P A R T -
2
C H A P T E R -
2 0
A C O D E
O F C O N D U C T
Writing the Preface to Professor
Weeramantry’s “ The Law in Crisis”, Lord Denning has said:
“Civilized society appears to be
disintegrating, Minorities openly defy the law for their own ends.
Terrorists seize hostages and threaten to kill them.Workmen set up
picket lines outside power stations and threaten to bring the country
to a stand still; students occupy buildings and prevent the running
of their Universities. Only too often their threats succeed. The peaceful
majority give in. They surrender.
Moral and spiritual values too appear
to be at a low ebb. The sanctions of religion have lost their force.
Schools and teachers
take much interest
in social
sciences. They explain how people behave. They seek to help the misfits.
But they do not set forth standards
of conduct. They do not tell people how to behave.”
Who must then tell the people how
to behave? Scriptures have prescribed the codes of conduct. Different
religions have different scriptures but interestingly most, nay, all
the religions harp upon the same virtues for adoption in life and
commend acceptance thereof. Like all the rivers that originate from
one source carry the same water, all religions originating from Divinity
carry essentially the same message. A code of conduct acceptable to
all religions can be evolved without much difficulty and the same
should be the code for the Indian society and every Indian must be
required to fill in line with it.
Social conduct is not being enforced
today on account of failure to identify what exactly it is. Again,
the moral fabric having disappeared, this censure of either of individual
or social conscience does not operate. The law still continues to
be different on many aspects from what social conduct would warrant
it to be and even in the covered field, enforcement is poor and ineffective.
The code of conduct( including decency) should be universally taught—
at home, in school, in the establishments— private and public — and everywhere in the community. Awareness
is the first step. Most people would be abiding. Those who fail should
be subjected to enforcement.
Without community discipline, no
national character can be built up. And without national character,
a nation cannot indeed progress.
The mass media has a large role
to play in this regard and the commission proposes to deal with the
same next.