Acceptance Speech by
Shri Pranab Mukherjee on his Assumption of office as President of India
Shri Hamid Ansari,
Smt. Meira Kumar,
Shri Justice
S.H. Kapadia,
Members of
Parliament,
Your Excellencies, Friends and fellow
citizens,
I am deeply moved by
the high honour you have accorded to me. Such honour exalts the occupant of
this office, even as it demands that he rises above personal or partisan
interests in the service of the national good.
The principal
responsibility of this office is to function as the guardian of our
Constitution. I will strive, as I said on oath, to preserve, protect and defend
our Constitution not just in word but also in spirit. We are all, across the
divide of party and region, partners at the altar of our motherland. Our
federal Constitution embodies the idea of modern India :
it defines not only India
but also modernity. A modern nation is built on some basic fundamentals:
democracy, or equal rights for every citizen; secularism, or equal freedom to
every faith; equality of every region and language; gender equality and,
perhaps most important of all, economic equity. For our development to be real
the poorest of our land must feel that they are part of the narrative of rising
India .
I have seen vast,
perhaps unbelievable, changes during the journey that has brought me from the
flicker of a lamp in a small Bengal village to the chandeliers of Delhi . I was a boy when Bengal was savaged by a famine that killed millions; the
misery and sorrow is still not lost on me. We have achieved much in the field
of agriculture, industry and social infrastructure; but that is nothing
compared to what India ,
led by the coming generations, will create in the decades ahead.
Our national mission
must continue to be what it was when the generation of Mahatma Gandhi,
Jawaharlal Nehru, SardarPatel, Rajendra Prasad, Ambedkar and Maulana Azad offered us a tryst with destiny: to
eliminate the curse of poverty, and create such opportunities for the young
that they can take our India forward by quantum leaps. There is no humiliation
more abusive than hunger. Trickle-down theories do not address the legitimate
aspirations of the poor. We must lift those at the bottom so that poverty is
erased from the dictionary of modern India .
What has brought us
thus far, will take us further ahead. India`s true story is the partnership of
the people. Our wealth has been created by farmers and workers, industrialists
and service-providers, soldiers and civilians. Our social harmony is the
sublime co-existence of temple, mosque, church, gurudwara and
synagogue; they are symbols of our unity in diversity.
Peace is the first
ingredient of prosperity. History has often been written in the red of blood;
but development and progress are the luminous rewards of a peace dividend, not
a war trophy. The two halves of the 20th Century tell their own story. Europe,
and indeed the world, reinvented itself after the end of the Second World War
and the collapse of colonization, leading to the rise of great institutions
like the United Nations. Leaders who ordered great armies into the field, and
then understood that war was more barbarism than glory, transformed the world
by changing its mindset. Gandhiji taught by
example, and gave us the supreme strength of non-violence. India`s philosophy
is not an abstract in textbooks. It flourishes in the day-to-day life of our
people, who value the humane above all else. Violence is external to our
nature; when, as human beings, we do err, we exorcise our sins with penitence
and accountability.
But the visible
rewards of peace have also obscured the fact that the age of war is not over.
We are in the midst of a fourth world war; the third was the Cold War, but it
was very warm in Asia, Africa and Latin America
till it ended in the early 1990s. The war against terrorism is the fourth; and
it is a world war because it can raise its evil head anywhere in the world. India has been
on the frontlines of this war long before many other recognized its vicious
depth or poisonous consequences. I am proud of the valour and conviction and
steely determination of our Armed Forces as they have fought this menace on our
borders; of our brave police forces as they have met the enemy within; and of
our people, who have defeated the terrorist trap by remaining calm in the face
of extraordinary provocation. The people of India have been a beacon of
maturity through the trauma of whiplash wounds. Those who instigate violence
and perpetuate hatred need to understand one truth. Few minutes of peace will
achieve far more than many years of war. India is content with itself, and
driven by the will to sit on the high table of prosperity. It will not be
deflected in its mission by noxious practitioners of terror.
As Indians, we must
of course learn from the past; but we must remain focused on the future. In my
view, education is the alchemy that can bring India its next golden age. Our
oldest scriptures laid the framework of society around the pillars of
knowledge; our challenge is to convert knowledge into a democratic force by
taking it into every corner of our country. Our motto is unambiguous: All for
knowledge, and knowledge for all.
The weight of office
sometimes becomes a burden on dreams. The news is not always cheerful.
Corruption is an evil that can depress the nation`s mood and sap its progress.
We cannot allow our progress to be hijacked by the greed of a few.
I envisage an India
where unity of purpose propels the common good; where Centre and State are
driven by the single vision of good governance; where every revolution is
green; where democracy is not merely the right to vote once in five years but
to speak always in the citizen`s interest; where knowledge becomes wisdom;
where the young pour their phenomenal energy and talent into the collective
cause. As tyranny dwindles across the world; as democracy gets fresh life in
regions once considered inhospitable; India becomes the model of
modernity.
As Swami Vivekananda
in his soaring metaphor said, India
will be raised, not with the power of flesh but with the power of the spirit,
not with the flag of destruction, but with the flag of peace and love. Bring all
the forces of good together. Do not care what be your colour-green, blue or
red, but mix all the colours up and produce that intense glow of white, the
colour of love. Ours is to work, the results will take care of themselves.
There is no greater
reward for a public servant than to be elected the first citizen of our
Republic. Jai Hindi.”
Source : PIB, July 25, 201
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