Author: Shashi Tharoor
Publication: International Herald
Tribune
Date: December 3, 2002
URL: http://www.iht.com/articles/78832.htm
Bangalore, India I made separate
trips from Bangalore recently that revealed, within a span of 48 hours,
two different but related facets of India. Late one night I set out on
a four-hour drive with my mother to the well-lit and orderly town of Puttaparthi
in Andhra Pradesh.
Buildings gleamed white against
the streetlights; the sidewalks, patrolled by volunteers even at that hour,
seemed freshly scrubbed. Puttaparthi, once a humble village like so many
others, had become a boomtown as the birthplace and headquarters of the
spiritual leader Sathya Sai Baba.
A private audience with the ocher-robed
guru was astonishing at several levels. Sai Baba uttered insights about
my family and myself that he could not possibly have known.
He has a habit, disconcerting at
first, of turning his palm quizzically outward and staring off into the
distance, as if silently interrogating an unseen, all-knowing source.
Sometimes he scribbles in the air
with a finger as if dashing off a note to a celestial messenger.
Then he says things which are by
turns banal or profound, and sometimes both (if only because so much of
what he says has become worn out by repetition and frequent quotation,
including in signs on the streets outside). Most startling, he materializes
gifts from thin air - in my case a gold ring with nine embedded stones.
He slipped it on my finger, remarking, "See how well it fits. Even a goldsmith
would have needed to measure your finger."
My mother, a longtime devotee, received
a little silver urn overflowing with vibhuti, or sacred ash.
"It was as if he had heard what
I wanted," she said. But a skilled magician can do that, and it would be
wrong to see Sai Baba as a conjurer. He has channeled the hopes and energies
of his followers into constructive directions, both spiritual and philanthropic.
Everything at his complex is staffed
by volunteers who rotate through Puttaparthi at well-organized two-week
intervals. Many left distinguished positions behind. The free hospital
in Puttaparthi is one of the best in India; many leading doctors volunteer
their services. Sai Baba has built schools and colleges, and is now involved
in a project to bring irrigation to a number of parched southern districts.
The next day I drove from Bangalore
in a different direction, to the campus of Infosys, India's leading computer
technology company. It, too, wore the clean and scrubbed look I had seen
at Puttaparthi. But there were no temples here, no pavilions thronged with
devotees.
Instead, escorted by the affable
chief executive, Nandan Nilekani, I saw the world's leading software museum,
a state-of-the-art teleconference center, classrooms with sophisticated
video equipment and a work environment that could not be bettered in any
developed country. Infosys is a world leader in information technology.
It provides services in consulting, systems integration and applications
to some of the biggest companies in the world. Its 13,000 staff members,
known in the company's argot as "Infoscions," work in more than 30 offices
around the world. In Bangalore, they sit amidst lush, landscaped greenery
dotted with pools, recharge themselves at an ultramodern gym, display their
creativity at a company art gallery and enjoy a choice of nine food courts
for their lunchtime snacks.
I marveled at the sophistication
and affluence visible in every square inch of the campus.
"We wanted to prove," Nandan explained,
"that this could be done in India."
Sai Baba and Infosys are both facets
of 21st century India. One produces rings out of the ether and urges people
to be better human beings; the other deals in a different form of virtual
reality and helps human beings to better themselves. One runs free hospitals
and schools; the other seeks to bring the benefits of technology to
a country still mired in millennial
poverty.
In the 1950s, Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru declared dams and factories to be "the new temples of modern India."
What he failed to recognize was that the old temples continued to maintain
their hold on the Indian imagination.
The software programs of the information
technology companies dotting Bangalore's "Silicon Plateau" may be the new
mantras of India, but they supplement, rather than supplant, the old mantras.
Sai Baba and Infosys are emblematic of an India that somehow manages to
live in several centuries at once.
On our way out of Puttaparthi my
mother and I talked to a devotee who was lining up to buy a packet of vibhuti
to take home with him.
"What do you do?" I asked.
"I am," he replied proudly, a cell
phone glinting in his shirt pocket, "a project manager at Infosys."
The writer is the author, most recently,
of the novel "Riot." He contributed this comment to the International Herald
Tribune.