Looking around
one comes across a kind of darkness that seems to be descending on the country.
It is somewhat like what the Nobel Laureate, VS Naipaul, described in his
travelogue, “An Area of Darkness”, but, perhaps is more forbidding as it is
occurring in the second decade of the 21st Century. Ominous, as it seems, the thought processes
of our people seem to be consciously and unrelentingly heading towards the
medieval ages. Although it cannot be reckoned as the sign of the times when
serious efforts are under way to achieve material progress, yet many societal
aberrations strongly suggest that regressive tendencies are getting free play.
Suppression of
women’s freedom and their abuse appears to be gathering strength. The “Khaps”, a sort of socio-political
village grouping, have become active again and are issuing dictat that are
reactionary to the core in the prevailing atmosphere of freedom in a modern
democratic society. The “Khaps” and
their agglomerations, “Sarv Khaps”,
were, for ages, instruments of administration in the village republics of
north-western India comprising the modern northern Indian states of Haryana,
Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. From time immemorial the Indian society has been
organised around the village unit and the republican fabric of the village
administration did not die out despite the emergence of subsequent systems of
administrations. However, with the establishment of panchayats (village councils)
“Khaps” lost much of their significance.
Yet, these seem
to be functioning in some pockets and from time to time are issuing
uncompromising dictat, mostly on norms of marriages and against women. Though
archaic, their power and influence continues to be formidable. A young couple
of Kaithal district in Haryana was done to death in 2007 for marrying for love.
They happened to be from the same gotra (clan),
and were from the same village. Unacceptable to the “Khap”, the couple was murdered despite an order from the state high
court for provision of police protection for them. Recently, in Baghpat
district of Uttar Pradesh (UP), in a Taliban-like fatwa, the “Khap” of
Asara village banned love marriages, prohibited women below 40 from shopping
and from using cell phones outside their respective homes. Appallingly, some
local political parties came out in support of the “Khap”. Even the new young and well-educated chief Minister of the
province parried questions and avoided condemning the fatwa, thus indirectly turning a blind eye to the sinister system
that could take the community back to the dark, medieval ages of patriarchy.
Women,
generally, are at the receiving end all around the country. Earlier this month
a 20-year old girl was molested and stripped by a gang of around fifty hoodlums
as she came out of a bar with friends in the eastern city of Guwahati in Assam.
A Hindu extreme right wing outfit, Sri
Ram Sene (Army of Lord Ram) had organised an assault in 2009 on girls in a
pub in Mangalore. One couldn’t believe the visuals as the rowdies physically
attacked girls injuring some of them, whose fault was that they had gone to the
pub – something the Sene, apparently,
consider being against the tenets of Hinduism. Its aim is to bring back the
traditional Hindu society in which women were properly wrapped up in yards of
cloth and confined to the kitchen, obediently serving every need of the
husbands and their families.
A similar
tradition-bound society is what Naipaul encountered during his travels through
the country that he undertook to discover his roots. He put down his
observations, in his travelogue “An area of darkness” published in 1964. That
was more than fifty years ago, only about a decade and a half after the
country’s independence when it was emerging out of centuries of imperial rule
and was still in search of an identity. Highly religious, caste-ridden and
tradition-bound, he found India stagnating and bogged down. Gloating over its
ancient glory, it was indifferent to material progress. Guided by the theory of
Karma, the country wallowed in poverty, squalor and filth. Its leaders were
disinterested in progress and oblivious of the economic revival taking place
apace in the war-ravaged countries. Contented with the “Hindu rate of growth”
of around 3.5%, they appeared to be blind to the human misery that surrounded
them. For a Trinidad-Indian living in England, brought up on the staple of
Indian folk-lore that were laid on with layers and layers of romanticism, the
actuality of the physical, social and spiritual visuals of his mother-country
that Naipaul got hit with was a big let-down.
That very same
construct appears to be making a re-appearance. The society seems to be getting
radicalised and religious bigotry is striving to occupy centre stage.
Radicalised fringe elements of both the major religious groupings have had
successes in brow-beating the government into submission. While, the same Sri
Ram Sene goons raided in 2008 an exhibition of the paintings of internationally
famous Indian artist MF Hussain and vandalised them, some Hindu extremist
groups, by way of threats to his life, ensured that the artist lived out the
rest of his life in exile.
Taslima Nasreen,
a Bangladeshi doctor-turned-author, exiled from her country for authoring an
allegedly undesirable literary work was forced out of India – her country of
refuge – in 2008. After having come under physical attack from a Muslim
political group in Hyderabad in 2007 she was forced out of Kolkata by radical
Muslims under the threat of death. Kept under what she described as
“unendurable” (virtual) house-arrest in New Delhi for months by the Centre,
Nasreen later thought it best to leave the country. India-born Booker-prize
winning author Salman Rushdie came in for somewhat similar treatment in 2012 for
authoring Satanic Verses 24 years ago that allegedly mocked Prophet Mohammed.
Under pressure of Islamic fundamentalists he was prevented from attending the
“Jaipur Lit Fest”. In all these instances the weak-kneed governments of the
states and the Centre deliberately did not adopt their avowed secular stand and
played along with the fundamentalists for reasons that were patently political.
Apart from
competitive radicalism pervasive corruption is overwhelming the country; it has
spread like a virus infecting every segment of the society – from
industrialists to businessmen, from traders to tradesmen, from politicians to
the bureaucracy right across their various levels. Billions from public funds
have been siphoned off by politicians, bureaucrats and industrialists, throwing
cold water on the much-acclaimed sizzling “GDP growth”. Ethical values had,
probably, never plumbed such depths. With hardly any sign of governance law and
order are on a long holiday. Loots, abductions, thefts, molestations and rape
are routine. Dalits are tormented, even murdered; their women are humiliated
and frequently raped.
The country seems to have hit a dark, portentous
patch. The future appears to be menacing and sinister and foretells a kind of
darkness much worse than what Naipaul happened to observe.
"http://www.zimbio.com/member/proloybagchi"
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