Back to Home
 
   
  Bhavan's Periodicals
  Bhavan's Dimdima (English)
  Bhavan's Journal (English)
  Navneet (Hindi)
  Navneet-Samarpan(Gujarati)
  Samvid (Sanskrit)
  Bharatiya Vidya (Sanskrit)
  Astrological Journal (Eng. & Guj.)
   
  Glimpses From The Past
  The best of
Bhavan's Journal
1954 - 2003.

It is a small sample of the Bhavan's Journal's
half century of life in print. It gives but a runaway glimpse of the past.
  Read on>>
  A Wonder Magazine
  It is read by the young and the old, the rich and the poor, men, women and children. It is bought because it speaks the spiritual language and represents the collective wisdom of centuries.
  Read on>>
   
  Advertise With Us
  We have various options for advertising in Bhavan's Journal.
For more details and Rate Card.
  Click Here
   
  Contact us
   
 

Bhavan's Journal

Glimpses From The Past
The best of Bhavan's Journal: 1954 - 2003
Back To  List of Articles
The Future Administrator
Dr. Zakir Husain
(Published in 1962 Annual Number)

 

(...Contd)

These and similar habits and attitudes cling to the administrators as remnants of a past they can never do too much to shake off.
The people still seem, at times, to look upon the administration as if it were not their own, seem to enjoy finding fault with it, seem to take delight in the use of their ingenuity to evade what the administrator is commissioned to enforce.
This is thoroughly bad—the one side as bad as the other—for things have so fundamentally changed. We are face to face with a new life with new problems. The attitude of the people and that of the administrator have to undergo a radical mutual change. The people have to realise that the administration is their own, their instrument for the execution of their will.
The administration has to realise unmistakably that it is such an instrument and to take pride in the privilege of being able to serve and through service to educate its masters, the people.
In order to enable you to do this, you will have to develop attitudes which are essentially a product of the process of self-education.
The first is the attitude of consciously and consistently preferring service to rule.
In the expanding democratic life of this country, there is not much room for people who find their greatest satisfaction in imposing their will on others and in demanding and receiving unquestioning compliance.
The administrator today has to work among people who after long years of sullen unquestioning compliance have at last come into their own.
This should affect their whole attitude to human relations with the people in general and with the teams in which they work, their attitude to superiors and inferiors. It will perhaps lead you to evolve a technique of open and frank communication in good faith allowing no tales to be secretively carried to you or by you. It will perhaps help you in not being in a hurry to judge or to let down a subordinate and in not making special pets or favourites. It will perhaps give you an inner resistance against sycophants. It will, perhaps, give you a quality of self-criticism and inner vigilance which may enable you to resist what pleases you to hear. A person who has developed this pattern of attitudes can fruitfully cooperate with others and get the hearty cooperation of others. And this is to be one of the outstanding qualities of future administrators in our country.
There is the attitude of absolute impartiality towards and equal commitment to work for the welfare of all you serve.
You should learn to set your face resolutely against any narrow sectional loyalties. Your loyalty is to the people of India without any distinction, to their politically organised society, the Indian Union.
If you succeed in developing these attitudes, you will be anxious, wherever you may be placed, to do whatever lies in your power to enlist the active and effective cooperation of every Indian villager in the great enterprise of building up a life free from hunger, want, ignorance and disease, a pattern of non-exploitative and graceful living together.

Previous Page
  Latest Issue
 
  Read Online
  The magazine is available online.
REGISTER
and read the entire magazine online
TOTALLY FREE!
   Log in To Read>>  
  We add the Journal on 7th and 22nd of every month.
   
  Subscribe
To
Bhavan's Journal
  Read it.
Collect it.

Preserve it
For future generations

  Subscription Form 
   
  A Worthwhile Gift
  Give Your Friends -
Subscription to
Bhavan's Journal
as Special Gift.
  Gift Subscription Form
   
This Site is Created and Maintained by Amrita Bharati, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan