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WHAT IS WRONG WITH US?
Saturday, 30 May 2009
Rapes that are not!
Mood:  mischievious
Now Playing: Can the truth ever be told?!
Topic: The pity of it all, Iago!
Dev Colabawala, all of 21 years, is spending his seventh week in jail for a rape that was not. It is easy to strait-jacket events, fall into the groove of established notions and then pass judgments. But the truth is always grey, neither here nor there. Just take the incidents of rapes in Mumbai in the past few weeks. Incidentally, rapes have become so frequent that people have to be wiser than to just nurse a skewed pro-women, politically correct outlook. For Dev, the case is loaded in his favour, except that the media has so much influence on the judiciary these days that Dev might spend the rest of his life in jail. It is so tragic that no one seems to talk about the other side of the story, even in the media. The media, as said on this blog-site earlier, only try to sanitise the happenings. If any reporter bothers to go and visit a few colleges he will know what today’s generation thinks of all this. Casual sex is so common amongst today’s teenagers that they are shocked at the ‘manufactured outrage’ in the media. A parent in Mumbai who would tell his teenage daughter to be alert to older men trying to molest, and “enjoy good company with boys of her age” is hardly the kind of modernity media has reached in India. Media is always 15 years behind, probably because it is manned by grey-haired men belonging to another generation. Let’s look at the train of events in the first instance. The American girl studying at Tata Institute of Social Science (TISS) on that non-fateful day had been pub-hopping with four of her closest friends. If they were not close enough to her then she should not have been going with them all around the town from Chembur to Andheri through the night. At about 2 in the morning, the four boys decide to call it a day by going to an unoccupied house of an acquaintance. The girl is game for that too and joins them to the house in Andheri. Nowhere in the FIR lodged by the girl there has been a mention of any force used on her. Now the story gets a little hazy. The girl claims that the boys took turns to get fresh with her the moment she hoped into the bed. Graphic details are given in her FIR which says how the boys took her on from all sides. Then she says she went into the bathroom and hid herself to escape from the clutches of the four marauding young men. She finally agreed to come out when the four boys banged the bathroom door in the dead of night. She came out of the bath and went back to the same bed to sleep. In the morning when she woke up she found that she was stripped and the four boys sleeping in the same bed were also nude. Quite some sight there. Then suspecting the worst she went into the bathroom to check sexual assault. She is graphic enough to tell the police about finding her tampon embedded deep inside and signs of the semen on her private parts. The FIR is so Hollywood-like that it reads like the screenplay of the Original Sin. When she found that the boys have had sex with her when she was sleeping, she trooped out of the house and walked into a police station and lodged a complaint about atrocities committed on her. The whole sequence of events is so filmy that one can raise many questions on the veracity of her claims. And if the police are not influenced by media colouring of the event, they should be able to crack this one without much strain. First, it is rather very naïve for an American girl not to expect the obvious through that evening and the morning after. The boys were pub-hopping, which is quite a trend among the youth in Mumbai, at least till Ram Sene does not interfere. They were truly on a pub-bharo andolan, and for sure, Renuka Chowdhary should be on their side. Second, TISS is known to be a hot and heaving place, again, among the college-going youth – Americans will find themselves at home there. Third, if the girl was so caught up with chastity she should have never gone with the four boys. Fourth, if there was another girl in the same group that evening the American girl should have returned home before midnight with her. Fifth, even when the four boys invited her to join them to the vacant house, she should have known what was coming. There is no sign of any force used to get her to the house, except perhaps for the boys’ charm that worked on her that night. Sixth, the visit was nocturnal and when four young boys want to share their bed with a girl, you shouldn’t expect some Satyanarayana pooja to happen instead. Seventh, when the four boys started to make out with her, she should have by now got the message loud and clear, unless of course, she was also consumed by passion. Eighth, when she came out of the bathroom where she was hiding she could simply walked out of the house, hailed a taxi or a rickshaw and gone home paying cold tribute to the boys’ raging desires. In that event, their state would have been even worse than going to jail. Any Mumbaikar would vouch for this, one will find very secure and safe transport at any time of day or night anywhere in the city. What is so intriguing is that we Indians are otherwise quite clued-in when it comes to sexual behaviour of people. If a boy and a girl spend a night together at home because of bad weather or flight delays we immediately come to the conclusion that they ended up having sex! A young unmarried couple working in a bank in Mumbai had spent the night in a building terrace on July 26, 2005 when torrential rains accompanied by high tide flooded the suburbs. The girl was found to be pregnant after six weeks and all fingers started pointing towards the young boy. But he was lucky enough to have recently undergone a sperm-count test which revealed that he was grossly incapable of impregnating women. The doctors at a well-known hospital in Mumbai saved the day for him by testifying before the girl’s parents. It is amazing that a girl, and an American that too, does not know what to expect if four boys sleep with her. It would have been very disappointing if all the four boys came out of that house the morning after with testimonials from the girl for ‘correct behaviour’. There is so much sex and sexual imagery floating around us that it is inescapable. Even coffee ads and chocolate ads meant for five-year olds are about “what is on your stick?!” In the 90s when this reporter once asked the managing director of Air-India & Indian Airlines (the two PSUs were just merged) about how bad its in-flight service was, the newly sworn-in chief was calm enough to tell a select few reporters that airlines business is considered a “sexy business” by everyone – the passengers, the investors, the management and the government. It could be one of the reasons why we have to pay Rs5,000 tax when the actual fare is only Rs500. Airline ads even in Muslim countries, are all about sexy women being at your beck and call and serving you fruit juices. Do the train or bus services in India advertise their women service staff. There are no women to serve in the first place, unlike in Europe.  Once when a Tata group company had taken a press party to south on a chartered flight for a site visit, journalists almost threw a collective fit seeing elderly men serving them in flight. The best retort which never became quotable was when the chief of the newly merged airlines said, “if I decide to give the best in-flight service then I will have to run a whore house in mid-air!” His logic is unbeatable. One does not spend more than 2 hours on any flight in India. What all do you as a passenger expect from the airline crew. What if an elderly man gives you the air-sickness bag when you are tasting bile in your mouth at take-off. Does it really matter if it had been a girl full of oomph showing you any part of her anatomy? Can that make you less sick? So what if the same elderly man also delivers you the newspaper or the fruit juice at your seat? Do you complain of lack of service in first class train, when you are paying much more than the flight ticket cost? All pertinent questions, which any passenger would parry, for lack of conviction in his argument. It is in light of all these facts that one feels sorry for a young manager who is being jailed for masturbating in his seat while watching the air-hostesses flit up and down the aisle with food trays. The airline ads have hit the bull’s eye, one must admit. The young manager only did what was expected of him by the ads. The hypocrisy of it all is that one is enticed into travelling in air planes for the girls on offer, and then when he rises to the occasion in full measure, he is jailed for contemptuous behaviour. If you expected to get your moral moorings so right then one should follow an African-Muslim country which has introduced moral tourism, where no one is allowed to have sex, drink liquor, gamble or even check internet porn while on the conducted tour for eleven days. Wonder if they would allow men to shave their beard or skip the prayers five times a day. The other rape accused in Mumbai belongs to an upper class family in Andheri, who is supposed to have molested actor Deepak Tijori’s daughter too. Here again, the story is familiar – the young boy (24) chats up with good-looking girls on the street and then takes them to hotels at Madh Island and have sex with them. It may be labouring over the same points, but it is hard to see how girls can accompany a stranger to a hotel in public transport so far away, check into the hotel room and then get laid (a whole street of hotels at Madh Island cater to this sort of clientele – impulsive, one-night standers). And the morning after they cry rape! There is no mention of force used in these cases too. The boy is rich and resourceful, so no question of proving his manhood, as often suggested by psychiatrists. It is simply that the young boy, true to his age, cannot control sexual urge. The girls also get attracted to him, naturally. He takes the courtship to logical conclusions. It is as natural and obvious as dogs copulating on the streets of Mumbai. But in all these reported cases, the girls cry rape and get sympathy, while the males become the villain of the piece.  In all likelihood, and this the police must investigate, there might have been attempts at blackmail the morning after. If the demands made by the victim of rape on the accused cannot be met, one of the thousands of sexual encounters in the city, can become a rape story for prime time news. Also, the victim girl could be taking revenge on the boys for something that had happened earlier. But the fact remains the young boys accused of rape have lost precious time, their reputation lying in tatters, and a future jeopardized by a justice system that is most of the time non-existent. In another aside, how can NGOs propagate the idea of use of condoms and free sex when even consensual sex is mostly considered as rape by law. It is best not to get into these issues, and call the TISS rape case as a fate that was ordained on the four boys. Very Hindu, very moral. **************

Posted by Anil Nair at 10:05 PM
Monday, 25 May 2009
Elections and after
Mood:  happy
Now Playing: Never say never again!
Topic: Who wins who loses

To quote an example of uncontrolled and intemperate speech, Bollywood screenplay writer Vijay Tendulkar twice said during press conferences in December 2004 that if he had a gun he would shoot Narendra Modi. It was reported by almost all television channels on prime time news, just as newspapers had given it front-page coverage. But no one had ever suggested that Mr Tendulkar should be arrested or charged under NSA.

____________________________________________________

Just as sub-brokers in Mumbai are known to have their ear to the ground for insider trading, the bookies almost got it right this time round in general election, as far as government formation is concerned. The election results predicted by most news channels incidentally were so off the mark that it gives legitimacy and vindication to the Election Commission’s hardball tactics of banning such surveys during elections. Many have even suggested a total ban on exit polls even after the election results are declared as the television channels have exceedingly shown the propensity to get it wrong, which subsequently has led to imputing charges of advertisement-led opinion polls. After all on many television channels, in these days of economic downturn, advertisement department calls the shots on editorial coverage.

Also, the media has the naïve and unseemly immature way of deriving conclusions on the success and failure of political parties in elections. The BJP candidate from north-west Mumbai constituency Mahesh Jethmalani explained to many people in the television studio post-election debates that it is childish to come to the conclusion that every decision of Congress party had contributed to its success or conversely, every decision taken by BJP had led to its failure to garner majority support for its candidates. It could even have been that some decisions of Congress went against it and hence it could not get a majority and yet some others of BJP could have helped BJP candidates get more votes.

The most striking example is that of Varun Gandhi’s speech in Pilibhit where he made quite some indiscreet statements. The reality is that in the real world people are used to saying much worse things in public discourse that no one gets too shaken by these utterances. The media unnecessarily sanitise a straight talk if it comes from any Hindu camp. And most often it is quite selective in such censorship. To quote an example of uncontrolled and intemperate speech, Bollywood screenplay writer Vijay Tendulkar twice said during press conferences in December 2004 that if he had a gun he would shoot Narendra Modi. It was reported by almost all television channels on prime time news, just as newspapers had given it front-page coverage. But no one had ever suggested that Mr Tendulkar should be arrested or charged under NSA. It didn’t become a major point of debate in favour of Narendra Modi on television news channels as seen in Varun Gandhi’s case where he is being vilified.

On the other hand, Mumbai’s indifference to the elections with voter turnout of less than 41 per cent was widely reported as a shocking display of ennui and apathy. But as this blogsite reported earlier following terrorists attacks on 26/11, people are not stirred by the corporate advertisements on how they should play a proactive role in choosing leaders to change the situation. The fact remains that when Mumbai was attacked six times in the last 15 years corporates never showed any sympathy. Then, offices worked regularly even on election days. That a few CEO-types died at Hotel Taj and Trident should not be taken as a wake-up call. The wake-up call first came to Mumbaikars in 1993 when the present Samajwadi party general secretary Sanjay Dutt and his cohorts in the D-gang were involved in the serial blasts in Mumbai which killed over 480 people in a couple of hours. What the man on the street feels so outraged about is that when bombs go off in crowded trains killing scores of poor people corporates don’t show the same alacrity and sense of purpose in spending money on ads to awaken the society against the menace of terrorism. The corporates raved and ranted only when some among themselves got a hole in the head.

In Mumbai in particular, the Congress has gained this dubious credit for having successfully tamed the threat from Shiv Sena by indirectly giving Raj Thackeray a free rein in his racist propaganda against Biharis. The state government courted overtly and covertly the breakaway faction of Shiv Sena, never intending to take action for all the violence that Raj Thackeray unleashed on the streets and drove a wedge between Shiv Sena party workers and supporters to split the votes between the two. Congress may have romped home in the latest elections in Mumbai, but there is a good lesson in it for the BJP and Shiv Sena. The BJP can go it alone if the votes are getting divided so effectively between the two Senas. Alternatively, Shiv Sena could be persuaded to reach out to the cosmopolitan population of the city for it to embrace wider communities and voter base. If the BJP chooses to do the latter, the combined efforts of both the BJP and the Shiv Sena in wooing the city population which is bred on economic development dream that Mumbai is known for, would be a walkover against the Congress. Raj Thackeray, just as Shiv Sena did, will realise in good time that Marathi manoos philosophy has a short shelf-life. Sooner than later Raj Thackeray will be back to getting a wider support base than just from a parochial population of the city. Growth is the only way for political parties to survive in a democracy, and if Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) wishes to rule the state it will have to concede to larger demands and population demography. It has happened earlier with Mayawati and Jayalalithaa, and it would happen to MNS too.

But many Tamil Brahmin residents this reporter talked to in Matunga have raised suspicion over the death of LTTE leader V Prabhakaran in Sri Lanka just after the elections came to an end in India. The way LTTE started to pack up and leave without even giving the Sri Lankan army a befitting response it was known for and the way the propaganda machinery of the terrorist organisation was fledgling through the days of intense fighting when it was most required—all point to the possibility of how the death of the terror leader in Sri Lanka could have been manipulated by Congress to win the elections. “By all means, Prabhakaran might have been killed weeks ago but the news was never released to the media for that would have created a huge problem for the Congress to win seats in the south”, said a resident from Hindu colony in Dadar. But the death of the LTTE leader is certainly a good news, and India should be indebted to Sri Lanka to have brought Prabhakaran to justice for his role in killing Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.


Posted by Anil Nair at 6:53 PM
Updated: Saturday, 30 May 2009 1:06 PM
Thursday, 12 March 2009
The Third Front farce
Mood:  cheeky
Now Playing: Why the Left will never win general elections
If BJP has called it a murder of democracy, it is an understatement, to put it mildly. Every rule in the book was broken on Thursday when the Naveen Patnaik government sought a vote of confidence in the Orissa assembly. The results were only too predictable if one had sat through the events in the house. The BJP might find the whole episode beneficial if it waits two more months to see what the people of the state think of Mr Clean and his antics to be in power.
 
But besides the political maneuvering in the southern state which might enter the annals of Indian political history as second only to the cash-for-votes scandal in the Parliament a few months ago when the Left had withdrawn support to the Manmohan Singh government over the Indo-US nuclear deal, the even more revolting are the makings of the Third Front.
 
The Third Front this time around, is being pushed hard by out-of-circulation politicians as a viable alternative to the Congress or BJP led coalition government at the Centre post-elections. Even while going to press, there were reports emanating from Bangalore that the Third Front will take shape with leaders from almost all the rejected regional parties and the Left as the pivot. To begin with, the desperation in the Left is palpable as both Kerala and West Bengal are slipping out of their hands -- the time has become ripe for a change as people are starting to see through the Leftist agenda. There is widely felt fatigue over Left philosophy in regard to industrialization and its hypocrisy when dealing with issues like SEZs in Singur and Nandigram. The effect of the CPM’s blow-hot-blow-cold policies will be far more emphatic in Kerala than in West Bengal. One wonders, if supporting Mahdani will help matters at all for the party which leads the LDF in the state.
 
The out-of-sight-out-of-mind politicians getting together before the general elections to forge an alliance called Third Front with no common agenda, programmes or philosophy has become a regular feature. The name ‘Third Front’ gives legitimacy to the exercise as it makes it sound like a credible alternative. This time too national parties like the Congress and the BJP along with their allies are perking up their act to deal with this nuisance. If you see the probable candidates in the so called Front it can be as diverse as the CPM leaders, Mayawati, Chandrababu Naidu, Deve Gowda, Jayalalitha and several other wanna bes from NCP, RJD and  JD(U).
 
The ridiculousness of this alliance which calls itself the third alternative is even worse than the UPA structure. Almost all the heads of the individual parties are prime ministers in waiting. Mayawati will join any party for that matter if that could ensure her immediate alleviation to the prime minister’s gaddi. She does not even hide her unbridled ambition or her various ways and means to reach that position. Deve Gowda who slept through most of his tenure as prime minister when circumstances forced him to be the head of state has betrayal written all over his face. Not very long ago, he withdrew support to the alliance with BJP in Karnataka after his son served his term as chief minister and it was BJP’s turn to have its man at the helm. In the elections that followed people in Karnataka voted for Yedurrappa with an absolute majority, and made Deve Gowda and his son irrelevant.
 
The case of Naveen Patnaik of Biju Janata Dal could be the same. Naveen Patnaik is only being too clever by half. His case is stranger. The Communists have been crying foul and calling him names (the worst being a ‘Nazi’) ever since communal riots broke in Kandhamal. Chandrababu Naidu in Andhra Pradesh is fighting hard to be relevant. His only projected reason is that he wants to keep Congress at bay in his state.
 
All non-national parties which want to buy its way to national politics, get a good deal for a few seats that they will win in the general elections and finally, dictate terms all through its existence at the Centre might pitch in to form the Third Front. But the contradictions themselves will tear the alliance apart. National parties like Congress and BJP should not have much to worry if they wait to watch the disintegration of the Front either before the elections or just after that. After all, leaders like Mayawati will not make her prime-ministership negotiable with her peers like Sharad Pawar, or even the other way round. But the electorate will have to be wary of the Front as it would only split the votes, make the elections inconclusive if the Front decides to make irresponsible promises, as it is wont to do, and even stay out of power just as the Left would choose to do while they enjoy all the privileges of being rulers.
 
*************

Posted by Anil Nair at 6:33 PM
Updated: Thursday, 12 March 2009 11:39 PM
Is religion dying in the US?
Mood:  hungry
Now Playing: Obama signs executive order reversing Bush's legacy
Topic: RELIGION IN POLITICS
This week US President Barack Obama decisively and demonstrably turned back the Republican legacy on morality by lifting restrictions on federal funding on embryonic stem cell research. This is a hugely controversial subject in the US, not by the number of supporters for or against the measure, but by the nature and consequences of this presidential fiat. Foremost, one should be clear that the restrictions placed on state funding had very little support from the common people, rightly or wrongly. But the dynamics of law-making is what is turning the heat on.
 
More than the benefits and the fears of stem cell research is the politics of religion that was on full play in the last eight years, a crucial time that the American scientific community feels has been lost. Coincidentally, this week, according to an American Religious Identification Survey conducted by Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, the number of people in the US turning apostate is growing alarmingly high. Today, according to that survey, only 75 per cent of Americans call themselves Christian as against 86 per cent in 1990. Americans are not adopting a different religion but they are giving up religion itself, the study found.
 
Several experts have stated that there is a radical shift towards individualism over the last quarter century. But at the same time, one in three Americans consider themselves evangelical, and the number of people associated with mega-churches has gone up substantially from less than 2,00,000 in 1990 to more than 8-million in the latest survey. But then the same experts also state that the downward spiral in the economy will drive people towards religion.
 
The other major findings of the study are:
 
# The percentage of Catholics in the United States has remained steady at about one in four since 1990, while the percentage of other Christians has plummeted from 60 per cent to 50 per cent.
 
# The percentage of Muslims has doubled since 1990, but remains statistically very small, only 0.3 per cent in the original survey and 0.6 per cent today.
 
# Mormons have remained steady as a percentage of the population, even as the number of people in the United States has grown. They make up 1.4 per cent of the population.
 
# The number of Jews in the United States is falling if the category includes only those who define themselves as Jews religiously, but has remained the same if the category includes people who consider themselves ethnically Jewish.
 
Why this study is significant for the current Administration to take measures like removing the restrictions on embryonic stem cell research is that people have increasingly swayed away from organised religion in that country. One must take note of the fact that President Obama was the first in the history of that nation to have given non-believers a place in the sun, going by his inaugural speech less than two months ago. Also, statistics reveal that white right-wing Christians have not voted in favour of Obama in the last election, in spite of the wide euphoria and hype of a black Democratic leader becoming President for the first time. Barack Obama seems to have seen the writing on the wall.
 
The argument put forth by many of the analysts is that President Obama does not have much to lose by removing state funding restrictions on embryonic stem cell research, simply because that vote bank any way will not feel betrayed. But the speed with which Obama has gone about making changes in policy decisions and reverting Bush’s policies regarding major controversial issues, like abortion and now the state funding for stem cell research, make conservatives that much more uncomfortable. But President Obama has quickly learnt that the honeymoon period may not last long for him because of the worsening economic situation in his country, and that such measures have to be taken earlier than later.
 
After Barack Obama was elected President an interesting study on voting pattern was published which stated something not very obvious. John Green who is an expert in religion and politics at the University of Akron in Ohio conducted the study which revealed that President Obama's share of the vote among white evangelical Protestants was virtually unchanged from that of John Kerry's in 2004. On the contrary Obama had actually lost some ground among white mainline Protestant and white Catholic voters. The fact which will not come as any soother is that Obama had won over the majority of the “modernist” wings of both groups, but not by even the margins than Kerry did.
 
The conservatives are not against stem cell research itself but against embryonic stem cell research as it will kill embryos, and hence is anti-life. Barack Obama was considered the most extreme pro-abortion member of the US senate. The issue gets a little complicated here as stem cell research itself demands a more mature approach. The embryos produced in vitro for reproductive purposes are now-a-days left frozen in cryopreservation units for future use. Stem cell research on these yet-to-born living babies usually results in the death of the embryo, and that is what Obama’s Republican predecessor George W. Bush took cognizance of. The former president had overtly and covertly been taking up a conservative position which was quite akin to the will of the Church. By signing this executive order on stem cell research, President Obama might as well have conceded that religion is waning in the US.
 
*********

Posted by Anil Nair at 10:44 AM
Updated: Thursday, 12 March 2009 12:31 PM
Sunday, 1 March 2009
A job to die for comes with a parent with killer instincts
Mood:  spacey
Now Playing: Is formal education really important?

Is formal education really important to succeed in today’s world? You can be ambivalent on this issue trying to be different saying education is nothing more than getting through exams by any means without learning the art of survival. That is only partly true. It goes without saying that you need to learn the art of living irrespective of who you are -- a slumdog at Dharavi or Sushmita Sen’s neighbour at Colaba. Several of us might have this irresistible temptation to describe living as an art which is all about what god won’t ask you in Jannat when He is ready to serve you with 72 virgins. Being contended, many would say is about living life king size. Some would even say it’s just about being happy, probably through pranayam. Fiddle sticks!

The recent spate of news reports on how A.R. Rahman did not complete his school education just as Bill Gates was a school drop-out emphasize on the redundancy of formal education and insistence on street-smartness. There are tens of thousands of entrepreneurs in this country whose only talent has been to manage the government inspectors, while they raked in the moolah. For most of them Sita’s Kitchen would mean culinary delights. That does not mean that every illiterate entrepreneur can, as some top engineers from IIT Mumbai who have set up successful enterprises on brand design to making eco-friendly buckets to draw water from a stream say, make it in this wild, wild, wild, wild marketplace caught in middle of a biting recession.

There are tens of thousands from Gen X who are caught between their ambition looking at the way software engineers (at least till recently) earn their first salary in six figures and their own qualifications which leave much to be desired. Young boys hailing from Orissa, Haryana, Rajasthan, Bihar, Bengal and Kerala have swarmed Bangalore cityscape. But in the recent six months almost all of them have left for their hometown never to come back to Bangalore again. Their stay in Bangalore has made them adept at IT-related fringe jobs like data entry, Tally operations and chatting with girls abroad. Their language skills have developed to the extent of making Americans doubtful if their bank has outsourced the call centre jobs at all.

Every weekend trains from Bangalore City Junction take home a bunch of young boys and girls who have everything in them except for the educational qualifications that can catapult them to the next orbit. The inability to do so hugely takes a toll on their disposition as well as their morale. When young school drop-outs go on to take up odd jobs like guarding IT tech-parks later in life, and when they see their peers from metro cities driving their swanky cars with girl-friends in tow every morning, it snaps.

They blame everyone from parents, the lack of educational infrastructure and even their own regional language medium which by some strange logic is taught at the cost of English language proficiency. It is so heart-rending to see young boys talk ill of their parents for not having brought them up to the mark, of the loss of opportunities for leading a yuppie, pub-going lifestyle, the grind back home where nothing seems to have changed since they were born, and most of all, a system which smacks of parochialism when it comes to teaching English. Most youth in Bangalore who found themselves at the wrong end of the cleft stick were the first to leave the city when the depression set in. Even as they consumed cheap liquor which is so abundantly available in the city, they cannot help but point out the disparity to anyone who is willing to listen. To make matters worse, the age for making amends has far surpassed them which allows them to only wallow in self-pity.  

Once when then chief minister of Maharashtra Vasantdada Patil was asked to provide more budgetary allocation for education in the state, he told a thickly packed press conference at Mantralaya, “I have come up to this stage in public life without having any formal education. You get a status in life that is in your fate. Why is this insistence to spending so much on education when our farmers are in dire need of funds?!” For almost a minute the mediamen stood with jaws fallen, collecting their wits after the bureaucrats went on a damage-control immediately saying, education comes second only to agriculture.

Many would remember how concerned was Mukesh Ambani about his daughter taking the IAS exams. He actually kept away from his office for a few days to be with his daughter during the exams, and at the end of it he said he had become enough knowledgeable to pass the exams and choose his posting too. No one can question Mukesh's will power. That is the right kind of parent for the 21st Century.

A few Rahmans or Bill Gates might make a great Sunday newsfeature for the reading pleasure of the city-bred middle class which loves feel-good films like Slumdog Millionaire. But they are also the ones to jettison any attempts to reserve seats in IIT or IIM, as that would reduce the chances of their own children making it to the top rung in corporate hierarchy. But the problem is with the semi-urban and rural settings where people are still caught in the warp of time, who still refuse to see light of day and deprive their children of the prospects of a good life.

Even if our villages have started to become better in terms of per capita income and returns from investments in assets, the youth have no qualms in telling the truth. Gandhi’s philosophy of a self-contended village was given a decent burial by his own followers in Indian polity. To believe that children should be given only the bare minimum of education for their basic survival kills the spirit of modernity and undermines a country’s potential to overcome poverty and deprivation. No politician can be blamed for that, the common people amongst you and me should take it as a mission to establish the undeniable fact that the survival for our children does not have to do with learning to cook, identifying trees and how to clean up during periods, but with the ability to talk in American accent or punch two keys zero and one, or even better still as they do these days get to learn Java to attract enough jobs to withstand the worst recession of all time. In all probability, you belong to either one of them. So three cheers to formal education, though it is a wee bit late for us in India to praise the lord and await the Jannat.


Posted by Anil Nair at 9:16 PM
Updated: Saturday, 7 March 2009 8:15 PM

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