We are with you, Bangladesh
For
us, Bangladesh means the spirit of 21st February. ‘Ekusher Chetona’,
as they say in Bengali. This spirit is running through the veins of this nation
since 1952, and with this secular democratic spirit the people fought the liberation
war in 1971 and gave birth to the nation. It is this spirit which drew together
lakhs of youth in Shahbag movement and provided the present government with all
its ailments and shortcomings to avenge the killing of the father of this
nation, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and many of his colleages; to resume the
proceedings of the war tribunal and punish the war criminals.
And
that has infuriated the communal, fascist elements of Islamic fundamentalism
world over. It is beyond tolerance for them that they are failing to unsettle a
democratically elected government and catapult to power a communal, fascist
rule which may hasten take over by a military junta supporting it. They are
determined to brand Bangladesh again as an Islamic country which has not happened
till now.
And
that is why they had taken the path of assassination of young secular bloggers,
publishers and writers. And now perhaps they are making connections with ISIS
as well. Or ISIS is making connections with these forces! Though the government
has denied ISIS link in the siege and firing at Gulshan Café area in Dhaka on 1st
July in which more than 20 people died and subsequent blast in eid congregation
at Kishoreganj on 7th July in which 2 policemen died while many were
in injured. Rather the local banned outfit, Jamaat-ul-mujahideen was behind
these attacks, the government has asserted, ‘though some possible ‘foreign
links’ may not be ruled out’.
We,
on our part, remain with the spirit of 21st February and express
solidarity with the secular, democratic people of Bangladesh.
(Vol. II, 41st
– 42nd issue, July 31, 2016)
Flood – 2016
As per the Press Release issued by the
Govt. of Bihar on 31st July 2016, “due to coming of flood in
Mahananda, Bakhra, Kankai, Parmar, Kosi and other rivers 12 districts of the
State, Purnia, Kishanganj, Araria, Darbhanga, Madhepura, Bhagalpur, Katihar,
Saharsa, Supaul, Gopalganj, East Champaran (Motihari) and Muzaffarpur are
affected. Due to heavy rains in the Tarai region of Nepal flood situation has
erupted in some districts of North Bihar. As per the Standard Operating
Procedure to combat flood disaster the districts have made preparations.
“In 558 Panchayats (332 partially and
226 fully) of 62 blocks of 12 districts, 27.50 lakhs of people, 2.00 lakhs
hectare of land area and crops standing in 3.39 lakhs hectares of 2162 villages
are affected. 26 persons (Araria – 1, Supaul -8, Kishanganj – 5, Katihar – 2,
Purnia – 7, Madhepura – 2, Saharsa – 1) and two animals have died due to flood.
“182 (part) and 72 (full) brick-built
dwellings, 3382 (part) and 1885 mud-built dwellings and 4641 hutments have
faced damage due to flood. Estimated total value of the dwellings is 68 lakhs.
“591
indigenous Govt. boats, 472 private boats and 112 medical teams are working
whereas 598717 people have been evacuated, 296008 of them are staying in 415
relief camps.”…
Of course the State appears to have made
much improvement after Kosi disaster of 2009.
In fact, in which area the improvements
have been made?
1.
Increasing
regularity in maintaining, reinforcing and strengthening the embankments and
dams?
2.
Deepening
and widening the river-linked water catchment areas?
3.
Making
the forecasts and cautions earlier and educating the people of flood-prone
areas to get prepared in time in facing sudden flood situations?
4.
Establishing
Information Kiosks of Disaster Management Department beforehand in the flood
prone villages/cluster of villages?
As it appears, the maintenance
(including construction) of major embankments and medium weirs, as also the deepening
and widening the river-linked water catchment areas fall under the jurisdiction
of Water Resources Department. Minor ones fall under Rural Works Department.
But why there isn’t any provision for forming a team of qualified
engineers/flood experts under Disaster Management Department three months
before the monsoon, to make a round-up of all the embankments/dams etc.? If the
team is formed by the government, then under which department does it work? If
such a team makes a round-up by Water Resources, does it file the report to be
subsequently forwarded to Disaster Management department as well? At least,
nothing is clear about this aspect in the Pre-flood Standard Operating
Procedure (SOP) of Disaster Management Department.
The 3rd work is mentioned in
that SOP of Disaster Management Department. But again, the 4th is
not there.
Not the disaster management as a whole
but the response mechanisms seems to have improved a bit, due to better
governance and due to technology as well.
And the people of the areas not affected
by such disasters, the mainstream movements of the people, they are so far away
in response! The common conscientious reasoning finally sublimates, oh, these
disasters are too complicated to understand, God’s own hand working behind; let’s
give some money in relief and breathe in relief!
(Vol. II, 43rd
– 44th issue, August 15, 2016)
Establishment of two new universities
The Bihar cabinet has given its approval for
creation of two new universities in the state at Patna and Purnea. They
will be named Patliputra University and Purnea University respectively.
As it has been reported by the media, quite a
good number of colleges affiliated to B N Mandal University at present, would
be brought under the new Purnea University while colleges in Patna and
Nalanda, presently under Magadh University, would be affiliated to Patliputra
University.
The districts that would be covered by Purnea
University, obviously include Purnea, Katihar, Kishanganj etc. which are having
a large number of Bengali speaking population. As it happen with the government
decisions, implementation involves work at various levels down the line in
which many issues just ‘slip away from the briefcase unknowingly’. And then it
becomes difficult to put it on the agenda again. We are talking about creation
of post-graduate department of Bengali in proposed Purnea University. It must
be taken care of right now.
Likewise, Patna urban area has a large Bengali
speaking population. The students till now studied under Patna or Magadh
University. Now they must have the facility in Patliputra University. Hence,
creation of department of Bengali in Patliputra University should also be taken
care.
(Vol. II, 45th
– 46th issue, August 31, 2016)
[We received this interesting poem
through Prantosh Bandopadhyay, Secretary, RIVER, always our good friend. Though
the poem looks at Bengalee millions through the eyes of a Bangladeshi, yet it
is beautiful. We publish it here in lieu of Editorial – BH]
The proud Bengali
We
the Bengali millions
Of
our heritage extremely proud
Muslims,
Hindus, Buddhists and Christians
Comprising
a diverse crowd
Across
the globe dispersed today
Having
crossed seas seven
Nostalgic
about our motherland
To
us it is Heaven
Nothing
is dearer than our language
Of
Ekushey the world is aware
Salam,
Barkat and our brothers many
With
their lives challenged the dare
Sons
and daughters of Bangladesh
And
India’s West Bengal
Sharing
the culture of Nazrul and Tagore
Literary
gifts they left for all
Meandering
rivers, azure skies
Fragrant
flowers amidst fields green
A
blessing from Mother Nature
Such
beauty who has seen
Wherever
you may now belong
Of
your motherland you are fond
We
treasure our language and heritage
Which
creates our unique bond.
Shaheen Choudhury Westcombe MBE
March 2008
(Vol. II, 47th
– 48th issue, September 15, 2016)
The Poverty Line
So,
once again we are in search of the Poverty Line. The dangerous line which, if
lowered, threaten the governments and if raised, threatens our so prized,
international development ratings. Tendulkar Committee, given the task in 2005,
said in 2009 in its submitted report that the Urban Line (Minimum Spending
Threshold) is Rs.37/- per person per day while Rural Line is Rs.22/-. Person
who can spend that much is not poor. Below it – poor. BPL population thus came
that time to 270 million. There were public protests all over the country. In
the parliament the central government faced trouble. Hence again a committee
was set up – Rangarajan Committee, in 2012. This Committee said in 2014, in its
submitted report, no, not Rs.37/- and Rs. 22/-. It should be Rs.47/- and 32/-.
BPL population that way rose to 363 million. But by that time general elections
were held and a new government had come. It rejected both the committee reports
as it was appearing to do with all the decisions of the previous government in
the first go. It also dismantled the Planning Commission and made a NITI Ayog.
This NITI Ayog Vice-Chairman Arvind Pangarhiya was given the task and a task
force by none other than NITI Ayog Chairman and Prime Minister of the country
to decide afresh on poverty line. Vivek Debroy and other celebrity economists
were in the task force. They were to submit their report by June 30, 2015. That
report they finally submitted now, in September 2016. The new central
government is nearing half of its tenure and the Task Force appointed by it
reports, “In view of this lack of consensus (among states), the Task
Force recommends that an expert group consisting of the country’s leading
specialists on poverty consider the issue in-depth and recommend the poverty
line India must adopt for tracking of poverty,” (Hindustan Times, Sept 12).
Strangely, as HT journalist Maushumi Dasgupta
further writes, “The only point the states agreed on with the task force was
that the poverty line – that is calculated based on household expenditure data
-- should be used to track poverty and not to identify who is poor or provide
entitlements meant for them” ! That means, even after the new Task Force
(comprising ‘leading specialists on poverty’ as suggested by present Task
Force), submits its report, most probably just before the next parliamentary
elections in 2019, its recommendations are not to be used ‘to provide
entitlements meant for them’! And that is the point where all the state
government representatives and the celebrity economists were in agreement!
We are in ‘achchhe din’ and must try to think
otherwise. Who can say, perhaps, the sentence quoted above does not mean denial
of entitlements! Rather, it means providing more people than who are entitled!
Yet, it is a fact that budget allocation for
all anti-poverty programmes were cut heavily for the years 2014-15 and again
for 2015-16.
(Vol. II, 49th
– 50th issue, September 30, 2016)
Crumbling Birthplace, Bleeding Shehnai and failing Promise
for a Music University
Daughter’s
and sister’s marriage assumes a unique cultural and ethical significance in the
Indian families. Irrespective of religion, (and obviously for the present,
keeping aside the issues of social evils) it becomes the holiest of task for
the father and the brothers. And for centuries, the name of one musical
instrument associated with that event, literally or allegorically, is that of
shehnai.
Whenever
the bride or the girl-to-be-bride bleeds anywhere, the shehnai bleeds. Whenever
daughters and sisters and the women of our land are outraged, the shehnai
bleeds. Whenever our inter-religious brotherhood is assaulted, the shehnai
bleeds.
And
this age old musical instrument of the Nahbat khana was brought on the stage of
modern north Indian classical music by Ustad Bismillah Khan. Not only a great
innovative musician, he was a great man as well in his simplicity and
humbleness.
In
these decades, when everyone who is a celebrity rich enough, prefers to have a
home in USA, to settle for life or stay in holidays or stay to earn better
income, we remember Ustad Bismillah Khan. When offered by his admirers to come
to USA and stay there (they would be bearing the expenses) he simply denied
with a smile. With that denial he put that legendary question forward, “Wahan
Ganga kahan se laoge? (From where will you bring the Ganges there?)”. Such was
his love for his motherland.
We
are proud that his birthplace is Bihar. In the town of Dumraon, there is a street
(Dainik Jagran of 21st Aug’16 names it Bandhan Patwa Road whereas
Wikipedia names it Bhirung Raut ki Gali). On that street there was a house of
Paigamber Buksh Khan (perhaps popularly known as Bachai Mian, as Dainik Jagran
reports) court musician of Dumraon Maharaj. In the courtyard of that house of
Paigamber Buksh Khan his second son was born on 21st March 1916. The
boy was named Quamruddin but later became famous by the name Bismillah. Yes, we
are passing through the centenary year of his birth.
The
report of Dainik Jagran, quoted above speaks about the dilapidated condition of
the house, almost crumbling, and with so much neglect it is obvious that some
notorious encroacher/builder /local leader will grab it any day and change the
land holding documents even!
And,
what about the promise of a University? On 1st September 2014
Zeenews reported that the then Minister of Culture, himself a singer, promised
to the people to get built a Music University, Bihar’s first, at Muzaffarpur in
the name of Ustad Bismillah Khan!
Of
course, the Minister of Culture is another person now. The then Chief Minister
(seated for a short while) has left the Party. But the Government? Or to be
more precise, the Political Party forming the government? Aren’t the same? And
moreover, the promise is there, in people’s mind! Why it is to be in
Muzaffarpur and not in Dumraon itself, no one can say. We are at least, not
bothered that much with the choice of the place. But a Music University in the
name of Ustad Bismillah Khan must be there in Bihar, the state of his birth; we
make this appeal to the present Chief Minister of Bihar.
(Vol. II, 51st
– 52nd issue, October 15, 2016)
For a complete picture
On 13th and 14th instant
all the newspapers carried the news regarding the expositions of Global Hunger
Index released by IFPRI. Since the editions are mostly state, even district
based, the news, except in few dailies, did not figure as first page lead news.
It found place in their international page. After that write-ups are appearing
in editorials, sub-editorials and various blogs. All have lamented that
sufficient has not been done to reduce poverty and hunger etc. All have noted
with ‘partial’ satisfaction or exhibited through the graphics that even then,
situation is on steady improve. But, the news, the write-ups and the graphics
being used subject the reader to an illusion or rather half-truth. The
comparisons for reduction or increase are being based on data from the year
1991-92 onwards, which implies that since the era of so-called ‘economic
reform’ or of new economic policies of liberalization, privatization and
globalization has begun, steady improvement in the situation of hunger and
malnutrition is quite self-evident! Is it true? Is it the complete picture? India
became independent inheriting the colonial reality of famine, wide-spread
hunger and malnutrition. After independence a set of economic policies of
industrialisation, agricultural reforms, ‘generation of more and more
employment’ etc. were initiated and ran ‘undisturbed’ at least for 20 years.
(The rest two decades were of course ‘disturbed’ by dithered policy maneuvers,
increasing unethical political interventions and corruptions of a ruling
disposition losing its monopoly to rule which accelerated its degeneration).
Whole period is now conveniently demonized and dismissed as ‘Nehruvite
Socialism’ and pictured as ‘wasted’ by the protagonists of globalization.
That’s a brazen lie no doubt. We all know that foundations of modern India were
laid and whole initial structure (its face in the world) was built through
implementation of those policies. A real comparison can be made only by
bringing forth the data of hunger and malnutrition of that period. Just before
the independence and 20 years after the independence. Then only we shall be
able to know whether the pace of reduction during the neo-liberal reform period
is really higher or not.
(Vol. II, 53rd
– 54th issue, October 31, 2016)
Hush, hush! ... Caught? ... Affront!
This
has, since beginning, remained a pet pattern of corporate decisions regarding
introduction of some innovative drug or health care or food products. First try
to be secretive about (or worse, manipulate) the pre-introduction tests and
results. If caught by the social activists, media or by people in general, then
affront the informed ones by ‘employed and paid’ journalists, intellectuals and
scientists.
In
recent years the governments also have inherited the same pattern. Perhaps the
reason is, as they say, that many of the government officials, members of the
hallowed houses of the people, the deputies and ministers have become ‘employed
and paid’ by those drug, food, healthcare or fashion-care corporate lobbies.
What
about our own, government of India?
Not
very long years ago came the controversy on Bt Brinjal. Now come the
controversy on Bt Mustard. Few days ago Tribune India reported from Punjab
that, “Coalition for a GM-Free India, a front against Genetically Modified (GM)
crops that is supported by 500 anti-GM organisations, is waiting for a response
from the Prime Minister’s Office to the over 700 faxes sent since yesterday,
seeking his intervention in stopping the approval to the controversial GM
mustard.”
Then
we go through the letter written by Vandana Shiva, renowned environment
activist and scientific advisor on various agrarian issues, to Prakash
Javdekar, Environment Minister. She underlines that Genetically Modified food
technologies are not useful to us as we have better-yield hybrid seeds
developed in our own laboratories. She also claims that these GM foods like
Bt-Mustard are harmful for environment, as food and for fields as well. And
most importantly, she condemns the ‘underhand manner’ in which the decisions
are being taken by the government. She
says:-
“And
now our
mustard is getting Genetically Modified. Shockingly, important
information about this new Genetically
Modified (GM) mustard is
not being disclosed to us….
“We
cannot allow the government to take decisions about the food we eat in this
underhand manner. This is mustard, we
all use it, we cannot avoid using it. If permitted, we might have
no choice but to use harmful, unhealthy GM Mustard….
“And GM Mustard is
totally unnecessary especially because there
are existing local and hybrid varieties as well as farm practices which give as
much or more than the yield claims of this dangerous GM
mustard. Contamination from GM Mustard is also fast and irrevocable.”
May
be she is wrong. But the government, the scientists should address the issues
objectively. Instead, we find the Deepak Pental, Professor of Genetics, Delhi
University and Chief Scientist
Of
the centre where this Bt-Mustard has been developed, recollects in length the
importance of crop technologies and intervention of modern scientific expertise
in providing food to the booming population of the world in 20th
century, increasing average Indian age and then narrates in detail the history
of developing Bt-Mustard, using much tested technology of making rapeseed
high-yield and extensive use of GM foods in so many other developed countries
including Japan…! But, instead of allaying the fear of the uninformed people
like us about its effect on health, environment, other crops, the flora and
fauna… he underlines, “While
the GEAC* takes a decision, expect massive lies, gross misrepresentations, law
suits, innuendoes and demagogy from GM technology bashers.”
[*Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee of
the Environment Ministry]
So, anyone expressing his concerns about
people’s health, environment etc. in connection with the use of Bt Mustard is
‘GM technology basher’?
(Vol. II, 55th
– 56th issue, November 15, 2016)
Buffoon Assassin
Many
of us must have seen the assassin with a joker’s mask painted on his face. This
paradoxical character has also been portrayed in various ghost stories with
laughing killer dolls. But they are not buffoons as such. The term buffoon
assassin was perhaps first time used for U.S. Republican Senator of 1950s
Joseph McCarthy, the man due to whose typical political campaigns the infamous
regime of 1950-56 was named McCarthyism.
McCarthy
has gone. But the phenomenon of buffoon assassin has come to stay. With time it
has acquired varieties of expression. If not fully, partly it can be explained
as a character knowingly appearing to be paradoxical with making himself or
herself readily accessible, available even enjoyable (by free mixing, love for
the ethnic, rustic articulations in the lingo, narrations of personal
weaknesses, infatuations) to the masses and, on the other hand, ruthlessly, silently
choking all voices of dissent by misuse of executive and even judiciary; if
required, playing heinously on chords of communal or racial hatred. This
intelligent mixing of carefree and calculated moves builds the paradox.
Corruption get slowly attached to it as more and more funds are needed to make
executive and judiciary obeying his or her secret diktats in a republican
structure.
If
someone does the research, it may be found that rise of cronyism in present
rule of capital has given rise to this phenomenon of buffoon assassins being
catapulted as leaders of the people in many places over the globe. Even old
leaders, not having this characteristic earlier are acquiring it after sensing
decrease in their popularity.
At
the centre of this paradox of course lie the invitation to corporates, promises
of reliefs to them, support to market fundamentalism and labour reforms guided
by it.
Is
some ‘age of buffoon assassins’ coming?
(Vol. II, 57th
– 58th issue, November 30, 2016)
Lokpal
The government at the centre was caught trying
to be footloose on the issue of appointing an citizen’s anti-corruption
ombudsman or Lokpal in spite of a big movement by the civil society (referred
as ‘India Against Corruption’ movement in 2011 led by Anna Hazare) demanding it
by arguing that there is no Leader of Opposition in the Loksabha at
present.
“If you could do (amend LoP) it for four other
enactments so conveniently, what is the problem in doing it for this Act? You
claim you are committed to appointing a Lokpal and you have also moved an
amendment to this effect so in our opinion, you should welcome a judgment from
this court if that expedites everything,” a Supreme Court bench led by CJI
T.S.Thakur and comprising D.Y.Chandrachur and L.Nageshwara Rao asked Attorney
General of the central government Mukul Rohatgi on 23rd November 2016.
AG tried to defend the position of the
government saying that it was the Parliament’s role to legislate, which, in
that case the court would be doing.
“But you are not legislating…if Lokpal is meant
to be an institution to bring probity in public life and bring down corruption
then it must be working regardless whether the government wants it or not or
whether amendments have been cleared. This court will read down the related
provision to see that it becomes functional. We will not allow a situation
where an institution like Lokpal becomes redundant,”
The bench added: “We think that instead of
giving an impression that you are dragging your feet, you should come forward
and invite an order from the court so that Lokpal starts working. Why do you
want people to have a misgiving that government is not interested in having a
Lokpal. Ideally, you should do it yourself (by amending the law). But what you
have done conveniently in four other enactments, you are not doing it here so
accepting your own position, we should have no difficulty in reading down the
statute.”
The four other enactments mentioned by the
court were included those for selection of Chief Vigilance Commissioner, CBI
chief and Chief Information Commissioner, to substitute Leader of Opposition
with the leader of the single largest party in opposition.
The Attorney General failed to commit for a
time frame for passage of Lokpal bill. The bench asked him to take proper instructions
from competent authorities and come back on December 7.
In the year 2011, the leaders who are now in
various posts of the government at the centre, were also competing to stay on
camera to show-off that their voices have gone hoarse in raising demand for
Lokpal!
Are they not proving the correctness of that
famed hindi proverb which states that whoever goes to ‘Lanka’ becomes ‘Ravana’?
(Vol. II, 59th
– 60th issue, December 15, 2016)
Besmirching the Republic continues
On
6th of December 1992 Babri Masjid in Ayodhya was demolished, not in
the dead of night by a set of criminals of any sort, but by an avalanche of
people, mostly youth, arriving from all over UP and nearby states. They were
intoxicated with the idea of catapulting their leaders to power as the central
government by this act of mass vandalism; their leaders, who were present there
to enthuse them, assured them building a Ram Mandir at the site of demolished
mosque. They all believed that this figurative act would give them a big leap towards
their long trumpeted ‘Hindu Rashtra’.
Just
a year before that, Congress government led by P.V.Narsingha Rao ushered the
new economic policies of liberalization and privatization, succumbing to the
conditions of ‘structural adjustment’ laid down by IMF and to the dictates of
WTO. Severe attacks on the hard-earned rights of the workers began. Against
these policies, just ten days before the demolition of Babri Masjid, the
workers, toilers of India had organized a procession from Lal Quila ramparts and
a rally at Boat Club. Several lakhs of people participated in the procession.
Opposition to the policies of privatization and liberalization was growing.
This act of mass demolition of a centuries-old mosque divided the workers,
toilers and people at large on communal lines, fanned the flames of communal
hatred and made the path of the government easy in pursuing its policy
distortions - re-prioritizing developmental goals in favour of capital - in the
name of reforms.
Situation
has aggravated since then. Then it was a heritage monument, now human beings.
Some of them were personalities famed for secular thought and activities –
Narendra Dabholkar, Govind Pansare, M. M. Kalburgi – and some were simple
toiling people having religious faith hated by majoritarian communalists. They
are being annihilated by groups of communal fanatic killers to divide the
people. The rise of atrocities on dalits is also a matter of grave concern.
(Coincidentally, 6th December is also the date on which Babasaheb
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar died.)
But
the government at the centre is failing to show its strong determination to
combat and eliminate these communal and casteist forces. While, on the other
hand, it is speeding forward in the name of ‘development’ with all the
anti-people economic policies it inherited from the previous government.
6th
of December, the black day, continues.
(Vol. II, 61st
– 62nd issue, December 31, 2016)
At Kurukshetra
On the eve of a New Year, in this last issue of
2016 of Behar Herald let us read and share this inspirational story in lieu of
an editorial. It must have been taken from some of the spiritual
interpretations of Mahabharata. But since the story was making rounds in
Whatsapp few weeks before we extend our courtesy to the unknown author from
whom it has been sourced.
It is said in
the texts that 80% of the fighting male population of the civilization was
wiped out in the eighteen days Mahabharata war.
Sanjay, at the end of the war went to the spot where the greatest war took
place; Kurukshetra.
He looked around and wondered if the war really happened, if the ground beneath
him had soaked all that blood, if the great Pandavas and Krishna stood where he
stood.
“You will never know the truth about that!” said an aging soft voice.
Sanjay turned around to find an Old man in saffron robes appearing out of a
column of dust.
“I know you are here to find out about the Kurukshetra war, but *you cannot
know about that war till you know what the real war is about*.” the Old man
said enigmatically.
“What do you mean?”
*The Mahabharata is an Epic, a ballad, perhaps a reality, but definitely a
philosophy*.
The Old man smiled luring Sanjay into more questions.
“Can you tell me what the philosophy is then?” Sanjay requested.
Sure, began the Old man.
*The Pandavas are nothing but your five senses*,
sight,
smell,
taste,
touch
and sound...,
and do you know what the *Kauravas* are?
he asked narrowing his eyes.
*The Kauravas are the hundred vices that attack your senses everyday but you
can fight them*... and do you know how?
Sanjay shook his head again.
“When Krishna rides your chariot!”
The Old man smiled brighter and Sanjay gasped at that gem of insight.
*Krishna is your inner voice, your soul, your guiding light and if you let your
life in his hands you have nothing to worry*.
Sanjay was stupefied but came around quickly with another question.
“Then *why are Dronacharya and Bhishma fighting for the Kauravas, if they are
vices*?”
The Old man nodded, sadder for the question.
It just means that as you grow up, your perception of your elders change. *The
elders who you thought were perfect in your growing up years are not all that
perfect. They have faults. And one day you will have to decide if they are for
your good or your bad. Then you may also realize that you may have to
fight them for the good. It is the hardest part of growing up and that is why
the Geeta is important*.
Sanjay slumped down on the ground, not because he was tired but because he
could understand and was struck by the enormity of it all.
*What about Karna*? he whispered.
“Ah!” said the Old man. “You have saved the best for last. *Karna is the
brother to your senses, he is desire, he is a part of you but stands with the
vices. He feels wronged and makes excuses for being with the vices as your desire
does all the time.*
*Does your desire not give you excuses to embrace vices*?”
Sanjay nodded silently. He looked at the ground, consumed with a million
thoughts, trying to put everything together and then when he looked up the Old
man was gone....
disappeared in the column of dust.........leaving behind the great philosophy
of Life!
(Vol. II, 63rd – 64th issue,
January 15, 2017)
Writing off corporate loans
In October, the Supreme Court had asked Reserve
Bank of India why names of the 57 borrowers who have defaulted on bank loans
should not be made public. "Who are these people who have borrowed money
and are not paying back? Why this fact that the person has borrowed money and
not paying back be not known to public."
Accordingly, the Bench had directed the Centre
to submit data on the pendency of cases for more than ten years and the list of
corporate entities where the amount outstanding is in excess of Rs 500 crore.
In an interim order passed by a three-judge
Bench, the court
did raise several issues regarding the Centre's debt recovery mechanism and
asked if the tribunal was equipped to decide cases of loan recovery in a timely
manner.
"There are lakhs of crores of rupees as
NPAs and one of the reasons for their non-recovery is that the mechanism for
recovery is not up to the mark," the Bench had said. Legislative changes
to provide for expeditious disposal of proceedings before the Debt Recovery
Tribunals may not by themselves achieve the intended object so long as the
infrastructure provided to the Tribunals is not commensurate with the burden of
the work and nature of
judicial duties," The matter takes on added importance since
the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) wrote off bad corporate loans to the tune of Rs
40,000 crore in 2015. In 2016, the amount reached a whopping Rs 85,000 crore
from 57 borrowers.
The order had come in reply to a 2003 PIL which
brought to the court's
notice the actions of state-owned Housing and Urban Development Corporation
(HUDCO) officials who were arbitrarily granting loans for political and
extraneous considerations without going in to the merit of each case.
Recent Financial Stability Report (FSR)
released by RBI last week, which says that public sector banks (PSBs) are
nowhere near revival when it comes to recovery of bad loans. Banks recovered
only Rs 22,678 crore in the financial year 2016 as compared to Rs 30,792 crore
in 2015.
On the day he retired, Chief Justice of India
TS Thakur heard the non-performing assets (NPAs) case and questioned how the
government would step up the debt recovery process. Do these tribunals have the
infrastructure to function ably, he asked.
The day a borrower’s default in repayment of
his loan is identified as willful, he/she or the entity should be classified as
‘rogue’ and the rules regarding financial secrecy of its customer observable by
the bank should stop to be applied. Small defaulters get publicly known the
moment bank manager enters the village or the locality. But big defaulters
cannot be made known that way. The names of big defaulters should be placed
before the Parliament.
(Vol. II, 65th
– 66th issue, January 31, 2017)
Values as taste of life
On 25th of January a press release was issued
by the Vice Chancellor of Bangalore University which read, “The Hon’ble
Governor and the Chancellor of Bangalore University had approved to confer
Honorary Degree on Shri Rahul Dravid, former Captain of Indian Cricket Team, at
the 52nd Annual Convocation of Bangalore University scheduled to be
held on 27.1.217. However, Shri Rahul Dravid, while thanking Bangalore
University for recognizing him for the Hon. Degree, has in all humility
declined to accept the Hon. Degree. He has conveyed that he would try to earn a
Doctorate Degree by accomplishing some form of academic research in the field of
sport rather than receiving an Honorary Degree.”
This news item was carried by the national news
channels next day and everyone once again had an opportunity to express their
love and regards for this man Rahul Dravid, the great Indian cricketer, named ‘Mr. Dependable’,
who after his retirement on 9th March 2012 is currently the coach of
the India U-19 team. The stylish right-hander also earned the title of ‘The
Wall’ for his reliability whenever it came to saving the Indian team from a
precarious situation.
As the media reminded, this is not the first
time Dravid has not accepted the honorary degree; the cricketer did not show up
at Gulbarga University's 32nd convocation in 2014 even though he was among 12
personalities shortlisted for an honorary doctorate.
No, it is not a case of refusal of honour. He
has not expressed his protest against anything. But he has expressed his taste that he wants to ‘earn a
doctorate through academic research’. It raises issues related to our way of
living.
Well, suppose while discussing corruption we
cite example of an honest man. Is he honest because since childhood he has been
taught to remain honest? Or he knows that ‘honesty is the best policy’? Or, he
is honest due to fear of the law against corruption? Or… honesty is ingrained
in his taste? Is honesty or for that matter, any other value constitute
attitude, behavior, social practice or something deeper - personal taste?
Just like the question: are you eating healthy
food in fear of developing blood pressure, blood sugar, fat, flatulence or any
other ailment… or, eating because those are tastier for you?
He likes to ‘earn a degree’, that’s his taste.
And that is the man. Really, you can’t but adore him.
(Vol. II, 67th
– 68th issue, February 15, 2017)
The way they shame Bihar
Newsdesk
– Bihar Staff Selection Commission (BSSC) is tasked with
conducting examinations for recruitment of government personnel in lower
ranks. It issues the advertisement
mentioning vacancies under different grades and asks eligible candidates to
apply. It also issues admit cards and conducts the examination at different
centres. State with administrative support of the district administration
concerned helps it in this regard. In objective- type examination, OMR answer
sheets are used and evaluation is done through computers. In subject exams,
BSSC uses the services of subject specialists for evaluation of answer sheets.
Finally it publishes the list of successful candidates.
The state government appoints the personnel and
officials manning BSSC. Presently, an IAS officer is working as chairman of the
BSSC. A state administrative service officer was made its secretary (who has
now been arrested). Around 50 lower grade staff has also been provided to do
the office job at BSSC.
Police investigation has revealed that a
network of BSSC employees and private players was leaking question papers to
those who were paying a sum of Rs 6 lakh. They were also provided answers.
WhatsApp was being used for leaking the question papers and those who had paid
the price were added in the group and provided the details. So far police have
found that 200 candidates were members of this group. The investigation has
revealed that these were leaked from one examination centre in Patna and those
manning this examination centre had connections in BSSC.
During investigation in connection with an
employment racket which used to dupe candidates in the name of getting a job in
the Indian Army, police nabbed a few players from Patna. They revealed during
interrogation that they were also into the question paper leak business of
BSSC.
Apart from BSSC secretary and one data entry
operator, 30 more people have been arrested. One of them happened to be the
director of a private school in Patna, which was the examination centre from
where the question paper was leaked.
Police investigations revealed that Parmeshwar
was part of the conspiracy and his mobile records revealed he was in regular
touch with persons who had been arrested in connection with the scam.
Police has not arrested the chairman till date
but he has been questioned.
Initial probe shows several politicians and
bureaucrats had sought undue favour from BSSC officials for their respective
candidates.
Last year, there was that revelation of big
scam in Bihar School Examination Board. Now a scam is revealed BSSC. Next is
the turn of which institution?
(Vol. II, 69th
– 70th issue, February 28, 2017)
Film-making in Bihar
Along
with the Hindi film industry of Mumbai almost all of the linguistic
regions/states have their own film industry, big or small, producing films in
their own languages. Problems are there in the states of so-called ‘Hindi
belt’. Are they to make Hindi films? Will they be able to compete with the
budget and technology level of Mumbai films? And the all India market?... Are
they to make films in their own ‘regional’ languages? And who will finance
those? Who will distribute?...
Struggling
against all these, a generation of Bihari film enthusiasts moved forward.
Wikipedia
informs that in 1961 first Magahi film ‘Bhaiyaa’ was released. Then in 1962 a
memorable Bhojpuri film and a hit, ‘Ganga maiya tohe piyari chadhaibo’ was
released. First Maithili film ‘Kanyadan’ was released in 1965. But in all these
films, financiers and the crew – actors, technicians, directors – appear to be
mixed, rather more from Mumbai. This way it went on. Not many, but a number of
films in those regional languages were made over the years. Then came a burst
of Bhojpuri films. These were copies of maar-dhaar-masala formula of Hindi and
Telegu films with some more ounces of vulgarity. But it gave Bihar its own
genre of superman ‘harfanmaula’ heroes, which is so needed by the youth –Manoj
Tiwari, Ravi Kishan, Pawan Singh, Dinesh Lal Yadav ‘Nirahua’ and others.
Recently,
bbchindi.com carried a write-up, ‘Bihar ke Leningrad me lights, camera, action’
by Situ Tiwary on a new stream of films being made in Bihar. Films in Hindi are
being made in Begusarai on the folklores of Bihar. ‘Jat-Jatin’ was made some
time back and now ‘Chauharmal’ is in the process. She quotes Nitin Chandra, the
noted Bihari filmmaker which again reveals the dilemma of language, “What is
the point in making ‘Jat-Jatin’ and ‘Chauharmal’ in Hindi? Hindi films are of
Mumbai domain. You make films in your dialect, only then you will be able to
enrich your dialect and make films that would represent that dialect. Then only
you will challenge the representation, which presently for the world is
Bhojpuri cinema, and in reality they are not even cinema of Bhojpuri language,
just a medium of selling cheap sex.”
Along
with Bhojpuri, Maithili, Magahi, Angika, Bajjika etc., Hindi is now also a
Bihari language for more than 150 years. Films can be and should be made in all
these languages. The question is do we still have an industry? Do we have our
own up-to-date studios, laboratories, experienced technicians, actors,
actresses, musicians, artists…? With technology advancement, digitalization
etc. it would have been easier to have. But we haven’t as yet.
(Vol. II, 71st
– 72nd issue, March 15, 2017)
Election
in five states
Newsdesk –
Results for Assembly elections held in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Goa
and Manipur were declared on 11th March. BJP got massive victories
in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand. Congress got massive victory in Punjab and
won majority in Goa and Manipur. However BJP along with allies and some other
parties and independents roped in, has formed governments, not only in Uttar
Pradesh and Uttarakhand but in Goa and Manipur as well.
Though this
phenomenon does not match with the number of seats won, gets justified with the
share of votes these two parties got in these states. In Uttar Pradesh BJP got
39.7% of polled votes while BSP was second with 22.2% votes. Congress stood at
4th with 6.2% votes. In Uttarakhand BJP got 46.5% of votes while
Congress stood second with 33.5%. In Goa BJP and congress shares are 32.5% and
28.4% respectively. Likewise in Manipur BJP and congress shares are 36.3% and
35.1% respectively. Whereas in Punjab the situation is reversed by Congress
polling 38.5% of votes while BJP standing at 4th position with 5.4%;
second position has been taken by Shiromani Akali Dal with 25.2%.
Elections are
being held. Winning parties are forming governments. But the campaigns by the
parties and candidates are getting murkier every day. Absence of policy issues,
promises for sops, abusive language hurled towards the opponent, suggestive
hints to divide the people and then expenses in thousands of crores which
include gifts (bribes) in cash and kind for the voters! After every election we
are getting a constituency more estranged from the idea of of India adopted in
our Constitution!
While the
situation after the election results were declared in five states justify BJP’s
maneuvers for government formation in Goa and Manipur as well, looking at the
positions of parties standing 2nd or 3rd and the fact
that none of the winning parties, in this election or in elections held before
is ever getting more than 50% of polled votes an electoral reform becomes
highly necessary – for proportional representation. But that is a different
issue altogether and related with thorough going changes in our electoral
system which are yet to be agreed upon by the legislators and the major
political parties of this country.
(Vol. II, 73rd
– 74th issue, March 31, 2017)
Bihar Diwas
[Celebration
of Bihar Diwas 2017 has ended. In lieu of Editorial we translate here the
comments of Hindi poet Alok Dhanwa, on the occasion of Bihar Diwas. These
comments over phone, on the progressive heritage and culture of Bihar were
recorded by Ajay Kumar of Prabhat Khabar and posted in www.prabhatkhabar.com on 22nd
Mar’17]
Should we not take pride in our social-scientific consciousness?
“I feel proud over the cultural-democratic
values of Bihar. It’s a document of a society impassioned to march forward,
from the age of Buddha, 2500 years ago, to the age termed modern. In the modern
period, coming of Gandhi to Champaran brought a new type of awakening in the
society here. After the formation of Bihar, democratic and secular journey of
its people began only with the arrival of Gandhi in Champaran. Giving expansion
to those values Champaran Centenary Year is being observed. It is a matter of
pride. But, any way, we cannot forget the turning point came with the year
1857.
“Freedom movement gave expansion to the new
social consciousness. It strengthened the shared culture and heritage of our
society. Dr. Rajendra Prasad, Shri Krishna Singh, Anugrah Narain Singh were the
products of freedom movement. That was also the period of Swami Sahajanand
Saraswati. He developed his Ashram in Bihta, near Patna and mobilized the
peasants. He was a protagonist for change in rural life. However, on many
issues he had differences with Mahatma. These differences are manifest by his
speech during the Ramgarh Congress. In spite of that, untiringly he continued
his work.
“This was the cultural stream which appears to
be moving forward. How can you not take pride in Nagarjun? Rahul Sankrityayan’s
workplace (Karmbhumi) was Bihar! Nagarjun and Rahul, both were great scholars
of Buddhist philosophy. Developing this stream we get Ram Briksh Benipuri
thereafter. Ramdhari Singh Dinkar comes. Dinkar looked at the society through
critical realism. ‘Parti Parikatha’ and ‘Maila Anchal’ of Phanishwar Nath Renu
is a document of our values, struggles and struggle for freedom. This is the
stream of democratic-secularism, attached to which the poets, theatre-workers and
people associated with various cultural medium, have concerns about various
social segments – and not only that – search the ways for those segments to
come out of their depravities. How can we forget the contribution of Bhartendu
Harishchandra? Acharya Shiv Pujan Sahay wrote a book like ‘Dehati Duniya’ in
1930. Jai Shankar Prasad strengthened scientific consciousness by his writings.
Historians like Ram Sharan Sharma and K. P. Jaiswal provided us the way to
understand history.
“Lyrical poetry had a great effect on our time.
Gopal Singh Nepali, Arsi Prasad Singh, Acharya Janki Ballav Shastri gave us new
vision by breaking the social inertia. You may observe that Jai Prakash Narayan
carries forward the same stream after coming back from USA. The 105 years of
history of Bihar cannot be complete without persons like Pandit Ramanand Tiwary
and Karpuri Thakur. On the cultural front, Bhikhari Thakur developed his plays
as a tool for social criticism.
“In painting, Upendra Maharathi, in Dhrupad
singing, Pandit Ram Chatur Mallik, Pandit Siyaram Tiwary, in folk singing,
Padmashri Bindhya Vasini Devi and Sharada Sinha nurtured the popular traditions
through their own mediums. I feel that the programme of prohibition gets
connected with that developing stream.”
(Vol. II, 75th
– 76th issue, April 15, 2017)
On the occasion of 7th April, the Foundation Day
of Bengalee Association, Bihar
On
19th Oct., 1946, in the 2nd issue of volume 73 of Behar
Herald, there was an Editorial – ‘Future of the Bengalee Association’. The then
editor of the weekly, M. C. Samaddar commented in that editorial, “The future
of the Association corresponds with the future not only of a community but with
that of the entire population of the province.”* It was a time just following
the darkest months for this country – the violent communal clashes and killings
in Kolkata, Noakhali, Patna, Saran and other places. In Bihar, the relations
between Banglabhashees and the provincial government were just coming to normal
after remaining strained for seven years due to continuance of infamous
Domicile Rules (not fully withdrawn but a bit inactivated by that time). The
Association was facing attacks from some sectarian political leaders and there
was anger among the members of the Association. Annual General Body Meeting was
going to be held just after one week and th editorial comment, from which a
sentence is quoted above, was the part of Behar Herald in the debate on the
future course of action to be taken by Bengalee Association, Bihar.
So
true it was, and is!
Future
of Bengalee Association cannot but correspond with that of the entire
population of Bihar. And that is the guide in all our organizational and social
activities. When the branches of BAB in Bhagalpur achieves foremost position in
the city in organizing blood-donation camps and also stand in solidarity with
the bengalee family falling victim of land-mafia assaults, when the Barari
branch organizes adult & female literacy centre and also resist in unity
the land-grabbing conspiracy of the local dons in their refugee colony, when
more than hundred banglabhashee elected representatives of the local bodies in
West Champaran work for the betterment of their electorates and also take
initiative in unity to provide Bengali textbooks and Bengali teachers in the
primary schools… they are guided by the dictum.
Bengalee
Association, Bihar completed 79 years of existence on 7th April this
year. Its emblem contains two palms in handshake with ‘sanhati’ meaning unity
and ‘samanvay’ meaning ‘co-ordination written above and below. The association
calls for unity of the Banglabhashee community of Bihar and their co-ordination
with other communities. From the beginning the Association has remained
non-political, meaning thereby neither supportive nor in opposition to any
political party.
On
various all India forums of the Bengalee organisations, the unity achieved
between urban middle class bengalees and rural refugee settlers of E&W
Champaran, Purnia, Katihar, Darbhanga, Bhagalpur and elsewhere, and the efforts
of Bengalee Association, Bihar in this regard are always highly praised.
When
the concern is repeated in the meetings, conferences by the elders that the new
generation of Banglabhashee community should be inculcated with the spirit of
the organisation, it is done not only to maintain or generate their affinity to
their mother tongue and their lingua-cultural community, in these career &
technology driven ‘hostile’ circumstances, but also to inspire them with the
spirit of welfare work for the society at large of their area.
Long
live Bengalee Association, Bihar! Long live the fight to get the linguistic
minority rights enshrined in the Constitution of India! Long live the spirit of
unity and co-ordination! Long live the people of Bihar!
(Vol. II, 77th
– 78th issue, April 30, 2017)
A shocking report
A study made by Aspiring Minds, a employability
assessment company, 95% IT sector engineers in India are unfit for coding jobs. Due
to shortage of talent, the majority of them are unfit to pursue any software development
jobs. The report by PTI on the basis of which the story was published in https://m.yourstory.com/2017/04/engineers-india-unfit-coding-jobs-report/
on 20th April, further adds
that only 4.77 percent of candidates are capable of writing the correct
logic for a programme—which happens to be the basic requirement of any
programming job. The report quoted Aspiring Minds CTO and Co-founder Varun
Aggarwal, “Lack of programming skills is adversely impacting the IT
and data science ecosystem in India. The world is moving towards introducing
programming to three-year-olds! India needs to catch up.”
Automata—a machine learning-based assessment of
software development skills – was operated by over 36,000 engineering students
from IT-related branches of over 500 colleges.
Over 60 percent could not write code that compiles. And only 1.4 percent
can write functionally correct and efficient code.
The study points out that this is due to the
gap in educational methods – widespread use of rote learning as opposed to
the practical application of concepts and the lack of good teachers for
programming.
All engineering colleges promise 100 percent
placements at the time of joining. But only a handful of the over 3,000 approved
colleges in India draw or attract companies that offer the ‘dream job’ that
every student is promised. The rest of the students are forced to settle for
low paying jobs by mass recruiters in the IT sector, regardless of their
subject. Even they are seen opting for some totally different fields.
With the mass production of engineers, there is
more supply than there is demand. So going by the basic laws of economics, an
engineer’s value is highly reduced. This is the main reason why most engineers—about 30 percent of the 15 lakh graduates
every year— are unemployed (or underpaid), which is a depressingly
large number.
Whither gone the race for last two decades of
the parents encouraging the young ones to pursue career in engineering and the
young ones, after all their labour, craving for placement and package? And
whither gone our pride that we are now a country of engineers?
(Vol. II, 79th
– 80th issue, May 15, 2017)
Increase in Railway fares
Railways are again going to increase the
railway fares for all classes by 10%. In the last three years the government at
the centre and the ministry of railways in particular have boasted umpteen
times that in their regime the railways are not only getting a facelift but
longtime structural reforms are underway. Is it really? Except creating morsels
for private take-over, outsourcing the jobs of the department including
contractualisation of management of railway stations and merger of railway
budget with general budget?
Do they expect us to count ‘home delivery of
tickets’ and providing film and video packages through journey-time internet as
some thorough-going betterment?
Nothing demonstrates the hoax of betterment of
passenger facilities in Indian Rail better than a travel in sleeper class or
general or unreserved compartments. Well, one can say who pays less will get
less! But, the passengers in these classes are not treated as human beings
even. They themselves are forced to behave animal-like when rushing to get a
seat or even a standing space in the unreserved compartments and in 3 tier,
genuine reservation ticket holders suffer due to the sitting or standing crowd
of not-so-genuine ticket holders who enjoy the acquiescence of the railway
staff deputed to ensure that they do not enter the compartment! In long
distance trains a system of regular cleaning of the compartments and the
toilets has been re-enforced by outsourcing the job. It is practically limited
to AC compartments only. And even in AC compartments, what happen in the last
leg suppose of eight hours, of the journey?
Number of accidents has happened in the last
three years and now-a-days it has become very easy for the authorities meeting
the press after such accidents to allude involvement of terrorists or Maoists;
thus easing out the tension of proper investigation of the reasons of the
accidents.
And after all these, here is the sequence of
increase in various charges made by the railways during last three years.
Firstly, railway passenger fare was increased by 14%. Then price for platform
tickets was doubled and made Rs.10/-. Then freight was increased 10%. Then the
charges for tatkal tickets were increased. Then again, ticket cancellation
charges were increased. Ticket charges for higher classes were increased.
Concept of tickets with floating and premium prices for some trains were
introduced (which is being withdrawn and they are boasting that it is done
because of their care for the people, whereas the fact says that the scheme
miserably failed). And now this 10% increase again.
Rokeya in Patna
Recently
a theatre group of Patna presented a ‘theatrical reading’ of Begum Rokeya’s
works mainly based on her great book ‘Abarodh basini’, a rare collection of
events related to the pathetic condition of Muslim women of her time, gathered
by her painstakingly from contemporary newspapers and her personal experiences.
For years, an enthusiast of Rokeya’s life and works Mr. Nasiruddin is
translating ‘Abarodh Basini’ and other works of Rokeya. He is also making
researches on his own. The presentation ‘we are all Rokeya’ involved four women
dressed-up as Begum Rokeya and they performed commendably. The performance
attracted good media attention.
Without
highlighting the blasphemous writings and comments of some Muslim writers or
leaders, which the media often does for ulterior motives, real reformers of the
community, the real work done within, should be focused. Cultural polarizations
on that basis should be encouraged. Only that way the grip of fundamentalist
and obscurantist forces over the community, as is made apparent by themselves
with the help of the media (alternative voices are marginalized very cleverly),
can be loosened.
(Vol. II, 81st
– 82nd issue, May 31, 2017)
Mother tongues of India and corporate
media
In a welcome move the government of West Bengal has
proposed introduction of three-language formula at primary level of education –
of the three optional language one, Bengali, the language of the state, will be
compulsory.
First of all, West Bengal is not the first state to
make such a move and secondly, the credit of prolonged struggle for making
study of the language of the state compulsory at primary level, goes not to
West Bengal but Karnataka.
Educationists world over have stressed the
importance of learning one’s mother tongue. They have also stressed that best
period for learning multiple languages is the early age, which means at the
primary level. The Constitution of India also recognizes the importance of
learning (not only learning, rather having as medium of instruction) the mother
tongue.
So if Hindi is to be taught as the Official Language
of the Union, English also is to be taught as all the guardians, i.e. ‘voters’,
remain mesmerized with the possibility of ‘placement-package magic’ for their
wards to happen only through ‘Inglis-medium’ then how the overwhelming majority
of children of a state ‘linguistically’ reorganized, will learn their mother
tongue? And who, if not the government of the state, should undertake the
responsibility to arm the new generation of the linguistic communities living in
that state, with the basic tool to relate itself with the people and in future,
use all its knowledge for the betterment of lives of those who have paid for
its education through taxes?
Yet we know that the Mafiosi of English medium
private schools will raise a furore, and that through paid intellectuals,
‘anonymous’ education department officials and legal luminaries that children
will be overburdened with the pressure of learning three languages. Ignorant
guardians will also start nodding their heads.
And just see the way the news has been covered by
the media! The Times of India, Kolkata edition made it a headline on the first
page. But what did it say? “State
education minister Partha Chatterjee laid out the plans to force Bengali down every student’s throat” (emphasis added). The
newspaper even avoided use of the term mother tongue. “he avoided a direct
Hindi-versus-regional language confrontational approach”! Asking to be taught
one’s mother tongue has two options in India – to be confrontational or
non-confrontational with Hindi? And, it has nothing to do with English? Should
we utter what this way of thinking means? It precisely means, let English rule
and let it use Hindi to confront and oppress the ‘regional languages’ i.e. the
other mother tongues of this country.
(Vol. II, 83rd
– 84th issue, June 15, 2017)
New Ward Councillors of Patna
No
public institution has earned such a bad name amongst the people of Patna in
recent years as PMC, Patna Municipal Corporation or Patna Nagar Nigam. Its
conspicuous absences exactly where and when it should be seen at work, piles of
stinking wastes in each and every locality, sometimes raising dust in the name
of cleaning the streets exactly at the time when the crowd of men and women
going for offices and work-places begin rushing through, some ‘bob-cats’
dancing here and there showing people what ‘automatic’ means, waste-carrying
vans or trucks winding through with backside open – giving people free
face-lifts with dust and stench… all these are daily experiences of the people
of Patna. While writing these lines the homepage of www.patnanagarnigam.in was checked.
There are control room phone numbers for complaints regarding water logging but
no phone number or menu even, for complaints of spreading piles of wastes in
some street! That means PMC is quite gratified that whole of the city under
their management and waiting to be ‘smart city’ with the tagline “behatar ho pehchan apna, vikasit rajdhani
sundar patna” is clean, sanitized and doesn’t need any enquiry anywhere!
Then
there are the stories of its in-fights for the posts of Mayor and Deputy Mayor
etc. which come in the newspapers.. Boycotts by the councilors, never sitting
in full strength in any meeting which in any case never yield any outcome
except policies and increasing tax-rates and even facilities just to increase
harassment of the people!
And
then the treatment meted out to its own workers. There is a sizable list (PDF
dowloadable) of daily workers and supervisors who performed well in the job of
cleaning and that is commendable that PMC recognizes it. But, what about giving
necessary gears and accessories to the workers by the authorities, particularly
those who do the cleaning of the underground sewerage? Recently two workers
died due to lack of those gears and accessories.
In
such a situation the elections for the ward councilors were held recently.
Results were declared on 9th of June and oath-taking will be held on
19th of June. Of the 75 (72 + 22a, 22b & 22c) councilors
(people’s representatives at the ward level) elected, sizable majority are
women. Hope they are not all those female candidates whose photos on the
posters and banners were smaller than that of their husbands (councilor-pati
instead of mukhiya-pati), and are winners in their own right. Then, it is also
a fact that many a four-timer, three-timer stalwarts have been defeated and
around 70% are newcomers. Even their political brands are still in formation!
If
these young people put their heads and efforts together (squabbles, fights for
the post of mayor apart, that is part of the game) and really resolve to make a
better Patna, it is hoped that they will succeed and earn the support of the
people of their city for a long time.
(Vol. II, 85th
– 86th issue, June 30, 2017)
Anniversary of Emergency
Very few events were organized this year to
commemorate the anniversary of Emergency. It’s a dark day of Indian history and
not something to be celebrated. It’s not a day to be observed as well. Yes,
there are issues to talk about or initiate active discourse on the streets like
rallies, processions etc. – the issues of civil liberties, of freedom of
press/media, of governance and more. And on all these issues in general and on
the issue of freedom of media in particular, serious discussions in the public
space are increasing since the present central government came to power.
But this time, on that day the nation was yet
reeling, so to say, from the shock of death of Zunaid – a teen-ager killed by
passengers aboard a train on the false accusation of carrying beaf, just two
days before Eid. It sounded like legendry boy of the story by Premchand, Hamid
was killed for his ‘chimta’, on the false accusation that he was carrying a
weapon!
Public lynching is not new in this country.
Every other day some hapless woman get inhumanly tortured and then killed by
the villagers on the accusation of being witch or ‘Dyan’. Men, old and young
get lynched on the accusation of being child-lifter. But this is a new, sordid
phenomenon. First of all, keeping, carrying or eating beef is not a crime even
now after some disputed enactments by central government and some state
governments. And then, lynching on a false accusation! It hurt more because it
came after killing of Akhlaq in Dadri and killings of cow-traders by
‘Gou-rakshaks’ in Gujrat, Jharkhand and elsewhere. Finally it stands out clear,
the message – ‘if you are a minority, you may be heckled, beaten, tortured and
then killed!’ like that goat of the fables on which the tiger heaped false
accusations one after another. You may be killed not only by some bizarre group
of so-called ‘vigilantes’, but by a gathering from people at large.
It is appreciable that Prime Minister has
denounced these killings during his speech at Sabarmati Ashram. But not only
denouncement, diluted by contrary statements from your ideological kin, but
strong punitive administrative action is what the people of India want to
see.
(Vol. III, 87th
– 88th issue, July 15, 2017)
Reducing the ‘Akash’ of Akashvani Delhi
All
India Radio, Delhi, has closed the broadcast of news in regional (sic)
languages from 8th July 2017. The sting of nostalgic pain must have
pierced the hearts of other linguistic communities also, but near home we could
see the sting felt by Bengalee newspapers, individuals and users of social
media.
This
was to come. After President of India gave his assent to the new set of rules
about languages, framed by the Central Government and passed by the Parliament,
this was to come. The new rules have expelled the use of languages in the
Eighth Schedule from the functioning, even from discussions, speeches by
individual MPs, of both the houses of the Parliament, of course except the
Official Language of the union i.e. Hindi. The languages have been shown their
area of operation within the states only. Rather, as they say in Hindi, the
languages were shown their ‘aukaat’. We don’t know, what compelled the
President, himself a Bengalee, to give assent to these rules, ‘bring this file
on his table and clear it’ in a hurry. He could have returned the file. The
rules are not ‘against the Constitution’ perhaps, but against the spirit of the
Constitution. The parliament could have sounded like a gorgeous symphony that
is India! Now it will sound like a repetitive sonata of the Mid-Gangetic plains
only.
So
far as Akashvani or All India Radio is concerned, languages of the Schedule
were shown their state or regional centres. Akashvani Kolkata will have its
national news in Bengali. But Akashvani Delhi, loaded with decades of memory of
association with Bengali and other linguistic people all over India, loaded
with stupendous moments of history shared with them till the advent and
popularization of TV, has closed its doors for them.
(Vol. III, 89th – 90th
issue, July 31, 2017)
Birth Bicentenary celebrations of Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar
Already the decisions of Bengalee Association,
Bihar, Vidyasagar Smriti Raksha Samiti and Vidyasagar Bicenteanary – Nandan
Kanan Celebration Committee formed by the latter, have evoked good response.
Now there is a Research Centre and Regional Office of the Committee in the
premises of Bouddha Dharmankur Sabha, Kolkata. The office was inaugurated with
the Vidyasagar Tirodhan Diwas programme on 29th July. The programme
was simultaneous with the programme at Nandan Kanan, Karmatar which shows that
separate sets of stewardship (necessary for an All India programme as
envisaged) are growing. Kolkata based Regional Office, under the able
leadership of Prantosh Bandopadhyaya has already designed a Guru Charan Samanta
Lecture on ‘Vidyasagar and Karmatar’ to be held on 26th September
2017. In Bhubaneshwar, a group of learned Oriya people are in the process of
organizing with the help of SCERT the relationship of Vidyasagar with Odisha
and Oriya scholarship. The Secretary of VB-NCC hopes that a seminar will also
be held at Delhi. Behar Herald eagerly co-operates in all these programmes and
further hopes commemorative programmes in other centres as well.
Vidyasagar’s works may be widely divided in
five or six sectors to correlate with present day campaigns.
First, obviously will be issues related with
empowerment of women, from
education, marital rights to enhanced participation in all fields; economic
recognition of their labour at homes is also included in these.
Second, may be his tireless efforts for
spreading education, opening more
than 200 schools, preparing
scientific syllabus etc. which we
can correlate with issues of universal education, uniform education system and
rational syllabus/textbooks to develop scientific temper, not obscurantism.
Third, mother
tongue; the demand of compulsory teaching of mother tongue at primary level
should be taken up forcefully.
Fourth, taking his life at Karmatar during last
two decades in consideration, his work to develop the life of Santhal and other
local poor people, thrust for development of Marginalised people, and protection of their rights may be taken
up.
Fifth, a campaign should be there to encourage scientific and rational way of thinking,
which Vidyasagar valued most all his life.
There may be some more,
but campaigns at least in these five areas should be taken up while
commemorating Vidyasagar.
(Vol. III, 91st – 92nd issue, August 15, 2017)
Bengali script prohibited by Bhagalpur University
It
is alarming. Bhagalpur University has prohibited the use of any language other
than English and Hindi by examinees in writing their papers except the language
paper. Why? It was asked by many. President of Munger branch of Bengalee
Association, Bihar sent a written representation protesting the move, to the
Vice Chancellor. In the mean time, he also had a talk with the leadership of
Bengalee Association at Patna. Informed people were consulted by the
leadership. They said that well, it is under the powers of University, they can
do it, issue notification in this regard if it is necessary. And all seemed to
be satisfied – after all, the all the Universities are suffering from want of
language teachers! We ourselves are fighting to get Bengali teachers recruited
in schools and colleges! Faculties are facing closure! So, what the University
could do any way!
But
then the President of Munger branch of the Association received a phone, as he
reports, from some officer of the University! The officer said that VC himself
has asked the officer to try to convince Mr. Mukherjee. What about? …No, sir,
it not anything related with want of teachers. Actually (sic) numerous spurious
colleges have sprung up in some areas of North Bihar. In exchange of a good sum
they take admission of very low-quality students on a contract that they will
manage the examinations, checking of papers and the result; the students will
just have to write their papers in languages other than English or Hindi. This
nexus is tarnishing the image of the University! Hence, this notification…
The
statement of the officer requires re-verification. But if it is true, it is
weird all the same. Tomorrow the head of a government office may say that since
large number of ‘spurious’ medical certificates are being submitted by the
employees, only certificates for cancer and brain tumor will be accepted from
now on!
From
the Bengali speaking community of Bihar it may legitimately be asked - could
the University not find good, ‘unmanageable’ examiners for Bengali in any other
universities of Bihar, Jharkhand or Bengal?
(Vol.
III, 93rd – 94th issue, August 31, 2017)
Common School System
Is
Common School System a realizable goal? This term, Common School System was
first recommended in 1964-66 by the Kothari Commission, the first commission
for educational reforms in India. Thereafter it was
incorporated in the first National Policy on Education in 1968 and again in the
second policy in 1986 as well as its modified version of 1992. The 1986 and
1992 policy statements were also approved by Parliament. But ignoring this
approval or the voice of the Parliament the government rather euphemized ‘Sarva
Shiksha Abhiyan’ in effort to provide cheaper, alternative stream of education
for the poorer sections. Quality of government schools deteriorated over the
years. On the other hand the number of elite schools increased fast in all the
cities. The deep chasm between two systems of schooling just like the widening
gap in wealth looked volcanic. The private schools openly violated the
conditions on which they enjoyed various benefits. In such a situation the
Supreme Court verdict on this aspect of private schools came in 2004. It had an
all India import. Even then, neither the state governments acted nor the
private schools were ready to mend their ways.
In such a situation recently some news appeared
in the media and social media about the government of Delhi. Firstly, the news
came that the quality of education, the condition of school buildings and the
availability of basic amenities for the children are radically improving in the
government schools. Then came the news that private schools have been forced to
submit to the rules with a threat of take over.
It is difficult to check the reality in Delhi
sitting here at Patna. We do not want to appear supportive of any political
party. But the news, the consecutiveness of the actions reportedly taken by the
government of Delhi give us an idea of the course which may be taken by any
government, any municipality, any city administration, if not towards common
school system, towards increasing the commonality of two school systems
existing. First, improve the quality of education, make the condition of the
school buildings and premises attractive for the children in your own schools
and then bring the private schools, particularly the school-owner Mafiosi under
your reins. Hold your strong knuckle in front of their nose and force them to
follow the rules you have framed. Not impossible. And in our state we see there
is an urgent need for it.
(Vol. III, 95th – 96th
issue, September 15, 2017)
Bullets to silence the truth seeker:
fourth hit
Gauri
Lankesh, a senior journalist of Bangalore was killed on Teachers’ Day, the 5th
September, outside her residence in the evening. This killing,
fits into a by now familiar pattern of eliminating voices that dare to speak
out against the current climate of hate and intolerance as also the prevalence
of obscurantist and anti-rational ideas in the society. The killings of Narendra
Dabholkar, Govind Pansare, M. M. Kalburgi and now Gauri Lankesh – are all
interconnected. All of them were vociferous in their opposition to
superstition, obscurantism and the perpetuation of the communal agenda. The
investigating team of the police is also reaching the same conclusion in its
own way, by searching the weapon of the crime and nearing the fact that the gun
was same which was used to kill Kalburgi.
Waves
of protests reverberated throughout the country. Then there was a huge protest
rally in Bangalore on 12th September. More than 40 thousand people
gathered with bands and placards ‘I am Gauri’ and there and then the new issue
of Gauri Lankesh Patrike, which she used to edit and publish, was released.
It
is hoped that the culprits of this heinous murder will be found soon and
arrested.
(Vol.
III, 97th – 98th issue, September 30, 2017)
Linguistic Minorities Cell in Minorities
Welfare Department
On
17th April 2016 Bengalee Association, Bihar jointly with Bihar
Bangla Academy and Behar Herald celebrated Bangla Nabo Barsho 1424 at A. N.
Sinha Institute, Patna. Hon’ble Chief Minister of Bihar, Shri Nitish Kumarji
kindly consented to grace the occasion and an assemblage of more than five
hundred Banglabhashees from all over the state were thrilled to have their
Chief Minister in their midst.
One
of the very important announcements Chief Minister made in his speech was about
opening a Linguistic Minorities Cell in the Minorities Welfare Department of
the Government of Bihar, to hear and dispose the issues etc. related to
linguistic minorities.
It
is regrettable that even after passage of one and a half years the announced
cell has not been opened. So far the information reaches us, no step has been
taken in this regard.
Recently,
Bengalee Association, Bihar in its Annual General Meeting held on 13th
August 2017 demanded through a resolution adopted unanimously that as announced
by the Chief Minister himself, the Linguistic Minorities Cell be opened without
further delay.
Bengali Literature in Bihar
Bengali
literature in Bihar has a glorious past.
Often,
while talking about Bengalees it is said that after division of Bihar and
Jharkhand, most of them are now in Jharkhand. No doubt a major segment of
Bengalee population living in the urban areas of Ranchi, Jamshedpur, Dhanbad
and other cities and towns along with those in the rural areas of Santhal
Parganas, Singhbhum, Dumka, Hajaribagh etc. (culturally contoured areas of
Dhalbhum and Manbhum included) are now people of Jharkhand. A populace of 12
lakhs living mainly in the districts (urban and rural taken together) of Patna,
Bhagalpur, Muzaffarpur, Samastipur, Purnia, Katihar, Kishanganj, Gaya,
Darbhanga, Motihari (E.Champaran), Bettiya (W.Champaran), Munger etc. or in
small segments in other districts like Madhepura, Saharsa, Araria constitute
Bihari Bengalee or Banglabhashees of Bihar. That is why it is more pertinent to
remember that most of the literary giants of Bengali language whom we claim to
have roots in Bihar are from this segment, or present day Bihar.
Name
them? Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay, Bhagalpur. Kedar Nath Bandopadhyay, Purnia.
Baldeb Palit, Patna. Asha Lata Singha, Bhagalpur. Anurupa Debi, Muzaffarpur.
Satinath Bhaduri, Purnia. Banaphool, Bhagalpur. Bibhuti Bhushan Mukhopadhyay,
Darbhanga.
But
due to apathy and neglect of the administration in implementing the policies
and provisions of law to safeguard and nourish the minority language.languages
of a state, the culture of learning Bengali language and studying Bengali
literature in the homes of Banglabhashee have eroded fast over the generations.
In
such a situation, to enthuse people with literary bent of mind, particularly
the elders, housewives and children who still nurture the reading and writing
of Bengali in the mohallas, colonies of various towns, who eagerly write in the
souvenirs published during festival season, or in local little magazines,
Bengali Association, Bihar has convened Bihar Bangla Sahitya Sammelan 2017 on
11th November at RMR Seminary, Patna. It will provide a ‘Mukto
Mancha’ for their writing endeavors.
A
commendable effort, undoubtedly.
(Vol. III, 99th – 100th
issue, October 15, 2017)
Hunger index
Is increasing hunger a paradoxical poser for an
otherwise developing country? Or fallout succinctly proving, the anti-people
nature of the set of policies which is guiding so-called ‘development’?
Why the people of the forests hungry? Because,
their forest rights have been snatched away, either by legal prohibitions or by
leasing out the forest lands to multinationals, capitalists (the ‘developers’?)
or in the name of anti-insurgency operations.
Why the farmers are hungry? Because
prematurely, from a regime of building food-sufficiency and subsistence a
regime of market-driven agriculture has been promoted over a long period which
is driving the farmers to un-repayable high-interest bank loans, loans from
micro-finance agencies, clutches of metamorphosed landlords of newer generation
and eventual destitution and suicides.
Why the millions of workers in the unorganized
sector are hungry? Because of low wages, that also half-paid through the
contractor agencies/individuals, literally zero service-security in practice,
seasonal unemployment and unemployment due to various policy-related reasons,
e.g. demonetization of the year 2016.
Why the self-employed, petty traders hungry?
Again, due to policy decisions taken in the name of development, from national
level decisions like 100% FDI in retail sector to municipal decisions barring
access to trading areas, roads and so many other things.
After making crores of people prey to hunger
through the policies of liberalization, privatization and globalization over
the decades, when the situation becomes explosive, you start talking about
‘globalization with human face’, sops like ‘2 Rs/KG rice’, ‘daal-bhaat meals
for 5 Rs. and then again, to prevent that also, you raise the tricky question
of ‘entitlement or empowerment?’ Then, to reduce, to exclude people even from
that minimal entitlement you raise the bogey of fictitious identities! You
order linking ration cards with Aadhaar! A child dies of hunger and
administration is made hell-bent to find other excuses for that death!
Hence, India’s ranking 100 among 119 countries,
going down 45 positions since 2014 in Global Hunger Index, is not a paradox. It
is the crux of that ‘development’ which is inflating the numbers of
billionaires in this country.
(Vol. III, 101st – 102nd
issue, October 31, 2017)
Cold
rains, bitter tea and Girija Devi
About 4 decades back in the timeline. At that time Patna was
more Magadhi and densely musical. Street-side Musical nights at the time of
Durga puja were annual routines. While the brats and rogues held their swaying
heads steady till ten or eleven in the evening till the orchestra etc. were on,
they remained mostly out of the fence; the audience for the classical artists,
flaunting invitation cards, filled up the pandal area by that time. The lesser
people crowded outside as the kathak artist came on the stage and bowed to the
audience.
This happened to be the scenario either in Children’s Park
(though never became a children’s park), Veena Cinema, Govind Mitra Road, Patna
Collegiate School, Nala Road and all other places. Venues changed with time –
Gandhi Maidan, Sachivalay Maidan…. And then there was SBI, LHO at the time of
Diwali.
By the time of Raag Lalit, prized vocalists or instrumentalists
used to come. With their voices or notes on the instruments autumnal sun would
rise in the east.
It was such a dawn when Girija Devi came on the stage at Patna
Collegiate School. By the time she ended the rendering of a Khayal for the
first, sky could be seen to be overcast. It started drizzling. And, lo, the
tarpaulin roof on the stage began leaking! The organizers immediately rushed to
the stage with umbrellas and requested her to come down. Audience shouted, “No,
arrange more umbrellas, she will sing her fill today morning.” Half of the
audience was outside the fence, standing getting wet and cold with increasing
drizzle. They shouted more, “You sing, Girijaji, we shall not move!” Girija
Devi herself was in a mood to sing. She had just completed the Khayal. Now she
must go for some Thumris, Kajris, Bhajans… and then some of the audience from
the rain had already demanded ‘Nanadiya re, jiyara naa laage mor’.
So, five umbrella-holders were ‘punished’ to stand for more than
an hour, giving cover to Girija Devi, her microphone, the tabalchi and his
microphone, the drone(tanpura)-player and her microphone and the singing went
on.
Such was Girija Devi. And she is no more. We deeply feel lost,
Girijaji!
(Vol. III, 103th – 104th
issue, November 15, 2017)
Bihar Bangla Sahitya Sammelan
It was a novel and daring banner – Bihar Bangla
Sahitya Sammelan 2017. There never happened Bihar Bangla or Bongo Sahitya
Sammelan in known past. We had Probasi and then Nikhil Bharat but never Bihar.
So Bengalee Association, Bihar, particularly Bihar of this century, after
Jharkhand being a separate state, can claim that it has created history.
But creating history is not so easy. Without
proper exploration of the possible depth and expanse this movement can acquire,
we perhaps will be seen as a laughing stock creating a dead weight for
oblivion.
That exploration requires that such Sahitya
Sammelans or Sabhas, sponsored by Bengalee Association, Bihar centrally and
convened by its branches may be held in near future. There should be Katihar Bangla Sahitya Sabha,
Bhagalpur Bangla Sahitya Sabha, Muzaffarpur Bangla Sahitya Sabha, Patna Bangla
Sahitya Sabha and similar events held in other districts as well. Locally the
literature-minded and creative people writing poems, stories etc. in Bengali
should be encouraged to come to the Sabha. The best should be rewarded and more
encouragements should be searched out.
The Association must not let the spirit of
Bihar Bangla Sahitya Sammelan and the enthusiasm generated by it; die out by
our delay in taking the movement forward.
(Vol. III, 105th – 106th
issue, November 30, 2017)
Human Rights
Can the legislators or the legal luminaries
consider the framework of monetary support for the Indian farmer (to prevent
his suicide in failing quest to earn a living for him and his family, in
failing quest to avert distress sale of his produce and avoid taking
high-interest loans) under the concept of Human Right? Can they consider
payment of minimum living wage to the workers under the concept of Human Right?
There are so many other injustices inbuilt to
the system we live in which do not come under the concept of Human Right. There
was a time when this ‘Human Right’ approach to the problems was ridiculed as
sly American thing to confuse the people fighting for their rights.
But the times have changed. Sense of community
is not being developed on the basis of love, rather it is being developed on
the basis of hatred towards other community. Majoritarianism in the matters
where the concept of majority has no place has grown sickeningly and people are
being brutally targeted, beaten, killed and then the killers are being
rewarded!
10th of December was observed as
Human Rights Day. In an event observing the Day, none other than our earlier
Chief Justice of India R. M. Lodha commented, ““Should
religion be a factor when two adults fell in love? People have been killed in
cases of love jihad. The violators of human rights are not accountable to
society. There is laxity in the police action. This question is shaking me
every day,… Is it human rights which we are talking about when we have
laws compatible to the international declaration of human rights?...In
the name of cow protection, human beings were slaughtered. Cow vigilantes are
mushrooming everywhere. Sedition charges are being invoked against activists.
Cartoonists, actress and students were charged with sedition charges,… Do we
really value human rights? Despite adequate laws, constitutional safeguards and
strong judiciary, we are not able to achieve the goals of protection of human
rights”. Justice Lodha, President of the International
Institute of Human Rights which has organized the function, urged for a robust
mechanism to protect the human rights in the country.
What times have arrived! Even the right to life
of a child is being threatened every day. Every morning you open the newspaper
and see at some corner – 4/5 year old girl child raped and then killed! Girls
in villages and cities are being gang-raped and then killed every other day!
This man, Afrazul, working in Rajasthan was hacked by an axe! Then burned! And
the killer proudly videoed the whole thing and posted in social media! How he
could? He could because day and night he is listening to the proud, violent
utterings of a group of political leaders who encourage people to kill. ‘You
just do it. Rest will be taken care of by us. You will be rewarded! What
happened to the killers of Akhlaq? They have been rewarded with jobs in NTPC!
What happened to the killers of Pehlu Khan? Heh..heh, no one killed Pehlu Khan!
What happened to the killers of Junaid? Rest assured, they will come out
clean!...’
Unless these heinous acts and abetments of
crime are avenged by the people, human rights will not remain protected. Police
and courts cannot protect human rights unless people is there, in front of the
police stations and courts, united and getting restive to know what action has
been taken.
(Vol. III, 107th – 108th
issue, December 15, 2017)
Merry Christmas
Christmas
is not a Christian festival for us. Due to its being the ‘Bara Din’(the daytime
beginning to be longer), beginning of winter holidays in the schools and
colleges, the sweet associated with it, the ‘cake’ (world says that Indians
love sweets) and the family trips, Christmas is an Indian festival. But, it is
Christ’s birthday first of all! And that way also, like all countries where
poor, hapless people are suffering oppression of the economic, political and
social system they belong, India has a strong case to observe the birthday of
this rebel as a hero of the downtrodden! That way the liberation theology world
over has owned Christ!
“Jesus is stated to have visited the Temple in
Jerusalem, where the courtyard is described as being filled
with livestock, merchants, and the
tables of the money changers,
who changed the standard Greek and Roman money for Jewish and Tyrian money. (Gentile money could
not be used at the Temple because of the graven images on it.). Jerusalem
was packed with Jews who had come for Passover, perhaps numbering 300,000 to
400,000 pilgrims.
“And making a whip of cords, he drove them all out of the
temple, with the sheep and oxen. And he poured out the coins of the
money-changers and overturned their tables. And he told those who sold the
pigeons, "Take these things away; do not make my Father's house a house of
trade." [Jn
2:13–16]
"And Jesus went into the temple of God, and cast out
all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the
moneychangers, and the seats of them that sold doves, And said unto them, It is
written, My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made it a
den of thieves."
In Mark
12:40 and Luke
20:47 Jesus accused the Temple authorities of
thieving and this time he names poor widows as their victims, going on to
provide evidence of this in Mark12:42 and Luke
21:2. Dove sellers were selling doves that were
sacrificed by the poor who could not afford grander sacrifices and specifically
by women. According to Mark
11:16, Jesus then put an embargo on people carrying
any merchandise through the Temple—a sanction that would have disrupted all
commerce. This occurred in the outermost court of the gentiles.
Matthew
21:14–16 says the Temple leaders questioned Jesus
if he was aware the children were shouting "Hosanna to the Son of
David." Jesus responded by saying "from the lips of children and
infants you have ordained praise." This phrase incorporates a phrase from
the Psalm
8:2, "from the lips of children and infants,"
believed by followers to be an admission of divinity by Jesus, thus confirming
his divinity via prooftexting the Old Testament. (Wikipedia,
Cleansing of the Temple)
Roman
Empire was already in crisis. Orders were given to the administrators to halt
and punish any troublemaking within the borders of the empire. So, Jesus was
arrested, tortured and then punished with death by crucifixion.
And
that ‘trade within temple’? It is still there. We face it today as ‘crony
capitalism in religious extremism’! So the Son of God posits itself here by
logic! Of course with people of different millenium, with new advances of
humanity!
(Vol. III, 109th – 110th
issue, December 31, 2017)
Will the Bengali text books be printed
this year?
When the representatives of Bengalee
Association, Bihar go to visit other states they proudly say that agencies of
the Government of Bihar now include Bengali language in syllabus preparation,
text book preparation and printing and its distribution to districts etc. etc.
But the regrettable fact remains that the text books were prepared no doubt,
but never printed. On persuasion by the Bengalee Association, PDF files of
those text books were made downloadable in the website of Bihar State Text Book
Publishing Co. Ltd. It was claimed that the students who would get the
downloaded files printed by local cyber cafes or such type of shops would be
reimbursed by DEO office after recommendation by Head Master of the school on
the cash memo! It is quite an imaginable feat that a student of primary level
studying in some school situated at some remote village (suppose one of those
Bengalee settler’s colonies in Bagha, West Champaran from where nearest
township is 5 KM through jungle infested with dacoits) would get the text book
printed and the cost reimbursed!
When Bihar Bangla Academy came forward and
offered Bihar Education Project that if reimbursement of the cost be provided
centrally to it, Academy will undertake supply of text books to all the primary
schools in Bihar where Bengali speaking students are admitted and Bengali is
taught. Rather, through TET, Bengali teachers have also been provided to some
extent. Academy received a negative response. Then Bengalee Association, with
some donation from the Academy and collection of donations from individuals,
prepared Xerox copies of text books and sent in limited numbers to schools
through its branches and Bengali teachers’ organisation developed by the
Association.
Anyway, that is past. New Year has arrived. Can
we expect printing of Bengali text books by BSTBPCL and distribution by BEP
this year? Can we expect that students will get Bengali text books in their
school bags this year?
(Vol. III, 111th – 112th
issue, January 15, 2018)
Supriya Devi
Days
before her imminent death due to tuberculosis, Neeta in Meghe Dhaka Tara by
Ritwik Ghatak cried, “I wanted to live”. More than a cry it was an accusation
against this world of injustice which did not let her live. It reminded us of
the despairing intermittent utterance, ‘I accuse’, of her incapacitated father
in his room. They were a family of the refugee colony struggling for their
subsistence.
We
also loved her as Anusuya in Komal Gandhar. Anusuya is the heroine of the film
but not the central character like Neeta in Meghe Dhaka Tara. The film is about
the travails of amateur theatre (yet the zeal to move on) intertwined with the
pain of partition of India and Pakistan, yet so many of the important messages
of the film by Ritwik are conveyed through Anusuya. Moreover, it was suggestive
of her own journey.
Supriya
Choudhury, born in Burma (Myanmar) came to India and, having a knack for acting
and dance since childhood, began her journey in films to become one of the most
adored actresses of Bengal.
Supriya
Devi breathed her last on 26th January 2018. We pay our respects to
her.
The ‘fringe’
It
appears to have become a fashion today. Whenever something happens which is
widely criticized and consequently becomes unpalatable for the political force
which is running the state, it tries to shrug that happening off by making the
‘fringe groups/elements’ responsible. Media also accepts this way of dealing
with the affairs. Who are these ‘fringe groups/elements’ who torture and kill
people in the name of religion, throw stones on the bus with school children,
plants saffron flag on court building, come out in procession with saffron flag
on Republic Day, threatens constitution of India and then hide when the purpose
of the ruling political force is fulfilled? Strangely, the ruling force, never
criticizes those activities except under extreme pressure! If you look at the
phenomenon, you will surely conclude that the so-called fringe groups/elements
are not separate entities, time to time they are generated by or they are
expressions of the ruling force itself, conveniently released and then
concealed. What type of ruling force it is which always need a multi-headed
fringe to surround it? Is it healthy political behavior? Does this behavior
signify some healthy development of our republic? No. History is witness to
such political behavior. They are known as fascistic manoeuvres to
destroy the republic.
(Vol. III, 113th – 114th
issue, January 31, 2018)
Cricketing in Bihar
Thanks to Lodha Committee recommendations and approval by
Supreme Court for all of it that after long 17 years young cricketers of Bihar
will now be able to play in their home state without dooming their careers.
For these 17 years, Bihar was under RJD rule for five
years, (excluding President’s rule for some months) and JD(U) or JD(U)+ rule
for 12 years. Yet it required a national level judicial committee
recommendation and Supreme Court’s affirmation of the same to put Bihar cricket
on the track again! This piece of fact speaks about the care state governments
have been taking to develop sports in Bihar. How many times did the governments
take the initiative to make the cricket associations of the state to seat
together, end the face-off and take unified position to approach BCCI for
recognition and participation in national tournaments?
On the other hand, it goes to the credit of ‘Cricket
Association of Bihar & Others’ to raise a legal dispute for participation
in the Board of BCCI which led to formation of Lodha Committee, whose
recommendations proved to be a game-changer for the administration of the game
of cricket. (The judges hearing the case in the highest court of law did also
observe that though many states remain unrepresented in the Board of BCCI,
leaving out Bihar, old, most populous and a big state is ‘significant
omission’).
Recently, the Acting Secretary of BCCI met Chairman of
the Media Committee of Bihar Cricket Association (now recognized by BCCI)
Sanjiv Kumar Mishra and assured that in the year 2018-19 Bihar will play the
national cricket tournaments including that for Ranji Trophy.
It is also in the news that from 1st April
2018 onwards the Moinul Haque Stadium will be handed over to BCA for which MOU
has been signed. That is also a piece of good news. But what about playing
fields in all the cities and towns of the state? What about playing fields in
private and ‘CBSE affiliated/affiliation applied for’ schools? There still are
schools running in apartment-type buildings in congested streets which show the
public park (that also in a sorry state) at the other side of the road when
inspection team from the affiliating authority ask about the playing field of
the school! And still those are obtaining affiliation!
However, it is time to support upcoming heroes and
heroines of Bihar cricket who would bring pride to the state and to the country
in coming days.
(Vol. III, 115th – 116th
issue, February 15, 2018)
Ishwar Chandra
Vidyasagar and Hindi
Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar joined Fort William College in
the year 1841 as the head of the Sanskrit department. The Secretary of the
college Captain G. T. Marshal, being impressed by the knowledge of Vidyasagar
advised him to learn English and Hindi as well. Ishwar Chandra learned and
acquired good command on both the languages.
When he thought to write ‘Betal Panchavinshati’ in Bengali as a
textbook, instead of selecting Katha Sarit Sagar and other Sanskrit sources as
the base material, he chose Betal Pachisi in Hindi written by Lallu Lal, a
teacher of Hindi in Fort William College, Calcutta.
Bharatendu Harishchandra, living in Benares, used to
visit Calcutta frequently as he had family relations there. He knew about
Vidyasagar. During the 70s of 19th
century Bharatendu was in his 20s while Vidyasagar was in his 50s. They shared
their month of birth. Ishwar Chandra was born on 26th September 1820
whereas Bharatendu was born on 9th September 1850. In their very
first meeting they became good friends. Whenever Bharatendu went to Calcutta he
met Vidyasagar. Whenever Vidyasagar went to Benares he met Bharatendu; he also
went to his home and used his father’s library. Bharatendu wrote about
Vidyasagar (it is a typical four-liner in popular puzzle style):-
सुन्दर वानी कहि समुझावै ।
विधवागन सों नेह बढ़ावै ॥
दयानिधान परम गुन आगर ।
सखि सज्जन नहिं विद्यासागर ॥
[He makes you understand in good words, increases his
affection for widows, god of kindness and store of sublime qualities – is he
just a good man, my friend? No, he is Vidyasagar (meaning Ocean of Knowledge)]
His influence on ‘Hindi Renaissance’ is an area of
research. In the year 1856 Hindu Widow Remarriage Act was passed. During the
years 1857-58 whole northern and western India including some areas in the East
and South was engulfed in the tumultuous events of the first war of Indian
independence. During the same period of two years Vidyasagar opened 35 girls
school in the districts he was working as Inspector of Schools. In 1855 he had
opened first teachers’ training institute of India, called Normal School those
days. Even before that he had modernized the syllabus for education.
In fact, major
portion of recommendations of Wood’s Despatch reflected the suggestions given
by Vidyasagar in his ‘Notes for educational reforms’ and his discussions with
Halliday, which formed the core of ‘Halliday’s Minutes. The colonial government
changed its policies regarding education after these developments, in which
Vidyasagar played a crucial role.
But as it appears, his social reforms, his efforts to
modernize education and spread education amongst women did not extend to Hindi
area in a linear way. Bharatendu’s literary works, influence of Dayanand
Saraswati even before establishment of Arya Samaj, influence of enlightened
Hindi intelligentsia, as also the social reform by Ram Mohan Roy before him…all
mingled to create the wave of enlightenment in Hindi world. Where and in which
way the name of Vidyasagar stood in that wave is an area which needs further
research.
Finally, if his role as foremost protagonist of
rationality, of rational thought remains lost in his image of ‘Man of strong
ideals’, that is not the fault of Hindi world, the Bengalee mind itself did it.
(Vol. III, 117th – 118th
issue, February 28, 2018)
Killing of children in Muzaffarpur and
the media
Nine children were instantly killed and 24 were
injured on February 24 when a speeding SUV (not truck) ran over the group of
school students crossing the road. The shocking incident happened on NH77 at
Minapur block. The man who was driving the vehicle was drunk (in a State where
Liquor is banned) and a leader of a political party of the ruling alliance in
Bihar. Moreover that political party also rules at the centre. That is where
the blood stains on the road exposed the bloodlines of the media today.
As recorded in detail in an analytic piece by
Altnews (https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/
patna/suv-that-killed-9-kids-in-muzaffarpur-was-being-driven-by-bjp-neta/articleshow/6307
1033.cms); they “looked at
the coverage by television news channels and newspapers for English and
Hindi to see whether the issue made it to the prime time slot and the
front page.” They also “looked at the prime time coverage for February 24
and February 25.” and “For newspapers” they “looked at the Sunday edition i.e.
February 25, a day after the incident.” They found that a majority of the TV
news channels and news papers tried to evade the news, downplay it or used
subterfuges to ignore it.
Though these tendencies have not appeared for
the first time, it sure is a new phenomenon. Often it happens now a day that
some big news unpleasant for the ruling disposition is taken note of in evasive
way. Newspapers relegate it to inner pages as a small clip or simply ignore it
on the first day. TV news channels begin streaming the news late on the lower
screen. It only when they feel the pressure of the public outrage or of the
social media making the news viral that they begin (rather, are forced to
begin) giving it better coverage.
Ominous signs for the future of this country
with a corporate-controlled media, that also crony corporate, are being more
and more visible every day.
(Vol. III, 119th – 120th
issue, March 15, 2018)
Being human vis-à-vis being market
Well,
two decades back we were not aware that there are 5 - 6 (suppose) business
entities competing to improve each and every part of the functioning brain, 5
-6 for hair, then ears, nose and for eyelashes and eyes itself. Perhaps a dozen
corporate wings are wrangling to grab more share of our face-skin, teeth, lips
and so on. Every part of our body, our behavior and individual characteristics
are subject to market operations. And then relations! To do better with your
family, to be friendlier to the friends, products are there. Even in
conjugality, from first expression of love to making of love – to do better,
rather ‘to do it cool’ you just need money and choice to purchase the required
product!
If this is the situation with human body and
relationships, much same is the case with commitments to sociality, or ‘being
human’ in the larger sense as well. Just now, perhaps a lesser number of
philanthropic institutions, education, health or other establishments are run
by the funds made available by mandatory CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility)
from the balance sheets of those same business establishments who have
segmented and divided among themselves our body and our relationships, but all
the funds routed through various foundations and endowments are related to one
or other or various corporate entities, except of course, various modes of
‘crowd-funding’ done in some projects.
If the situation is reversed, they may say, “Oh
well, we are caring so much for your ‘being human’, we have every right to
intrude in your privacy, know you physically and personally to shape our
products according to that! Nothing too serious, yaar, just like sending
cookies to your computer!”
Now, the largest ‘donor’ (as the era of LPG –
liberalization, privatization & globalization – thinks in India today) is
the government! In spite of all allegations of forsaking its responsibilities,
of shrinking the budget allocations, it is (or ‘are’, including the states) the
largest owner of educational and medical establishments, provides funding for
numerous NGOs and takes the responsibilities of all primary healthcare and
relation-care as enumerated above including subsidized supply of sanitary
napkins and condoms, both.
So, as it is alleged that the app for the
mobile in Prime Minister’s name gathers private data of the users for the
government, Adhaar data is being used for surveillance… the government can also
repeat the same dialogue as above and say, “Nothing too serious, yaar! Chalta
hai!”
(Vol. III, 121st – 122nd issue, March 31, 2018)
Rape as community punishment!
When
we do not grow with time we become retarded, handicapped. When we refuse to
grow with time, we rot and may be struck with disease. But when we
intentionally begin going back in time, we ourselves become disease – disease,
to be eradicated by the whole of humanity.
Continued
rape of an 8-year-old hungry, half-conscious girl in Kathua (J & K) by
giving her doses of sex-arousing drugs (!) for a week and then killing her by
smashing her head, for ‘teaching a lesson’ to the community she belonged...!
The mastermind being an erstwhile government official! One of the rapist being
police official! Clan of advocates preventing the police to lodge the case in
the court and chanting slogans seemingly simple religious expression but as
communal threats!...
Gangrape
of a woman in Unnao (UP), then taking her father in custody for the ‘crime of
demanding justice’, killing him and before his death, taking his signatures on
false statements to be placed as evidences to protect and save the guilty…and
police dilly dallying in arresting the accused as he is a MLA of the ruling
party!...
Now,
again a case of child-rape and murder in Surat, Gujrat!...
Of
course, humanity has prevailed finally till now. In Kathua, Police and the
advocate for the victim showed strong will despite threats on phone; the
accused have been arrested and the investigation has begun. In Unnao also the
State government had to act finally and the accused MLA has been arrested.
But
the tales of horror proves beyond doubt that there are people around us who
have metamorphosed to become worms of disease. And if not eradicated soon we
all may be infected and waiting to be worms.
1 April Barna Parichay published
Barna
Parichaya. the historic book, a primer for learning Bengali language has been
standing the test of time for 164 years. It was first published on 1st
April 1854. Pundit Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar wrote this classic after
thorough-going research to modernize the Bengali language. Bengalee
Association, Bihar commemorated the 150th year of its publication in
the year 2004. It is also significant that the last edition of the book was
published with the Karmatar-address of the writer. Now that ‘address’ i.e.
Nandan Kanan is the property of Bengalee Association, Bihar (undivided Bihar of
1974) and is being maintained by Vidyasagar Smriti Raksha Samiti.
The
Samity may think about making a ‘Barna Parichay Gallery’ in Nandan Kanan
premises in which the blowed-up facsimiles of the rough pages of work on Barna
Parichay done by Vidyasagar will be displayed along with the pages of final
book.
3rd April, AIBA foundation
day
AIBA
or All india Bengalee Association was found on 3rd April some years
back in Banga Bhawan, New Delhi. Since then this organization has arranged
conferences in Ahmedabad, Chennai and Patna. With its growth it is trying to
cope up with the challenges of such an All India organization. The tag line of
‘connecting people’ gets stressed with the complex situation of Bengalees in
Assam, quasi-political and legal battle for minority rights of Bengalees in
Bihar, linguistic and social deprivation of settled refugees in Uttarakhand,
Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and other places and then, with the fact of poor
bengalees being soft communal target as in Afrajul’s case in Rajasthan.
Yet,
AIBA is growing. It has proved its need for the Bengalee individuals and
families living in different states facing problems related with medical
treatment at Vellore, Mumbai, Hyderabad or Chennai. Or problems related with
stay of the children who get admitted in various study streams or join jobs in
different cities. Bengalees, specially of Bahirbanga or out of Bengal are happy
that they have an All India organization, that also with its head quarter in
the capital of the country. It means much in the social-political culture of a
country like India.
Let
AIBA grow more and more every year. Best wishes for its young and energetic
leadership working cohesively from distant locations of Delhi, Ahmedabad,
Chennai and other cities.
(Vol. III, 123rd – 124th issue, April 15, 2018)
Plastic-eaters found by accident
Newsdesk
– Scientists have found plastic-eater enzymes. Of course, the plastics on which
they have tested the ‘taste’ of those enzymes are PET (Polyethylene
Terephthalate) plastics, a classy thing, seen only in the kitchens of middle
class homes and used in branded water bottles here. We don’t know whether the
black, blue, red and yellow plastic bags the grocers, the meat-sellers provide
us are eatable by those enzymes or not.
But
the world is much bigger. And those plastics which come out of a dead whale’s
stomach or carried by ocean waves, litter an island where not a single human
being has stepped till now are all PET or PEF (Polyeyhylene Furandicarboxilate,
bio-based but not bio-degradable, used in beer bottles) plastics.
So,
we are earnestly hoping that accidentally (scientists were studying the
structure of the enzyme, ‘Ideonella Sakaiensis 201-F6’ to help protein
engineering) man has found something which may be used to combat one of the
world’s worst pollution problems.
The
discovery was made by the researchers, Bryon Donohoe and Nic Rorrer from
University of Portsmouth, Britain and National Renewable Energy Laboratory,
Department of Energy, USA. Few years ago, they had found the enzyme in ia waste
recycling centre in Japan.
Media
(https://m.economictimes.com) says
that “according to a three year study published in Scientific Reports last
month, a huge, swirling pile of trash in the Pacific Ocean, known as the Great
Pacific Garbage Patch, is growing faster than expected and is now three times
the size of France, more than double the size of Texas.”
(Vol. III, 125th – 128th issue, May 15, 2018)
Crusaders & martyrdom
From 16th to 31st May
every year the Bengalees commemorate a few crusaders. First obviously is Ram
Mohan Roy (conferred the title Raja by the Mughal Badshah of Delhi before Roy’s
visit to London to raise the issues he was dealing with the rule of East India
Company here) the harbinger of 19th century reform movements in
India. Then Kazi Nazrul Islam, the rebel poet endeared to Bengalee hearts
spanning both sides of the divided Bengal. Nazrul, till date, remains the
unparalleled hard-hitter against communalism and casteism, the two biggest
problems Indians face every day. Then there is the writer Manik Bandopadhyay
who blazed his trail with Pragaitihasik and continued with dozens of novels and
hundreds of short stories which are classics of modern Bengali literature.
And then, in this fortnight Bengalees observe
Bhasha Shaheed Diwas to pay tributes to the martyrs for mother tongue, who died
in police firing on 19th May,1961 in Silchar, Assam.
So, this editorial was meant to something more
about these great persons and the martyrs. But suddenly came the news of police
firing in Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu on 22nd May. More than a dozen
died. Who were they? What were they struggling for? Were they terrorists
escaping from jail? Were the intruders from some enemy country? They were
simple villagers struggling to protect the environment of the area, which, they
alleged, was being polluted by a copper smelter, a factory established there by
a multinational whose owner has a name of Indian origin. May be the allegations
were wrong! The company has taken enough precautions to protect the
environment! May be, the protestors did something – pelted stones, tried to
cross the factory boundary etc. etc. – which needed police action! But did it
need firing on such a large scale? Death of more than a dozen people means
injury, including grave injuries to people double the number of death! And
then, as the pictures are coming on social media, firing was done from too long
a range which suggests no prior preventive action like barricading,
lathi-charge, teargas shelling or from such a close range which suggests the
action to be ‘punitive’.
Perhaps any affirmative or suggestive comment
should be avoided as court has already taken up the matter. But looking at the
situation in general appearing all over the world we see indigenous and local
people are fighting, bleeding every day to protect their habitat and
environment against profit-hungry demonic corporates. It is the cronyism of the
latter which has given rise to a situation where much needed industrialization
for growth and employment have become a tool in the hand of the exploiters to
uproot people and grab land. May be, after the end of the arguments in the
arsenal of the state to justify police action, young people killed in
Thoothukudi will stand out as crusaders for a just cause and martyred.
(Vol. III, 129th – 130th issue, May 31, 2018)
June waitings
For
so many things we wait in the last days of May and then first week of June!
Firstly,
we see the studious and talented boys and girls, and their parents along with
other relatives waiting breathless for the results of entrance examinations for
medical and engineering. And when rapturously they receive the results of their
passing and All India ranks etc. they begin their wait for the days of
counselling and admissions.
Much
more than the number of those people waiting for results, are the farmers who
wait for the monsoon. And monsoon waiting affects all of us. Scorching heat,
everyday exchanges of information about rising mercury in Gaya, Patna,
Bhagalpur, Muzaffarpur make us restless and we begin speculating on each string
of clouds in the horizon – are they monsoon clouds? And the way they come
sometime!... Suddenly the sun of 10.00 AM is dimmed, you smell something, rush
out and see huge, huge dark masses of cloud engulfing the sky… kites encircling
and moving away look like they are guiding the clouds… dry leaves and dust rise
menacingly – the storm has already begun. You wait for the smell of the earth
wet with the first big drops of rain!
And
then we know that litchis, coming since last week, will be sweet now and
markets will get concealed behind heaps of litchi leaves for some days.
Mangoes
come by the last of May. But wait for the king, the Dudhia Malda begin in the
first week of June. Though it never comes by the first week. It keeps us
waiting for the second week, even third week sometime.
…
But
suddenly the heart fills with sadness. Suddenly the Station Road of Purnia,
Bhattabari, Naorattan, Zila School, Khazanchi More and other areas appear
before the eyes. A man should have been there. The Bengalee Association and the
Bengalees in general could have gone to meet him. Or have met him in Patna
residence. Could have said, “Ajitda, you shall have to look after these issues.
We have brought the questions framed. You may raise it in Bidhan Sabha. The
Bengalee students are not getting books. The settlers are not getting pattas…”
and more.
Of
course, he had a political colour. He had the people, the poor farmers,
adivasis to fight for in Budhauli estate and other places. But that never
prevented him from raising the issues of Bengali-speaking people of Bihar.
It
was shocking in the year 1998 when bullets killed Ajit Sarkar, four times MLA
(he was MLA at the time of his death) from Purnia, on 14th June. It
is shocking that after a lapse of two decades, ‘who were his killers’, are yet
not decided.
(Vol. III, 131st – 132nd
issue, June 15, 2018)
Is some game on?
Few
days ago, there was a news, “Union HRD Minister…directed the CBSE to continue
conducting the Central Teacher Eligibility Test (CTET) in the 20 Indian
languages as earlier.” What CBSE had done?
Removed
all other languages from the list of languages in which CTET used to be taken
over the years and retained only English, Hindi and Sanskrit!
What
were the languages which were removed?
They
were Assamese, Bangla, Garo, Gujrati, Kannada, Khasi, Malayalam, Manipuri,
Marathi, Mizo, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Tamil, Telegu, Tibetan & Urdu.
Why
those languages were removed? Was it expected that students from a village near
Aizawl or Madurai or Dharwar or Leh would not be getting any school in their
localities and come to Delhi or any other city of Hindi ‘A’ area for studies?
All the Kendriya Vidyalayas opened in the remotest areas over the area would be
closed? Or, the teachers appointed for those schools from now on will only
require knowing only English, Hindi or Sanskrit from now on? Or, the finest utopia – those states either
would be converted to Hindi ‘A’ area or cease to exist?
Issue
is not that CBSE had taken a decision and Minister stopped it from
implementation in time, though not on his own but in face of protest, “the
directive… came following criticism” (news).
Issue
is, what is the frame of mind of CBSE, the biggest board, central board, (which
now-a-days the state board tend to follow), of secondary education? What future
vision of India tempts them to take such audacious decision?
Whereas,
any reasoned view of future India, particularly from eminent educationists
supposed to man the head posts of institutions like CBSE, would rather consider
increase the list of languages, including languages like Konkani, Santhali,
Kokborok, Mizo and many others. In fact, the teacher must begin his or her
first talk with the child coming to the school for the first time in the language
of the locality.
We
must be thankful to those who protested the CBSE decision in time. We do not
know who the others were (and any leader from Bengali-speaking community was
there) but from the news published in Times of India we get the name of Kanimojhi,
leader of DMK. We are thankful to Kanimojhi.
(Vol. III, 133rd – 134th
issue, June 30, 2018)
Vilification of Prof. Tapodhir Bhattacharjee answer the
questions raised by him
Prof. Tapodhir Bhattacharjee is a learned
Bengali litterateur, author of many books, ex-VC of Assam Central University
and a human rights activist as well. He is observing the plight of Bengali
speaking people of Assam like many others. He is observing that whether
practical groundwork for completion of National Register of Citizenship is
going the ‘NDA-way’ in some districts or ‘AASU-way’ in some other districts
(that way it happens in such coalition governments), the brunt is being borne
by Bengali speaking people who are no less than one crore and 40 lakhs living
in Assam. Bengalees are suffering in the detention camps, Bengalees are being
declared D-voters, Bengalees are running pillar to post to provide their ID
documents to the officials and Bengalees are losing all their life-time family
earnings and assets to pay for the legal battles they are fighting to prove
that they are Indians.
Tapodhir simply wrote some booklets and
articles about the origin of Bengalee people in Assam, some glimpse in the
history of hatred against the Bengalees and the present situation emerging
during time-bound completion of NRC under the supervision of Supreme Court.
No media claimed that whatever Tapodhir is
writing is lie, government is damn serious and impartial to implement the Assam
Accord in letter and spirit and identified cases of harassment are being taken
care of; Bengalees, who are genuine citizens have nothing to be afraid etc.
etc. The huge number of paramilitary forces being posted on the streets have
nothing to do with the apprehension that they are there to stifle any voice of dissent.
That would have been better. But no, Tapodhir is a villain, is Assam-hater and
he must be ‘caught’. Hence a flimsy FIR is lodged in Dispur PS by someone and
based on that police immediately moves to cities all over India for look-out!
These tamashas prove that what Tapodhir is
saying, what Harsh Mandar had said in his report to the NHRC and many others
are saying are true. Bengalees in Assam are facing large scale discrimination
and atrocities.
(Vol. III, 135th – 136th
issue, July 15, 2018)
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