Wednesday, November 29, 2017

This is how it is!



A mother holding her little daughter’s hand waiting to cross the road. The child in white and green uniform is on her way to a government school in Salem. The mother who is taking her to school cherishes a lot of dreams relating to her child’s future. She should be careful… She will look left and right and right and left before crossing, the highway teeming with traffic, to the other side safely with her daughter.
The mother has to work hard to keep things going for them. She will make sacrifices. She wouldn’t trust her husband.  She should be careful.
The child will grow up to be a woman. She might perhaps do well in her studies, get a job, stand on her own legs (as they say) and choose her own man as life partner as against the wishes of her parents.
The mother might then feel let down. She would challenge her daughter's choice. The daughter would resist... 
The world will try to find scapegoats, point fingers, accuse one of them of being cruel, heartless...  There is no point in it all (though easier said than done). Still there is no point. This is how nature works.

Sunday, November 5, 2017



Sing paeans to power or face the music.

In a crackdown on satire, another instance of state trying to bulldoze criticism, silencing dissent; Tirunelveli police arrested a cartoonist Bala for his work lampooning the indifference of the State which  led a family of four self-immolate recently at the Tirunelveli collectorate.
 The family was incessantly harassed by a loan shark despite repeated complaints lodged with the authorities resulting in the rural laborer killing himself, his wife and two daughters.

The cartoon in question, an upshot of frustration caused by the incident, depicts chief minister Edappadi  Palaniswamy, Tirunelveli district collector Sandeep Nanduri and superintendent of police P.Arun Sakthi Kumar, trying to cover up their private parts with a wad of currency notes while a child is ablaze in front of them.

The cartoonist was booked under section 501 (printing on engraving matter known to be defamatory) of the Indian Penal Code and section 67 (punishment for publishing or transmitting obscene material in electronic form).  

While Bala is out on bail now it's worth noting that this isn’t the first instance of gagging of free speech witnessed by the state. The message the rulers and their sidekicks seem to be sending out is: don’t call out the vain emperor with no clothes. Sing paeans to power or face the music.