Sunday, November 30, 2008

My father and freedom of the press

November 30, 2008

I begin my blog with a write-up on my dad. I wrote this in February 2001, eight months after his death. I began my career as a journalist with him and I owe him a great deal not just as a daughter but also as a professional. Whatever I am able to manage today as the head, corporate communication of a software company is due to the work discipline, honesty and integrity that he inculcated in me.

"We lost him eight months back. He went quietly, accepting death as if he had finished his task as a father and ofcourse written his weekly column, earlier during the day. Fearless in death as he was with spoken and written words.
My earliest memories of him are as a three-year-old running for his slippers, and his copy of Daily Express, London, with dog kitty shrieking wildly behind me, when he entered home. From that age I knew what made him happy.
He would sit in the living room with a pile of newspapers and magazines, a tall wooden lamp behind his armchair and with his transistor, switching from BBC news channels to all India radio news bulletins. I remember calls from the telegraph office, often in the middle of cold winter nights, and his portable typewriter rattling away in quick response.

Indo-China War
During the Indo-China war, while I lay with serious burn injuries in a nursing home, he was busy meeting deadlines, spending a major part of the day and night in the press room and telegraph office. My mother appalled by his behaviour would reprimand him, “What kind of a man are you. Your little daughter is fighting for life and you are away working.” His only answer was, “I have a job to do. I can not let down my editor in this time of crisis. My daughter is in safe hands.” That was his level of professionalism.
He was extremely critical of the way the war was fought. “We were ill-prepared. We had rusted guns and weapons and we sent our army on a suicide mission to fight in the cold, in unfamiliar areas. Nehruji’s Gandhian ideology was too simplistic. Any one can say bhai-bhai and attack quietly.”
In the same breadth he often said, “The Nehruvian era was different. The world saw India differently. We were an important country. We had total freedom of press. We could be critical and write the way we wanted to. Madame Gandhi depends too much on her coterie and cannot tolerate criticism. She lacks Nehruji’s wisdom.”
To his media friends who pointed out that he was too critical in his columns, his answer was, “My job is not to do propaganda for the ruling party but to analyse government policies. No one can tell me what I should write.”

Emergency in India
Fearless as ever in his thoughts and writing, he was shocked when emergency was clamped and severe restrictions were put on the freedom of press. For the first time in his 30-year-old career he felt restricted and helpless by the system. It was a living nightmare for him.
However he always said, “This the biggest mistake Madame Gandhi has made. India is the world’s largest democracy, no one can get away by curbing the press. The people of this country will never forgive her.”
His prophecy came true. Mrs. Gandhi lost badly in the elections after the emergency was lifted, the Congress split, and the party never really got back together.

Indo-Kashmir relations
Kashmir was an important issue for him. He went to Kashmir twice as a guest of the Chief Minister, Sheikh Abdullah. He felt Pakistan had a single point agenda, that was to grab Kashmir, and elections were won because of their hate-India campaign. “They only talk about jihad. They are least bothered about their increasing poverty, and their economy is in shambles.”
The Kargil war did not surprise him, “We are in a precarious situation because we have a poor neighbor, governed by trigger-happy generals and Muslim fanatics, who even claim to have nuclear weapons. We have to think beyond ‘Bus Yatras’ and take a re-look at our foreign and defense policies. To defend ourselves, we have to upgrade our defense equipment and buy more sophisticated arms. We can not let down our defense forces.”

Indian politics
Disappointed by the changing Indian political system in the last couple of years, his favourite punch line was, “How does Mr Vajpayee expect a 13-legged party to come to a consensus, when right hand does not know what the left hand is upto. They are all busy with petty politics and bickering within the party. Our opposition is weak, led by a stone-faced Italian goddess, who knows little about the Indian psyche and the social fabric of this country. They lack the political will to deliver.

Indian Economy
“Even a country like China has managed to keep their population in check and attracted such large FDIs. MNCs are scared to come to India, there is so much political and economic instability layered with bureaucratic red-tapism. The license Raj is over but the bureaucrats are not ready to give up their powers.”
In the last fifty-five years, as a media person, he had seen and written with same fervor about the pre-independence era, the free India with all its problems - the liberalization phase, the nuclear strategies, the IT revolution, the changing political system, and India moving into the 21st century.

Terror and war
Had he been there to witness the recent terrorist attacks and war in Afghanisthan, he would have said in his typical way,“ These Pakistanis needed to be taught a lesson. Musharaff thinks he is a clever man but you cannot fool the Americans.”
He could have churned out hundreds and hundreds of words, an unfatigued mind, but he had to meet another dead-line, however not with his newspaper this time."


Today,I wonder what my dad's reaction would have been! Once again the country faces a huge challenge. Could we have averted the tragedy in Mumbai? When will our politicians stop bickering over petty issues. Or have they become so callous that it makes no difference to them. It is a strange feeling of helplessness as we watch terror, poor administration, rising corruption and lack of political will to deliver.

7 comments:

Prachi said...

really like the way you put your thoughts together!

Best wishes for your blog!! :) Hope to see more posts soon!

Unknown said...

You have covered many facets in your musings - professionalism, political apathy, common man's vulnerability to terrorism / poverty.

Look forward to more thought provoking insights... Gautam Rastogi

Unknown said...

Hi Ma'am,
It was very interesting to read the way your thoughts were collected - especially in these times there could not have been a more apt topic.
The impression I am carrying after reading your words is that of utter helplessness - if such has been the state of our politicos since so many years - can things look better now?
But then, I cant help but hope and pray that someday our politicians will "awake" to the reality and get down to their business of governing this country!

Unknown said...

Thanks for initiating such a good topic! You have entailed the whole story with a very free flowing thought and lucidity. You also aptly pointed out the need of the hour -- to stand up for our own rights. It is really surprising to see that the scenario has been more or less same since the past about the media's freedom to express the views. It is ridiculous especially when we claim that our most revered Constitution gives us the right to "Freedom of Speech".
More so when the charismatic leaders like Mrs. Gandhi put the chill on media's freedom. It's shocking and condemnable.Thanks to you and your blog , it revealed many of the hidden facets of this ongoing games our political leaders play. One of these days I was watching a program by Barkha Dutt where one of the interviewees (one of the common mass rather) said “Mr. Terrorist, I am still alive, what more can you do! Mr. Minister, I am alive, despite you”. I felt this particular individual was intonating all our voices.
Passing the buck continues. But I, as an Indian citizen, find the media as the primary source of information for the country’s econo-political situation. Somebody quoted “ So far media has been the least corrupted industry” . Are we allowed to maintain the sanctity? Funniest part is in a democratic society like ours we still bear the brunt of the self-centered decision of a handful without seeing the greater good!!!

Kapil Nakra said...

Thanks for sharing your thoughts and feelings with all of us.

I could experience the depth of knowledge and understanding your father had on these issues and the same have been passed on to you now.

I think you should write more often and keep sharing your views..

All the best! Looking forward for other posts from you.

-Kapil Nakra

Rohit Thakur's BPM Blog said...

After reading your post, about your father, I am sure, he would have done a lot to push the politicians to do the correct thing. To initiate the right kind of debates as to the next set of actions which should be taken by the administration.

Now, perhaps, it is time for us to ask right questions to the right people...to make the experts in sociology, communication, banking, defence, antiterror, commando training, foreign affairs etc come together to a common platform and discuss this end-to-end. To engage these kinds of professionals to speak / write about the issue in public and in turn to create pressure on the Government to Act...not jut to let things be...

We have seen the black cats being cheered by the crowds after the success of the operations, just like film stars or crickerters...similar cheer needs to come for concerned experts in various related fields (some of them I have mentioned above) when they are talking something which makes sense to us we should not only complement them publically but also create pressure groups which can lobby with the government for action points derived from the expert's judgement, to be implemented ASAP.

In other words, let us write : to newspapers / blogs / magazine articles etc. in whatever point of view we believe in and let there be a debate on a grand scale (involving people like you and me) and whatever the result, let us advocate that through all the media available to us.

... If we are concerned, let us voice our concerns, seek answers from the experts, arrive at some conclusion and persuade the govenment to act on our action points or to make the government answerable for its own inaction...Perhaps this would have been also your father's way , his approach towards dealing with today's challenges.

pallavi said...

Nana was just like that. If he was there he would have loved reading your blogs. probably we should start a blog in nanas name with all his articles in it