http://scroll.in/article/774643/stop-calling-us-presstitutes-a-message-to-my-friends-and-other-modi-supporters

OPINION
Stop calling us Presstitutes: A message to my friends and other Modi supporters

It is the duty of a writer, journalist, artist to question the
powers-that-be. Not doing so would be a disservice to the profession.
Rahul Pandita  · Yesterday · 05:30 pm

It has become very difficult to have a conversation with some people I
have known for years. Of late, something has changed drastically in
their worldview.

Till last year, these friends and acquaintances could at best be
described as admirers of Narendra Modi. In our conversations, Modi
never cropped up immediately. We had so many other things to talk
about: school girlfriends, solitary travels, lost homes, the precipice
of equal monthly instalments, or whether cycling is more effective
than running in reducing abdominal fat. Sometimes, only sometimes, an
odd remark would veer the conversation towards the nation’s state of
affairs.

At times like these, my friends would crack a joke about Rahul Gandhi
at which we would laugh together. They would say Modi had the spirit
to change India. I would argue otherwise, they would listen patiently
and offer their counterarguments. In the end they would say something
like “Modi deserves a chance”, after which we would return to school
girlfriends.

But this is no longer possible with most of them. No sooner do we meet
than the first question is thrown like a Molotov cocktail: why are you
guys only interested in reporting negative things against Modi?

Learning the drill

By this time, you have already ignored a few things. On Facebook, you
have noticed that your friend is increasingly using “Presstitute” to
refer to your fraternity. You have also noticed other changes in his
Facebook feed, some of which are spookily common to the Facebook
timelines of such friends.

The Facebook wall of these friends will invariably have the following
links (apart from their DPs in Digital India colours):

1. “He tied a slice of onion to his sole overnight. When he woke up,
he witnessed a miracle.”

2. Subramanian Swamy exposes Sonia Gandhi.

3. Brave Kurdish women guerrillas fighting against ISIS.

4. Ayaan Hirsi Ali on why Islam needs reformation.

5. The result of at least one online IQ test in which the friend’s IQ
levels would have been found equal to that of Einstein.

Now back to “why are you guys”. It does not stop at that question.
Right afterwards, the scuffle last year between the journalist Rajdeep
Sardesai and Modi supporters in New York gets used as a litmus test to
determine whether they have done the right thing in inviting you to
their house for dinner. “He deliberately instigated the crowd,” they
vociferously say.

They indulge in their favourite pastime of abusing Nehru, which makes
you wonder whether they have begun to believe in PN Oak’s theories on
Taj Mahal. They also speak a lot about Israel and its prowess and it
seems as if they almost did a stint with the Israel Defense Forces.

By this time, you have learnt your lesson, you know the drill. You
just nod and make some non-committal noises. You don’t tell them you
were there when Rajdeep Sardesai was abused. You eat your food, nod at
everything and get the hell out of there.

The PR machinery

But then, you wonder what just happened. You know your friends are
successful professionals – doctors, software engineers, sales honchos.
They live in Delhi, New York, London. They like to think of themselves
as liberals, and as virtue signalling they say the right things about
gay rights and even pick up their wives’ dinner plates. It is hard to
believe that they derive pleasure out of a journalist getting heckled
by a bunch of people like themselves in New York.

I hope my friends read this. Because I want to tell them that the job
of a journalist is not to “merge pictures”. That is not even the job
of the Press Information Bureau, but let us not go there. A journalist
is morally obliged to show the cesspool beneath selfies and other
glitzy PR drives. Unless the journalist is selfie-struck himself or
his aim is to be part of a politician’s informal secretariat, he
should be constantly aiming at dissecting the State’s cadaver. As
Albert Camus said in his Nobel Prize speech in 1957: “By definition he
[the writer] cannot put himself today in the service of those who make
history; he is at the service of those who suffer it.”

Camus further elucidates this in his Letters to a German friend, which
he called a document emerging from the struggle against violence: “I
cannot believe that everything must be subordinated to a single end…I
should like to be able to love my country and still love justice. I
don’t want any greatness for it, particularly a greatness born of
blood and falsehood.”

Even if we, for a moment, forget the intellectual argument, how do my
friends see journalism as a profession? How is it different from the
professionalism they have to display in their respective fields? Say,
you are a doctor in Houston and one of your patients has been
diagnosed with tumour. Do you not tell him and start his treatment
because he has recently come from India and you think it will show
your country in bad light? Even if you are a lousy medical
practitioner and would rather be on Facebook than in an acute care
centre, you are duty-bound to inform your patient.

Say, you are a software engineer in Hong Kong and there is a
malevolent virus emanating from India that is threatening your
client’s interests. Would you rather keep it under wraps than report
it and take steps to counter it? Say, you are a company’s CEO in
Hoshangabad and want to buy computers for your staff – would you buy
it from a person who offers you a good deal or from someone who has an
orange tick on his Twitter DP? If you will deal with all these
situations as is becoming of a professional, why would you expect a
journalist to do otherwise? Unless you think journalism is about
singing paeans to a particular man or government.

Disservice to the profession

In another lecture titled Create Dangerously, Camus makes a powerful
pitch against turning art into a deceptive luxury: “On the poop deck
of slave galleys it is possible, at any time and place, as we know, to
sing of the constellations while the convicts bend over the oars and
exhaust themselves in the hold.” In the face of circumstances in a
country like India (and these circumstances have existed much before
Modi), if artists (or writers or journalists) insist on painting a
rosy picture where none exists, it will be a lie and a disservice to
their craft, to their profession.

And some of us are committed to look into the hold and write about the
sweat and the blood and the flesh that the oars extract.

So stop calling us Presstitutes. Because we are much more creative
than you when it comes to coining terms.

Rahul Pandita is a 2015 Yale World Fellow and the author, most
recently, of Our Moon has Blood Clots: A Memoir of a Lost Home in
Kashmir. His Twitter handle is @rahulpandita.

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Peace Is Doable

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