“Over the course of my years here, I have begun to wonder whether
India will be the country that will grow and grow and never undergo that
transformative disruption,” writes Stephanie Nolen in a moving essay reflecting on her 5-year stint at the Globe & Mail’s South Asia bureau chief.
But as I look back at this past year on Independence Day, I realise
that this prophecy has already come true. Each explosion of “disruptive
transformation,” be it the anti-corruption campaign or the post-Nirbhaya
protests, has ended in a whimper. For the past 20 years, India has been
growing and growing while remaining exactly the same. The glitz of
‘new’ India has proved skin-deep, and each day brings a new revelation
of the same old ugly face underneath, as Nolen observes:
One week, I covered the launch of the new BlackBerry to a
voracious Indian market in the high-tech “millennium city” of Gurgaon,
outside Delhi – and the next week, I drove a couple of hours farther
down that road and covered a violent siege against Dalits in a village
where a dominant-caste woman had eloped with a lower-caste man she had
met at business school. It felt like time travel to the Middle Ages.
We don’t need to step out of the house to encounter the Middle Ages.
Each morning, the newspapers bring the same news of caste killings,
gangrapes, deteriorating water supplies, malnutrition, female foeticide,
blah blah. Even what were once considered portents of a 21st century
India — creation of SEZ zones or the arrival of that new mall — have
acquired an ominous quality. We brace ourselves for stories of the real
estate mafia or mining barons or political corruption that will
inevitably follow on its heels — along with shrill TV debates and
dead-end sessions of Parliament or the state legislature that will be
suspended “in uproar.”
Life in India has acquired the hallucinatory repetition of that old Bill Murray movie, Grounds Hog Day.
We too are condemned to relive the same day over and over again, except
as reimagined by Kafka. Over the past year, over and again, hope has
receded in the face of a seemingly unalterable sameness.
On 16 August, 2011, Anna Hazare
launched the “second struggle for independence” in protest against the
UPA version of the Lokpal Bill. His arrest sparked a spontaneous street
uprising, and his fast later in the month in the Ram Lila Grounds
attracted unprecedented crowds, as autowalas and middle class
housewives, shopkeepers and college students swarmed in to register
their support. As thousands others fasted in solidarity across the
nation, the media chatterati hyped the coming of an aam aadmi revolution. The great Indian middle class had finally risen from its long slumber to overthrow the tyranny of corruption.
Or so it seemed until Anna Hazare‘s movement disintegrated in the absence of vision and leadership. Two years later, on this I-day, the news of Robert Vadra‘s land deals evoke barely a raised eyebrow, and Anna Hazare is in New York, ringing the Nasdaq bell— just another celebrity cashing in on his 15 minutes. Arvind Kejriwal
has left all talk of the Lokpal behind, and moved on to electricity
prices in hopes of securing a handful of seats in the Delhi elections.
And for good reason: corruption ranks a distant fifth in the public’s
order of priorities.
The outcome of the ballyhooed anti-rape protests is slightly more
encouraging. The Delhi police has tried to up its game. “After 16/12
everybody had to think about it, and repeatedly,” deputy commissioner BS
Jaiswal told Mint,
“Now people are aware of their rights because of the sensitisation. All
our efforts are taken to chargesheet assault cases within one month,
and all molestation/eve-teasing cases within 15 days.”
However, neither the new laws or modestly elevated national
consciousness seem to have stemmed the tide of violence against Indian
women. Not much has changed in a post-Nirbhaya India except —
ironically, given her media moniker — the increased levels of fear. As
Nobel reports, “After the attack on [Nirbhaya], one in three female
employees in the capital either reduced her hours or quit her job,
according to a survey by the Association of Chambers of Commerce of
India.” Others are afraid to venture out after dark, or go out to clubs.
Not that home is any safer for the many more women who are victims of
the still legal marital rape and domestic violence.
On this 66th independence day, Indian women are more afraid than
ever, and less free. But then so are all of us who now know better than
to give an incautious sound-byte, tweet the wrong opinion, or post the
errant Facebook update. Each year, we can say and do less than in the
bad days of state-controlled media — which now is controlled by giant
corporations and their vested interests. Did we go from frying pan to
fire, or the other way around? It’s getting harder and harder to tell.
We’re losing in other, invisible but more urgent ways, as well. The
quality of ground water declines, air pollution levels rise, electricity
shortages grow more chronic, garbage multiplies and spreads dengue in
its wake. And while the urban middle class may relish the McTikka perks
of liberalisation, it grows poorer in other ways. “When we were growing
up, hilsa was a standard treat. Now it’s a rare luxury,” says a Bengali friend.
But we’ve grown accustomed to our reducing circumstances much like
sleepy lobsters in a warm pot. The price of onions which raised such hue
and cry merely a year ago is now greeted with a weary shrug. We spend
less on ‘luxuries’, our maids skimp on vegetables, in other parts of the
country, people survive on one pitiful — sometimes fatal — meal a
day. India is not growing, or even at a standstill. Rising, shining
India is now shrinking, much like the sizes of our wallet, spaces for
free speech, places to be safe, and our appetite to fight back.
“Freedom means the power to choose your path, to make your own
decisions, to speak your mind, to dream without inhibitions,” reads the
little Independence Day banner by daughter brings back from school. I
can’t help laugh.
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