Saturday 17 August 2013

Patti Smith's advice to the young

Build a good name. Keep your name clean. Don’t make compromises, don’t worry about making a bunch of money or being successful — be concerned with doing good work and make the right choices and protect your work. And if you build a good name, eventually, that name will be its own currency.
Patti Smith's advice to the young, by way of William S. Burroughs – a fine addition to our library of noteworthy advice.

SAGARIKA: RESEARCH NOVICE

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SAGARIKA: RESEARCH NOVICE

Article image Sagarika reading
“Your humble columnist has the dubious honour of coining the phrase ‘Internet Hindus’ “
When I read this sentence in Sagarika Ghose’s latest column in the Hindustan Times, it took me a while to figure out why I could feel a chalky distaste at the back of my throat. It reminded me of the first fictional character I ever came to associate with the word “sanctimonious” – Uriah Heep from Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield. You see, he too was an ’umble man.
Ms Ghose’s assertions in this column are exceedingly disagreeable. “Look beyond politics” is a stellar example of how not to write a column. Unclear, self-contradictory, muddled and confused, the reader is at a loss when it comes to understanding what exactly the writer wants to say.
She laments that “there is largescale Hinduisation of popular culture, as seen in the best-selling novels by Amish on the life of Shiva, the hit TV serial Mahadev, the thronging temples, the high-decibel festivals and export-quality Hinduism in the form of yoga gurus and wellness spas”.  And yet goes on to ask if “…is this continual protest, actually preventing Hinduism from being popularised, from being thrown open to newer and younger audiences?” How does this work then? Is this large scale “Hinduisation” being thrust upon an unsuspecting audience who would rather not visit those Wellness spas and not watch those serials? OMG, WORSE STILL, ARE WE BEING FORCED TO READ WELL-WRITTEN BOOKS WHEN WE COULD BE READING A BOOK ON PEOPLE WHO DRINK GIN??!!!
Not only does Ms Ghose seem to get her entire worldview from Twitter, she also seems to be confused about which aspect of Hinduism she wants to examine in her piece – cultural, religious or social? I am not carrying a flag for Hinduism, but for nuance and a bit of research.
If the author had just cared to visit the “Indian writing” section of a bookstore, she would have noticed that the “intelligent examination” of Hinduism that she so yearns for is happening. Many of the questions that she poses have been addressed. In fact, one wonders why she would think that a book series like the Shiva Trilogy contributes to the “cultural emergency” Salman Rushdie is justifiably upset by. Isn’t it a good thing that authors such as Amish Tripathi, Ashok Banker and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni are rewriting our popular myths? What could be better than reading the Mahabharata from Draupadi’s perspective (Palace of Illusions) to break the shackles of the patriarchal perspectives of our epics? For far too long we have unquestioningly accepted the “grandma’s” version which would have us believe that Draupadi passively accepted her five husbands and was equally dutiful towards each. But hey, if she wasn’t, was she unjustified?
Ashok Banker’s Ramayan series flips the epic over its heels. It makes one wonder – does anyone really have a monopoly over the myth? Who knows how Valmiki wanted his work interpreted? We only know with certainty how Tulsidas wanted us to think of Ram – as the Maryada Purush. Banker gives all of his female characters – from Sita to Kaushalya to Manthara – individual agency. He makes them masters of their actions and sometimes pawns to their fate – as we all are. Similarly, Anand Neelakantan’s Asura is a fascinating, if boring in chunks, retelling of the Ramayana from Ravan’s point of view. It examines the caste system and the social prejudices which the conventional version glosses over.
As a reader, one of the most gratifying trends that you would notice in recent years is the tendency to gravitate towards books which inject flavour into that part of India’s history and culture which has been influenced by Hinduism. Be it The Difficulty of Being Good by Gurcharan Das – which is a sombre reminder of what we can take from the Mahabharat into our daily lives and what we can discard – or the cheeky Great Indian Novel by Shashi Tharoor – which hilariously meshes the Mahabharat and the Indian freedom struggle – or even the masterfully compiled In Search of Sita edited by Malashri Lal and Namita Gokhale – which visits the many interpretations of the lady – there are many, many books which challenge our conventional notions of spirituality, religion and “Bharatiya Sanskriti”. Are these too the “Hinduisation” of popular culture? Even The Hindu carried a brilliant op-ed by Chitra Padmanabhan on the lessons for the Uttarakhand tragedy from the myth of the Ganga. How then, do these works support the statement that “the modern Hindu is denied the freedom to re-interpret and interrogate his religion because of fear”?
What makes “Look Beyond Politics” and indeed, much else of Sagarika Ghose’s writing a disappointment is that while one may disagree with her assertions, one cannot help but agree with her views on what needs to be fixed. Festivals have become way too consumerist. There are far too many people who get easily offended when their narrow and rigid ideas of religion are questioned. A songwriter must not face a ridiculous lawsuit when he pens a song on Radha.
By clumsily stitching together blanket statements on discordant themes, adding a generous dose of sanctimony and throwing in everyone’s favourite 4-letter word – Modi, Ms Ghose, column-after-column misses an opportunity to come up with constructive solutions. For a journalist in Delhi who reports daily on Hindu Nationalists and Hindutva politicians (her claim, not mine), we would have expected a lot more answers to the many, many, oh-so-many questions which she raises. Her purpose would have been so much better served had she acknowledged the vast body of work which does re-examine society and then ruminated on why there still exists no political will to combat anti-social elements who hijack free speech by using religion as a shield. One can only hope that for the next time, Ms Ghose looks beyond Twitter.
The views expressed are personal
Priya-kale

The Union Of Hate-Filled Souls

The Union Of Hate-Filled Souls

The ‘Speech V Speech’ combat was the highlight of I-day. It’s a better way for a political combat. You can choose your winner of that combat but I’m sure people were clear on which one inspired hope and which one was defensive. There is something that MMS said that I would like to recall: “… for relations with Pakistan to improve, it is essential that they prevent the use of their territory and territory under their control for any anti-India activity”. This is a regular line contained in many statements from the Congress govt in the last 9 years. Nothing changes. That’s a different topic though. Pakistan is a separate State over which we don’t have control. The real question is: What about those indulging in anti-India activities right here on Indian soil? And there are many of them. They hate some Indians, they hate Hindu culture and they don’t think twice before behaving like traitors even when communicating with foreigners. When a bunch of MPs wrote to Barack Obama pleading not to give a visa to Narendra Modi they were branded #65Traitors on the Social Media. They deserve that tag because you do not take internal matters to a foreign Head of State or any foreigner.

There are have been other instances too when hate-filled Indians have behaved in this fashion. The ones to flaunt it recently are Nidhi Razdan of NDTV and Rajdeep Sardesai, both products of the same Tube-family. Their souls were united in a hate for one person on August 13. This is not a regular marriage, but a holy union of hate. Their souls united in union like a monstrous goat with two heads or a sea-monster with two heads drinking from the fountain of hatred. The two become one in a union of hate blessed by powers behind the scene that fuel their hatred.

Sometime back when a group from Wharton University invited Modi for a lecture to students there were petitions to the university to cancel the event. The university obliged the Commie anti-India activists. This time the invitation came from a higher power source. A group of British MPs (From both the Labour and Conservative parties) invited Modi to address the British Parliament on “The future of modern India”. I have defined what constitutes anti-India to me. Anyone who speaks ill of India or of Indians to foreign powers and bodies is anti-India (Apart from state enemies who want to destroy India or terrorists). The invitation is being championed by MPs Barry Gardiner andStephen Pound. Naturally, the new hate-couple Nidhi and Rajdeep were alarmed and couldn’t wait to spew mindless hatred not just against NaMo but even the British MP Barry Gardiner on August 13. It first started with Nidhi in her crap show LRC. 

Nidhi not only spews mindless hatred against Modi, but even lampoons BarryG for no reason or rhyme. It should have been an honour for any Indian to be invited to address the UK Parliament but such is the mindless hatred that runs through the veins of some media morons that they end up lampooning India and India’s institutions badly. They seem drunk with some kind of anti-India poison. Here are some shocking excerpts from the short interview:

Nidhi refers to Modi as a controversial figure some 5-6 times in 4 minutes, a blot on human rights and badgers BarryG, leaving him hardly any moment to respond. She refers to the 2002 riots and claims there are still legal cases pending against Modi (and even Moral cases?) But what BarryG did manage to say was stunning.

WATCH THE VIDEO AND THE COMPLETE ARTICLE @