Wednesday, September 29, 2010

We the People


It was 11 pm and I was back from the Gym to my TV watching routine, actually my mindless channel surfing routine. In a row, 4 Hindi news channels were apparently engaged in what they believe is their reason of existence - raising TRPs.
One was obsessively repeating the 6 time dress pulling act of Katrina Kaif, a Bollywood starlet, apparently whose scarlet designer gown that wouldn’t give up slipping. Wardrobe malfunction it is called these days. Sometimes people say it is pre-meditated.
A second channel was showing how post debut, the leading lady of Dabang Ms XYZ (??) tripped on her heals as she sashayed the ramp. This shot was also repeated about 20 times.
Live India the third channel that hesitatingly I switched to was showing Malika Sherawat maniacally gyrating to a Nagin number. India’s love for the nagin continues to live through generations.
A fourth channel was showing how a old Fort in Etawah, was still haunted by ghosts of nautch girls, as one of the rulers some Thakur ABC Pratap Singh Maharaj, ignored the counsel of a sage and brought on the occasion of holi, nautch girls, despite the foreboding of the sage. Since then, the curse that befell continues to haunt and even 100s of years down when anyone mustered the courage to tip toe the ominous sound of the late night anklet he is destined to die. And many actually had, claimed one of the villagers who out of fear was abdicating the village. An act symbolic of a society still suffering from the scourge of cast, superstition and totemic supernaturalism! But, regardless, the manner in which this was being televised is reinforcing the superstition not dismissing it.

All societies, Oriental or Occidental without exception, have had some sort of witchcraft at some point of time. Some sort of shamanite tradition at some point of time. Vestiges of these can be seen in the most societies even today in varying measures. But extolling it by televising on prime time is weird.
Neils Bohr was once asked about the horse shoe dangling on his quarters. He is believed to have denied any belief in superstition. But went on to say, “believe it or not, it does bring good luck”. From the famous Pascals wager it is clear, keep God on the right side, because if he does exist, it makes pragmatic sense to keep him on your right side. The same logic may well be extended to the supernatural, and the demonic powers that be may best be avoided than challenged. But a prime time media campaign to reinforce the proposition is preposterous.

I have always believed that the authorship can be blamed or must be blamed only in some measure and not in full measure. The readership or viewership is also to be blamed. These channels are wasting precious airtime because they are convinced they capture eye balls, and perhaps they are right. Commerce sees no reason, and greed no bar.

Sunday, September 19, 2010


AMERICANS WANT A PAPA


The Gallup polls for the mid term polls show an astounding erosion of goodwill for Barack Obama.

I always felt, unlike India which is constantly seeking a mother, regardless of how inept she be about childcare – Sonia, Behnji, Didi and Amma are just a few cases in point, the Americans want fathers. Therefore, their tryst with the much tom tomed egalitarianism testified - voting in a black president and their fancy for mother-like mild mannered, sensitive and polite ObaMA may be short-lived. In the same breath, a woman president, and I say this, as Hillary has kept no secret of her ambitions, is a far dream for this cowboy country.

Nehru, the tall and fearless internationalist too preferred showing in India his softer side more. A man whose presumptuousness would almost always put diplomatic nerds like the high browed Galbraith also at discomfort, his image makers tirelessly chose to project him more like soft Chacha Nehru than hardy Tau Nehru in India. India also elected to neglect or consign to the margins stalwarts like Sardar and Netaji – they were too much of a Papa for them.

We like Mamas, who would cajole and cuddle us more than Papas who deride or demand of us, chide or challenge us. And we like good babas would be willing to reciprocate to Mamas by glossing over their foibles and incompetence than punish them, quite contrary to Americans who would much rather forgive the archetypical male malefactor of a Lewinsky gate than condone callous neglect of statecraft. And they believe, good statecraft is the essential tool particularly for perpetuation of American hegemony delivered better by the Papas.

Whereas, Oba(Ma) from various statements seems reconciled to a single term Presidency, the minions, seemingly resigned to losing in the mid term elections are already crunching numbers, already seeking plausible explanations for the defeat from the study of similar past patterns.

This generation of Americans is witnessing an erosion of their global hegemony. A people that would not deign it necessary to really know where India or Thailand exist on the map, are now being challenged by the very lands they never acknowledged presence of. This is too much for this generation to swallow and of course, the one and only one to blame is the born Muslim Black mama Obama.

Today they are forced to acknowledge the Asian juggernauts. The Asians ( read Indians and Chinese ) are coming is a common board room refrain in the USA. I remember the CEO of an American Pharma MNC recount a dining table conversation that he had with his father, which testifies a paradigm that has indeed shifted. On one occasion when this man, then a young boy in his teens, left food on his plate ( today the Americans consign USD 150 bn dollar worth of food to the bins ), his father admonished him saying there are many people going hungry in India. Today the same guy tells his son, to not leave his homework as there many in India ready to take his job. Just in one generation the paradigm has changed so much. Obama is playing to this sentiment as well. Stop outsourcing. The very use of the word is a faux pas. But if the Papa like Bush senior and junior or the virile Clinton could not even stop human smuggling, and drugs how can they stop outsourcing. Outsourcing is an arbitrage, which can never be stopped as it makes perfect sense for both parties.

Friday, September 3, 2010

TIGER VISA


Tiger Visa

Very soon if not soon enough, some right wing party will write in its manifesto about piloting a treaty with China for tiger visa for Indians, who believe that goddess Kali rode the Tiger to supervise wars, destroy demons and run errands for her consort Rudra. China would by then be at the pinnacle of a uni-polar world. It may deign to allow Indians to visit its Tiger farms for Tiger Tourism.

Today there are more Tigers in the farms of China, by some estimates 5000, being bred in captivity, four time of those today in the wild in India - 1300. My children have wished to go to Sunderbans to see the Panthera Tigris Tigris before this majestic beast and its habitat are both wiped off the face of the earth.

Eventually the Tiger will be known as an oddity that inhabits China. It may come in all moulds, weights and sizes. Of course Chinese manufacturing has no limits. That it ever did inhabit India would be forgotten just like the world as much as we ourselves today have forgotten that martial arts originated in India. While our Kalaripayattu languishes, the martial arts once practiced by Indian monks, are now an art form attributed to the Chinese, Japanese and Koreans, and Indians go there to get 9 Dan Blackbelts. This is just one of the multitude of testimonies of our expertise in heritage destruction. Yoga would soon be a patentable product coming from the US. I remember, Ranbaxy conducted a yoga course and the instructor was a Dane from the US.

Just like we read about the silk route, our great-grandchildren will read about the Tiger route. Tibet, the autonomy of which India has been espousing, is actually the prominent participant in this pervert poaching. Lhasa is the high seat of this trade. You don’t need to avoid the swarm of Han Chinese police in Tibet or even the under cover police in Lhasa to get Tiger skins and other tiger parts that are so blatantly traded in open market in Lhasa. Vendors are willing to deliver them to your hotel, city country wherever. It is done blatantly and brazenly, and right under nose of the Chinese authorities, who chose to turn a Nelsons eye to the activity. Tiger skins and bones are displayed openly with certificates authenticating its wild origin as the farm tigers never fetch the premium that those from the wild do. Stuffed head are trophy possessions.

Years ago, in 2002, when we holidayed in Sariska ( close to Alwar ) supposedly a tiger reserve, all we were shown were spots where sightings had once taken place. There was actually no trace of the tiger there. I am sure there is some money being spent on the Project Tiger which was started in 1972, but how much of it is going to the actual conservation and how much in venal pockets is something that needs no investigation.

In 2008, coinciding with my joining Ethypharm, we took a holiday to Australia. In a theme park ( I don’t remember where ) perhaps Goldcoast, there was a show of the Royal Bengal White Tiger. He was named Taj. An 11 feet long strapping beast prancing about at the orders of its handler.

We all know the western way of life is full of Declarations and Disclaimers. Pretty much in sync with this mentality, the theme party had both to make. The declaration was that the tiger was the on verge of extinction Bengal Tiger, and the disclaimer was, torture was not used to train it. It seems that the tiger away from its Sunderban habitat was too shorn of his mother love and found the same in his handler and thus meekly followed instructions to jump and climb. A really emotional tiger he was.

The British killed some 80,000 tigers in India. They were primarily fox hunters before the Indian Maharajah trained them in this bravado - hounding the beast seated conveniently on a bedecked elephant, scaring it with the sound of the ludicrous drum beating and killing it with the breach loading gun. The largest one weighing 390 kgs was killed by a joker called David Hasinger in 1967 making a record of sorts.
As usual, "save our tiger" is a fancy rallying point, but affirmative actions still remains a distant dream.
Some estimates say, there are 12,000 tigers in USA and 4000 are kept as pets.

Monday, August 16, 2010

MY I-DAY SPEECH WAS IN HINDI


I spoke in Hindi.


Born in Allahabad, to a mother who was struggling to complete her residency at the Kamla Nehru Hospital, and a father a young Captain on field, I spent a lot of time with my grandfather who was then the Director Education for UP. A self made man, but of a very humble origin.

Walk as he would with his penang lawyer, I was his usual and daily companion on this routine to the Alfred Park, the place where Pt Chandrashekhar Sitaram Tiwari died “AZAD” as he could not be captured alive by the police. This story of the supreme sacrifice must have been recounted to me I am sure times without number particularly by the customary raise of the penang lawyer toward the statue, by my grandfather who before he joined the government was himself a revolutionary. But of course, I have no memory of those anecdotal narrations, but for hazy memories of the moustache twirling statue of the great hero. But somewhere down the memory lane, repeated anecdotal references must have made a dent.

This year, when I was asked to make an impromptu speech after I hoisted the flag - being averse to public speaking I was ill prepared - I unconsciously recalled the story of Azad.
An ace shooter, priest to Hanuman temple, which proved to be one of the best disguises for Panditji, a new convert to the socialist thought, and of all a mentor or guru to Bhagat Singh, Azad was the icon who co founded the HRA with Pt Ram Prasad Bismil. I seemed to have culled it out of my cached memory quite effortlessly.

Talking about independence which most of us take so matter of factly and for granted, my grandfather would tell me stories of how the sole purpose of youth of that age was independence. Curisously, when it were the kings fighting, the rebellion of 1857 was quite successfully suppressed and the resistance was decisively quelled. But when the people – the hoi polloi - rose, when women sold their ornaments, when kids mindlessly ran with the diminutive Gandhi ( walking with him was well nigh impossible, his pace was such ), it was impossible to for the British to quell the popular uprising and prolong their stay in India. The manifestation of a popular uprising is so protean, that it becomes impossible to even recognize it, so it is never possible to suppress it. You just smart it.

My grandfather once told me, when his friends had no money for a Mauser, the stationmaster of Mainpuri, a small railway station of UP (United Provinces), suggested to them to raid his office, beat and tie him up and decamp with the Rs 50/- that was needed for the Mauser, which of course the group bought.

Closer to independence, the tricolor ( with the charkha, the chakra was not adopted until 1947, used to be unfurled along with the Union Jack, albeit a few incheS lower. The district Gazette has it, that on one occasion being enraged by the 3 inch lower position of the tricolor, my grandfather – Harishankar, pushed a the District Magistrate J JOHNSTON aside, manhandled him in the presence of a huge gathering and an equally huge police force and pulling the Union Jack down raised the Tricolor to its eminent height. Of course daring acts always have a shock appeal, and by the time, a taken by surprise force reacted, Harishankar was already on the roof of one of the houses, and apparently the house owners were all fighting to get the privilege of giving refuge to this fugitive.

It was this participative patriotism, the revolution of the common man, the last man, that shook the roots of the Raj. The situation, and it mascot - Gandhi, had ensured an all inclusive resistance. The all pervasive hate for the Raj, euphoria for swatantŗatā and swaraj were voices that were cutting across strata. GD Birla wanted riddance from foreign yoke as much as Gajodhar, the quintessential boorish village stereotype of stand up comedian Raju Srivastava.

I vividly recall, we got a negative observation in an audit of our Pharmaceutical factory by a MNC just because, some bottom rung contract house keeping worker did not understand that a steel drum had to be scrubbed clean beyond imagination. The MNC audit team made a critical observation that the solvent making equipment was not clean and the SoP though existed was not being followed. So down the line, the people have to be completely aligned with the goal and aspiration of the organization and contribution of the bottom most rung as critical as that of the top most.

Well, the above was broadly the content of my I - Day speech also. My impromptu speech after I hoisted the flag. I spoke in Hindi. My first speech in Hindi it was. Completely unpremeditated. Something in me impelled me to speak in Hindi. For a few moments I seemed to be quite possessed.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

NOTHING APPEALS TO HIM. HE IS A TEENAGER.


There is a situation. A situation of conflict. And the positions of both parties are quite recalcitrant or even irreconcilable. A curious conflict of views and also of thinking in our family, to which I am an onlooker or at best an incidental participant.

Curiously, this is between my mother 67 and my son 14. The former - a matriarch quite conservative even for her generation - and the latter - my elder son - quite precocious and quite different even for his. The usual generation gap gets even more gnawing as both my mother and son are on the extremities of their respective generational spectrums.

Well this is not a classical case of delinquency. It is not a grandmother chiding a teenage grandson for not studying or for being on a excessively long call with a girl or for being glued to TV or play-station. It is more about life, the way you must live, the values that you must imbibe and the philosophy that you must follow and espouse.

When he was 3 yrs of age, he was made to memorise Haldighati, Rani of Jhansi and a poem on the martyrs of Chittor of anonymous authorship. The one mentioned last is a beautiful poem of unknown provenance, was published in Kalyan about 60 years ago, and was memorized by my mother at the instance of her father, and then passed on to my son by her. Her father was indeed a man of great erudition. So when my son was as young as 3, he did memorize and reproduce on demand, to an awe struck audience – my mother is quite prone to demanding such impromptu recitations – sitting in admiration of an infant reciting torturously chaste sanskritized Hindi verse with a clear diction and “veer rasa” like intonation, but of course no understanding of either the significance or the context.

But that was then. Today he has a mind of his own. He is more inclined to abstract painting, and writing verse reading up on game theory, and rightly or wrongly giving in to believing that some will rise only on the expense of others, but clearly not willing to memorize a eulogy on Chittor’s martyrs.

Whereas, my mother would want him to respect mythology, have some basic knowledge of theology and dabble in philosophy with equal sensitivity, he despises the first two but is quite eager to debate on the last. That is to say, he dismisses mythology as buffoonery for lesser minds, disregards theology as useless interpretation of mindless mythology, and creation of rules by a handful few who would like to manipulate a larger lot for self interest and self preservation. So, all that he accepts in some random measure is Philosophy. This is immensely intriguing as philosophy itself is probably debating, descanting and dissecting all that a commoner would like to accept and believe.

Today I read a dialog steeped in dialectical abstraction that he penned. The dialog is between a Serpent and a Saint. Curiously enough, a supposedly indolent serpent is asking questions of a supposedly eminent saint who is responding supposedly sagaciously, but his responses are dismissed by the Serpent as cliched. The serpent shares with the saint what he believes the right perspective. The entire tenor of the dialog that he has conceived is of an impertinent challenge of the supposed erudition of the saint by a sloughing serpent. It is reflective of his deep seated defiance of authority. His deep seated desire to not walk the beaten path. His inclination to rebel. The perplexity caused by the usual debate of causality, determinism and free will.

Well the outcome will never be known. There are no rights and wrongs in this. But clearly today free will is the predominant philosophy that he wants to follow.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

WHY FRENCH HATE THE ENGLISH?


Why French hate English?

When the Norman crusader William the Conqueror defeated Harold in 1066 and sat on the throne of England, the French victory, claimed the English, was not so much due to the military prowess of the conqueror from Normandy, as for the battle tired army of Harold.

Of the few stories that my father would repeatedly narrate to me when I was in sub – five, this was surely one. Although, I always knew what was coming next in the story, it was always nice to hear from him.

The French won, yet the British deny them the kudos for this victory, and I wonder if this could be one reason why the French detest the British. Of course they also believe, it was with guile and not guts that the British wrested the colony of India from the French.

Also, Napoleon, who most French hero worship, to the British was never more than a “corsican usurper” – Napoleon was born in Corsica and not France - whose defeat at Waterloo was more importantly a defeat of a paradigm than that of a ruler or despot. The treatment given to him at St Helena was also very shabby.

But I think more than India, the 100 years war or the sordid soccer nationalism that all Europeans are congenitally configured to contest, or the “Corsican” jibe for Boneparte, it was the treatment that the English gave to the beautiful Joan of Arc that peeves the French most.

It is true, Joan was very young and it is also true that she was beautiful and I say this with a credence and also certitude that even her contemporaries can be denied, but what is of greater value is that she was a virgin, and perhaps the only virgin in France then and yet the English killed her. Outrageous and completely unacceptable and clearly a national tragedy! No wonder the French wounds are so permanent and the hostility toward the British so pervasive.

Thankfully, Sania Mirza was never an icon like Joan ‘d Arc, else more than 26/11, this would be the grouse that many of us would nurse against our delinquent neighbor nation. Of course many of us would perhaps most chauvinistically argue if she was a virgin, as for most, that aspect would clearly forsake her iconic tennis star status, just as it did in the case of JoA.

Working for a French company I have started admiring the French. They are always so French, yet so adaptable. They love their cuisine, more so the nouvelle cuisine, and yet they always indulge themselves with the local food and appreciate it so much. Paris is so beautiful, yet they find beauty sometimes even in the squalor of India. They are wired to appreciate the finer and delicate aspects of human life. In the squalor and poverty, they admire the grit of the people to fight and stay happy.

One of my French colleages once said – “ you don’t feel unsafe when you walk through a poor colony in India. In most countries, you feel unsafe including Paris.” How true. And speaks volumes of the Indian culture. The poor never blame the rich for their state. “Niyati” is more often than not the culprit.

In contrast, the American world view is quite myopic, and can be compared to the Indian world view of 3 centuries ago. The world view I am convinced is reflective of the phase in which the civilization is to enter. The myopic world view almost inevitably reflects the beginning of the end.

If you happen to travel intercity in USA, the vast unpopulated terrain does give an illusion that the world is America and nothing beyond. You cannot blame the Americans completely after-all. Their country is actually vast, un-traversable and very sparsely populated. When you are in America, it is difficult to believe there is a world beyond.

But just like Napoleonic surge was arrested by Russian winter, the American surge is already receding in the face of the Chinese checker.

But what I need to research now is why the British detest the French. There is more to it than just reciprocation.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

REPLY TO RTI


You have to read this in conjuction with Padma to Saif Ali Khan of an earlier vintage in this blog.

Well, the Home Ministry did finally respond to the RTI application that I had made. And did so in the stipulated period of 30 days. But prevaricated, in-fact the reply was an oblique denial of all that had been so directly asked. It said, most incredulously, it was not aware of any pending duty evasion case or any case with regard to black buck killing. What a blatant lie. I pause and perpend to think, who is responsible for this shamelessness and audacity in a democratically elected government.

In a democratic set up, it is wrong to blame the government. Democratic countries have polities that reflect the attitude and aspirations of the people. The governments are tenured and elected by the people. There is a system of universal adult franchise and adult sufferage. So if anyone has to shoulder the responsibility, it is us - the common man.
But this system works very well in countries where the disparities are not as much as they are in India. With such social contradictions in a land, nay, a sub-continent, that is home to the worlds richest and also the poorest and that too in equal right, home to the most literate and most illiterate also, it is indeed arduous to spell out the common aspiration of the such a diverse peoples. The politicians and bureaucrats make the most of this dilution of common aspiration.

The government knows, such trifling events hardly have any bearing on its life and even credibility. It will go back to the people, and win again. It just has to ensure proper seat allocation and appeal to caste and other parochial prejudices. The job is done. Mountbatten and Churchill, both most presumptuously believed that left to its own India would Balkanize.

When voices of people like Arun Shourie faded away in din of an uncouth, goon and history sheeter manifested parliament, then who would care for a person like me. The RTI was received by the Government and with procedure disposed off. The bureaucrat is so bogged down by being the man Frdiay to the politician, that his heart has stopped bleeding for the common man. The common man that he himself was just before joining the service. The common man that his kin still are, whom he obliges everyday with some bureucratic favor or the other. His predisposition to the common man is just like it should be for a legatee of the oficer of the Raj.
My grandfather who, before becoming a part of the bureaucracy was a freedom fighter. He used to tell me, that independence was the aspiration of each and every man and woman of the country. Everyone wanted to make his or her wee bit of contribution to the struggle for independance of the country. One of the anecdotes that he told me was an operation, for which his group of revolutionary students needed some funds. They approached the railway station. The station master( the highest that an Indian could rise to) exhorted them to tie him up, before they pull out the key of the safe from his pocket and scoot with booty, which would invariably never be more than 50/- but of course enough to buy a mauser.

Independance having being achieved, if taking India to the same level that Bharat was once, would be the next mission or passion of all people, then an RTI like the one that I made would be a golden opportunity for an otherwise bogged by the system bureaucrat to expose the truth. To veritably bring the facts to the fore and be an agent of change, be a tool for getting a wrong undone.

But regretfully, this is a nexus. Today the spineless officer is actually reading and interpreting the fine print of the rule book to the convenience and advantage of the neta. He has aligned his interest with him. He guides the neta on how VIP security can be obtained, how business class foreign travel with family be still managed when ostenibly there is an austerity drive on.

Such a bureuacrat will actually run to the Neta to tell him, how adeptly he had responded to an RTI that raised a fundamental issue like debasing the solemnity of a national award, was rubished by him. He is the complete anti-thesis of my "station-master". He has actually made common cause with the exploiter. There are some who dont make common cause, but turn a Nelson's eye or a too timid to turn the tide.

But I shall not give up yet. I don’t have the grit of an activist, but I shall certainly not stop here. I have some energy still left.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

The IPL Awards - A whimper


Well, it was the IPL Award Ceremony at the Grand Hyatt Mumbai. All teams were lodged there, members donning blue IPL T Shirts or the usual Black Suits. Of course, one or two old fashioned members were in Tuxedos as well.

Willy – nilly, I have to admit, players ought to be judged by their play and not their demeanor in arenas which are not of the sport they practice. I say this because off those arenas, most of them are awkward, their expression lacks refinement, they strut around with a swagger that reeks of arrogance from shallow understanding of life and of course, there is often a conspicuous lack of humility; the money that they earn and multiply, oozes out from all quarters, the girls - most of who are mesmerized by the flashy lifestyle, the glitz and glamour of these players and places that they go, and some who just find the sweat and testosterone just too irresistible - keep throwing themselves on these players and keep the attention of audiences and onlookers alike riveted by their juvenile and jaunty behavior. Also, most of these consorts are from middle class background. Their socialite bravado and sometimes saucy looks launch them in these circles. Their tryst with glamour and glitz is post adolescence. Following the trend, they all have to adhere to western couture. The awkwardness and discomfort of carriage is evident. But they must wear gowns. All of them without exception. Thats ordained by the high priests of couture.

I was also surprised to see the now much controversial Lalit Modi apparently acting pretty much in control of the situation even on the eve of his dismissal, beckoning and back slapping players as though the findings that flambéed the fortnight that was, were nothing beyond the the supposedly dead - pan revelations of an arm chair media, not meriting anything more than a cynical sneer from a typically American fall guy, and to be buried out of the peoples memory after a quotidian enquiry.

Well, in this melee the man who stood out, showed grace and also a twinkle of intelligence in his eyes was the diminutive Sunil Gavaskar. In the midst of the big bodied players, our little master though dwarfed, stood out. He had both appeal and aplomb which seem to be growing with the years that he is adding to his age.
One phenomenon which intrigues me no end is the fad of being flanked by burly black bedecked men, who apparently are paid to protect the VIP - the people they lunge around. Why should able bodied players carry protection. I think more than need, it is a matter of trend and fashion. It is a statement of having arrived in life. These guards are mostly a nuisance for people at large, and ironically enough, land up roughing up the very people who build this semblance of stardom about their protectee.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Padma Shree to Saif Ali Khan


I am quite disillusioned and even piqued by the type of people picked by the government for awards. There have been controversies galore about the nominations of the Padma award for decades now. Dr Rajendra Prasad wanted to reward the nurse who looked after him through his illness by the Padma award and mind you she was.

Saif Ali Khan, indicted in multiple cases, like the black buck killing and also the duty evasion case, was also awarded.

Notwithstanding the fact that I have nothing personal against this Khan, I made an RTI application on the procedure followed for short listing for the Padma Award. Of course my angst is more against the government which is making a mockery of these awards than against the Khan, who probably does not even know what he has got.

My making such an application should not give the reader an impression that he was the only person who did not merit the accolade. There are many more. Then why did I choose to writ against the Khan. Well I do not have any sound reason for this, other than he is one undeserving person who I was familiar with and I was precious sure and aware of his indictment in some cases.

But of course, this is true, that these actors are rewarded enough in terms of money and fame that another award from the government would do them hardly any good. Clearly they don’t seek the type of recognition that such awards are associated with. The government needs to clarify to the people what these awards stand for. A committee of peripatetic bureaucrats is hardly the right constitution for recognizing musical, academic, theatrical or any other fine arts talent. Chronically, bidding time in one ministry for a more lucrative tenure in another, perhaps makes them most inappropriate for making such selection. Being themselves, a product of a system that is bereft of any mechanism of recognizing much less nurturing talent, how does one expect them to do this for others.

I do recall, once, while I stood in a queue for check in at the Jet Airways counter, I saw a diminutive man sneak into the queue and ask the counter agent, if the flight could be delayed as Mr Saif Ali Khan accompanied by Ms Kapoor were trapped in traffic. Well to the dismay of this handy man of the Khan, I had overheard him. While Jet Airways seemed inclined to make this small gesture to a big celebrity, I threatened to de-plane if the flight was unduly delayed for any such reason. Since my de-planing and consequent de-manifesting and bag offloading would have delayed the flight much more than the courtesy waiting for the star, good sense prevailed on the airline which confirmed to me that no such special treatment would be extended.

For those who saw the last Filmfare award ceremony, would occasion with me to agree, that the onstage buffoonery of the duo - SRK and SAK – was pitiable. The “chote nawab” joke was really in cheap taste. It bemuses me completely, to imagine how a man who operates at a low mental level that he does, and is involved in criminal cases that he is, be found deserving of such national honours.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Why Micromanage?


Why Micromanage

To micromanage is a syndrome that is becoming more and more prevalent in the corporate world. Well it is established and widely acknowledged that micro – managing has its perils and limitations. I wonder why bosses tend to micro manage.

It is important and prudent to delegate. Just that you have to diligently choose the right person for the right job, which could be onerous at times and of course very critical. Having done that, it is important to delegate, trust the judgment of the operational manager and give them space to exercise discretion and operate.

Today, because of the various conveniently available tools of communication, un-imaginative mangers are encouraged to relinquish their own briefs and minutely chase the progress of their direct reports or those even a step lower. They are completely deprived of new ideas and thus find chasing their manger a task more simply accomplished than creating value at a higher plane or making an action plan for a change of orbit.

I think, one of the most successful empires of the world was the Roman Empire. It was clearly upon the King to look for talent who could govern in his name, following the basic tenets or principles set by the King himself, but nothing beyond. How that value system that the King espoused was to be translated into governance was left to the good judgment of the Governor.

Having chosen the right, dependable and loyal candidate, all that the King would do is to watch his caravan disappear into the dust kicked up by the horse chariots round the corner of the hill.

Selukas Nikator was left behind by the Greek general Alakshendra or Alexander.
Ayodhya was left to Bharat, who governed in the name of Ram ensuring that the values that his elder brother stood for were upheld and the people were safe and happy. Chandragupta ruled upto Taskent of course not by micro-managing.

But e mails, faxes, telephones and above all, video conferences, have your bosses continuously breathing down your necks and always making suggestions which are more like directions.

No micromanagement is also one of the reasons, why companies hived off the parent invariably do better than they were doing as a part of the group, because they become owners of their own destiny. Lucent technologies being hived off from AT&T is a stellar example.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

THE CLASSICAL DILEMMA OF DHARMA


The Classical Dilemma of Dharma

The word Dharma has always intrigued me. I call my dilemma classical, as I know I am not the only one battling to understand what it means. Not so much because of its esoteric import for the Anglo Saxon world, or the complexity of its etymology, but more because of the complete lack of a parallel in the English language.

Morality, duty, piety, truth, religion, legality, righteousness, conduct all seem to individually and severally signify in some measure the import of the word Dharma. But only in some measure, as the significance of the word is far beyond all the above can collectively connote.

Derived from the Sanskrit Dhātu Dhŗ which means to sustain, the word Dharma defies precise definition. The manifest meaning is too broad to even a very scholarly westerner to discern, decipher and define.

As a child, sitting on my maternal grandfather’s lap, I used to hear him deliver discourses on Dharma and basically in context of the most unsung hero of epic India – Bharat, the younger brother of Rama, the King of Ayodhya. “Ye dhryati, iti Dharmah” – “That which sustains is Dharma”. This to his mind was the actually the most precise definition of the word Dharma and to me the most intriguing also. How does the common mind translate this to daily life. No way!

What sustains? Of course the cosmic order.
How does that sustain? Of course because it must.
Why does it sustain? Because of the cycle of eternal perpetuity.
And of course, I needn’t say more on why I find this the most intriguing question.

Well the demagogue ( I am a Hindu, and if I can call Hinduism a religion, there is no well defined concept of blasphemy in my religion, so I can, unlike followers of any other faiths take the liberty of calling the famous charioteer a demagogue ), who preached Dharma / Karma and then in a teacher like exasperation Bhakti to Arjuna, much as the latter, in his bout of emotionalism, failed to imbibe the subtleties of either Dharma or Karma, thus being advised by his charioteer to abandon cerebration and adopt the path of Bhakti, as Bhakti needs no reason, it is unconditional surrender to the master; was perhaps the only one who understood the esoteric import of Dharma and its ever changing and so very situation and actor specific definition.

In the Mahabharata, Dhrtrashtra was forever, fondling with the idea of Dharma, and distorting its definitions to sponsor the designs of his son - a reflection of his own aspirations - leaves the naïve reader completed confused about the concept of Dharma with his convoluted argumentations to suit his son’s ambition.

Similarly, whereas Gangaputra Bhishma, who I would say was the most coherent of the epic cast after the slave son Vidur, also has in places shown an understanding of Dharma which is very confusing. How can a Kshatriya stay a silent spectator to pawning and then humiliation much less the disrobing of a women, and even more egregiously his own grand daughter in law, in the court that he was ordained to adorn, guide and protect, against all threats from within and without, and yet claim to being on the right side of Dharma?

How can a man of such immaculate erudition and seasoned judgement as Devvratta himself, a man whose senses would have been so refined by decades of abstinence and penance, err in his understanding of the profoundness of Dharma. If err he could never, how can Dharma ever allow Bhishma to stand witness to such guile, such deceit and such avarice and such rapaciousness. How come his bow was not strung of sheer indignation and anger on those masters of deceit.

The only character in the epic who shows complete moral and intellectual fidelity to his views and values and demonstrates unwavering coherence to what he believed was his Dharma was Vidur.

Help me guys in understanding the profoundness of Dharma.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

AWARD NITE, STAR MIGHT, AUDIENCE PLIGHT

Giving awards has become a catchy trend. Institute awards and give them amidst pre-scripted fanfare stretching into midnight, one award affair barely distinguishable from the other, including detail of where the lectern for the anchors is positioned. Carefully choreographed, nay cartographed as it is more of chess board PT than dance.


Multiple celebrity anchors, who bring in some wit and some humor ( not necessarily without stink), some rancour, some play, some frolic and some prank mostly imbued in imbecility.

The Khan clan usually outdoes others in this race. Shah Rukh is the front runner. The man has manic energy and has something that clicks with the common man. Intellectuals, find him just another freak case of success of probability or the probability of success.

The only one award function that I did the mistake of attending in person and not viewed on TV was the felicitation of the Sushmita and Aishwarya after they won the world beauty pageants in the mid 90s. Serpentine queues outside and euphoria brinking on madness inside. In fact a colleague of mine was so struck by the actual physical presence of these dames that he jumped the bamboo barricade, breached the security cordon and reached next to the jeep in which these women were riding and waving to the crowd. Of course in hot pursuit were the cops and he did get a lathi of a Mumbai police, but he was euphoric about being able to touch Sush’s hand and remained steeped in a blissful hypnagogic hallucination thereafter for many days.

Speaking of the Filmfare Awards of last week, many of the impromptu jokes and crowd interaction seemed pre-meditated, orchestrating a situation which sometimes can be actually more embarrassing than humorous.


If some of you would have seen the Filmfare awards, the chhota nawab joke was pretty much in poor taste. But the nymphs must giggle and the cameras must focus on them to complete the ritual.

Sometimes I feel, it may be wrong to be critical. You can admire the heavy stuff, but laugh only at buffoonery. That is what these stars are doing. Only that they take a fortune for that buffoonery.

Gurcharan Das

When he was 3, his name was Ashok Kumar. His grandmother suspected, his mother had a silent crush on the actor Ashok Kumar. So to undue the sin, she took him to her guru and putting the 3 yr old at his feet, pleaded the guru to christen him. The guru saw the child at his feet and magnanimously chose to call him Guru Charan Das.

I would now not say, what is in a name!

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Our Neta

Well, our generation saw the worst of them. The ubiquitous Neta, clad in immaculate white, cynically grinning, undaunted by scandalous exposés, master of subterfuge, archetypically one who could most brazenly blame almost anything on opposition – vipaksha ka hath, is the stereoptypical image that my generation grew up with. Just as my fathers generation saw many who were committed administrators, diligently reading and pushing files, and my grandfathers generation saw nation builders and statesmen, who put the country before self, by the time I was in my teens, politics was literally degenerated to the refuge of the scoundrel. It seemed then, the mores of this tribe had already reached a primal abyss and could not drop deeper.

Neta – surprisingly for me, Webster, still does not recognize the word, implying the English language has not yet co-opted it, notwithstanding lack of a word with parallel connotation in the English language. In-fact, there is clearly no prototype of this character in the Anglo Saxon world. This creature is quite specifically found in India and predominantly in the IndoGangetic plain, though significantly enough, no empirical evidence has been established between this creature and flora and fauna of the Indo Gangetic plain.

Bimaru states (15 pct of Indias GDP), where the combined GDP of all of them is less than the Education Budget of the USA. But, ironically, an average politician of these states can easily buy the President of USA many times over.

Today, I must admit, there are some Netas if you could call them who are very sound and couldn't care less for the strappings of power. P Chidambaram our Home Minister - who has jettisoned symbols, like the beacon light on the car that stands out like a phallic symbol of sarkari power or black cats, whose patented posture of elbows jutting of their modified ambassadors, figuratively forewarning "dont mess with us"- whether they create a protective layer around the protectee or not is yet to be tested, but they clearly do a good job of intimidating all who come their way, and mark the VVVIP from the VIP.

When as a student 15 yrs ago, I had approached PC for a seminar, he opted to sit with the students. Today, at the Grand Hyatt Mumbai, I saw him alight from his unmarked most simple Maruti Esteem, while his counterpart of the Maharashtra State's convoy was too long to fit in the hotel porch.

He also keeps the airport staff, most eager to offer their faciliation to him, always baffled. He exits like a normal passenger, while the officials scurry to facilitate his clearances. He always manages to outsmart them. He carries his own brief case as well. You call this reverse modesty or just his efficiency stretching beyond sarkari files. Clearly, politicians from my home state of UP need to imbibe some this virtue.

See you soon.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Jalesvava Jayamahe


Jalesvava Jayamahe

This is the motto of the Navy of Indonesia in Sanskrit. It is the language of the Devas!! Well, I think here the connotation is – language of our forefathers – at least 2 millenium ago.
It is common practice, to ascribe divinity to a language that has fallen in disuse, and is no longer the lingua franca, is spoken just by a handful of elite, and is not understood by common man. Once upon a time, such a language has been a language of the common man, and the import of creation or literature of such language were not considered so esoteric to require a scholars interpretation, but with passing eons, as the language falls into disuse, such interpretation becomes critical.
Increasing disuse and eventual dismissal as the language of everyday use, on one hand curbs the enrichment of the language, but at the same time, imparts an element of divinity to the language, a gain that no amount of literary effort and enrichment would have been able to impart.
The resistance that the Christian world faced from its ecclesiastical cadres against the translation of the Bible into English from Greek and later Latin is common knowledge. Similarly, the Koran cannot be in a language other than Arabic.
Such languages also become, what one may say, the exclusive preserve of a handful few, some of who pursue it with a curatorial quest and others who see it a vehicle to become a part of the infrastructure of divinity and godliness. It goes without saying, the latter do not bring any real value to the language but certainly do benefit from the knowledge they have of it.
Today Sanskrit, extolled internationally as one of the most scientific languages, is on the brink of extinction, as it has no students. An art or know-how which has only teachers and few students is bound to fade away.
Interestingly, there are about 2500 scholars of Sanskrit in MIT. Globally, there are some 4 millions speakers of this language, most of them outside the nation of its origin. In India till date, because of the colonial past and, because of the deprivation, the life of a common man is a struggle, the environment has not been conducive to pursue something that brings value other than that which can be monetized immediately or sometime in the future. English is obsessively pursued not because it is so rich, but because it can be a tool for earning wealth, station and or sometimes simply livelihood.
But, just for the simple preservation and advancement of the science behind this language - sanskrit - which the original speakers conceived, the study of this language should be encouraged. Interestingly, this is the only language in the world, which has tools like sandhi and samas.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

SAY BHARAT, NAY INDIA

It was holi last year and I had gone home to my parents. As I walked on the roads on which I used to cycle to tuitions, swinging my father’s penang lawyer I had a queer desire to relive those years. There are, in the English language enough words to describe such wistfulness. Such feelings often called nostalgia are not uncommon to experience when you reach a certain stage in life. I was perhaps just following an established stereotype.
The city was dirtier than when I used to live there. The roads had been encroached by sundry vendors, with their shops creeping ever closer to the margin of the road. Suddenly, a bus, very familiar passed by. When it motored ahead of me slowly negotiating the potholed road, which was now much narrower today than in my times, I read on the rear of the bus “ Bhartiya Praudyogiki Sansthan” my alma-meter.
Bharatiya and Bharat. That is the question. Modern strategic minds, corporate captains and many Gen X politicians tend to distinguish between an advancing India and lagging Bharat. A progressive India is contrasted with a backward Bharat.

Bhimbeteka, 40 minutes off Bhopal, traces antiquity to 40,000 year ago. The Pandavas, seem to have sought temporary refuge here as well, during their agyatvasa. The caves paintings speak of a vibrant society. The Harrappan sites too evidence an urban civilization with sewerage and town planning in an age, when the much of the contemporary world at best comprised cattle grazing nomads.

Having come a full circle, India, even today is 70 pct rural. One of the implicit pledges India made, at the moment of her “tryst with destiny” 60 years ago, was of health, nutrition and education for all. Today, India is not only far away from redeeming her pledge, but has failed miserably, even in providing drinking water.

Yet, Bhaskaracharya, the inventor of Zero, the decimal system with the place value, was of Bharat. Nagarjuna, Varahamira and of all, the illustrious Bramhagupta who expounded the then preposterous postulate of a rotating earth and the trees not falling off it, due to a gravitational force pulling everything on it towards its centre, not contemporarily with the West, but 800 years before the West, were indeed in Bharat too.

Whereas the crown jewel of India, Infosys, is still primarily a code writing company, in Bharat, there was mathematics, astronomy, innovative medicine, and even medical surgery. In India of today, we have nothing of even shade. No reader should construe this to be a suggestion to bask in past glory, but just to highlight, that our forefathers were civilized.

Many facets of Kautiliya Arthashastra appear in Kempo of Sholotu or the Magna Carta, 8 centuries later than the Kempo and 14 centuries later than the Arthashastra.

Sahayya sadhyam rajatwan chakram ekam na vartate – quote from Kautiliya Arthshastra, clearly indicates the vibrance of the Republican thought and structure of government 250 BC - in ancient India – Bharat.

In Bharat, you had universities – Nalanda and Takshila - which were internationally acclaimed. That, China was inviting Buddhist monks to teach physics, astronomy and mathematics in China, in the era of the Han Dynasty and Tang Dynasty, is no secret. To my mind, the first Indian expat was Gautam Siddhartha who was the head of Astronomy at the Chinese court in the 800 – 900 ADs. Xuanzang ( Hiuen Tsang ) took horse loads of Sanskrits manuscripts from India.

“Bharat Bhagya Vidhata” – the East India Company – later to be replaced by the crown (and I indulge in the act of defiance and perhaps impropriety by deliberately writing it in common case than capital) itself – had a crucial vested interest in depicting an ancient civilization as barbaric and a burden of the white men, an argumentation, that even Theodore Roosevelt would accept, and at later stage use to justify and even extol the virtue of Imperialism. Being legatees to this diligently propagated myth of Indian backwardness, done with the clear purpose of subjugating a nation, we continue to live in the same shadow, constantly trying to justify to ourselves, our coming of age, by seeking solace in simple achievements like the metro or launch Chandrayana.

Taking a leaf from from the Raj, myopic movers and shakers of the day often egg you to believe, the economically and socially backward “Bharat” needs to advance on the trickle of development that it receives from advancing and modernizing “India”. Well that is the myth that I am intending to challenge.

It is India, which is at crossroads, accomplishing the daunting task - trying to re - attain and realize the station that it relinquished 900 years ago – of becoming Bharat.

There is no gainsaying the fact, that the achievements of India in the last 60 years are in no way mean and cannot be trivialized, much less demeaned, food sufficiency and eradication of large scale famine ranking perhaps the highest, nevertheless, the rationale or the lack of it in wishing Bharat to be India is really the question.

Bharat contributed 24 pct to the world GDP even ahead of China and India contributes only 2 pct, so it would betray common sense if we were to demean Bharat and wish it to be India and not the other way round.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

BUSINESS AND LEGISLATION

The story of the economic success of India is now real, in part due to large work force which is trying to procure basic necessities for itself and secure future for its offspring. The success though facilitated in some measure by good POLICY making post 1992, is largely due to lack of it and is more from the pockets of excellence created by Indian corporate houses and the value in niches created in by the small private entrepreneur.

Today, as much as a small entrepreneur representing the supply side, would fly overseas to seek our business / opportunities / orders, the buyer representing the demand side too is wandering on the markets of India seeking goods and services. The latter trend is more recent and growing, due to recognition and realization that there is entrepreneurship, business acumen, a skill - set and faster turn - around in India.

India ranks 75 as per a study ranking countries on the ease of starting a new enterprise index. But not allowing a business to start is big business in India. For a business man time is money. He is not inclined to approach the market with an idea which has lost its novel appeal. There is a huge infrastructure that protracts his time of mind to market. They call it speed money. He gives this. It does not involve bribing a particular person. It entails monetary incentive to anyone in the chain related to facilitating the enterprise. But the enterprise flourishes despite this hindrance. It flourishes with this hindrance.

But clearly, it is good world class policy making that is happening in India. VAT, GST, IT policy and now the PMLA. Over time the culture will trickle down to the level of the block and taluka.

RTI, act passed in 2005 and effective 2005 in India is a very powerful tool, and the government is taking this very seriously. India has been very proactive in enacting this. In the UK, this act was passed in 1980, and in 1966 in the USA. As you can see, India is not far behind. Clearly, unlike infrastructure, where India is trailing the modern world by a century, in rights and legislation and democratic values, the country is pretty much in sync with the best.

Friday, February 19, 2010

NETI - NETI


I think, the word means the end of Veda, but undoubtedly it marks the beginning of the Veda, and more than Veda, perhaps it is Shankaras interpretation of Yagyavalkya, which Shankara calls Advaita.

Yagyavalkya, in his discourse with Videharaj - the illustrious Janak, explained to him the intricacies of the Indian cosmic tradition - recognition of the Supreme power - which is the eternal essence of the cosmos, even of parts which constitute it. The underlying truth that constructs all that is real, true or for that matter even platonic.

Obviously, it is not surprising at all, that such a power, the condensate of the a million universes, defies definition, conceptualization, intellectualization and seems to be beyond the ken of most of mortals who cannot think of god beyond the anthropomorphic Hindu form or a Progenitor of other religions, including the Jains and Buddhists and Sikhs. It is just natural, should there be a progenitor, the commandments must follow, and hence all these religions have commandments, something that philosophers, commentators and students of faiths often keep seeking in Sanatan Dharma, but never can settle down to a universally accepted set. But of course, since Hinduism never did have a progenitor in the real sense of the word, the commandments were also not there.

In such a situation, what can be a better way of describing this Supreme Power or Supreme Being, if that is really the limit of imagination – believing that he is a being, than describing him as “neti – neti”.

Yagyavalkya, who having gained the better of most Brahmins through debates and discourses, and having gained the reputation of a Brahmagyani, described the nondescript and ineffable Supreme Power by “neti – neti”. Of course, at stake were a 1000 cows that Janak was to bestow on him in the event that he is invincible in the debate.

Well, it is precisely for its philosophical import, scholars who have so brilliantly dissected all other religions, find Hinduism ( if it is an –ism at all ) so enigmatic, a concept or philosophy so protean, that it defies precise definition. No book, no church, no institutionalization of congregation.

Would I be naïve, if I would say, Yagyavalkya, was indeed a sceptic? A school of skepticism, that believed in God but not in form of God.

Well, what is clear is, I have set myself thinking. That is important. Generations of scholars of jostled with these ideas and have attempted to decipher the manifestations of truth, and that, I with no shade of scholarliness should be able to do with ease is a proposition equally improbable. Supreme cosmic power, the Creator, the Brahma as "neti, neti" .

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Road Rules

1.Rules are for fools

2.Footpath or pavement is for squatting, begging, vending or even parking but not walking

3.Red light is red only when a cop is standing, else it is usually safer than green to cross

4.Zebra crossings are not for humans, jaywalking is always safer.

5.Honking is line with musical tradition of India

6.The road dividing line should be taken in the middle of the car

7. Indicator grants the right to change lanes

8. Bigger vehicles have first right to traffic

9.Flat tyres should be changed in the centre or wherever noticed, and not on shoulders

10.Yellow light means accelerate to cross