The Lieutenant by Kate Grenville

On Board the First Fleet that bought convicts to Australia in 1788 was a young lieutenant of marines, William Dawes. Although nominally a soldier, he was a considerable scholar in Austronamy, mathematics and languages. The records left of the language of the indigenous people of Sydney area (Cadigal tribe) is by far the most extensive we have. … Continue reading “The Lieutenant by Kate Grenville”

On Board the First Fleet that bought convicts to Australia in 1788 was a young lieutenant of marines, William Dawes. Although nominally a soldier, he was a considerable scholar in Austronamy, mathematics and languages. The records left of the language of the indigenous people of Sydney area (Cadigal tribe) is by far the most extensive we have. It contains not only word lists and speculations about the grammatical structure of the language, but conversations between him and the indigenous people, particular a young girl, Patyegarang. 
These are the basic facts , on which the extraordinary life of Lieutenant Daniel Rooke is based, in the book ‘The Lieutenant ‘ by Kate Grenville. Most of the characters are based on the accounts of the first settlers in New South Wales (NSW) .   It is interesting to note that, all cadigal words and conversations quoted in the book have been taken verbatim from Dawes’ language notebooks.
The story describes the clash of civilizations, when the white man meets the natives of Sydney, NSW.  For the white man, be it the marines or the convicts (declared unfit to live in the civilized world of Europeans), the natives were simply savages, though for Lieutenant Rooke, it was difficult to say who was more civilized. The author compares the two peoples, through the eyes of Lieutenant Rooke, not based on the advancement in science and technology and standard of living , but based on quality of life and from a linguistic point of view.

At one point of time, The linguist in Rooke is so excited , when he discovers that the cadigals had different words for “You and me’, ‘all of us’ or “me and these others but not you’, all embedded in the pronoun !While English makes only the crudest of distinctions, the natives were a race of people using a language as supple as that of Sophocles and Homer”

The xenophobic and culturally blind Europeans have caused  untold miseries to natives of america, and Australia. When you think of the word ‘holocaust’ what comes to mind is the history of Jews. But there has been a holocaust on much larger scale, perpetrated by the then civilized world. It has been estimated that by the seventeenth century, more than 50 million native Americans perished as a result of war, disease, enslavement, and deliberate brutalities of Europeans.

Who is a savage, what is savagery ? A savage is considered “A brutal and vicious person”. But don’t seemingly civilized people act more cruelly to their own fellowmen ?  A scene in the novel, illustrates the point. The entire British marine forces form up in their ceremonial  best, for a punishment parade. A man who had stolen potatoes from the garden was being flogged methodically, mercilessly, till his back is reduced to a bloody pulp, all in the name of impartial justice and iron discipline. There is only one person on the scene who sees just ‘cruelty’  and nothing else. He is the only one  dares to protest and he is a native whom they call a savage.

Nothing tells more about a civilization than its untranslatable words.  I quote from the book ;
————–
“She went over to the fireplace and held out her hands to the coal…Then she pressed his fingers with her own….He felt her skin warm and smooth….. Their hands were of the same temperature now.
“Putuwa”, she said.
From her gestures and actions he deduced that word ‘putuwa’ to mean warming one’s hands by the fire and then squeezing gently the fingers of another person. In English it required a long rigmarole of words….. Tagaran was teaching him a word and by it she was showing him a world”
—————

A very interesting book indeed !

Corruption in the Congress Party

“Congressmen are not sufficiently interested in constructive work; we must recognize the fact that social order of our dreams cannot come through the congress party of today…..There is so much corruption today, that it frightens me.  Everybody wants to carry so many votes in his pocket because votes give power” This is not a current statement by … Continue reading “Corruption in the Congress Party”

“Congressmen are not sufficiently interested in constructive work; we must recognize the fact that social order of our dreams cannot come through the congress party of today…..There is so much corruption today, that it frightens me.  Everybody wants to carry so many votes in his pocket because votes give power”

This is not a current statement by an Opposition leader or Anna Hazare. It was by Mahatma Gandhi, sometime in Nov 1947 (Source: The Life of Mahatma Gandhi by Louis Fischer)

His limited experience told him that legislators and judges were too close to  the Govt machinery of power to check and balance the executive ; only those outside the Govt, he contended , could check and balance those in Govt.

How can it be done ? He goes on in his address to a conference of Constructive Workers (the name for Civil Society in those days)” Under adult suffrage, if we are worth our salt, we should have such a hold on people that whomsoever we choose would be returned….”

He visualized a regular dialogue between people in power and the “Group of Constructive Workers”. He had even scheduled a meeting to take place in March 1948 at Sevagram. The meeting actually took place  , with President Rajendra Prasad , Prime minister Nehru and Maulana Azad from the Goverment , and the Constructive Workers Group led by Vinobha Bhave and comprising of Jayaprakash Narayan, the economic thinker JC Kumarappa, the scholar and reformer Kakasaheb Kalelkar, the teacher Ashadevi Aryanayakam, the balladeer Tukdoji Maharaj, the expert on tribal affairs AV Thakkar, the intrepid rescuer of abducted women during Partition, Mridula Sarabhai, the Gandhian leader from Andhra, Konda Venkatappaiya, the khadi pioneer, Srikrishnadas Jaju.

There is an account of the meeting narrated by none other than Mahatma Gandhi’s grandson Shri Gopal Krishna Gandhi in Hindustan Times.

Television through the years

Why is it that the entire main stream media went gaga over Anna Hazare’s reality show at Ramlila Grounds when it chose to ignore Baba Ramdev’s show on 27 Feb 11, at the same venue ? Baba Ramdev’s show was attended by Anna Hazare , among other stalwarts, and had drawn much larger crowds. Why … Continue reading “Television through the years”

Why is it that the entire main stream media went gaga over Anna Hazare’s reality show at Ramlila Grounds when it chose to ignore Baba Ramdev’s show on 27 Feb 11, at the same venue ? Baba Ramdev’s show was attended by Anna Hazare , among other stalwarts, and had drawn much larger crowds.

Why is it that floods at Delhi or Mumbai get more focus than more catastrophic and devastating floods in Bengal, Bihar or Assam ?
Media questions everybody , but who questions the media? If you do, you are accused of shooting the messenger. Is media just a messenger, or a perverter, modifier and amplifier of the messages it conveys?
There was a time when TV and Radio broadcasts  were totally Govt controlled. There were technological limitations. Large parts of the country had little or no access to TV. During my initial 6-7 years in the army, all I had access to was Pakistan TV and later Rupavahini for a year.  In any case Doordarshan was neither reliable nor real time . In remote areas it was not even accessible.
But in late 80s and early 90s, with winds of change sweeping across the globe, news coverage attained new dimensions. With Satellite communication, better technology and independent news agencies, nothing could be hidden or manipulated by the Govts.
In the year 1988-89, Pranoy Roy had the viewers riveted to his programme, “The World This Week’. The technology was there to upload or download live data from anywhere to any where. Independent, impartial, hardcore professionals were in key positions covering events global and local. I remember looking forward to Pronoy Roy’s  “Good evening and welcome to the world this week…..” It was then, that we had witnessed historical events like ‘the fall of the Berlin wall’ and ‘break up of the Soviet Union’. Real time visuals left no doubts, as people saw the events as they unfolded from the safety of their drawing rooms. The Gulf war was witnessed by the whole world in real time.
Just when you thought, nothing could be hidden from the media, it is the media itself that became elusive and double-edged. Pressure from Govt or technological limitations has given way to  pressure from TRP, corporatism , or simply the rat-race.
Today you have the technology, freedom from Govt agencies and professionalism to report accurately; yet, the whole establishment lacks credibility. Even while one channel is breaking news on a sting operation, there is another channel questioning the authenticity of the audio-visual media used. Is it genuine or a ‘cut and paste’ job ?. Well, if technology can be used to expose a scam, it can also be misused for false accusation or for a cover up operation. Also corporatism has the editors looking at the bottomline even while deciding on what events to cover and how.
I wish we had just one 9 o’ clock news from just one channel, like the good old Doordarshan; at least it was predictable.

Public Sentiments Again

http://mi59.blogspot.com/2011/08/public-servants-and-public-sentiments.html When I wrote  on this blog about Rule of Law giving way to Public Sentiments , I never thought my worst nightmares would be forming up so soon. While sentiments in Tamilnadu is for clemency to convicts in Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, Jammu and Kashmir is poised to fight for clemency for a convict in parliament attack case. In both … Continue reading “Public Sentiments Again”

http://mi59.blogspot.com/2011/08/public-servants-and-public-sentiments.html

When I wrote  on this blog about Rule of Law giving way to Public Sentiments , I never thought my worst nightmares would be forming up so soon.
While sentiments in Tamilnadu is for clemency to convicts in Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, Jammu and Kashmir is poised to fight for clemency for a convict in parliament attack case. In both cases, the majority view in the country will be in favour of  upholding the law of the land, while majority in the particular region is definitely for review of the law, in deference to public sentiments.
While J & K is ever volatile, Tamilnadu has a curiously disturbing culture of self-immolation at the drop of a hat. In fact the word for self- immolation is ‘thee-kulithal ‘, meaning fire-bath , as if it is something like sauna bath. How can a young girl, kill herself, for a remote chance of saving a life ? The State legislative Assembly passes a resolution, under pressure from the public sentiments, and the pressure is further passed on to the the Supreme Court, Union Govt and the President.
What’s worse is that, some panelists on CNN-IBN ask, “Hasn’t Anna Hazare just proved that People’s wishes reign supreme in a democracy ? “
I wish , I could read Anna Hazare’s mind on what should be the right course of action for the State and Central Govts, in the face of such popular sentiments.  He can’t even convert it to a debate against ‘capital punishment , per se’, as some people  do. He has gone on record supporting death sentence for the corrupt !

Anti Corruption Movement :La Anna Hazare Movement

Firstly, I must admit that, though the idea of ‘India Against Corruption ‘ did appeal to me, I was never comfortable with the idea of fasting unto death to challenge a pillar of democracy . The idea that ‘people’s power is supreme’ can be absurd at times. Today, it is the parliament under fire, tomorrow a … Continue reading “Anti Corruption Movement :La Anna Hazare Movement”

Firstly, I must admit that, though the idea of ‘India Against Corruption ‘ did appeal to me, I was never comfortable with the idea of fasting unto death to challenge a pillar of democracy . The idea that ‘people’s power is supreme’ can be absurd at times. Today, it is the parliament under fire, tomorrow a judicial court may be expected to act in consonance with the popular sentiments while trying a particular accused. 

I still feel that, a very bad precedent has been set. In a country of over one billion people any popular leader can mobilize 20-25 lakhs of people in his/her support to threaten the very existence of an institution provided for under the constitution.  

Now, let us see how it all panned out. I am not calling it Anna Hazare Movement to begin with as he actively joined the movement somewhere in mid course, rather than initiate the movement. I have to mention that I don’t mean to discredit Anna Hazare , since we have reached a stage where unless one is eulogising the great ‘gandhian’ you are accused of being a traitor and a congress stooge. 

It all started with Shri Santosh Hegde , Lokayukta of karnataka, sometime in mid 2010. In my humble opinion, Justice Santosh Hegde, though not so flamboyant, was to Lokayukta was TN Seshan was to Election Commission. A post which had been in existence since 1985, was suddenly in News Headlines. He made  a pedestrian appointment look like a high profile one. He was one of the founders of the Indian against Corruption Group. There is a recording of minutes of a meeting of India Against Corruption (IAC ) available here 

The following met at IIC on 10th August 2010 to discuss the deficiencies in present anti-corruption systems in our country and what steps need to be taken to address these deficiencies.
1.      Justice Santosh Hegde, Karnataka Lokayukta
2.     Mr J M Lyngdoh, former Chief Election Commissioner
3.     Mr P Shankar, former Central Vigilance Commissioner
4.     Prashant Bhushan, Advocate,  Supreme Court
5.     Mr Kamal Jaswal, Director Common Cause
6.     Mr Shekhar Singh, Eminent social activist
7.     Mr Nikhil Dey, Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangthan
8.     Mr Arvind Kejriwal, Social activist
9.     Mr Sarvesh Sharma, Common Cause
10.  Mr Suhas Borkar, social activist and media personality
The basic Ingredients of the present Jan Lokpal Bill my be found in these minutes
This is the time Arvind Kejriwal , as an RTI activist was actively lobbying for appointment of Kiran Bedi for the post of Chief Information Commissioner ( CIC), along with baba ramdev, Anna Hazare and Amir Khan.  

At this point of time three significant developments took place , resulting in a rainbow coalition on an anti-corruption platform.
1.    A retired beuracrat , AN Tiwari was appointed to the post of CIC, on 29 Sep 2010. This did not go well with RTI activists. “It is a very unfortunate decision by the government. ” Arvind Kejriwal said. 
2.  CWG Scam and 2G Scam along with Nira radia tapes, shocked the nation and corruption became ‘The Issue’.
3.  Prashant Bhushan’s Centre for Public Interest Litigation had moved a petition in the Supreme Court seeking a court-monitored investigation into the 2G spectrum scam by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).    
The focus of Arvind Kejriwal-Kiran Bedi team shifted from RTI to anti corruption. Shantibhushan and Prashant bhushan joined them. Then Anna Hazare was brought in to provide a credible face to the movement.
The main players who were active through out the period were Arvind Kejriwal, Kiran Bedi, and Shanti Bhushan, and Prashant Bhushan; with the saffron brigade or otherwise. Sri Sri Ravishankar, Santosh Hegde, Swami Agnivesh, Aruna Roy, Shekar Singh, Medha Patkar  and  Baba Ramdev were sometimes in the core group and sometimes in the fringes.  

Events panned about roughly, in 3 Phases, period from Nov 10 to Feb 11, Apr 11 Fast and Aug 11 Fast.

Phase 1

 On 14 Nov 2010 and again on 27 Feb 2011 there were rallies organized under the banner of Bharat Swabhiman Andolan by Baba Ramdev, and supported by Swami Agnivesh, Kiran bedi, Arvind Kejriwal, and Anna Hazare among others. it was a saffron show mostly ignored by the media barring channels like  Sansker and Aastha. The youtube link 
   This was also when the movement was spread through social networking sites on internet. Netizens  started ‘liking’ IAC on fb, gave missed calls to prescribed numbers to show solidarity and  started sporting IAC badge on fb profile.


    30 Jan 2011, 63rd Martyr’s day saw marches organized, in over 60 Indian States and abroad under a simple banner “INDIA AGAINST CORRUPTION”    as can be seen from the image below (right), 30 Jan  event saw sober people on the stage and in the crowd, and nothing really came of it. A youtube link

      War Against Corruption Rally (Shankhnad) Part-08 on 27 Feb 11at Ramlilla Ground, Delhi by Bharat Swabhiman attended by laks of people (and lakhs of people were stopped out side delhi border and not allowed to enter into delhi) and addressed by Dr. Kiran Bedi, Anna Hazare, Vishwa Bandhu Gupta former Additional Comm. of Incom Tax, GR Khairnar, Molana Nisar Ahmed Husaini, Ram Jeth Malani, Arvind Kejriwal RTI Activist, Acharaya Giriraj Kishore, Swami Agnivesh, Govinda Acharaya, Acharaya Balkrishan, Baba Ram Dev, Dr. Suman, Molana Mukti Samun Kashmi, Om Parkash Singhal, Dr. Subramanium Swami, Mulana Maksud Hasan Kazmi, etc..


   Phase 2

   The Phase 2 and Phase 3 of the movement was led by Shri Anna Hazare. The Movement carefully avoided the rightist tag. This time the media latched on to the happenings and the momentum was much more than anybody had expected. Barring the only faux pas on the part of Anna Hazare ,when he praised Narendra Modi, the team manged to present a secular image. Anna Hazare learnt that , if you want support from the main stream media, you had to play by their rules. 

   By this time, the movement attracted a number of people wanting a piggy back ride to push their own agendas. There was also some members, originally part of the team, distancing themselves now.

   What was just a cerebral activity, now found  a heart in the form of Anna Hazare and the arms and legs in the large volunteer force across the country. 



    Phase 3

    Once they got media attention, they perfected the art of ‘reality show’ with expert media management, providing a 24×7 show. Bharatmata gave way to a huge profile of Mahatma Gandhi in the backdrop, Independence day celebrations spilled  over to the rest of the month with large tricolor flags everywhere and the perfect package was ready for the ‘second freedom struggle’.

The most difficult part ;what are the key takeaways from the whole story?


1.   Baba Ramdev has proved to be a better crowd puller than Shri Anna Hazare, but without the media support, possibly because of the rightist image,  the events did not provide much help to the cause.


2.  Anna Hazare’s clean, Gandhian  Image appealed to people across the political and social spectrum all over the country.

    3.  Intelligentsia like lawyers, judges, and bureaucrats can give wonderful solutions on paper , but the masses support  great individuals (who appeal to them as trustworthy) , not great documents.
4.  Most people don’t care for an abstract idea like  the supremacy of the  constitution. 




Is Majority always Right ??

Is Majority always right ? I don’t think so, particularly when faced with a complex issue. Let us not be carried away by the huge turn out at the Ramlila grounds  At a Washington, D.C., press conference in 1952, Churchill was asked, “Doesn’t it thrill you … to know that every time you make a … Continue reading “Is Majority always Right ??”

Is Majority always right ? I don’t think so, particularly when faced with a complex issue.

Let us not be carried away by the huge turn out at the Ramlila grounds 


At a Washington, D.C., press conference in 1952, Churchill was asked, “Doesn’t it thrill you … to know that every time you make a speech the hall is packed to overflowing?”

Sir Winston: “It is quite flattering, but whenever I feel this way I always remember that if instead of making a political speech I was being hanged, the crowd would be twice as big.”

I remember, while in High School,  we had a maths teacher who used to make us solve entire sets of problems as homework. The next day in the class, he would call for volunteers to solve the questions on the blackboard. For easier questions, a number of hands went up, but for difficult ones, there were very few. There were no punishments for failure and the reward for solving a difficult question was the thrill of walking up to the blackboard and having the entire class listen to you. It is only logical that when faced with difficult questions , the majority is clueless and it is a minority which gets it right.

So is it in real life; the only difference is that while in a class room, the questions are objective and the minority which gets it right, is heard, whereas in real life situations, issues are subjective and the majority hogs the centre stage.

Regarding, Anna Hazare’s Movement, be it on print media, TV Channels or even in the cyberspace you hear only the majority view and the few dissenting voices are dismissed as ‘congress stooge’ . Someone has compiled a lot of information on the subject , including voices of dissent …


Since it is the dissents that are rare to find, I recommend the link


Then there is a well researched article by Mukul Sharma (science writer and journalist), first published in May 2006. The paper covers the developmental work organized by Anna Hazare, at his village Ralegan Siddhi .


Along with much publicized good work done by Anna Hazare, it also highlights some of his methods to deal with family planning and prohibition, which to say the least are highly questionable.

A Tale of Two Fasts

There are many comparisons being made about Anna Hazare’ fast and Gandhiji’s fast.   I don’t intend giving a sermon, but just want to share my understanding of the circumstances that led to Gandhiji’s fast unto death on different occasions. Gandiji has undertook fasting many times as a religious exercise or moral exercise, but only thrice it has … Continue reading “A Tale of Two Fasts”

There are many comparisons being made about Anna Hazare’ fast and Gandhiji’s fast.   I don’t intend giving a sermon, but just want to share my understanding of the circumstances that led to Gandhiji’s fast unto death on different occasions.

Gandiji has undertook fasting many times as a religious exercise or moral exercise, but only thrice it has been ‘Fast unto Death’ for achieving a ‘socio-political objective’.

These occasions were :-


1.    To stop all revolutionary activities after the Chauri Chaura Incident of 1922;


2.    Against the 1934 communal award giving separate electorates to Untouchable Hindus.


3.    In 1947, when he wanted to stop the bloodshed between Hindus and Muslims in Bengal and Delhi.


 In all three cases,Gandhi succeeded in achieving his aims.

The first time, he fasted to stop the jaggarnaut of Indian Freedom movement, when he felt the movement had strayed away from his principle of non-violence. In other words he fasted till violence stopped even if it meant the freedom movement losing its momentum. The fast was against violence.

The second time was when he felt that the British were resorting to ‘dividing ‘ India into Harijan India, Hindu India and Muslim India. The British left it to the Indian leaders to mutually resolve the issue and come to an understanding. So the fast was not against the British, not against Upper caste Hindus, not against Harijans /Dalits. What was it against?  It was against polarization based on castes. 

The third time , it was in Kolkata, in an independent India when the entire population was facing terrible hardships due to  Hindu -Muslim  riots. The fast was obviously against all forms of violence.

It is the 1932 fast, also called as the epic fast, that is much criticized for Gandhi’s ‘pressure tactics’ against ‘Dr Ambedkar’

  If the pressure was on Dr Ambedkar to give up his demand for a separate electorate, the pressure was on the entire Hindu community to be more inclusive, to breakaway from the practices , in vogue for centuries. Let us see the positive fall out of the fast towards social change.

At the very beginning of the fast week, the famous Kalighat temple of Kolkata and Ram Mandir of Benares, citadel of Hindu Orthodoxy, were thrown open to untouchables. In Delhi, cast Hindus and Harijans demonstratively fraternized in streets and temples. In Mumbai, a nationalist women’s organization organized a poll in front of seven big temples. Ballot boxes, watched by volunteers, were placed outside the gates, and worshipers were asked to cast their votes on the admission of untouchables. The tally was 24, 797 for and 445 against. As a result, temples in which no Harijan foot had ever trod were opened to all.

In villages, small towns and big cities, congregations , organizations and citzens unions adopted resolutions to stop discriminating against untouchables; copies of these resolutions formed a man high heap in Gandhi’s prison-yard.

A spirit of reform, penance and self-purification swept the land.During the six fast days, most Hindus refrained from going to cinemas, theatre, or restaurants. Weddings were postponed.

A description of the scene in Yeravada Prison, in the words of Louis Fischer goes like this;

“Gandhi lay on a white Iron cot in the shade of a low mango tree in the quiet prison yard. Patel and Mahadev Desai sat near him. Mrs Naidu had been transferred from the women’s ward to nurse and guard him against excessive exertion. On a stool were some books, writing paper, bottles of water, salt and sodium bicarbonate.

Outside, the negotiators were racing with death……..”


The major differences between then and now;

1.    Then, there was no Us and Them…..everyone was with Gandhi. Nobody vilified anybody, nor anyone gloated over the discomfort of another. Dr Ambedkar  and the Hindu leaders bargained hard and the public did everything to prove that there was  an earnest effort to abolish untouchability; and all were aware that they had to find a lasting solution to a national problem  or be prepared to lose Mahatma Gandhi for ever.  There was no sabre rattling from any quarters, you did not see anyone, bragging of his capacity to fast, or boasting about brownie  points scored.

2.       Every one of Gandhiji’s  supporters at any point of time would have been only too happy to see him breaking his fast. There was no crowd to applaud with every ‘hour’ on the score board as if it was a T-20 match.

3.      It was an occasion for the entire public for self-purification . There was no  festive air that we see today.  

Tail-piece 
There was a news item today that there is heavy betting by bookies on how many days the fast would last and as to what would be the outcome.


Fast Forward Anna Hazare Way : Some Crystal Ball Gazing

A poser before getting down to details…. Did TN Seshan require any enhanced Powers for Election Commissioner to do what he did ? In fact suddenly people found that he had too much powers and it was diluted by having a panel of three members instead of all powers being vested on just one person. … Continue reading “Fast Forward Anna Hazare Way : Some Crystal Ball Gazing”

A poser before getting down to details….


Did TN Seshan require any enhanced Powers for Election Commissioner to do what he did ?
In fact suddenly people found that he had too much powers and it was diluted by having a panel of three members instead of all powers being vested on just one person. Do we lack laws or just the will to enforce the laws ?

Anna wave is as strong as ever and at the time of writing this Anna Hazare has given the clarion call for the second freedom struggle.

So for he has been getting his way, thanks to low credibility of the Govt and the huge wave of public sentiments. There is no sign of the wave abating and we may safely assume that he will continue to get what he wants.

So far, the Govt has agreed to his demands, in deference to the public sentiments and just to keep anna Hazare alive. Govt has agreed to :-
  • co-opt civil society members in drafting the bill
  • let anna hazare protest  mostly on his own terms
Further along the road, with similar tactics:-
  • He will coerce the govt to table his version of the bill in the parliament.
  • Coerce the parliament to pass the bill (Bill or my life ?!)
 Anna hazare and his team will claim a great victory and go home. Public will be jubilant.

Then the Act will become effective and it it is time for people entrusted with the job of implementing to have good hard look at the various clauses.


I am cynical, but this cynicism  is not unfounded. Till the time there is a change of hearts, change of value system, what can mere laws do ? Why is it that we routinely see vehicles jumping traffic lights ? Why is it we see people travelling ticket less on trains ? Why is tax evasion not considered a serious issue ? This is a land of speed breakers not sign postings. I hope some Anna Hazare can change that.

The political parties will look for ways and means to fix their adversaries through this new found weapon. There will be intense lobbying at all levels for being part of the Lokpal or on the right side of lokpal, the new power centre.

Janta will continue to bribe their way through, particularly when making unreasonable or illegal demands. Simplest example is  jumping the queue for anything from a  gas cylinder to college admission. (It is the shortage of gas resulting in corruption, not lack of laws). 


This new law may create another layer of absolute power. It may create a Frankenstein monster. If that happens who will take responsibility ? Not the Govt ? Not the parliament ? As for Anna Hazare, will he repeat his moves this time to amend the law ? Very doubtful.

There is no dearth of unresolved conflicts in our great country. Delhi Police will receive a bunch of applications from Telengana movement, Hurriyat, VHP, etc to follow the footsteps of anna hazare and get their agenda through. Everyone of these movements will whip up public sentiments locally if not at Delhi. Smaller communities / states like Manipur will be left high and dry , after all democracy works on the will of the majority.

As Ambedkar said while introducing the Constitution in November 1949, once the Constitution came into force, we should avoid all non-constitutional methods like protests and satyagraha, for they are the grammar of anarchy. If two persons go on fasts until death for two opposing reasons, we cannot decide the issue by allowing one person to die first.
Yes, Anarchy it is… it all seems so nightmarish. If I am awake I want to go back to sleep and If I am asleep , it is time I woke up.

Public Servants and Public Sentiments

    These days sentiments are running high and it is very fashionable to say ‘I am with Anna Hazare’ or ‘I am anna’ . Even media persons suggest that the Govt should take cognizance of the public sentiments. Taking cognizance is desirable but taking actions in line with these sentiments can be disastrous.     Public … Continue reading “Public Servants and Public Sentiments”

    These days sentiments are running high and it is very fashionable to say ‘I am with Anna Hazare’ or ‘I am anna’ . Even media persons suggest that the Govt should take cognizance of the public sentiments. Taking cognizance is desirable but taking actions in line with these sentiments can be disastrous.

    Public servants should never be swayed by the prevailing Public Sentiments. Here’s an example from History.

    In May 1948, Nathuram Godse was tried , for murder of Mahatma Gandhi. The assassin was not a member of the mafia but was some one who had many things in common with the mahatma. He was well read, he was patriotic, his motive was selfless and he was idealistic. Only difference was that he did not believe in the absolute ahimsa. He believed that any one on the wrong side of dharma should be fought, as In Gita , Lord Krishna himself motivated Arjuna to kill the reverred Bhishma for being on the wrong side of Dharma …!!!!

    So Godse gave a long deposition in the court on his motives for his actions. He quoted extensively from the scriptures to justify every action of his.


    The speech had its effects on the small gathering in the court.



    Justice Khosla, who was a member of the jury, wrote after his retirement:



‘There was a deep silence when he ceased speaking. Many women were in tears and men coughing and searching for their handkerchiefs… I have no doubt that had the audience of the day been constituted into a jury and entrusted with the task of deciding Godse’s appeal, they would have brought in a verdict of ‘not guilty’ by an overwhelming majority.”


    And the place was not Pune but Shimla; far away from the birthplace or stronghold of RSS or Hindu Mahasabha.

     Godse did not have the benefit of a public trial, Media, Facebook or Twitter. Had he had all these, it was quite possible that the sentiments in the court could have spilled over to cover the entire country, and the then Govt would been in a tight spot.

    In the actual course of events, Godse was sentenced to death and hanged . Among those calling for commutation of the death sentence for the defendants were Jawaharlal Nehru, as well as Gandhi’s two sons, who felt that the two men on trial were pawns of RSS higher-ups, and in any case, executing their father’s killers would dishonour his memory and legacy which included a staunch opposition to the death penalty.

    There was no place for sentiments and the law of the land prevailed.

    This is not a defence of Godse,, just an example to show that Govt, The Police and Judges have to act in consonance with the law of the land, not in line with the prevailing public sentiments.

Women, Work and Identity

I have always wondered how the gen-next is going to handle the issues of family , work and gender-equality. About 25 years back, women still had an honorable, socially acceptable designation as ‘housewife’ or home maker’.  Today, even if they call it ‘CEO , Home Inc”, there would be no takers for the title.    … Continue reading “Women, Work and Identity”

I have always wondered how the gen-next is going to handle the issues of family , work and gender-equality. About 25 years back, women still had an honorable, socially acceptable designation as ‘housewife’ or home maker’.  Today, even if they call it ‘CEO , Home Inc”, there would be no takers for the title. 

    
       Women do need an identity, outside their home, just as men have always needed. Even in my 32nd year of service, I can’t say enough is enough. I keep hearing  “What do you plan to do for a second career. ?”
        Read a book, ‘When Work Doesn’t Work Anymore’ by Elizabeth Perle Mckenna. This book was written in 1997, but is just right for the social scenario in India today. It is about a successful career woman, who after 20 years of relentless pursuit of success on ‘man’s terms’ realizes there was  something missing in her life despite achieving everyone of  the goals she set for herself in personal and professional sphere. She still liked her work alright, had what she calls ‘rock solid marriage’; yet this was not what she had thought her life would be like.
 

Just as the title is, there are a number of interesting one-liners  to describe the situation of women today.  

 
Some examples:

 

“ women soon realized, going to work involved having to work” 
 
“without the privileges or good financial rewards, work was just that – work.”
 
“ and worse, women are faulting themselves for not being enough of what they don’t even want to be”
 
“she has arrived at what she calls her ‘something gotta give period’ which means either her career or her personal life is going to get smaller for the good of the other”
 
     The author narrates the stories of women with similar predicaments, to illustrate each point she makes. Then there is a liberal dose of Gloria Steinem (GS) Quotes to add weight to her case.
 
        Today, women have entered every field, well, almost every field, and have tasted success in every field they have ventured into. But after, working for 20-30 years, in a man’s world , playing by the rules set by men, there is a kind of emptiness. There is a  perceived sense of failure, which is best expressed in the words of  GS, ” If you meet a woman who’s doing wonderfully well professionally, doing great creative things and is completely happy with her work, but does not have the personal life she thinks she should have, she may think she is a failure. Men are the reverse. They can have great personal lives, and think they are failures if they don’t have the job success they think they are supposed to have.”
 
      Another GS Quote from the book ‘ The working world remains a place built for men with full time wives to take care of the rest of the life’. In the present times men are also equally handicapped to succeed in such a working world. Talking of full time wives, the Indian scene is indeed quite confusing. There are housewives/home makers, ladies and  working women who may be categorized as full time wives, part-time wives or of any shade in a broad spectrum.
 
      Years ago, I saw a hand bill  inviting ‘housewives, working women, and ladies ‘ to join a computer training course. After some deliberation, I translated ‘housewives, working women and ladies’ to mean ‘women who work only at home, women who could work also at home and women who wouldn’t work even at home’
 

         The last category is possible in India , thanks to affordable domestic help. That is where the ‘CEO, Home Inc.’ steps in.


Recently I read an Indian version of similar ideas in HT http://www.hindustantimes.com/Kamla-comes-home/Article1-719214.aspx

        The book is a good read for any woman looking to balance work life and personal life. Another quote from GS ” I still get young women in audiences, asking,’How can I combine career and family?’ I always tell them, ‘you can’t until men are asking that question too ‘.” Well, men  will start asking such questions , if only they are allowed to go easy on their work life, by the society, family and themselves.
 
     For whatever reason, men haven’t made much progress in work-family balance. At best you have the cooperative husband who is prepared to put up with cold dinners or even no dinner, cheerfully. Don’t expect him to cook or wash for the whole family. On the other side is the prickly type (no pun intended) who simply cannot accept any situation where the woman is not at home.
         Let’s say, one has decided on how much to give to one’s career, still there is a need to decide the time line. There are two schools of thought; one is to first establish yourself in your work place and then raise a family. The other is to take a break, complete your family and then get back to the rat race .

           Unfortunately, a woman’s most productive years coincide with her reproductive years as well. Oh God ! isn’t there any easy decisions at all in life?