July 18, 2016

Swarajya - a big tent content is behind a paywall

The Marxist view detaches the Hindu tradition of the Bhakti movement, with its strong spiritual core, from the Indian freedom struggle. But a closer look at historical facts shows the undeniable connection between the two.

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Swarajya - a big tent for liberal right of centre discourse that reaches out, engages and caters to the new India.

We welcome your contributions (drafts!), criticism, feedback and praise. Fill up this form and we will get back to you at the earliest!
If you are sending us a draft for publication please have a look at our style guide below and make sure your draft adheres to it. Contributors are requested to follow the Swarajya style guide posted here. Compliance with the style guide will help us greatly in ensuring error-free posts with a consistent and meaningful style of presentation.
Swarajya accepts submissions to the blogs from its readers. Submissions can be broadly under one of the subcategories of commentary – on social, economic and political issues, book reviews of relevant books and Longform – where the author can delve into any issue of choice either with a series of posts or a detailed piece.
Commentary
Swarajya invites contributions in the ‘commentary’ section on social, economic and political issues of the day. Submissions made in this category must be between 750 to 2,000 words. These submissions must be made exclusive to Swarajya and they can be hosted on personal blogs only after a week of its publishing on Swarajya.
Book Reviews
Swarajya accepts book reviews of socially, economically and politically relevant books. These submissions too must be exclusive to Swarajya which can be hosted on other sites after a week of its publishing on Swarajya. Ideally, these reviews are expected to be less than 3,000 words.
Longform Pieces
Swarajya welcomes original research output in the field of humanities, and would publish such works under the category of ‘Longform’. The author can choose to present his work either as one single article – in which case the article must not be more than 10,000 words or as a series of posts – where each post is no more than 3,000 words long.
General Guidelines
Do's and don'ts 
The argument should be made clearly and concisely. 
Articles should not be or contain rants against an individual or an organisation; issues should be addressed and critiqued. Articles should refrain from ad hominems – focus on the argument, not the person! 
Check grammar and spelling before submission – an article riddled with errors is just more work for our copy editors 
Data and quotes must be cited. No article based on unsubstantiated source material will be published. If the source is private, mentioning it should be reconsidered. 
If you can keep it short please do so! 
Formatting 
To the extent possible send us plain-text drafts. Submissions in other formats like .pdf, etc. makes our job of publishing your draft slightly difficult. 
Use British spellings. 
Single indent all quotations that are longer than 3 lines. 
While quoting from a source, identify the source in clear terms and also provide a hyperlink if the source is available online. 
All abbreviations – including the common ones must be expanded at its first occurrence. 
Images used can be in jpeg, png or gif formats. Images must not be copyright restricted. 
Provide a caption for all the tables and images used in the article. 
Now that you’ve read it all go ahead and submit a draft to editor@swarajyamag.com

Our Editorial Philosophy
There is before the country the great problem of how to secure welfare without surrendering the individual to be swallowed up by the State, how to get the best return for the taxes the people pay and how to preserve spiritual values while working for better material standards of life. This journal will serve all these purposes. -Rajaji
What does Swarajya 2.0 believe in? 
Free markets 
individual freedom 
individual enterprise 
integrity of our country 
celebrating and promoting our cultural heritage 
gender equality, 
secularism which does not pander a separation of religion from politics 
opportunity for every Indian to achieve his/ her potential 
democracy. 
A reduced role of the State in general but a more effective role in its focus areas 
defence 
internal security 
foreign policy 
justice system 
facilitating business 
investing in the national interest 
physical and social infrastructure. 
Our identity

Swarajya will be an independent voice, looking at the world based on our core principles. We will not be a mouthpiece of any political party or individual. Of course, our commentary may at times be supportive of some whose convictions converge with ours.
Swarajya will be the confident voice of a New India. We will not be inflexibly doctrinaire. We should be bold enough to be accommodative, or even to change stances when our principles demand that. This is strength, not weakness. We will allow counterpoints to be raised. We will carry rejoinders, as Counterpoint, or to Counterpoint.

What is Swarajya?
Swarajya is a 58-year-old independent media start-up. We are a new-age media company with a rich and storied legacy.
What is this rich and storied legacy?
In 1956, journalist Khasa Subba Rau with the patronage of C Rajagoplachari “Rajaji”, India’s last Governor-General, freedom fighter and statesman hailed by Mahatma Gandhi as his “conscience keeper”, launched a weekly magazine called Swarajya.
Swarajya was intended to convey the founders’ quest to translate the joy of freedom not only from foreign rule, but full freedom as defined and promised by the preamble of our constitution.
Swarajya represented the first coherent intellectual response to Nehruvian socialism and the ever expanding Big State in newly independent India.
What did Swarajya stand for?
Despite the odds stacked against it and long before it became fashionable, Swarajya championed individual liberty, private enterprise, the minimal State and cultural rootedness. Explaining the magazine’s mission in its early days, Rajaji wrote:
“There is before the country the great problem of how to secure welfare without surrendering the individual to be swallowed up by the State, how to get the best return for the taxes the people pay and how to preserve spiritual values while working for better material standards of life. This journal will serve all these purposes.”
So what is the new Swarajya or Swarajya 2.0 about?
Rajaji’s words remain as true as ever, especially now! Swarajya will be an authoritative voice of reason representing the liberal centre-right point of view.
In its second coming, Swarajya remains committed to the ideals of individual liberty unmediated by the State or any other institution, freedom of expression and enterprise, national interest, and India’s vast and ancient cultural heritage.
Swarajya will be a big tent for liberal right of centre discourse that reaches out, engages and caters to the new India in a manner that’s not arcane, abstruse, arrogant or self-referencing.
The founders of the 21st century Swarajya merely see themselves as custodians of the legacy of Rajaji.
Why Swarajya now?
The battles that Rajaji and his colleagues fought through the pages of Swarajya are relevant, in fact more so, even today.
Irrespective of the changes in government, India remains by and large a populist nanny state where the State makes choices on behalf of the citizens, and socialism permeates most layers of policymaking. This has resulted in our institutions and India itself remaining weak socially, politically, economically and culturally rootless.
With the world’s largest number of aspiring young citizens, it would be a travesty if India’s tryst with destiny were to continue to be subverted. The world’s attention will again be on India and this time it must not squander the opportunity to give all its citizens a quality and dignity of life that they deserve.
It is time to break free of the ideological shackles of the past and gain Swarajya.
What will Swarajya’s focus areas be?
Swarajya’s focus will be on what we have identified as the Social, Political, Economic and Cultural (What we refer to as SPEC) life of India.
So, how will this be done?
Swarajya will have two avatars to begin with—a digital daily and a monthly print magazine. It will reach out, inform, engage and energise the concerned and thinking reader through easy to read commentary, analysis, research, satire and opinion. It will use the tools of the 21st century, like tablet and smartphone versions and provide daily commentary, blogs, insta-opinions, interactive multimedia content, podcasts, videos and lots of other web exclusives. All this in addition to the monthly print version.
What is Swarajya’s mission?
The new Swarajya’s primary focus would be to channelize the positive impulses of an overwhelmingly young nation towards confidence and punch commensurate to its true heft. Socially, Politically, Economically and Culturally. Swarajya would be at the vanguard of the new Indian renaissance.

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