Monday, May 5, 2008

Why I die a thousand deaths when someone claps for Raj Thackray.

He said ‘Swaraj is my birth right and I shall have it.’ And they clapped.
He said ‘Inquilab Zindabad.’ And they chanted in unison.
He said ‘Quit India’. And they threw themselves in the movement.
He said ‘as the world sleeps this midnight hour, India awakes.’ And we declared ourselves Indians. Free.

What a bloody waste of time and effort that was. Those men and the generations who followed them into getting us a country. A free country. 595 states fought each other for their little princedoms. The British smiled. Who needs to conquer a country where people are more than eager to kill each other anyway. Lets just pit them against each other and soon they will be parasites unable to breathe without us. What a farsighted people the British were. We meet their expectations even today.

It would have been better if Marathis, Biharis, Punjabis, Tamilians had fought and got their own individual independence. We would be spared the trouble of uniting billions and then dividing them again in less than 50 years of getting that bloodsoaked freedom.

Today we clap for Raj Thackray. So by that logic Gandhi should have asked only for the freedom of Gujarat. Why did he waste his time touring every village in every corner of India and striving for their freedom as well. Bhagat Singh was then, a regional leader who was only moved by the death of Sikhs in Jallianwala Baug. What did he care about the rest of us. And the Swaraj Lokmanya Tilak was referring to was actually the right of Marathi speaking people to live and work exclusively in their state. And the biggest loser was Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. Poor old man spent his energy uniting people speaking more than 18 Languages, following more than 8 religions and ruled by more than 500 princes. Sorry Sardar, but we don’t want to live as one nation. We want to live in our own narrow mini countries where we all speak the same language, wear the same clothes, eat the same food, pray to the same God. Whoever said there is beauty in diversity, forget about unity. So what if nature herself thought it important to have different species of everything to sustain and make this planet as lovely as it is.

Maybe we don’t fully realize what we have because we got it for free. You and I had to pay nothing to become free. So it is not worth much to us. Free Indians are the world’s most thankless lot. What was handed down to us was not pieces of land to which we could claim ownership. Freedom was an opportunity to now live and work for ourselves, not as individuals or communities but as a nation that could write its own destiny. It was the responsibility to now work for progress, not mine and my brother’s but of all those who are the children of our founding fathers.

Sorry you people died for us. Sorry, but we didn’t want any of this. Actually we are not worthy of your sacrifice. Because the colonial ghosts are now such a part of us that we will speak in English but not in an Indian language that is not our mother tongue. We don’t mind migrating to another country if brings us prosperity. But letting another Indian set foot in our state, no sir that’s not done. And how can the Brits or the Yankees blame us for taking away their jobs? That is against the spirit of freedom, isn’t it? We want open societies to accept us, be we certainly cannot become one. And don’t even start about culture. We respect our gods so much that every Ganeshotsav we coerce people into paying for our booze for those 10 days. And we even beat our drums and bollywood item numbers in the immersion procession so loud especially when it passes a mosque. Ganapati loves this kind of hooliganism. (Maybe because nobody told you that Ganapati is North Inidan himself, he is Shiv and Parvati's son no? So is Gautam Buddha, Ram and Krisna.) We also celebrate these festivals where ever we go, to Delhi, Hyderabad, Banglore or United States of America. But hey you cant have Chatt puja in my land. That is not MY festival, and you will corrupt my culture by praying to YOUR god. Your festivals have political agendas, mine are plain faith even if large political cut-outs are used for decoration. And you spoil my city with your slums and cabs and pan shops. So what if I cannot do without my maid or driver and I will not pay them enough so they can live in flats. I keep their income low and blame them for it. I will buy from the hawker who sells his wares cheaper than the authorized store no matter what his origin even if he encroaches public space. These are economic choices I make because they benefit me. I see no hypocrisy in it.

And Oh!The IT park in Banglore. I will now settle in Bangalore. I will call it Bangalore not Bengaluru. Nice weather, lovely city. And yes the meaty job. So what if that is not my home state. This is my country off course, I don’t need a visa. Oh please, I am not taking away the Kannadiga’s job. Its an opportunity I cant miss. Oh my god, they expect me to speak Kannada? That’s a bit much na!. They must think of the migrants who’s mother tongue is not Kannada. But I will teach my children Marathi and we will form a Maharashtra Mandal so we can have cultural programmes together. Oh no, I am not hurting their culture, I am just preserving mine. Oh what double standards we have.

And yes my relatives from America who cannot speak one clean Marathi sentence are more Indian than my neighbour from Bihar. The rich can migrate off course and become richer. But the poor cannot. They are condemned to die poorer, where they are born. The fruits of freedom are for those who can afford them.

This then is what we made of our freedom. The right to exclude. To take but not to share. Who’s pride is it when Amartya Sen was awarded the Noble. Certainly not Maharashtra’s, he is not Marathi. Marathis should not join the Armed forces and die needlessly for North Indians or any other Indians.

So what if the politician who I cheer for protects the very slums he blames for making my city ugly. So what if he says they are taking away my jobs when he took money from me to bring them back, and brought Micheal Jackson to perform ‘culturally rich’ entertainment from it instead. His men bash the poor cabbies, and enlist them a day later into his party. He allows the migration of Marathis to far away suburbs so he can build homes for the rich on prime plots. Those who buy the up-market homes need not be Marathi mind you. This two faced bigot is our Hero.

No city in the world is migration proof. Opportunity attracts people, its simple economics. The city needs them as much as they need the city. That we did not plan well to accommodate those who run our machine is our fault not theirs. That real estate prices remain high to benefit few while the majority lives in sub-human conditions is proof of our misplaced priorities.

In an age when we are moving briskly towards achieving economic well being, such divisive elements work overtime to make us sick, Thackray or Azmi or whatever name they answer to. Empowering the weak to face the strong is one thing, creating artificial and emotional ridges for political gain is quiet another.

Children of independent India inherit the duty of Nation building. To pool together our strengths for common good of all of us. To prosper as a people who are born with different abilities and resources but aid each other in hitting the goal. To further the struggle for Independence, to get freedom form economic and social bondage. If we choose to now break ourselves up into groups of language, religion, class or caste there cannot be a bigger slap on our own faces. If a Maharashtra can be exclusively for Marathis, soon a proud Konkani will bring the Western Ghats to divide Konkan from rest of Maharashtra. And soon the townies will see themselves as different from the suburbanites. There can be no end to fragmentation. It takes courage to unite, not to divide.

So when we applaud someone who is reciting the story of our own doom, I cannot but marvel at the orator’s magical spell, and the audience’s dim wit. And I die one more time remembering the real Heroes who now have to share their league with those who are out to undo their work.

- Prachi Jawadekar Wagh
The struggling poet says, 'lessons from history we shall not learn, we are cursed to light our own pyre and burn’
4 May 2008

17 comments:

Kanwardeep Singh said...

happy to see you have started to write on a blog. and a good beginning to it as well. agree with you on all points. hopefully better sense will prevail...guess i am saying this like any other citizen who expects things to improve automatically without any contribution made to it.

moksh juneja said...

are you planning to write anymore posts??

Aman said...

:)

WiseAss said...

Great post, keep up the good work.

Vrushali

Vidya said...

Blogomania strikes you as well!!! Cool ...You get a medium to express yourselves ….Nice blog....But the problem that I find on the Uttar bhartiya and marathi issue is that people like you who think rationally seem always to express themselves in English and I really don't think people like Ashish Salgaonkar (who I know is a hard core Raj Thackeray fan and spends most of his time abusing cabbies these days) will ever get to hear a rationale view and make sense of the whole vote bank issue. Of how he is politically utilized just as Shiv Sena did at one time and then suddenly did a complete U turn to now inflate their vote bank among the North Indians. They of course can not bear an “outsider” explaining things to them and no maharashtrian from his group explains the logic….So what do you have….growing popularity of Raj Thackeray among this age group of maharashtrians…

MB said...
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MB said...
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MB said...
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MB said...

Loved your blog on Raj Thackeray...message well communicated...impressive use of sarcasm and irony...agree with everything...however...another point that can be brought out is that this whole issue of migrants putting stress on the city's infrastructure (while being a valid point), should actually be used to highlight the pathetic implementation of infrastructure and city planning measures of the Government over the past 20 years! This, if used as a genuine election issue, would garner much more attention and many more votes from the educated youth of the city and state, rather than this idiosyncratic 'Marathi manoos' rhetoric!

Ash said...

I share your concerns over the newest form of xenophobia being thrust upon us by the likes of Raj Thackeray and Abu Azmi. But I have a more poignant question to raise. While migration in search of economic opportunities is natural and justified, it is not a sustainable solution for addressing the issues of poverty and unemployment that beset our North Indian states. Looking at the fresh groups coming from these states that crowd the city of Mumbai every day, one wonders why the trend has never been reversed. The abject poverty and lack of any meaningful development, has been forcing these people to come to Mumbai in search of menial jobs. Why for so many years after independence the exodus from these states is far from over. Surely, the politicians in these states have been quite busy building their own mafia and caste based empires at the cost of development and progress. My objection is not to receiving our friends from the other states with open arms. But I feel strongly that its about time the politicians and the governments in these states own up their responsibility of providing a decent life to the residents, so that they neither have to leave their state nor be a strain on some other states.



The Thackerays have never been famous for putting up rational arguments. In fact they do more harm than good with their intolerant and unreasonable political barbs. No doubt Raj is using this issue to galvanize support for his nascent political outfit with his desperate effort to stay 'relevant' to Marathi manus. I completely disagree with the manner in which our friends have been bullied and harassed to leave Maharashtra. But I have seen a suburb like Kandivali being inundated by thousands of North Indians causing unbearable rush in local trains, in a short span of 5 years. I don't trust that Raj has any noble thoughts behind raising this issue or he genuinely cares for the increasing strain on city's infrastructure. He is more worried about the increasing political strength of the likes of Abu Azami and undermining Shivsena. But the overwhelming response that he seems to be receiving may somewhere have its roots in genuine trouble that residents of Mumbai face.

cYb0rG said...

Nice post... I see you are pretty passionate about the issue and are able to express it well... totally agree with you... keep the posts coming!!

p.s. am blogrollin u...

Adisha said...

Hi Prachi,

Well Said!! I found your blog specially inspiring and hope there are more people out there who think as more of an Indian then whatever state/culture/religion they belong to. Though of course that's a long way to go. Having lived in different countries, in the Gulf and now in the US, I have always found it amusing how people from one region gravitate towards each other. There are Gujrati/Marathi/Punjabi etc groups all over the place vying for a chance to preserve their culture, not once thinking about the country as a whole. Language,it seems to be is the biggest barrier of sorts these days. In the south, Kannada or Malayalam are the National Languages.

I remember, when after the Gulf war I came to India and joined school and someone asked me " what caste are you ? " I was left aghast wondering what I was, other than a Hindu and Indian ( Being liberal my parents had never felt the need to inform me) and went rushing home at the evening to query my parents and get expansive answers in return about our Rajput heritage. Yet, Now when people ask me where are you from. I have only a long winded answer about where I was born and how I'm from a cocktail family of different cultures and now married into a totally different one.

I had started a community recently of people who might want to talk and work on the changes India needs. Maybe something like why it's only the metropolitans are bursting at their seems while remote areas remain under developed and poor. I was disappointed in the least to learn that people were just too busy or preoccupied to even just talk. I can only truly hope more people realize and come forward like you who want to make a change, and not just crib and rant about what's wrong with India.

Keep writing .

Kaushal Inamdar said...

Hi Prachi,
I agree that petty politicking has really taken us away from the real issue. I agree with you on Raj Thackeray. But the problem that Marathi as a language faces in Mumbai is genuine and pretty urgent. I also die a thousand deaths when a Marathi Drama Bus is not allowed into Belgaum and I have to pay a ten thousand rupees tax to get into Karnataka on a bus with a Maharashtra number plate. I also die a thousand deaths when people from commercial radio stations in Mumbai refuse to play my song in Marathi saying that it is downmarket. I also die a thousand deaths when Shahir Vitthal Umap is asked to perform on the stairs of NCPA while the likes of Javed Akhtar and Anup Jalota get the red carpet treatment in the Tata Theatre. Would you be kind enough to read my blog in defence of Marathi. You'll find it on my profile. There is a photograph of Raj Thackeray on the blog, but please don't be in a hurry to judge the book by its cover! I am working on a big movement for Marathi and I would like you to join it. www.marathiasmita.org

Kaushal Inamdar said...

Please read Music in the World of Noise.
http:/musicandnoise.blogspot.com

SkyPrince said...
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SkyPrince said...

The question of dividing Maharashtra in Konkan and Ghats doesn't arise. Here Raj Thakrey is not fighting for Konkan or Ghats but for Maharashtra. What you will do when some outsider will come to your house and tell you to speak in his language or will tell you -'Hey you, just get out from here, I am going to stay here from today.'

Ji manas swatahachya Matru Bhashecha aadar karu shakat nahit ti manas jevha Desh aani Deshbhakti yanvar bhashan thokatat, bolatata, lihitat tevha tyanchi kiv karavishi vatate. Maharashtra dharmacha aani Marathi bhashecha ha ghosh kinva attahas Maharashtrachya vikasasathi aahe. Ek gosht lakshat theva Deshacha vikas tumachya gharapasun suru hoto. Ghar, Samaj, Rajya aani Desh ashi chadhan asate vikasachi. UP, Bihar madhalya netyanni Raj Thakarey chya navane shivya ghalanya aivajee swatachya rajyaancha vikas karun, tithale manushyabal tithech vaparale tar mag sthalantaracha ha prashnach udbhavanar nahi. Mumbai madhe yeun bhaiyye kamaai karatat pan kiti bhaiyye kar bharatat? Survey kara mag samajel tumhala. Kinaryavar rahun panyat pohanaryala ase kar, tase kar sangane sope asate, swataha panyat uatara aani mag sanga kase vatate te.

Kishore said...

Hi Prachi
I respect your view but I think you have some misunderstandings on Raj's thoughts or you have referred English / Hindi media that always portrait Raj as national villain who is against all North Indians and against unity of this country.

Its true Gandhiji.. Bhagat sing fought for freedom of this nation. Vasudev Balvant Phadke started this in late 18th Century many of krantikari died for this country. Veer Savarkar always wants a country from Sindhu to Kanyakumari at the same time its not true Raj wants Maharashtra as separate country he never said that.

After 15th August 1947. India was structured as different states based on languages. For Punjabi speaking its Punjab, its Gujrath.. its Maharashtra and Indian constituency is also based on this structure.

As per Indian constituency there are 3 category of jobs. 1. Skilled 2.Semi Skilled and 3.Unskilled. And as per Indian constituency Semi skilled jobs should be given to the domiciles of that state (The one who have 15 years or more than residence in state will have domicile of that state). Raj's stand is as Indian constituency saying 80% of unskilled job should be given to Maharashtrians. He never said on Skilled or Semiskilled jobs. He is not against Engineers, Doctors form rest of country coming to Maharashtra.
And if any one has objection on Raj's stand then they should first raise objection on Indian constituency which says 80% reservation of unskilled jobs.

No one can go to US / UK for job. He/she has to follow process to get job there. We can’t compare UP/ Bihari people coming for job search in Mumbai with the people who are going for job in US / UK.

Second thing Indian constituency says is all name boards of shops, offices etc should be in regional languages of that state. If Raj saying all boards should be in Marathi what’s wrong in his view. He never said all boards should be in "only" Marathi.

One more important point missing in this blog is route cause of why UP and Bihari coming to Maharashtra for job hunt. One should point out to the politicians of UP and Bihar who have forced this situation on UP/Bihari people. If these states come out of dirty politics, do some development, create jobs for their people then no one will come to Maharashtra and this is the only solution for this situation.

Just saying "Why I die a thousand deaths when someone claps for Raj Thackray." Don’t you think to find out reason why someone claps for Raj Thackray, why Marathi people supporting Raj Thackray. When you will get solution of this, these kinds of questions will not come in your mind.

Jay Hind.. Jay Maharashtra

Kishore