FEBRUARY 11, 2009

Go beyond sending 'pink chaddis'
Hindustan Times, February 10, 2009

What lies beneath

by Sagarika Ghose

Both the zealot and the sex symbol claim to be the defining face of a new 
India. Pramod Muthalik, the Sri Rama Sene chief, claims to represent a tidal 
wave of public revulsion against Western culture. In sharp contrast, bare 
midriffs and cleavages stare down from hoardings as if to declare proudly that 
it is they who represent the aspirations of every young Indian. A Facebook 
group, ‘A Consortium of Pub-Going Loose and Forward Women’ (a group to which 
your columnist also belongs) is now planning to send ‘pink chaddis’ to Muthalik 
in protest. Undoubtedly, the Sene’s actions are loathsome and unacceptable, but 
sending pink underwear to perverts is pretty undignified too.

In fact, therein lies the dilemma of most educated Indians today. Most of us 
are scandalised by the Sri Ram Sene’s actions, horrified at being told that 
‘love’ is foreign to India. We’d like to remind the Sene that the love stories 
of Shakuntala and Dushyant or of Roopmati and Baz Bahadur show that some of the 
greatest love stories of all times were made in India and love has always been 
a socially revolutionary force destroying taboos of caste, class and religion. 
St Valentine is only an upstart in our centuries-old experiments with romance. 
Also, where does one draw the line at ‘Western’ influences on India? Does the 
Sene know that the potato and even cottage cheese from which mithai is made, 
were, ‘foreign’ to India, brought in by Portuguese traders? The custodians of 
‘Hindu sanskriti’ are not just absurd, they don’t know their history.

Yet the dilemma is that groups like the Sri Rama Sene force the thoughtful 
Indian to defend things he may see as a fundamental right, but does not 
necessarily want to defend. However much we may hate the Sene, upholding the 
commercially-driven Valentine’s Day as a supreme cultural resource, or seeing 
the pub as the shining symbol of our social ‘freedom’ may not be forward 
movement for India.

Young people choosing urban lifestyles that are desi imitations of Sex And The 
City, is hardly a matter of celebration. Fears about ‘westernisation’ are so 
deep that with the exception of U.R. Ananthamurthy, few of Karnataka’s galaxy 
of public intellectuals have come to the defence of the young women drinking at 
the Amnesia Lounge in Mangalore on January 24.

Politically, there is a consensus on the moral failings of ‘pub culture’, with 
even the BJP’s ideological opposites, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot and 
Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss expressing energetic disapproval of pubs. 
When Union Minister Renuka Chowdhury urged that there should be a ‘pub bharo’ 
campaign, several of her own Karnataka Congress leaders protested that drinking 
was against their norms, in a state where the ‘rootless cosmopolitanism’ of the 
IT industry has been the focus of much cultural criticism.

Two years ago when the national anthem was played and not sung at an Infosys 
function, Kannadiga intellectuals said that software tycoons embodied an 
English-speaking cosmopolitanism that was far removed from the realities of 
India. At the recent IPL auction, the stark exhibition of glamour and wealth, 
in an economy where 500,000 workers have just lost their jobs, was an unabashed 
spectacle of rootless elitism.

History shows us the dangers inherent in an elite pleasure island floating in a 
sea of deprivation. The Iranian revolution of 1979 was a political movement 
against the repressive Shah, as also a massive conservative-religious backlash 
against a rich and westernised elite. Ayatollah Khomeini’s class war soon 
became a cultural war. Groups like the Sene have no mass support but the fact 
that militant traditionalism is now the calling card of thuggish youth shows a 
dangerous fusion of cultural and class hatred — a class war expressed through 
culture.

This is why India’s globalised westernised elite — or those who are its most 
visible face — are under attack by those who have a grievance against modern 
women and the new economy. The Sri Ram Sene, the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, 
the Kannada Rakshana Vedike or other myriad ‘religious’ or ‘cultural’ groups 
are all targeting ‘secular’ plays, fashion shows, the IT and biotechnology 
sectors or migrant workers. Every aspect of public life that is characterised 
by freedom and affluence is under threat and a potential target of violence. 
The chasm between the India of pubs and the India of the Sri Rama Sene is 
growing wider and as economic transformation produces more social unrest, the 
emerging elite might face more such attacks.

Which is why the battle for freedom and progress must be a sensible and a 
rational battle and not a trivial one where we fling coloured underwear at 
maniacs. We must learn from the Nehruvians of the 40s and 50s who were 
incredibly westernised, but deeply rooted; many of whom were rich but lived 
modest, tasteful lives. They drank, smoked and romanced, yet were discreet and 
embodied a tradition of Indian elitism that was rooted in excellence. C. 
Rajagopalachari was considered a scholar in three language. Rukmini Devi 
Arundale may have been deeply influenced by the Theosophical Movement but 
dedicated her life to reviving Indian dance and music by founding the 
Kalakshetra academy. Sarojini Naidu’s favourite poet was Shelley but she took 
pride in the fact that she could speak Urdu, Telugu and Bengali. However 
westernised their minds, India’s nationalist elite could not be accused of 
living in a cocoon of extravagant privilege or having their pleasure
 spots guarded by armed commandos.

Maybe India’s young, instead of trying to be like characters from Sex In The 
City, should try to emulate Sarojini Naidu and Jawaharlal Nehru. While the 
ghastly cultural hoodlums must be dealt with sternly by the law, the lifestyle 
norms we choose, especially in public, must be attuned to our surroundings.

If we persist in trying to create a mindlessly imitative mythical Las Vegas, we 
will not be able to defeat the Sri Rama Sene, however many pink panties we may 
throw at them.
 2009  
LABELS: CITIZENS CAMPAIGN, KARNATAKA, PROTEST, SHRI RAM SENA


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