How many more?

We celebrate anniversaries. We commemorate some and mourn the rest. I am not too sure if all of us who are related to Mumbai either in person or remotely actually just commemorated, mourned or in general celebrated an anniversary like a national obligation to show unity. I know it’s a very cold statement that comes up when the world is expected to be sympathetic to such a situation. The whole scene around 26/11 in Mumbai to me appears similar to something that happens on ground zero every year.

It is the fifth terror attack in Mumbai ever since I opened my senses to the city. The first one was in 1993 December where in my father’s place of work and a market behind my mother’s place of work were bombed.  In Mumbai all parents travel by train to work every day running their middle class homes. Ever since 1992 these middle class home have been vulnerable to terrorist attacks in Mumbai either directly or indirectly. Suddenly 26/11 happens and we see action around. No home ministers or chief minister had to do away with their positions before this. No media covered the issue as much as they did this time. No world spoke about terrorism in India as much as after 26/11.

Like always India blamed Pakistan for what happened. There is no question of a foreign hand in here but this cannot happen without an internal helping hand or loophole is also a truth. The political eye wash by the Indian National Congress in wake of upcoming Lok Sabha election is shameful. The home minister of the country was replaced. The home minister and chief minister of the state were asked to step down. After the election all of them were again well placed in the cabinet. This itself shows the seriousness of the Indian administration to handle the situation seriously. The only immediate actions were to protect its interests in the elections. Known truth we would say.

 Pakistan still remains a vulnerable and unstable state. There is no accountability. The country is like a firm about to file bankruptcy. Leaders who failed to resolve the Hindu-Muslim divide and had vested interests of some to hold high positions in the Indian administration post independence are responsible for the situation we are in. Indian leadership as much as the Pakistan leadership is responsible for the situation we are in. Therefore it’s not only important that as we ask Pakistan to mind its actions but also a right time we iron our actions in our very own interests.

 It’s hard for us to believe that anyone can enter the coast or this country without inland help. Thousands of Bangladesh immigrants are able to illegally stay in India. The porous border is never completely taken care of. It’s also believed that some political parties have let this happen in interest of maintaining a sizeable Muslim vote bank in India. Many states of this so called resourceful country remain mismanaged. This creates unbearable pressures on states that are currently or have been historically been doing well. There is huge population migration from ill managed states to good going states like Maharashtra. This has put land, water, infrastructure and in general basic resources pressure on the state and its resources. Not everybody there can lead a comfortable life. There are many economies that run in that city. One of them being the so called underworld, the other being prostitution. Any foreign hand that appears to help the struggling population is often held. Who then is responsible for the state we are in? Is it just Pakistan? I don’t think Pakistan ever told us to mismanage resourceful states like Bihar. I don’t think Pakistan ever asked us not to track down illegal immigrants. Pakistan is doing what it thinks is right for them. The very base of the country stands on hating India. If Pakistan does not hate or trouble India, Pakistan is afraid to be another India.

 In light of this, India and Indian supporters around the world will keep asking a question after every carnage, “How many more?”. I think there will be many more. All of us know this somewhere within. Hanging one Kasab will not end the threat. There is a lot more analysis, book keeping and governance that needs to be done in-house. We should know our weaknesses as much as our strengths. A growing GDP shows how well you grow. I wonder is there a vulnerability measure that the world counts for. If there is none, its time India creates one for itself and sets a bar for itself. There is no point mourning 26/11 as a fashion following 9/11. US had the capability to answer 9/11 and place its house in relative order.  If India doesn’t think along the lines of what next, we would keep asking the same question after occurrences like 26/11 and lose the count of which ones should we mourn or commemorate.

 

Three Rupees and something more………….

A birthday start that I did not plan for. I was excited to celebrate this Birthday in India. All what you say its special. Now since it’s so much of a special day I wanted hit the gym before work. So I did a good and happy workout. I moved to the Rickshaw stand to take a Rickshaw home. I just said the destination name and the rickshaw started. I was on the phone with a friend. The whole ride was everything about my birthday, her boy friend etc. etc. 

I reached my destination and the meter said twenty seven rupees. In plain understandable Hindi I said the same. The driver demanded rupees thirty. Honestly or rather by GOD’s grace I earn enough to give away three bucks to a beggar without much reason or even leave it off at a vendor if he’s in crunch for some genuine change. I many a times do that. The only thing here was that I could not find a good enough reason to give away the three bucks. Why should I? I insisted that the driver take rupees twenty seven and leave. The driver said that he did not intend to give me a ride but did so because I was on the phone. The whole thing did not make much sense. I still insisted that he take rupees twenty seven as the meter demanded and leave. I mentioned that it’s my hard earned money and that I don’t give it away without reason. 

The driver shot back using explicit language, which implied that I earn money possibly by other means. I am a strong supporter of living a respectable life regardless of the gender, religion or nationality one comes from. In my head I thought, if this driver in his early forty’s can say this to me, if I leave him unanswered I’ll encourage him to say and do a lot more to someone who is less privileged in determination and resources than I am. I took my bags, got off the vehicle and dialed the police. The driver then claimed that I used explicit language against him in spite of the month of Ramzan. I am in midst of celebrating Ganesh Chaturthi too so this didn’t make much sense to me either. I insisted that he say that in front of the police.

Suddenly the driver had all the change he was refusing to give me earlier. The driver left. I cut the phone call and started the stride to floor seven. In my head I was agitated and angry that I had such a wild start on my birthday. 

I must say that this wasn’t the first argument that I have entered in past one year of my stay in Pune. I think there are rules set by the RTO and rickshaw drivers are required to abide by them under the states law. Almost none of the drivers in Pune are seen wearing a uniform or displaying a badge which he is supposed to. Ideally drivers are not supposed to charge random extra money. In my understanding the tariff rates are many times higher than the petrol cost price and incorporate the expense of a dry or without passenger journey back from the start point. Half return money is charged during random hours of the day when actually the legal time interval is between 12:00 a.m. to 5:00a.m. In case the passenger refuses to pay extra money the high handedness of the driver to bring in religion, festivals and attack the modesty of a woman passenger verbally is not only socially unacceptable but should be punishable under law. If I have experienced this in past one year, I am more than sure that the residents here have experienced it often. What surprises me is the cold nature of the RTO towards these offences. Why aren’t immediate help lines set up to complain about such incidences? Why isn’t enough action taken to curb this menace? Moreover what impression is the city leaving the visitors with? Travel in Pune and you are bound to be cheated? I as a responsible citizen refused to pay more than what was legally bound. I had a male driver talk to me in a disrespectful language. Though I have the vehicle number I refrained from loging a complaint as I am not too sure if he is the only bread winner in the family. More than that I know he is not the only one. He is among that larger population of rickshaw drivers who think laws are meant to be in books and the books are meant to hidden in pockets.

Can the RTO please clean this menace in Pune? Not too sure what is lacking. Is it the evidence or just the will?

 

Mumbai’s life is at a risk….Does anyone care?

I have been feeling insecure to travel by local trains everyday. I have to take the 8:14 a.m. fast from Kandivli and get off at Dadar. I don’t have a choice. I have to be at work by 9:30 a.m. if not, my boss will seek a replacement. Similar thoughts run through a working class Mumbaikar everyday. Traveling by local trains during the wee hours of morning is nothing but a war time exercise. An average traveler is scared for his life and safety. In 1853 British laid the first railway between Mumbai and Thane. They continued their own contribution until 1947. August 1947 we were “free”. After that I hear that the next major railway project was the Kokan railway sometime in later nineties or early twenties. The continued lethargy of the Congress berthed railway ministers is shameful. I say the Congress because they were in the office more than 90% of the time post independence and have shown a record of not learning from mistakes in many departments.

 Ever since I was a traveling student I have seen accidents and accident struck bodies waiting to be attended n platforms. This sight used to scare me. There was an instance when a woman passenger in my compartment had fallen off a running train and the rest of the passengers acted so used to the incident. I remember another shocking incident when in early hours of the morning a dead body or seriously injured one was loaded in a first class ladies compartment that was run over by the train I was traveling in. The women in the compartment were in a state of shock. I was going for my Engineering math I exam. I returned to India last year. Though being in Pune saves me a lot of this horror now, I do travel to Mumbai to visit my parents. On one such evening I went on Platform No.3 at the Dadar station. Like a normal Mumbaikar I was running to get the train on the platform while it was still. The moment I got off the bridge I saw the indicator was on Virar fast. I waited for the train to move. It didn’t for sometime. It was a usual 6:30 p.m. evening train. It was packed to its capacity and yet overflowing as a sign of careless and immune Indian railway system. Finally it did move for a distance of 2 feet and then suddenly everybody around the second class Men’s compartment yelled. Thankfully the motorman heard the cry and stopped the train or may be it was some sensitive passenger who pulled the chain. One someone was another victim. He had fallen in the gap between the compartment footboard and railway platform. The platform no.3 gathered around the spot for sometime. Something happened between then. I had no guts to see what that was but I am sure it was distorted human body in blood pool surrounded of some spectators and witnesses to the incident.

 And I said to myself, this still happens in India. Life in Mumbai has become so cheap that we need to cut throats to get to our destinations on time. The under built platforms lack of trains with people traveling on footboards and train tops are still a reality. People are traveling in utmost inhuman conditions and I do not see any human rights agitation. Politicians like Govinda and Sanjay Nirupam have made train travel an election issue and let some more people to be run over and entangled in wheels that are so to say the life lines of Mumbai.

 

It shameful that an average Mumbaikar sees one of these incidents almost everyday and yet there has been no change in the system. I then find what Raj Thackeray says is not completely wrong. The system in Maharashtra has allowed so many illegal immigrants to build slums and throng in the name of votes that the system is not ready to take the excess burden in every sense. Every resource is in shortfall and people are struggling for a piece. Every pre-election we again look at our “promising politicians” to make a change. Shameful enough, Sanjay Nirupam who was accidentally elected from the Mumbai North constituency, thanks to MNS again, did not utter a word when Mamta Di forgot to mention enough for Mumbai local travelers. Mind you he had promised this in his election campaign.

As I continue to write for this cause, I wonder how many more lives will this system need to make a change and get us to safe and human traveling conditions. We little realize that the travel by Mumbai local trains during the wee hours of morning breaches our basic human rights of right to move free and safe in our own country.

 

If Sawarkar : Veer :: Rajiv Gandhi : ?

Ever attempted such riddles in school and competitive exams? I am sure you have or at least I have. My answer to the above riddle is “Rajiv Gandhi”. What’s yours?

I haven’t traveled over the Bandra Worli Sea Link yet but I think it is a marvel step in building a good infrastructure for a city like Mumbai. This is also a lesson and project to look up to for cites that are soon going to see a Mumbai like financial revolution. One link that can give the technical and other details of this architecture stunt of its kind in recent times is http://www.marinebuzz.com/2009/07/01/mumbai-bandra-worli-sea-link-inaugurated/. Many citizens like us are happy with this first step whose stones are believed to be  laid in during the Sena BJP regime in Maharashtra. It’s good that the Congress took it forward though with some delay. We can still give it to the Congress run state government as this was the first project of its kind in Mumbai.

Now that the project is done, there are vulture like credit takers around. We can still give it to them for the nature of politics that the politicians have been playing for years now. It’s hard for them to just give it away for this project. Needless to say the ruling party in Maharashtra had an easy take at this. Being in the government it was easy for them to pull all the credit strings towards them and choose to name the sea link. What surprises me is the melodrama that ruling party played. I am wondering how long did they practice for this one?

Sharad Pawar now realizing that unless he pleases Sonia Gandhi there are chances that Vilasrao Deshmukh will play the daemon and Congress might choose to go alone in the assembly elections held in September. What better way to attract her attention than to propose to name the sea link after Rajeev Gandhi. With Chief Minister Chavhan looking to be at the center in next five years, I am confident he hardly had a choice but to agree. Now with the decision made to revert from the name originally planned the Congress government didn’t even think of consulting the remaining members of the house. This is one more classic case of arrogance demonstrated by the Congress party in recent times. All the leaders of Maharashtra were either dead or incapable and that is the reason we needed to invite a yoga and English certificate holder from Delhi who married Rajeev Gandhi and hence entered politics to inaugurate architecture exemplary. Congress in its current state thought this to be the right way to inaugurate the sea link. So what? Didn’t the British rule Mumbai? It should have been inaugurated by a foreign born. Where else could they find one except in their own party?

Now the bridge name. Ahh…the Congress dictionary has three Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajeev Gandhi. With Sharad Pawar proposing one it was decided to name the bridge after Rajeev Gandhi. When questioned why the Congress has very generic reasons to give. In the light of reasons given I as a common citizen can give you at least twelve alternate names that fit the reasoning. In this context then I can challenge that there is nothing so unique about Rajeev Gandhi that hundreds of streets, bridges, monuments, airports and other structures be named after him. The reasons Mr. Kripashankar Singh (Mumbai Congress President) gives are that Rajeev Gandhi was born in Mumbai. I have a hearty laugh here. At least 70% of the current population including me satisfies this criterion. So there’s nothing unique about Rajeev Gandhi being born in Mumbai. Kripashankar Singh then says that Rajeev Gandhi has had a hand in Information Technology revolution of this country. I have my own reservations about this claim as the IT revolution started with Stalwarts like Naren Patni, Azim Premji and Narayan Murthi seeking outsourcing business primarily from the US. I would refrain from calling Mr. Rajeev Gandhi an architect of any revolution in India. The third reason that Mr. Kripashankar Singh gives is that Rajeev Gandhi gave his life where in his body was churned to pieces. First of all, this incident happened in Tamilnadu. So whenever we build a sea link in Tamilnadu we can think of naming it after Rajeev Gandhi if localites find it fit. For now there are hundreds of Mumbaites who were forced to give away their lives in bomb blasts and terrorist attacks. If being blown up in a bomb attack is a criterion then it’s the citizens of this city who were razed in terrorist attacks since 1992 who deserve to be engraved on the pillars of that bridge. In this light what remains so unique about Rajeev Gandhi that Congress both at the center and state is after except for being the Prime Minister? This again is not a unique status as we have had a dozen after independence itself. Morarji Desai and Atal Bihari Vajpayee being visionary and deserving of all.

On the contrary Vinayak Damodar Sawarkar whose name was first decided to be given to the sea link when this project was first planned was  a young boy born on May 28th1811 in Nasik Maharashtra. Born in a Sanskrit scholastic atmosphere Vinayak Sawarkar continued to excel in academics, literature and revolutionary activities against the British. Starting from the “vanarsena” a child play and awakening group to “Mahasabha”in the later stage. Sawarkar was the pioneer of the Independence movement against the British. As a student he was the founder of the “Abhinav Bharat”foundation. He went to London to study law and started his activities from there. He had authored Independence Movement of 1857 and other such likes which became the backbone to the revolutionary movement in India. He was of the belief that India needed a strong armed existence against the British and his activities to strengthen this belief into actions saw many literary miracles and secret assignments being carried out in India during the British rule. Needless to say that soon Sawarkar was de-ported from Britain and sent to India which was then under the British rule. During this time he made a legendary escape from a ship’s toilet outlet into the sea. He swam the salted sea waters with his torture would still open. At the French port he surrendered as his accomplice had not arrived. It was then illegal to arrest anyone on a foreign land. In spite of this the French soldiers to whom Sawarkar surrendered handed him over to the British. He was kept in the Adman jail under inhuman conditions. That is where he wrote a classic that still makes you numb, “Ne majasi ne parat Mathrubhumila,Sagara pran talamala”. This literally translates into “take me to my motherland, ohh sea! my breath stalls in unrest to meet her”. Later during this he was gotten back to Ratnagiri, jailed in Yerawada. He remained the key architect of the armed revolution and concept of Hindutva (cultural nationalism) and akhanda bharat. The nation looked at him as a conspirator in Mohandas Gandhi’s death but Nathuram Godse refuted the charges and Sawarkar was released. His fears of Nehru Gandhi policies came true and India surrendered to China in 1962. Amidst a fire brand life and equally suffering personal one. Sawarkar breathed his last on February 27th 1966.

Now we know why Sawarkar is Veer Sawarkar and Rajiv Gandhi is just Rajiv Gandhi. Also, we come across this ungrateful and highly nepotism filled Nehru-Gandhi politics that continues the haunt every road, sky walk and sea link built in this country. This why most in Maharashtra and Mumbai are hurt by the hands that inaugurated the sea link and also the name that it will carry as this land of the Maharashtra and given birth to and bred many capable legends that none in the Nehru Gandhi family can even attempt to match.

 

Leave Hindutva as it was meant to be.

I have been following the BJP quiet regularly in the media. There was a sizeable population who wanted BJP to be in power for intellect and integrity reasons. However, the rule was not destined to be in hand for next five years. Never the less BJP has emerged as a largest opposition party and has a myriad contribution to make to influence the government policy decisions positively. BJP supporters in India and living abroad have been waiting since the results for the BJP top brass meeting and lessons thus learnt from introspection.

The media had BJP “atma-chintan” meeting on beat. Some did the job genuinely others either wanted to paint it black or gather news of street side gossip quality. Of the statements that came first from the print media, I was surprised to read one that stated “BJP would re-cast “Hindutva” Knowing the quality of journalism in this country in recent election times, I was waiting for the prints of speeches given by L.K. Advani and Rajnath Singh. It was good to see how BJP supported cultural nationalism.

Ever since I opened my mind and head to politics the word Hindutva was always talked of  as a brand that is pro Hindu and anti Muslim. The word to ears also sounds like Hindu extremism these days. I have heard young college girls talk of voting for Congress because BJP is all good except for too much of Hindutva in them. Even educated urban population both settled in India and abroad abhors this word or translates it into Hindu communalism and hates the party or organization that uses it. Naturally its the BJP and RSS that bear the popular brunt.

It is surprising to see how cultural nationalism was tainted by handful of politicians. More surprising is how the people in general have accepted it and even more surprising is the irresponsible print and visual media that leaves the cultural pride of this country on back tracks to make sure they are running on fast TRP tracks.

In my opinion the term Hindutva coined by Vinayak Damodar Sawarkar is an exemplary concept that unites India with its various colors. It is one that makes the blue complement the orange and orange complement the green. It is one that is so essential within this country that it makes the intrusion of foreign rotten brain difficult to penetrate. This concept of Akhanda Bharat houses and encompasses every religion sect and cast. What is refers to is not those who pray like “Hindus” but those that call this motherland their “aai” “ma” “ammi” “mother” etc. When you analyze this a little more, you start observing examples around that support this concept.

I have relished the sheer kurama at friends place on Id. I was born on Pateti and hence Parsi New Year is celebrated in my home in India every year. Having studied in a convent school and alternatively living outside India for a while I and many of my friends who follow other religions except Christianity celebrate Christmas. All Hindu festivals are always celebrated. We look at the office holidays and regardless of the reason of Diwali, Id or Independence Day, it is always welcomed with all zest. In school what binds you in a group is not your caste or religion or language but it’s the culture that you share with your classmates and like experiences. A random someone following Islam doesn’t backfire on Miyan Musharraf because he is a Muslim. He does that because he stands for a culture and knows that the rest, regardless of their religion will stand by his statement in praise and prove him right. It is not out of coincidence that you see Md. Azzaruddin of the Slumdog Millionaire fame touch feet on the podium in spite of being a Muslim. It is not random that a Muslim stands against imposed “Ghunghat” and a Hindu woman stands against forced “Burkha”.

What this states is that something that binds us all in this Indian subcontinent is not our religion or language it’s the culture that we grow in and experience till our death. This beautiful concept of “Akhanda Bharat” or United India was termed as “Hindutva” and every person who calls India his motherland was called a Hindu.

In light of this discussion, the word Hindutva essentially belongs to neither the Congress nor the BJP. It was coined by Vinayak Damodar Sawarkar who was an ardent freedom fighter and an iron man of Sardar Patel cadre. Thus it is the sub standard quality of the Congress thought and other pseudo secular parties to malign a concept that holds Indian culture together for petty votes. It is the arrogance and lack of understanding of common and historical India within the so called “High Command” that has further perpetuated this. It is shameful that the media endorses such actions and maligns parties like BJP and organizations like RSS. The aftermath of which is anti BJP undercurrent because of the use of the word Hindutva.

In my opinion, no party in this country has a right to recast Hindutva as they anyways weren’t the creators of it. Only thing possible is to champion the concept to build a stronger India or build a secular concept better defined than “Hindutva” itself

 

It sells all for One Lakh Only.

I go to swimming regularly these days. For past two days, being on a medical leave I have chosen to attempt the 5:00 p.m. batch escaping the 6:00 a.m. morning chill. It has been an empty week so to say. I didn’t have much to do as such. A pressure free life sometimes leaves a vacuum and a strong urge to fill it with something concrete and impacting. I have been looking for ways around that I could be of help and be that impact I was looking to be. Time and again after returning from United States I have a growing feeling within that my countrymen do not feel empowered. They do not believe in the system and its power to bring about the change.

 

While I was in the ladies changing room I spotted a woman complaining about her daughter’s admission. This happened in a city that is known to be “the mother of educational institutes”. I was shocked and surprised. I approached her for a reason. What she mentioned was what I had heard before. What I knew today was that the problem was affecting a vast majority and the gangrene was wide spread.

 

Few days ago I was chatting with my neighbor who mentioned about “middlemen educationalist”. Till then I had heard the term “middlemen” prominently in real estate and prostitution business. I was agitated and helpless at the same time. This is the country that I want to raise my kids in and this is the country I look to educate my kids in. Why on this earth do I need to feed the middlemen to get this through?

 

There is a convent school in Viman Nagar, Pune, MH, India. This is run by the “missionaries”. It is an ICSE board school. Parents who wish to acquire admission to their wards in this school are known to religiously visit the Principal’s office for Lower K.G. admissions. The watchman or the attendant refuses to allow the meeting either by saying that the Principal is not available or admissions are full. There are some brokers or middlemen who operate on behalf of the school authorities. These men/women are then approached by needy parents. They are then given the “rate” or “cost” of admission which is in form of donations to the school authorities. This amount varies from 75 Thousand to 1.25 Lakhs. Parents who can afford this can wish to get the admissions rest are left to cry in silence over their helplessness to provide good and affordable education for their kids. One like the woman in the ladies room of the swimming pool I go. She was crying in silence away from her daughter’s knowledge in helplessness. This is the case of many middleclass parents in and around the Viman Nagar area. They cannot afford the “donation” through middlemen that the convent schools ask.

 

There are a few convent schools in this area that are graded as “good” by the localites.The fee structure of these schools is also very intense. It varies from 35 to 50 Thousand rupees per year. We all know the situation of government and municipal schools in this country. In light of this, isn’t it the responsibility of the local government to control this menace and ensure affordable basic quality education in this country? Shouldn’t the government nail down people to proliferate these malpractices impacting a common man’s house. I was ashamed to hear this in a city like Pune. It goes without saying that this could be the situation elsewhere as well.

 

Being from a middle class family and background I know the helplessness that parents feel when they have to say “No” to something that they know is requisite for their child’s growth but they can’t afford it. I can imagine the assault on the child’s mind at that tender age where he/she does not know what is happening and doesn’t even know how to fix it. At the onset of his first steps in the education system or rather the country’s system, what the society and the system teaches him/her is to shell out money to “illegal middlemen” to get tasks done. These are the kids that we say will be our country’s future. Would we still expect a clean and non-corrupt system after 50 years? Do we still expect things to change years later? Do we still expect a government clerk to refuse under table money when he has to pay huge donations to middlemen to fetch quality primary and secondary education in this country 50 years after independence?

 

If I as a local citizen of Pune could sense this in my 9 months of stay here, I am wondering what is the State Congress-NCP government doing for ten years now? Haven’t the account auditors questioned the Lakhs of rupees that the convent schools are extracting from the parents like extortion money? How much more time does the state government require to make quality and affordable education available to citizens of this country and that to in a city that is known to be the “mother queen” of educational institutes.

 

Ooops! What did this country exactly vote for?

While apparently majority of the nation celebrates the coming of a stable government at the center, a sizeable fraction is also disappointed with the results. Though it is always true that the voting population is the one that selects the government we have seen an unexpected wipe out of the BJP from larger states in India. The election this time was fought on grounds of good governance, development and security by the BJP. There was a new hope and “Hindutva”  was tried to be placed in the right perspective of “su-rajya” and equality. In spite this and many more efforts, there was a short fall at all levels. From top brass of the party to an average BJP supporter all of us have something to learn from this. Keeping that retrospection discussion aside, it’s really important to understand what the majority of the population that went to the ballot box really voted for or for that matter did they understand what and whom they have voted for?

 

No doubt that people have understood the importance of getting a stable government at the center and have trusted the capability of the Congress to do so. The smaller regional parties have been largely shown a red card in national politics.

 

People have also accepted dynasty politics over meritorious selection. This election has proved that Congress as a party belongs largely to the Gandhi’s and there is very little that can be achieved without a Gandhi family in high office.

 

Sonia Gandhi’s pro-poor and social tending policies and declaration of them at the right time has as an answer to the Indian population’s short memory proved to be a boon. People saw Congress as an “aam aadmi” savior once again. People have chosen to see the political leader taking trips to the poor, spending nights in a hut whether or not even a city like Mumbai is facing power outages and the economy is making even a middle class lifestyle difficult to sustain.

 

People have given a loud and clear “OK” to a foreign origin leadership over five decades of committed service to the nation.

 

People have given in to advertising and media hype about the Congress.

 

People have ignored the Congressionalisation of the independent positions and organizations in this country. Right from the Indian President to Navin Chawla of the election commission all are pro-Congress entities. CBI’s misuse to either cool or heat up cases against Mayawati, declaration of Jagdish Tytler’s  clean chit by the C.B.I just before the elections or for that matter nullifying the red corner notice against Quatarochi right during election campaigns has been ignored by the people over their daily woes of water, food shelter and a respectable leaving.

 

People have accepted building of more IIT’s without right infrastructure, people have accepted the reservation in premier institutions and people have accepted to ignore the woes of the defense personal. People have accepted the caste based reservation policies and welcomes the inauguration of religion based policies for the Muslims in the Congress manifesto. People have accepted that Muslims are the only minority in India that need special treatment and rest of the country can fall under a single umbrella.

 

People have accepted the vote bank politics over visionary agenda.

 

People have accepted that terrorism is not the responsibility of the running government. People have believed that “Kandahar” was a mistake but have accepted innumerable terror attacks on this land during the Congress reign. People have allowed Congress to sensationalize Godhra and Kandahar to cover the inefficiencies of the running government.

 

People have accepted that elections can be won without a strong agenda and analysis. People have proved that elections can be won if things spoken in speeches are things that they like to hear.

 

People have accepted the Congress politics to stay in power with criminals like Shibu Soren and  ideologically disparate partners like LEFT.

 

Last but not the least, people have accepted their state as it is and have lost hope.

 

This is according me a verdict of confused Indian citizens who still think that BJP and Ram Sene are the same. Citizens who do not understand the meaning of “Hindutva” and citizens who neither could trust Congress enough but had no option as they could not embrace BJP and they didn’t exactly understand what the party stood for.

 

Will future change this is something we all need to see. While NDA was in power BJP had a sweeping victory in the Vidhan Sabha elections but the following Lok Sabha elections had a different story to tell. Congress has gotten an opportunity for a image lift and BJP has given it enough pointer as a feedback to do so during the election campaign. It is hard to believe that people largely ignored the fallacies of the last UPA government or did they not feel them? Or may be an alternative option to the Congress never reached that deep. Something we all need to retrospect over.

 

 

Why Mumbai? Just Because It Silently Earns…

Mumbai is very unique as a city. Being a Mumbaite I have seen it grow and gradually suffocate over past two decades. There are issues and they are blatant but a Mumbaite is so busy running at par with the second hand of his wrist watch that he either chooses to changes things on his own or suffer in silence. Majority of the Mumbaites for ages now have chosen latter.

 

Mumbai is in news everyday, for one reason of the other. One thing that ensures its mention is the Bombay Stock Exchange. However the city is rarely in news 24/7. Terrorist attacks of 26/11 ensured that as well for three days. The recent mention of Mumbai in media is for a low voter turn out in Mumbai for the 15th Lok Sabha elections.

 

Mumbai has had voting trend post independence.

mumbai1

 

If we see closely over the past three decades, it has more or less remained constant .Even when the nation turned up in large numbers after Indira Gandhi’s assassination Mumbai continued its trend. One more thing to note here is that the composition of Mumbai ever since then has been changing. It has turned from fishermen’s (Koli’s) Mumbadevi to financial capital of India, Mumbai that we know today. The population of Mumbai Metropolitan Region has increased from 77 lakhs in 1971 to 188 lakhs in 2001. Thus as an absolute the number of voters turning up to vote has definitely increased.

 

This city with its growing importance has attracted many parallel running economies and attention. It has thus taken the first hit of many aggressions and attacks. More recent ones and ones at shorter intervals are since the 1992 blasts. Every other year or even many times a year the city bruises itself with bomb blasts and such foreign aggressions. The city then bleeds for a few hours, as that is all what it can afford to waste, bandages the wounds and then continues to live. This suffering in silence is known to the world as “never day die” spirit.

 

Mumbai as a city has given lot to this country. Huge amount of the revenue generated at the center comes from this city. This is the city that has shown the country to stand in spite of odds. This is the city that houses some of the top industrial houses in this country. This is the city that houses truths of a big city and continues to live. This is the city that houses culture. This is the city that houses unity. This is the city that houses courage and this is the very city that houses suffering in silence. That’s the precise reason that Mumbai is the city that waits at the mercy of latent politicians and the central government for a metro railway for decades now. Thus is the one that waits for the state government to solve the issues of the localities. Also, the one that needs a Raj Thackeray to speak up for itself. This is the city that succumbs to several deaths during daily railway commute of utmost inhuman nature. This is the same city that has been looking for a convincing solution for its population explosion and exhaustion its its already pressurized resources. This is the same city that succumbs to lies of our “worthy” politicians like Govinda Ahuja . This is the city that get back less than 1% of its contribution back for its own good. This is the city that never sleeps in anxiousness of a possible change and a better tomorrow.

Mumbai since independence has only given and given to the center and the central governments’ apathy towards it has been a return gift. Mumbai was so busy within its culture and upliftment that it barely had time to stop and question. Mumbaities started solving all these problems on their own and hence the result. Largely migrating population from other underdeveloped parts of India have pressurized the logistical system here. The localite does not have a mode of decent public transport or roads to ply on. Hundreds of people die everyday by local train accidents that are packed above their capacity. I have never seen and experienced such an inhuman treatment of people by its system and authorities in a civilized society. No fulltime water, no fresh air. No plantations, no playgrounds, this is the truth of this city. As I mentioned earlier, many parallel economies run here. Right from the underworld to established prostitution and child labor. But who cares as long as the city earns in leaps and bounds and provides to nations financial growth?

This city has been suffering for over two decades now. It’s rotting like gangrene spreading. It’s burning from wounds of several blasts. What happened at TAJ was sad, but that gained mileage because it was TAJ and not a local train. That incidence gained mileage because it was just months before the nation went to polls. What is so different about Mumbai after 26/11 that the media created a whole hype around to it to make the city wake up and vote? There are special debates held in the media for this! A Mumbaite is claimed to have not being shaken by 26/11? Excuse the city, the city is suffering to numbness and living in fear every minute every day.

Can someone please ask the system and “high profile” politicians on what is being done for the city in return? Piya Dutt joins a lakh people to TAJ to show her solidarity. When asked on what they have done for this city, both Milind Deora and Priya Dutt claim to have gotten more funds for the city. No one knows where has the money gone and neither of them seem accountable. What does an educated voter of this city get to see in the media? A Prime Minister who cannot handle criticism either on the floor of the house or outside. He comes out in public making “Sonia Gandhi” style remarks on the opposition. A debate held by channels like CNN IBN where Sagarika Ghosh inspired by her Congress funds makes false news from statements like “Narendra Modi insulted the women of this country by calling them Budhiya”. A spokesperson like Jayanthi Natarajan who in spite of being a lawyer fails to make logical arguments in debates. She speaks and shouts like vendors in the market refusing to let others make any point on the TV debates. She is a classic example of some politicians that are broadcasted on the media and generate a sense among masses that no one listens to their needs. What does TOI print in head lines, the fact that Priyanka asked Varun to read Gita. Another news channel has designers do our politicians make over. Then we have actors joining Sanjay Nirupam’s rallies. We see politicians distributing money for votes. We hear speeches that are allegations and finger pointing of the door step quarrel quality. The ECE then decides to have the election in midst of summer holidays. The list of such unintelligent and apathetic show both by the media and politicians can go on. The real issues of this country are thus hidden under the dunes of such mass and orchestrated nonsense. The empathy and motivation to vote for a change then goes missing somewhere.  An average voter thus prefers to enjoy his day off than to go and vote for a system and candidate that he does not connect to or consciously doesn’t want to.

 

I am not averse to voting. I traveled intercity taking a compulsory leave to cast my vote but the hype around Mumbai not voting when the nation itself is averaging to 50% shows that both the media and the politicians are trying to diverge attention from the crux of the issue. The politicians and media should be thankful that the city still stood up to vote 49% giving another chance for a change. For what the city has suffered all this while, I wouldn’t have been shocked if  the city would have boycotted these elections.

 

Sonia Gandhi-What does this name translate to for India?

 

I was traveling with my friend from Pune to Mumbai last weekend. She is a Nigerian. The current heated political environment has not spared her as well. She is following the news papers dropped at her hotel room every day. While conveying that she is following the news and that she knows of two big parties against each other, she understood that one of them was communal and the other was led by Sonia Gandhi. She also knew that Sonia Gandhi has two kids who are in politics. Now this was a little interesting to me. I debate and analyze Indian political situation with my colleagues and friends here in India but this was an opinion from someone who was an onlooker.  What does a common foreigner think about Indian political scene?

 

My friend continued to mention her view points. She thought that one of the larger Non-Congress parties is anti-Muslim. She was astonished by the fact that Indians allowed a woman Italian (foreign) origin to compete for the post of Prime Minister. She was amazed that a naturalized citizen can hold such a responsible position in India and no one would object. She strongly thought that was wrong.  She thought that Sonia Gandhi had raised her kids as Indian and her not returning to Italy after her husbands’ demise was laudable. And the next instance I heard the word Sonia Gandhi…..I thought

 

Swatynatra Veer Sawarkar, Bhagat Singh, Mangal Pandey, Acharya Atre, Baba Saheb Ambedkar, Subhash Chandra Bose, Sardar Patel rebelled against the British in vain. What an average foreigner knows about Indian politics is largely about an Italian face that is dressed Indian. An Italian national was always welcome to be a naturalized citizen of this country as daughter-in-law. She took over the Indian political scene to a level that is no more identified by Indian faces. A certificate in English is the only course that was needed to hold power in this country. This was the power to rule and not govern. I was in some sense helpless and in a state of agony at the same time. Where has this Congress taken my nation to? What is the image that my nation has in the eyes of a young foreigner? What is the difference between what is happening now and the dynasty rule that was apparently abolished hundreds of years a go? Where are the names of my leaders who bleed red for this country? Why can’t I hear the names of Vajpayee, Advani, Sharad Pawar, Morarji Desai, P. Chidambaram, Manmohan Singh etc. from a foreigner? If I have to have my country known by a foreign face sixty years after independence then why did we throw out the British? British or Italian what difference would that have made to the image anyways? Directly or indirectly you are under foreign led rule.

 

Even when a foreigner feels that having a foreign born person govern the nation can be dangerous the Indian National Congress is not willing to accept that. Short sighted as they are, they do not understand the risk at which the nation and national secrets stand when a naturalized citizen is given such a high office. Though the moral temperament of a person cannot be judged by his or her nationality I think that you put your nation too much at a risk of leaking secrets and prone to partial decisions when it comes to holding a responsible office in India. I can tell you this for my experience. I travel a lot for work. My stay in United States of America has been the longest. Tomorrow even if I take up American citizenship for any reason, my loyalty will always be first towards India. It is natural. It is impossible for a person to leave the citizenship of the country that he/she is born and raised, in sense of its meaning in spite of a few papers being signed and stamped to naturalize to a different nation. So is the case with Sonia Gandhi. She has shown today that it is possible for an international by the way of marriage to a political family or otherwise to rule this country with great ease. It is a little astonishing that our constitution did allow this. We were just off of a British rule when our constitution was written by Mr. Ambedkar.. With all due respect for the great work and the person that he was, in my understanding, an amendment to not let this happen should have been a natural outcome. If not then, then why not now? When we know of the threats our country faces! When we know that we are a capable country of a billion people! When we know that we have people who can lead from the front and when we know we have every resource we need to govern this country on our own. Why did India and why did Congress need Sonia Gandhi.

 

Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her body guards. Rajiv Gandhi fell pray to the LLTE master minds. The bases of the Congress were leaders like Gandhi, Nehru, Ambedkar, Rajendra Prasad. There was a structure thought and purpose the party had. With sudden demise of Indira Gandhi Rajiv Gandhi took over. Probably by the time he could instill a sense and organization in the party or may be even understand things unfortunately he was taken away. The party till then did not have a democratic structure to itself. It was always based on worshiping the Nehru Gandhi family. Suddenly the party crippled without a Gandhi name to show. If you may agree, a good structured and well run organization is not as much people driven. It is largely policy, structure, purpose and ideology driven. No doubt it needs good and capable people but never “a person” in specific. It is evident from what Congress did in 1999 that the party did not have a strong foundation to stand on. The only possible foundation this party has is the Gandhi family and the Gandhi lineage. They had no option but to get Sonia Gandhi to lead the Congress. This was in spite of the sects in Congress not agreeing to this completely. She seemed like the only savior to the age old party.

 

I wonder what made Mrs. Gandhi take that decision either. I have seen some of her photographs with Rajiv Gandhi at election rallies. Rajiv Gandhi was known to be the leader of masses. Mrs. Gandhi I believe has seen that through. She had seen how the reservation and minority politics seemed to have been working in the favor of the Congress. She has seen the power of “Garibi Hatao” slogan from Indira Gandhi. She has seen the vote bank politics within her party. She has seen the shallow nature of principles within her own party. She also knows how easily people can be transformed into vote banks based on false and ambiguous statements with no substance at all. According to me one thing at she has known is to crush the opposition and stay in power. She also knows that the masses here have a very short memory and anything and everything is taken at its spoken value without much analysis. At least by a larger vote bank.  She knows that Congress needs to be a household name till Rahul Gandhi can take up the Prime Minister position to earn his bread and butter for generations to come.

 

Unfortunately, her understanding of the nation and its political scenario is limited. Not only does she lack the experience but she fails to have the vision and connection necessary to place this country on a path to progress. She does not have the educational background or stronghold to hold a post like Chairperson of the coalition. She does not a vision for this country. I say so because I have never seen her in interviews or anywhere else where she is found talking about her vision for this country. I have never heard her having an intellectual and debatable discussion. I have heard her stoop at levels and talk about things that are deemed unsuitable for a person holding her office. I do not expect such shallow speeches from a leader holding the office and position that she is holding now. Blame game politics is may be suitable at corporation election level. I find her speeches of that caliber. She has no political vision or a strategic one. She however knows the power her last name has. Hence she has instilled the “ji huzur” culture in the Congress. Congress now seems like a place where merit does not matter. It’s all about how close you are to the ultimate family. The very fact that she has continued the vote bank politics and disregarded the merit structure shows her incompetence for the position she holds and her lack inclination to country’s development in true sense of its meaning. I sincerely doubt that she “means well”.

 

Till late 90’s Sonia stayed out of politics for a reason. She stayed in India for a reason. I do not challenge that. For a woman of any origin to lose her husband the way she did is sympathetic. Thousands of women in this country have gone through her pain with innumerable terrorist attacks that this country has seen. Though, what astonishes me is she markets Congress on the dynasty name and assigns a martyr image to the genocide. Something that happened to Mrs. Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi was a murder of democracy and an end of an individual era. They cannot be called martyrs. I would not even call people who had to give away their lives in TAJ as martyrs. A martyr is a person who is at the frontier knowing that he is out there to take the first bullet on his chest so that it doesn’t hit his countrymen. I think it’s an insult to my countrymen who fight for my country’s defense at the borders when their contribution is compared to leaders who have been assassinated. If you may agree, there is a huge difference between two. I was ashamed of the Congress when they did not object to Sonia making fun of Mr. Vajpayee’s age and knee problems in the parliament. I was ashamed of my countrymen when they allowed words like “maut ka saudagar” to be used on the parliament floor without much protest. I am shamed that my countrymen accept an Italian non-competitive leadership. I am ashamed that an English certificate holder from Italy who married an Indian politician and came into politics just a decade back has the courage to question Mr. Advani’s contribution to India. I am ashamed that our country has agreed to accept whatever Congress throws in their plate when the country and we as individuals deserve more. I am disturbed that only lineage of Nehru-Gandhi family has had an opportunity in this country, thanks to the opportunistic marketing by the Congress. Where are the families of so many freedom fighters and known leaders like Sardar patel, Maulana Azad, Lokmanya Tilak, Damodar Sawarkar? Are we sleeping to drama that is being played or are we just immune?

 

What Soniya Gandhi and her aura translate into is more interesting to know. All of us know that taking up Indian citizenship is easier than many other countries in this world. It’s all the more easier by the way of marriage. When the Congress today upholds Sonia Gandhi and the people vote her to power, the message to the world is loud and clear. We have conveyed to the world that a person of non-Indian origin without much baggage of experience capability or service to this nation can hold an influential office in India. We have shown the world that this is easily possible. We have shown the world that the larger masses in India can be fooled to believe that Sonia is an “international level” leader. This is the term used by one of the farmers from Rae Barreli from where Sonia is the elected MP. We have shown the world that people prefer Sonia Gandhi’s persona over veteran services of Sushma Swaraj. We have shown the world that we can be falsely influenced.

 

Fixing this issue is not a one day job or a subject of election campaigns. The naturalization process in this country needs to be stringent and scrutinized. The issue does not limit and end at Sonia Gandhi. Thousands of people cross borders everyday. They are a burden on our economy and threat to our national security. These are the people who should have been in the jail and not Varun Gandhi. There are other laws to handle Varun Gandhi situation. These people can become citizens easily. Thanks to our porous system. They can very well enter politics. They can become popular leaders and they can hold a high position in office either individually or by blackmailing a larger party in need of support to form the government. Lastly you would know, they had entered to leak national secrets to a foreign country and break this country. We would be fools not to see what Sonia holding office as a foreigner implies. We may be fools not to know that there may be many aliens who enter this country with malign intensions are encouraged by the possibility that a alien can be made into something politically strong and influential.

We need an amendment that stops a naturalized person from holding office at the center. There have to be limits in national interest. The issue does not start and stop at Sonia Gandhi. It just throws open a discussion of implications and challenges that the country will face and the selfishness of Congress leadership by continually denying the existence of these for India. I do not question Mrs. Sonia Gandhi as a person, she may be the finest but what I doubt is her capability and the signal that this nation has given the world with her being in such a strong and influential office.

 

“Aditya”


On the spur of the moment my thought turns deep
I looked at the shine and my sight turned meak

Imagine his power to control all
From all distances so near and far

He keeps the universe around his soul
Holding the string and avoiding the foul

He makes you see all day and night
He gives you all the energy to keep you tight

He is the lord of this universal cycle
Making look all so weak and fickle

This is what he said to me
“This power has not come an easy way
To give you life I burn all day”