Monday, October 20, 2008

The second incident...


The second incident which I would want to mention happened when I was on a trip to Pattya.

I was taking a walk down the famous Walking Street. For a while I was disgusted at the site of girls standing along the whole strech, waiting to get picked. I just looked at them and wondered why do they have to do it, can't they find themselves a better way of earning money.

I tried to walk a little away from them, as if to say it with my action - 'LOOK!!. Don't you think I am interested....

A little over 5 minutes I saw this lady standing on the strech, nothing unusual when I first saw her....just like the many ...waiting to be picked...

But then I saw the little difference...just next to her on a bench was kid playing..playing while she fed him..

Somehow it struck me...that where I stand is completly different from the place I come to. i was in a different country, a different cultureTo me what may seem like disgusting may not be something the same for them. It's a job for them...my sentiments or what I feel (whether right or wrong) maybe I don't agree to it but its legal in that area and so...nothing wrong...

They are not at fault, its me who has to understand that I had not adapted and realised this fact, the fact that this is nothing but another mode of earning money. Just a way to make sure that her child gets all her meals at the right time.

Nothing Wrong!!!

Monday, October 13, 2008

Article by Samina Mishra


This is a piece I wrote for India Today but the version that has
appeared in the magazine is an edit that I did not agree to. It's not
clear to me how that happened since I edited the longer article down
to this final version and sent it in to them. But the magazine is out
and I am both angry and saddened at their careless editing of ideas
that are particularly under siege at this point of time.

So, here is my edit and I would be glad if it was circulated widely on
the net - more widely than the magazine!

Samina


Not far from L18, in the posh part of Jamia Nagar, is a house on a
tree-lined avenue that will always be home to me. But my life, with
all its easy privileges, could not be more different from Atif and
Sajid's, the two young men shot as alleged terrorists at L18. I
contain multitudes, Whitman so eloquently said. But we live in a time
when even multitudes are forced to lay claim to a singular label. And
so by writing this, perhaps, I will forever be labelled the voice of
the liberal secular Muslim. A voice that is accused of not speaking
up. Ironically, it is this very tyranny of labels that grants me this
space in a mainstream national magazine.

As someone with a Muslim first name and a Hindu surname, I suppose I
have always swung between labels - a poster girl for communal harmony
or a confused, rootless individual, depending on who was doing the
labelling. I went to a public school and have never worn a burkha. I
might escape being thrown in the big cauldron with "Islamic
Terrorists" but I will certainly be added to the one for "misguided
intellectuals". While there is no mistaking that it is zealous
nationalists who seek to light the fire under the first cauldron, the
other is a bone of contention between those who seek to define for me
how to be Indian and those who seek to define for me how to be Muslim.
My condemnation of the demolition of the Babri Masjid, Imrana's rape
or the media circus around Gudiya will always be seen in the context
of my privileged background, my gender, my religious identity.
Perhaps, it can be no other way.

In this rhetoric of binaries of "us and them", it is difficult to find
the space to create a new paradigm of discussion. And so, in
conversations that throw up Islamic terrorists, rigid religious
beliefs, Pakistan and madrasas, the response is inevitably another set
of questions - why is the Bajrang Dal not labelled a terrorist outfit,
why is the growing public display of Hindu festivals like Navratras
and Karva Chauth not considered rigid religious beliefs, why should
Muslims in India be answerable for what goes on in Pakistan, what
spaces other than madrasas are available for thousands of believing
Muslims who choose to get educated and still retain their Muslim-ness.
As a Muslim in India today, not only are you fighting to shrug off the
label of fundamentalist- if not terrorist - but you are also
succumbing to a paradigm of dialogue which has been set for homogenous
communities with clear markers of identities.

But how does one fight that when shared cultural spaces, other than
those created by the market, shrink? How does one speak of the
diversity of being Indian when Diwali is celebrated in schools and Eid
just in Muslim homes? How does one avoid a singular label for
experiences that are diverse and yet have a common thread running
through them - the experience of a tailor in Ahmedabad whose Hindu
patrons have stopped giving work to, the butcher in Batla House who
couldn't get a bank loan, the software professional who will now have
to watch every single byte that leaves his computer.

Being Muslim in India today means many things to many people. But how
easy it is to forget that one fundamental reality. How easy it is to
say, as someone said to me after the Delhi blasts - "These are all
educated Muslims. Don't they know that their bombs can also kill their
own?" As if everyone with a Muslim name is a terrorist's very "own".


Samina Mishra / October 2008

Thursday, October 2, 2008

A late post


I have been trying to write here for long..just that ever since I have returned from Bangkok life has become very hectic, seems as if Delhi is having a crime festival (as mentioned by one of my colleagues in a chat over chai) from Bomb blasts to encounters to a mob killing a CEO... to what not. Of my short professional career in the News Industry this has been the most hectic and gruesome month. But I learnt a lot, not only about the profession I am in, but also about life, society, the system and most importantly Human nature.
But this is about the Bangkok trip which I undertook (I was frustrated, I was exhausted and most importantly needed to be alone).

There are two incidents which come to my mind, rather which I can never forget.

It was my fourth day in Bangkok, had planned to go and see the Grand Palace, but since both my sister and brother in law were busy with their schedules. I decided to go alone, with their driver.

He was a few years older to me. The funny part was that we didn't realise (didn't know that the locals called it King Palace, not Grand). So, I was off to this place, equipped with just two Thai words - 'Khap' and 'Khapam Khap' and my driver, well....equipped with just one word in English - OK.

Halfway to the place, I realised that my driver doesn't know the place. So there it started - my quest to make him understand the place I had to go to.

It's kind of funny, that after an hour not only did we reach the Palace but he also helped me buy the tickets.

It;s funny, that two people who couldn't talk to each other, didn't know the other's language, could somehow 'talk'.

I still remember, when I came in the evening, the smile which my driver gave me. I knew a bond had been made...without any words.

Sometimes incidents like these make you feel that its nice to be human...nice to be in this world...nice to be alive...