It was a sunny winter afternoon, and as cold as it gets in West
Bengal. We, a group of journalists, were on a press trip to Mahishadal
in West Bengal's Midnapore district. It was one of those occasions
when seniors would be tied up, giving a rookie an opportunity to
report. With barely a year in the profession with news agency Press
Trust of India (PTI), and that too on the desk, I needed this break.
Chief Minister Jyoti Basu was to address this rally. With kar sewaks
at their dance of death in Ayodhya, Basu would surely have something
to say. My news item would be carried. All through the bus journey
from Calcutta, I had been animated. Happy. It was December 6, 1992.

The rally started and one after another speakers blared Leftist
rhetoric and jargon. All decrying the kar sewaks who were camping in
the North Indian temple town. All little sparing in their trenchant
criticism of the PV Narasimha Rao government which had allowed the
assemble of thousands of Hindu rightwingers waiting to go on the
rampage. The crowd here, not that big since this was a traditional
Congress stronghold, stayed in rapt attention. We journalists remained
by the sidelines, bored with and occasionally exchanging knowing looks
at the Leftist words of wisdom, letting the fiery words enter through
one ear and leave through the other. Waiting for Basu, we were.

Soon he was there and was barely into his inimical, staccato speech
when someone stepped up to him and whispered something into his ear.
We had an uncanny feeling what it might have been. Basu apologised to
the crowd and nonchalantly left. When the drone of the chopper drifted
into our ears from not afar, we were ready to pack up. An important
comrade came up and huddled us back into the bus parked a good half
kilometre away. "It's happened. But please keep it to yourself now. We
have a restive crowd here." Grimly we returned. No one spoke during
the two-hour journey back to the big city.

It was dusk when I reached office. I was greeted by a more grim and
stony silence than I had endured in the bus. Everyone was there, at
work, and no one spoke except when needed to. I got the news I was
dreading to hear: the mosque was history, the Babri Masjid had been
rendered into rubble. There was no need for me to file a story. I was
advised to head for home.

I quickly read through all the creeds on the demolition and returned
home quite disturbed. This shouldn't have happened. It had been the
Ramjanmabhoomi agitation of the Late Eighties that had first made me
pick up a pen and write. Literally. And it had been that acerbic piece
in a magazine that had got me my first hatemail, a threatening letter
from an obscure Hindu hardliner group. To me all zealots were a threat
to a civilisation of peace -- Hindu or Muslim. The first had proved me
right this time out.

Fuzzily, with a million thoughts racing through my mind, I tucked
myself in. There were no blogs those days, my opinions remained with
myself.

I stayed alone and did not have either a television or a radio. I
remained oblivious to what might have been happening around that
night. After I readied myself and clambered down from my third floor
flat the next morning, empty streets were all that I saw. The Left
Front had called a bandh. Those days an LF bandh was more effective
than clamping down a curfew. Everything would remain shut anyway. It
had also been the same tactic that the Front had applied after Rajiv
Gandhi had been assassinated in 1991. A bandh can also be a tool to
control mobs.

I didn't have a phone either this time. So office was in no position
to contact me. I had to ring them up. A rickety Ambassador picked me
up from my Salt Lake residence an hour later. To work, I went, all
charged up.

What happened to me during the next few days was a lesson in
journalism. PTI stories, at least in those days, were known for their
straightjacket formats. No adjectives. No adverbs. Every quote
attributed to a source, or dropped altogether. There was no room to
whip up passion. If there was an antithesis to sensationalism, it was
this. We could take the sting out of everything. At the helm of the
regional desk was a man with nerves of steel, and who knew how to
handle exigencies like this. Playing up a story is easy. Any idiot can
do that. But to play it down, you need to be a good journalist.

There had been post-demolition violence in many towns and cities
across India. Riots had broken out in Calcutta too. Those weren't days
of 24/7 television. Akashwani was for kisan bhais. Mobile phones and
SMSs were only science fiction. And we were yet to know of the
Internet and emails. But the riots had spread. And it hadn't been
because of a media which had done the dirty job.

For my part I knew what we had done. Everything had been reported,
including the deaths. But the copies did not say members of which
community were killed. And which community had killed them. It was
about the deaths of people. And that is what a democracy should be —
it ought to be about people.

[ First published: September 29, 2010   Last updated: September 29, 2010 ]
http://www.write2kill.in/first-person/reminiscences/374.html
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means
respecting all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the
others. When a society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it
undermines peace and leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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