Does no one care about their Civil Liberties? Today’s Hindu has an article that reflects what I’ve been thinking for a while. In the last few years, there has been an increase in the level of intolerance among the public, or rather, there has been an apparent increase. Why apparent? To me it seems like it like it’s been orchestrated by politicians and others with a vested interest.
Remember the news articles in which Chennai Police decided to become the moral police and started targeting couples whose only crime was trying to spend time together. Never mind there was no legal basis for their action.
A university’s primary function is to strive for excellence in education - both in themselves and their students. Anna University has enforced a ‘Dress Code’ on their students and on students of affiliated collages. There is a reason why the education in most institutions India is still in the dark ages. I can on and on this point alone, but It deserves a post of it’s own. Recently a few college boys were called up by the morality police for wearing dark shirts and were asked to confess to their ‘crime’! I wish I was in such a college. I would have broken the rules on purpose.
Talking to youngsters, especially girls, about AIDS, drinking, drugs, Sex education, rape, child molestation or contraception is against our culture. Notice how all most issues have a greater impact on women. In the 80’s, when AIDS was an issue in the West, our all-knowing Health Minister, refused to discuss the potential impact the disease would have in India. Their reasoning? AIDS was a Western disease caused buy their decadent lifestyle. In India, ‘our culture’ would prevent such a disease from spreading. India now has one of the highest AIDS populations in the world
Now what is culture? It’s not something static but a living, changing concept. The past influences the present and the present influences the future. We, that means you, I and everyone else alive and kicking, are responsible for defining what culture is. Culture can not and should not be held hostage to the narrow vested interests of a few.
Is it time for a civil disobedience movement? A second Quit India movement but aimed at those in power? It does not have to be an organised mass movement. Each and everyone us can make a difference in their own way. Like my law professor used to quote often, “It’s a slippery slope.” If we don’t act now, it may be too late.
Back in college, the gents hostel gate never used to be closed. One day the authorities inform the student’s council that they were going to lock the shutter. When we objected they told us it was for the safety of us and our belongings. Although the shutter would be closed at 10 p.m. We could come and go as we pleased at any time with no restrictions. We knew that this was always going to be an issue. That night when the hostel security was about to close the shutter a bunch of us stood outside the gate. What follows are the events as I remember:
Security Officer (SO): “I’m going to close the shutter, would you like to come in?”
Us: “No, we want to stay outside”
SO pulls down the shutter. Next moment. . .
Us: “Please open the gate. We want to come in”
SO opens the shutter, we come in and he closes the shutter again.
Us: “We want to go out”
. . . We repeat the cycle a couple of times. After the 4th or 5th time you can imagine him getsting irritated and loses his temper. This is what we’ve been waiting for. We calmly inform him that we are allowed to come ad go as we please, the closing of the shutter is just a formality and he is free to complain to his higher up if he has a problem. Naturally he calls in and shortly the authorities are called and we force the issue. The shutter remains open and we’ve won a small victory. All it takes is standing up for your rights.
Whay are our rights? In the same Hindu article, Nirupama Subramanian puts it across beautifully:
As long as a person is an adult, and does not kill, maim, molest, rape, abuse, or spit on anyone, how he or she chooses to lead his or her life should be their business alone, strictly off-limits to anyone else. That includes the clothes they wear, the books they read, the music they listen to, the films they watch. It includes life choices such as finding a career, making friends, marrying, staying single, getting a divorce, having children or not.
What we really need in India is something similar to the American Civil Liberties Union (Read the Wikipedia ACLU article too) . If there is one organisation that has fought for civil liberties in the US consistently it’s the ACLU.
If you think it’s not going to affect you, I sign off with a chilling poem written about the Nazis.
First they came…
First they came for the Communists, and I didn’t speak up,
because I wasn’t a Communist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I didn’t speak up,
because I wasn’t a Jew.
Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn’t speak up,
because I was a Protestant.
Then they came for me, and by that time there was no one left
to speak up for me.
Martin Niemöller (1892 - 1984)
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