Friday, April 28, 2006

Apres moi, le deluge!

The Sun King, Louis XIV of the Bourbon dynasty, once exclaimed, or maybe it was Madame de Pompadour, the mistress of Louis XV, who said, “après nous, le déluge”, to suggest that after the passing away of her master, the heavens would pour down and the Deluge would be revisited. Of course, no such thing happened for nearly 80 years after the good Madame said so, and after Louis XV had left for his heavenly abode. And even when his son, the ill-fated Louis XVI was guillotined for treason, and the ancien regime obliterated by the machinations of the likes of Robespierre, to the eventual benefit of the French people, no flood cascaded down the Pyrenees to drown the people in gloom and sorrow. And so is demonstrated that a regent, a monarch is worthy of respect, worthy of honour, worthy of acclaim, so long as he/she has the espousal of his/her people. The day such support should be lacking, the throne is no more than a charade, a joke on the people, and the personage sitting on it, the biggest jester on the surface of the earth.
The condition in the Kingdom of Nepal today strangely resonates the circumstances prevalent in France immediately preceding the Revolution, or even those prevailing in Imperial Russia prior to the October Revolution. Or maybe it isn’t so strange after all, considering that over the ages, monarchies have degenerated, to some extent, to become autocracies in some way, and then to be compelled to unleash a reign of tyranny over their people. The regent begins to presume that his right to rule is not so much out of the benevolence of his people or of the trust that they repose in him, as much as a divine prerogative endowed upon him, by virtue of his ‘noble’ birth. And when a mere mortal deigns it fit to term himself and his prerogatives as divinely ordained, then it is evidence enough that the days of the monarchy are numbered. History bears proof that whenever a monarch tried to remonstrate his divine ‘origin’, the people didn’t ignore him; rather they threw him over the divide, and uprooted the ancien regime, lock, stock and barrel.
King Gyanendra must bear to remember that the process of democratization that he is attempting to stifle has been secured by his people after a long and arduous struggle, and they, of all the souls on the planet, will not take lightly to any challenge to this process. Lest he not value his own life, he must bear the example of those monarchs who resisted the appeals of their people to submit to the authority of the people, for these monarchs were either ousted from their thrones, or were executed by the people whom they once reigned over. He must acknowledge the example of the constitutional monarchs such as those seen in the United Kingdom, Denmark, The Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, etc., where the regent stepped aside, in deference to his/her people’s desires, and is now a source of inspiration, a symbol of the nation, and deserving of respect and affection.
The Maoists may alarm many, but remember this that they feed on the discontent of the people, discontent emerging from the lack of facilities, anger emanating from the absence of development. Once the Government of Nepal begins the process of democratization, I am hopeful that this discontent can be very well alleviated, if not removed altogether. Till then, Narayanhiti Palace has no option but to keep burning in the fires of the Nepalese people.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

A window to my soul!

I was going through the blog of Ms. Nessa one day, and came across a most delightful thing called the Johari Window.

Basically, a Johari window is a metaphorical tool intended to help people better understand their interpersonal communication and relationships. It is used primarily in self-help groups and corporate settings as a heuristic exercise.
In simple words, it helps you understand how people view you, and to what extent their perception of you matches your own perception of yourself.

So, I decided to setup my own Window, a sort of window to my soul.
Click here to access my Johari Window

Now, the Johari window focuses on the positive aspects of a person, but life isn't all about the sweet things, is it?

So, we have the Nohari window to depict the darker sides of our soul.
Click here to access my Nohari Window

Please do visit both these sites and be very honest in your evaluation.

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Bewarned, for thy be faltering!

The most cowardly and despicable attacks on the Jama Masjid at Delhi, perhaps committed by the same fanatics that sought it fit to attack the Akshardham temple in Ahmedabad, and bomb the Sankatamochan shrine at Varanasi, goes to show that terrorism has no religion. Terrorism hiding behind the veil of religious sanction is fooling no one; no religion, in its truest element, could ever sanction the killing of innocents, the shedding of blameless blood, the violation of the holiest of the Holies, the shrines of mankind. Georges Duhamel, the great novelist, once said, “I have too much respect for the idea of God to make it responsible for such an absurd world.”

I ask you which faith advocates the adoption of violence against one’s fellow beings. Do not show me the ‘kafir’ and ‘infidel’ phraseology used by the invading Muslim armies and Crusader forces. For to that I shall tell you, “All they that take the sword shall perish with the sword”, and this I quote not from some raving philosopher’s musings, but from the Bible, the holiest text of the Jewish & the Christian faiths. But somewhere down the ages, these words of caution, these syllables of advice have been muted by a more horrendous sound. In the words of the Hungarian writer Arthur Koestler, the most persistent sound which reverberates through man’s history is the beating of war drums. To believe that the one who doesn’t believe in my God is inferior to me and must be forced to adhere to my faith is foolishness, for belief is like love; it cannot be compelled.

I reject those who claim that they are superior to others. It is akin to saying that all animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others. Know this that in our infinite ignorance of both this world and the world beyond the pale, we are all equal. Or to be jocular about our lack of knowledge, as the French poet Paul Valery puts it, God made everything out of the void, but the void shows through. Know this, and know this well: God has written all the books. Nothing was made by God for man to destroy or spoil. Why cannot we feel like Kant felt, who exclaimed, “Two things fill the mind with ever-increasing wonder & awe … the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me”? Or is it our aim to ensure that in so frivolous a manner the glory of the world should pass away? Maybe, Margaret Mead was right when she says that human beings do not carry civilization in their genes. For a mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, and a hell of heaven.

And that is where we must turn to religion, for that civilizing effect. For in the purest forms of religion, not in the rituals or in the mantras, not in the sanctimonious uttering of the priests or in the sounds of the bells, lies the eternal Truth of life. There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of it. This truth was the foundation of the famed City of Camelot, the Utopia we aim to achieve. This truth was “In service of others, we serve ourselves.” Nay, I do not jest. You may quibble that this be so commonplace a sermon that it surely couldn’t be the Truth, but I ask you, is it not a constant struggle to see what is in front of one’s own nose? Can we not say that my country is the world, and my religion is to do good?

In conclusion, I pray to the better wisdom of those who feel that shrines are the best places to torment and torture people, and remind them of the fact that the sanctity of a temple, as in a place of worship, is that it is a place to which men go to weep in common, be they rich or poor, sinners or God-fearing souls. Torment them, deny them their faith any further, and you shall be washed away in their tears. And then shall you be ‘rewarded’ by the ‘Paradise’ of your deserving.

Ambedkar's legacy circa 2006

Yesterday one observed the birth anniversary of a man credited with the creation of the foundation of our Republic, the bulwark of our State: our Constitution, which we in our hope gave to ourselves on the 26th of January 1950. This man had come a long way, from the squalor of the cantonment of Mhow in the then Central Provinces, to being a member of the highest decision-making body of the country, the Union Council of Ministers. He had come a long way from being a student who studied in the light of the candle at night, just to avoid the hustle and bustle of the neighborhood in the day, to becoming the man whose words the whole nation stayed silent to listen. From the days when he would smuggle sandwiches into the British Library, just to save time and read more and more, he would go on to become the most favored of patrons of the booksellers of the world, buying carton loads of books at one go.

All his achievements, all his glories, he secured not because he reveled in the fact that he belonged to a certain community, or because he managed to secure the State’s support in his initiatives and endeavours. He secured his place in history because he had the guts to fight against the system, if the situation so demanded, and if the system were to underestimate or even deny him his right to a better life merely because he was a member of a specific community. He deserves to be venerated not because he strove to liberate a specific community from the clutches of injustice, but because he believed that the wheels of change need just to be prodded for them to be set in motion, and that push would come not from the skies, but from the earth, from its people, his people. When I use the possessive adjective ‘his’ here, do not think that I refer to his community, for I refer to the human race as such, as I believe he too would have.

And today that this great man’s name is dragged in whenever someone talks of reforming the reservation system, when his legacy is so maligned by his so-called followers to let go of the crutches of social welfare even when they no longer may seem to need it, my heart bleeds. This man never identified himself as a member of specific community to gain special privileges, or to distinguish himself from the rest of the people; rather he believed that just as a Brahmin is proud to call himself a Brahmin, so also should he permitted to feel proud of his identity. He didn’t ask for dole-outs; he asked for assistance. His own education wasn’t the result of a reservation policy, but of a magnanimous monarch’s appreciation of the merit of a deserving student, which stood the risk of being wasted in the face of social pressures. Thousands of such deserving students, many of them from the hitherto referred to as Depressed Classes, were supported by many other monarchs throughout the land, without the compulsion or rule of the State, but merely out of respect for the merit inherent in these students.

Maybe he felt that the nascent nation, in its founding days, would be imbued with a sense of guilt or maybe even a desire to undo the wrongs of the past, and would therefore lift those who had lain in the squalor of Time for centuries to the light, and so introduced the proviso for reservation, albeit time-bound, for largesse when granted for infinity becomes the very shackle from which he sought to liberate his people. But when man proposes, God disposes, and He disposes through His creations. And so, the very ‘honorable’ political class found it inconvenient to abolish the largesse, or even review the munificence. His own, those whom he sought to liberate found this life of ease and luxury, when one only needed to be born in a specific community to claim privileges for life, so very relaxing that they never bothered to get up from the very gutters the largesse was intended to clear out. And so this man dies a thousand deaths every day, for now not only do those who considered him their enemy condemn him to Hell, but the bacchanalian behavior of his followers leads him to purgatory!

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Do we dance at this number?

The dance bars will open again, so declared the Hon’ble High Court of Bombay. The point that the Hon’ble judges made was that the government i.e. the State cannot prohibit an individual from taking recourse to any profession. By implication, a citizen of the Indian State can choose any profession and profess it, without there being any restriction on him/her in any manner whatsoever. Laudable statements, indeed.
Considering that this is a matter concerning the judiciary, I will tread delicately. The fact’s that the verdict has raised certain questions in my mind. Does the right to choose one’s profession make one impervious to social concerns? Say, someone feels seditious, does the right to profession permit him/her the privilege of becoming a traitor or even a terrorist? Or if someone wants to earn money the bad way, does this freedom guarantee that the police will not catch him/her if he/she choose to indulge in smuggling/extortion/theft/fraud? And if not, then why these double standards?
The Hon’ble High Court clearly has quashed the amendment brought in by the Government of Maharashtra on technical grounds, but surely they also agree that the issue is not as simple as it is being made out to be. I am no moralizer, frankly, if someone wants to dance in a bar, and if such a person is comfortable with people trying to grope and fondle her, well, she’s welcome to her career decision. But the fact’s that here there are people who object, and maybe this objecting crowd is far more than the numbers constituting the dance-bar employees. Maybe the critics far outweigh the patrons. And for once, the political system had chosen to listen to this group rather than the other. Just as when a particular book is banned merely because it is deemed hurtful to the sentiments of society, because it is deemed offensive, so also the political class chose to ban the very profession of dancing in bars, merely because a very large majority of people found it offensive to their sensibilities. If the former is acceptable to those advocating the freedoms of humanity, then accept the latter as well. If you don’t, well, then stop making such a show of your adherence to human rights.
People have screamed out loud that these women are being denied employment. I ask you, has this nation come to this state when our women are incapable of finding employment in any other area? And will we allow our nation’s wealth to continue to encourage such depravity as is being perpetrated on these women in these dance bars, and which they bear in silence, merely because they have hungry stomachs to feed?
I must have seen more than five separate petitions against the reservations in the premier institutes, but to date, not one petition asking that we at least try to curb the tendency of young, beautiful, yet misled women ending up in these flesh-pots. I have the highest respect for the women who are employed in these joints, for they indulge the decadence of others, courting such degenerates that even Satan would be ashamed, and for what, but thirty pieces of silver. Liberate them; show them the light of a new day, when they can seek suitable employment elsewhere, for their sake, for our sake.

Re-Serve this System please!

A lot of blogspace has been already dedicated to the recent reservation fuck-up (yes, I am using the term, and it feels good) by the ‘honorable’ Minister for Human Resources & Development for the Union of India, the ‘venerable’ and ‘respected’ Mr. Arjun Singh. I don’t think I need to be clearer about how I feel about this whole affair.
Reservation per se, I am ready to accept on certain grounds and certain conditions.
Firstly, the entire provision must be a time-bound affair, not an ad infinitum proviso for those who have lifted their eyelids much after their forefathers were last abused in the name of community and caste. I appreciate that society is obliged to repay these communities in full for the tortures it inflicted on them for centuries, I accept that without as much as a whimper. But for long?
Secondly, there must be some factoring on the basis of the economic conditions of the family of the one seeking the reserved seat. Come now, if I happen to come from a family with an annual income in excess of Rupees Two lakhs per annum, happen to have a house, a car owned by my family, surely I am in no way disadvantaged. Then should I be permitted to claim that which is the right of those clearly lacking all this and more?
Finally, rather than numerically setting aside seats in the name of some community/communities, give them some leverage, maybe if one is admitting students on the basis of academic performance, grant them a 5 pc difference, but only if they happen to be economically disadvantaged, else tell them to stand in the general line. Sure, reserve seats, but only for those who have done exceptionally well, despite the adverse conditions at their residences. That way, one cannot be accused of compromising on merit alone, while still maintaining one’s lofty goal of social justice.
By now, you, my friend, will have understood that my ‘system’ of reservation rests solely on the premise of economic status, and not so much on the community-based approach adopted hitherto. Maybe this system is doomed to failure so long as the State is incapable of ensuring that each and every person is perfectly honest as far as his/her income is concerned. But there is hope. The Union Finance Minister, Mr. P. Chidambaram, is doing a stellar job of slowly but steadily reforming the archaic financial systems, to guarantee that accountability which this nation sorely needs.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

The Oarman's Beloved

The flute rang out in the meadow,
A liturgy of emotions, a parody of the soul,
A panegyric to the broken hearts.

She sat beneath the banyan tree,
Awaiting the boat,
The vessel that would bring him to her,
He, who had her heart captive,
In the folds of his bosom.

The river lapped at her feet,
Caressing her pink soles,
Fondling her delicate toes,
Adoring her dainty anklets,
Of silver and gold.

The butterflies came
And brushed her golden tresses,
Flew they past her hazel-brown eyes,
Those eyes which would open,
Open only to see her beloved’s precious visage.

Came the caravans and the mendicants,
Those who moved on in this world,
And those who moved beyond,
Gazed at this beauty in stone,
And wondered in awe,
Is this what love brings to man?

Then came the cry of the oarsman,
Hailing the shores of his native land,
The shores of his beloved.
And in a flash closed her eyes,
To drink in her tears,
Her tears of joy, her tears of bliss,
Her love had come, her life had come.

Friday, April 07, 2006

The Gift

My heart jumped a thousand leagues
Up in the air,
Tearing the heavens beyond
And touching the stars glorious!

Came in my dream
An angel so sweet
So beautiful, so pure
Quite like the dew in the morn.

Promised she to me
Shall I come in your midst
When the sun sets in the West
When the sea is aflame in her passions.

Sat in her wait,
I, all day, beside the crashing waves,
On the lonely parapet,
On the driveway of gold and silver.

Glanced at me,
And dismissed me as lovelorn,
Scores of passersby,
And other couples in affection.

Slowly, but steadily,
The glorious moment approached
The sun started its descent
Into the turbulent waters of the bay.

And then, as I watched
This sight beautiful and serene,
I realized what my angel
Meant by in my midst.

For by the sights and sounds,
Of the tranquil scene,
She had given me
The gift of the heavens, the presence of the Gods.

Sunday, April 02, 2006

It's hard to say goodbye to yesterday!

I wrote last week about my feelings regarding leaving college. But on the day itself, I somehow couldn’t bring myself to control my emotions. When after the whole function was over, when the whole bunch had danced to their hearts’ delight, when perhaps for the last time, we had a blast, and I feel downcast. When people came up to each other, and hugged, shook hands, and wished each other all the luck in the world, I cried, maybe not overtly, but my heart wept.

The French say, ‘Partir c’est mourir un peu’. To leave is to die a little. A day after the farewell, I am coming to realize what they mean. All night long, I tossed and turned, remembering the good days, when we all laughed and played pranks together, when we would raid each other’s lunchboxes and yet manage to have a decent lunch for oneself, when we would sit and furiously copy out journals and assignments, when we would give each other the glorious kick on the backside on our birthdays, when we would loot the hapless birthday boy of his monies by way of treats, when we would wish each other at midnight on our birthdays, just to be the first one to wish the chap/lass. And now, as I write this, I cry. I mean, where will I get these days again? These friends, these buddies, the people with whom I would fight, but also play around with. Friends with whom I flirted, and who flirted with me. Friends who tortured me, and who suffered my tortures silently.

I know this isn’t the end. We still have nearly two months before it all ends. But this is the beginning of the end. And that is a heart-wrenching feeling. One that tears the heart asunder, one that leaves one filled with a strange emptiness, a void that has no end, no limit. Maybe I am the sentimental type, maybe I always was the eternal romantic, but today, I just wish I had a shoulder to cry on. I wish I could cry more openly. Because I can cry but now, and hold my tears hereafter.

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