develop.
3. Statistics are irrelevant with regard to Shanghai. The
statistics of today will become outdated next week and so
on. That is the pace of its development. Shanghai is proud
that every important country of the world is represented
there--- in its industries, in its business world, in its
financial centres, in its architecture and in its arts and
culture.
4. Shanghai is a miracle within a miracle. If China is
rapidly overtaking the rest of Asia----even the rest of the
world---in its economic development ad modernisation,
Shanghai has already overtaken the rest of China many times
over in every aspect.
5. The Chinese without any exception and without any
hesitation give the credit to the late Deng Xiao-ping, the
father of modern China, for the economic miracle achieved
within a short period of three decades in the country as
whole and even a shorter period of 16 years in Shanghai.
6. He not only liberated the Chinese economy from the
stranglehold of the State, but more important, also
simultaneously liberated the Chinese mind-set from the
stranglehold of past prejudices, suspicions and outmoded
thinking. He made the Chinese overcome their traditional
suspicions of foreigners and welcome everybody----whatever
be his or her nationality--- who wanted to contribute to
China's development. Without the liberation of the mind-set,
the liberation of the economy alone may not have achieved
the kind of miracle, which the world has witnessed. That is
the point which is stressed repeatedly by one's local
interlocutors.
7. Another point which is equally stressed is that India is
still far from achieving a similar miracle because the
liberation of its economy has not been accompanied by a
similar liberation of the Indian mind-set from the
stranglehold of its past prejudices, suspicions and ways of
thinking. As an example, a reference is made to its
inability to get over the memories of the Sino-Indian war of
1962 and move ahead in developing co-operation with China
much more rapidly than has been possible so far.
8. At the same time, one finds an inability even in the
Chinese mind to rid itself of its ancient thinking in
matters such as recovery of territory, which they look upon
as rightfully belonging to China. Arunachal
Pradesh---particularly Tawang--- is a glaring example. Why
such rigidity on Tawang?
9. "Because our Tibetan people would not let us accept
Indian control of Tawang," one is told. Why the Tibetans
would not agree? In response to this question, one is told:
' Because Tawang is of religious and emotional importance to
them. Tawang is as sacred to the Tibetan Buddhists as
Jerusalem is to the Jewish people. One of the past Dalai
Lamas was born in Tawang. Recognising Tawang as Indian
territory would amount to recognising that he was an Indian
citizen. How can the Tibetans do it? "
10. It is recognised that the sensitivities of both the
countries are involved in Tawang. India cannot agree to a
change of the status quo. China, it is said, cannot accept
the status quo. A possible solution could be status quo plus
with both the countries sharing the responsibility for the
administration and development of this area, it is said. It
is pointed out that China and Japan are attempting a
similar solution towards the East China Sea islands, which
both claim.
11. What strikes one during a short stay of four days is
the tremendous national pride of the Chinese people----pride
over their past, pride over their present, pride over their
achievements, and pride over the policies of their
leadership, which have produced the miracle. One can discern
this pride everywhere and in everyone---young or old, man or
woman.
12. One cannot dismiss this pride by calling it
simplistically as narrow nationalism, as many sections of
the Western media try to do. China's greatest strength is
not its military power or economic muscle, but this national
pride. This pride has been hurt by what is perceived as the
attempts made by some sections of the international
community to tarnish China's image on the eve of the
Olympics. Next to this national pride, the emotion which
strikes one is a mixture of anger, sorrow and suspicion due
to the recent events in Tibet and in some Western cities
during the passage of the Olympic flame. ( To be
continued)
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delh, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also
associated with the Chennai Centre For China Stud