On the streets I heard hush conversations about fresh outbreak of shooting of migrant workers. Numbers of migrant workers shot vary wildly. I won’t mention any one of them—they are more in the nature of rumors. My radio is not working. I also don’t feel like phoning any media houses because they are now officially on holidays.
Then, suddenly there were police vans on the streets announcing that the curfew which was to start from 9 pm (like yesterday) would come into effect from 6 in the evening instead. So, the news of fresh shooting down of migrant workers is as good as being confirmed.
Popular narrative in Manipur invariably paints the migrant workers as one of the active actors of a grand conspiracy to swamp the population here. The narrative has been drilled into common men’s psyche.
To my mind, it is the right time for everybody who has a stake in the well being of our society to start to think empirically. It is exactly not the time to be swayed by emotions. We need to disengage ourselves form the tight embrace of the popular narratives so smoothly passed down from generation to generation. Otherwise, we would start to lose our collective direction and would start walking right into a trap.
Even if there is a grand conspiracy, the poor migrant workers are not active participants in it. At worst case scenario, they just might be a cog in the wheel—a tool of the power that be.
So, it’s no use striking at them. It’s waste of time and energy.
If 21st Century would be a century of the 4th World people, then it would be the history of tiny communities like Albanians, Croats in the Balkans, Timorese, Shans, Karens in Asia and even Scots, Irish in the middle of Europe finding ways to continue to do business with large, established societies and at the same time, not swept away from their cultural and ethnic moorings.
But how?
Sunday, March 23, 2008
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