Jaishankar unveils plaque at ‘Bhoodan Grove’ in Israel

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar will be meeting his Israeli counterpart Yair Lapid today

October 18, 2021 02:01 pm | Updated 02:08 pm IST - Jerusalem

Dr. S. Jaishankar also visited the Indian Cemetery at Talpiot in Jerusalem and paid homage to the brave Indian soldiers who made the supreme sacrifie during World War I.

Dr. S. Jaishankar also visited the Indian Cemetery at Talpiot in Jerusalem and paid homage to the brave Indian soldiers who made the supreme sacrifie during World War I.

External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar on Monday unveiled the “Bhoodan Grove” plaque at the Jerusalem Forest, bringing out lesser-known aspects of Indo-Israel relations before the establishment of full-fledged diplomatic ties between the two countries.

With an objective of keeping Mahatma Gandhi’s concept of the village as the basic unit of development, Indian leaders who were exploring ways to implement the socialist ideals of the Sarvodaya movement namely, ‘Bhoodan and Gramdan’, made several visits to Israel to study the social structure of different forms of Israel’s communal and cooperative institutions -- ‘Kibbutzim and Moshavim’.

Jayaprakash Narayan, the leader of the Sarvodaya movement, visited Israel in September 1958 on a nine-day visit as the guest of Histadrut, the Israel Federation of Labour.

His visit received wide attention in the Israeli media, which warmly welcomed him and carried long biographical articles. He met then Israeli Prime Minister David Ben Gurion and visited Kfar Saba in central Israel, and Kibbutz Afikim near the Sea of Galilee of northern Israel during his stay.

Narayan’s visit was followed by that of a 27-member Sarvodaya team, which during its six-month study tour in Israel from February-August 1960 spent time in Tel Aviv and Kfar Giladi in northern Israel.

On their way back to India, they planted the “Bhoodan Grove” in Jerusalem Forest on May 22, 1960.

Mr. Jaishankar described the visit by Narayan and Bhoodan workers as “an aspect of our shared history which hasn’t received the attention it deserved”.

Mr. Jaishankar also called the unveiling of the plaque very “timely” as last year was the 125th birth anniversary of Acharya Vinoba Bhave.

“But there is also a larger message in what we are doing today. It is partly a message that our relationship is very human centric… that of the importance of going green and most of all I think it is a reminder to all of us that between India and Israel we need to keep finding new ways, better ways, more deeper societal connect and that is at the heart of the progress of our ties,” the Minister said.

Mr. Jaishankar also shared information about this shared historical connection with the Indian Jewish community in his address on Sunday evening.

“In modern post-Independence times, there are also the relatively less known aspects of how major socialist political leaders and streams in India felt a kinship with the kibbutz movement in Israel. And, in a quest to build on the Gandhian concept of ashram or village as a self-sustaining unit of development,” he said.

“Jayaprakash Narayan, one of our most prominent political leaders and theorists associated with our Independence struggle, visited Israel in 1958, and many followers of Vinoba Bhave, another towering leader of our independence movement, visited Israel in 1960 to understand the kibbutz movement here,” Mr. Jaishankar added.

The details of the intense cooperation between Sarva Seva Sangh, the group charged with carrying on Gandhi’s “constructive programme” of social uplift, and Israeli Moshavim and Kibbutzim was last year also published in an article, “The Kibbutz and the Ashram: Sarvodaya Agriculture, Israeli Aid, and the Global Imaginaries of Indian Development,” by Benjamin Siegel in the American Historical review.

The Sarva Seva Sangh hosted Benjamin Halevy, a Ukraine-born agriculturalist recruited from the Kfar Yehoshua Moshav (or cooperative agricultural settlement) in Israel’s Jezreel Valley, for two years after reports emerged of the prodigious yields that Halevy was coaxing from basalt soil.

“The kibbutz at Gandhi’s ashram would not be merely an Israeli model adapted to Indian contexts. For members of the Sarvodaya movement, India’s hugely popular program dedicated to Gandhian practice after his death, the settlement would serve as a living rebuke to votaries of coercive socialist agriculture and modernization theory alike,” the author writes in the article.

“An Israeli-designed collective agricultural settlement in the spiritual home of the late Mahatma would show that a popular programme of cooperative uplift was not unsuited to the economic and social realities of post-colonial India, proof that Gandhian economics was on a par with the age’s most daring political experiments,” he adds.

The External Affairs Minister also laid a wreath at Holocaust Museum Yad Vashem to pay respects to six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust.

Mr. Jaishankar will be meeting his Israeli counterpart Yair Lapid during the day besides visiting the Indian hospice in Jerusalem’s old city.

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