October 1 to October 14,
2003
You can always count on women
to move forward and up...

I was serving out the ‘dal’ at dinner when the thought
came to me that there would be homes where the kitchen fire would not have been
lit that night. It was the evening of August 25, the day the taxi bombs had
killed and injured so many, and the TV news was full of the details and
discussions over how it happened...
IT struck me too, that like me,
many other families, across Mumbai and the rest of the country would be
listening to the news and simultaneously sitting down to dinner. And like me,
they might reach for the remote and change the channel to something less
disturbing to digestion and peace of mind.
THIS is where we are as a
nation. National tragedies, MiG crashes, bomb blasts, riots that leave many
dead... we take everything in our stride, and go on with our lives. Maybe
it’s the fact that TV has brought it all into our homes.
READING of disaster is one thing, seeing wreckage and corpses,
hearing the wailing and seeing the tears as cameras zoom in on the
grief-stricken survivors in the confines of one’s living room, is quite
another. The complete insensi-tivity of our very eager-to-be-there-first TV
channels had desensitised us as people. We feel, well, nothing.
IT is
also the stress we live under. The constant fear of mishap, inflicted by the
city or by terrorists, makes us narrow our minds and think primarily of
ourselves. There is no way one can keep one’s peace of mind caring or
worrying about the million things that go wrong with others in a city teeming
with people jostling for time and space.
The only way to keep
one’s equanimity is to fold oneself ostrich-like into one’s own
world, and count the blessing of being spared. Little wonder then, that while we
feel a shock and a sorrow as we hear of a tragedy that hits our city, we thank
god for letting us get off scot-free and go on with life hoping the next time it
won’t be our turn.
It’s a terrible skin to grow on
one’s brain, but a protective strategy that seems inevitable and natural.
And sad.
***
ON a more positive note: I was recently on a panel to
select deserving young women for scholarships for higher studies. The criteria
focused on the eagerness and dedication of the student to pursue higher
education and a career, which would be curbed by a lack of funds if the
scholarship were not made available.
I must admit, I thought at
first I was doing the beauty company, which has floated the aptly-named
Saraswati Scholarship Scheme, a big favour. Sitting through two days sifting
through 51 entries was mind-bending work after all, guaranteed to leave me spent
by the evening. But as the interviews began, and one candidate after another
came up to meet us with wary eyes and smiling face, I realised that I was
privileged indeed to be able to see the true face of the Indian
woman.
They were, for the most, women with drive and integrity.
Women, who despite coming from homes where there was little education and
money, had not only excelled in their studies, but had dared to dream of life
beyond the fringe and were working to make that dream real.
Daughters of India, who came from families in tiny towns hidden away
from the headlines, whose fathers were coolies, mechanics or tailors or owned a
shop that sold this and that, women with an ambition to become self reliant, and
had the support of their families.
Women dreaming of the means to
research plant genes and find new strains that would yield better crops or be
pest resistant, or of completing their MBA and then competing for the civil
service exams, the better to lead their fellowmen... Women who will hold the
reins of our country’s destiny — teachers in the making, waiting to
inspire new generations with their ardour, leaders in waiting for the corporate
world, hoping to light new fires with their zeal...
So
many who showed rare spirit.
I swelled with pride as
we finished the last interview. Here was hope incarnate. In hands and hearts
such as these, the future of India would be
safe.
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