Indian media; Mannequins masquerading as Gods
I used to
love Ramlila as a kid. Most kids do and I was no exception. But I had a misconception
about the characters of Ramlila.
I believed
that the characters in Ramlila were the real Gods. Let me explain.
I believed
that, every year, during Ramlila season, the organizers just erected the stage
and announced the program. Then the real Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, Dasharatha etc. would come and play their part. They did not need any script, story or
dialogues as it was their own life they were enacting. It may not sound rational or logical but then
I was a kid, probably aged around 8 or 10. Anyway, I believed in this concept
from the core of my heart.
But one
fine day, or rather afternoon, this deep rooted belief was shattered.
I and a
friend of mine, were loitering around (kids of age 8 to 10 used to do that,
before satellite TV, video games and PCs took over) and went to the Ramlila
ground. A couple of electricians were working on a display board having a dozen
incandescent lamps and a couple of fluorescent ones. My friend, who was better well
versed with the ways of the world than I was, pointed to the directions of electricians
and said, “This is Sita.”
I looked
around in astonishment, bit confused at the thought of Sita appearing before
time (it was afternoon and Ramlila started around 9 PM) and could not find her
there. “Where?” I asked.
“The one repairing the display board.” He said.
I had one
look at the thin, loutish, beedi smoking urchin who was adorning the mother and
sister of his assistant with choicest of cuss words while repairing the board, then
a second one at my friend as if he had gone completely insane and expressed my
feelings about him in as many words. My friend, got angry at not being believed,
then dragged me to the green room where the actors were going thru the paces
for the evening.
The
gentleman responsible for keeping loafing urchins like us outside spotted us
and approached with a stick in hand. However, before I was subjected to the
gracelessness of the stick, another gentleman intervened and said, “Don’t
bother, he is known to me.” This
gentleman was actually known to my father.
This was
the first time I had seen a green room. Some people were applying the make-up,
some were trying dresses while others were toying with the arms they were
supposed to wield that day.
For next
four hours I saw the ordinary men (No women actors in small town Ramlilas) turning themselves into God like characters. I saw the same bidi smoker turning into
a Sita, a shoe salesman turning into Rama, a sweetshop owner turning into a
Hanuman, a quack turning into a Vibhishana and a property dealer turning into a
Ravana. That was the day, probably, I got the first impression that it was the
Man who created god and not vice versa, but that is another story, for another day.
But my perception about Gods was
shattered that day.
I learnt
that day that the characters who came to the Ramlila stage were just humans
whose Godly qualities depended more on the color & texture of the makeup,
fall of the dress, twirl of the fake moustache, shine of the plastic crown or
the novelty of the arms they carried than what we normally associate with God
i.e. omnipresence, omnipotence or omniscience.
A similar experience
happened decades later but bit of a background before that.
As a kid,
my dream career was of a journalist. The thrill of discovery, of chasing a
story, of travelling the world in search of stories, the utopian idea of taking
on the world with a pen, a notebook and a tape recorder appealed to me. But the parental
control marked ‘Engineer’ somewhere on my application form and I became one.
As time
passed, the TV camera replaced the tape recorder, later the laptop replaced the
notebook and the iconic pen but my unrequited love for the career of my choice stayed
as intense as ever. And so did my faith
in the responsible power of the journalist, to be the harbinger of change, to
be the influencer of opinions, whether of the common man or of policy makers.
Though over
last decade or so, events like Radia tapes, cash for votes story and many other
such blemishes did cast aspersions on some of the renowned figures in this
profession but I still believed that there are some good men & women in
this profession who have the interest of the society and the country at heart and
they have the wisdom, the foresight, a much larger world view to justify my
love and adoration for this profession.
And then, I
joined twitter .This social media platform brought me face to face with many of
the personalities I respected, partially fulfilling the dream of interacting with them, if not being one of them.
This
coincided with the change in government at centre.
And in the
next few months, it was the Ramlila green room in reverse. Everyone of the
personalities I adored and respected, began a maddening race to prove
themselves as petty, greedy, egoistic, scheming humans. As event after event
unfolded, the race to the bottom started becoming more intense.
Indian Media - just mannequins, no Gods |
They tried to protect a rapist who had confessed to
his crime, they provoked ordinary people to a fight to cast aspersions on Prime
Minister by association, they abused the government when it stopped free travel
(& drinks) on foreign tours, they cried freedom of press when denied entry
to sensitive government installations, they
abused the government even more when they realized that government was not in
their pocket anymore, some funnily realized that they needed their moral
compass now, despite not using it for decades, many abandoned their declared
principles and crawled to continue with their boot licking (though different
boots, this time) hoping for some sinecures and awards, others who could not do
so, became more shriller doing away with sanity completely, many couched their
personal hatred by hiding behind their sectarian, bigoted version of secularism,
they spun fiction when they turned clueless as their contacts in the government
vanished, they played with national interests including matters of national security to suit
the agenda of their unknown paymasters and they kicked, abused, cried and
blocked when they were asked uncomfortable questions. They just proved to be
men and women of straw.
And then I
realized that even in the past, they had been parading their personal agendas as
wisdom, their contacts as foresight and their coffee shop gossip as world view
just as the people behind the characters at Ramlila were hiding behind their makeup, dress, jewellery and arms..
I realized
that they were just mannequins masquerading as Gods.
Post Script: A friend suggested yesterday that
to spot the white smoke, the security analyst needs to look inside. It is coming out of his
burning credibility.