Friday, April 24, 2009

Th.Tarunkumar lecture and my viewpoints

The lecture is named 'The Lost Decades'.

From the 1950s onwards, the most noticeable characteric of the political process in Manipur is the abscence of any effort towards the empowerment of the small men and women. In that sense, many decades, for us, are as good as lost.

That's the undelying theme of the lecture.

What strikes me most is when Mr Th.Tarunkumar mentioned at the very outset of his lecture that Manipur's very brush with the Union of India started with the dumbing down of the small men and women.He gave an example: The Union of India scraped the already working constitution of Manipur during 1947-48. He said the idea behind this is that ruling class in Delhi decided that Manipur's people was not ready for the constitution.

I think he got a point here: that's definitely dumbing down the common people. If they were for the empowerment of the common people,they should have said- 'Hey, this constitution is not good enough; let's bring in a better one'. Instead, they scraped the contitution together with the popularly elected legislature and imposed direct rule from Delhi, which was, by any name, totally undemocratic.

But, what about now? The following is my viewpoint which is stimulated by the lecture.

Let's look at the two most annoying elements in our society right now--the 'thikadars'and police commandos. However annoying they are, they are sure signs that there is now a process of empowering the common people underway in our society.

If the 'thikadars' want to go places with their favorite construction business,they have only to put into places the needed corporate framewok and culture,instead of hobnobbing with buereaucrats and ministers.

If the police commandos want to do a better police job, unintimidated by the rebels,it's only to be encouraged. The only condition is that they should be guided by the law of the land.

If we look at the other sectors of the society, like sports, popular arts,especially cinema etc, we can see the same empowering process.

But it's not the empowerment of the samll men and women by design.

The stream of the empowerment process started its tortured course because of the intense competition between the ruling class in Delhi and the whole assortment of rebels here for winning the hearts and minds of the small men and women.

The intensity of the this competition is magnified many fold because of New Delhi nearly-neurotic needs for containment of rebels in Manipur purely for geo-political compulsions, percieved or otherwise.

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