Skip to content Skip to navigation

Popcorn Nationalism vs Humane Nationalism

Radhika Tanwar (20) is shot dead in Delhi. We see the perpetrator of the murder in the newspapers. We see protest marches brought out for the safety of women and girls.


Any rape, any murder in the city. We see the criminals.


Tarmetla, Chattisgarh. Hurre (20) is picked up by Indian government employed armed forces to the Chintalnar police station, stripped and sexually assaulted. But we donot see the perpetrators of the crime. May we request the government of the world’s largest democracy to disclose the names and pictures of security personals and policemen involved in crime?


The most unfortunate thing is the unconsciousness of the Great Indian middle class towards the pathos, the concerns, the anguish, the rape of honour and subjugation of the dignity of the oppressed sections of the sub-continent.


Sadly, the PM of India Manmohan Singh and all the ministers and bureaucrats are busy with a cricket match and dinner party. No one has bothered to empathise with the barbaric incidents in India’s hinterlands. The barbaric activities of the army and police might move an Aruna Shanbaug, but not the politicians and chaps moving in red-lights. There is nothing to expect from politicians and their corporate sponsors. As for the central bureaucracy, it abounds in towtowing, ‘once-upon-a-time’ book-worms, none of whom dare say, “The emperor is naked.”


What we see among the Indian educated, middle-class during a cricket match is the best example of ‘Popcorn Nationalism’. In this breed of ‘patriotism’, people sit on the couches and equate love for the country India (as demarcated by the British rulers and remote-controlled by the Nehru dynasty for the last 63 years) with the shouts for runs. This category of nationalism is safest for a government voted on cash and run covertly by corporate interests. What is dangerous for the government of India and the business tycoons is the spirit of ‘Humane Nationalism’, the champions of which are the likes of Binayak Sen. This involves working for the subjugated, giving them voice instead of shouting for millionaire cricketers. And this variety of nationalism is something which the corrupt and greedy fear, as it goes against their interests and threaten their profit-making schemes. Apart from being a rising ‘superpower’, India has become a nation without conscience.


By: Pallavi Barua, Sumaya Qadri

Comments

dipankar sen's picture

You are right...absolutely right. So binayak in in jail, you have written an aritcle. What are we going to do about it? They have the greed and we have the need. We know the equation now. What we now need is to put our heads together and come up with a plan, a programme for mitigate this drainage of resources and energy. If you send me your email address, I might have a programme to start with. It will be a long trek but it will be fun and fulfilling. These guys dont care about slogans, they have it all factored in. The thickness of their skins might end up in embarassing a rhinoceros.
Pallavi Barua's picture

I am glad Deepankar Sen shares the concern and thinks over the ground situation, as it is. As for my email, I would like the reader to contact the editor at 'editor@assamtimes.org' to collect my email address. I am not putting it up here for all and sundry. I would like the editor to verify the identity of the reader before giving him/her my email address. Thank you.
susmita Rakshit's picture

Rightly said, nationality and 'proud to be an Indian' only finds mention after a world cup is won but the rest of the days we educated Indians are more engrossed in the so called 'rat race' to really stand up for things like this, we may find hundreds of people to cheer with us during a match, but I dont think anybody would stand up for other important issues.... great work....take care
Sarada Paul Roy's picture

Well written Pallavi.....had the people voiced their opinions when it came to ending all the wrong doings in the society in a similar way as they cheered for the Men in Blue, India would have been a better place to be in...Wish we could enlighten them and bring them all in a platform....but sadly only cricket brings all together and politics and dark issues are what everyone wants to steer clear off....
Raktim Baruah's picture

the write draws a real picture of India,where deprivation of the helpless and hapless become a day to day phenomena.Instead of giving adequate attention to the plight of common mass government shows indifference.Today,it is a common concept that the government is busy with appease those who have wealth.Wealth and power mean a lot for them.What may be more disgusting that when Dr.Manmohan Singh,Prime minister of India,took part in election campaigning for Bharat chandra Narah at Lakhimpur,one of the most corrupted politicians of Tarun Gogoi led Assam government.As the above article visualises this is the ultimate real picture of post-modern India.....
Anupa Lahkar's picture

Its what you called 'agenda setting'. Our attention is diverted by the admin and media from what is important to what is they make us believe is important. And we religiously follow what we believe leads the nation
Lakshminarayan's picture

You are right, Pallavi. When we have so much of problems on hand, we just sit like couch potatoes and view cricket matches...and make our great heroes earn in crores...shameless indeed!
TRS's picture

try try and try again if you fail, then cry cry and cry again!! jesus was the last who influenced a vast horde of population. m k gandhi tried, and succeeded in trifurcating the pie!! looking at the world from a distance, you and your brethren is trying to open the eyes of another fresh horde. no matter how big the effort group (NGO/individual/party/etc) is, but influence of the type you advocate will be only on a handful few. history of 'democratic, republic' india abounds with such efforts and impacts. but still we try, and have to try again. 'they' - the political and corporate machinery will also try, and try again. as rightly mentioned, 'they' succeed easily. we prefer popcorn, rather than karela. but a day will come when karela will be desperately searched for - popcorn no longer would be sought after. till then we keep trying the legacy continues for next, and next generations till Egypt happens, till Berlin Wall happens, till Jesus comes again, till Kalki avtaar happens till then......

Pages

Add new comment

Assamese Translator

Assam Times seeks English to Assamese translators!
Join our volunteer team.
Email editor@assamtimes.org.

Random Stories

AAMEF welcomes SC verdict on Majithia Wage Boards: Demands implementation in Assam

13 Feb 2014 - 9:59pm | Nava Thakuria
All Assam Media Employees Federation (AAMEF) welcomes the recent landmark judgment of the Supreme Court of India upholding the constitutionality of the Majithia Wage Board for journalist & non-...

Employment boost for entrepreneurs

17 Oct 2017 - 8:20pm | AT News
The Directorate of Employment & Craftsmen Training, under Skill, Employment & Entrepreneurship Development in association with Entrepreneurship Development Institute of India (EDII) and...

Karbi festival going on

18 Feb 2008 - 4:41am | editor
With much fanfare and cultural extravaganza, the colourful Karbi Youth festival is going on atop the Karbi hills. The colourful cultural event of the Karbi youths was inaugurated by Assam Governor Lt...

Rajnath to see border fencing

25 Jun 2015 - 10:08pm | AT News
Union home minister Rajnath Singh will be on a stock taking visit to Dhubri on June 29. During his two days visit, Singh is scheduled to take stock of the Indo-Bangladesh border fencing work....

Other Contents by Author

In 1916, a boy reportedly beat and thrashed one of his British professers E. F. Otten in Presidency College, of then Calcutta. The professor made a racist remark against the Indian students. Result, the boy was expelled from the Presidency College and banished from Calcutta University. The incident brought him in the list of rebel Indians. Later in life he was placed fourth in the Indian Civil Service Examination with highest marks in English. This boy is none other than Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. I would like to ask the student who tried to commit suicide because of the torture and insult meted out to her by the vice-principal of her school for speaking in her mother-tongue Navanita...
The sight of a stereotype Muslim with a trademark beard and round cap evokes mixed feelings in a crowded area in many parts of the world, not to speak of India. The Akbar as portrayed in ‘Amar Akbar Anthony’ of the 1970s has well been reduced to ‘Amar Osama Anthony’ down the years. Apart from the growing fundamentalist forces in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Middle-East, the diplomatic, conniving West; their politics, the corporate and media have fired a phobia of Islam. The ‘demonization’ of Islam is complete. But, a greater terror is crippling the lives of innocent civilians in India. This is less talked about, or infact never taken up or highlighted...
On January 9, on the occasion of Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, PM Manmohan Singh expressed the hope that Indians living abroad would be able to vote in the next general elections. Responding to the frequent plea for voting rights to non-resident Indians, most recently made by members of his global advisory council for overseas Indians, Dr. Singh termed the desire legitimate. He said of the ongoing work on this issue and sincerely hoped that non-resident Indians will get a chance to vote by the time of the next regular general elections. In fact, he assured to go a step further and asked why more overseas Indians should not return home to join politics and public life as they are increasingly...
The case of molestation of a 14 year old girl by a senior Haryana police officer, S.P.S. Rathore has raised serious questions as to the integrity of the institution of ‘Police’ in the country. D.I.G. Rathore not only harassed the family of the deceased Ruchika but also framed false charges of murder and theft on the victim’s father and brother when an FIR was lodged against him 19 years back. There are numerous cases all over the country where the police has been leveling false charges according to their whims, either to settle personal scores, or under the direction of powerful lobbies or as ‘disguised’ extortion. In Haryana it was a Director General of...
1st January 2009 witnessed blasts in Guwahati ahead of Home Minister P. Chidambaram’s visit despite high security, as claimed by the state government. In the wake of the blasts, P. Chidambaram said that the Assam government had clue of miscreant activities but, were not able to able to avert the blasts. As such, the law and order situation of the state had to be handled by the Union Home Ministry. Whether CM Tarun Gogoi and his council of ministers felt pinched is not known, but mature citizens have understood the tone of sarcasm in the Home Minister’s remark. It also reflects that P. Chidambaram has gouged the lack of will of the state government to tackle insurgency in earnest...
New Aruna Nagar, Delhi – 54. One of the oldest Tibetan colonies in India. The settlement dates back to 1959. Being from the North-East, I often hear stories of discrimination of the students and people from the region in Delhi. I have been always curious whether it is a mental block ingrained in an average North-Easterner, an illusion/ a myth promoted by jingoistic regional media or a reality. This urged me to find out what is it for the Tibetans who have been in India since the Chinese clampdown in Tibet. The area is near the Gurudwara Majnu ka Tila along the Grand Trunk Road, on the banks of the River Yamuna. The present Chief Minister of Delhi, Shiela Dixit has named the colony...
For most of the folks who have been brought up in Guwahati. Delhi is not something to be charmed with. Girls and boys from villages or small towns might be swept away, but the life-style is no different from a medium-sized city like Guwahati. Infact, I have only a few square feet area to call my 'home' in this metro (far less than the spacious room in my home city). At times, I feel I am in Delhi only when I go for walks in Central Secretariat, the area near India Gate, Rashtrapati Bhawan et al......otherwise most of the areas are like any other locality in any medium-sized city like Guwahati. Infact, in many places, there are no proper footpaths....yes, the capital Delhi, this is it...
August 12 sees an earthquake measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale. August 19 is witness to 4.9 on the Richter scale. August 31 brings in 5.3 on the Richter scale. September 4 ropes in 5.9 on the Richter scale. Being situated at the junction of two great geographical plates, the most affected is Guwahati and Shillong. Guwahati is one of the best examples of how human ecological mismanagement and haphazard constructions can usher in man-made natural disaster and climate change of the worst kind. Since Guwahati is a valley surrounded by hills on three sides, it becomes a flood plain in the wake of dense human habitation and encroachment of the bogs and fresh water lakes...
Sunday afternoon, August 23, 2009; meeting on the Annual Report. A lady enquires, “What are the expenses covered under the category of establishment expenses as shown in Page 17 of this report card? We would like to see the detailed account of this expenditure which totals upto Rs. 89,131.00” She is a member of the managing committee for the year 2008-2009. Now this is a meeting of a kind. It only reflects the transparency in the functioning of the Assam Sishu Kalyan Sadan, a home for orphaned and destitute children. One hardly comes across such annual expenditure reports in any NGO, be it in Assam, other states of North East India or be it any ‘national’ level...
Lunch time. A boy in his teens helps his friend have his tiffin. He feeds him and pours some water from a bottle for his friend to drink. Next he cleans the boy’s lips with a napkin. This boy likes to help his friends have their tiffin. He is known by the name of Parag Jyoti Barman (16). He lives with Down’s syndrome. However he is in a position to help his classmates some of whom show signs of autism. Principal Mr. Satyendra Thakuria let me know that he loves to feed children who cannot help themselves. These are students of Mon Vikash Kendra, a centre for children challenged with autism and spastic symptoms. Established in 1988, Mon Vikash Kendra is an offshoot of...