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    The kibbutz and the Ashram: Sarvodaya agriculture, Israeli aid, and the global imaginaries of Indian development

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    Date Issued
    2020-10-21
    Publisher Version
    10.1093/ahr/rhaa233
    Author(s)
    Siegel, Benjamin
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    Permanent Link
    https://hdl.handle.net/2144/43659
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    Accepted manuscript
    Citation (published version)
    B. Siegel. 2020. "The Kibbutz and the Ashram: Sarvodaya Agriculture, Israeli Aid, and the Global Imaginaries of Indian Development." The American Historical Review, Volume 125, Issue 4, pp. 1175 - 1204. https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhaa233
    Abstract
    In the first two decades of Indian independence, members of the Sarvodaya movement—India’s popular, non-state program for Gandhian social uplift—sought to partner with representatives of Israel’s developmental apparatus to build a communal agricultural settlement at Gandhi’s former ashram. Working against the lure of large-scale, Nehruvian development, Cold War politics, and cool formal diplomatic relations between the two countries, Indian votaries of small-scale rural uplift saw in Israeli collective agriculture the chance to give Gandhian “constructive work” a practical program rooted in voluntary, village-based socialism—a goal that eluded Gandhi himself. Israeli planners saw their work with Indian civil society as a means of securing the formal diplomatic sanction largely stymied by India’s relationship with the broader Muslim world. Gandhi’s vision of the Indian “village Republic” and the Israeli model of agrarian collectivism both owed their origins to nineteenth-century utopian thought, and both projects felt anachronistic by the time of their decade-long joint effort, whose initial promise succumbed to realpolitik and the hegemony of the developmental state. Yet their work foregrounds the enduring international stake that Indian civil society maintained in development and nation-building, long presumed to have withered with the arrival of the nation-state.
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