Posted in Political

Why Lockdown Will Not Be Hard On Indians.

Hopefully our PM orders for a lockdown of entire India after today’s Janata Curfew that is already an overwhelming success. I have my reasons. I don’t think most Indians will suffer because, Indians have the habit of bulk buying for generations. Culturally also we have the stocking practice in our homes.

I heard our PM asking us citizens not to hoard in his televised address. I did in fact shop a few days ago. I did a bit of bulk buying. I don’t feel guilty because that’s how we Indians shop generally don’t we? I did nothing unusual. You just have to queue up in the grocery stores to see how much we Indians bulk buy routinely. Anyway, bulk buying now for me is reduced to a pathetic 2 kg of everything. In modern times and in urban homes, bulk buying is a cruel joke when it comes to groceries. Our lifestyle changes being the reaso.

We bulk buy by month beginning typically after we receive our pay checks. For instance, in our joint family (some 25 years back), we used to bulk order 25 kg Rice bags,  5 to 10 kg Atta or Wheat bags, 5 kg Onions, 3 kg Sugar, 5 kg Cooking oil, dozen Toilet soaps, 1 kg Detergent, etc. In north Indian families, they add a 5 to 10 kg ghee (clarified butter) tin. Still this was not even one month’s provisions. Even after mine became a nuclear family, I followed the same method for managing groceries except that now in our case, our bulk buy has considerably reduced over years given our small family size and in keeping with changes in our eating habits. So now my staple bulk buy is 5 kg Rice bag, 4 kg Idli Rice bag, 3 kg Wheat bag, 3-5 kgs of mixed Dals or lentils, 3 kg Cooking oil etc. Even the rice content is now divided between Basmati, Brown rice, Jeera rice (seeraga sambha) and Ponni plain rice so effectively I buy 1 to 3 kg of each type of rice.  Except for vegetables and fruits and meat and fresh milk, most Indian families shop at one go like this. We also store for a month or two months in advance always. In our joint family, we always hoarded six months stock because we used to get a steady stream of guests then. We buy Tamarind to last us for 2-3 years, spices like Cardamom, Cinnamon etc., to keep for years. We pickle mango, lemon etc to use for years. We make papads and masala powders and fryums for winters. A chief reason is that, the older the foodgrains like rice get, the older the tamarind gets, very much like vine, they taste better and improve in volume.

So I am confused about this Covid 19 advice against hoarding. At least as far as India is concerned. We don’t do panic buying and hoard. Let me make it clear here. We Indians generally buy our provisions in bulk. That is it. Even if sec 144 is announced without a warning, most Indian homes can still manage. Just look into our refrigerators! Bursting at seams!

Even in government-run fair price shops (PDS), provisions are issued on bulk basis only. My maid uses my card, therefore I know. At any one time, Tamil Nadu govt issues 20 kg free rice apart from other foodgrains and pulses. Minimum/Maximum quantum is fixed for pulses and cereals of course. This is on monthly basis.

Indian shopping habits are very much unlike the western habits. We always save for a rainy day. That is why, even our savings and investments ratio is far higher than you may find in advanced nations.

Masks and hand sanitizers started selling out from even a month before. We Indians hardly use tissues or sanitizers because, instead we use water faucets in our toilets. When we are in the habit of washing our hands everytime before and after we eat anything, where is the need for sanitizer. We don’t use forks and spoons to eat. We eat with our hands. So that means, we wash our hands always. Of course we have the rudimentary handwash liquid soap these days at home, nothing more. Hand sanitizers and tissues  are in production and available in India mainly for the sake of visiting foreigners and for those Indians who  live western life within India. And of course for restaurants. I am not ashamed to admit, i have no use for them sorry! Now that there is a demand for masks and hand sanitizers, the government has ordered for increased production locally.

Since tomatoes started selling cheap, I have been bulk buying tomatoes as well for more than a month now. I buy 2 kgs minimum for our small family! I buy kilos of fresh unpeeled green peas, double beans, soya beans, rajma, etc, shell them and freeze them for off-season. I buy kilos of mangoes for pickles. There are atleast a dozen coconuts shelled and stored in  my freezer as well all the time. Idli batter, I grind every week once and refrigerate to last for a week. I dry grind wheat locally and store atta in kilos at home. I pound even dhania (coriander seeds) and red chili with a dash of black pepper, lentils etc., locally in a mill. Minimum 2 to 3 kgs because this is a basic spicy ingredient in our south Indian cooking. I grind my Masala/curry powder as well to last me an year. I buy coffee and tea in bulk and hoard always two months stock in advance.

Since I have lived abroad a considerable time, I know the difference between the shopping habits of my fellow Indians and other nationalities. Others hoard things that normally we Indians don’t pick up much – like now the tissues for instance. Indians buy fresh vegetables and fruits in kilos as well. Alongside you can see Arabs bulk buy frozen meat. We buy ‘agarbathis’ for our Puja while other nationalities buy scented candles. Cannot catch a single Indian citizen paying for a scented candle. It is okay for us to receive these as gifts though 😀

Most Indians also use only cloth hand-made nappies for babies. 99% don’t go for Huggies or such diapers. You can see other nationalities even in general times bulk buy and hoard diaper packs in dozens. I used to smile looking at this because I never once bought a single diaper for my baby all those years ago 😀 We Indians have lived the natural way all along. Now the diaper companies are trying to capture Indian market at any cost trying to change us. The upper middle class is already falling for it. Sanitary napkins – we women can’t do without. But why can’t babies be weaned out of the disposable napkins. Major pollutant environmentally.

So our Prime Minister need not have to worry. We Indians bulk buy always. This is nothing new or extraordinary. This is not panic buying at all. We Indians have no use for tissue boxes either – we use cloth handkerchiefs mostly. I use tissues only to soak extra oil from the fried food in my kitchen. If you are an American guest in my home, you will have to learn to use the water faucet as I don’t buy toilet rolls at all! Only five star hotels in India and resorts stock the paper rolls!

As for bulk buying of prescribed medication, i take mine overseas so I buy everything in bulk again. I am presently in India on long haul. Otherwise, I used to be here once in 3 to 6 months. So my medical supplies have to be prompt and regular. Most NRIs like me bulk buy their medical needs in India because our dosage is light, never strong like in foreign countries.

So what conditions apply to others, need not have to apply necessarily to India. India is not locked down. At least as yet. We are unofficially 1.4 billion. We have 370 covid-19 infected cases out of which 7 are dead. Stage 2. As of today, this figure includes 39 foreign nationals mostly Italian tourists.  370 on 1.4 billion is not bad, touchwood. India is doing good without imposition of section 144, so far. Let us see. I am keeping my fingers crossed. I am pretty optimistic that we Indians will break the corona chain. We will!

Still, the cautiously optimistic me would like more and extended isolation and social distancing in the nation so that we flatten the corona curve from rising to stage 3. Last evening I was shocked to notice people queuing up to buy milk from a booth in my street because the milk van arrived late. I buy my fresh milk by morning always.  Milk has to be fresh for us Indians. No UHT longlife milk. Not even our groceries sell it. Today in tv news I saw that most of India ., i.e, some 99% of the country is deserted and on self imposed isolation/lockdown. Yet there were people outside the Central Railway station in Chennai, obviously migrant labourers from other states wanting to go back home.

From today, all the incoming and outgoing international flights to and fro India stand cancelled. Train services cancelled until the month end for the entire nation. Now this definitely means hardship because India moves on its rails. Major ferrying of goods and services across the country is through our extensive railway network. Which means, the local economy is to take a hit, as expected. But this is something we have to grin and bear for our own sake.

Let’s see.

Off to have a glass of buttermilk now. Waiting for the clock to strike 5 so that I can rush to my balcony and start clapping hands to applaud the services of our medical fraternity. Hats off to our dear doctors, nursing staff, lab techs, paremedics, police force, janitors, security detail etc., etc on this most important day in contemporary Indian history.

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Learning now that 75 districts in India have announced lockdown. Chennai figures in the list along with Erode and Kanchipuram districts from Tamil Nadu. Pharmacies, groceries and bank ATMs and other essential services will still function. Milk supply will be uninterrupted! This is extremely important for coffee and tea crazy Indians!

I never dreamed that such a day would dawn in my life. I was talking to my aunt who is 75 and my mother-in-law who is 83. They both said, things were like this during the India-Pakistan war times in 1965 and 1971. My MIL is 1937 born so she remembers the World war II times even if it did not involve India. She was sent to a village to live for months as safety measure. The Japanese did bomb Chennai, then called Madras and there was some casualty. Considering what was going on in rest of the world, this never made to world headlines. India was also on the verge of winning independence from the British.

I also remember my father telling me of how his family rushed back to Madras by ship from Burma by 1942 or 42. My grandfather, my father’s father, was a matriculate and he worked as postmaster in Rangoon. He also was running a very prosperous side-business selling leather footware. The affluent family could earn their berth in a ship therefore. Some of my relatives who also worked for the British govt in Burma, returned to Madras by foot walking for months through jungles. An elderly woman relative was born as a baby in the jungle near Assam and named  ‘Janaki’ promptly. I inherited my grandparents’ teakwood cot, rosewood dresser and a teakwook bureau. I gifted the cot to my maid who eventually sold it not realising its value. I regret gifting it. I still have the other two. Strong and solid like steel. War reminders. Now we do have a war like emergency in the world. Only this time, the entire world is fighting a novel enemy, the Corona virus.

 

Posted in Political

The Corona Gyan: The Famous Indian Resilience

I remember the time when there was Anthrax scare in the US. My brother-in-law who is a general physician then said, Anthrax was not uncommon in India, with cases present even in Chennai. We have simply remained unaware that’s it. In his over 30+ years of private practice, he bemused that, there was not a thing he did not get to see. We have cows roaming our streets, dozens of stray dogs and cats littering every gulley and crows shitting every windowsill and parked car without being shot down at by civic authorities. Rhesus monkey menace is pretty common in every Indian city, town and village in India. You may find them in your balconies and terraces or even sometimes raiding our kitchen. We feed them fruits because we think actually God Hanuman is visiting us! We even feed the snakes, milk in our temples. We host elephants in temples! The only difference is, we DO NOT EAT them! In India, everything is holy and revered – from the cow to the crow! Even the dog happens to be the vehicle of Lord Kala Bhairava, a fiery form of Lord Shiva who is connected to destruction and restoring balance in the universe. World media portray India as filthy and teeming with germs, but at times like now perhaps, it helps growing up with a natural immunity to a good number of bacteria and viruses in the kind of environment we have in India. Could be a reason for covid 19 picking up slow in India (touchwood). Indians’ physical resistance to germs is very strong unlike those who grow up in sterile atmosphere.

In fact I was debating this with my son very recently. He returned from the US quitting his research studies (we forced him to). He was telling me how mental health is not given its due share of attention in India. I quoted a cousin’s name and said, today he works for a multinational only because we did not label him as autistic or dyslexic when he was a kid. He was just a backbencher and a poor performer in academics who did not merit any extra attention. He grew up with his peers as an equal and had a normal childhood and adolescence. Not all the kids can be class toppers. You need some to flunk the grades as well! In today’s schools and times, I wondered aloud how someone like him might fare. Sidelined like a freak, asked to join a special school, forced into counselling sessions and behaviour therapy classes. Of course there are varying degrees of delayed development and in some cases, special attention may be warranted. But in a majority of cases, not sidelining the odd but mainstreaming them and normalizing them must be sufficient. I have heard our elderly say, ‘not all the fingers in our hands are the same.’ This is how we tolerated and nurtured the slightly lethargic among us and made them live a normal life.

Today my sister called to tell me how the situation in the US is getting worse and out of control. She has family there from in-laws’ side. Not only are the masses there hysterical but even the doctors are overtly stressed and can’t cope up. The American physicians may be great research scientists and innovators in the field of medicine, but it looks like, they are not mentally prepared or trained like their Indian counterparts to take on or deal with highly stressful situations and therefore cannot get down to work on their hands and knees when there arises a crisis, without breaking down. Then what is the use of boasting state of art institutions and cutting edge technology medical apparatus and testing/research laboratories. Apparently, the medical fraternity in the west gets overwhelmed/ exhausted too soon. Indian doctors are good at managing stress and dealing with traumatic conditions because, life is a struggle for us all the way. You only have to step into our government hospitals to understand why a huge percentage of medicos in the US, UK, Europe, Australia and Middle East are Indians by descent. Same for our staff nurses and paramedics. Comparatively India is cool. Of course I do not know how the next few weeks are going to pan out. Indian doctors still are good at diagnosis without the help of screening tests for the chief reason that medical equipment and testing kits are expensive in India!

I was telling my son, we don’t give importance to mental health in India because we never believe we will have any problem in the first place with our mind. We meditate. We pray in temples. We celebrate without holding back. Just look at our festivals and weddings. Globally they call ours ‘the big fat Indian wedding!’ We don’t control our emotions. I have been on the verge of so-called depression myself many times in my life. All of us go through ups and downs in life. We go through phases. We throw temper tantrums, we stomp and scream, we cry and curse but then we do come around in a while. We do not consult a psychiatrist for normal but sometimes erratic human behaviour and we refuse to pop a pill branding ourselves as ‘the depressed.’ There is nothing wrong with a vast majority of us. The actual cases for counselling or medication may be negligible. After Corona, my son tends to agree with me.

I have had friends and relatives visiting from US. What spooks me is that, some of my friends and relatives who grew up in India actually find India unsettling! For instance, someone complained about fresh milk I was using for coffee. These people are now used to milk from cartons that they cannot accept fresh milk not older than one day, merely pasteurized and without added vitamins and preservatives, as safe enough to drink. In fact at Ongole in Andhra where my husband worked, i used to watch as my milkwoman milked a cow in front of our house. Straight from the udder, warm and without water mixing. I love fresh milk and ‘seempal’ (the first milk of a cow after it births a calf but now i don’t have it because I think only the calf has the right to the first milk not humans) and until last generation, many of us owned cows at home. Now of course, we get milk sachets in half or one litre hardly a day old that we refrigerate. This milk unlike the UHT milk you may find in the US or Europe, has only a day’s shelf life even if you put it in fridge. This milk curdles if you use it after a day. Because this is how the natural milk must be. Have you ever seen the UHT milk souring. It can have even 365 day shelf life! I was shocked when my friend refused to drink fresh pure Indian milk only because it did not come from a carton printed with calories and ingredients (!)

Same for the meat we cook in India. No frozen fish or chicken or goat meat. Even though I am vegetarian, I cook meat for my family and friends. We have never so far gone for frozen meat. Even in Malaysia and in Middle East (where we are currently based), we have gone for fresh meat only. Most Americans again cannot agree with meat that is not packaged or frozen. Anything that is packed for them is automatically safe and hygienic enough to consume. Fresh meat is contaminated in their dictionary. Expiry date and date of packing are a must for them in anything and everything! Now how can you ever change this mindset! We Hindus in India who are supposedly the poorest, refuse to eat food older than a day but the far richer Europeans and Americans and even Arabs go for food frozen for months even years! I wonder who is really living a truly richer and better life!

The curry smell may be because of turmeric, an array of spices like black pepper, ginger, garlic, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, even saffron, curry leaves, coriander, red chili, asafoetida (hing), fennel, cumin seeds, mustard, kalonji (or black cumin) etc., etc. that are an integral part of Indian cuisine – north and/or south Indian. We Indians use a mix of all or most of these on a daily basis in our kitchen. Eating with hands, walking without footwear – these are all healthy habits. Even power-cuts are good! Most Indians can go without power and amenities like air conditioner for days! Yoga helps most of us have flexible bodies. Meditation calms our mind. I am not saying we are the best. But I guess, we can handle trauma and crises much better than the so-called advanced first world nations as we see presently.

The greatest lesson I learn from Corona is that, not necessarily everything has to be streamlined or strictly disciplined and enforced as in the US or Europe. Things can be irregular and not punctual as in India. Things can go wrong no issues. Things can wait. Things can be imperfect. Systems can break down like our power grids and metro rail! India teaches you resilience and patience as none can! One of the major issues in the west I feel, is this invincible attitude of theirs because they believe they have put in place the best streamlined system that will take care of itself.The litmus test for such a hypothesis is now. And I must say, most western countries are already proving the theory wrong.

We Indians are infamous for our ‘chaltha hai’ attitude about everything. We take it all very easy and nothing is serious for us. ‘This too shall pass.’ For the first time in my life, instead of counting it as our curse, I am taking it to be our greatest blessing.

We Indians, especially Hindus, have been slowly getting materialistic that is against our dharma. Covid 19 is like a rude awakening to us, reminding us, our goal is Nirvana/Mukthi – the ultimate renunciation of all things bonding and materialistic by nature.

My husband has been working outside India for over 20 years now. For the first time I heard him say, he wants to return home for good and be with just the family. Corona has opened his eyes and he says, ‘what for all this money. who for?’ I braced myself for three more years abroad as he very recently bagged a prestigious project to head. We don’t know how this will work out, but the very thought has stirred emotions in me. Many expats working overseas who are doing great share a surprisingly sudden and similar feeling, wanting to get back to India.

India’s greatest pluses are this mental strength and quiet confidence and physical resilience. Even after serial bomb blasts on more than one occasion, Mumbaikars returned to work the very next day because the city never stops or sleeps. This nation has to go on, come what may. This my nation has been hounded and traumatized for centuries – that there is never a chance or moment for us to get complacent. We are always on our toes. Even militarily, we have to thank our hostile neighbourhood for keeping us always on alert! Our soldiers are battle hardened! We fight the worst adversaries : the Pakistanis and Chinese!

Family ties in India are very strong. Family breaks your heart as none does. Rat race for school and university admissions, employment etc., etc., have you primed to compete with the best brains in any part of the world ! Frankly this is the secret of success for most Indians who make it big in the US.

You cannot drive in the city without having your car scratched. Nobody even bothers! No court case, no fine. That is India. If you drive in Indian roads, you can drive anywhere in the world – that is another feather to our cap!

Do i sound sarcastic! Or satiric? No. This is just matter of factly.

The calm demeanor with which our prime minister Shri Narendra Modi ji addressed the nation has won him our hearts. Such a confidence yet caution for corona. Fixing responsibilities. Assigning roles. Preparing the grounds, testing waters, for the masses before taking the eventual and inevitable plunge shortly, if things don’t work out smooth. I like his approach.

India is resilient as ever. Will will banish the corona! Covid 19 will bypass India! Jai Hind!

PS: Watching a rerun of Man vs Wild with Bear Grylls featuring our PM, I can’t help lauding the clarity with which Modi ji asserts, how personal hygiene is very important to Indians even if most of us can’t care less about social hygiene. With Chinese or the west, the reverse is true. For Planet Earth to stay healthy and survive, every society must practise both in tandem.

Posted in Political

Chennaiites Have No Clue On ‘Social Distancing.’

Update: As of now, confirmed corona cases in India crossed 150 with two dead.

Chennaiites continue to go out and shop and socialize in restaurants not heeding to round-the-clock warnings by government in tv channels and in phone messages advising the public to maintain social distancing to discourage the spread of Covid 19 in India. All the medical advice seems to fall on deaf ears. God knows what is in store for India in the coming weeks. Well, by the way our temples are still functional drawing devotees by hordes who are undeterred by the corona virus. You simply cannot reason with these people. A friend is determined to visit Tirupathi saying, ‘if it has to happen, it will happen!’

However schools (except for board exam candidates) and universities and anganwadis (creches run by municipal authorities) remain closed. Also all fitness centers, swimming pools, clubs. Most IT staff work from home and banks are encouraged to deal with clients online or via phone. Man-to-man contact is tried to be kept minimum. There was a media report claiming that the vegetable and the fruit wholesale markets of the city are shut. Not sure how far this is true as there is no news in local tv channel confirming the same. Petty hawkers and small traders are already hit, no doubt, but what to do.

Crowds are milling as ever at T. Nagar, the middle-class shopping district of the metro , and Saravana Stores is doing brisk business in their nine floors saying, the ban is applicable only to malls and cinemas and not to smaller establishments like proprietary stores. Trains and buses are full as usual. I finished my fifteen day grocery shopping yesterday and stocked my fridge to full capacity. I missed getting only long life milk as I have fresh regular supply at doorstep. Other than that, I am fully equipped for even a one month complete social distancing and house arrest, should need arise. Last noon, I shopped only for most essential items and topped up my medical supplies from pharmacists. Still, I could not find a single face mask N95 for protection on leaving home. I did with a chemist, but he quoted an exorbitant price so I ordered the same online. Same for hand sanitizer so I got handwash instead.

The fate of my nation and my state and my city have me worried. I don’t want to panic but it is impossible not to think about this when there is so much of ignorance even among the educated here. Government should penalize the private showrooms selling textiles and merchandise like in T Nagar, Anna Nagar etc., who do not have a concern for the greatest catastrophe that is waiting to strike India if we don’t stay alert. Profiteering even at trying times like these. If the system collapses, none of us stands a chance but who cares.

I would like my government to enforce rules and regulations more severely and strictly, restricting movements.

I understand that with a population of 1.3 billion, India’s medical facilities are already on the verge of being stretched to full capacity. I am told, testing is done on priority basis only because the testing kits and supplies are also limited. No use in blaming the government that is increasing production of masks, sanitizers, testing kits, antibiotics, everything, all at the same time. Hats off to our medical fraternity who are working twenty four hours nonstop and to Modi government and our respective state governments for all that they are doing in their capacity to keep the nation going. God be with you!

My only visitor is my housemaid who lives in my next street. I have educated her on sanitizing. Her two college going kids are home and her labourer husband has to still find a job everyday, so that is precisely India’s problem. The lower middle-class. Daily wage earners. Most of them have to necessarily work every single day to earn the bread for their family. I tried to convince my autowallah to take a break yesterday but he refused. At last he obliged and came to a compromise saying that he would tie a cloth towel over his mouth. He has to necessarily work from morning 8 to evening 8 to keep his kitchen fires going. I can understand his situation perfectly but there is no way I could drill into him the precarious nature and condition of Covid 19. As every other Indian citizen/Chennaiite, my automan believes the corona virus will bypass him or he would survive it anyway even if it strikes. To him, it is like any other flu. He can’t understand what the fuss is all about.

Under these circumstances, all I can do is only pray. Pray, pray and pray.

 

 

Posted in Political

How Corona Is Used To Justify Untouchability In India

‘Greatest disservice to God is exclusion of fellow human with intent’ – Viji

‘God made us different because She wanted us to be different’ -Viji 😀

Hindu Dharma is a way of life where we follow to this date our ancient traditions and customs that include ablutions before entering one’s home every single day and mopping floors and outside home with cow dung for instance (a practice still followed in rural India). Most of us do not sip water/coffee with our lips touching the tumbler ever. You have to watch a south Indian Hindu gulp coffee from two inch above his/her mouth without the lips touching the tumbler. That is why we are not comfortable sipping coffee or chai (tea) from china cups. Most Hindu homes therefore use thali and tumblers for eating and drinking purposes that will not be co-shared with anyone. In Islamic culture for instance, everyone will dig from the same biriyani plate and eat at the same time. Originally the purpose was to overrule any conspiracy for murder or misdeed as in arab-turk reign, killing brothers for gain and kingdom was regular practice. The Moghuls were good at it and thus murdered their own kith and kin to win access to the throne. Old habits die hard and even today you can therefore see Pakis and Afghans share a single biriyani plate for their meals. Everyone will share from the same bread basket using the same hands they eat with simultaneously. This is JUST not acceptable for Hindus. You can do whatever you want with your own ‘thali; – and nobody will touch your thali. Even the subzis (veg curry) and stews and curds are served in small cups in the thali. Once you start eating, you cannot use even your left hand to touch the common food. This is a very serious blunder for Hindus. The food etiquette of Hindus is not really complicated, but easy to follow. There is just no intermixing or sharing of food with anyone as simple as that.

 

Similarly, the hugging habit too was absent among Hindus mainly for one purpose: to avoid what we call ‘runana bandha’ – an emotional attachment that comes with physical proximity like brushing, caressing, touching anyone. As a Hindu’s goal in life is always renunciation of material aspect by severing bonds for detachment, the physical exchanges like the muslim men physically hugging, christians handshaking – these were never adopted by Hindus. A foot distance also is maintained with anyone anyday.

For centuries, some Hindu communities especially the upper castes have been taking this physical personal space or what you may call ‘social distancing’ today, very seriously. The flip side of Hinduism is the caste system although one cannot completely rule out the benefits of having had a protective caste/varna system that prevented gene contamination with alien races with rigid excommunication codes for ages. In Tamil, this social distancing has been called ‘aachaaram’ – not since the Corona but from time immemorial. It means maintaining physical distance with anyone and everyone, not touching anything or anyone, regular ablutions, keeping a very strict personal hygiene etc., etc. However, those Hindus born into the Panchama communties outside the Varna system (who you may call the Dalits today or SC/ST) never had the privilege of observing this so-called achcharam because, these people tended to the agricultural farms, raised cattle, dug up latrines and cleaned the communities’ poop/sewerage manually (manual scavenging is still in practice in India although legally abolished; impoverished men continue to work as scavengers in our rural areas clearing choked drains and sewerage with bare hands) since the advent of human civilization and cremated the dead. They kneaded the clay for pottery and sewed chappals for others out of animal skin. They doubled up as warriors or soldiers in war times. They ate what was left over – pigs that they reared mostly – and stayed out of urban settlements like the exclusively reserved ‘agraharams’ earmarked for the privileged castes. For their occuptional hazards perhaps, they were barred from entering the civilized part of the country and into the temples, which later became their curse. These were precisely labeled the ‘untouchable’ called the ‘Harijan’ by Mahatma Gandhi who worked to remove their social stigma thoughout his life as much as he fought in a nonviolent way for India’s independence from the British.

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No Aachchaaram that denies a fellow human his/her sense of dignity is worth it. Corona is better to that.

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Today, one happens to come across very distasteful posts in social media, justifying untouchability, by those who claim to be upper caeste ONLY BY VIRTUE OF BIRTH. This is not only despicable and disgusting but outright a callous and irresponsible attempt to whitewash millennia of ill=treatment and injustice meted out to a section of humanity – that too our own blood brothers in the name of culture and tradition. When the varna system was put into practice in ancient India from God knows when, there was dignity of labour. As nothing lasts for ever, corruption set in in the middle ages leading to a skewed development of the society when a slender minority began prospering at the expense of a subdued enslaved and ignorant majority. Some of us today hijack the very concept of ‘aachaaram’ as our own, because we have been precisely put in that ivory tower by our fellow brothers and sisters who chose to get their hands and feet dirty on our behalf and all we can do now is to boast of our lofty ideals shamelessly and selfishly.

The purpose of reservation is to reverse this inequality that has existed in Indian society for at least last two thousand years and make it a level playing field for everyone. And it is not even seventy five years since the restoration of the status quo commenced. India may pick up slowly drawn back by sluggish growth owing to our reservation policies, but social equality and justice are more important to Indians than material development. In my opinion, only such a just and equitable society will not be endangered by a possible civil war in future. It is sad to note that, now in the name of Corona, some wolves in sheep’s clothing are trying to justify the centuries old cruel and evil practice called ‘untouchability.’ These cowards must be reminded that they could observe without a break their so-called achcharams that morphed into a heinous practice over time, robbing fellow humans of their very dignity, only because those born unlucky got their hands and feet soiled and dirty working the farmlands and milking the cows and clearing your poop and cremating your dead. Decades after reservation came into force to restore balance in the society, there still seems to be social stigma attached to our reserved categories, what a shame!

I have written a lot on conversion. Yet I must record here that, conversion to Christianity in India is not happening without an individual’s consent. Never against someone’s will. Nobody is being forced or tortured to embrace christianity even if one may be bribed or brainwashed. What prevents these hypocratic Hindus with ‘holier than thou’ attitude from taking dharma to the grassroots levels – our masses and convincing them to stay on.

Posted in Political

How Can China Go Scotfree.

After damaging the world wrecking havoc at regular intervals with fatal pandemics that are truly the only made-in-China originals, apart from territorial aggression on neighbours, economically blackmailing helpless smaller nations leading them to a debt trap, destructing the environment to the highest degree with very high level of gas emissions, hunting down endangered species in the oceans and legalizing the elephant tusk trade, bullying anyone and everyone in the vicinity who dares to question, China seems to have been allowed to go scotfree by generous world nations without having to pay for its deadly sins. Why?

https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/china-exploit-control-of-pharmaceutical-exports-by-brahma-chellaney-2020-03?fbclid=IwAR2vLLc0rupkTiLqeRwyipUJ5SSlYTR6AI6MBZ7QFieX_erG9k1ZEJNg8C0

Two years back China was about to lap up the Bhutan territory thereby denying Bhutanese access to India, the only road out of the landlocked Himalayan kingdom. India stepped in. Only two nations in the world have it in them to confront the arrogant haughty China: the US and India. In Doklam, Indian soldiers bravely forced the Chinese to retreat that did not go down well with the chinese. Some media reports observe, the Wuhan lab was producing bioweapon chiefly to unleash terror on India before it leaked out and the chinese got a taste of their own bitter medicine. Look at this bloodchilling video from high on the Himalayas where the chinese and indian soldiers face-off. (This is not Doklam but one of kind of regular encounters between chinese army and indian army. The chinese as a habit violate our border and sovereignty and have to be pushed back everytime). Only two years back, we were staring at a possible escalation of tension with China that could have led to a limited scale warfare. I doubt if any other nation in the world has this kind of nerve to take on China boldly and squarely on face. Just imagine the smaller nations left with no option but to surrender to China.

China’s ally naturally is our next door neighbour terroristan aka Pakistan. Rogue nations are at it together, not surprisingly. China has invested heavily in Pak and thousands of chinese workers are stationed right in Pak territory yet the epicenter of global terror continues to downplay the Corona scene there. After all, when India destroyed Pak terror camps in Balakot, they claimed we uprooted some 10-12 trees, so what do you expect from them. Pak government and Pak media are sold to China and their profiteering agent in this case is their notorious criminal ISI. To the extent that Pak is trying to paint a saintly picture of China asking all not to believe in ‘conspiracy theories’ on China, conniving with their sheepish media. Just who are they kidding. Other cronies of China include Iran and Turkey. Iran has thousands of cases and Iranians are busy spreading the virus around the world, especially in Middle Eastern nations  where they frequent.

China has been terror friendly so far quashing down India’s pleas at UN for designating vicious Pak terrorists as wanted by Interpol. China stalls India from becoming the Security council member, brushing aside the fact that India gave up the spot in 1950s (when we still trusted the chinese and were gullible and naive enough to commit this suicidal mistake) and recommended China for the same. China is classic example as to how some entities in the world won’t hesitate to backstab you when you spare them a lease of life. The Chinese pres Mao Tse Dong visited India as a state guest but on return immediately waged a war on India in 1961 when he might not even have digested the banquet feasts he had had in Delhi. India learnt a harsh lesson from China – the lesson we can never forget for life. Enemy’s enemy becomes our friend. That is how China and Pakistan are now chummy-chummy. How long, let’s see. Until the entire Pak territory leading to the Gwadar Port and the port itself will belong to China very soon when Pak fails to pay back the chinese loans compounded with interests. Already a port in Sri Lanka has similarly been acquired by China when the island nation could not afford to payback the exorbitant chinese loan installments. The lease is now for 100 years. Modern day territorial expansion.

It is time China is made to pay for this folly, foot the bill, for endangering entire humankind to grave conditions that can lead to mass extinctions, loss of revenue for nations, infection and extinction risks to wild life among other things – if it is proved beyond doubt that the Corona virus leaked from the chinese lab in Wuhan that was testing bioweapons. Very high level of panic and mass hysteria everywhere, leave alone the pandemic. Markets are crashing, ordinary lives affected across the entire globe. Families apart and broken. CHINA, YOU AND YOU ALONE ARE RESPONSIBLE AND ANSWERABLE!

 

Posted in Political

Dharma In The Times Of Corona Virus – Part 2

Hahaha here is a good question from Whatsapp: is the corona virus an RSS agent??? because it seems to promote Sanathana Dharma!

Some dharmic customs practised for tens of thousands of years in Hindu homes:

  1. eating with barehands
  2. brushing with neem twigs
  3. rinsing/cleaning not with toilet paper but water
  4. ablution before entering homes and temples. until very recently we had this habit in all our homes. leave the chappals outside, no footwear within home, and washing foot before entering home. most Hindu temples, atleast the ancient ones, boast of their own temple tanks where devotees would take a dip before entering the holy places. temples by seaside and riverside had natural waterbodies where the devotees took a dip. even today this is true of India. lakhs of pilgrims take a dip everyday in river Ganga  before visiting the Kashi-Hardwar temples and visitors to those like Rameshwaram take a dip in the sea
  5. vegetarian food habits mostly. even the worst non vegetarian Hindus in India cannot eat 10% of meat like a westerner or arab or Indian muslims/christians having inherited very poor appetites when it comes to meat ingesting
  6. mopping the floors with cow dung, spraying of cow urine. the cow excreta being natural anti-bacterial – even today this is the scene in rural India.
  7. maintaining bodily distance of 3 foot even at home among family members. only now it is common to see daughters hug fathers etc. never in my growing-up days.
  8. ‘namaste’ the universal greeting which is also a yoga by itself. just join your palms in unison in front of your chest for a few minutes. see the vibration that reaches your brain from palms
  9. school punishments of hindus and punishments to kids by parents always used to be what is patented today as ‘brain yoga’ by americans sadly. i have done even 108 for Lord Ganesha as prayers for my school exam grades. just do one and see today. catch your ears with crossed hands, do situps with knees bent lowering the pelvic to floor level. now that is brain yoga. this stimulates brain activity in kids
  10. ‘food is therapy’ for hindus. our vegetarian food is laden with natural medicinal properties. for instance we add banana stem and banana flowers to our menu every week. banana stem is a natural kidney/colon cleanser that prevents stone formation. likewise every vegetable and green we have takes care of specific internal organs . most ailments/diseases like jaundice, measles etc used to be treated with greens and herbs. when i was in primary school i got measles or chickenpox. i was asked to lie separately (what you may call quarantine today) in neem leaves mat and fed neem water and neem balls. no medication. i was fine in 3-5 days to go back to school. next one week, shower with neem water.
  11. this our Hindu culture is not flourishing for nothing for over 10,000 years. we are the only continuous surviving civilization in the entire world – the only native people to have bet all odds and surviving and flourishing to this day. we can live with ridicule by others who are good at nothing but talk big. we seek nobody’s approval. today my breakfast was dosa (lentils (urad dal) and rice pancake) with coconut chutney grounded with chickpeas and green chili. Lunch was snakeguard stew with lentils (channa dal and moong dal) with coconut-jeera (cumin) milk with a dash of ginger along with handpound brown rice. Plus ofcourse curds (a cup of unsweetened yoghurt but Indian curd is slightly different from western yoghurt). Dinner was whole wheat roti with the same snakeguard left over stew. midmorning snack: jackfruit slices. no coffee. evening masala chai (tea) with natural spices like bayleaf, cinnamon, cardamom etc., powdered. i know i eat richest food but the one that still comes cheapest in the world laden with natural proteins and vitamins and minerals. unfortunately, it is most underrated. we eat all vegetables and fruits : from bitterguard to snakeguard to beetroots to cabbage to carrots to cauliflower to peas and beans and raw bananas, yam, okra, greens like spinach, pudina (mint), coriander, etc., etc. we eat in general what we call ‘satwik’ food – this is what defines us hindus. this food can influence our emotional and intelligence levels cutting out aggression and infections and sharpening our brains. we hindus literally have gourmet meals at home. so sad, some call it ‘curry’ in the most derogatory way. needless to say, we add turmeric powder and curry leaves to all our dishes
  12. hindu way of life focuses on liberation (mukthi) of the soul from birth cycle over material wellbeing and acquisitions. that is why the abrahamic races were invaders. hindu kings never had such an agenda because our goals and purpose of life is not that of abrahamics. our kings sought renunciation never acquisition. after what happened to China, it is time for the world to pause and take stock of things. what is this race for. to where really.
  13. women in India were given proper rest during menstruation times. in fact were used to be quarantined for three days. ever since we women are denying ourselves this much needed rest in the name of social equality and feminism, our reproductive health has started suffering and the fertility rates have been drastically affected. hindu women (including me) wear toe rings in the second toe. this directly connects the nerve to the uterus and keeps our monthly cycle regular. same for the anklets. women’s biological needs are different from men’s and we have to respect the same
  14. see the yogic postures and mudras (palm/finger postures) – all these are designed to activate our dormant/lazy nerve endings to keep us fresh and active and disease free.

    if you take the traditional dance forms of India like the Bharat Natyam, Kuchipudi, Kathak, Manipuri etc., they all incorporate the mudras and yogic postures in their dance moves. the best fitness for anyone is a combination of our Yoga with one of the traditional dances that have amazing footwork.

  15. ayurveda: the natural medicinal system of India that produced those like Sushrutha, the world’s first ever plastic surgeon millennia before. absolutely no side effects. there are even cancer patients resorting to ayurveda when everything else fails. for autism, psoriasis, joint pains, etc., ayurvedic is proven best.
  16. lastly cremation: hindus cremate the dead while the rest of the world buries. after cremation, entire house is washed out. no cooking in the household when there is death in the family. any hindu who attends any death cannot enter home without a shower. in earlier days, the bathroom therefore used to be outside the house premises for this reason. after attending death, hindus enter their own homes through backdoors mostly, take a shower, wash their clothes and only then mix with others. now we don’t have backdoors in urban living, yet the showering ritual on attending deaths continues. no food or drinks in the place where the dead lie strictly – not just no cooking. we burn even the deceased’s last clothes, bedding etc or throw them out. similarly quarantine of new mothers for 40 days after a birth in the family.
  17. real health and hygiene is this: cow dung mopping and cremating the dead and not serving food and drinks in death and regular ablutions before entering our home and washing feet. why should we be ashamed of eating with hands or using a water faucet in our toilets instead of toilet paper. is the US/Europe the gold standard that we all have to abide by without critical review.

 

 

Posted in Environment

Biopiracy of India’s Indigenous/Intellectual Property By Corporate West

I may be an amateur blogger but I have blogged on this before. Pharmaceutical companies from US and Europe have patented what was/is originally traditional Indian home remedy/Ayurvedic medicine robbing us of our intellectual rights and entitlements. They have patented our bovine genes, native seeds, even part of Yoga (!) (and this is just the tip of the iceberg) to such an extent that in a very few years, we won’t have natural reproduction of anything in India. From foodgrains to animal breeding, US corporates will have to be paid royalty as they will hold back the poison seeds that killed the native flora. and the semen for our cattle. This is happening already right across the world and mostly the third world nations in Africa and Asia are since paying a heavy price for what is originally and truly ours. Biggest theft of the century. Recently I was visiting Arni, some 150 km from Chennai. My (regular) cabbie who drove me down, hails from Madurai. One look at the cattle grazing in the agricultural lands, he said the cows were IVF product and from the semen imported from US companies for a price . I was shocked. Such a layman he is, and not even a matriculate. But coming from a rural background, he knew these things growing up with farm animals and forestry, having worked as a farm hand engaging in cultivation before he left for the city in search of a job. He said the ‘Jallikattu’ (bull racing) was not just about reinforcing our traditional practices but about saving the indigenous bulls of India. As i have stated before in my previous blog posts, only the Asian cows can produce the brain stimulating A2 milk that is patented by America now! How is this. Now all efforts are on to deny Asia the A2 gene of cattle itself. You can sadly see the bottled A2 imported milk from US being sold even in Indian groceries! I have never supported foreign NGOs like the UNICEF or CRY or PETA or GREENPEACE for this reason.  No.1 International frauds who steal from poorest of poor nations without an ounce of ethics or morality. Nothing is here in India from America without an agenda. To save our native flora and fauna, the battles we have to fight! South America is an easy scapegoat. We saw the recent fires in the Amazon. For whose benefit.

I am linking a few more of my own clumsy write-ups (!) on Biopiracy of India’s intellectual/native properties by MNCs.

https://vijiravindran.com/2020/02/14/dharma-in-the-times-of-corona-virus/

https://vijiravindran.com/2017/01/21/wto-and-india-rethinking-indias-food-security/

The second link details the Karuvelam tree, an invasive species NOT native to India running dry the Tamil Nadu ground water table. My driver told me, some vested interests have obtained a ‘stay order’ in court stopping the removal and eventual eradication of Karuvelam from Tamil soil. I was beginning to see less of Karuvelam but the parasite species is back now in last one or two years with a vengeance.

Most north Indians could not relate to Jallikattu protests in Tamil Nadu. The south still has saved hundreds of indigenous cattle and canine species, breeding them exclusively until today. Even at Isha Yoga in Coimbatore,  for instance, they breed native pedigree bull and cow species without gene contamination. If PETA is allowed to have their way in India and if Jallikattu is to be stopped in Tamil Nadu, then there will be no reason to breed the native bulls and cows that are economically not viable. The Jallikattu is the greatest incentive for rural farmers to breed native bulls that are going extinct one by one. Today, natural breeding is very negligible in India where it concerns the cattle. Mostly commercialized artificial insemination. However, the exotic native breeds were excluded until now from the list. Looks like, not any more:

https://www.newindianexpress.com/cities/chennai/2019/sep/02/tamil-nadu-governments-ban-on-the-crossing-of-native-bulls-with-exotic-breeds-angers-farmers-2027650.html

The following link highlights the importance of Jallikattu in preserving the indigenous bovine breed:

https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/jallikattu-may-be-important-to-save-indigenous-bull-breeds-but-its-not-enough-1631855.html

This is what the Jersey and Holstein are about to destroy once and for all:

https://www.biodiversityofindia.org/index.php?title=Native_cow_varieties_of_India

Difference between Indian and western bovine breeds:

Hindu temples play a huge role in the upkeep of pure cow breeds in ‘goshalas’ (cow sheds) within the temple precincts. Why cow dung and cow urine. This is why. Don’t be shocked, even the cow dung and cow urine revered by Hindus who were mocked for their belief systems are now patented by America for their medicinal benefits! Not that this is new to America. They have stolen strains of our turmeric, neem, basmati etc., that we did not bother to patent because we believed, it is ours, been ours traditionally for millennia. Government of India woke up only when an attempt was made to patent the ‘Surya Namaskar’ in Yoga.

“Goshalas’ are integral part of most ancient Hindu temples. However, the recent ones may not have them for lack of space.

The need for saving native seeds similarly:

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/why-indias-native-crops-need-to-be-saved-from-extinction/articleshow/73237886.cms

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-times/these-seed-bankers-are-saving-indias-native-crops/articleshow/70106157.cms

https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/reviving-indigenous-seeds-silent-revolution-india-s-rice-growing-states-104257

https://twobrothersindiashop.com/blogs/news/the-way-forward-indigenous-seeds-for-a-stronger-safer-world-for-the-soil-and-its-people

I wish, anyone who browses through this post reads up every link. My small contribution to India in my own way.

The native canine breeds of India at a glance:

https://www.dogspot.in/9-indian-dog-breeds-never-knew-about/

We had what is called ‘panneer rose’ (panneer is rose water in Tamil) in our house until my teens. The yield was like some 20 flowers a day from the plant that was potted in a big rusted tin. The only natural manure we used then was tea or coffee powder after usage. Friends used to get us egg shells to fertilize soil. Our maid used to get fresh cow dung whenever possible. This rose used to be pale rose in colour, smaller in size. Amazingly the scent of the Panneer rose still lingers in my memory. Now it is no more to be seen in entire India, having been outbred by hybrid rose cultivation. I have never smelled that panneer rose scent ever again either. Nearly close, but never the same. Similarly even if you take the original reddish maroon hibiscus, it has become a rarity with more of mixed colours available in the nurseries. May be the originals are available if you search long and wide. Rare lucky instances. Same fate for what we used to call the original ‘December’ flower and Samanthi (chrysanthemum). The original white and yellow Samanthi strains we had at home still stay fresh in my memory. What I get for Puja at home today is the foreign variety Samanthi that is richer in colour and somewhat denser. That somehow dilutes something precious about the original Samanthi i have grown up with. Original native Indian samanthi used to be hardly like this. Not so rich or alluring. But the aromatic scent of the Samanthi was the game changer. Lightly moving in breeze with an elusive scent, pale in colour, the original Samanthi used to look delicate and sweet. As someone coming from a community that relates to different native flowers in daily life – from wearing flowers in hair everyday to school, college, work to adorning our home and pooja (worship) and temples and wedding halls and celebration parties and grooms and guests with flowers, I can vouch for how much even  the flowers of India have altered in last twenty or so years. The native pedigree breeds have vanished almost completely from the scene which is shocking. To what extent the hybrids have done the damage will be next to impossible to gauge. We just no more live in the same India that was our ancestors, that kind of makes me sad. I am sure, the good old flower cultivators of Tamil Nadu/India will agree with me.

I don’t deny, our own greed and demand for more milk, more of food grains and even flowers may be driving our native exotic species to extinction, as we create an atmosphere where hybrid breeding with foreign species becomes inevitable to keep the supply chain moving.

How many of us can give up Chai for instance. I just gave up coffee although for a different reason. Now two months successfully without my passionate coffee. I became one less person harming nature and forcing more forest land into cultivation for coffee. How many of us can give up milk altogether.

Posted in Pictures Foreign

Review: Crazy Rich Asians

Watched this sweet Chinese romance this forenoon. Almost felt like my fave M&B paperback.

First of all I want to raise a point here. What is this term ‘Asian.’ By Asian, mostly in America, they mean Chinese. America also clubs India, Pakistan calling us ‘South Asia’ as if we lack our identity. We are of the Indian subcontinent. Don’t America put us on the same board as Pakis, calling us Indians South Asians. In UK, the grooming gangs of Brit teen girls are Paki muslims not Indians or Chinese or Japanese. The UK media refers to these criminal gangs generally as ‘Asian.’ It is insulting.

So the title made me wonder which Asian this was about.

Also mostly the Chinese are stereotyped as the Kungfu type martial arts people. Their films are monotonous right from the times of Bruce Lee. Jackie Chan confirmed albeit with a difference what was chinese all about. So I was hardly prepared for this picture.

The film is completely shot in Singapore. I have been as a tourist in Singapore for more than a week over twenty years back. That Singapore is now history as I can see. The picture is a recent one – from 2018. Twenty years is a long, long time.

But I have to say, still a lot about Singapore may not have changed especially concerning their street food, train and taxi services and pan Asian culture. I saw a very few other faces than chinese in the film. It does no justice to the inherent multi-cultural set-up of Singapore. Leave alone representation.

Rachel, a chinese american professor with New York University follows her singaporean chinese boyfriend to the island nation to attend a family wedding of his. The infamous Asian snobbishness greets her to her dismay. It is chinese in the picture. It could have been Indian. Such a typical Asian mentality i must say! Omg, have I not been through this grind, married for over a quarter century! Is my family any different! I can author a book on the subject!

Whether Indian or Chinese, we have our way of forcing our dreams and ambitions on our children. I am sorry to admit this is exactly how Indian society is. Our children are not our property. We never realize this and take them for granted. We refuse to give them space and allow them to grow independently. Well this is one side of the coin.

During my four year residence in Malaysia, I have met with equally ambitious chinese parents like Indians. It used to surprise me always. I used to think back then, we Indians found our match only in the chinese! Our cultural values may be different but also somewhat similar in many ways. The elderly dominating the family, the family molding young minds from a tender age grooming them for a future business or profession, arranged marriages, marriages of convenience, extraordinary importance accorded to academics, etc., etc.. South Indians are less muted, but our north Indian brothers and sisters are boisterous like, nobody can enjoy life like them if you ask me. The world thinks we Indians and Chinese hardly enjoy life, but it is so much untrue. Our north Indians have to compete with the chinese on equal footing when it comes to partying! Again, i have been in Malaysia for four chinese new years. From casinos to local pubs to flashy cars, the chinese way of life used to completely amaze me. May be because who i saw then were Malaysian chinese not mainland chinese. Even their supper and dinner rituals every evening used to be a gala event. Every single day it happened without a break. Work hard in the day. Party hard at night. Booze flowed yet for not a single day, the chinese reported late for work. Something Indians can never ever manage. The significance and respect the chinese attached to wining and dining was a surprise to me in those days. Food and eating together were revered not to be disturbed for any reason! Most of our friends then were chinese who came home. It was an other world totally! I never got confused with Li or Chin or Lai or Cheng! Neither did they all look the same!

The kind of crazy rich chinese as in the film, I can imagine. We have such old rich families in India too. They don’t belong in our universe.

I liked the fact that young Rachel cared nothing for Nick (her boyfriend)’s family background. She was clear about what she wanted. She was mature enough to give him up to his mean mother on moral highground. That was stupendous. Her strength of character and integrity touched a chord in me. As she and her friend aver, sometimes some of us have just that left with us- those of us bereft of a family background and social circle that come by default of birth to the lucky few. No we don’t have to wait for anyone’s acceptance where we may never belong in a million years!

In my Malaysian days I knew many hardworking middle class chinese as well. The chinese women especially were very smart. When it came to money matters, the chinese were very shrewd. Corporate empires to side walk cafes, the chinese ran everything as family enterprise. Family restaurants were popular in Malaysia. The families worked as a single unit. I only once told them about my vegetarian habits and how for me, even the cooking pan has to be fresh. They kept it in their memory for our entire period of residence. Father was the chef and daughter was the waitress. Billing was by the son and the wife dishwashed. The chinese family values used to be so much like Indian even if the chinese were more westernized. One thing that cannot happen with Indians is this westernization!!! The south east Asians like the chinese and thai are easiest to adapt to the western influence and culture. Yet like us Indians having Ayurveda, the chinese took only their own herbal medicine. Their cuisine was as indigenous as our Indian. The contradictions were interesting!

The single mother of Rachel who brought up her daughter all alone by herself – this is again a very common chinese trait. Many of their families break up. Loose morality and alcohol are the reason although some may think I am cheeky to say that. But it is the truth. We have this single mother condition now in India too. Very brave and intelligent and hardworking women these single mothers are! However, the joint family sentiments are no exaggeration either. Joint family system is the very fabric of Asian societies be it Indian or Chinese or Japanese. Only in recent times we are having nuclear families. In fact for filing IT returns, we Hindus still have a category named HUF (Hindu Family) – where we can file tax as a single unit. This applies to joint family businesses where brothers may be carrying on traditional trades jointly for ages. Even cousins and extended families for generations may come under a single HUF umbrella. Even now this is common scene in India. Only business families can understand this custom and this breeding culture. Outsiders generally won’t. I am not blaming Rachel here but it is not easy for anyone to get a sense of this mindset unless you live this life.

After a long time I was kind of transported to Malaysia! A male chinese colleague of my husband used to get me my veggie ‘kuihs’ every evening from  kampongs (villages) that were tucked in too interior. The dumplings we make in India by name ‘modak’ (kozhukattai in Tamil) but we don’t stuff non-veg filling. Some similarities there. Then the rice eating country people! I used to identify more with South East Asians like Malays, Chinese, Thai, Indos over the wheat eating north Indians for this single reason: they ate lots of rice like us south Indians!!! They can’t do without rice totally! Chinese are also much more than ginseng and fried rice and jasmine tea. And mathematics! There is a humane side to them that is hardly portrayed rightly in films/media. Fortunately, I have seen that side of theirs in Malaysia.

The bachelorette and bachelor parties are now common even in India. Once reserved for the well-off, now getting popular with the middle-class. The richie rich can get away with anything stupid literally. Why can’t we follow just the good things for a change from the west. Why do we have to ape their worst habits. The big, fat Indian weddings are worldwide popular. This film is centered around one big fat chinese wedding. Obscenely extravagant. Somehow I believe in nice warm and cosy marriages not in pompous weddings. Haven’t lavish weddings become showcase of one’s social status. Once upon a time on earth, character and wisdom made masses look up to someone as role models. Today money power is what buys one societal respect and recognizance sadly.

The curse of Asia is: the rich and the poor live side by side without any qualms. You can see dirt poor being the next door neighbour of the stinky rich. I respect the dignity in some poor people and not-so-rich who hold their head high come what may. It won’t take some of us more than a minute to tick someone off for their boorish, haughty attitude who think they are good because of their material possessions and ‘birth conenctions’ but we keep our ground for peace’ sake and for sanity’s sake. It is not worth it.

Finally all is well that ends well. Fairy tale wedding that left me with a good aftertaste! The cast is perfect. Light dreamy magical story. Made my sunday! I must say, our Asian guys have to have some guts and stop being Mamas’ boys!!! Sigh!

 

 

Posted in Political

The Trail Of Terror

I like and believe (in)this man. RVS Mani. India is in dire need of real life heroes like Shri Mani. Hats off to you sir, for your selfless service that can endanger your very life.

On Pak pumping fake currency into India: this is awful. equally worse as terror. trying to derail the Indian national economy:

I have always wondered how if it wasn’t for Kasab, the Mumbai terror attack 26/11 could have been pinned on India and Hindus. With some local helping ofcourse even if the mastermind remained across the border. Perhaps Allah saved Kasab to tell the true story to the world. This is nothing but Karma.

I would like to add a point to the second video. Not only in Kerala, please Mr. Mani make a video on mind-boggling real estate amassing in ECR (East coast road) in Chennai by a specific community in last two decades, as well. An unusual international ‘religious’ conference was held here some years back that raised many eyebrows. Green flags flew from every pole for miles. Most of this stretch is unaffordable for those with hard earned white money. The role of hawala/black money here seems alarming. A thorough investigation required.

Koodamkulam protest was funded by foreign NGOs (one biriyani packet and one hundred rupees for every protester per day) and even recently the Sterlite Industry in Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu had to close down because of the church’s direct involvement in the protests and funding from christian missionaries. Nuns in their frocks were seen holding placards and provoking mobs. This is public knowledge. Once industries close, in despair the masses may be driven in to the open arms of the rice bag conversion missionaries in the state. Keeping the state backward and impoverished works best for the church. Classic method for conversion. No doubt the CAA protests were similarly funded from overseas.

Role of Christian missionaries in Sterlite protests

https://bharatabharati.wordpress.com/2018/06/05/church-behind-the-sterlite-protests-lalita-nijhawan/

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/north/story/kudankulam-row-prime-minister-blames-foreign-countries-94032-2012-02-24

Interestingly, it was the then PM Dr Manmohan Singh who was concerned of foreign NGO funding against the Kudankulam plant.

Every Indian citizen must watch these videos to learn the truth. Without prejudice, this honest man deserves an impartial hearing.

Posted in Food For Soul

Why Me?

Do we ever ask God, ‘why me’ when She showers on us Her choicest blessings.

Why ask ‘why me’ when it is time for a little test of our patience, faith and mettle.

For Vishu/Tamil New Year, we have the custom of offering for Puja and spreading a family feast of sweet, sour and bitter dishes. Veppam kozhundhu – the bitter neem finds a place alongside sweet jaggery and sour mango in our festive menu. It is not without a reason. It is symbolic of one’s life cycle. Upswings and downswings, the good and the bad, the right and the wrong, happiness and heart break are phases of life. When we never question ‘why me’ in moments of sheer bliss, why complain when it is time for self-introspection.

This too shall pass. After peaking highs, new lows are the laws of nature. Accepting God’s will and submitting at and surrendering to Her Lotus Feet one hundred percent may mark a milestone in one’s spiritual journey.

May Mother Goddess give us the strength and willpower to sail through challenging winds of time. Short-cuts to evade one’s Karma can only rejig the balance sheet. The shortfall will have to be met with and made good somehow, somewhere. If not today, then tomorrow. How many ever janams it might take. One can reschedule and postpone Karma not outwit it totally.