At times I just wonder why India and Pakistan can’t live in peace. Why the relationship between the two countries is so fragile that any violent terrorist act brings the two countries on the threshold of war?
Will the relationship improve (or heal) if the leadership in politics in the two countries were to pass on to the women-folk? As a male of the species, I can cite several reasons why men-folk in India and Pakistan (especially the decision-makers — both civilians and military dictators) have forfeited the right to govern.
The most important reason is that the big World leaders seem bereft of any heart/feelings or commonsense (their deafening silence greeted even the butchering of innocent children in the recent conflicts).
If you add all pervasive greed, myopia and maniacal egos, then a complete recipe for disaster seems ready. I wonder whether top women leaders could be so heartless as their men counterparts.
Now back to India and Pakistan. These two countries provide a unique example that can be compared to a fight within a family. Let us check the background. They have a shared culture and a history dating back to centuries.
Muslims and Hindus in the huge subcontinent lived in peace under various rulers in the undivided India before 1947 (witnessing only rare spells of ruler-induced violence in the past).
It is like two brothers who went through a horrible fight to set up their own two independent homes. India and Pakistan did so in 1947 with the boundaries redrawn. But they forgot that if they continued their hatred/rivalry/greed/myopia even after splitting, the opportunistic outsiders would keep inciting them for their own greed/myopia/self-interest, and the situation could go out of hand.
I am writing this piece not just to please my wife and daughter!!! My random thoughts have been prompted by a recent Indian TV programme that showed Taliban men beating women with long sticks, probably on Pakistan/Afghanistan border. And an article in The Outlook magazine by Booker prize-winner celebrity author Arundhati Roy in which she exhorts the two countries to look inwards instead of blaming each other.
The Taliban TV clip reinforced my conviction that there is nothing wrong with religions, it is the interpretation by the leaders in different communities/countries and their traditions/character that generally leads to either violence or peaceful coexistence. The television generally shows us only the sensational/ugly scenes.
Why are we not shown Muslims in Indonesia, or south-east Asia, who have been performing with such elegance and beauty the Hindu epic of
Ramayana (in dance/drama form) for centuries? Why there is no mention of Sufi shrines that dot the entire landscape of India and Pakistan where millions of Hindus and Muslims go for worship and blessings throughout the year?
During my year-long stay as a journalist in Saudi Arabia in the 1970s, I had a longish discussion with the Islamic clergy and academicians over the history of Islam. I was told that Islam has seen lots of ups and downs. During the glorious period of Islam women worked shoulder to shoulder with men and enjoyed equal rights. So nothing is static…things may change.
And how? Even within our lifetime we have seen the death of Communism as practised by Soviet Union. Capitalism, as practised by the United States of America, is on oxygen and gasping for breath. The orthodox Wahabi tradition of Islam that gripped the Arab world, and elsewhere, since the early part of the 20th century is showing signs of deep stress/upheaval and would have to undergo a change.
So when US president-elect Barack Obama used the word CHANGE during his election campaign, he and his team must have in mind the CHANGE which now seems inevitable not only in the US but worldwide. It is not just a coincidence that Obama has chosen a woman, Hillary Clinton, to assist him in healing the US relationship with the world.
The male chauvinism which has been on the rise for a while now peaked during the past decade or so. The big leaders talked and acted like macho men bringing untold misery to men, women and children. Shockingly, there was not a single leader in Europe, Asia and elsehwere who told the macho members of their own species to put an end to such brutal and senseless policies/actions.
One can understand the limitations and the limited worldview of the US mainstream media, but what happened to the media elsewhere? Most of the reportage and commentary reflected as if the journalistic community was in awe of the war unleashed on terror. No questions were asked and no investigations done. It was just cheering from the sidelines.
So why cry now when the economies are collapsing and the lines of jobless people are increasing?
Macho behaviour thrills but ultimately kills. A female, even in the animal kingdom, is by and large a nurturer and a healer (of course, there are exceptions before you mention about Condy Rice!!!).
But where are the women leaders? Men have planned well to keep women firmly under them (metaphorically speaking). But they would have to rise and shine before the macho men manage to drive the human species into extinction.
Here is a brave Indian woman, a celebrity author, Arundhati Roy who has taken on the entire ruling coterie. She wrote in the aftermath of last month’s Mumbai terrorist attack: "Through the endless hours of analysis and the endless op-ed essays, in India at least there has been very little mention of the elephants in the room: Kashmir, Gujarat and the demolition of the Babri Masjid. Instead, we had retired diplomats and strategic experts debate the pros and cons of a war against Pakistan.
"Though one chapter of horror in Mumbai has ended, another might have just begun. Day after day, a powerful, vociferous section of the Indian elite, goaded by marauding TV anchors who make Fox News look almost radical and left-wing, have taken to mindlessly attacking politicians, all politicians, glorifying the police and the army, and virtually asking for a police state.
"It isn’t surprising that those who have grown plump on the pickings of democracy (such as it is) should now be calling for a police state. The era of ‘pickings’ is long gone. We’re now in the era of Grabbing by Force, and democracy has a terrible habit of getting in the way."
"What we’re experiencing now is blowback, the cumulative result of decades of quick fixes and dirty deeds. The carpet’s squelching under our feet.
"The only way to contain (it would be naive to say end) terrorism is to look at the monster in the mirror. We’re standing at a fork in the road. One sign says ‘Justice’, the other ‘Civil War’. There’s no third sign and there’s no going back. Choose."
But we live in a world of short-cuts and the public memory is proverbially short. So who would have the patience to read Arundhati Roy’s article in full. I just wonder.
And, then, she happens to be an outspoken woman in the male chauvinistic world!!! There are already attempts to shout her down…Salman Rushdie, surprisingly, being one among them!!!