Saturday, May 05, 2007

Still on Ms Mukhim's piece.

I’m still on Patricia Mukhim’s piece and the link to the piece was given in my post 3 days back!

Ms Mukhim said the Northeasters are not capable of honest conversation and appreciations of one another’s point of view. It’s an interesting point. But is there an honest conversation between Dalits and Upper Caste people? Between Israelis and Palestinians? I wonder.

She also said that what is right becomes secondary to what is good for the tribe or the community. But the relations between societies on the macro levels are complicated matters. There is no ‘what is right’ in the pursuit of one’s national interest. There is no scope of morality in diplomacy.

Then, she is trying to come to her conclusion with this—‘—‘To accommodate the aspiration of others within the same political boundaries and push our own aspiration to a secondary position takes some amount of political maturity and a transcendence from the realm of the selfish to that of acculturation and assimilation’. She also said that to achieve that transcendence requires ‘civilzational process’ that might take thousand of years. To emphasize her point she also mentioned a book by the name ‘One Thousand Years in a Lifetime’ by a gentleman in Papua New Guinea.

Why a book from Papua New Guinea?

Trying to answer this question will throw light on the working of Ms Mukhim’s mind on the subconscious level. It’s likely that she belong to that class of people who are drilled into believing that the societies in the Northeaster regions are still in the process of reaching maturity. It will take a lot of time ( a thousand years!). So, what is needed now for them is to be docile and do nothing rash!

I may well also be afflicted by another set of prejudices but to me, Ms Mukhim seems to espouse that exact view point of the Delhi-hating Bengali Bhadralok, who cannot extract themselves from the self-proclaimed role of the gate keepers of the Northeasterners. It’s extremely worrisome to get the impression that Shillong, where Ms Mukhim belong to, is fast becoming Kolkatta’s cute poodle.

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