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  2. Spirituality and Prosperity VII

630. Indian Political Leadership

The World Academy of Art and Science was founded in the sixties by the leading scientists of the day so that it could pronounce on mattes of vital importance to the world. Among its 500 Fellows there are about 90 Nobel Laureates. Generally, their Congress is conducted once in five years on themes relevant to the world society. Their next Congress is coming in Zagreb, Croatia in 2005. Its central theme is Knowledge Society. As part of it, they are considering several themes. Rationality is one of those themes. To eradicate terrorism and minor conflicts of military nature, to grant employment guarantee are their major interests. Their President, Walter Anderson, past President Harlan Cleveland, and the organiser of Zagreb Congress, Ivo Slaus, were at a symposium in New Delhi this month.

The Symposium was inaugurated by the President of India. A day prior to that was the birth anniversary of Indira Gandhi where the Prime Minister spoke. The delegates of this Symposium were invited to that function where the Prime Minister, after his address, was introduced to some of the delegates of the Symposium. One comment of these delegates was, "It is a pleasure to listen to a committed speech delivered with such clarity. It is not usual for us to hear our own President with such satisfaction." That impression was reinforced the next day when the President of India delivered the inaugural address of the Symposium.  Harlan Cleveland was a member of the Cabinet of John F. Kennedy. Later he was in the Aid Administration of Taiwan before becoming US Ambassador to NATO. While in Taiwan, his observation of the change in life there led to the conclusion that a SILENT revolution was going on there, without any armed uprising or political upheaval.

His diagnosis was that the expectations of common people were rising everyday, and that aspiration urged them to bring about a Revolution imperceptibly. He called it, The Revolution of Rising Expectations. The world perceived it a couple of decades later in the phenomenon of Asian Tigers.  One hundred fifty years ago, the Communist Manifesto was announced which called the proletariat of the world to rise up in arms. It resulted in the Russian Revolution in 1917. The world readily received that great message of Socialism as a warning signal of a coming death knell. Conditions of workers vastly improved all over the Western world to escape a socialist revolution. During the entire twentieth century, that Revolution took a different turn. It was done not by armed uprising but by the urge of mental aspiration for a better life.  The prophet of that perception was Harlan Cleveland, an eminent thinker of the world.

Book traversal links for 630. Indian Political Leadership

  • 629. Index of Culture
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  • 631. Faith Works in the Body

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  • 601. What Makes an Idea Powerful
  • 602. The Roots of Terrorism
  • 603. The Power of Promise
  • 604. Ireland
  • 605. Job Efficiency
  • 606. Addiction
  • 607. Walking
  • 608. What is Duty?
  • 609. Opium of the Masses
  • 610. The Westernised Mind
  • 611. Periods of Transition
  • 612. Time is on Our Side
  • 613. Reliability
  • 614. The Place of Aid in Development
  • 615. Swami Vivekananda’s Vision
  • 616. The Power of Cleanliness
  • 617. Decision and Determination
  • 618. The Impersonal and the Personal
  • 619. Veerampattinam Kali
  • 620. Eminence of a Nation
  • 621. The Divine Mother’s Protection
  • 622. Peaceful Life
  • 623. Variations of Human Nature
  • 624. Meteoric Rise
  • 625. The Problem of Population
  • 626. Abolition of War
  • 627. Japan’s Insularity
  • 628. The Machine Age
  • 629. Index of Culture
  • 630. Indian Political Leadership
  • 631. Faith Works in the Body
  • 632. Betrayal of the Beloved
  • 633. Customs and Culture
  • 634. Success of Falsehood
  • 635. A Spiritual Magazine
  • 636. Patriotism
  • 637. The Irrational Politician
  • 638. Business Competition
  • 639. Strength of the National Currency
  • 640. Right to Break a Contract
  • 641. The Past Initiated Act
  • 642. Emotion of Falsehood
  • 643. Jane Austen
  • 644. The Subconscious
  • 645. Radha and Krishna
  • 646. Luxuries vs. Necessities
  • 647. The Boon Internet Is
  • 654. Love is Blind
  • 655. Food Security
  • 656. Viswarupa Darshan of the Lord
  • 657. India as Leader of the World
  • 658. Silence
  • 659. Pain in the Neck
  • 660. Unmarked Chest
  • 661. Gratitude to Grace
  • 662. An Independent Administration
  • 663. M. Visveswaraiah
  • 664. The Other Side of Idealism
  • 665. The March of Time
  • 666. Seminars
  • 667. The Power of Keeping a Secret
  • 668. The 21st Century
  • 669. The ‘Virtue’ of the Excesses
  • 670. Open Mind
  • 671. Neglected Arrears
  • 672. Infinity in Life
  • 673. The Personality of Karna
  • 674. Collection of Arrears
  • 675. The Opposites are True
  • 676. Capacity to Defend Oneself
  • 677. Creation of Wealth
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