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A long wait… April 12, 2008

Posted by chitranshu in News.
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So the excitement that was building up in my mind till the afternoon of 10th April was brought to a halt in the worst possible way – the Hon Supreme Court of India decided to come out with its verdict on OBC reservations just a day before the IIM admission results were to be announced. Now, the announcement of the results has been put on hold, and to make matters worse, there seems to be an ambiguity in the judgment regarding reservations in post-graduate institutes like the IIMs.

The resulting tug-of-war between conflicting interpretations of the judgment and the consequent delay in the announcement of admission offers are the most irritating aspects of this whole issue for me. I just hope that whatever be the case, the IIMs are ready to implement either of the options, and that they don’t have to go back and conduct more interviews for OBC candidates or anything.

In the end, I just hope that this uncertainty clears out as quickly as possible. I want my results, ASAP!!!

P.S. For those who want my opinion on reservations, read what I had written almost two years back on this blog, here , here and here. My opinion has not changed much since then. In short, I don’t have a problem with reservations per se, but I feel that the way they are being implemented currently does not end up helping the really needy people. The ‘creamy layer’ should be excluded not only among the OBCs, but also the SCs and STs. And that ‘52% of the country’s population is OBC’ claim should be verified independently.

India @ Doha 2006: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly December 15, 2006

Posted by chitranshu in News, Sports.
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Finally, the 2006 Asian Games draw to a close. It has been a reasonably successful outing for the Indian contingent, with the medals haul being the best ever at any Asiad apart from the 1951 & 1982 editions that were held in India. It could have been better though; my friend Vishwakant had said about two weeks ago that we can expect to get “at least 15 golds” this time. So why did we finish with just ten, and why does a majority of TOI readers still feel that ‘sports in India has reached its nadir’ (according to a poll on 12th Dec., 2006)?

Before trying to look for answers, and ending up criticizing everyone related to Indian sports, let’s look at the brighter side, The Good.

India won 54 medals this time, second only to the 57-medal haul from Delhi 1982, and it was also one of the few occasions when the gold-medal count reached double figures. And contrary to popular belief (about the nadir etc.), India’s performance has been improving consistently since Beijing 1990, where we finished with only 23 medals, just one of them gold (in kabaddi). I distinctly remember my parents saying then that like hockey, kabaddi will also cease to give us gold medals once other nations learn to play it (which would happen in about 10-15 years).

It has been 16 years since, and not only has India won its fifth consecutive gold in kabaddi this time, but it has also, in the meanwhile, produced new sporting heroes like Jaspal Rana, Leander Paes and Vishwanathan Anand (whose successes have inspired an entire generation of shooters, tennis and chess players respectively, the three sports that accounted for seven of the ten golds this time). Two of these heroes were there at Doha, and were at the top of the podium on half of the occasions when India’s national anthem was played out.

Besides these Indian strongholds, there were a few other feel-good occasions like Pankaj Advani and Ashok Shandilya battling for gold and silver in the billiards singles, and the chess team assuring themselves of gold even before the last round had been played. There were a few unexpected medals too, in obscure places like the equestrian and rowing events, which made up for quite a few unexpected losses, The Bad.

One of these was in the semifinals of the billiards doubles, where Geet Sethi and Ashok Shandilya went down to an unknown pair from Myanmar, and had to be content with the bronze. The performance of the snooker players, too, was below par. In shooting, a little more was expected from Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore and Anjali Bhagwat. In women’s hockey, some consolation came in the form of a bronze, after the losses to Japan and China. The boxers and wrestlers too turned in a substandard performance. And no one even noticed what happened in weightlifting, or volleyball, or swimming. While these sports might not have contributed medals in the past anyway, a lot was expected from athletics, in which India had won seven golds in Busan in 2002. This time, we had to be content with just one, in the women’s 4X400 relay, an event in which India has done well since the days of PT Usha.

I have deliberately postponed discussion on men’s hockey to the third paragraph, The Ugly. A few days before the Asian Games, we heard that Viren Rasquinha, along with some other well-known players, has been dropped from the squad, and some obscure players included instead. On being asked about this, Mr. KPS Gill retorted that he will only discuss Indian hockey. Perhaps Viren’s name sounded too foreign to him, and he believed that only those who have the surname Singh can be a part of ‘Indian hockey’. On being told that Viren is from Mumbai, which is very much in India, Mr. Gill retorted again, ‘Did you watch the match between India and China’?

Well, I must really compliment the ex-Supercop for his art of deflecting questions. Meanwhile, we were expected to go through the torture of watching India lose to a team coached by someone who learnt hockey in India itself, about a decade or two ago, and ‘know more about hockey’ before we could dare to ask questions on it. So now, should we master the art of fast bowling before we question Irfan Pathan’s lean patch, or the straight drive and the square-cut before we point a finger at Sachin Tendulkar? Doesn’t the very fact that Mr. Gill, in his capacity at the helm of the hockey federation, is a representative of a ‘democratic’ Indian establishment, render him answerable to the people of India, irrespective of their knowledge of the game?

I believe the problem is not just with one person or one organization, it is with the whole ideology of ‘controlling’ sports through ‘boards’ and ‘federations’ made up of former bureaucrats and others trained in the art of ‘controlling’, instead of ‘managing’ and ‘promoting’ them through an association of former players and professional managers. The IHF or the BCCI are not the only ones; even Jaspal Rana came out in the open with criticism of the ‘authorities’ once he had resurrected his position as the poster-boy of Indian shooting. And if we look at the life of almost any Indian sportsperson, we will find an example of some cruel joke being played with a career or an ambition, and the talent being wasted.

Such organizations for overseeing sports can, if they do their job with honesty and passion, either take a country to the dizzying heights of sporting excellence, as happened with the Eastern Bloc countries during the Cold War and after that with China, or they can completely smother even the existing talent, if they become dens of corruption like they have in India. A better option, in post-liberalization India, would be to let go of these ‘controls’. In any case, most of the Asian Games medalists this time have achieved their success on their own, and in spite of these federations, or in some cases due to being employed in establishments like the Army.

Indian sports has not reached its nadir now, but it already did so about two decades back, in the late 80’s and early 90’s, and subsequently embarked on an upward path parallel to that of the post-liberalization economic growth. This ascent can be further accelerated if the vestiges of bureaucratic control are removed.

Meanwhile, India’s most popular sport continues with its ups and downs, oblivious of the world around it, and is presently in a trough similar to the one it found itself in against New Zealand in early 2003, months before the last World Cup in South Africa.

And mind you, India’s national sport is not following any of these trends, for it has only been on a downward slide since 1964, and has not yet touched its nadir. That will probably be achieved only when India reaches the heights (depths?) it has achieved in the ‘beautiful game’, unless Mr. Gill and Co. decide to quit, or someone else throws them out.

Meanwhile, the drama between the two giants of Indian tennis continues to be played out under full media glare. One has brought success in partnership with everyone from Ramesh Krishnan to Sania Mirza, and the other initiated India’s success in the Grand Slams with the French Open mixed doubles crown in 1997, and both have a right to their respective egos. I just hope there was a bit more compatibility, though.

Anyway, at least they are leaving behind a sparkling trail of success for others to follow. Now, if only our occasional Olympic silver or bronze could be turned into gold…

A Voice of Sanity October 25, 2006

Posted by chitranshu in News, Society & Politics.
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Today’s Times of India had an article by Arif Mohammed Khan on the Imrana case. The full article can be accessed online. Here, I am quoting a few sections of it.  

Woe to those who write the Book with their own hands and then say, ‘This is from Allah’, to traffic with it for a miserable price! Woe to them for what their hands do write and for the gain they make thereby — Holy Quran 2.79.
   And yet it’s written every other day by those in the business of clergy and passed off as Allah’s word. The Holy Quran repeatedly decries such attempts to impose human opinions as laws of God. Still, the clergy is ever ready to issue decrees in the garb of ‘fatwa’ and make the lives of Muslims more and more complicated. There are several examples where the clergy has gone out of its way to distort the laws in a manner that ensures male dominance and female subservience. 

So who is Arif Mohammed Khan? He is a politician whose name I have heard fleetingly on news channels during elections. More info about him is available on the Parliament website. The AIMPLB calls him ‘confused’ and dismisses his opinion as he is now a member of the BJP. Here’s what he has to say about the AIMPLB:  

The All-India Muslim Personal Law Board (MPLB) since its inception has been a votary of this trend. Their role in the Shah Bano case bears ample testimony. Although after the Imrana verdict, some of their members have welcomed it, but as a body of clergy, the MPLB has kept silent. In fact, when a ‘fatwa’ was issued by Deoband, annulling Imrana’s marriage and asking her to marry the rapist, the MPLB’s silence was stonier. 

And the ‘confused’ state of their laws, supposedly based on Islamic law:

To those who still respect the MPLB, the board’s publication, Compendium of Islamic Laws, should be an eye-opener. … not only sanctions triple oral ‘talaq’ but also divorce written on a piece of paper or even on the wall without conveying the same to the wife. … 
   In another provision in the same chapter, the Compendium says ‘‘for the effectiveness of ‘talaq’, it is in principle necessary that the man pronouncing it should be in his senses. This demands that ‘talaq’ pronounced in an inebriated condition should not be effective.’’
   But in succeeding sentence it is said, ‘‘However, if a person has unlawfully consumed an intoxicant by his own liking and habit, his ‘talaq’ will become effective by way of punishment.’’
   Curious logic, particularly when one knows that consumption of all liquor in Islam is forbidden and unlawful. You could understand that if in the case of a liquor addict, the wife is given the option to divorce him by ‘khula’. But to say that divorce pronounced under the influence of drink will become effective ‘‘by way of punishment’’ is being oblivious of Indian social realities where more than the husband, it’s the hapless wife who is likely to feel the pinch of the ‘punishment’ given to an erring husband.
   Then, section 6 of the chapter says, ‘‘If a person under compulsion or duress pronounces a ‘talaq’, it will be valid if it is verbal, but not otherwise.’’ Here the cat is out of bag. Force is held to be the final arbiter. If somebody is compelled to pronounce divorce under duress, according to the MPLB it will be valid. And the Quran declares, ‘‘There is no compulsion in religion’’ (2.256). The basic principle of Islamic jurisprudence is ‘‘Action depends on intention’’ (Innamal Aamalu Binniyat). As you can see, the MPLB has ignored intention and instead given extraneous factors the sanction of legality. 

And here is an explanation for this stupidity:

The Compendium says: ‘‘Regard shall be had in respect of descent among the Arabs, especially the Quraish, and those non-Arab families who have preserved the descent.’’
   Next, it says, ‘‘People in the rest of the non-Arab Muslim World are mutually equal.’’ Further, it says, ‘‘On the basis of this principle, a girl can get terminated her marriage to a non equal contracted by her guardian; and a guardian has the right to terminate the marriage of an adult woman to a non equal.
   In other words, this provision gives authority to a guardian of Arab origin to terminate the marriage of his adult daughter if he is of the view that she has married an unequal. He need not approach even the Qazi but can do so on his own. They have been given special right to decide about equality of status in marriage whereas the Muslims of non-Arab origin have been held to be mutually equal. The implication is clear: Muslims of Arab origin are more equal than others. Since the leadership of the MPLB consists mostly of those who claim Arab origin, this is how they wish to stop marriages between Muslims of Arab and non-Arab origin.
   Consider this in the light of the basic Islamic principle of equality of all human beings. To prove the point, the Prophet prevailed upon his family, and despite their resistance, gave his first cousin in marriage to a man who was a freed slave.
   Cases like Imrana and Shah Bano will keep happening because the MPLB is promoting a value system that is not rooted in Islamic principles but Arab tribal arrogance. The right to freedom of religion under Indian Constitution is guaranteed to each and every individual. But the Constitution does not provide any license to a group of persons, howsoever eminent, to become the arbiters of the religious faith of a community.
   If we do not wish Imrana and Shah Bano to be repeated then there is urgent need to at least discourage organisations like MPLB and give them no respectability and thus help the community, in the words of the Quran, ‘‘to free from their heavy burdens and from the yokes that are upon them’’ (7.157). 

I wish there were more opinions like this in the world…

Celebrating Diwali October 22, 2006

Posted by chitranshu in News, Personal.
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First, read this by Vivek and this by Jai Arjun.

I never had any such experiences. My enthusiasm for firecrackers did not decline steadily either, as happens with most people as they grow up. It kept going up and down… for various reasons. In any case, I did not light a single firecracker this Diwali. I don’t think I lit one last year either. Before that, I do not remember, but anyway, life is very different, in many ways, from what it was two years back.

What is the reason for this lack of enthusiasm? Nothing in particular. By the way, isn’t Diwali, or Deepawali to be precise, the ‘Festival of Lights’, quite literally? So, candles, diyas, etc. are understandable (before you ask, I have always liked lighting those)… where did firecrackers come from? I do not know, and searching on Wikipedia didn’t help. I have a feeling that the fireworks industry in India really took off during the Independence struggle, as a benign façade for revolutionaries making real bombs. (If that sounds too far-fetched, it’s probably because I have been reading Indian history these days :) )

Anyway, thankfully, no real bombs went off this Diwali, unlike last year. There was some fear, especially due to a controversial execution scheduled just before Diwali, but that has been postponed. I think there is already enough debate for and against this issue, so I shall not get into it. Just a few things, though. I do not agree that the execution of Afzal by itself will cause the Valley to rise up in flames, and neither was the execution of Maqbool Butt the lone cause back in the 80’s. Behind every appeal to religion, emotion, reason, or whatever, there is always politics. Whether he got a fair trial or not is another question, but isn’t it too late to ask that question? I think the only credible reason against his execution could be a general appeal against capital punishment, in which case he should be spared the noose if and only if it is never to be used again.

Ahh, I have already said more than I planned to, and this post was supposed to be about Diwali. Anyway, best wishes to everyone for the year ahead. :)

Lingua Obscura October 14, 2006

Posted by chitranshu in News.
2 comments

Codie Stott, an English schoolgirl, gets arrested in a really strange case (as I said in my last post, the news is really getting a little too hilarious now-a-days). Would you really call her action ‘racist’? Or is it, as someone put it, ‘political correctness gone mad’?

I would tend to agree with the latter. After all, what the girl told her teacher was, as her family puts it, ‘plain common sense’. Of course, there are allegations that she also made some ‘offensive remarks’, but in a case like this, it will just end up being one person’s word against another, and no one will ever know the truth. However, even if she did make those remarks, or consider the case of the 10-year old who called his Asian friend a ‘Paki’ and ‘Bin Laden’ (mentioned in the same article), are these children really ‘racist’ or is it just playground anger manifesting itself in a manner for which their parents AND schools are equally responsible? And can’t these schools deal with such cases internally? Why do they need policemen on campus? And is it justified to keep a young girl in a police cell on such frivolous grounds? (Of course, the police now claim that she was never kept in a cell)

Personally, I think such kids can be called brash, snobbish or arrogant, but not ‘racist’ (from her photo in the news article, the girl does look a bit naughty). The best punishment for such kids can come from their own classmates – a boycott until they mend their ways. Also, as the comments on this news story suggest too, ‘political correctness’ is not as important as ‘human correctness’. In fact, going overboard with political correctness can have the opposite effect, e.g., in this case, I would not be surprised if the girl and her family actually ‘acquire’ racist views as a result of their harrowing experience.

Another thing to note is that the girl comes from a working-class background, and the school in question is ‘not a very good one’. I wonder if the police would have taken such action against a rich kid from a premier school…

And as for the real problem that the girl had, of not understanding her classmates, I think a lot of us in India are quite used to that. I can remember times when I have been surrounded by classmates speaking in Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, or Telugu, and I couldn’t understand a word of what they were saying (ok I can understand Marathi, but I still prefer they speak in English or Hindi). Also, I might often be interested in trying to pick up a few words from these conversations and learn a new language (or at least a few phrases of it), but in a ‘tense’ situation (like an upcoming exam, etc), that is the last thing on one’s mind. So again, what the girl did seems to me to be just plain common sense.

The best way to sum it up is, I think, a line from one of the comments on the news story, “Is the entire universe going crazy, or just the ‘civilized’ Western world?”