| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 49, Dated Dec 13, 2008 |
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| CURRENT
AFFAIRS |
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crisis hour |
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Death Of A Salesman
And Other Elite Ironies
TARUN J TEJPAL
ROHINTON MALOO was shot doing two things he
enjoyed immensely. Eating good food and
tossing new ideas. He was among the 13 diners
at the Kandahar, Trident-Oberoi, who were
marched out onto the service staircase, ostensibly
as hostages. But the killers had nothing to bargain for.
The answers to the big questions — Babri Masjid, Gujarat,
Muslim persecution — were beyond the power of anyone to
deliver neatly to the hotel lobby. The small ones — of money
and materialism — their crazed indoctrination had already
taken them well beyond. With the final banality of all
fanaticism, flaunting the paradox of modern technology
and medieval fervour — AK-47 in one hand; mobile phone in the other — the killers asked their minders, “Udan
dein?” The minder, probably a
maintainer of cold statistics,
said, “Uda do.”
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Photo: AP |
Rohinton caught seven
bullets, and by the time his
body was recovered, it could
only be identified by the ring on his finger. Rohinton was just
48, with two teenage children, and a hundred plans. A few of
these had to do with TEHELKA, where he was a strategic
advisor for the last two years. As Indians, we seldom have a
good word to say about the living, but in the dead we discover
virtues that strain the imagination. Perhaps it has to do with
a strange mix of driving envy and blinding piety. Let me just
say Rohinton was charismatic, ambitious, and a man of his
time, and place. The time was always now, and in his
outstanding career in media marketing, he was ever at the
cutting edge of the new — in the creation of Star Networks,
and a score of ventures on the web. The place was always
Mumbai, the city he grew up in and lived in, and he exemplified
its attitudes: the hedonism, the get-go, the easy pluralism.
For me there is a deep irony in his death. He was killed by
what he set very little store by. In his every meeting with us,
he was bemused and baffled by TEHELKA’s obsessive engagement
with politics. He was quite sure no one of his class —
our class — was interested in the subject. Politics happened
elsewhere, a regrettable business carried out by unsavoury
characters. Mostly, it had nothing to do with our lives. Eventually,
sitting through our political ranting, he came to
grudgingly accept we may have some kind of a case. But he
remained unconvinced of its commercial viability. Our kind
of readers were interested in other things, which were
germane to their lives — food, films, cricket, fashion,
gizmos, television, health and the strategies of seduction.
Politics, at best, was something they endured.
In the end, politics killed Rohinton, and a few hundred
other innocents. In the final count, politics, every single day,
is killing, impoverishing, starving, denigrating, millions of
Indians all across the country.
If the backdrop were not so
heartbreaking, the spectacle
of the nation’s elite — the
keepers of most of our wealth
and privilege — frothing on
television screens and screaming through mobile phones
would be amusing. They have been outraged because the
enduring tragedy of India has suddenly arrived in their
marbled precincts. The Taj, the Oberoi. We dine here. We
sleep here. Is nothing sacrosanct in this country any more?
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Photo: REUTERS |
What the Indian elite is discovering today on the debris
of fancy eateries is an acidic truth large numbers of ordinary
Indians are forced to swallow every day. Children who die of
malnutrition, farmers who commit suicide, dalits who are
raped and massacred, tribals who are turfed out of centuryold
habitats, peasants whose lands are taken over for car factories,
minorities who are bludgeoned into paranoia —
these, and many others, know that something is grossly
wrong. The system does not work, the system is cruel, the
system is unjust, the system exists to only serve those who
run it. Crucially, what we, the elite, need to understand is
that most of us are complicit in the system. In fact, chances are the more we have — of privilege and money —
the more invested we are in the shoring up of an unfair state.
IT IS time each one of us understood that at the heart of
every society is its politics. If the politics is third-rate, the
condition of the society will be no better. For too many
decades now, the elite of India has washed its hands off the
country’s politics. Entire generations have grown up viewing
it as a distasteful activity. In an astonishing perversion,
the finest imaginative act of
the last thousand years on the
subcontinent, the creation
and flowering of the idea of
modern India through mass
politics, has for the last 40
years been rendered infra dig, déclassé, uncool. Let us
blame our parents, and let our children blame us, for not
bequeathing onwards the sheer beauty of a collective vision,
collective will, and collective action. In a word, politics:
which, at its best, created the wonder of a liberal and democratic
idea, and at its worst threatens to tear it down.
We stand faulted then in two ways. For turning our back
on the collective endeavour; and for our passive embrace of
the status quo. This is in equal parts due to selfish instinct
and to shallow thinking. Since shining India is basically only
about us getting an even greater share of the pie, we have
been happy to buy its half-truths, and look away from the
rest of the sordid story. Like all elites, historically, that have
presided over the decline of their societies, we focus too
much of our energy on acquiring and consuming, and too
little on thinking and decoding. Egged on by a helium
media, we exhaust ourselves through paroxysms over
vacant celebrities and trivia, quite happy not to see what
might cause us discomfort.
For years, it has been evident that we are a society being
systematically hollowed out
by inequality, corruption, bigotry
and lack of justice. The
planks of public discourse
have increasingly been divisive,
widening the faultlines of
caste, language, religion, class, community and region. As
the elite of the most complex society in the world, we have
failed to see that we are ratcheted into an intricate framework,
full of causal links, where one wrong word begets
another, one horrific event leads to another. Where one
man’s misery will eventually trigger another’s.
Let’s track one causal chain. The Congress creates Jarnail
Singh Bhindranwale to neutralise the Akalis; Bhindranwale
creates terrorism; Indira Gandhi moves against terrorism;
terrorism assassinates Indira Gandhi; blameless Sikhs are
slaughtered in Delhi; in the course of a decade, numberless innocents, militants, and securitymen die. Let’s track
another. The BJP takes out an inflammatory rath yatra;
inflamed kar sewaks pull down the Babri Masjid; riots ensue;
vengeful Muslims trigger Mumbai blasts; 10 years later a
bogey of kar sewaks is burnt in Gujarat; in the next week
2,000 Muslims are slaughtered; six years later retaliatory
violence continues. Let’s track one more. In the early 1940s,
in the midst of the freedom movement,
patrician Muslims demand
a separate homeland; Mahatma
Gandhi opposes it; the British support
it; Partition ensues; a million
people are slaughtered; four wars
follow; two countries drain each
other through rhetoric and poison;
nuclear arsenals are built; hotels in
Mumbai are attacked.
IN EACH of these rough causal
chains, there is one thing in
common. Their origin in the
decisions of the elite. Interlaced
with numberless lines of potential
divisiveness, the India framework
is highly delicate and complicated.
It is critical for the elite to understand
the framework, and its role
in it. The elite has its hands on the
levers of capital, influence and
privilege. It can fix the framework.
It has much to give, and it must
give generously. The mass, with
nothing in its hands, nothing to
give, can out of frustration and
anger, only pull it all down. And
when the volcano blows, rich and
poor burn alike.
And so what should we be
doing? Well, screaming at politicians
is certainly not political engagement. And airy
socialites demanding the carpet-bombing of Pakistan and
the boycott of taxes are plain absurd, just another neon sign
advertising shallow thought. It’s the kind of dumb public
theatre the media ought to deftly side-step rather than
showcase. The world is already over-shrill with animus: we
need to tone it down, not add to it. Pakistan is itself badly
damaged by the flawed politics at its heart. It needs help, not
bombing. Just remember, when hardboiled bureaucrats
clench their teeth, little children die.
Most of the shouting of the last few days is little more
than personal catharsis through public venting. The fact is
the politician has been doing what we have been doing, and
as an über Indian he has been doing it much better. Watching
out for himself, cornering maximum resource, and turning
away from the challenge of the greater good.
The first thing we need to do is to square up to the truth.
Acknow ledge the fact that we have made a fair shambles of
the project of nation-building. Fifty million Indians doing
well does not for a great India make, given that 500 million
are grovelling to survive. Sixty years after independence, it
can safely be said that India’s political
leadership — and the nation’s
elite — have badly let down the
country’s dispossessed and
wretched. If you care to look, India
today is heartbreak hotel, where
infants die like flies, and equal
opportunity is a cruel mirage.
Let’s be clear we are not in a
crisis because the Taj hotel was
gutted. We are in a crisis because
six years after 2,000 Muslims were
slaughtered in Gujarat there is still
no sign of justice. This is the second
thing the elite need to understand
— after the obscenity of gross inequality.
The plinth of every society
— since the beginning of Man —
has been set on the notion of justice.
You cannot light candles for
just those of your class and creed.
You have to strike a blow for every
wronged citizen.
And let no one tell us we need
more laws. We need men to implement
those that we have. Today all
our institutions and processes are
failing us. We have compromised
each of them on their values, their
robustness, their vision and their
sense of fairplay. Now, at every crucial
juncture we depend on random
acts of individual excellence and courage to save the day.
Great systems, triumphant societies, are veined with ladders
of inspiration. Electrified by those above them, men strive
to do their very best. Look around. How many constables,
head constables, sub-inspectors would risk their lives for the
dishonest, weak men they serve, who in turn serve even
more compromised masters?
I wish Rohinton had survived the lottery of death in
Mumbai last week. In an instant, he would have understood
what we always went on about. India’s crying need is not
economic tinkering or social engineering. It is a political
overhaul, a political cleansing. As it once did to create a free
nation, India’s elite should start getting its hands dirty so
they can get a clean country. |