Updated On: 12 July, 2021 07:13 AM IST | Mumbai | Ajaz Ashraf
With the passing of the popular culture icon and the Jesuit priest, who embodied the ideas of equality and dignity, the lights of the Republic are dimming, turning India into a shadow of what it had wanted to be

Bollywood legend Dilip Kumar, and Fr Stan Swamy died last week
The lights illuminating the constitutional idea of India are going out one by one. Two such lights were extinguished last week—Jesuit priest and activist Stan Swamy and film-star and popular culture icon Dilip Kumar. They took flight from an India evolving in contrast to the vision of its founding fathers, an India bristling with sectarian hate, riven by growing inequalities, and ruled by those who insist on steamrolling dissent. In mourning their death, we subliminally mourn the subversion of the idea of India.
Dilip Kumar was born Yousuf Khan. His first box office hit was Jugnu, in 1947, the year in which India won Independence and was also partitioned. As his popularity grew, Kumar became a clinching argument for India’s multiculturalism, its religious inclusiveness. Since Muslims enjoyed the same citizenship rights as Hindus, they did not have to leave secular India for Islamic Pakistan.