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A rediscovery of India

What inspired Shashank Mani to pen “India - A Journey Through a Healing Civilization”?

Photo: V. Sreenivasa Murthy

ON A NEW TRACK Shashank Mani

It sounds like a thinking youngster’s grand dream – hop on to a train, travel the country, meet its real people in the smaller towns, take a peek at history and gaze into the future - with hope, and perhaps a plan.

That’s what 200 young people in the country got to do in 1997, in the 50th year of India’s Independence. The Azad Bharat Rail Yatra was led by Shashank Mani, an IIT-Delhi graduate who is an IT consultant now based in London.

The 22-day journey took them to places like Amritsar, Jallianwala Bagh, Tilonia, Jamshedpur, Bodh Gaya, Aurangabad, Ralegaon Siddhi and brought them in touch with people like Anna Hazare and Bunker Roy.

A decade after they took the journey, which was more an intellectual and emotional one of discovery, says Shashank, he’s penned a book “India - A Journey Through a Healing Civilization”. Several questions pop up instantly. What made him wait ten years to write a book on such a magnificent journey?

The journey itself was about bringing young people together on a common platform and get them talking about the country, says Shashank.

“I hadn’t planned on writing a book. It actually started as a bedtime story for my two daughters recounting the yatra. I had initially set out to make a documentary…which never got made. And the 20 hours of footage now lie under my bed.”

His IIT classmate and founder of the Bangalore-based South Asian De-Materialisaion Initiative (SADI) Umesh K. Baveja recently released the book, published by HarperCollins Publishers India. Shashank believes the book is richer and more nuanced because it was written much after the journey. As he elaborates in the book’s epilogue:

“This narrative has been long due but it needed the onset of the sixtieth anniversary of India’s Independence to get it going.” And on the narrative itself he admits: “I realised that I had often ignored the analytical for the passionate…the description of the journey merged with a description of my personal experiences, insights gained from starting my business, from walks in my village, and my personal experiences of growing up in India…”

The title of the book, especially the ‘healing’ bit, again raises eyebrows. Shashank says he grew up reading V.S. Naipaul’s cynicism for the country as seen in his “India: A Wounded Civilization”.

“But when we travelled, we discovered a civilisation that had the power to heal,” says Shashank.

One journey is always said to lead to another. And it is no different for Shashank.

He hopes to make the yatra , now dubbed as Jagriti Yatra, an annual affair starting 2008, with corporate funding. For details on who can qualify and where the journey will take you, you can check out www.jagritiyatra.com.

BHUMIKA K.

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