We the Punjabis have failed them
By Rajesh Sharma
Less than a week to
go – and it will be a month since Shruti Sachdeva was abducted on September 24.
The probe is on. The police is being blamed and ridiculed by turns. The
opposition has taken out the whip to thrash the government right and left.
True, it is the wretched state of law and order which a minor girl’s abduction by
a spoilt brat with ‘criminal’ record has highlighted. But is that all? Is not
the crime also a symptom of some deeper, more insidious malaise?
To put it briefly
but not sweetly, the girl’s abduction is the ripe fruit of a poisonous tree
that has been cultivated over the years by all sorts of people among us. The
brand of politics that has established itself as the only viable kind, with its
deadly blend of wealth, force and an extremely uncouth disrespect for law,
comes first to mind. Next, one thinks of the new economy which treats the
spectacle as the only reality. Phrases like ‘reforms with a human face’, ‘the
feel-good factor’, the sensex as the mirror of economic health, despite their inbuilt irony, have pushed the
substance out of sight. What matters is the appearance, and that too loud,
vulgar, immodest appearance. Modesty, restraint, quiet grace are out. Salman
Khurshid’s foul and furious vapours are just a side show in the great Indian
wedding.
The centre stage
of this great wedding is, expectedly, the Punjab
– with its unquenchable craving for myths. The land once praised for never
letting an invasion pass unresisted has surrendered abjectly to the most
pernicious of invasions. A certain dandyism has slowly invaded and settled in
our souls. Indeed it has become the trade mark of the Punjabi male self.
Popular cinema, pulp journalism, vulgar music videos, obscene jokes with a tadka of sexism and casteism breed more happily
in a culture in which SUVs, roadside bars and barbecues, and barber-fresh beards
define honour and self-respect. Women, then, will be the natural prey of the
male animal that is raving to break free in fantasies of criminal
self-glorification. This animal did come out to prowl during the Gurdas Mann
Nite in Punjabi University
at Patiala
recently. I am sure it has not been caged or tamed; it has only retreated into the
shadows, and is waiting for the right opportunity to pounce on its prey.
The more I
contemplate the scene, the more it fills me with dismay. The sages, the gurus,
the bhaktas, the Sufis, the martyrs – they were not of us. They were dissenters. They fought against us, for our sake.
We have failed them – in failing to fight against ourselves.
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Comments
prophets foretold? With our feelings gone numb,are we too groping for
a 'bronze horseman' whom the great Russian poet Pushkin imagined would
salvage our plight?
sad; this is the way the world ends--with the deadly self-absorption of the classes, and god's desertion of the masses.
urus and the Sufis. Are we free to choose that?
I have been introduced to your blog by my niece, Manreet, who was a student of yours until last year.
I have really liked this blog for its content and hope to be visiting it often.
Cheers!