Birthday Celebrations and Democracy..!

A few days ago, newspapers greeted us with full page ads all trying to outdo each other in wishing the PM on his birthday. We also watched lavish celebrations and wondered whether we were still a democracy—or whether we had quietly slipped into some ancient monarchy.

Streets decorated, speeches thundered, and sycophants gushing as if the nation itself had been born on that day.

Now, don’t get me wrong. Every birthday is a milestone. Seventy-five is no small feat, especially in a country where life expectancy often struggles to reach those numbers. But should the birthday of a leader, however tall, be turned into a national spectacle?

Isn’t it the Republic we swore to honor, not one individual within it?

Democracy, as I learnt in dusty civics classrooms, rests on a simple truth: no man is greater than the system. Leaders are not owners, they are caretakers—temporary custodians of the Constitution. They come, they go, but the Constitution remains.

To elevate one person above the system, even for a day, is to send the wrong signal—that loyalty to a man is greater than loyalty to the nation.

Imagine if Modi, on his 75th, had chosen differently. A quiet day of service. A hospital visit without cameras. A lunch with farmers, not photo ops. A whispered prayer, not a booming rally. That would have been a masterstroke—true humility wrapped in silence. The sort of gesture that lingers longer than fireworks.

But sadly we our Indian leaders love fanfare: We love to clap louder, make our garland bigger, and the cake taller, with posters stretching from one lamp-post to the next.

And yes, we the citizens too are to blame. By cheering birthdays as if they were Independence Day, we blur the line between servant and master.

I say leave the grand shows for the days that belong to the nation: August 15th and January 26th. Those are the days worth parades and fireworks. Days when we celebrate the birth of India’s freedom and the birth of her Constitution. The rest, whether it’s Modi at 75 or any leader at 80, should be marked with dignity, simplicity, and humility.

Because, let’s be honest, the louder the music at a leader’s birthday, the weaker the message of democracy becomes. The bigger the cut-outs, the smaller the confidence. It is almost as if the candles on the cake are meant to distract us from the cracks in the system.

So here’s my birthday wish for every leader, not just Modi: Blow out your candles if you must, but don’t blow out the light of democracy. For while birthdays come once a year, the Republic must breathe every single day…!

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12 thoughts on “Birthday Celebrations and Democracy..!”

  1. How many prime ministers celebrated birthday as per your expectation?How can Modi be exception to it?Why leaders should be blame ?We the people should be blamed for such celebrations.No god asks us to celebrate his birthday but we do,isn’t it sir?

  2. How many prime ministers celebrated birthday as per your expectation?How can Modi be exception?We the people should be blamed.No god asks us to celebrate his birthday or demise,still we celebrate,isn’t it sir?

  3. I completely agree.

    I can almost hear our Honorable Prime Minister whispering in the background….

    “Thank you for your heartfelt wishes,
    Happy birthday to me.

    Pray, please stop the fireworks and the circus meant for me.

    I can’t blow out the candles
    ‘coz my lungs are toxic
    from pollution and felling trees.

    I prefer a warm hug and some ginger tea.
    If you want me to feel special, a humble plea.

    Come, let’s celebrate unity and democracy.
    Eliminate autocracy in Bangladesh, terrorism in Pakistan and discord in bureaucracy.

    Let us join together, work for peace
    With dignity, simplicity and humility.

    Vande Bharat. Jai Hind.”

  4. In a true democracy, the spotlight belongs to the stage, not the star.

    When a leader’s birthday becomes a carnival, we risk mistaking the drumroll for the symphony.

    Candles are meant to guide, not dazzle. Let the Republic be our sun—steady, unwavering—not eclipsed by fleeting comets.

  5. If service is what you are called for, service is what we give. It’s really surprising that at the exchequers cost of the tax payers all the pomp and gusto. Truly I quote the Bible, your right hand should not know what the left hand does. Service means servitude not the Pharasee attitude of pomp and celibacy, which I beloved priminister is.

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