http://www.business-standard.com/article/beyond-business/party-politics-113080900950_1.html

*Malavika Sangghvi  |  New Delhi * *August 10, 2013* Last Updated at 00:09
IST
Party politics


Dear Anonymous Leading Industrialist, You know who you are. I met you at a
recent Mumbai party. You were three drinks down. You were tired and
emotional. It was late.

Politics <http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Politics> is
always a tricky subject to discuss under these circumstances. But what the
hell, we were old friends who liked the same American TV shows.

It began by us discussing the latest bit of news to emanate from the Narendra
Modi <http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Narendra+Modi> camp.
That he was hiring IIM grads to man his election campaign. You told me
you'd lost two middle-level managers in the last week.

So far so good. I trotted out my standard befuddlement about the limited
choice people like us had in the coming
elections<http://www.business-standard.com/search?type=news&q=Elections>.
An inefficient and scam-ridden incumbent versus a regressive communal
challenger.

You jumped on the inefficient scam-ridden incumbent bit, of course. Your
anger and frustration was palpable. The crumbling rupee, the international
downgrades. The buttressing of personal Swiss accounts by politicians in
power, they were all par for the course at parties like these.

I was prepared for the post-dinner vent. What took me by surprise was how
you found no need to challenge, let alone apologise for my perception that
your leader was anti-Muslim.

In fact the longer we spoke, the more alarming your diatribe became. From
being somewhat feeble but sincere at expressing dismay over the state of
things in our country on my part, it rapidly became a monologue in which
you revealed the extent of your suspicion and resentment against Muslims.

Frankly it took my breath away. Not that you felt that way - but that we
had reached a stage in our nation's life when men like you were not
embarrassed to express hatred against a community or a class of people.

What left me shaken and stirred, and unable to sleep that night was that I
was hearing these words not from a person who had horns on his head and
went around with a pitchfork, but a person who had attended the best
universities in the world, possessed one of the finest collections of jazz
and shared my passion for St Emillons.

How could such a person not see the fallacy of discriminating against
people or be unaware of the deep and dark consequences of that kind of
thinking?

In that chilling half-hour of your diatribe against Muslims, I found myself
thinking of Germany in the 1930s. Before the Holocaust and the killing of
six million people. Before Auswitchz and gas chambers and the awful wounds
of genocide. I wondered if there had been conversations like ours - and I
wondered if there had been industrialists like you, who had lived to regret
their words.

Because even though you expressed such a disturbing regressive streak, I
still cling to the fact that it is only frustration that makes you talk
like that. That beneath and beyond it you, like me, know that hatred and
discrimination can never be the way out. That boundaries and walls of any
kind diminish us. That wisdom lies in the strongest amongst us standing up
for the weakest.

Forgive me if these cliches sound like the banners on a passing truck, or
if what you describe as my bleeding heart, pseudo-liberal secularism sounds
naïve and effete to your ears. Perhaps some day we will meet again and all
my fears and apprehensions will have been proven to be misplaced and
alarmist.

Till that day though, you will have to forgive me if I don't seek you out
for such conversations. Or raise another glass of St Emillon with you.

Yours sincerely
Your average bleeding heart, pseudo- secularist.

Malavika Sangghvi is a Mumbai-based writer [email protected]
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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