As West Asia burns & fuel prices threaten to bite, Prime Minister’s radio programme this month became something rarer – a carefully worded act of statecraft, asking 140 crore citizens to hold steady, trust government, and find strength in stories of a nation quietly building itself from the ground up
Srinagar, Mar 30: Prime Minister Narendra Modi used his monthly radio address on Sunday to speak directly to a nation watching an unfamiliar kind of anxiety unfold, not a domestic crisis this time, but a war raging in a neighbourhood that tens of millions of Indian families call home. In a 'Mann Ki Baat' that balanced geopolitical gravity with grassroots celebration, Modi struck a tone that was part statesman, part motivator, warning against panic and political opportunism while spotlighting the quiet revolutions taking shape in India's villages, classrooms, rivers and rooftops. The centrepiece of this month's address was unmistakable: the ongoing conflict in West Asia, which Modi acknowledged has been raging for a month and shows no sign of abating. For a Prime Minister who has carefully cultivated India's image as a global bridge-builder, maintaining ties with both Russia and the West through the Ukraine war, this was a moment to reaffirm that balancing act while speaking plainly to citizens with family in the Gulf. "Millions of our family members, near and dear ones, live in these countries, especially working in the Gulf countries," Modi said, expressing gratitude to the Gulf nations for providing support to over one crore Indians. He did not name the warring parties. He did not take sides. But he was explicit about what is at stake for India: energy security. The region, he noted, is a "major centre of India's energy needs", and the conflict is already creating a global crisis around petrol and diesel. What followed was a passage that will be parsed carefully by political observers. Modi appealed for unity, warned against the spread of rumours, and in pointed language rebuked those "politicising even this issue", saying there was "no place for self-serving politics" in a matter concerning 140 crore citizens. He urged the public to trust only official government communications. Critics will note the irony of a head of government asking citizens to rely exclusively on the state in an information environment already shaped by government-friendly media. Supporters will read it as responsible statecraft in a crisis moment. Either way, the message was unambiguous: this is not the time for dissent, it is the time for national solidarity. Having addressed the crisis, Modi pivoted to
the register he is most comfortable in, cataloguing the grassroots energy of an India he presents as perpetually building, growing, and rediscovering itself. This section of the address was, by design, a counterweight to anxiety. The Gyan Bharatam Survey, an initiative to catalogue manuscripts from across India, received warm mention, with specific examples spanning from Tai-script manuscripts in Arunachal Pradesh to copper plate inscriptions from Rajasthan and Tibetan manuscripts from Ladakh's Hemis Monastery. The cultural breadth was deliberate: in a month shadowed by war, Modi was painting India as a civilisation too rich and too rooted to be destabilised. The MY Bharat organisation drew praise for its budget quiz that engaged nearly twelve lakh young Indians, with a subsequent essay competition drawing 1.6 lakh participants. Modi read excerpts from young writers across Telangana, Bihar, Punjab and Odisha, a geography-spanning exercise in showcasing youth engagement with policy. Individual sports achievers also received their moment: Gulveer Singh, whose sub-one-hour New York half-marathon finish made him the first Indian to achieve the feat; and 17-year-old squash player Anahat Singh, now among the top-20 women players in the PSA World Rankings. These were not incidental mentions; they were building blocks in a narrative of a young, achieving India. Two policy areas received sustained attention in the address: water conservation and solar energy, both central to the government's climate and rural development agenda. On water, Modi drew on community examples from Tripura's Jampui Hills, Chhattisgarh's Korea district and Telangana's Mancherial district, where village-level innovations, such as rooftop harvesting, recharge ponds, and soak pits, have measurably improved groundwater levels. The cumulative data he cited, nearly fifty lakh artificial water harvesting structures and seventy thousand Amrit Sarovars, was aimed at presenting the Jal Sanchay Abhiyan as a mass movement, not a government scheme. The solar section was more personal, profiling individual beneficiaries of the PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana: Payal Munjpara of Gujarat, now a solar technician and entrepreneur; Arun Kumar of Meerut, selling surplus electricity back to the grid; Muralidhar of Jaipur, who freed his farming from diesel costs; and Riang tribe villages in Tripura where solar mini-grids have allowed children to study after dark. The pattern was a consistent large policy, human face. Women's economic agency ran quietly through
the address. Sujata Bhuyan of Odisha built a fish farming enterprise in the Hirakud reservoir. Havva Gulzar of Lakshadweep expanded her fish processing unit into a cold storage. Nagaland's Chizami village women preserve 150 varieties of traditional seeds in a community bank. These profiles were not coincidental; they formed a steady undercurrent asserting that women's enterprise is now a structural feature of India's rural economy, not an exception. Read together, the March 'Mann Ki Baat' reveals a government navigating a delicate moment. The West Asia remarks were the most geopolitically charged Modi has made in this format for years, and the decision to speak about an external conflict at all marks a shift from his usual practice of keeping the programme focused on domestic achievement. The instruction to trust only government communication, issued in the same breath as warnings about rumours, will invite scrutiny. In a democracy, that line sits uncomfortably close to an argument against independent media and opposition voices. That tension between the genuine warmth of the programme's grassroots sections and the political weight of its opening is what makes this month's address worth reading not just as inspiration, but as a policy signal. India is watching a war it did not start, protecting interests it cannot afford to lose, and asking its citizens to stay united and trust their government. Whether that trust is earned will depend less on what was said on a Sunday morning radio address and more on what petrol prices do by next month. In the end, 'Mann Ki Baat' endures because it reflects something real, a Prime Minister who speaks not from a distance but from the ground up, drawing strength from fisherwomen in Odisha, solar entrepreneurs in Gujarat, seed-keepers in Nagaland and athletes breaking records in New York. This March, with a war raging in the neighbourhood and global uncertainty at its peak, Modi's message was not one of alarm but of anchored confidence, reminding every citizen that a nation which has weathered COVID, economic headwinds and global turbulence with unity and resolve carries within itself everything it needs to emerge stronger once again. The microphone may belong to one voice, but the strength it speaks of belongs to all 140 crore.
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