So Near And Yet So Far
V. Suryanarayan
So Near And Yet So Far by By Navrekha Sharma and Baladas Ghoshal Market Asia, Singapore , Research Asia, South Asia Research Series, 2014, 306 pp., price not mentioned.
September 2016, volume 40, No 9

Why is the United States the most powerful country in the world today? I always pose this question to students in my inaugural lecture on contemporary Southeast Asia. Students provide several answers. The United States is the most powerful country in the world; it has vast economic resources; technologically it is the most advanced country, etc. While the above answers contain elements of truth, I clinch the issue by stating that the United States is the first country in the world to realize that knowledge is power. American Universities—Harvard, Yale, Columbia, MIT to name some—attract the best talents from countries across the world and they set in motion concepts and ideas which we in the rest of the world blindly accept.

One such concept which originated in the early 1950s was the division of our part of the world into South Asia and Southeast Asia. The Indian School of International Studies, started in 1955, thanks to the initiative taken by Pandit Hriday Nath Kunzru and Professor A. Appadorai accepted this division. It is necessary to remind ourselves that Indian historians like R.C. Majumdar, Nilakanta Sastri, H.B. Sarkar and B.R. Chatterjee used the term Southeast Asia to cover both South Asia and Southeast Asia. By accepting the American premise that South and Southeast Asia are two distinct geographical entities, countries which are close to us geographically and culturally became intellectually distant. Few people in India realize the fact that the distance between Indira Point and Pu Breush in Northwest Sumatra is only 92 nautical miles, less than the distance between Chennai and Tirupati. Similarly the distance between Indira Point and the nearest place in Thailand is less than the distance between Chennai and Madurai.

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