Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Guns or Roses



There was a small arms survey done by Graduate Institute of International Studies. According to the survey there are 875 million guns held by civilians around the world. 270 million of them are with Americans. Shockingly (for me) India is second on the list with number of guns. Indian civilians have 46 million guns. Even though the number of guns per 100 people is very small for India, I could have never imagined more Indians have guns than anybody else except Americans.

I am an Indian living in USA. Concerned countries being #1 and #2 on the above mentioned list. I am living in a society where almost everybody has guns, but this very society is considered a very safe society. I do not disagree with that a whole lot. When I go out I do not worry about getting shot. But I do have difficulty understanding the need for guns. I could only come up with one, which is making me think of owning a gun myself. Looking at the numbers what happens if there is a conflict? what happens to those who do not have a gun? the only justifying reason I came up with is everybody has one, I do not want to be left out.

The other reasons which are a little farther from reality for me to own a gun include - one day I want to represent India in the Olympics or go on a hunting trip.

Now I am looking at owning a gun myself. This is a shocking development even for me, u would understand if you read my post after the Virginia Tech massacre.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

What do I know about India?

Whenever I call home and talk to my family and friends and try to preach them, they would just tell me - You don't know nothing about India maan, you live in America. What do you think Hyderabad is the same? you visited two years ago, there is a earth-sky difference from then and now. You Don't know Nothing.

Well my response is always been - Come on don't give me that crap. I know enough about India and Indian people, I lived in India for 23 years you know and have you heard about Internet, I would know things before they happen you know.

This might have happened to lot of you guys and gals out there. The last time this happened I decided to take more interest in the news from India, which I have gone away from.

My belief is a country will go as far as the people of that country. I quote Mahakavi ("The Great Poet") Gurujada Appa Rao "Deshamante Matti Kadoi Deshamante Manushuloi" meaning - A country is made up of people not soil. It is considered the universal truth. I have spent the last seven years in USA, but never stopped talking to my family and friends in India during that time. I hear the same things I heard back when I was in India. Though I cannot base the whole country's progress on the progress of these few I have always interacted with, I can certainly see why the progress of these few have been limited. India has certainly progressed during this period, maybe faster than some people might have thought, but not fast enough, not for me. Why do I think such is the case, its simple, India has become a larger free market during this time. Any free market depending on the size of the freeness, will progress proportional to that.

Anyway, economics aside I will go back to taking more interest in the Motherland, I decided to watch the new acclaimed movie "Chak de India". I could not watch more than first five minutes. The movie starts with a hockey match between India and Pakistan. Watching the speed at which the hero and other so called athletes were playing I could not take it anymore. It is a complete disrespect to the sport itself, because in reality the intensity on the ground will be so high that the athletes in such a match will have additional testosterone going. This first five minutes of the movie shows you the progress Indian cinema has made. I don't think the hockey players around the world would appreciate it for its depiction of a real life hockey game. of course they cannot replicate the reality but they can certainly reduce the gap. Well it resembled more to a street hockey game.

I would definitely love to see India progress at the current rate or at higher rate in the future. Once again that depends on how fast we Indians progress.

Monday, August 13, 2007

"Much as we in the West may resent it, India has a lot to teach us when it comes to religious tolerance" - Gary Weiss

India's Jews -

There's no question that India's secularism is under strain. Militant Hinduism remains as much a potent force as extremist Islam. The ongoing bloodletting in Kashmir is an open sore, and the periodic spasms of communal violence in Gujarat, combined with memories of the Mumbai bombings of 2006, have led to undeniable tensions. Just have a chat sometime with a Kashmiri Pandit--a Hindu displaced from that war-torn region--and you will know what I mean.

Yet this country of 1 billion largely impoverished people, home of the second-largest Muslim population in the world, still manages to maintain a sturdy system of democracy based on respect for religious and ethnic diversity. In the U.S., diversity is a politically correct slogan. In India it is a historical fact. Much as we in the West may resent it, India has a lot to teach us when it comes to religious tolerance.

To my mind, the best example of that can be found in the remarkable story of a tiny minority--India's Jewish community. India may be the only country in the world that has been free of anti-Semitic prejudice throughout its history. As the Jewish genealogical journal Avotaynu recently observed in an article on one Indian Jewish group, "The Bene Israel flourished for 2,400 years in a tolerant land that has never known anti-Semitism, and were successful in all aspects of the socio-economic and cultural life of the people of the region."

That's really a bit astonishing, if not ridiculous, when you think about it. Compare that with any Western nation, be it France or Russia or even the U.S., where discrimination against Jews in housing was a fact of life as recently as the 1950s. But in "backward" India, from the beginning, the Jewish communities have not only been free of discrimination but have dominated the commercial life of every place where they have settled--something that has fed traditional European anti-Semitism.

Why has India remained free of this scourge? Various reasons have been advanced for that--such as, the Hindu religion does not seek to convert those from other faiths. What we do know is that anti-Semitism seems alien to the Indian character. And if you don't believe me, I suggest you take a trip to a southern Indian town called Kochi, in the state of Kerala. There you can find the physical evidence of this glaring historical anomaly.

Kochi, formerly called Cochin, is a former European settlement with a large Christian population and a seafaring heritage. It is a town of enormous charm that reminds some visitors of the Caribbean more than India. On a shabby lane in Kochi you can find a complex of four 439-year-old buildings--the Paradesi Synagogue.

There you have Exhibit A for India's tradition of secularism and day-to-day tolerance of religious diversity: the fact that this synagogue exists at all.

Kochi's Jews trace their descent back to 700 B.C., and lived in harmony with their Muslim and Hindu neighbors until--well, I guess I’ll have to backtrack a bit on my claim that there was never anti-Semitism in India. There was quite a bit in the 16th century.

Kochi's Jews were indeed persecuted--not by Indians but by the Portuguese, following in the glorious traditions of the Inquisition. With the help of the Hindu maharaja and the Dutch, Kochi's Jewish community rebuilt its synagogue, burned by the Portuguese, in its current location near his maharajah's palace. It has remained there, unmolested, ever since.

The Jews of Kochi are largely gone now, mostly emigrated to Israel, but it remains a very Jewish landmark in a very non-Jewish country. The synagogue, at least when I last visited it, had none of the heavy security that is common in large New York City synagogues. A short distance away is a Jewish cemetery, and again the distinction is in what you don't see--there's none of the overturned headstones and vandalism that have been sadly common in Jewish cemeteries in the U.S. Yes, even in Brooklyn.

It's pretty much the same story elsewhere in India. Separate Jewish communities were established over the years in Mumbai, where the Bene Israel arrived over 2,000 years ago, and in Kolkata, where a more recent community of Middle Eastern "Baghdadi" Jews became established. In the northeast of India is the Bnai Menashe, who trace their origins to the Israelite tribe of Menasseh.

The Indian Jewish community has never been very large, with the Bene Israel numbering just 35,000 at its peak in the 1950s. Yet Indian Jews have achieved distinction far beyond their numbers. A great many chose to make a career in the military under the Raj (British rule that ended with independence 60 years ago this week)--a phenomenon that, believe me, is certainly foreign to the Eastern European Jewish experience.

Indeed, the most well-known Indian Jew is an eminent soldier: Lt. Gen. J.F.R. Jacob, who commanded Indian forces in the invasion of East Pakistan in 1971. Other Indian Jews achieved distinction in Bollywood, such as the pioneering actress Sulochana, queen of the Indian silent movies. It would probably surprise most Seinfeld fans to learn that Brian George, who played the sad-sack Pakistani restaurant owner Babu Bhatt, is an Israeli of Indian descent.

To be sure, the small size of the Jewish community has meant that the Jews of India never rose to become a political force. As a community it has never exerted any influence on Indian politics, and certainly not on the rabidly anti-Israel foreign policy that has marked much of India's modern history. In other countries, the absence of Jewish communal influence--or even the absence of Jews--has not prevented rulers from using Jews as scapegoats. Poland of the late 1960s, the era of "anti-Semitism without Jews," is a good example.

All this has a way of mystifying Indians. I've always had difficulty with Indians when we've discussed anti-Semitism. They don't understand it, and to tell you the truth, I've had difficulty explaining it myself.

Indians are sometimes accused of being condescending toward Westerners, and of being excessively preachy in their attitude toward other nations. That accusation is sometimes correct. But when it comes to India's treatment of one of its smallest and most vulnerable minorities, there is ample reason to be both condescending--and proud.



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The above article was written for Forbes by Gary Weiss as a tribute to 60 years of India's Independence. As an Indian I found a lot of statements true in this article. When I first read this, I was going through my emotions of Mr.Weiss being so right. In a statement Mr.Weiss writes of difficulty explaining Indians about anti-semitism. Well anti-semitism was an unknown fact for me until I came to USA. I think his article explains a little bit why it is difficult for Indians to understand anti-semitism even when they were introduced to it. Lets see how by putting together certain points

- In the U.S., diversity is a politically correct slogan. In India it is a historical fact
- The Hindu religion does not seek to convert those from other faiths
- In one paragraph, he mentions Portuguese, Dutch, Hindus and Jews, well go back to point one and two. you would understand why the Hindu Maharajah restored the Synagogue.
- The Indian Jewish community has never been very large

I totally disagree on one subject with the writer, there is no truth at all about the existence of militant Hinduism in India, associating militancy and Hinduism is just propaganda or shear ignorance. If the author refers to RSS or the incidents in Gujarat, then he should understand that RSS is not a militant organization and the Gujarat incidents are examples of failure of democracy, it is a result of government officials taking a back step or in some cases joining the mob. It is an example of misuse of democracy and what misinformed and angry citizens even in a Democratic setup will do if the Law is not enforced. I can site tons of examples of those failures associated with American Democracy, one being the incidents after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, where everybody including some police officers were caught on tape stealing. Hindus, even today after bitter division of country in 1947, through 3 wars with Pakistan, through Militancy in Kashmir and in Punjab and with numerous terrorist attacks in recent history, will be the first people in this world to embrace peace with Muslims of this world. Period.