Friday, January 23, 2009

And then they came for me.....

Lasantha Wickramatunge, a leading Sri Lankan journalist/editor of a newspaper was assassinated earlier this month. Circulating rapidly on the internet, is a posthumously published editorial piece written by him a few days before with instructions to be published if he was killed.

Reading it, I felt this could have happened in India or, indeed, anywhere else. Very moving, especially the poem he has quoted at the end of the piece written by Martin Niemoeller that goes like this:

When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I remained silent;
I was not a Jew.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.


Am sure most of us will relate to this, because isn't "not speaking out" something we have developed into a fine art?

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Irrelevance of religion

I think this articulates my feelings about religion as well as any I have read/heard so far!

"Religion is orthodoxy, rules and historical scriptures maintained by people over long periods of time. Generally people are raised to obey the customs and practices of that religion without question. These are customs and expectations from outside the person and do not fit my definition of spiritual." - Wayne Dyer, Author, Lecturer & Self-help advocate.

As the same author says in one of his books, it would be better if people tried not to be Christian, but more Christ-like; not to be Buddhist, but more Buddha-like!

Ah, well, not so easy is it, for most?

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Intellectual terrorists


A 17 year old schoolboy took his life by hanging himself, a couple of days before the new year. The reason: he had a altercation with his father the previous night. While this may sound like a common enough occurrence the world over and a trivial reason for someone to commit suicide, if you dig deeper startling facts begin to emerge.

Many parents seem clueless when it comes to dealing with teenagers. Since teens are neither children nor full-grown adults, many parents don't seem to be equipped to deal with the situation. They expect teens to suddenly show the maturity of adults, which of course cannot happen since they have not yet had the experiences required for this transition to happen. This leads to confusion amongst parents and eventually leads to anger, frustration and heartburn on one side and complete emotional detachment on the other.

In the case of the boy who committed suicide, it was not that he was physically abused or anything. He was not. His dad seems to have been a normal middle/upper-middle class, hardworking individual with reasonably good academic background. It may seem perplexing that someone with such a profile could drive his own child to end his life. But sadly these types, in a sense, can cause a lot more damage than unlettered, rough parents who occasionally give the child a rap, but who a lot more balanced in many other ways.

I call this kind of parent "intellectual terrorists", since these are polished, well-educated, albeit insecure individuals, who use their knowledge and mental abilities to stifle their children and their growth for varying reasons. (Most don't even know why they do this!) Something when sustained over a few years can drive any kid (or indeed anyone in general) to despair! And yes it is that very thing - DESPAIR - that drives people to kill themselves. One example - for the intellectual terrorist kind of parent - that I can think of is the mother character in that brilliant Robert Redford directed movie, Ordinary People.

I have seen many adults - parents, older siblings, relatives - use the relative lack of maturity and naivete on the part of teenagers to their advantage during interactions, and conveniently twist and manipulate opinions. This is usually followed by a dose of rationalization to justify all wrong-doings on the part of the adult, in case they are found out. (Like why, what they (the adults) have done, "is beneficial for the common good" etc!) If that doesn't work, then it is followed by an apology - usually used as a tactical tool rather than a heartfelt acceptance of a mistake made! Am sure many of us have seen this play out in our houses or elsewhere.

The kid who died, need not have, if only his dad;
- had given him enough space to grow without being judgmental and critical
- had tried to nurture, not nullify his talents
- had not tried to be a bully, knowing fully well the kid was powerless
- had judged himself based on the same standards that he was judging his son.

and most importantly....

- had managed to retain the memory of the day his son was born and his own feelings attached to that event.

Many kids go through this....and live to tell the tale. Sadly some don't.