Controversies at Jaipur festival 2013
The Jaipur Literature Festival
(JLF) 2013 presents a modern manthan, of
ideas and ideals, opinions, books, fashions, what have you. With six issues being taken up per hour from
10 am to 7 pm, the choice is incredible, whether one wants to just hang out with
a cup of tea or coffee or any of the other delicious eats on offer, watching
the latest in winter wear on display or
partake of more serious offerings in any of the panel discussions.
In one of his less controversial
statements, Ashish Nandy pointed out
India’s four favorites: films, sports, crime and politics. All were
present at Jaipur, so footfalls were obviously heavy. It was during the same discussion, after
Tehelka’s Tarun tejpal offered a different view of corruption that Ashish let
fly. When Tejpal suggested that the
‘corruption’ be looked at as a way of means of equalizing equity, offering a
pick me up to the have nots, Ashish
Nandy let fly his missile about corruption being the worst amongst the SC,ST
and OBC. Despite the hooting, he continued,
ignoring the fact that there is no Old Boys network for them to fall back on , which
allow an enormous amount of subterfuge and sophistication in the multi-crore corruption of the upper
castes and India Inc. No wonder there
was such a huge backlash, first on the stage
and later in the streets and the courts.
Wonder if Ashish Nandy is aware
of the realities? That Bengal and Kerela
lost their vaunted positions on the India development table when taken over by
CPM…supposedly non corrupt according to Nandy?
That the SC ST poor’s version of corruption is less than chillar
compared to the stakes in the huge scams in big business and elsewhere? As
someone remarked in the melee, it was upper caste leaders who oversaw Darupadi
vastraharan and precipitated the Mahabharat?
But the big Nandy was only concerned with the corruptions attributed to
Mulayam and Mayawati!
The controversy completely blanked
out the earlier part of that session
which was focused on a hunt for
Utopia. Why?
Of what use a Utopia,which by its very name is not available. If it were, would it be a Utopia? Is there such a thing as complete freedom, of
speech, religion, economy…whatever? where does the utopia come in, except in
the fancies of the Greek literateurs and their present day fans. A utopia would
be boring. When constant changes are
being sought and chased, why hunt for a
utopia?
In the search for a break out
nation, the focus was on the developing states, listed as UP and MP and
Bihar. For some reason, Gujarat did not
figure in the listing. Is it already
developed?
But what was discussed was the
fact that strong regional leaders are rarely prime minister material, for the
very fact of their being regional leaders whose pull is limited to their
state. And India today has not one but
three chief ministers serving a third popular term already. As a matter of history, all India’s
non-Nehru/Gandhi prime ministers were dark horses, virtually pulled out of a
hat. So the hunt is on for that hat and
its contents for 2014, when politics will matter only if there is also a policy
to appease an India hungry for universal good and institutional leaders rather
than reservations and sectional benefits and economic reforms’ benefit has
actually percolated down to the aam aadmi, since everyone is aware that despite
the rise of the regional leaders, economic control still remains with Delhi.
Will the Kashmir issue ever be
resolved? Despite the anguish and the
anxiety of the ordinary peoples of both
India and Pakistan?
The proceedings at JLF were
rather despondent on this issue. A
session with India’s present and former IFS bosses, and those from Nepal,
Bangladesh and Pakistan ended up with a lady literateur begging for peace to
enable people to move back and forth and mingle over newly built bridges, rather
than held back by walls; while the big babus hung on to their stiff upper lip
and their insistence on proper protocols etc etc which have held back the peace
process for so many decades now. Pavan
Varma’s cut and dried stance and strict babu attitude came as a shock for someone who remembers him
as the author of the incredibly sensitive book on the relationship between Yudhistir
and Draupadi. A babu who was a poet is now a poet who has
become babudom personified, straddling diplomacy and Chankya giri.
At the human level too, the
picture is not very encouraging. At a
session titled Chronicles of Exile where the subject was a book “Our moon has
blood clots” by Rahul Pandita who belongs to the exiled Kashmiri Pandits, his
fellow panelists, one a valley muslim and the other a muslim from Leh seemed
very pointedly to refuse to concede the realities
of the situation. Rahul pleaded for an acknowledgment of his people’s trauma
and their lost heritage in Kashmir, his co panelists displayed a stoic refusal to see that point at all. They seemed were more concerned with
resolving the LOC so they could meet up with their relatives on the other side
and do business with them. Had it not
been so tragic, the obduracy and specious arguments presented would have been
amusing! Given such attitudes, finding a
solution in Kashmir remains a very big question in my mind, and a whole lot of
others too.
It was while listening to this
session that I realized the pride I could take in my own heritage. I belong to the Sindhi Bhaibund
community. Partition saw our entire
homeland swallowed up by Pakistan and the exile was en masse. But Sindhis have not stopped to fester or to
breed violence. They brushed aside those
feelings of alienation and uprootedness which have become the harbringer of vicious
violence in the partitions such as Palestine;
Sindhis have clung to their memories of a happier time, when they
interacted with their muslim brethren and went on pilgrimages to well known,
time honored sites not available to them now.
And they just buckled down and got to work to make a living for their
children, without any begging,.... not on the streets, not from any government …. It was plain and simple hard work which has
brought Sindhis right on top of the economic table whichever country of the
globe they live and work in. But they
never, repeat never speak about what they left behind and lost in that flight
from what was HOME. SALUTE! JAI HO!
Amongst the Kashmiris, there is an ignoring of the problems created
by lowering the security systems by railing at the routine mobile
blackouts, with neither remorse nor sympathy for the damage done to the rest of
the country.
End note: all agree that Kashmir
is Delhi’s cottage industry for trouble, that with Pakistan being declared a
failed state, Azad Kashmir is no longer a viable option. But…but will the Kashmiri
aam aadmi accept that?
Or will it go the Khalistan and
Bodoland way, with the elite exiling themselves to safe havens abroad from
where they can send funds to create mischief at home?
The most recent example of this
is the Kurds, a community of some 30 odd million that is scattered in four
middle eastern countries, while the elites have based
themselves in the US from where they watch their compatriots making themselves with the concessions they extract from the
respective governments, under the constant threat of a ‘Kurdish” uprising.
Speaking for his Chanakya’s New
Manifesto, Pavan Varma held forth on the need for reforms, both economic and
judicial with a transparent nexus between the crime and the punishment and a
neutral technology that eliminates touts.
He himself is a former Babu and knows all the way and means. Doable? The
author says it is all doable, not rocket science. Must read the book to see exactly what and
how, the exact prescriptions.
Comments