I went to the 4th Arambam Somorendra Memorial lecture at JN Dance Academy.
This year's lecture was delvred by Mr Niketu Iralu, Tustee, Centre for Policy Research and Centre for Dialogue and Reconciliation. Though himself a Naga and a close of AZ Phizo, he is based in Shillong and considered to be an expert in reconciliatio.
As usual when I reached there the lecture was over and the question and answer seesion was in progress.
But I got a copy of the printed lecture.
Titled "Our common Crisis:What are we do?", it's a rather small lecture containing only 11 pages.
His main theme is in the line--'If the individual Naga is not good, Naga society would not be good', which is useless from a sociological point of view.
The Arambam Somorendra Trust, in its brief introduction, puts it more succinctly--'Given the decay in moral fibre in contemporary societies/polities like ours, the attempt to marry ethics to an essentailly political enterprise like social restructuring is arrestingly piquant'.
But Mr Iralu is searching. He qouted form several books, even from Israely and Arab writers. Like Iralu, we also find people here searching by reading up Mao thought, political struggles in Vietnam etc. But we form a rather unique in that we are so small in number. We are not normal viewed from this context. We should not hope get answers from the writings of other 'normal' societies.
By asking the question---'What factors made us run throughout the course of our history with so a puny population?'---would answer a lot of questions regarding oor ills.
If we come to grips with the reality of 'abnormally' small size of our population, then a fundamental question arises--'Do institutions themselves, which would produce 'good individual Nagas(or Meeteis or Mizos) got corrupted from the influences of the bigger and 'normal'societies surrounding us?'
This is a fundamental question because, being so small and foisted to live in an environment of huge societies, our chances of getting unwanted influences naturally get magnified manyfold.
I'm asking myself--'Is this our comon crisis?'
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
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