Spectacle, Silence, and the Abdication of Governance in Contemporary India
History as Distraction: Political Ritual and Democratic Decline in Modi’s India
Abstract
This article critically examines the contemporary shift from governance to spectacle in India under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, using the Somnath Swabhiman Parv of January 2026 as an analytical lens. It argues that the public performance of ritualised nationalism—symbolised by the Prime Minister playing the damru at Somnath—coincided with, and distracted from, a convergence of serious crises: a public health emergency in Delhi caused by severe air pollution, institutional communalisation in higher education, persistent caste violence, the dilution of labour guarantees, and a foreign policy marked by strategic silence. Drawing on media reports, regulatory documents, and public health data, the article situates these developments within a broader pattern of governance that privileges historical symbolism and civilisational grievance over constitutional responsibility and material welfare. The Somnath episode is read not as an isolated cultural event but as part of a political technique wherein history is mobilised to displace accountability in the present. The article contends that such spectacle-driven politics risks hollowing out democratic norms and weakening the republic’s capacity to address urgent social and environmental challenges.
Moments of crisis reveal not only the priorities of power but also its moral architecture. In January 2026, as India confronted an accumulation of social, diplomatic, environmental, and constitutional crises, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chose spectacle over statesmanship—performing ritual, invoking civilisational grievance, and publicly playing the damru at Somnath. The image has since been widely circulated as an assertion of cultural confidence. It deserves instead to be read as a metaphor for governance by distraction.
This is not an argument against faith, ritual, or history. It is an argument about timing, responsibility, and the deliberate substitution of symbolic performance for political accountability.
From Governance to Spectacle
The Somnath Swabhiman Parv was framed as a commemoration of “a thousand years of resilience” since Mahmud of Ghazni’s attack on the temple in 1026. The Prime Minister described Somnath’s history not as one of defeat but of reconstruction, casting present-day India as the triumphant inheritor of that legacy.
Yet what was conspicuously absent from this civilisational narrative was the contemporary Indian citizen—breathing toxic air, facing institutional discrimination, losing statutory rights, and witnessing a steady erosion of constitutional norms. The Prime Minister’s public calendar that week revealed an unmistakable choice: to foreground ritualised nationalism while remaining silent on urgent material crises.
Delhi: A Capital Reduced to a Slow-Motion Gas Chamber
As the Prime Minister performed aarti in Gujarat, India’s capital was experiencing a severe public health emergency. Delhi’s air pollution levels—particularly PM2.5 and PM10—had once again crossed hazardous thresholds, with medical studies equating daily exposure to smoking approximately 25 cigarettes a day. This is not metaphorical exaggeration; it is epidemiological fact.
Pollution-related illnesses claim over 10,000 lives annually in Delhi alone. Infants, the elderly, and those with pre-existing conditions face irreversible harm. Roads have effectively become open-air gas chambers—laden with nitrogen oxides, sulphur dioxide, carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds, and ground-level ozone. Yet there was no national address, no emergency mobilisation, no Prime Ministerial acknowledgement commensurate with the scale of the crisis.
Silence, here, is policy.
Foreign Policy Without Voice or Vision
India’s external posture during this period was equally revealing. As the United States escalated military action in Venezuela and signalled broader geopolitical aggression—from West Asia to the Arctic—India’s response was notable primarily for its absence. Tariffs on Indian goods were sharply raised by the US; public claims were made that India had reduced Russian oil purchases under American pressure; major corporate actors confirmed compliance. The government neither rebutted these assertions nor articulated an independent position.
This is a far cry from non-alignment, strategic autonomy, or even pragmatic realism. It suggests instead a foreign policy hollowed out of confidence, where silence is mistaken for stability.
Merit, Majoritarianism, and Institutional Capture
The decision by the National Medical Commission to scrap MBBS admissions at the Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Institute of Medical Excellence illustrates how institutional authority is increasingly shaped by majoritarian pressure rather than regulatory consistency.
The official justification—faculty shortages, inadequate infrastructure, low bed occupancy—raises a fundamental question: why were these deficiencies deemed acceptable when permission was granted months earlier? The answer lies outside the inspection report.
Of the first batch of 50 students admitted strictly through NEET merit, an overwhelming majority were Muslim. This triggered protests by religious organisations claiming that a shrine-funded institution should prioritise Hindus. Political mobilisation followed. Inspection followed mobilisation. Cancellation followed inspection.
Merit was not defeated by incompetence; it was defeated by identity.
Caste Violence Without National Outrage
In Meerut, a Dalit woman was murdered for resisting sexual harassment; her daughter abducted. The brutality of the crime was compounded by its predictability. Such violence has become routine, administratively managed rather than politically confronted. Compensation was announced, police teams deployed—but there was no Prime Ministerial condemnation, no national reckoning.
The contrast is instructive. When history is invoked at Somnath, it is framed as collective humiliation. When Dalits are murdered, it is treated as local law and order.
Sport, Nationalism, and Electoral Calculations
The BCCI’s instruction to release Bangladeshi cricketer Mustafizur Rahman amid rising nationalist hysteria further illustrates how institutions bend under ideological pressure. The consequence—Bangladesh withdrawing from sporting engagements in India—damages regional diplomacy and undermines India’s credibility as a host of global events.
This was not a sporting decision; it was a political concession, facilitated by state silence and electoral calculation, particularly in the context of West Bengal.
The Strategic Use of History as Distraction
The invocation of Somnath’s destruction and reconstruction is not historically innocent. It is a political technique—reviving civilisational grievance to displace present accountability. By portraying dissenters as “appeasers” and critics as inheritors of colonial or foreign sympathies, the government reframes governance failures as cultural conflict.
Jawaharlal Nehru’s reservations about state involvement in temple reconstruction were constitutional, not civilisationally hostile. To retrospectively delegitimise that position is to reject the very idea of a secular republic.
Nero Revisited
The comparison with Nero is not rhetorical excess; it is analytical. Nero’s crime, as legend remembers it, was not merely indifference but misplacement of attention—art and performance elevated above governance during catastrophe.
Playing the damru is not inherently objectionable. Doing so while the republic confronts environmental collapse, institutional communalisation, caste violence, diplomatic erosion, and the dilution of labour rights is.
The crisis in India today is not of faith. It is of governance.
And history is unforgiving toward rulers who mistake spectacle for leadership.
References
1. National Medical Commission, Inspection Report of SMVD Institute of Medical Excellence, January 2026
2. NMC Act, 2019; UGMSR Regulations, 2023
3. Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), Daily AQI Bulletins, Winter 2025–26
4. World Health Organization, Air Pollution and Child Health (2018)
5. NCRB, Crime in India Reports (latest available)
6. Times of India, coverage of Somnath Swabhiman Parv, January 2026
7. The Hindu, reports on Meerut Dalit murder and abduction, January 2026
8. Indian Express, NMC action against SMVD Medical College
9. BBC / Al Jazeera, India–Bangladesh relations and IPL controversy
10. Economic Times, India–Venezuela trade and oil exposure analysis
11. Christophe Jaffrelot, Hindu Nationalism: A Reader
12. Pratap Bhanu Mehta, writings on symbolism and governance
13. Romila Thapar, Somnatha: The Many Voices of a History
14. Amartya Sen, Democracy as Public Reason