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Monarchy The deaths of King Birendra and his
heir-apparent, Dipendra, in the
aftermath of June 1 'accidental'
shoot-out mark the end of an era of
direct succession of kingship
established by the founder of modern
Nepal, King Prithvi Narayan Shah in the
beginning of the 18th century. The line
of succession has now been shifted from
the son to brother. Prince Gyanendra has
become the 13th King of Nepal. Many of
Nepal's 23 million people still revere
the king as an incarnation of Hindu god,
Vishnu, and the Hindu-Buddhist faith is
that monarchy mediates the material and
spiritual power that establishes its
authority and legitimacy in the Nepali
society.
Many political symbols are attached to
the institution of monarchy. For
example, it is regarded as a symbol of
national unity and its ideological glue
- nationalism - is the raison d'etre of
modern nation-state. The monarch is also
perceived as a lord having spiritual and
temporal authority to protect the
sacredness of Nepal Mandala, the
universe of Nepal. It is considered to
exist for the "Reasons of State" where
people as citizens sustain their private
and public life in social existence-
peace, amity and cooperation.
The theory that upholds the belief that
"King does no wrong" is embedded in its
non-partisan formation. The practice of
worshipping monarchy thus springs from
the notion that King performs Rajdharma
(statecraft) to regulate society,
observes the Sanatan Dharma (the eternal
religion), is of virtuous conduct,
dispenses justice and safeguards the
motherland from external intrusion.
Popular expression like "Go to Gorkha
for justice" captures the judicious
tradition of the Nepali monarch in this
historical aphorism.
The founder of the Shah dynasty, King
Ram Shah, established rule of law and
social justice in the hills of Nepal at
a time when many parts of the world were
in a Hobbesian state of nature. He did
not only solve the problems of anarchy
and chaos but had some conception of a
higher law than his self-will, a will to
individualise himself through the
trajectory of history.
King Prithvi Narayan Shah, the founder
of present-day Nepal, rediscovered the
roots of native virtues and introduced a
vision of progress, patriotism and
participation of diverse people in the
social, economic and political
construction of the nation-state through
the institutionalisation of monarchical
institutions, system of rights for the
people and their places in society. The
spread of nationalism and the
articulation of coherent geopolitical
worldview he defined latter became
rallying points for his successors to
marshal the support of people on behalf
of the goals of modern state.
The identification of monarchy with
social physics of the nation moulded by
Hindu-Buddhist mores proved itself to be
the most resilient institution that
derived its legitimacy from the act of
national unification, dharma-mediated
statecraft and a radiator of native
culture. In so doing, monarchy safely
adapted to the Western ideology of
Enlightenment -rationalism, modernity
and aspiration of the age.
Two kinds of reason have thus been
combined to nourish the institutions of
monarchy. The standardisation of
administrative, legal and economic
practices, spread of Nepali language,
literature and culture and art and
tradition, focus on development tours to
several places and construction of
shrines and symbols around the country
were designed to construct the "national
identity". The unifier had an ardent
belief that freedom of people rests on
the freedom of the State - a State
capable of building its own national
culture and civilisation upon the
materiality of the territory it
possesses.
In the 1940s, it was King Tribhuvan who
provided guidance to the then political
parties and leaders in their effort to
take the country out of the clutches of
autocratic Rana rulers. The Rana regime
had kept the people politically docile
up until that time. Monarchy's help to
resolve the conflicts between
aristocracy and democracy in favour of
the latter is a recorded fact. In other
words, it sought to create virtuous
environment for the achievement of
common good.
In a delicate geopolitics of the nation,
symbols were transformed into
substantive legitimacy to the popular
movement aspiring for democracy. His
feat was by no means small as he
articulated the need for collective
national consciousness for holding the
State and society together under
constitutional bounds. The essential
differentiation between politics and
morality, which the then political
leaders failed to make clear, widened
the gulf between law and politics.
The institution of monarchy was,
therefore, particularly important when
political institution building was
critically required to stipulate the
expected behaviour of all forces but
very difficult to achieve. A salient
example can be traced from the monarch's
efforts, matching the European models,
of protecting the national heritage and
projecting the identity of Nepal abroad
despite immense pressure for conformity
and uniformity.
Monarchy's ability to transcend
"partisan politics" not only set itself
above many institutions of governance
but also helped achieve a "single
national community" as opposed to the
ideology of identity politics and
caveman feelings of mutual hate.
Evidently, monarchy seems to have known
that a purely utopian approach to the
problem of national community offers
little hope of escape from the impending
anarchy.
Monarchy often played the role of a
safety valve of society against the
threat of imperialism and native
radicalism without being socially
conservative in its ideology. This is
the reason social change in Nepal often
occurred in a spiral manner. Yet, the
geniuses of monarchs are full of
dramatic contrasts based on the
individual personality of kings: some
were powerful and assertive, while
others were mere figureheads. Quite a
few of them were captive of local
aristocracy and some even upheld an
image of constitutional monarch.
A similar contrast is also found at the
elite and mass level. For example, both
the groups do not fully grasp the vision
of democracy and used constitutional
interpretations for their own interests.
Here, too, the role of monarch remained
salient in facilitating the political
transition along democratic lines.
Monarchy is regarded as an element of
continuity, a continuity of Nepali
history, society, institution and the
statehood. And, it percolated
institutional memory of managing
political order at a time of the crisis
in civic and political institutions.
Several institutional and policy
innovations underway since the 1950s
marked a point that monarchy also served
as a catalyst for social and political
reforms. Late king Birendra can be
considered as a key force in himself for
the restoration of democracy, human
rights and social justice. During his
reign, Nepalis found their sovereignty
in a unity between political life and
the institution of monarchy.
How does one overcome increasing
democratic deficit and the crisis in
public institutions now? It is obviously
something that cannot be answered in a
straightforward way. One can defend the
argument for constitutionalisation of
the state, the market and civil society.
This is the way to overcome an element
of parochialism in Nepali politics which
continues to operate as a counter force
against the achievement of a democratic
state and, in the process, losing the
moral and constitutional checks the
institution of monarchy provided until
recently.
The other is by establishing the
credibility of democratic life. Who can
act as a conscience-keeper of the nation
when the institution of monarchy is
drastically weakened by an ordeal as the
present one while national political
parties and elites are sharply divided
along geopolitical lines lacking an
anchor and purposive direction? The
springs of restless democratic
aspirations are spiraling the source of
rebellion in all aspects of national
life. A collective political effort
alone can help solve the growing crisis
of governability arising out of
pervasive poverty, political drift and
Maoist insurgency and thereby restore
the normalcy in public life.
Simultaneously, monarchy as a seat of
statesmanship should seek to fulfil the
expectations attached to Rajdharma. Late
King Birendra proved an illustrious
monarch. King Gyanendra, it is hoped,
will follow the glorious tradition his
ancestors had set. (The author is
professor of political science at
Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu). |
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