Not sure how many from the current generation remember Chandra Sekhar Azad, or even heard of him. He died this month of February in 1931. Let me take the opportunity to pen a few lines as a tribute to our forgotten hero.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Chandrasekhar Azad
Saturday, February 26, 2022
RIP Smarajit (Malla) Patnaik
This year has started on a bad note for me. I am losing way too many friends too soon, too fast. He was my friend from childhood days, my classmate in D. M. School in Bhubaneswar. Popular among us by his nickname "MALLA" (means wrestler in Odia) for his chubby face and rotund figure, he went on to carve his niche in the field of medical science as a renowned Orthopedic doctor, much sough after by Who's Who of Bhubaneswar and beyond.
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
UP Elections 2022
Midterm Assembly elections process is on in 5 states of India. But the apple of everybody's eye is Uttar Pradesh, better known by its commonly used acronym UP. It is the largest state in India with a population of 250 million which sends 80 Members of Parliament making it politically important for all political parties. The state would be the 4th most populous country in the world by itself, slightly less than the population of United States (I am sure when the next Assembly election is held in the state, it would have surpassed the population of USA). Politically speaking, what UP thinks today India thinks tomorrow.
It's a pretty big state. I remember it used to take me almost 20 hours to cover the entire state when I used to travel to Delhi in the 1990s by train from Bhubaneswar. It would enter UP in Mogalsarai junction where we would snack on KHARBHUJA (cantaloupe chunks) and have dessert with PETHA (a sweet meat made from gourd) in Agra after nearly a day. It was pleasure to watch the view of the vast, green gangetic plains of UP from the train meandering through the fertile flora filled with paddy, sugarcane and myriads of vegetables planted on endless fields on both sides of the railway track.In that context, it is important to throw some light on the ongoing elections in the state of UP. Opinion polls point to a close contest between BJP and SP. Mayawati's BSP and Congress party being marginal players, especially the later, the grand old national party of the Gandhis is virtually doomed. The results are still uncertain, though BJP seems to have an edge. As complex casteism and communalism is the leitmotif of cowbelt politics, it is a nightmare for any Psephologist worth his salt to correctly predict the outcome. Yet one outcome is certain - Samajwadi Party is going to at least double or even treble its tally from the last election. But the upper castes, especially the Brahmins seem to rally behind the BJP. Though they form only 15% of the electorates, Brahmins are influencial is shaping the outcome, especially in the Eastern UP where the election will be held in its last phase.
Nowhere the Brahmins wield more influence than the Temple city of Varanasi (also referred by its Anglicized name Benarus). It shares a lot of culture and customs with its cousin, the temple township of Puri in Odisha. Folks from both Puri and Varanasi have a passion for KUSTI (Wrestling) and BHANG (cannabis). Apart from being famous for Lord Jagannath and Lord Shiva temples, both contain huge cremation grounds, SWARGADWAR (The Gateway to heaven) of Puri by the sea and huge burning pyres on the MANIKARNIKA GHAAT (bank) of Ganga in Varanasi. And it doesn't end there. It is said that my ancestors, especially those Brahmins from Puri and its vicinity came from Kannauj, Uttar Pradesh.
Reminds me of this funny episode once narrated by a friend, a guy well connected to the family of Kamalapati Tripathy, erstwhile Congress MP and central Cabinet Minister during Indira Gandhi's time, who hailed from an influential Brahmin family from Varanasi.
Indira Gandhi, though born Brahmin, lost her Hindu status after her marriage to Feroz Gandhi, for which she was never allowed inside the Puri Jagannath temple. Kamalapati Tripathy, a Brahmin from Benarus wasn't exactly expected to break breads with someone from the Scheduled caste community, not at least in that generation.
It has to be seen how Varanasi, a prestigious seat who flipped its MP to PM of the nation shapes the electoral map of the state in absence of the Modi wave which swept UP in 2017. No one expects such a repeat and I have a hunch the next phase will not only determine the ruler of Lucknow, also shape the politics in 2024.
Though this is an Assembly election where folks vote on local rather than national issues, BJP's campaign solely hinges on Modi and the current CM Yogi's popularity. Modi's campaign is bit subdued which could be deliberate, as he doesn't want any leader to rise in the politically vital state of UP - who can be a potential future power center and threat to him.
Also, Modi being the one man campaign army has taken the risk of over exposure. BJP's strategy of taking risk in going for the kill solely with Modi may turn out to be an overkill. But no gain has ever come without risk taking and the PM from Gujarat is known to be a calculating risk taker. Come March, the day of reckoning and counting, we will find it after the votes in UP are counted.
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Maya Miriga - The illusory deer
The noted Odia movie maker Nirad Mohapatra passed away today 7 years ago. The Award winning Odia movie made by him named MAYA MIRIGA (The Illusory Deer) from the 1980s made by him rings a bell.
I remember watching it one summer afternoon on Doordarshan in 1987, the only TV channel available in India at the time. The story revolves around a boy from a typical Odia middle class family who qualifies for IAS, the most cherished job in Odisha of our generation and the generation before (Odisha being a Feudal state Babus are respected more than entrepreneurs and achievers in art, literature and science).
In the movie the boy's success instantly puts him on a pedestal, catapulting him as the most sought after bachelor. Cars made beehive in front of his middle class home to beat each other in grabbing the coveted son-in-law. The boy ends up marrying a girl from the upper strata of the society.
The newly wed bride from the elite family could not fit to the middle class milieu. She does not like her husband sharing the same razor with his bothers, not unusual in middle class families those days when privacy and individualism hadn't percolated into the millieu. Though the down to earth boy has become a HAKIMA (big officer) he hasn't been able to get rid of some of his old habits which is detested by his wife as unhygienic and non elitist.
A very symbolic movie. A classic depiction of the dilemma in a middle class Odia family due to the sudden change of status in one of it's members. Like a trapeze artist the guy struggles to play a balancing act between his wife and the rest of the family, ending up in pleasing nobody.
Those were the Golden days of Odia cinema. Every other year Odisha used to produce many award winning movies. CHILIKA TEERE (On the banks of Lake Chilka), SEETA RAATI (Winter Night), NEERABA JHADA (Silent Storm not Silent Shit) to name a few. It did not take long for those movies to be shown on National TV as they perform poorly in box office.
I bought couple of newly released DVDs of Odia movies from my last trip to India. They were laced with plenty of Hindi dialogues and copycat scenes from South Indian movies with voluptuous women gyrating their hips, speaks volumes about the state of affairs about the current status of Ollywood movie industry. There was hardly anything originally Odia about them. It was difficult for me to watch them beyond 30 minutes. I threw them into trash, where they rightly belong.
RIP Sri Nirad Mohapatra, you were one of the last of the originals. May your tribe flourish in a state which is fast losing its language and cultural heritage.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
The current crisis in Ukrain
Russia is threatening to attack Ukraine. Rather Putin is threatening to do so, because in communist, autocratic Russia the dictator has his last word. We can say Putin is Russia and Russia is Putin, as dictator ruled states have no checks and balances as you would expect in a democracy.
Now question is why Putin is doing all these ? It could be due to two reasons. First being an ex head of KGB, the ubiquitous secret service of Soviet Union from the Cold War era he harbors grudge against West and NATO, especially the United States for breaking the erstwhile USSR and encroaching into its territory. He wants to bring back the old glory by gobbling up Ukraine and drive his point by preventing it from jumping into NATO's arms.
Secondly, USA the global superpower is perceived being week due its internal squabbling has led Americans being seen as a divided nation losing control over their global grip. Election of a nincompoomp like Trump as its President, the last year's incident of January 6 in the Capitol Hills and Afghanistan withdrawal fiasco hasn't helped America's image.
Western Europe, is seen more as a liability to NATO than asset. Germany, the strongest economy in Europe is weakest amongst the Western Europe nations as far as dealing with Russia goes. It is because its dependency on the later on its natural gas supply to keep Germany warm in winter.
China in the meantime has cut a deal with Russia but they are shrewd enough not to openly back Russia as a full pronged war is not at China's interest when the Middle Kingdom's economy is not doing so well. Further hike in gas prices will hurt China, an energy hungry country heavily dependent on its oil imports to run its manufacturing engine.
In the meantime a lot of negotiations are being carried out in both foreground and background. Putin and Biden spoke yesterday for an hour. The President of Germany is meeting Putin after visiting the Ukrainian President. The French President Macron is deeply involved in talks with Russia.
Realpolitik is a different ballgame. It should not be viewed in a simplistic way like a discussion at PANA, CHA DOKAN GULLI KHATTI (Light hearted chats a Gully joints like betel shop or tea stalls). Foreign policy negotiations aren't done openly on media - certainly not on the social media. Lot of deal making is done in the background which we don't know or probably will never know.
Most of world's biggest banks and other financial institutions are in the United States, Canada and Western Europe. International trading including that of crude oil is still carried out in US Dollars. If Putin attacks Ukraine the crippling sanctions which would follow can hurt Russia's fledgling economy pretty bad. Russia ain't China. It doesn't have economic muscles to flex. As Bill Clinton coined his famous campaign slogan - "It's economy stupid", power doesn't come from the barrel of the gun these days, rather from a country's economic might.
Putin may be aggressive, but he isn't suicidal. He has already withdrawn part of Russian military from Ukraine border as a gesture indicating he is open to negotiation. Hope he sees some logic and stops his misadventure. It will be good for him, it will be better for the rest of the world.
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
Rest in Peace Subhasis (Gora) Dikshit
Our community has been jolted by this unfortunate incident of the sad and premature demise of Subhasis (Gora) Dikshit. Subhasis, his wife Swaha were great friends of mine and members of our community. This incident is devastating to all of us. Tanujaa and I share our heartfelt condolences.
The news came like a bolt from the blue last night. I knew Subhasis for a long time. He visited our home in the summer of 2015 when his son came to play in a Tennis tournament in Columbus. He was bubbly like a teenager and enjoyed my backyard which was green and full of vegetables that summer.
Complimenting me on my green thump, he picked one of about a dozen cucumbers lying in the ground, taking a sunbath and asked my permission to eat one of them. I replied him - "Eat as many as you want, but let me wash them for you before you eat". Like a kid he said - "Back in those days during our childhood in India do we used to wash our fruits and berries after we plucked them. We put them straight in mouth. It was fun then. Here in US we have turned way too formal". He had a point.
As they say in Hindi "BADI BADI KHUSIYAN HEY CHHOTI CHHOTI BATON MEIN" (Big happiness lies in light hearted talks). Subhasis was a great conversationalist who loved to debate. He spoke from his heart,, in a short sentences to drive his point. I loved his dark sense of humor which and impressed by his wit and sarcasm. He was a moving encyclopedia on myriad subjects. Nevertheless he was a great company I cherished, not to mention my then 10 year old son who loved the several magic tricks Subhasis showed him.
Something snapped inside me upon hearing this shocking news last night. He lived a lively life and was too young to leave. Our hearts go to Swaha and their son Niloy in the torrid time. Rest in Peace in heaven, my friend. Om Shanti.
Sunday, February 6, 2022
RIP Lata Mangeskar
She sang with KL Saigal, she sang with Mohd Rafi, she sang with Hemant Kumar, Kishore Kumar, Mukesh and many many more legendary playback singers long on. She was the scion of Indian music - a gifted singer in all forms for all occasions.
Wednesday, February 2, 2022
An Ode to Khushwant Singh on his Birthday
If Khushwant Singh was alive today he would be 107 year old. After a long, prosperous, eventful life he died at the age of 99. The man wrote his Novels and Columns until he was 96 - amazing fit at an age it is a challenge to keep sanity when one can't even think straight. When a young lady journalist asked him how long he will keep writing the ebullient Sardar replied - "No one has yet invented a condom for my pen".