If you have a problem, fix it. But train yourself not to worry, worry fixes nothing. - Ernest Hemingway

Wednesday, 22 April 2020

The Cuckoo’s Nest


Malayalam writer Sethu began his literary journey in the 1960s and over time, became a leading author in his language. The Cuckoo’s Nest is not a translation of one of his Malayalam works; it’s the first novel Sethu has written in English. It was an excellent idea for him to tell the story in a language that is followed by a significant section of the educated Indian middleclass. The Cuckoo’s Nest makes us reflect on some of the dreadful realities of our time in the context of the country as a whole.

In a short, 260-page novel, can anyone cover a range of truths from the bottomless misogyny that cuts across geography and cultures of India, to the deep hatred of the upper-caste Hindu towards the the children of lesser gods, to the “othering” of a part of our own people for pitiless political gains and the eager collaboration of a part of the Hindu religious establishment in the project, to the hypocrisy of the Catholic Church, and more importantly, to an undercurrent of love and tolerance of a people which are much older than the Western concept of liberal humanism, and which has held together a civilisation for five thousand years? Can you think of a novel that connects a Khap Panchayets of Haryana to an exploitative convent in Tamilnadu and yet manages to convey a message not of despair but of resounding hope? I wouldn’t have, unless I had read this novel.

The central character of The Cuckoo’s Nest is a former holy sister who has renounced her role in a convent, but not her faith in Jesus. Sister Agatha has left her convent and set up – with the help of some other noble souls in a small town in Tamilnadu – a home for young women who the society throws out for one reason or another. Her shelter becomes a microcosm of those margins of the Indian society where lots of unfortunate Indian women struggle before falling off the cliff. Agatha’s aim is to offer them a nest until they are ready to fly away. In the context of her nest, she is religion-neutral and doesn’t preach. Rather, she forbids religion there, except within the personal space of each occupant.

Agatha doesn’t tread the hackneyed path of tailoring classes or formal “education”. She doesn’t even hand-hold the hopeless girls. She just encourages them to find their own path to an honourable life. Some of them succeed, some don’t.

But the story of every one of the unfortunate girls makes compelling reading. While offering a glimpse into a largely unknown world, Sethu weaves their yarns with the refined skill of a master craftsman, which makes the book easy reading, despite its somewhat heavy contents. However, I wish he had the support of a more ruthless editor and the book was free from the rather numerous linguistic glitches and typos.

[The Cuckoo's Nest, Sethu, Niyogi Books, New Delhi, 2019]

22 April 2020

Monday, 13 April 2020

A fascist shows his fangs



Prannoy Roy recently said if the Indian media is asked to bend, they crawl.

Thanks to the crawlers, we find it difficult to access credible news. The mainstream newspapers, barring exceptions, publish government press releases most of the time. The TV channels are mostly unwatchable. Let me give you two examples.

The prime minister has set up a private trust to collect donations to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, putting aside the PM's National Relief Fund which has been in existence since 1948. The new fund has been self-aggrandisingly named PM-CARES Fund. The Wikipedia says: “No one knows when it was registered, under which act, and why it [does] not contain any members of civil society or opposition as part of the trust.” (Accessed on 13/04/2030). Also, the trust isn’t covered under the RTI Act. So, the public has no way to find out how the amounts received will be spent. What level of arrogance can make the PM set up an opaque private fund in the time of the gravest crisis since independence, when he should act openly and transparently?

Secondly, India’s Corona virus cases are relatively small and we are happy about it. Let’s take a step back and check how many people India have been tested and compare it with a few other countries. According to a report published in the Business Standard on 9 April 2020, three countries had tested the following numbers till then FOR EVERY MILLION (1,000,000) PEOPLE:

Spain:                  18,300
South Korea:              60
India:                            4
  
A lot of experts believe India’s low level of testing is reflected in the relatively fewer cases, which is also a common-sense argument. If we may go back to the figures, it would be pointless to compare India with European nations, but for a country the leadership of which sells the fake dream of becoming a “Vishwa Guru”, can we not ask why India tested 1/15th of what South Korea, another emerging economy, did?

In a true democracy, the media will tear the government apart over the two issues I have flagged. But have you seen many discussions on them in the mainstream media, barring exceptions?

Fortunately, we have some new web-based news portals which offer us true news. They are run mostly by crowd-funding. The finest examples are THE WIRE and THE SCROLL. We should also mention Pratik Sinha’s Altnews.in, which has been doing a fantastic work. (If you haven’t, please do visit the website and check how much fake news is peddled by different sides of the political divide.)

The fascist powers that rule us cannot be happy with these upstart news portals which have captured the imagination of a lot of Indians, particularly the young. And they are not sitting idle.  

Recently, the UP government has filed criminal cases against Siddharth Varadarajan, Founding Editor of the Wire. The UP government accuses the Wire of “causing panic when it reported that UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath attended a religious event on March 25 at Ayodhya on the occasion of Ram Navmi”, long after a nation-wide lockdown was in place.

The Wire argues that the UP CM’s presence was an undisputable, recorded fact. However, in the article the Wire had “wrongly attributed a statement made by Acharya Paramhans to the chief minister, which was not only retracted but a corrigendum issued as well.”

In a statement made on 11 April 2020, 215 journalists have described the above event and issued a statement saying:

“Rather than let the matter end there, a FIR was filed in Faizabad district. On April 10, a team of the UP police descended at Siddharth Varadarajan’s residence to serve him a notice for appearing on April 14, irrespective of the fact that a nationwide lockdown was in force. … The state has an extra responsibility to exercise restraint on use of its powers when citizens are restricted in exercising many of their usual democratic rights. Freedom of the press is doubly important in such a context as people cannot make news themselves, but independent media is the most important medium of expressing their concerns. We demand that such politically motivated harassment of media persons should stop immediately.”

The New York Times tagline says, “Democracy dies in darkness.”

And what can be a quicker way to ensure darkness than to silence journalists by brute force or threats?

Monday, 13 April 2020

Thursday, 9 April 2020

The Great Indian Middle Class


My friend Ramdas Menon writes:

“I always tell whoever cares to listen that the people to fear are not the saffron-bandanna clad, trishul wielding khaap panchayat types; rather, they're our kinsmen, clansmen, family members and friends.

“I know a guy - much senior to me and IIT educated - who called his mother from the US to ask her to offer prayers at the local Sitala Devi temple when his daughter had some skin infection.

“Yet another US based guy who had come down to Chennai to visit his ailing mother told me NOT to visit on Thursday because it was inauspicious.”

Cannot agree more. If I may sum up what I see around me:

·       Organised religion at its worst
·       Rampaging superstition
·       The privileged believing they’re somehow in grave danger
·       hating the “other”
·       Spewing hate even at a time when a pandemic, which may not kill millions, but will surely kill our economy
·       Unconcern for people who lost their livelihood overnight
·       Ostracizing doctors who are risking their lives for us
·       Not questioning what our rulers are doing to overcome the calamity
·       Accepting complete absence of transparency as normal
·       Following a charismatic demagogue like sheep

in short, irrationality defines our privileged existence.  

To the people of my social and economic background, I would say: I am a part of you, and I am ashamed of the fact. I am ashamed of myself too, because I am one of you.