Saturday, May 7, 2016

IS CIVILISED DEBATE ON NATIONALISM POSSIBLE?

Events being triggered from the JNU campus in February, 2016 are leaving the country in turmoil. It is unlikely that even an interim calm can be restored unless Kanhaiya Kumar, the student union president who has been thrown into jail on the charge of sedition, is honourably set free. Even the report of the police now appears to suggest that he had not made any so-called "anti-national" speech, not that such a speech category exists in our laws. If anything, the impassioned and well-rounded speech Mr. Kumar made when some others were raising offensive slogans was in defence of the Indian Constitution, and was in the nature of throwing a challenge to the idea of nationalism embedded in Hindutva. This was in keeping with his CPI affiliation. Nevertheless, JNU students and teachers, as well as Delhi journalists, were physically assaulted by a group of BJP-oriented lawyers at the Patiala House Court where they had peacefully assembled in connection with the sedition case, and the police mutely looked on. A Delhi BJP MLA was also among the assualters, who were encouraged by the police's inaction.
The following day, Mr. Kumar was himself badly beaten up by the Hindutva-oriented goon squad of lawyers when he was brought by the police to appear before the Court. The police had been admonished by the Supreme Court in light of the previous day's event and charged with maintaining order in the district Court premises. But it remained impassive as BJP's goons ran amok. A committee of top-motch lawyers sent by the Supreme Court to Patial House Courts for a report were also showered with abuse and chased away by the Hindutva Lawyers.
These shameful happenings were taking place in the heart of New Delhi, a stone's throw from Parliament House. From the first day when trouble erupted in JNU until the physical attack on Mr. Kumar, the police has given the impression of doing the bidding of the BJP government at the Centre. Eventually, the Supreme Court said Mr. Kumar's safety in Tihar Jail would be the personal responsibility of Delhi police commissioner B.S. Bassi, whose conduct so far suggests that his agenda is to ingratiate himself with his political masters.
So repugnant to the idea of civilised debate on nationalism have recent goings-on have been that three leaders of the ABVP, RSS' student wing, in JNU have resigned in protest. They have asked some basic questions. Meanwhile, unrestrained by any sense of politicl morality, a Delhi BJP MP has called for the removal of Congress Leader Rahul Gandhi, CPI leader D. Raja and CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury from Parliament for supporting "anti-national" students. On the same ground, a Rajasthan BJP MLA has asked for Mr. Gandhi to be 'hanged' and 'shot'. Why is the BJP leadership silent?
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BEARDS MAY BE MORE HYGIENIC THAN SHAVEN SKIN.

Beards may contain bacteria which could potentially be developed into new antibodies, a study has found. Researchers found that clean-shaven men are likely to harbour infection-causing bacteria resistant to antibiotics when compared to bearded men. The study published in the Journal of Hospital Infection, tested swabs from the faces of 408 hospital staff with and without facial hair. According to the results, clean-shaven men are more than three times as likely to carrying Methicilin-Resistant Staphauerus (MRSA) on their cheeks as their bearded counterparts.
Clean-shaven men were also more than 10 percent more likely to have colonies of Staphylococcus aureus on their faces, a bacterium that causes skin and respiratory infections, and food poisoning.Researchers suggest this may be due to micro-abrasians caused by shaving in the skin, "which may support bacterial colonisation and proliferation". The report reads "Overall, colonisation is similar in male healthcare workers with and without facial hair, however, certain bacterial species were more prevalent in workers without facial hair".
Dr. Adam Roberts, a microbiologist from University College, London, was able to grow over 100 different bacteria from beard swab samples in a separate analysis. Among the petri dishes, he found the presence of a microbe that appeared to be killing the other bacteria. Dr. Roberts isolated the microbe and tested it against a form of E. Coli that causes urinary tract infections, and found the microbes killed the bacterium efficiently. He told BBC Radio 4's Today presenter Mishal Husain that this analysis does have potential for further research for the future. The current stock antibiotics is quickly becoming ineffective, with antibiotic resistant infections killing at least 7,00,000 people a year. No new antibiotics have been released in the past 30 years. 
Dr. Roberts compared the findings to Alexander Fleming's success with penicillin, which was discovered by chance when a fungus spore was accidentally blown into his lab onto a petri dish. Fleming noticed the bacteria he was growing in the dish had died around the area the spore had landed, and subsequent research led to penicillin as it is known today. -- Source: www.independent.co.uk  
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C.S. Chakravarthy
H. No. 12-13-301, St. No. 9,
Lane. No. 1, Flat. No. 203,
Satya Classic, Tarnaka, 
Secunderabad- 500 017
Telangana State
e-mail: chakkuresearchscholar13@gmail.com
            chakku1968@gmail.com
Cell: 09985732397.
Land-Line: 040-27006517
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Sunday, May 1, 2016

CLUELESS AND 21.

Turning 21 is quiet a big deal. You get to earn your own money, some of you live on your own, and most importantly, you finally become an adult. But let's be honest, it also means no more afternoon naps. Or bunked lectures. Or 3 PM breakfasts. The twenties are your most formative years, and while we are all for making the most of them, we are also okay about bending the rules a bit to suit ourselves. Here are ten things that are more or less on the cards, you wonderful adult, you; but honestly, you don't need to accomplish them on a deadline. Take it easy...
Dream Job: In an ideal world, you did have a job right out of college. But it's okay if you are not too sure of what you wish to do. Or, if you are stuck with a bad job. Seriously, there's no harm in those coffee runs and working overtime. You will actually get to learn a lot more than way.
Moving Out: The best part of being in an Indian family is that you can move out in your twenties, or not move at all till your thrities, and there's no one to judge you. So, don't stress out about having your own place until you are absolutely ready.
Borrowing Money: Moment of truth: sleeping hungry can be a real pain. Instead of trying to be all grown up and responsible, accept that you messed up (Charles & Keith non-sale shoes, we are looking at you) and ask your parents for help. Word of caution though, better to not make it a habit. And of course, you are going to pay them back, right? RIGHT?
Having The Perfect Relationship: If she/he ain't worth it, dump her/him. Move on. Period. No point breaking your heart trying to make it work simply because you have to follow an arbitrary rule someone, somewhere decided to make. Many more fish in the sea, in fact, far better ones.
DIY Sundays: We all love the idea of being a desi Martha Stewart - prepare perfect Indian meals now that we are adults, DIY everything in the house to impress parents, friends... While that's great, learn to CHILL. Yes, you are 21, but it's still okay to take a break (or breaks) and move at your own pace. Or do nothing.
Healthy Lifestyle: Poached eggs in the morning, salds at night don't even sound like fun... on paper. We don't promote fries for Friday dinner (okay, maybe we do), but don't beat yourself up if you eat that extra slice of pizza. The whole point of being in your twenties is that higher metabolic rate! Now, where's that pizza outlet menu?
Queen Bee: The FOMO syndrome (if you don't know what that means, consider yourself lucky) is the biggest curse of your twenties. But if you don't really care about your social status, that's okay too. Miss out on that party that everyone HAS to be seen at. Welcome to team 'Netflix and Chill'. We have cookies.
Non-Toxic Friends: We all want healthy relationships but 21 is probably not the ideal age to be able to tell the nice ones from the not-so-nice ones. So if you end up with a horrible friend whose only good quality is her awesome makeup bag, we promise we won't judge.
Doing What Our Parents Did: We have all had that talk. Most of our parents were busy becoming super productive adults at 20 while we did rather eat a pizza and hate people. Did you just nod, too? It's okay. You will get there, at your own pace.
Becoming A Morning Person: It ain't gonna happen. We know the perks of being a morning person, but hey, quick outfit decisions and managing to do your entire makeup in the cab, are essential life skills too.
---Based on article by Ainee Nizami, published in The Times of India dated May 01, 2016
C.S. Chakravarthy
H. NO. 12-13-301, St. No. 9,
Lane. No. 1, Flat. No. 203,
Satya Classic, Tarnaka, 
Secunderabad- 500 017
Telangana State
e-mail: chakkuresearchscholar13@gmail.com
Cell: 09985732397.
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Wednesday, April 27, 2016

INSTIGATING A CONTROVERSY.

Is it compulsory for every citizen of India to chant "Bharat Mata Ki Jai"? Obviously it is not. As Asaduddin Owaisi, the ebullient and often provocative leader of the All-India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM), says, this is not a condition called for in the Constitution. In that narrow, technical sense he is right. Yet, it is not the language and precise wording of that sentiment that is the only issue of relevance today. The Constitution obligates every citizen ("We, the People of India...") to a certain commitment to India - the nation, the country, the collective, the Republic, the civilisation, call it what you will, of which that Constitution is an embodiment. Some choose to express that commitment by using "Bharat Mata Ki Jai", a simple yet evocative phrase that has resonance for many thousands and millions of Indians and goes back to the freedom movement and the larger enterprise of nation-building under the Mahatma.
Others may prefer "Vande Mataram" or use the Urdu "Madre Watan" instead. Still others may offer their "Salaam" to "Sar Zameen-e-Hindustan", or use the pithy coinage of Subhash Chandra Bose: "Jai Hind". A younger generation may get goose pimples listening to A.R. Rehman's electrifying "Maa Tujhe Salaam..." - composed and sung for the fiftieth anniversary of Independence in 1997. There could be those who may not use any of these terms at all but still show their commitment to India and the Constitution by simply and silently doing what they do best - working hard, paying taxes and living honest lives. Each one is free to choose. Having said that, while that commitment to India and its Constitution may not expressly demand that one stand up each morning and chant "Bharat Mata Ki Jai" - or any of the other phrases mentioned above - does it give anyone the right to deliberately mock those for whom such an expression is dear, revered and deeply felt? That is the key question, the answer to which must put Mr. Owaisi in the dock. He has been egregiously offensive and has manufactured and instigated a controversy where none existed, as well as sought to design a denominational quarrel on an issue that doesn't bother most ordinary Muslims at all. His unstated implication, that to have citizens who may be Muslim say "Bharat Mata Ki Jai" is an insidious attempt to force idol worship on them, is so ridiculous that even many of his co-religionists have been left exasperated.
Just what is a "Muslim Issue" - that is, a concern that genuinely affects religious sensibilities of Muslims and interrupts the manner in which they practice their faith? Let us go back 25 years, to the spring and early summer of 1991. India was preparing for a mid-term election, in the aftermath of the Mandal Commission announcement, the rath yatra and the Congress' decision to withdraw support to Chandra Shekhar's short-lived government. It was a pulsating political session that saw a genuine ideological context between very different concepts of India and nationhood. In the midst of all this, a Janata Dal politician - among the Asaduddin Owaisis of his age, if you get my drift - began a campaign to have the film Hum banned. A film that in effect began the second phase of Amitabh Bachchan's career - putting him in senior roles, rather than as the proverbial "Angry Young Man" - Hum had just been released and featured a popular and catchy song Jumma chumma de de... The song sequence had the hero serenading the woman he was wooing - she was called Jumma - and asking her for a kiss, as she had apparently promised, on Jumma (Friday).
Jumma or Friday is sacred in Islam and is the day of congregational prayer. According to that Janata Dal politician of 1991, the song was deeply offensive to Muslims and had caused outrage and anger in the community. As such it needed to be banned or acted upon in some manner by the government. His claim was absolute nonsense. This writer lived in Calcutta (now Kolkata) at the time, in a neighbourhood that had a substantial Muslim population. There were Muslims from a variety of social strata, ranging from the local paanwallah to a distinguished Professor of History at the University of Calcutta. The song was frequently heard in the neighbourhood (as were other popular songs of the period) and there was no sense of "anger" or "outrage". There is little reason to believe it was different in other mohallas elsewhere in the country. As can be expected, the silly controversy lasted only a few days. It gave the politician in question his 15 minutes of fame and then had him quietly moving on.
A film song and a slogan offering salutations to and expressing empathy with India are very different. It is not the intention to either compare these or place them on the same pedestal, not at all. However, the point remains that Muslim leaders like Mr. Owaisi do the Indian Muslim enormous justice by reporting to such gimmicks. In that he has been as dishonest as his Janata Dal predecessor of 1991. Mr. Owaisi is an articulate man and a frequent face on news television. Frankly, though, the national media tends to treat him with kid gloves. The inability to interrogate him or ask him harder questions has been disappointing. This may be due to absence of desire, or perhaps to an individual media person's inadequate engagement with history outside of a quick Google search.
Consider the contradiction. Mr. Owaisi attacks the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and the Hindu Right, accusing it of 'forcing its ideology' on others. His intellectual auxiliaries make references to 70 or 80-year-old quotes of RSS personalities, which may appear angular and unacceptable in a contemporary context, and ask whether the current leadership of the RSS and the Bharatiya Janata Party believes in them. Fair enough. Has anyone cared to ask Mr. Owaisi whether he subscribes to the letter and text of Qasim Razvi, the founder of the MIM and commander of the Razakar militia, who can only politely be described as a bigot and a religious fanatic? Could Owaisi tell us if he is willing to repudiate Qasim Razvi? The response would be revealing . ---Based on an article by Ashok Malik published in Deccan Chronicle dated 20th March, 2016. The author is a senior fellow, Observer Research Foundation. He can be reached at malikashok@gmail.com---        

BARBARIC INDEED.

When judges assume messianic roles while seeking to act on perceived outrage, it may result in inventive remedies but not necessarily achieve complete justice. It is not usual these days to find some of them traversing beyond the remit of the cases before them and seeking to find or suggest solutions to many of society's crimes and ills. In the Madras High Court, one has seen recent instances of a judge suggesting mediation between a victim and the perpetrator of a rape, another laying down that mere sexual relations amount to marriage, and one prescribing pre-marital potency tests to prevent divorces happening. The latest (27th October, 2015 in The Hindu) is the suggestion of Justice N. Kirubakaran that castration be made an additional punishment for child rape. Significantly, he himself acknowledges that this would be criticised as being barbaric and retrograde, but yet goes on to say that barbaric acts require barbaric punishments. But this is out of character with Indian Jurisprudence as well as known canons of modern criminal justice. For one thing, the principle of proportionality of punishment is a limiting norm that militates against excessive punishment, and is not an eye-for-an-eye rule. Secondly, civilised systems have moved away from retributive sentencing, especially from ideas such as torture, decapitation, mutilation and chopping  off parts of the body as forms of punishment. It may also be counter-productive if castration is added as a form of punishment as it may deter foreign courts from allowing the extradition of offenders to face trial in India.
The judge's suggestion is not qualified as 'chemical castration' in the operative part of the judgment. To be fair, he has listed the countries and some States in the United States that do have provision for chemical castration, or the injection of drugs that reduce testosterone levels and control libido - and it is not a suggestion that has not been made in the past. Also, he has called for wider consultations involving experts before such a measure is introduced. The Justice J.S. Verma Committee, which in 2013 recommended far reaching changes to criminal law to protect women from sexual offences, also received suggestions to that effect. However, the committee had noted that the effects of chemical castration were temporary, and repeated monitored doses at regular intervals may be required. It will violate human rights treaties such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which bars cruel and unusual forms of punishment. In other jurisdictions it is done with the offender's consent and is a form of psychiatric treatment and not a judicial penalty. None, least of all the courts, should assume that rapes occur because of uncontrollable sexual urge. There can be no 'magical results' in curbing crimes against women, unless there is transformation in society and its very thought process. The rising rate of sexual crimes against children in the country is indeed alarming, but that is not reason enough for courts of law to advocate medieval forms of punishment.
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INDIAN HISTORIOGRAPHY UNDER THREAT.

The old colonial notion that ancient Indians had no sense of history has by now been blown to bits by outstanding scholars like V.S. Pathak and Romila Thapar. They have also established that ancient India drew its sense of the past from a vast range of sources, of which religious texts were one, and that its understanding of the past differed radically from the Western notions of history. Romila Thapar, in particular in her magisterial work, The Past Before Us - Historical Traditions of Early North India (published in 2013), scrutinises the vast corpus of Vedic texts, the great epics Ramayana and Mahabharata, the itihas-purana traditions, the Buddhist and Jain canonical texts, hagiographies, biographies, inscriptions, chronicles and theatrical compositions like the Mudra-rakshasa to form her database and arrives at conclusions which frontally challenge received wisdom from the West. 
Court narratives: Come Medieval India and a new genre of history comes alive. These histories, more like court chronicles, titled Tawarikh, plural of tarikh which denotes both date and history, followed strict codes of chronological and spatial location of an event and were narrative rather than analytical in content, although a certain view point always inheres in any narrative account. There was an interesting dichotomy as part of the narrative. The framework that enclosed the tawarikh was largely derived from Islam, which not only brought a new religion to the world but also a new concept of history. The chronological framework that was almost invariably followed was that of the Islamic hijri era, with the exception of Abul Fazl, Akbar's courtier and historian. Abul Fazl abandoned it in favour of Ilahi era, created to commemorate Akbar's accession to the throne, and disengaged history writing from the axis of Islam. At any rate, Abul Fazl had rather a low opinion of the hijri era. Within this overall chronological framework, historians were more particular  about locating each event in the precise year of the reign of each ruler whose deeds formed their main narrative. 
More important, they did not look at history as a breach of Islamic theology, unlike their European counterparts. In medieval Europe, histories composed by church fathers, the only literate class, perceived all historical events as manifestations of God's will. For them the past, present and future - all constituted part of God's grand design in which nothing happened haphazardly, even as these appeared so to human beings. In medieval India, on the other hand, historical events are treated as individual, independent events and not part of a grand pattern, and historical causation is established in human violation and at best human nature. God is invoked only when the historian is unsure of the veracity of an event, akin to our everyday invocation, "God knows" when we are unsure of something.
We are thus introduced to "strong" or "weak" rulers, "liberal" or "orthodox" rulers and the complete history of their reigns merely unfolds their nature. Best examples: Muhammad bib Tughlaq ("his nature consisting of contradictory qualities"), Akbar ("liberal"), Aurangzeb ("orthodox"). Diversity necessarily inhered in the explanation since no two persons, not even rulers, would possess the same nature.
Colonial invention: It was James Mill who metamorphosed the entire, long history of ancient and medieval India, divesting it of all diversities by making the religious identity of the rulers, instead of their nature, the central category for understanding the past; all diversity of explanation was lost to the uniformity of the religious identity of all the rulers, whether Hindu or Muslim. His History of British Rule, published in 1818, created the tripartite division of India's past into the Hindu, the Muslim and the British periods. As a Utilitarian and as a colonialist par excellence, he had contempt for religion, for both Hinduism and Islam but more for the former, and emphasised that prior to the British rule, India was mired in religious obscurantism with no worthwhile achievement to its credit; thus the Indians ought to be thankful to the colonialists for setting them on the path of progress.
This was further reinforced by Elliot and Dowson's 8-volume History of India as told by its own Historians, published from 1854 onward, bluntly stating in the Introduction: "This history will teach the bombastic babus of India the great benefits British rule has brought them". The foundation of the infamous "divide and rule" strategy had been laid.
Since then the tripartite division has remained operative in the teaching of history in India and even when the nomenclature was altered to Ancient, Medieval and Modern, first by Stanley Lane-Poole in 1903, the basis of division remained the same until around the early 1960s. Religious identity and religious conflict were clearly the central analytical categories in this history. Fundamental to it was the assumption that colonialism was the harbinger of "modernity" to India, as it was to the rest of Asia, Africa and Latin America. This view was shared by almost all European thinkers during the 18th and 19th centuries from Montesquieu to Karl Marx, even as their modes of thought as well as their sympathies were as different from one another as chalk was from cheese.    
From the late 1950s and 60s, Indian historians began to revisit all the assumptions and categories of historiography handed down to them by colonialism. A few, indeed very few, of the historians who fundamentally revised colonial history writing were committed Marxists and many more were not. It is the Marxists who questioned even Marx's understanding of India's past, including his notion of the Asiatic Mode of Production. One substitute for it was the concept of "Indian Feudalism", but this was soon thrown open, with the question "Was There Feudalism in Indian History?" - the title of an essay that became the centre of a long drawn, international debate, which unearthed several facets that lay unseen below the surface. The long cherished colonial notion that India (indeed the Orient) was unfamiliar with any socio-economic mutations before the colonial engine of modernity was set in motion, was blown to smithereens.
Religious identities were assigned their due priority in the saga of change, but were no more the lone, determining element. History was no longer mono-causal but multifaceted. Sights were moved from individual character of rulers to social and economic structures, technology and trade as the motors of change, uprisings of peasants and artisans against the state's exploitative excesses. A threshold had been crossed.
From the 1980s and 90s, yet another threshold was crossed when still newer methods of looking at history evolved. The history of women and gender, ecology, inter-personal relations, sexuality, history of the notions of time, space, habitats, of perceptions of masculinity and femininity, the nature of polities, alternative views of history evident in the vernacular languages, the enormous dynamism of Hindu philosophy especially in the 17th century, the evolution of Bhakti culture and worldview in opposition to elite Brahamanic culture, the formation of identities and most important the recognition of and respect for immense diversity in the perceptions of the past either as a mega narrative or as individual events such as the Partition of India - all these and more have taken us a long, very long, distance from the colonialist and even Marxist historiography. We live in a fascinatingly fast-moving environment. 
Hindutava discomfort: It is this immense diversity and its inescapable premise - discussion, disputation and debate at a level of professional competence - that the Hindutva brigade finds so uncomfortable, largely because history can no longer revert to mono-causal explanations, which is its sole and entire worldview. It is no surprise that while we had some outstanding professional historians down to the 1960s, like R.C. Majumdar, who were committed to the "Hindu" version of history and were yet deeply rooted in the discipline, the Hindutva brigade has since failed to produce any notable professional historian. The new developments in the discipline have passed them by.
The categories created by colonialism have been abandoned even by the British scholars as a consequence of interaction with Indian historians. But the present regime, guided and controlled by the RSS, is still sticking to them with unprecedented fervour. Ironically, the Hindutva brigade touts its claim to "Indianising" Indian history as a giant step towards cleansing it of colonialist (and Marxist) pollutants. How masterfully George Orwell had in his fictional Ninety Eighty Four portrayed the crucial role of "doublespeak" in running a duplicitous state system.
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Tuesday, March 1, 2016

TEST THE MUSTARD.

The Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC), the body that takes the ultimate decision on genetically modified (GM) crops, has reviewed the data presented on the GM mustard hybrid DMH 11 and decided that the data is not adequate. It has asked the developer for more information, including additional biosafety tests and a risk assessment and risk management (RARM) report. It is also to be welcomed that the GEAC has decided to proceed in a systematic manner in this case, instead of the usually ad hoc nature of its earlier responses. The committee will meet to draw up the concrete modalities of the additional data required to write up the RARM document pertaining to DMH 11. This will include details like the timeline for the preparation of the report and specific roles and responsibilities. Given the embarrassing nature of the rather cut and paste review document that was prepared by science academics in the case of Bt brinjal, it is understandable that the GEAC is proceeding with caution. 
Asking for overarching evaluations like an Environment Impact Assessment or a RARM document is fairly standard procedure in responsible nations testing genetically modified organisms (GMO). The United States department of agriculture, the federal department responsible for agriculture, forestry and food, including GM food in the US, emphasises the need for environmental risk assessment as well as the Ecological Impact Assessment (EcIA) of GMOs.