‘We are Trained to Hate India’: Pakistani Students


Young children in Pakistan are taught to hate India, says a group of Pakistani students at a workshop conducted by the Sociology Department of Mumbai University. Their visit to the Indian city on a mission of promoting the practice of harmony and bonding among the youngsters of both nations is a positive move which should be appreciated.

'We are Trained to Hate India': Pakistani Students

“Once hating India was seen as true patriotism. We were trained to hate India but now we feel that there is an urgent need to stress on peace,” Sitara Jabeen, an MPhil student in Peace and Conflicts Studies at the National Defence University, Islamabad told DNA in Mumbai. “There is a group in Pakistan that is involved in terrorism, but the rest of us feel the same pain when India or any other country is attacked,” she said. “Pakistan is as much a victim of violence at the hands of terror outfits as India,” says Sidra Tariq who pursues MPhil in International Relations at the Institute of Regional Studies, Islamabad.

Arshi Saleem Hashmi, a professor from the same university, said “stereotypes are kept alive by a lack of understanding between groups of people. One way to shatter them,” she added, “is by engaging the youth of both the countries. The bonding of the youth can break that deadlock.”

Lahore based architect and youth activist, Hina Anwar Ali mentioned the cultural and demographical similarities of Pakistan and India and he pointed out how the youth can work as a centre of peace process between the two countries.
On the other hand, it is not a new allegation against Pakistan’s education system. Jabeen’s statement points out the fact that empowerment of terror in Pakistan have not just quickly taken place. According to a recent study by U.S. government had exposed how Pakistani schools cultivate discrimination and intolerance of other religions. The report stated that the very perception of non-Muslims is as ‘enemies of Islam,’ and nearly all teachers have the same view.
There are so many arguments on the growth of terrorism in Pakistan. Many arguments on what Pakistan schools teach their children reveal that the official textbooks prop up hatred against India, especially Hindus. The text books on Pakistan studies and social studies are the main controversial teachings where the history has been misrepresented and turn to corrupt the harmony with India.

Pak Schools Foster Hindu Hatred: U.S.


Text books in Pakistani schools foster hatred and intolerance of minorities, the Hindus in particular and teachers view these groups “as enemies of Islam,” a U.S. government report has said.

“Pakistan and Social Studies textbooks are rife with negative comments regarding India and Great Britain, but Hindus are often singled out for particular criticism in texts and in interview responses,” said the report. This intolerance and prejudice also extends to other minorities like the Christians and Ahmadis, who consider themselves Muslims but are not considered so by the Pakistani constitution.” The Islamisation of text books, the Commission has said began under the army rule of late dictator Zia-ul-Haq who courted Islamists to support his rule.

Though in 2006 the government announced plans to reform the curriculum, this has not been done under apparent pressure of hardliners, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) said in a report made public today. The Commission in its 139-page report said that though Pakistan was envisaged as a moderate state where minorities would have full rights, but three wars with India and appeasement of hardline clerics by successive weak governments had led to steady radicalisation of the society.

The Chairman of the Commission Leonard Leo warned “the teaching discrimination increases the likelihood that violent religious extremism in Pakistan will continue to grow, weakening religious freedom, national and regional stability, and global security.” “Although an unbiased review of history would show that Hindus and Muslims enjoyed centuries of harmonious co-existence, Hindus are repeatedly described as extremists and eternal enemies of Islam. Hindu culture and society are portrayed as unjust and cruel, while Islam is portrayed as just and peaceful,” USCIRF said in its report.

Youth Slaps Sharad Pawar


Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar was assaulted by a man named Harvindh Singh at the New Delhi Municipal Council(NDMC) calmingly angered by corruption and price rise. Pawar was attacked while he was leave after a literary function at a public auditorium on Parliament Street.

Youth Slaps Sharad Pawar

Pawar cringed at the sudden attack as he climbed the steps, but then continued walking while the police took the assailant away. Harvindh claimed that he is angry with corruption and price rise in India and said “This is my answer to corrupt politicians.” The Sikh youth is a tempo driver by profession and a resident of Rohini, Delhi. He had slapped the Ex-Minister Sukhram just four days ago.

“I came planned to the event to slap the minister,” he told the reports there.

“The prices for all essential commodities have risen. Annaji requested for Lokpal but it did not work out. I’m not a terrorist as a terrorist would never take such a step. I’m fed up of all the corrupt ministers involved in various scams,” he said. “I would have killed him if I had my kripan today.”

Cutting across the party lines, political parties by and large condemned the attack and called it an act of hooliganism. After speaking to Pawar, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh condemned the attack and said such incidents should not be given too much importance. Expressing his concern over the increasing incidents of attack on political personalities, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said did not know where the country was heading to and said this act is “totally condemnable.”

“Whatever has happened is wrong. Everybody is concerned about price rise. I am not in favour of violence,” Samajwadi Party MP Mulayam Singh Yadav later told the media.

NCP spokesperson DP Tripathi asked the media to exercise restraint while covering such incidents and the party leader and Pawar’s daughter Supriya Sule said, “This is a condemnable act. In democracy, everyone has the right to voice his opinion but any kind of violence is intolerable.”

While BJP spokesman Ravishankar Prasad condemned attack and demanded the assailant to be punished, another leader of the party, SS Alhulwalia said in the parliament, “The issue of price rise has become so grave today that now a youth has slapped the agriculture minister of the country.”

இருட்டில் தமிழகம்: சென்னைக்கு வெளியே 7 மணிநேரம் மின்வெட்டு… உற்பத்தி பாதிப்பு, தொழிலாளர் பணியிழப்பு!


தமிழ்நாட்டில் உள்ள மின் உற்பத்தி நிலையங்களில் உற்பத்தி குறைந்துள்ளதால் ஏழு மணி நேரம் வரை மின் வெட்டு அமலாக்கப்படுகிறது. இந்த மின் வெட்டினால் மாநிலம் முழுவதும் தொழிற்சாலைகளில் உற்பத்தி பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

கடந்த காலங்களில் அதிகபட்சம் மூன்று முதல் நான்கு மணிநேரமாக இருந்தது மின்வெட்டு. அதுவும் கோடையில்தான் இந்த மின்வெட்டு இருக்கும். மழைக் காலங்களில் ஒருபோதும் மின்வெட்டு அமல்படுத்தப்பட்டதில்லை. மழை, காற்று, இடி போன்ற இயற்கை தடைகளால் சில மணிநேரம் அவ்வப்போது மின்சாரம் நிற்கும்.

கடந்த 2010-ம் ஆண்டில் கூட மின்வெட்டு என்பது செப்டம்பர் மாதம் வரை நீடித்தது. மீண்டும் பிப்ரவரி 2011-ல் அமலுக்கு வந்தது.

ஆனால் இப்போதோ கோடை, மழைக்காலம் என எந்த பேதமும் இன்றி ஒரே சீராக தொடர்கிறது, மின்வெட்டு!

எவ்வளவுதான் உற்பத்தி?

தமிழக மின் நிலையங்களின் மூலம் 3,560 மெகாவாட், தனியார் மின் நிலையங்களால் 940 மெகாவாட், மரபுசாரா எரிசக்தி மூலம் 100, காற்றாலைகளால் 1,150, மத்திய தொகுப்பால் 2,060 மெகாவாட் மின்சாரம் கிடைத்துள்ளது. 800 மெகாவாட் மின்சாரம், தனியாரிடமிருந்து வாங்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

இதுபோக 3,700 மெகாவாட் மின்சாரம் பற்றாக்குறையாக உள்ளது. இதனால் கடும் மின்வெட்டு அமலாக்கப்பட்டு வருகிறது.

இதற்கு தமிழக மின்வாரியம் பல்வேறு காரணங்களை தெரிவித்து வருகிறது. நிலக்கரி இருப்பு குறைவு, பராமரிப்பு, நிலையங்களில் கோளாறு, தளவாட பொருட்களுக்கு பற்றாக்குறை என வரிசையாக காரணங்களை சொல்கிறார்கள்.

இதனால் சென்னை தவிர மாநிலத்தின் மற்ற பகுதிகள் பயங்கர மின் வெட்டை சந்தித்து வருகின்றன. கிட்டத்தட்ட 7 மணி நேரம் கரண்ட் இல்லை. மூன்று மணி நேரம் தொடர்ச்சியாகவும், பின்னர் 4 மணி நேரம் சுழற்சி முறையிலும் பவர் கட் ஆகிறது. குறிப்பாக வட தமிழகம் இதில் முடங்கிப் போயுள்ளது.

சென்னையில் தினமும் ஒரு மணி நேரமும் புறநகர்களில் 2 மணிநேரம் வரையிலும் மின்வெட்டு அமலாக்கப்படுகிறது.

தொழிற்சாலைகளில் பாதிப்பு:

இதனால் மிக அதிகமாக பாதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது கோவை, திருப்பூர், ஈரோடு, காஞ்சிபுரம், சென்னை, திருவள்ளூர் உள்ளிட்ட மாவட்டங்களில் உள்ள தொழிற்சாலைகள், தொழில் நிறுவனங்கள், வர்த்தக நிறுவனங்கள்தான்.

பெரும் பாதிப்பு ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது. இதனால், பண்டிகை காலத்தில் மேற்கொள்ளப்படும், நாள்காட்டி, ஆயத்த ஆடைகள், வீட்டு உபயோக பொருட்கள் உள்ளிட்டவற்றின் உற்பத்தி பணிகள், மிகுந்த பாதிப்பு அடைந்துள்ளன.

லாந்தருக்கு மாறிய கிராமங்கள்

இரவு நேரங்களில் நீண்ட நேரம் மின்சாரமே இல்லாமல் போவதால், வேறு வழியின்றி மீண்டும் கிராமப்புறங்களில் லாந்தர், சிம்னி விளக்குகள் புழக்கத்துக்கு வந்துள்ளன.

ஏற்கெனவே பாசன வசதியில்லாமல் விவாசயம் பட்டுப் போன நிலையில், மின்சாரமும் இல்லாமல் போனதால் விவசாய வேலைகளும் முடங்கியுள்ளன.

இதற்கிடையே, மின்வெட்டோடு, விரைவில் மின் கட்டணத்தையும் தமிழக அரசு உயர்த்தவுள்ளது.

மின் கட்டணத்தை உயர்த்தச் சொல்லி தமிழக மின் வாரியம் சார்பில் கடந்த 17ம் தேதி, தமிழ்நாடு மின்சார ஒழுங்குமுறை ஆணையத்திடம் மனு தாக்கல் செய்யப்பட்டது. இது வரும் 25ம் தேதி, ஆணைய சேர்மன் கபிலன் முன் விசாரணைக்கு வருகிறது. மின் வாரியம் சார்பில் அதன் தலைவர் ராஜிவ் ரஞ்சன் ஆஜராகி விளக்கம் சொல்கிறார்.

அதற்குப் பிறகு மின் கட்டணத்தை அதிகரிக்க ஆணையம் அனுமதி வழங்கும் என்று தெரிகிறது.

மின்கட்டண உயர்வு தவிர்க்க முடியாதது என முன்கூட்டியே முதல்வர் ஜெயலலிதா விளக்கம் அளித்திருப்பது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.

மக்களை மெல்லக் கொல்லும் ஜெயலலிதா!


‘அரசாங்கம் வியாபாரியல்ல, வருமானம் போதவில்லை, நஷ்டம் வந்துவிட்டது என்று கூறி விலையை உயர்த்தி மக்களைச் சுரண்டுவதற்கு. அத்தியாவசியப் பொருள்கள் விலைகளை உயர்த்துவது மக்களை மெல்லக் கொல்வதற்கு சமம். இதை வன்மையாகக் கண்டிக்கிறோம். இந்தப் போக்கை கண்டித்து மக்கள் போராட்டத்தில் இறங்க வேண்டும்…’

-இதனை நாம் சொல்லவில்லை, பெட்ரோல் விலை உயர்வைக் கண்டித்து கேரள உயர்நீதிமன்ற நீதிபதிகள் கொதித்துப் போய்ச் சொன்ன தீர்ப்பு இது.

மக்களை மெல்லக் கொல்ல ஆரம்பித்துவிட்டாரோ ஜெயலலிதா என்ற கேள்விதான் இந்த இரு தினங்களும் மனதை அரித்துக் கொண்டே இருக்கிறது.

ஜெயலலிதா ஆட்சிக்கு வந்து 6 மாதங்களாகின்றன. இந்த 6 மாதங்களில் அவர் உருப்படியாக எதையுமே செய்யவில்லை. அட, செய்யாமல் போனாலும் பரவாயில்லை… இருப்பதையும் நாசமாக்கி நஷ்டத்துக்கு மேல் நஷ்டத்தையே ஏற்படுத்தி வருகிறார்.

ஆட்சிக்கு வந்த கையோடு, வழக்கம்போல திமுக அரசு கஜானாவை சுரண்டிவிட்டுப் போய்விட்டது என்ற வசதியான காரணத்தைச் சொல்லி ரூ 4000 கோடிக்கு மேல் வரிகளை உயர்த்தினார். ஆண்டுக்கு ரூ 1600 கோடிக்கு மதுபான விலைகளை உயர்த்தினார்.

இப்போது தமிழக மக்கள் இதற்கு முன்பு பார்த்தும் கேட்டும் அறியாத அளவுக்கு ஏகத்துக்கும் பால் விலை, பஸ் கட்டணத்தை உயர்த்தியுள்ளார். குறிப்பாக பஸ் கட்டணம் 70 சதவீத அளவுக்கு உயர்த்தப்பட்டுள்ளது. போக்குவரத்துக்கு பஸ்களை மட்டுமே நம்பியுள்ள பெரும்பான்மை மக்கள், இனி மாற்று வாகனங்களை நாடியே தீர வேண்டிய கட்டாயத்துக்கு தள்ளப்பட்டுவிட்டனர்.

அடுத்து மின் கட்டணத்தை யூனிக்கு ரூ 1.50 அல்லது 2 வரை உயர்த்தத் திட்டமிட்டுள்ளதாக மின்வாரியும் அறிவித்துள்ளது.

இந்த மக்கள் விரோத செயல்கள் அனைத்துக்கும் மத்திய அரசு நிதி தரவில்லை என்றும், முந்தைய திமுக அரசு முக்கிய காரணம் என்றும் கூறி தப்பிக்கப் பார்க்கிறார்.

உண்மையில் மத்திய அரசு நிதியே தரவில்லையா?

இதோ இதே ஜெயலலிதா கடந்த ஜூன் மாதம் பிரதமர் மன்மோகன் சிங் மற்றும் திட்டக்கமிஷன் துணைத் தலைவர் மாண்டேக் சிங் அலுவாலியாவைச் சந்தித்த பிறகு கூறியதைப் படியுங்கள்:

“பிரதமர் மற்றும் திட்டக்கமிஷன் துணைத் தலைவருடனான சந்திப்பு பயனுள்ள வரையில் இருந்தது. நான் அலுவாலியாவிடம் ரூ 20000கோடிதான் தொகுப்பு நிதியிலிருந்து கேட்டேன், ஆனால் 23467 கோடி அளித்துள்ளார்கள். மிக்க மகிழ்ச்சியைத் தரும் அறிவிப்பு இது. மத்திய அரசுக்கு நன்றி,” என்று பேசிய அதே ஜெயலலிதா வாய்தான் இப்போது மத்திய அரசைத் திட்டுகிறது!

அதாவது ஜெயலலிதா கேட்டதை விட ரூ 3467 கோடியை அதிகமாகவே கொடுத்துள்ளது மத்திய அரசு.

அடுத்து, எப்போதும் போல கண்ணை மூடிக் கொண்டு அவர் குற்றம்சாட்டுவது திமுகவை. அவர்கள் கஜானாவை துடைத்துவைத்துவிட்டார்களாம். கஜானா என்பது அவர்கள் வீட்டு பீரோவா என்ன, திறந்ததும் எடுத்துக் கொண்டு போவதற்கு?

எந்தெந்த வழிகளில் பணத்தைச் சுரண்டி திமுகவினர் எடுத்துக் கொண்டார்கள் என்பதை இப்போது ஆட்சிப் பொறுப்பிலிருக்கும் ஜெயலலிதா வெளிப்படையாக சொல்லலாமே. அவர்கள் மீது நடவடிக்கை மேற்கொள்ளலாமே… யார் தடுத்தார்கள்?

இந்த விலை உயர்வு தமிழக மக்கள் அனைவர் மனதிலும் ஒரு பெரும் சவுக்கடியாய் விழுந்திருப்பதை இந்த இரு தினங்களில் நேரில் பார்க்க முடிந்தது. ஜெயலலிதா என்ன செய்தாலும் சரிதான் என ஜால்ரா அடிக்கும் ஒரு கூட்டம் வழக்கம்போல, ‘ஆஹா… ஜெயலலிதாவின் துணிச்சல் யாருக்கு வரும்’ என்று ஈனஸ்வரத்தில் முனகாமல் இல்லை.

சம்பளம் அதிகமாகிவிட்டதாம்… அதனால் இந்த விலை உயர்வு சரிதான் என்று வெட்டி நியாயம் சொல்கிறது இந்தக் கூட்டம்.

தமிழகத்தில் வேலைக்குப் போய் சம்பளம் பெறும் குடும்பம் அதிகபட்சம் 9 சதவீதம் கூட இல்லை. இதில் அரசுத் துறை பணியாளர்கள் வெறும் 2 சதவீதத்துக்கும் குறைவு. அதாவது தமிழக மக்கள் தொகையான 7.5 கோடியில் 2 சதவீதம்!

இவர்களின் வாக்குகளை மட்டுமே மனதில் கொண்டு மேலும் மேலும் சம்பளத்தை ஏற்றி வந்திருக்கிறார்கள் கருணாநிதியும் ஜெயலலிதாவும். இதன் பலன், மாநிலத்தின் மொத்த வருவாயில் 98 சதவீதம், அரசு செலவுகள், பணியாளர் சம்பளம் மற்றும் இதர வகைக்கே போய்விடுகிறது. 98 சதவீத அரசு வருவாயை அரசுப் பணி்யாளர்களை போஷிப்பதற்கே செலவிடுகிறது அரசு. எஞ்சியுள்ள 2 சதவீத வருவாய் மற்றும் புதிய கடன்களே தமிழக மக்களின் நலப் பணிகளுக்குப் போகிறது.

இந்த உண்மையைக் கூட நாம் சொல்லவில்லை. கடந்த முறை ஆட்சியிலிருந்த ஜெயலலிதா, அரசுப் பணியாளர் விழாவில் சொன்னவை.

அரசுப் பணியாளர்களுக்கு கருணாநிதியும் ஜெயலலிதாவும் போட்டி போட்டுக் கொண்டு சம்பளத்தையும் இதர படிகளையும் உயர்த்துவது எதற்காக? ஒரு அரசுப் பணியாளருக்கு தேவைக்கும் அதிகமாகவே இன்று சம்பளம் வழங்கப்படுகிறது. மக்களிடம் வரிகளாகவும் மறைமுக வருமானங்களாகவும் சுரண்டுவதை அப்படியே அரசுப் பணியாளர்களுக்கு கொட்டுவதை நிறுத்தினாலே, பல ஆயிரம் கோடி மிச்சப்படுமே!

மக்கள் வரிப்பணத்தை மக்கள் நலத்திட்டங்களுக்கு முறையாகப் பயன்படுத்த வேண்டும். மிகக் குறைந்த ஒரு பிரிவினருக்கு மட்டுமே முழு வருமானத்தையும் செலவழித்துவிட்டு, பற்றாக்குறைக்கு கடன் வாங்கி, அந்த சுமையையும் ஏழை எளிய மக்கள் மேல் சுமத்தும் போக்கை திமுக, அதிமுக என எந்த அரசும் நிறுத்துவதாகத் தெரியவில்லை.

இந்த விலை உயர்வை சம்பளம் பெறுவோர் சமாளிக்கக் கூடும்.  கூலிகள், ஏதோ ஒரு தொழில் செய்து பிழைப்பை ஓட்டும் சாமானியர் எப்படிச் சமாளிப்பார்கள் என்று யோசிக்க வேண்டாமா?

இன்னொன்று, தேவையற்ற இலவசங்கள்.

ஆடு மாடுகள், லேப்டாப், மிக்ஸி, கிரைண்டர், பேன்… இந்த ஓட்டு லஞ்சத்தை யார் கேட்டார்கள்? இந்த இலவசங்களைத் தருவதற்காக இருக்கிறவர்களை வதைப்பது ஏன்? நீதிமன்றம் மூலம் இதற்கொரு முற்றுப் புள்ளி வைக்க வேண்டும்.

போலீஸ்காரர்களுக்கு வருமானமில்லையா என்ன… எதற்காக அவர்களுக்கு மலிவு விலைக் கேண்டீன்கள்? இந்த தண்டச் செலவும் மக்கள் தலையில்தானே விடியும்!

பொதுத்துறை நிறுவனங்கள் நட்டத்தில் இயங்குவதாகவும், எந்த நேரத்திலும் செத்துப் போகும் நிலையில் இருப்பதாகவும் பிலாக்கணம் பாடியுள்ளார் ஜெயலலிதா.

இதற்கு முழுக்க முழுக்க ஆட்சியாளர்களே காரணம். பொதுத்துறை நிறுவன ஊழியர்களின் சோம்பேறித்தனம், மோசமான நடத்தை, யோக்கியமற்ற செயல்கள் போன்றவற்றை திமுக – அதிமுக அரசுகள் மாறி மாறி ஊக்கப்படுத்திக் கொண்டுதான் வந்துள்ளன. இந்த ஊக்கப்படுத்தல், கடைசியில் நிறுவனத்தையே விழுங்கும் அளவுக்குப் போயிருக்கிறது.

போக்குவரத்துத் துறையை சீரழித்ததில் கருணாநிதிக்கும் ஜெயலலிதாவுக்கும் சம பங்கு உள்ளது. 1996-97-ல் எம்ஜிஆர் போக்குவரத்துக் கழகத்தில் மட்டும் ரூ 900 கோடி நஷ்டம். இதற்குக் காரணம் என்னவென்று ஆராய்ந்தபோது, பழைய பஸ்களை சீர்படுத்தி ஓட்டுவதற்கு ஆகும் செலவு, உதிரி பாகங்கள் வாங்குவதில் அடிக்கப்படும் கொள்ளை போன்றவைதான் என்று தெரியவந்தது.

அதாவது ஒரு புதிய பஸ்ஸை வாங்கி ஓட்டுவதற்கு ஆகும் செலவை விட, பழைய பஸ்களை பராமரித்து ஓட்டும் செலவு அதிகம் என்று எம்ஜிஆர் போக்குவரத்துக் கழகத்தின் வரவு செலவை ஆராய்ந்தவர்கள் சொன்னார்கள். இருந்தும் ஏன் போக்குவரத்துக் கழகங்கள் புதிய பேருந்துக்கு மாறவில்லை? மாறிவிட்டால் எப்படி கொள்ளையடிக்க முடியும்… அதனால்தான் பழைய பஸ்களுக்கு செலவுக் கணக்குக் காட்டி, லாபத்தில் இயங்கும் நிறுவனங்களை நஷ்டக் கணக்கு காட்ட வைக்கின்றன.

அமரர் எம்ஜிஆர் ஆட்சிக் காலத்தில் இந்தியாவிலேயே சிறந்த பஸ் போக்குவரத்து உள்ள மாநிலம் என தமிழகம் 3 முறை விருதுகளை வென்றது. அவர் மறைவுக்குப் பிறகு அந்த விருதை தொடர்ச்சியாகப் பெற்ற ஒரே மாநிலம் கர்நாடகம்தான்.

இன்று நாட்டின் மிகக் கேவலமான ஓட்டை உடைசல் பேருந்துகளைக் கொண்ட மாநிலங்களுள் ஒன்றாகத்தான் தமிழகம் திகழ்கிறது. நான்கு வழித்தடங்களில் நான்கு பேருந்துகள் இருந்தாலே ஒருவர் கோடீஸ்வரனாகிவிட முடியும். அப்படியொரு லாபகரமான வர்த்தகம் போக்குவரத்துத் துறை. ஆனால் 95 சதவீத போக்குவரத்தை கட்டுப்பாட்டில் வைத்துள்ள அரசுப் போக்குவரத்துக் கழகங்கள் நஷ்டத்தில் இயங்குவதாக ஆட்சியாளர்கள் கூறுவது எத்தனை பெரிய அயோக்கியத்தனம்?

நிர்வாகத்தைச் சீரமைப்பதாகக் கூறி ஆட்சிக்கு வந்த ஜெயலலிதா முதலில் வெட்டிச் செலவுகள், ஓட்டை பஸ்களுக்கு உதிரி பாகங்கள் என்ற பெயரில் அடிக்கப்படும் கொள்ளை, லாபகரமான வழித்தடங்களில் தனியார் பஸ்கள் நன்றாக இயங்க ஒத்துழைப்பு தரும் அயோக்கிய பணியாளர்கள்… இவற்றையெல்லாம் களைந்திருந்தாலே, நிறுவனங்கள் லாபத்துக்குத் திரும்பியிருக்குமே!

இந்த விலை உயர்வு மூலம், வெளிப்பட்டிருப்பது இரண்டு விஷயங்கள்… ஒன்று ஜெயலலிதாவின் நிர்வாகத் திறமையின்மை. இன்னொன்று, அடித்தட்டு, கிராமப்புற மக்களைப் பற்றிய அவரது அக்கறையின்மை!

RBI to Issue Rs.100 Notes With Re Symbol


The Reserve Bank will shortly issue 100 notes which will have the rupee symbol.

The Rs 100 notes will be of the Mahatma Gandhi-2005 Series bearing the signature of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor D Subbarao and with the year of printing mentioned on the back of the banknote, the apex bank said in a statement.

The design of the notes to be issued is similar in all respects to the existing 100 in Mahatma Gandhi Series-2005 issued earlier except for the rupee symbol.

However, all the Banknotes in the denomination of 100 issued by the RBI in the past will continue to be legal tender.

Last week, the RBI had announced that it will soon introduce notes of 1,000 and 10 denomination featuring the rupee symbol.

The Indian rupee got an unique symbol a blend of the Devanagri ”Ra” and Roman ”R” last year joining currencies like the US dollar, euro, British pound and Japanese yen in having a distinct identity.
The new symbol, designed by Bombay IIT post-graduate D Udaya Kumar, was approved in July 2010.

Hindu philosophy is essentially spiritual.



“It is the intense spirituality of India that has enabled it to resist the ravages of time and the incursion into its motherland of alien philosophies. The founders of philosophy strive for a socio-spiritual reformation of the country. When the Hindu civilization is often called Brahminical, it is so because; its main philosophies are shaped by great thinkers, most of who are Brahmins.”

Broad divisions of Hindu Philosophy are:

Vedic period. Up to 600 B. C

This was the time of forest universities (Ashrams and Gurukuls) where evolved the rudiments of the noble idealism of India. We discern here a progressive thought process, signified by the Mantras (hymns), the Brahmanas, and the Upanishads. The views expressed at this stage are not exactly philosophical. It is the age of brain storming, where superstition and intelligent thinking seem to co-exist.

Epic period. 600 B. C to A.D 200

The Epics of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata serve as the vehicles through which was conveyed the new message of the heroic and the godly in human relations.

Sutra period. From A.D 200

In this period the mass of material generated was summarized in the form of Sutras (rule in verse form expressed in brief but technical language). Here, critical attitude in philosophy developed. Samkhya, Yoga, Mimamsa, Vedanta, Vaisesika and Nyaya schools were born. 

Scholastic period. Also dating from A.D 200

By this time the Sutras had become complex and unintelligible. It was impossible to comprehend them without expert commentaries.

Great names of, Bhaskara, Jayanta, Kumarila Bhatta, Madhwa, Raghunatha, Shankara, Sridhara and Vachaspathi, belong to this period. ‘Of these commentators Shankara and Ramanuja have become as distinguished as the original thinkers. Their commentaries are just as valuable as a spiritual discovery’. Dr S Radhakrishnan.

Haribhadra who lived in the ninth century A.D is yet another great Brahmin thinker converted to Jainism. He is the famous author of fourteen hundred Prabhandas (chapters of works) and one of the first to introduce Sanskrit language into the scholastic literature of the Svetambara (white dressed) Jains.

Shankaracharya preached Advaita philosophy. (Monism)

Ramanujacharyapreached Visishtadwaita. (blend of Monism& Dualism)

Madhwacharyapreached Dwaita philosophy. (Dualism).

Some of the well-known later day philosophers, saints and commentators are:

Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
1896 – 1977

The tenth guru in the Sri Krishna Chaitanya Mahaprabhu ‘Parampara’ (tradition), he was the founder of International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKON) to spread the Krishna Bhakti movement, beyond the shores of India. ISKON has built exquisite Krishna temples all over the world and also a beautiful palace of Prabhupada at Moundsville, Virginia, U.S.A.

Chaitanya Mahaprabhu
15th century

Fifteenth century saint, philosopher who gave a tremendous boost to the Bhakti marga’ championed by the Vaisnava (worshippers of Vishnu) acharyas and saints, through his ‘Sankeertana’ movement. (chanting and singing the names of Krishna with transcendental love). He opened the doors of divine love to all, by preaching the glories of Krishna (Hari) by chanting and singing his name.

Dayananda Saraswati
1824-1883

Born to Karshanji Lalji Tiwari and Amrith ba, in Gujarat state, Moolashankar was, a profound thinker from childhood. He left home at the young age of 21, in search of a Guru who would teach him philosophy and the meaning of life and death. It was his Guru Swamy Poornanda who named him as Dayananda Saraswati. Dayananda later founded the Arya Samaj, a social reform movement that condemns caste system and untouchability. He fought for equality of women and emphasized the Vedic way of life.

Raghavendra Swamy
1598 – 1671

Great scholar, philosopher, writer and saint in the Dwaitha tradition. At the age of 23, he renounced his loving wife and took Sanyasa. Legend says, that he resurrected two children from the dead, one of whom was the child of a Muslim chieftain of the town of Savanoor, in Karnataka. He renounced this world by entering into ‘Samadhi sthiti’ (breath control, deep meditation and passing on). As desired by him, his devotees built a ‘Brindavan’ (resting place) around him, using brick and mortar. This town called Mantralaya on the banks of river Tungabhadra in the state of Karnataka, is a pilgrimage center.

Sri Ramakrishna
1836 – 1886

Sri Ramakrishna who later came to be recognized as the ‘Paramahamsa’, was an Un- known temple priest, in the Kali temple at Dakshineshwar near Calcutta. His intense devotion to goddess Kali and his claim that he had seen her, resulted in him being branded as a lunatic. After traversing the whole gamut of Indian spiritual life, he experimented with Christianity and Islam. Realizing that all religions lead to the same super conscious mystic state, he started preaching the essential unity of all religions and the need for harmony among the votaries of all religions. The Ramakrishna Mission and the Ramakrishna Mutt are the direct offshoots of this.

Ramana Maharishi
1879 – 1950

A great soul, he left his home in early boyhood seeking spiritual knowledge and peace. Settling at Arunachala in Tamilnad, he would give simple, short, clear replies to the questions of his devotees. His constant teaching was that the way to cleanse the mind of its impurities was meditation. He has written a book called ‘Upadesa Sara’. He wrote much in Tamil.

Sarvapalli Radhakrishnan
1888 – 1975

Was a distinguished writer, Philosopher, Professor at Oxford and President of India. Besides translating Dhammapada, (Buddhist text), he has authored several philosophical works.

Sarada Devi
1853 – 1920

Married to Sri Ramakrishna at he tender age of six, she led a celibate life in service of her master and his disciples. As a spiritual teacher, as a guide to the activities of the Ramakrishna organizations, and as an ardent supporter of women’s education she became a spiritual master in her own right.

Sayanacharya
13th century A.D

Brother of Vidyaranya, Statesman and Philosopher whose commentaries on the Vedas are considered one of the best even to – day. Author of ‘Alankara Sudha Nidhi’. (work on poetics) and ‘Subhashita Sudhanidhi’ (collection of wise sayings’).

Swami Sivananda
1887 – 1963

Forsaking a promising medical career, Sivananda who had a natural flair for study and practice of Vedanta, took to life of renunciation for ministering to the soul of man. Settling at Hrishikesh in the Himalayas, he practiced intense austerities and shone as a great Yogi. For disseminating spiritual knowledge and for training common man in Yoga and Vedanta, he established,’ The Divine Life Society’ and’ The Yoga Vedanta Forest Academy’, at Hrishikesh. In 1953 he convened a ‘World Parliament of Religions.’ He has written over 300 books.

Swami Vivekananda
1863 – 1902

Swami Vivekananda, who was born as Narendra, at Calcutta in 1863 was the favorite disciple and chosen heir of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa. At an early age, he came under the influence of Sri Ramakrishna, and took ‘Sanyasa’. After the passing away of his guru, Vivekananda traveled the length and breadth of India, mostly by bare foot teaching universal brotherhood of man, and Vedanta philosophy. Swami Vivekananda represented India at the Conference of World Religions held in September 1893, in Chicago, winning high acclaim for his erudite and forceful representation of Indian culture and Hindu Philosophy. The Vedanta society in Chicago is a befitting tribute to this great son of India, who attained eternal bliss in 1902.

Vedanta Deshikar
1268 – 1369 A.D

A great scholar and saint in the Srivaisnava tradition, he lived for a full hundred years and worked tirelessly in the cause of spreading Dharma. He has written 53 philosophical works, 5 poems, 28 hymns and 19 works, in Tamil language.

Vidyaranya
13th century A.D

A great and famous saint, recognized as the founder of Karnataka. When Hinduism and Hindu culture were facing great danger in South India, he provided hope and inspiration for two brothers Hakka and Bukka to repulse the invaders.

He laid the foundation for the city of Vijayanagara, which later became the Vijayanagar Empire. He guided its kings as preceptor and Prime Minister.

Vidyaranya became the twelfth head of Shankaracharya’s , Sharada Peetha at Sringeri in 1331 A.D. He wrote commentaries on the four Vedas and Upanishads. He was probably 118 years of age when he attained eternal bliss in 1386 A.D.

India’s 8 Best Banks


The KPMG has made a survey on the best banks in India on the basis of their deposits and operating profits. Moody investor services started an argument on the healthiness of India’s banking system after the drop in their business. This brought the banks under the spotlight. Here are the 10 best banks listed which has a balance sheet amounted larger than 50,000 Crore.

1. Bank of Baroda:

BOB

The third largest bank in India after Punjab national and HDFC bank has topped the list of best banks in India. The bank was founded on July 20, 1908 by the king of Baroda, Sir Sayajirao Gaekwad III. The bank was nationalized on July 19, 1969 by the government of India when 13 other banks were also commercialized. The total deposit in this bank is 305439 Crore with operating profits of 6,982 Crore. They have 3620 branches spread all over India. M.D Mallya is the Chairman and the MD of the Bank.

2. HDFC bank:

HDFC

The bank has total deposits of 208586 Crore and an operating profit of 7.725 Crore. This is a financial service company based in India which competes with big banks like Punjab national bank, state bank of India and ICICI bank. The bank was established in the year 1994 after the approval of privatization of banks by RBI. the bank has 1,1725 branches and 4,323 ATMs, in 779 cities in India and all branches of bank give a facility of online banking on real-time basis. The promotion of bank was done by housing development and Finance Corporation. Aditya Puri is the MD of the bank.

3. Axis bank:

                                                                                       Axis bank
The total deposits in the bank is 189,238 Crore and the operating profits generated by the bank is 6,416 Crore. Axis bank, previously known as UTI bank is a financial service firm was started in the year 1994 after RBI gave permit for the privatization of banks. Unit trust of the India promoted the bank initially. Life insurance of corporation was also was also into the administration of the bank. The bank has 1,095 branches throughout the country and over 4,846 ATMs spread all over. The registered office in located at Ahmadabad and the head office are situated at Mumbai. The name of bank was changed to Axis bank in the year 2007 as the collaboration of LIC and UTI created great confusions among the consumers. The CEO of this presitigious organization is Shikha Sharma.
4. Yes Bank:

                                                                                       YB
The total sum of deposits in Yes bank is 45,939 Crore and makes an operating profit of 1,190 Crore. This is a just an 8 year old bank established by Ashok Kapoor and Rana Kapoor. The bank is headquartered in Mumbai and also run corporate and institutional banking and financial markets, investment banking, corporate finance, branch banking, business and transaction banking. The organization is also into wealth management business lines. The bank employs around 3,034 people. the CEO of Yes Bank is Rana Kapoor.
5. State Bank of Hyderabad:

                                                                                           SBH

SBH has a total deposits of 88,628 Crore and churns an operating profit of 2,319 Crore. The bank’s establishment was donein the year 1942 by the last Nizam of Hyderabad named Mir Osman Ali Khan. Hyderabad had its own currency Osmania Sicca which was also managed by the bank. This was the only state at the time of British rule to have its own currency. In the year 1956, the bank merged with the mercantile bank of Hyderabad. The MBH was found by Raja Pannalal Pitti in 1935. After the merging, the bank was renamed as state bank of Hyderabad. The entire stocks of the bank were linked with the RBI. In the year 1959, the subsidiary bank act was passed and the banks of the princely states became the part of SBI and SBH was the first subsidiary of SBI. M Bhagavantha Rao is the MD of the bank.

6. Punjab National Bank:

                                                                                            PNB
The third largest bank is in the sixth rank of the best bank in India. The bank was registered under Indian companies act in the year 1984 with office at Anarkali bazaar in Lahore. The total deposits in the bank are 312,899 Crore and make an operating profit of 9,056 Crore. They have around 5000 branches across 764 cities and is the second largest state owned profitable bank India. PNB has branches in UK, Hong Kong, Dubai and Kabul and representative offices in Almaty, Dubai, Oslo and Shangai. K.R Kamnath is the Chairman and the Managing Director of the bank.
7. Canara Bank:

                                                                                      CANARA
The deposits in this bank are worth 293, 973 Crore and the overall operating profits is of 6,107 Crore. Previously, the bank was called as Canara Bank Hindu Permanent Fund and was founded by late Ammembal Subba Rao Pai in the year 1906. The humanitarian’s bank flourished into a limited company as Canara bank Ltd in the year 1910. Later, Canara bank Ltd became just Canara bank after nationalization. The bank has more than 3000 network spread across India. S. Raman is the Chairman and MD of the bank.
8. Andhra Bank:

                                                                                       Andhra

With the total deposits of 92,156 Crore and operating profit of 2,413 Crore, Andhra bank has been ranked eighth. Bhogaraju Pattabhi Sitaramayya, a renowned freedom fighter and a mastermind founded the bank. Andhra bank was registered in the year on November 20, 1923 and started their operations on November 28 of same year. The bank was started with a paid up capital of 1, 00,000 and sanctioned capital of 10 lakh. Around 1, 611 branches of this bank are spread in India and two branches in the foreign nations. R.Ramachandran is the chairman and the MD of the bank.

5 Dust and Water Resistant Android Phones


Mobile phoneshave become an accessory for most of us. The amount of usage would be in different climatic conditions and we get very cautious of where to use our phones. But mobile makers are becoming more sensitive to consumers concerns and are addressing issues like using phones in dusty places and making phones water resistant.

 Most of the cell phones are built in with developed technology software’s and the materials used for better functioning makes it a light weight gadget to carry around. But, mobile phones are not made strongly immune to unexpected guests like dust and water.

Here are 5 Dust and Water Resistant Android Phones specially built by mobile companies. These phones are certified water-resistant, dust-proof, heat resistant, and built to last long.

Motorola Defy+

Motorola Defy

Motorola Defy+ is a recently released device in the Indian market. However the Defy+ runs Android 2.3 Gingerbread and is powered by a 1GHz processor. It is an IP67 certified dust and water proof Smartphone. Being an IP 67-certified device, the Motorola DEFY+ is fully protected against dust and other particles, but it can also survive a submersion under water up to 1 meter for up to 30 minutes.

It is equipped with a slightly better processor – the TI OMAP 3620, clocked at 1GHz, and an updated OS, the Gingerbread. The device is made of plastic and has a soft-touch finish to the back side. The DEFY+ is a tough phone and its styling is rugged from the tight covers of the 3.5mm jack and microUSB port, to the special lock of the back cover. It is available at the price of 17, 990.

The 3.7 inch display of the Motorola Defy+ comes with a resolution of 480×854 pixels and delivers good image quality. It is packed with a 5MP camera with LED flash.

Samsung Galaxy Xcover

Samsung Galaxy Xcover

This device sports a 3.65inch Gorilla Glass display, and has a 3.2 megapixel camera, with 150MB of built-in storage and runs Android 2.3 Gingerbread. The Galaxy Xcover is also powered by an 800 MHz processor and it is an IP67 certified dust and water proof device. It can stay submerged in water for up to 90 seconds. It is available at the price of 20, 000.

It is packed with HVGA display and a 3.2megapixel camera with flash graces its back. Besides that, you get GPS, Wi-Fi, and a 7.2Mbps 3G radio. It has a 1500mAh battery and there are rubber trims, which are there to prevent moisture and dust from destroying the phone’s circuitry.

Sony Ericsson Xperia Active

Sony Ericsson Xperia Active

The device has a 3 inch scratch resistant display and a 5 megapixel camera. It runs Android 2.3 Gingerbread and is powered by a 1 GHz processor. The device allows the sweaty fingers to work on it. It is a dust and water resistant device with ANT+ technology. It is available at the price of 19, 750.

Xperia Active is a compact Smartphone targeting consumers with an active lifestyle. With a 3 inch screen and running the latest Android platform for Smartphone’s (Gingerbread 2.3), the phone packs Reality Display with Mobile Bravia Engine, a 5mp camera with HD video functionality, and a powerful 1 GHz processor.

Xperia active is dust proof and water resistant and uniquely incorporates wet finger tracking, to ensure the phone works perfectly when either the screen or a user’s fingers are wet. The phone comes pre-loaded with sports apps that enable consumers to easily track their fitness levels.

Users can set their ideal training route using the built-in GPS, Barometer and Compass. On-screen heart rate and pulse can be monitored in realtime (enabled by ANT+ wireless networking technology), while the iMapMyFitness app can monitor day to day performance. Additionally, Facebook inside Xperia allows consumers to share their progress and experiences with friends.

Casio G’zOne Commando

Casio G\'zOne Commando

Casio’s rugged Android Smartphone which has a 3.6 inch display runs Android 2.2 FroYo and is powered by an 800 MHz processor. With its ruggedness this Smartphone is the best amongst the others as it is dust, water and shock proof resistant. It is available at the price of 10, 282.

Additionally it also resists Salt Fog, Solar Radiation and can withstand high altitudes and extreme temperatures. The Casio G’zOne brand is well known for its rugged phones and this handset is built tough in accordance with stringent military specifications.

As it can withstand a variety of environmental hazards that include immersion, rain, and humidity, the Casio G’zOne Commando is the first rugged Android phone from Casio. It’s padded from head to toe in durable material with the classic G’zOne look and feel.

Indeed, it also comes equipped with G’zGear, Casio’s suite of outdoor friendly apps. The G’zOne Commando has notable features include high security encryption for corporate e-mail, Wi-Fi hot-spot capability for up to five devices, and a 5-megapixel rear camera plus LED.

Motorola Defy

Motorola Defy

This device has a 3.7-inch display with Gorilla Glass protection, powered by an 800 MHz processor, it runs Android 2.2 FroYo, and has a 5 megapixel camera and 2 GB of built in storage. It is a dust proof and water resistant device and an eye catching device.

Defy, has a large 1540mAh battery, microUSB cable, 2GB microSDHC card, headphones and USB wall charger. It is available at the price of 14, 800. It is equipped with all the latest wireless connections and entertainment gadgets, Motoblur interface, Backtrack navigation pad and Crystal Talk Plus technology.

The user can upload images and videos to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other social networks through wireless connections. It also combines instant messaging support for Google Talk AOL, Yahoo Messenger, IM, and MSN.

Gandhi’s Girls


Gandhi’s Girls

India, 1942: In the end, the political demise of Mohandas Gandhi came with stunning speed. Until last week, he was the reversed Mahatma–the Great Soul– leader of 400 million Indians in the drive for independence from British colonial rule. With the election of the Labour Government in Britain increasingly likely, chances never seemed brighter for the free India that Gandhi had sought for so long.

But by week’s end, in the wake of newspaper accounts of Gandhi’s sexual peccadilloes, bizarre personal habits and mind-bending cult practices, his career–and perhaps Indian nationalism –lay in ruins. Those closest to Gandhi likened it to a Greek tragedy, a giant cut down by his own hands. “Gandhi’s personal life was a political time bomb waiting to explode,’ said one distraught associate. “Now it’s finally blown up in our faces.’

Ironically, Gandhi set the stage for his demise through his own pronouncements on sex. His obsession began in 1885 when he learned of his father’s death while in bed with his wife. By 1906, he had taken a much celebrated vow of celibacy. An extraordinary commitment, but even then Gandhi was angling for moral loopholes. “If for want of physical enjoyment,’ he wrote, “the mind wallows in thoughts of enjoyment, then it is legitimate to satisfy the hungers of the body.’ For years, supporters now admit, Gandhi had pushed the outer limits of propriety. “The man in the loin cloth, it seems, has thought a good deal about loins,’ said one observer.

After years of such rumors, it was the specific nature of the latest charges, followed by other damaging revelations, that undermined his political base. The shock waves were felt throughout the British empire–and new questions were raised about how relevant a politician’s character was to his work, and whether in the case of Gandhi, the Fourth Estate went too far.

A Spiritual Experience? The trouble began a week ago when the New Delhi Herald published a front page story reporting that Gandhi had spent the weekend with five attractive young women–aides in his nonviolent campaign–at his ashram in Sevegram. Meanwhile, his wife Kasturbai was 2,000 miles away at their mountain retreat in Kashmir recuperating from an illness.

Escorting them was Gandhi’s aide, the movie star-handsome Jawaharlal Nehru. With his urbane charm and stylish taste in jackets, Nehru never had any pretense to celibacy. (His intimacies with Lady Mountbatten are infamous.) Campaign insiders said that they had long been alarmed by Gandhi’s ties to Nehru, and several suggested their time together be cut back. “We told him to dump Nehru,’ said one aide. “But the old man would just sit there and smile. He didn’t see the storm coming.’

It was advice Gandhi must now wish he had heeded. New Delhi Herald reporters and photographers were hiding in nearby bushes, guarding both the front and rear entrances. Except for a breath of fresh air at 3 A.M., the women had spent the entire night with the erstwhile spiritual leader. If the chronology was indicting, the photographs were positively damning. Wielding telephoto lenses, the Herald photographers snapped shots that seem sure to snuff out a political career. The scene: Gandhi and his cabal sprawled on his rope bed– naked.

Late Sunday morning, a weary Gandhi finally spotted the Herald reporters and confronted them. The women were only there as an experiment in self-restraint, he insisted, and nothing sexual transpired between them. “True brachmacharya (celibacy) is this: one who, by constant-attendance upon God, has become capable of lying naked with naked women, however beautiful they may be, without being in any manner whatsoever sexually excited. I have done nothing wrong,’ Gandhi insisted.

The Indian public wasn’t buying it. His explanations had become the issue of the campaign, according to a poll taken two days after the Herald story broke. Only 34 percent of those questioned believed Gandhi’s claim that he hadn’t had sexual relations with the women–and a scant 16 percent believed he hadn’t been sexually excited. A mere 26 percent claimed to be disturbed by the incident itself; what bothered them, said 75 percent of India’s citizens, was the appearance of hypocrisy.

But the questions kept coming. Every stop on his campaign swing turned into a media circus. A protest march in Dandi was cut short by a throng of reporters, barraging Gandhi with questions about his sexual self-control. A new low in political discourse may have been reached when a reporter for the Bombay Post asked during a sit-in, “Did you get an erection last weekend?’ Although Gandhi was well within his rights when he responded, “I don’t have to answer that,’ some observers felt that the appearance of evasiveness further eroded his credibility.

Matters were only made worse when the Herald was widely rumored to be on the verge of publishing more damaging photos–of nothing less than unmistakable signs of Gandhi’s physical excitement. When a pack of enterprising reporters caught up with her at her sickbed, Mrs. Gandhi stuck by her man. She told them: “Honestly, if Mahatma told me that nothing happened, then nothing happened.’

More Revelations: Still, by week’s end, the prospects for Gandhi’s political recovery looked grim, despite his denials and counter-attacks. In the next few days, there were other newspaper accounts of Gandhi’s celibacy experiments. The Bombay Post ran an insiders’ account of life in Gandhi’s ashram. Contrary to the image he had cultivated of a gentle, loving soul, the two-part series, “The Dark Side of Gandhi,’ detailed the brutal regimen imposed on his followers. His 100-plus disciples, forced to live in primitive mud and bamboo huts, were awakened daily at a A.M. to eat nothing but a few crumbs of unseasoned vegetarian gruel and dry wheat. Weakened, they were subjected to long harangues on arcane religious topics. Eyewitness accounts were gruesome. “We had to spend hours on our knees chanting prayers and spinning cotton,’ said one American follower who defected. “We were like zombies.’ Cult experts say Gandhi had dozens of ingenious schemes to weaken his followers’ ties to their families and strengthen his control over them. Their secret name for their leader: “Bapu,’ or father.

The Post story was the final straw. In his political death throes, Gandhi made a dramatic appearance before his supporters–and stopped just short of abandoning his campaign for a free India. “I intended, in all honesty, to come to you this sunrise and tell you that I was leaving the cause. But, then, after tossing and turning all night, as I have through this ordeal, I woke up and said, “Heck, my goodness, no.”

Instead, Gandhi with his back against the proverbial wall reached deep into his bag of tricks and, like a cat with nine lives, pulled yet another rabbit from his hat: a hunger strike. Over the course of a fifty-year career, Gandhi had turned this familiar strategy into a crowd pleaser that could move the masses or pummel an Empire. “Under certain circumstances, fasting is the one weapon God has given us for use in times of utter helplessness,’ said Gandhi defiantly.

No one doubts that Gandhi can go weeks on end without even a drop of chutney. But political analysts are doubtful that the man, once dubbed “Mr. Hunger Strike,’ could make this latest gambit work. “Gandhi represents the politics of the past,’ said Patreek Chardeli. “A new generation of Indians wants vital, robust leadership. I don’t think a starving old man is well positioned to do it.’ More ominously, other pundits said the political damage was too much to contain– even with a high-profile play for sympathy. Davidahr Garthati, the media consultant credited with Gandhi’s decision to abandon the suit and tie of his early barrister days and “go native’ instead, was equally pessimistic. Garthati noted, “His celibacy shtick was crucial to the saint image he’d cultivated for all these years. The non-violence thing, the spinning wheels, the fasting–that was brilliant. But his celibacy really set him apart, made him genuinely holy. Without it, he’s just another pacifist do-gooder.’

Political opponents moved quickly to capitalize on the gaffe. Columnist Robert Novakilli, a longtime Gandhi critic, lambasted Gandhi’s hijinks from his nationally broadcast McRajan Group. “The real perversion is Gandhi’s political agenda. For years, he and his pacifist pals have had two things in mind: tinkering with the salt tax and cozying up to Stalin.’ And his most formidable rival, Moslem leader Muhammed Ali Jinnah, sought to subtly position himself to pick up Gandhi’s fleeing supporters. “Family life has always been sacred to me,’ he told reporters, standing outside his family’s mosque with his wife and daughter. “I don’t think it’s my place to comment on the controversy surrounding some of those in the public eye. It’s up to the Indian people to judge for themselves.’

And their judgment seemed harsh. Within a matter of days, the squalid controversy over Gandhi’s private parts turned him from a national hero into a laughingstock. On his nightly radio program, comedian Charu Carson quipped, “Well, at least we know the Mahatma is big enough for the job of running India.’ He added, to more laughter, “I guess he was really meditating his brains out this weekend.’ Editorial cartoonists had a field day, as a bulging loin cloth quickly became the Mahatma’s new trademark.

In the next few days more revelations came trickling out about other celibacy “experiments’ he had been conducting since his forties, including one report of a pleasure trip down the Ganges with Nehru and two female assistants on the awkwardly named Holy Cow. The Post also revealed that at the end of each day, he had one of his attractive, young female disciples administer an enema, which he insisted was for “health’ and “cleansing’ purposes. “Gandhi gives as much as he takes– even to total strangers,’ said one Gandhi aide.

New Ground rules: Gandhi’s sudden demise triggered an orgy of self-examination in the media. Did the press go too far? “At first, I agonized over whether we should risk tarnishing a great man’s reputation with close-up photos of naked women and speculation about his sex life,’ said Ved

Fiedleraba, who led the Herald stakeout. “But then I realized that the public had a right to know.’ Fiedleraba reasoned that if there was the slightest possibility that Gandhi was lying about his celibacy, then that raised serious questions about his candor and his ability to negotiate with foreign leaders were India ever to become independent. “So, naturally, it was my moral obligation to set up camp outside his bedroom.’

Clearly, the ground rules have changed. Historically, the press has had a gentlemen’s agreement with India’s rulers. When Viceroy Lord Lillybottom himself brought a bevy of beauties to the Taj Mahal, the muckrakers of Madras looked the other way. But with the rise of Indian Nationalism and the decline of British sea power, the mores of Indian society have been loosened–and so have those of the press. Today, nothing is off limits, even enemas. Many wondered what’s next: asking Jinnah whether he had violated the Koran’s strictures against amorous relations with pigs or other unholy animals? But for now it was Gandhi who was caught in this whirlwind. This smiling man, from a more polite age, seemed oblivious to the new rules of his beloved India.

Whatever the press’s ultimate responsibility, the longstanding doubts over Gandhi’s character left India’s nationalist movement in disarray. Behind the scenes, some Congress party operatives were privately relieved. “We feel betrayed,’ said one. “Gandhi promised he would remain celibate, at least until India achieved independence. Now that he’s gone, at least we can move on.’

Ultimately, Gandhi’s fate hinged on those questions of character, rather than any moral revulsion. In her essay “Gandhi’s Women Problem, Women’s Gandhi Problem,’ Sukai Lessardai voiced the concerns of many women wary of Gandhi’s apparent philandering. “Whether or not he was celibate, his need to prove his spiritual manhood by lying with five naked women is an affront to the dignity and equality of women everywhere.’ And as Willmed Schneidermanai of the Indian Enterprise Institute points out, “It’s not so much the fact that he slept with these women or regularly indulged in enemas; it’s that he showed such bad judgment in doing so. I think this raises serious questions about Gandhi’s self-discipline and insensitivity to the appearances of impropriety –and finally about Gandhi’s ability to lead a successful non-violent movement.’

Now the question is: Whither India? In his stead, there are other leaders who could possibly win independence for India–the Moslem Jinnah, or even Vallabhaai Patel–but neither has the stature and name recognition of a Gandhi. Non-violent disobedience seems a memory now. And nationalism itself is on the backburner. As the likely next Viceroy of the Raj, Lord Louis Mountbatten, points out, “If an entire nation could be led down the primrose path by this charlatan and hypocrite, the Indian people are not yet ready for independence.’ Wise heads in India and Britain agreed, and with Gandhi’s political demise, a tumultuous chapter in India’s history closes, and calmer times lie ahead.

-Gandhi’s girls – sex scandal Washington Monthly, July-August, 1987 by Art Levine