India’s Olympic Achievement: Indifference

Dalrymple’s recent piece on India in the Telegraph got a lot of attention, and a few days ago he returned, in the pages of the Wall Street Journal (h/t Neunder), to a point he made therein: that India’s disinterest in the Olympics speaks well of it.
It is not that India tried and failed. It did not try, and therein lies its peculiar wisdom and glory. Almost alone of the nations of the world, it more or less ignored the Games. But it is India, whose government does nothing to encourage (or deter) its athletes, that is right, not the rest of the world.
There is a bimodal distribution of countries that are enthusiastic about winning Olympic medals: They are either populist or ideological. Britain, for example, falls into the former category. Woe betide the British person who dares to suggest that his country’s excellent performance at the Games wasn’t a sign of national regeneration but of national frivolity and meretriciousness, to which its population and its leaders now turn as naturally as some flowers turn to the sun.
There are no prizes for guessing into which category falls North Korea, which did about a hundred times better at the Games than India. There is nothing a totalitarian regime likes more than devoting its citizens to pointless activities, such as throwing the javelin, and then claiming, when one of them does it better than anyone else in the world, that it proves the brilliance of the dictator and the beneficent efficiency of his rule. How else could such excellence result?

6 thoughts on “India’s Olympic Achievement: Indifference

  1. Jaxon

    Good article; I’m largely in agreement I do wonder though.
    I’m rather impressed with Rye Barcott (even if his ‘charismatic’ style, is a bit much) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ecPakFT-Kxc

    His work in Kibera, as I understand it, has used football as an important means of breaking down tribal differences.

    This is also very impressive 11:00 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9F7z9LLYxf8
    made possible by spin off technology from sending things into space?

    Reply
  2. Jaxon

    Yeah, I suppose his essay The Uses of Corruption where he contrasts corruption in Italy with bureaucracy in Britain is in a similar vein.

    Still I get his point, and I still largely agree – greatness in sport a great people does not make – least, that’s how I read it.

    Reply

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