Southasian mea culpa
Self-criticism came more readily to our forebears.
Introspection and self-absorbed bigotry have traditionally walked hand-in-hand in Southasia. Megalomaniac rulers, the leech-like priestly classes and their bete noire, the serenely divine dervishes representing the hoi polloi, have coexisted for centuries. Jawaharlal Nehru himself quoted Alberuni, the 10th-century Afghan chronicler, to support this lacerating critique of the Subcontinent.
For India's sciences, languages and its architectural splendour, Alberuni had unalloyed praise. About its people, though, he said: "They are haughty, foolishly vain, self-contained and stolid. They believe there is no country like theirs, no nation like theirs, no science like theirs, no religion like theirs." How did Nehru respond to such criticism, centuries later? In the Discovery of India, he describes Alberuni's views as "probably a correct enough description of the temper of the people".