Arun Shourie Explained

Arun Shourie
Birth Date:2 November 1941
Birth Place:Jalandhar, Punjab, British India
(now in Punjab, India)
Residence:New Delhi, India
Nationality:Indian
Office:Minister of Communications and Information Technology
Primeminister:Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Term Start:29 January 2003
Term End:22 May 2004
Predecessor:Pramod Mahajan
Successor:Dayanidhi Maran
Office1:Minister of Commerce & Industry
Primeminister1:Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Term Start1:9 November 2002
Term End1:29 January 2003
Predecessor1:Murasoli Maran
Successor1:Arun Jaitley
Office2:Minister of Development of North Eastern Region
Primeminister2:Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Term Start2:1 September 2001
Term End2:29 January 2003
Predecessor2:ministry created
Successor2:C. P. Thakur
Office3:Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
Term Start3:5 July 1998
Term End3:4 July 2010
Constituency3:Uttar Pradesh
Party:Bharatiya Janata Party
Profession:Journalist and former World Bank Economist
Politician
Spouse:Anita Shourie
Children:1
Relations:H. D. Shourie, (father)
Nalini Singh, (sister)
Alma Mater:University of Delhi (BA)
Syracuse University (PhD)
Website:Arun Shourie Blog
Awards:Padma Bhushan (1990)
Ramon Magsaysay Award (1982)

Arun Shourie (born 2 November 1941) is an Indian economist, journalist, author and politician.[1] He has worked as an economist with the World Bank, a consultant to the Planning Commission of India, editor of the Indian Express and The Times of India and a Minister of Communications and Information Technology in the Vajpayee Ministry (1998–2004). He was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award in 1982 and the Padma Bhushan in 1990.[2]

Popularly perceived as one of the main Hindu nationalist intellectuals during the 90s and early 2000s, for instance writing controversial works on Islam and Christianity apart from attacks on left-wing ideologues, he considers himself skeptical of religions, especially the concept of the organised religion.[3] [4]

Early life and education

Arun Shourie was born in Jalandhar, British India, on 2 November 1941.

Shourie did his schooling at Modern School, Barakhamba,[5] and received a bachelor's in Economics(H) from St. Stephen's College, Delhi.[6] He then obtained his doctorate in economics from Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University in 1966.[7] [8] [9]

Personal life

Shourie is married to Anita, and they have a son.[10] His sister is the journalist Nalini Singh. Arun Shourie speaks about his personal life and reviews his life events as case diaries. "My writing is like the case diary of an advocate which is aimed at winning a case" and his opinions on journalism.[11]

He is skeptical of religions, especially the concept of organised religion. He shared his life experiences in the 2011-book Does He Know a Mother's Heart: How Suffering Refutes Religion.[12] In his 2020-book Preparing for Death, he wrote about dealing with mortality, and added that others can approach this eventuality by looking at the examples of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Gautama Buddha, Ramana Maharshi, Mahatma Gandhi and Vinoba Bhave.[13]

Career

Economist

Shortly after receiving PhD in economics from Syracuse University Shourie joined the World Bank as an economist in 1967 where he worked for more than 10 years. Simultaneously, between 1972 and 1974, he was a consultant to the Indian Planning Commission and it was around this time that he began writing articles as a journalist, criticising economic policy.

Journalism

In 1975, during The Emergency imposed by then prime minister, Indira Gandhi, Shourie began writing for the Indian Express in opposition to what he saw as an attack on civil liberties. The newspaper, owned by Ramnath Goenka, was a focal point for the government's efforts at censorship. He became a fellow of the Indian Council of Social Science Research in 1976. In January 1979, Goenka appointed Shourie as executive editor of the newspaper, giving him a carte blanche to do with it as he saw fit. He developed a reputation as an intelligent, fearless writer and editor who campaigned for freedom of the press, exposed corruption and defended civil liberties.

Influenced by Gandhian ideals,[14] Shourie has been called a "veteran journalist".[15] [16] Shourie was a winner of the Ramon Magsaysay Award in 1982, in the Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication Arts category as "a concerned citizen employing his pen as an effective adversary of corruption, inequality and injustice." In 2000, he was named as one of the International Press Institute's World Press Freedom Heroes. He has also been named International Editor of the Year Award and was awarded The Freedom to Publish Award.

Politics

Arun Shourie was nominated from the state of Uttar Pradesh as a BJP representative for two successive tenures in the Rajya Sabha, thus being a Member of Parliament for 1998–2004 and 2004–2010. He held the office of Minister of Disinvestment, Communication and Information Technology in the government of India under Vajpayee's prime ministership.[17] As Disinvestment Minister, he led the sale of Maruti, VSNL, Hindustan Zinc among others.[18]

Shourie was among many who objected to The Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act 1986, which the government headed by Rajiv Gandhi proposed to alleviate communal violence and retain Muslim votes. Claimed by the government to be a reinforcement of India's constitutional secularism, it was widely criticised by both Muslims and Hindus. The liberals among them, says Ainslie Embree, saw it as "a capitulation to the forces of Islamic obscurantism, a return ... to the thirteenth century"; the Hindu revivalist critics thought it was "weakening Indian unity". Shourie wrote articles that tried to show that the treatment of women as required by the Quran would in fact offer them protection, although the application of Islamic law in practice was oppressing them. He was in turn criticised for what was perceived as a thinly-veiled attack on Islam itself, with Rafiq Zakaria, the Muslim scholar, saying that Shourie's concern for reform of Islam was in fact demonstrative of Hindu contempt that used the plight of Muslim women as an example of the backwardness of the community. Vir Sanghvi termed it "Hindu chauvinism with a liberal face".

After the defeat of the BJP in 2009 general elections, Shourie asked for introspection and accountability within the party. He deplored factionalism within the party and those who brief journalists to aid their own agenda.

Shourie has been described by Christophe Jaffrelot, a political scientist, as "a writer sympathetic to militant Hindu themes" and has publicly voiced support for the aims of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a nationalist Hindutva organisation. This has caused unease among some of those who admire his journalism. He has said that, although he sees danger from perceived Muslim violence such as the Godhra train burning incident of 2002, people have tended to redefine the "Hindutva" term. He says that prominent members of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), of which he is a member and which has ties to the RSS — specifically, L. K. Advani and Atal Bihari Vajpayee — have shown their opposition to sectarian hatred and in their attempts to make the BJP inclusive have tried to marginalise those on both the Muslim and Hindu extremes who promote such hatred. As a political scientist, he views that present electoral system does not concern competency and integrity. He emphasised his views in a cultural conference called Tomorrow's India Global Summit and added that the pressure to bring about change in the present electoral system should come from the society.[19]

Shourie has opposed reservation, a system of official legal discrimination in India similar to "affirmative action" in the United States. In 2017, he said "Panditji (Jawaharlal Nehru) had rightly said that in that way (reservation) lies not only folly but disaster."[20]

Writer

Arun Shourie has written numerous books. According to one review, the traits of his writings are:

Criticism

With the exception of Mahatma Gandhi, he has little time for any religious thinker and, says Nussbaum, his books "nowhere ... seek to provide balance; nowhere is there a sense of complexity. All have the same mocking, superior tone."

Historian D.N. Jha criticized Shourie's book Eminent Historians, which concerned the NCERT textbook controversies, on the grounds that it contains "slander" and "has nothing to do with history."[21] [22] [23]

IIT Kanpur

In 2000, Shourie pledged the entire amount (Rs. 12 crore) of discretionary spending available to him under Members of Parliament Local Area Development Scheme (MPLADS) to setting up of Bio-Sciences & Bio-engineering Department at the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur.[24] In 2005, he again pledged Rs. 11 crore for developing a separate building for Environmental Sciences and Environmental Engineering at the institute.[25]

Books

Author

Co-author

References

CitationsBibliography

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Arun Shourie . 13 February 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170214103002/https://www.credit-suisse.com/microsites/conferences/aic/en/speakers/speakers/arun-shourie.html . 14 February 2017 . dead .
  2. Web site: Padma Awards . Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India . 2015 . 21 July 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151015193758/http://mha.nic.in/sites/upload_files/mha/files/LST-PDAWD-2013.pdf . 15 October 2015 . dmy .
  3. [Vir Sanghvi]
  4. Utpal Kumar (18 June 2017), "The loneliness of being Arun Shourie", DailyO.in. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  5. Web site: Famous Alumni .
  6. News: Nalini Singh's daughter Ratna writes novel about mother-daughter troubled relationship. The Sunday Guardian. 9 August 2014. 23 December 2014. 24 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924111813/http://www.sunday-guardian.com/investigation/nalini-singhs-daughter-ratna-writes-novel-about-mother-daughter-troubled-relationship. dead.
  7. News: 2017-06-19 . SU's Who . Syracuse University Magazine . .
  8. M.A. . Syracuse University & University Microfilms . Shourie . Arun . Taxation of the Indian agriculture . 1965 . 83238831 . 31 January 2021 . English.
  9. PhD . Syracuse University . Shourie . Arun . Allocation of foreign exchange in India. . 1966 . 222018035 . 31 January 2021 . English.
  10. https://web.archive.org/web/20110724015117/http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/169238/i-am-now-distant-from-the-bjp-arun-shourie.html God's an invention to suit society's needs: Arun Shourie
  11. Web site: Interview with Arun Shourie Decentralised Emergency in India By Srikant Kottackal translated by A J Philip senior journalist and columnist. Arun. Shourie. 6 October 2017. The News Freedom. https://web.archive.org/web/20171008180230/http://www.thenewsfreedom.com/interview-with-arun-shourie-decentralised-emergency-in-india-by-srikant-kottackal-translated-by-a-j-philip-senior-journalist-and-columnist/. 8 October 2017. 7 October 2017. bot: unknown.
  12. IANS (9 July 2011), "Arun Shourie pens down his trauma", Hindustan Times. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  13. Web site: Arun Shourie on what to do — and not to do — in the final lap of life . 20 November 2020 .
  14. Book: Chakravarthy . N.M. . Karikkat . U.K. . Culture and Creativity - Selected Writings of N Manu Chakravarthy:, published by Manipal Universal Press . Manipal Universal Press . General . 2019 . 978-93-324-6003-4 . 66.
  15. Book: Remaking India: One Country, One Destiny. 25. SAGE Publications. Arun Maira. 2004. 9780761932734.
  16. Web site: Arun Shourie's Speech on Media Freedom at Press Club of India: Full Transcript.
  17. Book: Hindu Nationalism: A Reader . 344 . Christophe . Jaffrelot . Princeton University Press . 2009 . 978-1-40082-803-6.
  18. Book: Johri, Meera. Greatness of Spirit: Profiles of Indian Magsaysay Award Winners. 2010. Rajpal & Sons. 9788170288589. en.
  19. Web site: Arun Shourie says pressure to change electoral system should come from society. 8 October 2017.
  20. Web site: State undoing reforms: Shourie . The Hindu . 2017-10-08 .
  21. Web site: Grist to the reactionary mill. Indian Express. 9 July 2014. 9 July 2015.
  22. Web site: How History Was Unmade At Nalanda! D N Jha. Kafila. 9 July 2014. 9 July 2015.
  23. News: Votes do not guide intellectuals: D N Jha. Business Standard. 9 November 2014. 9 July 2015. Sreedathan. G..
  24. http://www.rediff.com/money/2004/oct/18spec1.htm Shourie gives Rs 12 crore to IIT-Kanpur!
  25. http://sudhirjain.info/documents/grapevine/newsletter/2004-05/grapevine_I_2004_05.pdf Grape Vine Newsletter