Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Road accidents: 10 earthquake equivalents in India

Dear all

The callous attitude shown by society to accident victims were amply demonstrated when a family in a two wheeler was hit by a speeding truck in Jaipur on 16th April. The man lost his wife and daughter while he was yelling to the passer-by’s and vehicles for an hour to save his kin. The whole incident was captured by a CCTV camera and shown in the media. It should be recalled that there is a high court judgement which protects the passer-by from police or court harassment, but in spite of this the social insensitivity was  seen in the open.

Lakhs of people die every year in India alone due to road accidents and this is a continuous catastrophe  in this country . We are in fact faced with the death toll of 10 earth quakes a year on  a continuous basis. Lack of driving sense and culture is the single reason for this malady which is high time to be rectified by strict action. An immediate public sensitivity program should be initiated by the government and the civil society both at the schools and organizational levels. This should be followed by strict vigilance on the roads. Gujarat is far better in this regard than other states with the 108 EMRI service available on phone call. Similar quick response teams and mechanism should be implemented with no room for intolerance.

The ministry of Road transport and the traffic department conducts numerous programs on road safety weeks , but all this programs has not found any effect as the public participation and practice is not enforced. It is easy in this country to break rules and pay the local police and escape, and off late only major cases of media intervention has found remedial action, making our safety management  systems continue its death journey
 
Sanyasi

Thursday, 28 March 2013

The New Gods of Indian Cricket


As Indian cricket team cheers itself on its  sweeping four test victory over Australia for the Border-Gavaskar trophy  , questions ponder as to whether it was the much acclaimed captaincy of MS Dhoni or the sheer performance of the new comers which yielded result. Leadership is always admired in all team achievements, but it was indeed the splendid performance of   youngsters like R Aswin, Murali Vijay, Cheteshwar Pujara, Shikhar Diwan and Ravindra Jadeja , which eventually resulted in this whitewash win for India. It is quite ironical to note that, whenever there is a victory there is always a successful leader but the same does not hold true in all cases of failure particularly in Indian cricket. Leadership judgements always have key words like tactical errors, or middle order failures to point fingers.

It is now time that the cricket savaged media in India give due credence to these new kids on the pitch than being pen pushers to Dhoni and Sachin. With a four test victory the media’s romance with Dhoni is justifiable but not to the halalullas they still sing for the ‘’God of cricket’’   who could hardly get double digit scores this season. It is still not late for the God to realize that a respectful retirement from Test cricket a la what he did for his  One Day matches , will keep him intact in the annuls of History and  with  hopes of a Bharatratna   kept alive .

There may be reasons for the media, the PR Managers and the endorsement gurus to tell us the God story, but it is time now for the God himself   to move on by giving his baton respectfully to the new Kids who made India proud..

Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Itally conned India



*       The two marines who was detailed by the Kerala government was allowed to go home for voting and now when it is time to come back, the Italian government has turned back . It is a matter of shame that the government allowed the marines to leave the shores of the country with a surety. It need to be thought that if any Indian citizens have done the same thing in Italian waters, would the Italian government allowed them to come to India. Now maximum what we could do is to summon the Italian ambassador and wave a protest. More than that what could be expected from this lame duck government?

Friday, 8 February 2013

Modi and Mouse: Anatomy of Humour:

Hi


When India’s economy was waggling between 3 to 3.5 % of GDP growth, Western media referred India as the land of Snake charmers. Today at a time when our IT and IT enabled services are our growth drivers India is now a land of ‘’mouse’’ charmers. This was what Narendra modi , Chief Minister of Gujarat said today.

Modi is known for his usage of humour as part of his regular rhetoric and his replacing the word ‘’snake’’ to ‘’mouse’’ communicated a larger picture of a changing India. Whether this humour is metaphoric or metonymic is left to the reader, the thought of the day is on the usage of humour in public life.

In his research publication, Psychology of humour , An Integrated Approach, Rod A Martin from the University of Western Ontrio, UK writes on the social significance of humour in particularly in human communication and relationship management. A ‘’sense of humour’’ is not just a quality or style of communication, but is indeed a soft skill to be reckoned with in communication management.

Humour used with a sense of sarcasm and indented to create a bad taste is often used by politicians in the public forum for ridiculing a person, party, or a community. Lots of Modi’’s Pot-shots on Nehru-Gandhi family are such examples. The much known sardar jokes can also be caricatured into this category. Humour is also used as a communication tool for conflicts and ego clashes among adults to score a point over the other and is often seen in office politics and grapevine .However affiliating and enhancing humour is a positive leadership communication tool which is a skill to be acquired. Business leaders often use such humour as a motivating factor to ease work stress and build in team spirit. Off late humour is a multimillion dollar industry be it TV or stage shows, not to mention about the laughing clubs spurting all over the health conscience world .

Coming back to Narendra Modi and his conversion of India from a snake charming to a mouse charming nation drives home the fact, that humour is indeed a leadership skill.

As long as it does not hurt and brings in a sense of bonhomie , humour is worth trying.

Sanyasi:

Saturday, 2 February 2013

Your Feedbacks:


Dear Readers

Making up this blog was not pre planned nor my idea , but was a suggestion given by an old time college mate, who used to call me Sanyasi.  She once told me, ''whatever you blabbered should be written down and there would be many ''hapless'' souls out there in Internet space , patient enough like me to listen to you" ....

Three months back when i started writing in this blog with a Pseudonym called Sanyasi , I didn’t expect that in this vast and growing domain called social media I would get such encouragement and accolades from both known and unknown friends spread over 12 countries .

As per statistics provided by Google-Blogspot , this blog has crossed 1000 hits and as I pass this milestone, many thanks to all of you who read and appreciated my views .

I intent to take up this initiative to the next level by giving a visual identify to ''Sanyasi" and create a characterization of this  Pseudonym , there by distance my individual persona away from the character itself.
 ''Sanyasi"' is envisaged to be a wandering monk unattached to persons, party , policies or issues but would put up his views in an unbiased and fearless manner with metaphors, humour and sarcasm with the only objective of making his disciples (readers) think in a different way.

While a competent designer is working on this initiative , I solicit your views and feedbacks .

You can write to me in my gmail id (rajeshmenon69@gmail.com)

Once more thanking you

Rajesh Menon

 

Sunday, 20 January 2013

Bad Politics is always Good history


Dear friends

As I glanced across the morning Sunday news from my first floor balcony biting the cold breeze , I overheard  my daughter preparing for her social studies exam . She was reading on the Mauryan dynasty….

Chandra gupta maurya was a street kid from a peacock charming clan in Pataliputra who over threw the Nanda dynasty and established the Mauryan empire. After Chandragupta abdicating his thrown and settling down into the reclusive Jain enclave in Shravanbangola, his son Bindusara became the King. Bindusara was extravagant and lived on the spoils of his father and his pleasure seeking pursuits made the kingdom shaky, prompting his son Asoka who was the governor of Taxila to take on the reigns of the Mauryan Empire. Emperor Ashok’s life and actions changed the course of the then India’s social, religious and political life. Not much is known of the Mauryan rule after the times of Ashoka, However as per my historian wife, since the time of Ashoka , Mauryan empire enforced the strict principles of Buddhism which was called Dhamma and prohibited extravagant rituals, animal sacrifices etc, which hit the underbelly of Brahmanism forcing the Brahmin Chief of maurayan army Pushyamitra sunga to kill the king Brihadrata and establish the Sunga dynasty. This happened in 185 BC and was a classic case of divide between the secular and communal forces in the political landscape of Ancient India .

Exactly 2198 years later today when I gazed at the newspaper report on Rahul Gandhi being elevated to the number two position in the congress party, I understand that much water has flown since then , through the rivers of the northern plains of India, but , its sour contents ,of dynastic rule and politico-cultural divide remains the same .

The dhamma of secularism is still the corner stone of our political divide between the congress and the BJP with the former proclaiming themselves as the torchbearers of secularism. While Ashoka conceptualized Dhamma and engraved its meaning in the monolith rock pillars, the emperors of modern India engraved secularism in the pillars of our constitution. Dhamma was well defined and practiced, but secularism- even though a noble concept imported from Europe- was a convenient means for our dynastic rulers to create fear and then appease the minority community whose population is now much more than an average European country. Administrative measures are taken with vote bank politics in mind, like special status to institutions runs by minorities or their reservations in education and employment and these are labelled as secular practices but no legislations are made like enforcing uniform civil code, regulating religious conversions, enforcing nationalistic and modern educational practices in madrasas etc. Through Dhamma the Mauryan rulers enforced the principles of right living, but protagonist of secularism in India , do not mind forging alliances with Muslim league and the Hyderabad based communal outfit MIM -now more known as Akbaruddin Owaisi’s party-

As a reaction to this the BJP talks of another dhamma called Hindutwa without a clear and logical discourse on the same confusing the majority of liberal minorities in our country, and there by encouraging speculative politics. While dynastic congress have one Raja or a Rani with a sycophantic praja , the BJP has many kings or no kings making its own praja search for a Sultan in Gujarat as their leader who was hitherto portrayed by the secular congress as some sort of a modern Chengiz Khan, only to create fear among those special species called minorities.

As we move on to 2014 for the General elections, political divide in India is thus cantering around secularism, hindutwa, youth and leadership and the elevation of the new prince in the congress dynasty should be looked upon in this context. Whether he becomes an enlighten Ashoka preaching his own dhamma or dwarfs into a brihadata only to be defeated by a communal Pushyamitra Sunga is yet to be seen.

As the Jaipur meet of the congress party concludes wishing the new King a good battle ahead.
Bad politics is always good History.

Sanyasi

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

Rape: Questions and Confusions from a vanilla movement:


Dear friends.
 
The agitation at Jantar mandir and other places of Delhi over the gang rape issue did result in some legislative measures being taken. Besides setting up a judicial commission, the government has also written to all political parties for suggestions for bringing in harsher  laws against rape. The agitation also demonstrated the governments’ alacrity in taking positive action. So far so good: However there are few questions which baffle and confuce me and Iam putting it across for you to think.

Firstly why does it need a national level outcry for a responsible democratic government to react? Why can’t it react in itself? This proves the inherent inertia of our administrative system. The point here is about the level of insensitivity seen on all aspects of our civil rights. Take the case of the two Italian marines arrested by the Kerala government over a shooting spree in Indian waters which resulted in the death of a fisherman. The Italian government pursued this matter at the highest level, and ensured that the marines were back  home for Christmas. They were released over a surety bond of 25 crores. On the contrary nearly 50 Indian sailors are kept captive by pirates and are languishing somewhere in the Indian Ocean on board hijacked vessels. Similarly 375 Indian fishermen mostly from Porbandar in Gujarat are languishing in Pak jails. Is  our government bothered. Do we need another revolution for this?

The second question is, ''Are Rapes committed only in Delhi or Mumbai deplorable which will make our ‘’dented and painted’’ women come to the streets.?  This Saturday a woman was gang raped and Killed by 8 men in West Bengal after brutally assaulting her husband who is now fighting for his life in a Calcutta hospital. Where is the media, the home minister , the judicial commission, political parties  and why no hullaballoo seen  in TV channels  round the clock?

The primary question here is that ,  do we have sustainability in social movements, and does it have a common cause and course of action?. Our social revolutions are just becoming stage shows without any sedimentation. Last year  three Dilli musketeers  rallied over an old man for a Jan Lokpal bill which till now has only  helped one among them to form a political party and make some , mendacious revelations . A year before that a Pink Panties movement took place against assault of women at a bar in Mangalore. Where are the tangible outcomes from these movements?  Are our social movements moving on the right track a la the velvet revolution centered around the Tahrir Square in Egypt which resulted in the creation of a democratic Egypt. ?

As seen till now our social movements unlike the Egyptian velvet revolution can only be viewed as some vanilla ice cream movement without a direction leadership and cause ….

Coming back to the Rape Story, What  the government  should do is not to dance to such vanilla revolutions but  to implement in a time bound manner the Supreme Court directions on judicial and police reforms which in itself is a cure to this malady.

While the whole nation rallies over a Delhi Rape victim , let me request my readers to pray for a moment for that hapless and downtrodden labourer who was raped and killed by 8 ‘’animals’’ in the outskirts of Calcutta on Saturday 29th of December 2012:

Vande Mataram

Sanyasi: