Thursday, December 31, 2015

Of Stock-splits and Bonuses


Stock splits are a farce in India.
In fact the capital markets have a fundamental flaw in the model. The face value should have been Rs.1/- ... instead, they had started with Rs.1000 and Rs.100 in the 1950s ... and later moved to 10.. then 5,2,1... who knows, maybe even 50 paise in future!! Ridiculous.

Stock splits serve no purpose other than increasing the pathetic liquid stocks in floating, by a small margin.... it still is nowhere near where it should be... but something is better than nothing.

And people have the dirty habit of punting on stock split as an event. In investment terms, the existing sharholder does not see reserves and surplus being redistributed to him. Stock split is nothing but hair split. No value to anyone other than the promotor sharks and the big broker sharks, who can happily punt, and make even more money.

Floating stocks in some of the scrips is pathetic... slightly more than 10% of paid up capital... It is high time we made amendments to the Companies Act 1956, by making the face value of stocks uniform, and make a mandatory 50% liquidity in the market. With 10% liquidity, the promotors and the big borkers can easily manipulate the market, which is what is happening today.

As for Bonus, it is slightly better than stock splits - but not by much.
Technically, bonus shares are a way to redistribute the Reserves and Surplus of the company, after providing for all liabilities ( in other words, giving back some of the profits of the company to the shareholders, after all debtors are taken care of). But again think of this - if you are a long term investor, ie, a real shareholder running a company, would you rather prefer the money to work for bettering the company prospects, or would yo prefer to punt?

A classic case of this is Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathway. Buffet has refused to give bonus or splits since the company was formed in the 1950s. Every dollar worth of those shares was selling at $100,000 apiece, until a few years ago, when he was forced to split, due to per-share price shooting over a 100000, making it unaffordable for many commoners.

I found Tata Power splitting from 1000, to 10 stocks of 100 each... I laughed at it. What the hell is the difference between buying and holding 1 stock of Rs.1000, vs holding 10 stocks of Rs.100? Unless one is saying " I buy only 5 stocks at a time".

These gimmicks are supposedly to help grow the small investor community, but the real beneficiaries are the sharks.

The other issue is how the splits and bonus are treated for taxes. Splits carry no implications. But bonus has tax implications.
If you buy a stock for 500 stocks for 200 rupees today, and it gives a 1:1 bonus, then ex-bonus, you will have 1000 stocks ( at ideally Rs100, but manipulations will ensure that it gets to 150 in no time, and then crash back to 75 apiece). Now, the original 500 can be sold at 500*100... booking a short term loss ( if holding for less than a year). In the eyes of the taxman, the cost of acquisition of the 500 bonus shares is zero. So, if you sell right after ex-bonus, you attract huge ST Capital gains on those 500 bonus shares. If you hold them, and sell after one year, you pay zero. The short term loss that you may have booked, can be set off against any short term capital gains in that FY.
So, the smartest way to play bonus is to buy ahead of the bonus, and sell the original shares within a year, and then hold on to the bonus for more than a year, and avoid taxes completely.
heart emoticon D heart emoticon

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Shinkansen for Yashodha Ben

Many people have criticized the proposed bullet train ("Shinkansen", in Japanese) link between Mumbai and Ahmedabad without going into the details. Newspapers scream " Can India afford to spend 90000 crores on bullet trains? For this money, why don't we feed the mouths of the poor for free?" . Other "intellectuals" opine that instead of spending money on bullet trains, the Railways should spend on improving safety of Railways and reduce the number of accidents.  In short, "expert opinions" from one and all, range from "concerns" on it's economics, to plain socialistic rhetoric, without going into perspectives.

I say perspectives, because full details are yet to emerge, in public domain. But let me try and interpret the various facets of the arguments, first, as a Finance professional, and then, as a Railwayman's son, who has grown up looking at rail tracks practically every day of my school life.

Before I start, let me also make a caveat. Whether Bullet trains are economically viable or not, has been a debate in every country, including the mother of them all, Japan. The fact is that bullet trains operate in many countries as on date - the Eurozone, Japan, Korea, China, and Taiwan , to name a few. They have faced this question at varying points of time, and their responses have been very different.

I am not going to make a conclusion on whether bullet trains are right for India or not. I leave it to you to decide. Hopefully my perspectives will help come to some conclusions.

Firstly, the "award". The shrills in the media seem to insinuate that Japan has been "favoured" without "tendering", or without feasibility studies. So untrue. Japan had tabled a feasibility report, per an Economic Times news in July 2015.  

http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2015-07-20/news/64638750_1_bullet-train-train-fare-jica

It may also be recalled that China and France also had bid for this., though not in the form of tender. The fact is that this project was one of the promises made by this government when they were voted to power in 2014, and within 18 months, they have taken the first concrete step to fulfil this. People , who are so used to decisions pending in the corridors of Rail Bhavan, waiting for bribes to be settled before awarding projects, in the past, are perhaps unable to digest the fact that a project of this magnitude can be decided in only 18 months.  As a flashback, I was witness to the Madurai-Dindugal-Karur Broad gauge Railway project, a motley 150 km stretch, taking 7 years from allocation of funds for feasibility study, to approval... and another 13 years to build, of which the first three years' funds were spent, building new staff quarters with that project money!! Those were the heady 80s. It is also worth mentioning here that this project was actually mooted firstly during the tenure of Lallu Prasad Yadav as Railway minister, and also during the MMS period. Feasibility studies were conducted even then, but socialism (read: electoral prospects) prevailed then.

Secondly, the economics. Sketchy information available in public domain at this point , point to a cost of Rs.90,000 crores, on an average. I assume that this covers the complete Capital expenditure, ranging from land to laying of tracks, to rolling stock and related infrastructure.  Of this, roughly 80% is going to to be funded by Japan. The balance 20%, I expect, would come mainly from assessed commercial value of land - both acquired as well as that of Govt, as well as related infra costs. Let us leave this portion for the moment ( approx Rs.18,000 crores). Japan has agreed to this make this a long term loan of 50 years, at 0.5% interest. If you do even a simple EMI loan calculation, this works out to a repayment of Rs.136 crores per month over 50 years ( fixed rate)!!!  And, how does one fund the 136 crores per month in EMI? Simple. Through ticket sales, and commercial exploitation. Big deal for an aspiring super power?? You decide.  Contrast that with China's bid. Assuming the project cost was the same, the interest at 1.5% for the same tenure, would have resulted in additional interest burden of Rs.16,000 crores that we have now managed to avoid.

Thirdly, why Mumbai-Ahmedabad? Why not any other sector? The answers are manifold. One, this is one of the busiest sectors of the Indian Railways for passenger traffic. Two, affordability of fares ( expected to be the same as first class sleeper fares) in one of the best, in this sector. Three, the region is comparatively safer, seismically, with no mountains to content with. Four, Gujarat has proven time and again that it is one of the easiest states for land acquisition for such projects. You dont want the pilot bullet train project in the country to be mired in land acquisition delays, do you?

Fourthly, why Japan, and why not China? ( France did not qualify). One, as we saw above, financial terms are too compelling. But in my opinion, this decision to go with Japan is a masterstroke by the govt. For both financial and strategic reasons. Financially, it is now universally expected that it is a matter of time before the Yuan will become one of the de-facto currencies of the world. And with it will come appreciation of that currency. Which means we need to shell out more than the 136 crores that we expect now, and that could affect the project viability. Whereas, the Yen is expected to decline slowly. ( While confirmation is awaited, I expect this to be a Yen-denominated loan, not a US $ loan). But also, strategically, why would we want to go to bed with our "enemy no. 1" for a project of this size and magnitude? We would be much better off going with Japan, especially given that this project will not be the last of the bullet train projects in India. The stakes, diplomatically , are much higher, in favour of Japan.

Fifthly, the spurious argument "Railways should spend on safety, and not on fancy projects like this". This is flimsy. If a bank is willing to lend you 80 lakhs to build a brand new 1 crore state of the art house at 0.5% loan rate, asking you to pitch in the balance 20 lacs, would you rather focus on quickly grabbing this offer, or would you rather say " oh, but my old TV is broken and I need to fix it first before buying a new house." " I first need to fix my water pipe" etc....  ??  You decide. The other aspect to be considered is, Japan is willing to lend this soft loan only for the bullet train project. Obviously they are not doing charity work, but are putting their excess forex reserves to good commercial use, thereby helping clear up the balance sheet of the Bank of Japan to the extent of this loan. Japan as an economy has stopped growing, and by a project return on investment of even 5%, the returns can be higher for them. Apart from keeping their bullet train factories humming, of course. In short, they are willing to lend specifically for this project, and not for other purposes. It , therefore, makes eminent sense to grab the offer. And yes, if we award them, then a quid-pro-quo of safety projects are definitely possible.

Sixthly, I am sure the government will insist on a good portion of the coaches and related infra to be manufactured in India ( "Make in India") , even as Japan may insist on retaining the "strategic" portions with them. Over time, we will learn to "crack that code" too. Indians are smart in that. If in doubt, look at ISRO.  This Make In India is expected create jobs, and the trickle down effect on the economy.

Lastly, why a luxury bullet train? The answer to that is simple....  why are we driving in Marutis and BMWs now, when Ambassadors and clunkers are cheaper? The world has moved on, and we need to keep pace with changing times, otherwise our aspiration as a superpower will remain just that - a promise. But leave aside this intangible for a moment. Studies in Japan have proved beyond doubt, that their Shinkansen network has resulted in companies moving away from Tokyo and Osaka Metropolitan areas, into the smaller towns, thereby giving huge economic benefits arising out of decongesting mega cities. It is common knowledge that Mumbai and Ahmedabad are already bursting at their seams. If corrective measures to decongest are not taken now, how will these cities even survive in 50 years? I have travelled in Gujarat extensively, and I can easily think of Valsad, Vapi, Surat, Bharauch, Anand and Vadodra and Ankhleshwar , as towns that will lie on this bullet train route,  that can take in the decongestion of the mega cities, given that they have huge business communities that contribute a big chunk of Mumbai's financial clout. Makes sense?

So, then, what are the risks of this project succeeding ? Yes, the same as above.

  1. Unexpected strengthening of the Yen- unlikely, but possible.
  2. Possible failure of India to quickly indigenized. - If we did it with Maruti, why not here.
  3. Will this become a Financial white elephant? - Unlikely, as long as 136 crores per month cash is generated in the route. 
  4. Will it not impact the profitability of traditional rail route, now that a big chunk of passenger are expected to switch over? - On the contrary, I am convinced that this will improve the profitability of the existing routes. Because, the Railway makes money moving goods, and loses money at prevailing ticket prices and a 97% operating ratio. By moving passenger away from traditional routes, the number of passenger trains in those tracks can be reduced make it now possible to move more goods, and thereby, earning more money. And who knows, it may save the costs of quadrupling those tracks in 50 years! That alone can pay for the Rs.18,000 crores that the government has to fund for this project as part of the 20% project finance. 
  5. In Project Financing parlance, failure of speedy Financial Closure, will impact ROI and therefore, the viability- Possible
  6. Delay in land acquisition - possible, but then low probability.
  7. The other 20% project cost is not accounted for. - Well, think of the possible increase in cars and that will ply between these cities to cater to growing population, which will now be avoided. Think of the additional goods that will be moved by rail now, relieving the congestion in the roads ( by way of truck movements). Think of the economic costs avoided here....  that alone will be sufficient to pay for this project equity. 
  8. Oh, there is undue haste in decision-making. Maybe some kickbacks, who knows? - Until any information emerges to the contrary, I would like to believe that this has been a fair and transparent deal.
  9. Security threat to the lines - this could be for real, and this is where one of the biggest challenges for the Railways will come from. There are enough jealous eyes around the world waiting to see India implode, and there are enough stupid people in country who could end up inadvertently aiding that.

    So, my own take on the project?

    As a 5th grader, I had watched "The Bullet Train" in Madurai's Regal theatre. I had then wondered " when will we get such dream trains in India?". That dream may well soon be seeing the light of the day, and I am massively excited. I want my India to move on, into the modern world, and not get entangled in socialistic anachronisms.

    As for you, I leave it to your wise counsel.

Friday, December 11, 2015

दर्द-ए-ज़िन्दगी


ज़िन्दगी का हर पन्ना ख़्वाब निकला
ग़म भरा अफ़साने का किताब निकला 
सोचा था वक़्त ग़म का मरहम बनेगा -पर 
जीवन का  हर मोढ़ खराब निकला

सुकून  को ढूंढते मैं यूँ भटक गया था,
तालाब नज़र आया, पर सराब निकला

दर्द का पैमाना काफी दिलकश ज़रूर है 
बारिश का हर बूँद ग़म का शराब निकला


Friday, December 4, 2015

The Prayer of a Chennai Street Urchin

The skies suddenly had opened up
One dark morning,
during my daily rounds
Soon, there was water everywhere
People wading in waist high water, here and there.

Even as I stood musing,
in front of the movie-star's housing
I was ushered in,
along with a few rich men,
Something I could not have
even dreamt of, on drier days.

With one stroke of depression,
God suddenly had provided
All that an urchin could have coveted.

A roof over my head, that too of a celebrity,
Clothes from the samaritans running Charity
Those hands doling out food,
looked that those of almighty
It was if I had found heaven, by serendipity.

Water had brought in the Utopia of Marx
By inundating houses, offices and parks.
And now,
The actor, the watcher,
The maker and the made,
Are all under one roof,
In silent contemplation.

All praying in silent fear
For the skies to quickly clear.

Except for that solitary cheer.
For me, this deluge is so dear.

For, the waters will soon recede
The people, to their houses, will secede
I will be back on the street
Nowhere to hide, nothing to eat.
Nothing to wear,
Except pain and despair.

I need to escape the machinations
Of the hoodlum forcing me to beg
At traffic lights, my "second home".

I need to escape the torture of hunger
By eating leftovers, that leftover food
In those banana leaves,
outside marriage halls.

My honour has many holes
In that sartorial "beauty"
On my torso
No one to care,
My body goes bare.

My life will revert
To that mountain of filth,
Dumped by the garbage van
From where I pick paper and plastic
To eek out my survival.

So, Oh God!
Let the rains continue.
Let me continue in this dream state
Let me enjoy the warmth
Of Four walls, for some more time.
Let me pose alongside the Star
In my new clothes from afar
Let me savour hot food
A once-in-a-lifetime chance so good
Let me continue in delusion-
Right in this deluge.

❤D❤














pyaar ka khazaanaa

नैनें मिले, और मोहब्बत का महसूल हुआ
क़र्ज़-ए-प्यार एक मुस्कान में ही वसूल हुआ
सोचा था माही बनना आसान नहीं है  -पर
क़िला-ए-इश्क़ एक पल में ही हुसूल हुआ

पता नहीं तेरी अंगड़ाई की क्या मिसाल  दूँ,
ऐसा लगता है, हर लफ्ज़-ए-होंट फ़िज़ूल हुआ 

सोचा था इसी ख़ज़ाने के सहारे जी लूँ - पर
जुदाई की वक़्त आई, और दिल मलूल हुआ 

===============================



नैनें मिले, और मोहब्बत का महसूल हुआ
क़र्ज़-ए-प्यार एक मुस्कान में ही वसूल हुआ
सोचा था माही बनने में रसूल की दुआ चाहिए -पर
क़िला-ए-इश्क़ एक ही पल में हुसूल हुआ

पता नहीं तेरी अंगड़ाई की क्या मिसाल  दूँ,
ऐसा लगता है, हर लफ्ज़-ए-होंट फ़िज़ूल हुआ 

सोचा था इसी ख़ज़ाने के सहारे जी लूँ - पर
जुदाई की वक़्त आई, और दिल मलूल हुआ 

❤D❤


महसूल- income, revenue
वसूल - collection
फ़िज़ूल - useless
रसूल  - messenger , prophet
हुसूल - acquisition
मलूल  - sad , depressed


Tuesday, December 1, 2015

bahut kuch hua... jo nahin hona tha
bahut royaa bhi tha... jabke nahin rona tha
kya bolun, jee tho zaroor bhar gayaa thaa
maar bahut khyaa thaa... jo nahin khaana tha

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

यह दिल की लड्डू है, जी भरके खा लें
यह देश की आन है , ख़ुशी से अपना लें
चाहे जितना भी कठिनाइयाँ क्यों न आएं
उन्नति के रास्ते को अपना तक़दीर बना लें

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Dear Prime Minister...

CAUTION: LONG POST. READ AT LEISURE.
Dear Mr. Modi, it is now about 18 months since the NDA was voted to power. You are roughly a third into your term of office of one of the world’s most tolerant democracies. When you had taken over at the helm, the economy was in doldrums, due to disingenuous management of the country by the previous regime. You had successfully ridden on the discontent, projecting “ache din” and hope for the future, in the hearts of the voters. Expectations were raised by you and the rest of the campaigning teams, and the emphatic vote of approval of your leadership made it incumbent on you to deliver. You had taken over, in the face of a toothless opposition, a stunned media, and a mortified western money power, which had hoped that you lost. The grandiose way in which you started off made us all believe that change is in the air.
I am sorry to note that in just these 18 months, all this looks like a mirage. Or at least that is what the perception is, amongst people, especially the man on the street. In my opinion, there are have been a few glaring acts or omission and commission, which I would like to bring to your attention:
1. Your reputation as a master communicator has taken a severe beating. See Mr. Modi, oratorical skills are different from communication skills. So, while you raised people’s expectations during your campaign days, and rightly so, you probably forgot to switch off the campaign mode, and to switch over to communication mode. Your first mistake was failing to level-set people’s expectations. You failed to communicate effectively that it would take time for 68 years of mismanagement to be reversed, and for tangible results to be seen, and that until then people need to be patient. This should have been targeted at the large middle class that voted you to power. The result? Expectations were raised sky-high on day one, and when the commoner did not see tangible results, discontent set in.
2. Wrong choice of words in communicating the intent and suggested actions with regard to black money, did not help either. Of course, you did not do that, but your partymen did. So, the commoner was left to believe that he would actually get Rs.15 lakhs into his own bank account within a hundred days of your government. The media and the opposition happily fed into this gaffe. Even if I were to take it as a pre-poll rhetoric, I expected you to step up, and communicate to the people on what exactly could be expected, and how long that would take. You failed. Result? Your government became the laughing stock of the naysayers, and is now being perceived as a untrustworthy one, by the voter. So, when you proclaimed bravely that 1.25 lakh crores were to be allocated to Bihar, people rolled on the floor, laughing.
3. Contrary to what people perceive, your government has indeed done some groundbreaking work already, in the background, the effects of which will be seen in the years to come. But, alas, a majority of them are intangibles, and are best understood only by the relatively more educated people. The commoner does not understand most of them. Therefore it became all the more incumbent on you to explain the plans and progress, and more importantly, the expected benefits, to the commoner. You failed. Result? The commoner knows something may have happened, but he does not understand what for, in the midst of more mundane problems. The most glaring example of this is the Jan Dhan Yojna, where more than 19 crore accounts had been opened in less than a year, in the remotest of villages, but the commoner does not understand the real purpose of them – that the hitherto subsidies are going to be done away with, and the money is going to go into his account directly. Very poor communication, Sir.

4. You are quietly clamping down on some of the gravest of malaises that are affecting our country – flow of illegal foreign money for nefarious activities through NGOs, clamping down on illegal use of government resources by officials, putting an end to lobbying in North and South Blocks for bureaucratic postings, making the babus a lot more accountable for their actions, than in the past, ensuring government servants are accountable for their responsibilities, by bringing in work discipline, cutting down red tape for faster decision making in the corridors of power etc. But along the way, you should have anticipated that resentment would arise, big time. For , those used to laid-back work style are now affected and would protest. And so, you should have stepped up your communication in this area to the customer of these services- the commoner. The common man should have been highlighted on the works being done to improve productivity, efficiency and accountability, and how it will benefit him. But, you failed. Result? A large section of the government employees are disgruntled, while at the same time, the consumer is not feeling any perceptible change at the ground level. In short, no one seems to be happy.
5. You let the loose cannons in your establishment continue with some of their irresponsible statements in public. I expected you to step up in a statesman-like manner, and put an end to those foul mouthing. Instead, I was shocked to find you joining the row, stooping to levels that no PM would perhaps have done, to berate your opponents, during your election campaign in Bihar. The opposition and media, aided by sinister foreign funding were quick to latch on to these blunders, instigated some of their stooges to “ return awards to protest against intolerance” and launched a scathing attack on your government. Almost to the level of comparing your government to that of Benito Mussolini. And yet, your silence has continued. I am sure, Sir, you are aware that sustained silence is tantamount to acceptance. I am sure you are not accepting any of the canards being spread, because you know that is not the truth. Yet, you chose to compete with Manmohan Singh in silence. Result? The image of your government has taken a severe beating.
So, is everything lost, Sir? No. Not at all. On the contrary, this is a fantastic opportunity for some real course correction- provided you choose to view it as such. As an outsider, I do observe a few areas, that may need your immediate attention. I am sure a lot more can be done than just this small list.
1. Where is the daily media briefing, Sir?. Why don’t you set up a team, who will do a daily briefing to the media on what has been happening, how performance has been against set targets, and what the nest steps are, and how long they will take? This is one of the biggest gaps, as I see it. Are you afraid that uncomfortable questions would be asked? Of course, uncomfortable questions are bound to be raised. But, running away from them is only going to exacerbate. Instead, take the bull by the horns, with the help of a few very capable media management people in your team. Explain to the people, through the very media that seeks to deride you, on what exactly had been happening, the progress, challenges and actions, going forward. This will inherently bring in a modicum of transparency and accountability in the system. Without this, the only news people will hear from a parochial media is some beefy news, and unjustified jokes about your foreign trips. Use the media to your advantage. Don’t allow them to be your adversaries.
2. Make sure that visible change for the better happens on the streets. I was initially happy the food inflation was maintained low, in spite of projected lower rains. However, towards the end of the rainy seasons, it was amply evident that the government had not taken proactive steps to import more pulses, and help control the prices. The raid on hoarders was a welcome step, but it could have been done much earlier, in order to prevent any heartburn. Sadly, that did not help. Plus, not enough surplus pulses of the variety we consume were available, making imports tougher. But again, no one in your government came out and explain the real situation to the public – yet another communications failure.
3. It is time for you to make significant changes to your council of ministers. A few of them like Suresh Prabhu, Parrikar, V K Singh, Irani etc are doing fabulous jobs. A few of them are OK types. The rest are rank incompetent, starting with your Finance minister. Mr. Jaitley has not been able to effectively manage inflation, but had ended up arm-twisting the RBI into drastic interest rate cuts, in the hope that credit off take would happen. He does not have a pulse for the ground reality – where, demand is simply collapsing. The excess capacity that as created earlier on by India Inc will take time to absorb, and until then no matter how low the interest rates goes, incremental demand is unlikely to pick up. If you want more proof, look no further than corporate performance has fallen off the cliff over the last two questers. While revenues are down, due to lower demand, profits too are lagging, in spite of lower commodity prices. Mr. Jaitley’s shocking push to have interest rates reduced, at a time when inflation was expected to pick up due to poor monsoon, was inexplicable. No wonder, the CPI has clawed back to 5% and is expected to rise further. And his latest attempts to impose a Swacch Bharat cess smacks of amateurism in implementation. We need a much better Finance minister. And as for the rest of the pack, the less said, the better.
4. While it is with good intention that you are undertaking novel schemes like voluntary surrender of gas connections, the swacch bharat cess etc., we would like you to present, during the ensuing budget session in Feb 2016, a report card on how much money was saved/ generated, and where it has been spent, or will be spent. The same applies to the perceived disproportionate reduction of prices of petrol and diesel prices at a tie when global oil prices are crashing. People do not realize that when oil prices go up, traders and merchants are quick to blame that, and increase prices, but refuse to pass on any reduction in prices. So, while I can understand that you are beefing up the oil pool account, rather than letting the middleman profiteer, we would much appreciate if you can table on the floor of the parliament( whenever the Opposition condescends to allow functioning, that is) , a status paper on the oil pool account and how you are planning to feed on it, if and when the oil prices start rising again. Communication, and accountability, Mr. Modi, is the need of the hour.
5. Your Make in India is a bold idea and will help us immensely, in future, no doubt. You do recognize the need for skilled labour, through the Skill India, to drive this big initiative, and rightly so. It is a well-known fact that virtually every budding youngster aspires to become an engineer or a doctor, and any other profession is considered a compromise. The result is a mushrooming of Engineering and Medical colleges across the country, throwing quality of education to the winds. As rightly pointed out by Mr. Narayana Murthy, almost 75% of the engineering graduates that come out of college are simple unemployable, meaning, they do not possess the necessary skills to jell into the corporate world, and worse, there is a massive dearth of skilled labour in the shop floors of manufacturing units. The only solution to this is vocational training, and the state governments should really be driving this. The Central HRD minister, apart from focusing on her full-time job of re-writing history books, should also devote at least part of her to grow at 8% like China did, we need skilled labour in serious numbers. Men and women, who are skilled in specific industries, eg., textiles, petrochem, airlines, leather, gems and jewellery etc. – rather than “engineers” who are not good enough to take up more challenging jobs, and who are too egoistic to take up skilled labour jobs. Let Skill India not remain a slogan. We are keen to see specific actions underneath, and the expected timelines. And if they are already happening, then it is all the more incumbent on your ministers to articulate it to the public.
6. More than 30% of our GDP still comes from Agriculture. More importantly, 47% of our people are still engaged in this sector. It is shocking to see farmers being driven to the edge, and committing suicide, after almost 70 years of our independence. I do not want to indulge in rhetoric of what the successive governments had done about it. The proof of the pudding is in the eating, as they say. While agriculture is a state subject, the Central government has a big role to play, by being proactive, and by planning for the longer term. Clearly, the governments have to act both short term, as well as long term. Short term measure include waiving off the loans of the affected farmers in the districts that are declared as drought-affected, providing alternative means of livelihood , like the MNREGA and numerous other schemes of public employment. The state governments have to take the lead, but will have to be backed up by the central government funds. You may ask where the money is going to come from. Well, the answer is, until we stop looking at the skies for rains, for survival of the farmer, this may have to go on. And, if we can find money to “re-capitalize” banks’ balance sheets, a euphemism for pardoning off their mismanagement of loans, I do not see why the farmers cannot be supported. Pls find a way, else please ignore the farmers at your own risk. The longer term measures include land reform acts that would enable larger tracts of land for mass cultivation, interlinking of rivers within a state ( to start with), like you have done in Gujarat, so that surplus water, does not go waste into the sea, but is gainfully diverted to the need areas. You will do well, Mr Modi, to remember that your popularity in Gujarat was to do with what you had achieved in each and every village there. We expect you to do an encore at the national level now.
7. Lastly, the world is full of crooks who are hell bent on diverting your intent of development. They have bought over the media, as it were, with funds supposedly from abroad, and are indulging in an unprecedented 24*7 smear campaign, to turn you from a hero to villain in less than 5 years. Today, each and every political party worth it’s salt has a media house under it’s belt – be it in publishing, or electronic media. Except your party. I understand that the parent organization of yours may be considering it unethical to manipulate people’s opinion, and that therefore you may be hesitating. But Sir, this is the time of Duryodhanas. There is no point in being a Dharmaputra. You need to be a Krishna, and play their own game, and defeat their evil designs. I suggest that your party takes up owning powerful media houses that can communicate the good works of your government, unlike the others who harp only on your shortcomings, but hide the good developments in the country. In today’s world, the power of the media cannot be over-emphasized. It is quite possible that this new media structure too may end up being biased in your party’s favour, but we will bear with it, for the sake of the nation’s betterment.
Sir, we appreciate your vision for the future. We laud your efforts in making India a progressive nation. In energy, where your big thrust in Solar power will surely bring down our dependence on coal, and make our development less polluting, in the years to come. In Nuclear power, where your efforts to lock in fuel supplies with the likes of Canada, France and Australia will help us in no small measures. In cleaning up the much maligned Ganga, and effort that will take a few more years to fructify. In providing the minimum basic toilet facility for one and all through Swacch Bharat … these are only a few good initiatives that I have listed.
The list of your initiatives and the to-dos may be much bigger than what I have tried to capture. The bottom-line, as I see is that a lot is being done, but needs to be communicated much more effectively that is currently being done. Remember Sir, managing expectations is much more important than the actual works, for your party to continue in power.
The nation is behind you, Sir, eager to see their lives change permanently for the better. We all are waiting, with bated breath, like an expectant father. We all know that if you cannot deliver, no one else can, from the current crop of leaders. Please step on the gas, and make “ Sab Ke Saath, Sab ka Vikas” a reality – and soon.
You yourself had mentioned that you need at least two terms in office to deliver what you had set out. It is now in your hands to make sure that you earn the second.
Thank you.
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Saturday, November 14, 2015

ग़म-ए-दिल

नैनों से ग़म-ए-दिल सुनाया न करो
आँखों में नमी नहीं , और रुलाया न करो।

उल्फत की राह में कांटें भर पड़े हैं
बहुत हो चुकी है, और सताया न करो।

अश्कों का दामन अब बनाया न करो
फरिशतें लापता हैं, अब बुलाया न करो।

दिल में कितने भी तूफ़ान क्यूँ  न उठें
दिल की बात हर शख्स को बताया न करो।

ग़ुज़रे हुए लम्हों को याद लाया न करो
आंसुओं का नमक ज़्यादा खाया न करो।

गली में तेज़ाब लेकर लोग घूमते हैं
ज़ख़्मी दिल किसी को दिखाया न करो।

❤D❤


Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Two Taml poems on rain

I have created two poems in Tamil, based on rain theme. Both use the same props - the thunder, water splashing, winds gushing, the toads etc..
One is romantic, optimistic. The coming together with the sweetheart. The other is of pathos, sadness. Separation of the souls. The second poem uses slightly more classical words than the first
=========
The joyous
மழைக் காலமிது உன் நினைவு வருகுது
சாரலின் சத்தத்தில் உன் குரல் ஒலிக்குது
இடி இடிக்கும்போது படபடப்புக் கூடுது
ஒவ்வொரு துடிப்பிலும் உன் குரல் ஒலிக்குது
வீசிடும் வாடைக்காற்றில் நெஞ்சமும் பறக்குது
ஆடிடும் மரமோ பச்சைக்கொடி காட்டுது
தேரையோ நம் கல்யாண வேதம் ஓதுது
மழைக் காலமிது உன் நினைவு வருகுது
=========
The sombre
இருட்டுவது வானமா, இல்லை என் மனமா?
உருட்டுவது இடியா இல்லை என் இதயமா?
வாடைக் காற்றினிலே பறக்குது காதல் வாசம்
“போகல்” என மரம் மறித்தும் போகிறாய் தூர தேசம்.
நான் அழ, வானம் அழ, கீற்று அழ, ஆவும் அழ
அறையிலும் மனதிலும் வேகமாய் இருட்டு சூழ
மையலின் மரணத்திற்க்கு தேரையின் தேம்பல்
மறுமுறைதான் பூக்குமோ நம் காதல் ஆம்பல்?
==========
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Tuesday, November 10, 2015

A short poem on rain


அவளே நினைவிலும் அவளே கனவிலும்- ஆனால்
அவள் மனதில் நான் இல்லை போலும்.

நான் விழித்திருக்க உலகம் உறங்கி இருக்க
மழை மட்டும் என்னுடன் அழுது இருக்க.

Saturday, November 7, 2015

अजब नक़ाब



जानवरों के प्यार में न मजब होता है 
एक दुसरे नज़दीकी में न तेज़ाब होता है

जितना भी जवाज़ देने की कोशिश करूँ
पर इसमे इंसान के सोच ज़रूर गज़ब होता है 

जिल्द का रंग प्यार को अक्सर तोड़ देता है
क्या कहूँ, इंसानियत का नक़ाब अजब होता है

❤D



Sunday, October 18, 2015

Making the most of Sahitya Academy Awards - Unofficial guidelines


Congratulations, awardee! You have won one of the most prestigious awards literary India has to offer. You join the elite group of people who have been honoured by the Government of India, for your literary achievements.

You could have received the award in any year starting 1955 until now. This user guide will guide you through the do's and don'ts. In fact, if you have received earlier rather than later, the better. Your brand equity can be enhanced many times over, with these simple guidelines.

  1. Firstly, note that along with the award come a heap of "perks" - privileged places to live in, money from govt. , ensuing government positions, etc etc..  not to mention intangibles like fame, recognition etc...   All with the taxpayer's money. 
  2. India has seen many acts of violence and intolerance over these last sixty years. However, because of the fact that many of you have been loyal to a particular family over the years, whenever an act of violence happened in the country in any part, you were required to look askance during the their tenure in the government. After all, those were isolated incidents, though unfortunate, and you had been given to understand that the secular fabric of the country shall not be damaged in any manner at those times. During these situations, your conscience should have been be busy either creating more literary work, or managing those plum job postings bestowed on you. So, there is no confusion.
  3. After May 2014, however, your position shall change overnight, in tune with new business environment. You conscience shall now be devoted full-time to function as the watchdog of the secular fabric of the nation. Don't bother finding out which textile mill that fabric was ever made in.
  4.  Just to make it amply clear, according to unwritten part of the constitution, "secular fabric" shall really mean ignoring the views of the majority portion of the population in order to appear "balanced" in the eyes of the others, and the rest of the Western World, nothing more. You shall constantly chide the majority, knowing well that no one dare resent. You shall praise people who draw derogatory paintings of Gods, and call it beautiful artwork, and expect the country to rise up and say "Wah! Wah!". The family and it's chamchas shall ensure that whoever does not do that shall be instantly labelled as communal. And at that moment, you have a bounden duty to call those protestors "bigots". Their sensibilities be damned. During these times "freedom of expression" shall prevail. Any protest shall instantly be labelled intolerance.
  5. When a Salman Rushdie book is prevented from getting released in the country, you shall look askance. At that time, your conscience shall instantly go into sleep mode. When a Tasleema Nasreen is heckled by zealots, you are under a national obligation to keep quiet. During such times, your heart shall instantly pause fluttering for freedom of speech and liberty. 
  6. After May 2014, whenever unfortunate acts of violence erupt, you shall be choosy about your reactions. For incidents like the Moradabad violence, where a significant portion of the affected people are from the majority, you shall instantly invoke the "look askance" code. 
  7. For all other condemnable acts of violence where even one person from the other sections is unfortunately affected, you shall not stop with merely condemning the incident. You shall surrender the Sahitya Academy award given to forthwith, never mind even if you got it in 1990...  this award is, after all,  a milking cow. You shall milk it when you receive- by way of the benefits  and perks mentioned. You shall then bask in it's glory, until people practically forget the fact that you had received it, in the first place. And when that cycle reaches end of life, when the commercial use-by date has been achieved, such incidents shall provide you with the perfect excuse to get back to the limelight. The media shall instantly confer you with the "apostle of secularism" award in exchange for your returning the S.A. Award. A good exchange offer, this.
  8. You shall not be bothered about the fact that law and order is a state subject, and that until the state government expressly asks the centre to intervene, the centre has no power to intervene, other than the extreme situation of invoking article 356 of the constitution if the governor recommends it. Never mind those constitutional niceties. Those are for the few people who care for the details. The vast majority are keen to see the "apostle of secularism" tag on you.

    Long live THE AWARDS!
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Sunday, October 11, 2015

The day the earth swayed

This is a narrative of an incident that I will never forget in my life, as a lad. This has happened in November 1977, when a super cyclone hit the coast of Tamil Nadu, in what was billed as one of the worst natural calamities ever, with thousands dead in Tamil Nadu and Andhra, and millions rendered homeless, and their livelihood gone.

====================
"Dey Dilip! Don't forget to pack your scrapbook and pen!" yelled dad, as he engrossed himself in tying up the holdall, full with the choicest of our clothes. He always made sure that whenever we visited Andhakudi during vacation, we did not "waste our time" but rather spent it "educationally" jotting down on that scrapbook, all our feelings, replete with new words in usage. I could not afford the luxury of a diary, but, hey, who cared? My father made made me read "The Hindu" editorial everyday, and asked me to mark at least ten new words, find out the meaning of them from the dictionary, and then learn to use them in sentences. That, he was convinced, was the best way to improve my vocabulary, never mind the fact that I was only in my fifth standard in school, and did not understand most of those editorials.
My brother and I were getting excited, as we usually did, whenever Andhakudi, that little ancestral village of ours close to the Nagappattinam coast in Tanjore district, beckoned us. We were so used to spending our summer vacations in Andhakudi, running around the lush green paddy fields, climbing tamarind and mango trees in search of success, plunging ourselves into the lake from a tree branch above and vying with each of our ten cousins to devour the choicest of Thavalai idlis, crispy vadais and the freshest of filter coffee you can ever imagine, made with cow's milk ( grandma used to milk it herself, grind the roasted coffee seeds afresh, and fill the big brass tumbler with divine aroma).
But this visit was special. My chitti ( mother's youngest sister) was looking forward to her Seemantham (baby shower) function. In the month of November. When the normally hot and humid Andhakudi gets a little dewy and chilly. After a rather uneventful train ride to Tiruvarur, the nearest train station, we barely had the time to stretch ourselves in the early morning air, when "Vaanga Ayyaa!" ( Welcome Sir!) beckoned us. It was Govindarasu, our servant in the pannai (farm). Govind was a fourth generation pannai worker. And was the last; his sons are now comfortably settled in government jobs. He was the epitome of loyalty, always keeping our interest in front of everything else. Govind took hold of the luggage, and led us to the rather decrepit bus-stand. We missing our early morning coffee already but the strict instruction "Amma asked you to come home directly" relayed, put paid to my father's thoughts of having a coffee at the Vasantha Bhavan.
It was going to be Diwali, the next day. Tiruvarur wore a festive look, with fire-cracker shops spread all over. There were only six trips for bus No.5 to Andhakudi through the day, so we had to wait for an hour and half, before we boarded the next one. The 11-km winding road made me feel tired. The lush green paddy fields along the way, littered with white cranes, and farmers going about their daily routine and above all, the beautiful coconut trees lining the horizon, were a spectacle. Little did I realize then, that those trees are going to be gone, by the time I took my return journey.
We reached home to a boisterous welcome. All my cousins had already assembled by then, and the cracker quotas for each of us had already been decided by then. I was one of the younger ones, and so mine largely consisted of flowerpots, chakrams and the like. My protests to get some of the louder and more dangerous bombs, a feeble attempt to establish my machismo, were met with " oh! you can do them next year when you grow up". I sulked for a brief while, but then the lure of the crackers was simply too much, and soon enough, I was on my feet, with the rest of the boys and girls in the Agraharam. Diwali day was grand, needless to say. The usual "Ganga Snaanam aacha?" ( Did you finish your bathing in the Ganga- that traditional way of greeting in South India) was also accompanied by " I hear that a storm is approaching. Is that true?" It was quite obvious that the so-called uneducated villagers were quite worldly-wise.
The usual fare of great food, with about 30 of us at home being fed to some of the mouth watering delicacies my grandma had made, capped the day. Matched only by those lively bursting of crackers. And a whole lot of fun in brand new clothes, with each one of us kids vying with each other to establish that his dress was the best. The cows at the cattle-shed were worshipped as Lakshmi, the Goddess of wealth. They were given a nice bath in the pond nearby, decorated well, puja were conducted and they were fed with a variety of bananas and freshly cut wild grass. The women got down to making preparations for the Seemantham function slated for the next day.
In the evening, during those rare hours when electricity was available, someone had turned on the valve radio for the 7.15 p.m. evening news in Tamil. The news reader started off : " All India Radio, Tiruchirappalli Radio Station. This news is being presented by Saroj Narayanaswamy. The severe cyclonic storm in the Bay of Bengal has moved in a North Westerly direction, and now lays centered about 300 km off the coast of Nagappattinam, and is expected to cross the coast near Cuddalore over the next 12 to 24 hours. During this period, severe winds up to 150 kmph are expected. The sea is expected to be rough. Warning flag no.9 indicating very high severity has been hoisted at the Nagapattinam coast. Fishermen have been advised not to venture into the sea".
There was sudden silence at home. The elders were in quiet confabulation. Do we go ahead with the function or not? But then, the sambandhis were already on their way, and so, it was decided to leave it to God and go ahead with the function. Clearly, by then, the festive atmosphere had given way to a rather eerie silence. People quietly went about doing their jobs. The kids were forced to sleep early.
"You need to get up early for the function in the morning". The sambandhis had arrived by then, had their dinner rather quietly, and retired early to bed, tired, as they were from the long journey.
Early next morning, the Vadyar ( Pandit) appeared promptly. The rituals were done through well. Lunch was a grand affair. The cyclone was kept at bay - literally. No sight of it yet. It was still bright and sunny during the day.
Towards the late evening, a quiet stillness pervaded the village. The streets were empty. The trees, it appeared, stood still. The coconut tree, right behind our home, appeared to brace for what was coming. The street dogs were nowhere to be seen. The lamp that my mother had lit right at the entrance of the home flickered as stoically as a saint in penance. The perfect calm before the storm, as it were. The cows were all removed from their shed, and were accommodated at the covered backyard - all fifty of them. Everyone was relieved that the function went off well, in spite of the impending threat. The kids, who were blissfully unaware of the goings-on till then, were a bit bewildered now, when grandma had accommodated quite a few poor villagers inside the safer confines of the house- probably another 20 of them, on top of the existing visitors. Quite an achievement it was, considering the fact that in the Agraharam, a non-brahmin staying overnight at a brahmin's house was quite unheard of. But grandma was firm. " At a time of existential crisis, only humanity matters", she said, as she went about doing her work. Coming from the otherwise staunch orthodox widow, it was a revelation for me, when I look back, after all these years.
The clear sky had quickly given way to murky clouds. In the distance, foxes were heard howling. The quiet still gave way to gentle breeze, and, soon enough, gale and heavy rains. Dad was quick to add: " this is what you call a torrent". This word would finally find it's way into my scrapbook. It was probably 11 at night by then. The winds had picked up pace, Electricity, as expected, had been switched off by the authorities as a precaution. The whole house was lit by a few lanterns. The tiny tots were wailing for milk, and grandma was busy the kitchen at that rather unearthly hour, firing up wood, to heat some milk. By now, the intensity of the thunder and lightning were frightening for anyone. It felt that the lightning was going to strike the house any time. One could see the Perumal Temple right opposite, occasionally lit by the lightning. One expected the terracotta tiles that served as the roof to fly off in the gale, exposing us all to the rain and winds. But no, the they held up admirably well.
At about 4 in the morning, the wind speed abruptly dropped. The rains too took a break, though it was still heavily overcast. The stony silence had returned. None of had slept through the night. But we all were happy, and relieved that the worst was behind us. The villagers who had taken refuge started going back to their huts, anxious to assess the damage. It was about to dawn. The elders were getting to have a quick nap.
Just when we thought things were returning to normal, all of a sudden, the sky opened up again. The gale returned. Only much stronger, this time. The villagers scurried back for cover. The wind speed this time was a lot stronger than the previous bout. Daylight had broken by now, and so, we were able to see the skyline clearly. The normally placid coconut tree at the backyard, was being bent ominously towards the house, terrifying the cows in the backyard, as well as the elders at home, For me, it was a spectacle unseen hitherto. The whizzing sound of the gale was threatening, in itself. Add to it, the mooing of the cows in the backyard, and the sound of the lashing water in the courtyard, I was quite scared by then. My bravado of wanting to burst big crackers just the day before, quietly gave way to refuge in my mother's pallu.
By then, the cyclone was in it's fullest fury. The rooftop was finished with testing its resistance. The few tiles had indeed flown away, and wind and water were gushing into some parts of the house. By now, I had started crying in sheer fear. The villagers moved into the only "dry corner" available, along with the rest of us. There we were, huddled in a corner of the house, clutching to each other for dear life, and indulging in our choicest prayers. At that moment, caste and creed took a backseat. Only humanity prevailed. It seemed that the coconut tree would fall on us at any moment. Not a word was spoken by anyone. All fifty of us. Even the infants had stopped wailing. It seemed that all of us were looking to meeting our end.
Except that hard-bred village lady, my grandmother. She seemed totally unperturbed by the goings on. She was murmuring the Vishnu Sahasranamam ( a popular prayer) as usual, but went about helping the rest of us with snacks and hot water, with the zeal of a missionary. When I think about it even now, her resilience on the face of adversity does not fail to astonish me.
The gale and the torrent continued. By the side of the house was a big pond, and paddy fields beyond. For a moment, I felt that the whole earth was swaying, like a drunkard under the influence of alcohol. One could see whole trees being uprooted, and getting rolled over by the fury of the cyclone. "Look! That is cartwheeling!" cried my father. Even at this hour, he was particular that I learnt my English hands-on. Literally.
After what seemed an eternity, the winds stopped. So did the rain. By then it was mid-day. The damage had been complete. Anthakudi looked more like Kurukshetra after the war. The trees that remained resolute, were bereft of any leaves. All those leaves could be seen mashed up on the walls of the houses, and on the road. Most houses had lost their roofs. As for the poor villagers, they had lost their entire huts, along with their meagre belongings. Grandmother, as usual, was quick to provide them with dry clothes that were available. All of us were asked to chip in, and we did.
The coconut tree, after all, spared our mansion, as if in deference to the wishes of the cows in the backyard.
Grandma was quick off the block. She shook up the ladies from their state of shock, into affirmative action. Food was prepared for all, with the remaining dry woodstock. The kids at first, followed by the rest. Hunger soon gave way to tiredness. I did not know when I had slept.
I was woken up by the sound of " Dey! Get up! Time for us to return to Madurai. We need to catch the 6 p.m. train, and it is already 9 a.m. here. We have a long way to go. Hurry up!". That was my father, literally shaking me awake from my slumber, the next morning.
It was going to take a while before normalcy could return. To the Households. To entire Andhakudi and the district. I learnt later in life, that the quietude in between the two storms actually was us being in the path of the eye of the storm, which apparently remains quiet for a while, only to resume its fury soon after.
By 11 a.m. we started from home. Four bullock carts, full with the guests, would bear our burden for the next six hours to traverse those eleven arduous kilometers. The buses had stopped, due to the trees lying strewn on the roads. Electricity poles had come down. As we left Andhakudi, I actually had wished we stayed put. For, right in front, the roads were inundated, and I felt I was entering the ocean in a bullock-cart! Scary prospect, indeed, for a 10-year old.. Dad was heard saying " Dey! Remember your asking me the meaning of the word "deluge", in the G K Reddy article in "The Hindu" the other day? This is it". I nodded in acknowledgement. It was hard to make out the end of the road and the start of the paddy fields, which, by now, were completely flooded. But Govind was at his skillful best. "You don't worry Sir! I will make sure that you reach Tiruvarur safely, in time for the train". One worry for us though, going forward, was the recently built bridge over the Pandavayaru, a distributary of the Cauvery. There were rumours that it had been washed away. If the flash floods persisted, we would have had no choice but to return to Andhakudi, midway.
Luckily, that was not to be, Govind deftly maneuvered his bullocks away from those fallen trees. the other carts followed suit. It was going to be an indefinitely long journey back home, as we found out later. It took two whole days thereafter, for us to reach Madurai. The railway tracks had been washed away. Communication lines of the Railways were snapped in the storm. The driver had nothing but his instinct, and a whole lot of courage, to traverse the distance, at snail's pace.
In hindsight, in what seemed like a new world for me, that 11 km bullock cart ride had taught the lad in me, many things in life. The resilience of the villagers from frequent adversities like this, and their ability to bounce back, was astonishing. The ability of birds and the dogs to sense the impending cyclone, and react in advance was unbelievable, as my father explained on the way. The skill of Govindarasu, who knew what he was doing, was quite reassuring, and had taught me to do whatever little I know, to the best of my ability. An otherwise conservative Agraharam lady who otherwise swore by orthodoxy turning into Mother Teresa and displaying the highest degree of humanitarianism on the face of a calamity, was an eye opener. And yes, the trip did make me learn and experience a few English words, firsthand.
And, as the bullock cart waded it's way towards Tiruvarur, I eagerly looked for those lovely coconut trees that had lined the horizon, on the way to Andhakudi, to see if they were still there.The line of unison between the overcast sky and the deluded paddyfields was now clean. The coconut trees were gone. "Cartwheeled!" I smiled to myself.
D

Thursday, October 8, 2015

The colour of secularism


Judging by media shrills, it appears that the intelligentsia of the country expect the Prime Minister to open a separate Ministry of Condolences and Condemnations, and function as the concerned minister. After all, the Dadri incident "has seen the PM maintaining a deafening silence, and he needs to come out with condolences and condemnations, failing which he is communal". That is what the media and these self-professed peddlers of secularism appear to be shouting at the top of his voice.
Yes, the poor man's life in Dadri is just as valuable as any other's, and the perpetrators deserve the highest punishment, no doubt. Yes, any act of violence is utterly condemnable by one and all, most of all, by the common people, who need to realize that however grave a perceived act of impropriety is, no individual can take law in his hands. That is not what a civil society stands for. Violence is NOT the solution for any social problem.
But then, how ridiculous! One cannot expect the PM of the country to make statement on a complete figment of imagination of the media. The unfortunate fact is, there are hundreds of killings across the country every day, and no one wants them to happen, for sure. However, that being the case, are we expecting the PM to spend his 24 hours, making serial condemnations on one incident after the other? Are the lives of the other 100 other victims of such daily incidents any less important? If the PM is expected to make a statement for each and every killing in the country that happens every day?
I would rather let the PM focus on his work of taking the country on the progress path and take into that elite club of developed nations, rather than making empty platitudes like his "eminent" predecessor had done, every time such an unfortunate event had happened then... the country needs action against the perpetrators, not " we will not keep quiet" formal speeches. And, the corrective action starts with the local police and the state government.
While there is no doubt that the Dadri incident is utterly condemnable. Killing of any human, for any reason, is. Make no mistake. But the politicians and media, alike, are basking in the sun of the incident, successfully making it an international issue. Even stranger is the UP govt report on the incident, which does not explicitly mention any beef incident.
By the way, has the media and these so-called intellectuals asked the question of what actions have been taken by the State Government, who has been taken to court and been punished, in the bloody Moradabad communal violence that happened just six months ago in U.P., where many people had lost their lives? Where is the accountability?
In the name of freedom of speech and civil liberty, barring certain pockets, the media has exhibited the most irresponsible behaviour - of showing the country in poor light, by blowing this unfortunate incident beyond proportions, and painting it in communal colour.
The other comic drama being enacted is the serial returning of the Sahitya Academy awards, by some of its recipients, in sympathy with the murdering of one of their fellow recipients, in a completely unrelated incident in Karnataka. Where were these so-called "feeble" writers who have returned their respective awards, when they happily accepted the Sahitya Academy awards, standing in the flood of blood that flowed during the 1984 anti-Sikh riots? Where was their sense of "secularism" then? Or during the 1992 riots? Or during the Mumbai bombings? Shame on these so-called intellectuals, who go head-over-heels to establish their "secular" credentials, by downplaying one section of the society and, in the process, showing India in extremely poor light, to the rest of the world.
I do not know why Modi has to make a statement for incidents like these. Educate me, folks. Did anyone ask why the CM of U.P. did not immediately make any statement, given that law and order is under him? Or the CM of Karnataka, for the matter?
During the same period, a UP police officer has been killed by beef mafia there. Did any of these so called secular media and politicians even bother to report about it, but for Indian Express and a couple of other newspapers?
Did we hear or see the media scream " shame on the nation" for that killing of an honest police officer just days ago, in the same U.P, who only did his job of implementing a law banning cow slaughter, that had been in vogue for over 60 years?
Sad to see such barbaric killings, of the police officer and of the poor man in Dadri, in this 21st century. Sadder to see the so-called intelligentsia of the country getting carried away.

❤D

Saturday, October 3, 2015

मेरी चाहत

मेरी चाहत
=======
मैं चुप ज़रूर हूँ, पर कुछ कहना चाहता हूँ
देखने में तो ख़ुश ज़रूर हूँ, पर आंसू बहाना चाहता हूँ।

फरिश्ते तो पूछते हैं, जन्नत में भी उदास क्यूँ हो
क्या करूँ , मरके भी फिर से मरना चाहता हूँ ।

मायूसियों की बारात सामने से गुज़र रही है
और खुद को बारातियों में शामिल करना चाहता हूँ।

मेरी मक़बरा को जितना भी फ़ूलों से सजा लें
क्या करूँ , मैं क़ब्र के अन्दर ही रहना चाहता हूँ ।



Wednesday, September 30, 2015

The deafening silence after Yakub's hanging


Prior to Yakub Memon's hanging by end July 2015, there was a flurry of intellectual self-gratification by political leaders, jurists and activists and the media moghuls alike. Many had petitioned President Pranab Mukherjee urging him to waive off the death sentence of 1993 Mumbai blasts convict Yakub Memon. Learned folks like Shashi Tharoor made impassioned speeches, to the galleries' "wah! wah!" accolades, on the bane of hanging, and how mercy should be shown to such "simpletons" who deserved to live on this earth, even if they chose sit right on top of the graves of hundreds that were mercilessly murdered by them in broad daylight.
The shrill calls for showing mercy to these marauders reached a crescendo at the last hour before Yakub's hanging. It felt as if these "activists" were literally clutching the feet of the hangman, begging him to let go of this " innocent man", even as the noose was being tightened. The Secularism Industry, surely, was in business.
It has been two months now. Grass has grown on Yakub's grave. Grass has grown, too, under the feet of these intellectuals. As far as I read and hear, none of these vocal mercy petitioners have approached any of the law-makers to abrogate the "draconian death penalty" provisions under the Indian Penal Code.
I am keen to know if Tharoor even asked to raise this issue on the floor of the parliament, during the 1 1/2 days the Monsoon session functioned for (!). I am keen on knowing which have these activists
have petitioned their respective MP to raise this in parliament. After all, these intellectuals know very well that the only way this law can be repealed, is by making an amendment, by both houses of the Parliament.
I am almost sure that none has raised this bogey thus far(I will be delighted to be proven wrong). None will. Not until the next set of hangings, riding on today's court ruling awarding death penalty to five conspirators in the Mumbai train blasts in 2006 reaches a crescendo in another 5 years perhaps. At that time, they get yet another chance to prove that they are the leaders of the Secularism Industry. At that time, the media gets another business opportunity to up their TRP ratings.
Until then, whisky will continue to flow freely in social gatherings. Until then, the media will have to find other "hot topics" like bashing up sadhus, to keep their TRP ratings. Until then, the terrorists can continue to feast on lamb biryanis in the cosy confines of jails.
heart emoticon D heart emoticon

Thursday, September 17, 2015

क्या जाने

ग़म-ए-सीने को दिल तोड़ने वाले क्या जाने
मोहब्बत के रस्मों को ज़मानेवाले क्या जाने।

हमसफ़र का सुकून क्या होता है- यह
अगले ही गली में मोड़ने वाले क्या जाने।

कितनी तकलीफ होती है ताबूत के अंदर
यह उपर से फूल छडाने वाले क्या जाने।

कितनी तन्हाई लगती है समुन्दर के नीचे- यह
साहिल से मोती को मांगने वाले क्या जाने।

❤D

Seenae kay gham kO dil thodnEwaalaE kyaa jaanE
mohabbat kii rasmoan kO zamaanewaalae kyaa jaanE
humsafar kaa sukoon kyaa hothaa hai - yeh
aglae hii gali mein modnaewaale kyaa jaanE
kitnii taqleef hothi hai thaabooth ke andhar
yeh oopar sE phool ChaDHAnEwaalaE kyaa jaanE
kitnii tanhaayi lagthi hai samundar ke neeche- yeh
saahil sE moti kO maangnewaalE kyaa jaanE

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

An Ode' to the Queen of Music





As you take your seat under the arclights
My heart turns into a sky with a million lights
Those diamond radiant nose-studs on your calm face
Signalling to me, the ensuing musical grace.

As silence descends outside, peace permeates all
Slowly the tanpura fills the air of the music hall
Slowly I feel being drawn into a whole new world
A world, where tranquility can be felt unfurled.

Your closed eyes, as you start off with an invocation
Brings tears of joy, without further provocation.
I dissolve in those tears, into the Raagam you present
An unfathomable sense of musical nirvana, so pleasant.

The Kirtanas that flow are an embodiment of devotion
Helping to keep the mind bereft of any commotion
Many a bruised heart has benefitted by this magic potion
Bhakti pervades the heart,  as the only emotion.

You make not any gestures, a scene of eternal beauty
Your still frame indeed is an exhibition of equanimity
Serenity is the source of your music, so true
Makes me wonder if sculptures can sing, too.

The three hours of trance come to an unexpected end
The heart yearns for more, but the night begins to descend
The Nightingale leaves, blazing a trail of effulgent musical light
Leaving me gasping for Sur-ambrosia, well into the night.

❤D









How can India aspire to be a thought-leader?

Two seemly disjointed happenings triggered this article today.  One – I was walking down an old alley here in Singapore, where a signage in ...