Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Seeing Red

76 jawans were slaughtered yesterday by over 1000 Naxalites. Ambushed and massacred. Why on earth are we worried so much about what the neighbouring country is trying to do? Why are we wasting our time and energy about a nation that is not even under our governance? Shouldn’t we first look into ourselves. Our country. Regions and people under our governance.

In a lay man’s terms, Naxalites are people who take a violent approach to Communism. They are against the red tapism, against the bureaucracy. If I think about it, I am forced to agree with their ideologies, if not their methods. Remember 26/11? The death toll for that ordeal was 173. Do you know how many people have died during this Naxalite struggle in the year 2009? 1134. Isn’t the number significantly larger than the death by external terrorism? But still, why is Pakistan given more screen space, more news time and more importance than this persisting issue? Because it is high profile. Why do the terrorist attacks get more importance? Because they happen in cities where civilians like you and me are affected. So what if in some rural internal part of the country men are dying to try and maintain peace in the country. That merely makes an interesting topic for conversation over a cup of coffee. Even today, more news time is given to IPL and for some weird reason the marriage of Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik. How is that of any importance to the nation? Two people find each other compatible and want to spend the rest of their lives together. What the f**k is the country’s objection/interest in that?

Humara kya jaata hain? We sit in our air conditioned homes and see the news and mourn over it for a couple of minutes. The fault lies in us. Because we are more interested in Sania Mirza, the media shows more of her. Because we give more importance to IPL, the media covers it extensively. Have we completely disconnected ourselves from that inner voice we loosely refer to as the conscience? There are people out there, dying to maintain peace in our country; people who have pledged to fight against any threat internal or external. Forget about helping them, forget about supporting them, we don’t even have the decency, the courtesy to show solidarity towards their deaths.

What is wrong if someone is raising a voice against such development? What is wrong if someone is raising a voice against such a government? What is wrong if someone is raising a voice against such people? So, the real questions is, are the Naxalites the villains or are we, the people, the society the villains? Naxalites are merely the effect, we are the cause.

2 comments:

Jitesh said...

Bravo.. Really well written. But, as usual, all we're going to do is read your post for a couple of minutes and get back to our busy and sophisticated lives, where we don't have the time or need to deal with such issues.

Mohit said...

I don't understand why you write about changing the world. I'd be really interested to know exactly what have you done about all those things you crib about in this world.