Friday, 13 March 2020

Summary of Jawaharlal Nehru's The Panorama of India’s Past




Jawaharlal Nehru is India’s first Prime Minister.  He is educated in England Cambridge University.  He spent most of his life for India’s freedom struggle.  This short prose piece is an excerpt from his famous book, The Discovery of India.  This book is written by Jawaharlal Nehru, when he was imprisoned in Ahmadnagar Fort.

Nehru begins the essay by saying that his mind is full of India and his attempts to understand and analyse her.  To do this he goes back to his childhood days, when he experienced the country.  At present Nehru is proud of the nation and at the same he is ashamed of the nation.  He is ashamed because of the superstitious practices, outworn ideas and the poverty of Indian people. 

As he grew up he became busy with India’s freedom.  He considers the British power over India as monstrous.  He asks a basic question – “What is India?”.  He thinks of India in geographical terms, her past, the present condition, the future and her role in the modern world.  To talk about the future of India, Nehru needs the present.  To talk about the present, Nehru needs to study about the past India.  He decides to approach India’s past as an alien, through the West, so that he will not be prejudiced and partial.

He thinks of the days, when he stood in Mohenjo-daro in the Indus Valley, where he saw houses all around him with streets, which was laid before 5000 years.  The Indus Valley civilization, according to Professor Childe, is a representation of a perfect adjustment of human life to a specific environment.  During those days, India was in touch with the Persians, the Egyptians, the Greeks, the Chinese, the Arabs and the people of central Mediterranean.  India changed those countries and it was changed by those countries.

Jawaharlal Nehru remembers his readings about India’s past, through the books of wanderers from China and other countries.  Nehru has been to the Himalayas, which say about India’s past and rich culture.  The mighty rivers of India talk about the history of India.  The Indus or Sindhu, from which India got its name; the Brahmanputra and the Ganges talk about the story of India’s civilization and culture and about the rise of fall of great empires and cities.

Nehru’s visits to old monuments like Ajanta, Ellora, the Elephanta Caves and other places like Agra and Delhi has made him learn more about India.  He talks about the festival Kumbh Mela, which takes place in his hometown, Allahabad.  The festival has a history of thirteen thousand years.  The place called Saranath, near Benaras, makes him visualize Buddha.  The Ashoka pillars of stone speak a different language to him.

These visits and places has taught a lot about India to Nehru.  His pride about the country becomes sad, when he thinks of the present reality.  According to Nehru, no other country in the world has such a long history and tradition.  The vast panorama of India talks about the great past, but the 180 years of rule by the British has changed everything in India and we are unhappy slaves today.  Nehru promises to bring out the hidden past of India and make the Indians feel proud of their nation.

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