Published Date: 03-11-2025 Issue: Vol. 2 No. 11 (2025): November 2025 Published Paper PDF: Download
Abstract: This paper examines Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya’s philosophy of Integral Humanism within the historical context of post-colonial India, focusing on its contribution to reconstructing Indian political thought after independence. Emerging in the 1960s, Upadhyaya’s ideas provided a moral and cultural counterpoint to the dominant Western ideologies of capitalism and socialism. He envisioned a system rooted in India’s civilizational ethos, emphasizing the integral development of human beings—body, mind, intellect, and soul. His thought sought to harmonize individual freedom with social responsibility, material progress with moral order, and democracy with cultural continuity. The study situates Upadhyaya’s philosophy within the broader intellectual landscape of post-colonial reconstruction, when India faced the challenge of nation-building amidst competing ideological frameworks. The central argument is that Upadhyaya’s thought represents a unique effort to indigenize modern political concepts through the moral vocabulary of dharma and Antyodaya (upliftment of the last person). While Gandhi had laid the moral foundation of Indian nationalism, Upadhyaya extended this into a systematic philosophical framework aimed at constructing a self-sustaining, ethical polity. The paper uses historical-analytical and interpretive methods to trace the evolution of Upadhyaya’s ideas and assess their impact on India’s socio-political discourse. Findings reveal that his philosophy not only challenged the ideological dependency on the West but also proposed a vision of governance grounded in ethics, cultural pluralism, and decentralized democracy. However, its translation into policy and legal structures remains partial and contested. The study concludes that Upadhyaya’s Integral Humanism offers enduring insights into the moral and cultural dimensions of nationhood, making it a vital resource for rethinking Indian political thought in the 21st century.
Keywords: Deendayal Upadhyaya, Integral Humanism, post-colonial India, Indian political thought, cultural nationalism, dharma, Antyodaya.