Then there was Lady Gaga; her blonde hairdo in the colours of the Indian flag, saying “Namaste India”, and Delhi’s yuppie crowd falling all over her and themselves and finally feeling like they had arrived and joined the real world.
Now, these arrivistes may say: that’s all very well to scoff at, especially since I wasn’t invited to the Gaga event and never once even to a fashion show in my life — pity, because I could write a treatise on the politics of the hemline, both rising and falling.
There are many who would say, ‘oh you jholawallah Indians’ — a reference to the khadi shoulder bag that several used to carry, especially in the pre-reform era, when it was still okay to be leftist, as well as publicly identify with the poor — all you can do is criticise your country in front of foreigners, although your urban sensibility has little connection with the muck and grime that rural India is made up of.
They may well be right. In any case, this reminds me of Amitabh Bachchan’s famous line in the mid-80s when he was newly-elected from Allahabad, one of Rajiv Gandhi’s new boys determined to save the country. “Politics”, said Mr Bacchan, “is like a cesspool”. Soon after, in the uproar that followed, he quit his seat as well as the Congress Party.
So what does one make of India these days, if one looks at it with a clear and unjaundiced eye? That old man Shakespeare comes to mind. “When things fall apart”, he said, “the centre doesn’t hold”.
Interestingly, in India these days, the reverse seems to be true. The centre seems to be struggling to get its act together, even as key provinces are run relatively efficiently by Jayalalithaa in Tamil Nadu, Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh (UP) and Mamata Bannerjee in West Bengal.
Even Omar Abdullah in Jammu and Kashmir finally amended the draconian Public Safety Act on Friday October 21 — which reduces minimum imprisonment from two years to three months, without trial or bail — which has been in place in the state for 22 years.
Remember that the Formula One rally is being held in a district just outside Delhi, in the state of Uttar Pradesh ruled by Mayawati. Now Uttar Pradesh may be one of the poorest provinces in the country, but it doesn’t figure in the list of the five worst-affected states in which farmers have killed themselves. That dishonour must belong to Maharashtra, easily India’s richest state, with Mumbai its financial capital.
Although Mayawati’s doing relatively well on the farm front, nearly 500 children have died of Japanese encephalitis in eastern UP in the last six months, as they do every year. Fact remains that the lady and her party are still going to sweep UP, when elections are held in India’s most populous state over the next few months.
The only way to make sense of all the above is that, as we take a respite in the Diwali-Eid season, India remains a bewildering and contradictory amalgam. Some things never change.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 30th, 2011.
COMMENTS (31)
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F1 in Delhi showed India can.. yes there are lot of poor people in India...and socialism didnt work for past 60 years.. Capitalism is working its taking India and Indians Places.. You cant reap out all the poor in ten years.. there has been huge improvements for everyone to see thanks to vibrant India.. Had we still continued with stupid socialism... we still would be begging for aid,, somehow pakistani press only wants to hear things bad about India,.. so she is giving it irrespective what international press is saying.
@Ali Tanoli.:
which games?
@Manoj:
Manoj forget it.
There are ppl who must find fault in everything. This article is a part of this.
@Ali Tanoli.: Kindly enlighten me how India lost money on these event. GOI did not spent a single penny from the public exchequer on this event. Private sector invested about USD 1.00 billion. and simple thumb rule of economics says that every 1 Rs. invested expands the economy by at least ten times. so economy was expanded by at least $10 billion. Which benifited the all the stack holder in the chain of consumer / suppliers.
@Manoj India lost millions of Dollers Rupees in those games.
it is not a hidden fact that, as india is a developing country there are so many problems. but this article is talking out of context, talking one problem connecting it to other facts. my indian friends have already replied the doubts and confusion of writer which i think is satisfactory.writer is confused. what she want to convey by this article, which is a hotchpotch of too many things which makes no sense. this shows that any type of news on india can make place in news in pakistan. i read this paper bcz of too many article on india. one or two month ago, one day i saw that out of 5 article in opinion page, 3 article was on india.
@OhLaLa:
You guys are not able to organize an international cricket match at home....one single international match.Poverty is a reality but that is not a barrier to India's entrepreneurs who dream big. Nobody wants to go back to the socialist 60s and 70s that hampered the spirit of the country and killed its motivation to grow. Formula 1 is privately funded and it is part of a huge township that can accomodate 1 million people outside Noida. The jobs created and the taxes paid are enough justifications for the race and the township. The jholawalahs lack imagination and are frozen in the rusty Soviet era. These dinosaurs are the greatest impediment to development.
What a nice customised article for pakistani readers!
by the way, when Lady Gaga will be performing in Delhi, same time, Metallica is having a grand concert in Bangalore !
And come to think of it, when millions of Indians are dying in hunger in roadside, there is Rowan Atkinson (Mr Bean) cheering his team on TV !! What a disgrace !!
@ohLaLa
I can understand your resentment. But mate, issues in Pakistan are not limited your own country but extends to cause the world, harm. After all, India and lately several other countries accused you of condoning terrorism. Now that gives us right to act on judgment of your society (at least on part of your society that is bent on killing infidels). Now coming India's case, its not like India's poor eating away your social benefit, are they? I hate the fact that India is made scapegoat all the while its taking tremendous measures to eliminate the poverty. I don't think same could be said about Pakistan on terrorism.
But hey I agree to the point, we should all take a foot off on generalizations.
noida formula 1 is a private investment. what does it have to do anything with poor farmers. if things change people complain, if they dont change people still complain. poverty which has been systematically kept in place by thousands of years of foreign rules wont go away overnight. i am not complaining tough i never seen a F1 race or heard lady Gaga.
@OhLaLa: Yes India has a lot of poor people - no body every denied it! But we don't become delusional 'strategic assets' and wage jihad against all and sundry!!
@Author Well, we all know you were not invited to the F1 inaugural extravaganza or the after parties but that doesn't mean you hold F1 responsible for farmer suicides or poverty in India. The fact is, in due course of time, slowly but SURELY, the booming Indian economy and educational levels in the masses will take care of all the ills you mentioned above. The vibrancy of Indian economy and its people will pull the best of events in the world into it, be it F1 or Commonwealth Games. The grapes are sour! aren't they? Do not worry, Pakistan will have its own F1 in 3797 AD.
Its ok to read good or bad opinion about india, but am surpirsed to see that not even one pakistani newspapers has mentioned about F-1 race taking place in India.
No doubt, what ever the problems, India is able to pull off spectacular events, which it could not few years back.
Yes, their are many people in INdia who are below poverty line. Stray dogs are still here . But this is a invitation for all pakistanis & all people of world to see the venue where f1 is taking place (NOIDA & GREATER NOIDA).It is no less than any foreign country. Problems are here in India but every one should be informed that in this era of depression in Global economy the world market is surviving because of heavy demand in INDIA & China. Let it be cars/mobiles/computers/softwares/space research/biotechnology. Indian companies are on the top of world & demand is also on top & world economy is also surving because of heavy indian demand. Their are Indian farmers who are committing suicides but THeir are many Indian farmers who are wearing genuine REEBOK shoes & carrying blackberries. Well i dont criticise Jyoti Malhotra author / reporter of this news, rather appreciate her to bring the INDIAN weeknesses in front so that their can be solution.
Jayalalithaa in Tamil Nadu, Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh (UP) and Mamata Bannerjee in West Bengal
Err... gender bias much? Where are Narendra Modi and Nitish Kumar. Not that I care, but just an observation. Oh! and it is too soon to provide a scorecard for Jaya's rule.
@Faisal K...
You are wrong ,we don't comment here because It is not in our hand and even Sports minister of the country was not invited.It is a full-fledged private investment .Just think ,why should private organizations care about poor people ?They care about their profit.It is just like IPL where pak players were not invited even after gov's request. Again the middle class family thinks poor are poor because of themselves . If a Hindu father doesn't send her son or girl to school or a muslim parent produces 5 children ,then is Gov or middle class family responsible for them ?? Is Private companies those who fund for such type of events are responsible ?
It is not a negative news , It is the quest of 300 million middle class people to achieve something ? After all Darwin didn't say any wrong thing. Survival of fittest .Poor people say rich men only says ,but don't do anything . But those poor people should understand that how difficult it is for a rich man to come to that stage ?Competition is like hell in India .
@Arindom and Sundeep It hurts your ego right? I believe the maxim is "Dont throw stones in glasshouses" In this day and age of technology, when you come to ET to laugh and mock Pakistan, trust me we can go and browse several embarrassing stories about your country. The conclusion is that your internal situation is no different then ours, so taunting each other doesn't help or change the reality on the ground. So Indians stop being sanctimonious, focus on our own problems while we do on ours.
I am sorry I am clueless what this article is about. At first I was curious about 'Stray Dog' but article was less about that and more about cliches on India, oh the mighty 'Poverty'. I still don't understand why everyone feels superior when they voices concerns of poor India but what of middle and upper class India? Do they have no right spend their money as they like. This F-1 is a venture of private business and was not supplanted by tax payers money. Now are you deriding them for being rich? Are you contending all the rich in entire India acquired their money through illegal means?
Key question one has to ask is are we putting richness of sharp mind below needs of poor? There has to be cultural change in our society. We need to start hating poverty instead of condoning it with stupid articles like this.
What a pathetic piece of article this is. Who said Mayawati is running UP efficiently?
the only way jholawallas can stay in circulation these days it seems is by being the interminably moaning, complaining, bitching and whingeing!! Whicle the rich India tries hard to match the rest of the world while also trying to get the poor India out of the morass - nothing will satisfy the jholawallas other than rich India relapsing back into poor India and the entire coountry goes back to the great 60's era of begging for food
and your point is??????
farmers are comitting suicide when the prices of food stuff is sky high. Dont you see some body making easy billions? Is F1 responsible for this mess. It is people like Sharad pawer, who are looting the nation through his army of middle-men. No journilist ever exposes him. Blame F1, everybody does.
Stray dog did give the Indian touch to Formula One. If it had not arrived in time you journalists would have had nothing to write about. "Formula One race happened as it happens all over the world", would not be much of story, would it? Every success story in India has to accompanied by a contrast story. For example http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/oct/30/india-formula-one-poverty-villages?newsfeed=true
Article is as confused as India. Starting from the title to the end, I wonder if one can make up what this author is trying to say? No use writing if you have nothing worthwhile to say. Whole article is like someone murmuring in dream...
Hmm....
Our Indian Friends missing from comments section in this piece, here too.
Just as our Indian Friends will not comment on any positive news about Pakistan, they will not respond to negative news on India.
Interesting!!
@Author
Your posts almost always provide me with a 'feel good factor' vis-a-vis India.
Its private investment that's running the F1 show, tax payers money is not involved. Sports Minister Makam wasn't even invited to the race. All the ills that she is discribing is due to government apathy why bring in F1 in it? I think she wants the world to still relate India with jungles, elephants and snake-charmers.
Other i was asking my indians brothers can they say something true about india no one answer my question i think today miss malhotra ji did it thank u miss u are great telling the truth god bless u lady and i know that too that india is number one country in term of loving there country in the world.