Irony of Punjabis and our 2012 Election (Part 1)

Punjab Elections 2012Punjab Assembly Elections are here one more time at Punjab’s doorsteps. In the spirit of “freedom,” there will be candidates and party propagandists from the parties in power and aspiring for power, selling their new slogans and others repackaging or coining new phrases to sell the old ones, all in the hopes of getting our votes and becoming elected in the 2012 Elections. The voter, on the other hand, is also getting smarter and shrewder if not totally fatigued and frustrated over this seasonal drama recurring every 5 years since 1952. The voter is expected to look and listen more carefully this year before casting his or her vote. As far as the NRIs in the Diaspora are concerned, since they have no vote or have no bowl of rice directly at stake one way or the other, it is big community news and the subject of gossip and discussion anywhere Punjabis congregate: at Gurdwaras, Mandirs, and Masjids all over the world, including California, where I and many other Punjabis, live.

Eying the voter at home in Punjab, there will be horse trading, arm twisting and dangling of all kinds of carrots to lure the voters in and keep the candidates to toe the line. Paid news, muscle power, threats, blackmailing, bribery, alcohol, and drugs are almost seen as acceptable and “natural” means to seduce the bride to come to the altar for all states in India. Falling for an extra fancy for it, and taking it to new heights or depths (depending on your perspective), this practice has been especially facilitated in the land of five rivers by our successive governments over the years so much so that this has slowly but surely crept into our most sacred of elections for our religious institutions such as the SGPC. People in general and that includes our political parties, have little faith in the local police. Running an honest and ethical election has become quite the challenge for the Election Commission who is contemplating import policing to conduct their business this time; this is what democracy looks like today!

View Irony of Punjabis and Our 2012 Election (Part 2)

 

Continue Reading

Share

Discussion:Cradle of Civilization Hit Hard By Ravaging Floods

Flooding in the Indus Valley

Flooding in the Indus Valley

The devastating floods ravaging Pakistan have been written about in various publications, covering aspects such as the displacement of people, loss of homes, lives, illness, and the slow movement of aid. But the particular plight of the farmer is seldom mentioned. I was reading an article by Ashraf Khan in the Associated Press that discusses this matter, “Farmers bear brunt of Pakistans’ deadly floods.” In the article, he points out that in addition to all of the above mentioned problems victims of the floods are facing, farmers have the added pressure of losing their livelihood once they do return to their homes and if they are unable to plant wheat for the winter by September, food shortages in Punjab and Sindh as well as throughout Pakistan will be inevitable.

Floods in the Indus Valley

Floods in the Indus Valley

Indus River to this side of the Himalayas constitutes an integral part of the Indus Valley, “the Cradle of Civilization” and is what The Yellow River is to China and its ancient civilisation on the other side of the Himalayas. The Indus Valley was perhaps the richest in ancient Indian history where man first brought the land under plough.  Like The Yellow River, Indus is both the mother and misery to millions of people who, for their survival, have depended on it for thousands of years since they first inhabited its banks.

Map of Indus Valley

Map of Indus Valley

Under relentless rain, the Indus breached its banks almost along the entire route within Pakistan this time. Homes and people, farms and animals alongwith orchards and crops have been wiped out  as they are washed away without a trace in many instances right from Khyber Pakhtunwa province and southern Punjab down to Sindh and Balochistan.

People displaced fight for bags of wheat

People fight for bags of wheat

Also mentioned in “Farmers bear brunt of Pakistans’ deadly floods, one of the victims of this unprecedented disaster, Razaq, while raising a finger skyward, tells Ashraf Khan that “only a prophet could pass a test as stern as the one we are going through now. It is beyond our capacity. It is coming from Allah.”  When everyone and everything else turns its back, the human heart pins its hope on Almighty God. Since human beings are created in God’s image as all religions teach us, I guess it can be interpreted that the opposite is also  true in such situations. Human beings could become the last refuge for each other in times of dire need. That is what  has happened elsewhere in the recent past when the world governments / communities joined hands during disasters of this magnitude and that should happen here in Pakistan now.

Devinder Singh Saroya sent me a link for an Editorial in The Hindu – Mitigating Pakistan’s Miseries on FaceBook. The editorial goes like this:
“. . . the fury of the floods having subsided, Pakistan still needs help to deal with the aftermath.  A U.N. appeal for $459 million has evoked a disappointing response from the international community. The pledges made so far total only 47 per cent of the target, with the United States and United Kingdom making the most substantial commitments.”

Map of Gujarat Earthquake

Map of Gujarat Earthquake

As the region’s biggest economy, India should have been first off the blocks in offering help to its beleaguered neighbor. Its belated offer of $5 million in relief assistance is a pittance compared to what it has done for other neighbors. At the time of the 2004 tsunami, India went out of its way to provide Sri Lanka with an assistance package of nearly $200 million. Prime Minister Mamohan Singh took the right step by calling his Pakistan counterpart Yusuf Raza Gilani on Thursday to express India’s readiness to do more for the relief effort. This rectifies New Delhi’s earlier position that it would give more only if Pakistan responded positively to the “initial offer,” which was as narrow-minded as Islamabad’s response that it was yet to decide whether or not to accept Indian assistance.

Despite strained political relations, there have been instances in the past of spontaneous solidarity such as when Pakistan sent relief materials after the Gujarat earthquake and India did the same after the Kashmir earthquake. It is unfortunate that the two countries are letting present animosities come in the way of addressing a humanitarian situation. If Pakistan can accept assistance from other countries, there should be no problem taking it from India. For its part, New Delhi must unreservedly raise the assistance amount, and provide it to Pakistan, if required, as part of the United Nations fund.”

Pakistani Flood Survivor

Pakistani Flood Survivor

Floods caused by an unusually heavy monsoon since July have jolted Pakistan to the hilt . The initial death and destruction as reported may follow with even bigger disasters by the spread of diseases and famine, usually associated in the aftermath if help is delayed from the outside or does not reach all the needy inside the affected areas on time due to mismanagement, politics or whatever reason. Time is running out fast for those millions marooned in Pakistan. My heart goes out to the honorable, hard working farmers and their families who have lost all they had and are reduced to destitutes, begging for food and shelter overnight through no fault of their own.

When all is said and done, there has to be a silver linning to this dreadful dark cloud of awful human tragedy brought about by these out of control rain waters as opposed to the havoc caused by the salty seas during the tsunami. Fresh water is the most precious commodity; even more precious than the oil as the time goes by. The fresh water is disappearing fast beneath the surface in this part of the world; as fast as oil is in the Middle East . By overcoming this mamoth human tragedy and moving  past this nightmare caused by the excessive rainwater, if managed properly through imaginative river management policy / plan as a national priority, it almost guarantees the replenishing of its tired soils and recharging its exhausted aquifer for the future. That way, the Indus valley civilization can go on being supported as it has been for the past thousands of years.

Share

Punjab News and Views: Honor Killing

Tune in to KBIF AM 900 every Sunday between 3-4pm (PST) to listen to Punjab News and Views.
Don’t have a radio? Listen to it live at www.asianradioam.com

Download and listen to any of the radio shows at your leisure by subscribing to the podcast at http://www.punjabnewsandviews.com/radio/JasPodcast.rss

This week’s topic: Honor Killings

honor-killingHonor killings are generally thought to be rampant in orthodox and socially backward groups around the world. Although it is believed to be more prevalent in Middle Eastern and South East Asian countries such as India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Turkey, Jordan and the Palestinian Territories,  ”developed” countries such as the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, Sweden and many other parts of Europe have also witnessed such crimes. According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), there may be a total of 5,000 honor-killing victims per year.

We all perceive honor in different ways and those who engage in honor killings imagine that they have somehow been dishonored and killing one’s own daughter, wife, daughter-in-law,  or even mother,  will somehow rectify that honor.

Poonam Singh, the editor of Preet Lari, recently sent me this great link to an online book (in English) on a related matter written by an Indian writer Sita Aggarwal, whose sister was burned alive for not bringing a high enough dowry with her.

The book is available for free at http://preetlari.wordpress.com/2010/07/22/

Sita presents an interesting argument. She argues that the flames of honor killings have been fanned by receiving support from religion. In her case, the Hindu rellgion. Perhaps there are other religions out there that either endorse honor killings or are vague on their position in regards to it.

Guru Nanak Dev Ji: First Guru of the SikhsBut what about the followers of modern religions like Sikhism where there is no ambiguity? Five hundred some years ago, Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the founder of Sikhism, unequivocally condemned this inequality in no uncertain terms and preached for the equality of all human beings regardless of their color, cast, creed, gender, or anything else for that matter. And yet, even with specific affirmation of women’s equal social status and the condemnation of “Honor” killings, Punjabis seem to be at the forefront in this regard (both East and West). My question is Why?

On the other side of women’s rights is an article published in the July issue of Tribune India by Swati Sharma titled, “Illicit affairs meet a gory end all too often“ By the title, you can guess what the writer’s main argument is. Fears by some people is that more freedom to women is encouraging  avoidable divorces, which impact the children and can be severely tormenting for them.  Not exactly a related matter, but
equally tormenting for the children is an extramarital affair of a parent. Swati Sharma, a woman herself incidentally, writes in the Tribune News Service highlighting this. She narrates two stories where the wives colluded with lovers to eliminate husbands of several years and one in which a youth repeatedly stabbed his mother’s lover to death in January 2007. Sunil, 19, was reportedly fed up with the ‘humilliation’he said he had to face due to his mother’s liasion.

What do you think? What is the cause of Honor Killings and what, if anything, can we as a society do to change the culture that accepts this?

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Share