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Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Refugee of a kind: ‘I need to breathe free and feel equal to my fellowmen’

 I am a man without a land. In the American foreign service, I served periodically as a Refugee Officer, helping refugees from Bhutan, China and Haiti. Now I am a refugee of a kind. In my mind, I belong to no land.

India was the land of my birth. I had no intention of leaving the country. But I fell in love, and the person was American, disallowed to work in India. I moved to the US. I worked in business, for a UN agency and then became a diplomat. Never have I felt ashamed to belong to the country of my birth or the country of my adoption. Now I do.

The US Supreme Court has decided that a football coach can create a religious sideshow by going on his knees on the field, praying publicly and inviting others to join him. The coach did so on public school grounds against a sensible school policy in a district where other religions like Judaism, Hinduism and Islam exist. The US Constitution prohibits State approval of any religion. He was not praying privately; he was making a demonstration of his Christian prayer, asking, in effect coercing, his non-believing players and their friends, as well as other players, to join him and make a public spectacle of his faith. This in a country where more than half the people do not go to a church or temple and one-fifth does not believe in god.

It is exactly like a school teacher praying before a class or a government boss reading scripture before subordinates. A student who doesn’t believe in religion or a subordinate who finds the text repugnant is cowed into silence and subservience. A society that allows that has a hollow reverence for its faith and forces its beliefs on people it cannot win by its values. Leaders who do that are doing no better than conquistadors who won converts by the sword. The US Supreme Court has six Catholics and one Episcopalian who was brought up Catholic — totally unrepresentative of the country — and is forcing values down the throat of a resistant and resentful people.

When India became independent and Pakistan declared itself a Muslim country, many wanted to make India a Hindu nation. Leaders who saw the wisdom of making India secular and a harbour for people of all faiths foiled that thrust. A struggling new nation, India grew from diverse contributions. A Christian could become a governor or a cabinet member, a Zoroastrian could be a defence chief, a Muslim could be the president of the country.

Just as some whites in the US resent the rise of blacks into affluence and power, there has been among some in India a seething resentment against Muslims: those who lost their homes in Pakistan or believe in an ultra-nationalist Hindu India. That resentment has been now fanned into a frenzied zeal to marginalise the Muslims. Laws to deny them citizenship. Policies to bar them from public service. Vending beef has become a crime — Muslims have been lynched for that sin. Mosques have been harassed, their services disrupted. 

The intolerance has extended to churches. Their events interrupted, pastors detained on spurious charges. In an ostensible democracy whose Constitution promised religious freedom, it is now an offence to change faith. Even to marry a person of a non-Hindu faith is subject to intimidation masquerading as a need for official approval.

India lives today under what Gandhi called “lawless laws”. Its Constitution proscribes an official religion but its leaders openly flout that provision. Official events begin with Hindu incantations; Hindu priests preside over government celebrations; senior leaders display their Hindu piety at assorted temples. These leaders are not exhibiting their spiritual fervor. They are demonstrating their ardour to trample on the Constitution and create a pseudo-religious State.

I believe in freedom, including the freedom of faith, the freedom to believe in what I choose, and the freedom to change my mind and embrace another faith. I should be able to court and marry another person of whatever faith. I should be able to do all this without fear. I need to breathe free and feel equal to my fellowmen.

Source: The Telegraph, 9/09/22

International Literacy Day: UNESCO makes unique endeavour in 2022

 Each year, the International Literacy Day is celebrated on September 8. The day founded by UNESCO in 1966, aims to remind the public of the importance of literacy as a matter of dignity and human rights


The day draws attention towards the challenges of illiteracy, highlights the need for steps and efforts to help create literate societies.

International Literacy Day 2022 – Theme

The theme for International Literacy Day 2022 is ‘Transforming Literacy Learning Spaces’. According to UNESCO, this will be an opportunity to rethink the fundamental importance of literacy learning spaces for building resilience and ensuring quality, equitable and inclusive education for all, in the aftermath of the pandemic which laid bare a huge divide between the haves and have-nots when it came to learning accessibility.

“At the global level, a two-day hybrid international event will be organized on 8 and 9 September 2022, in Côte d’Ivoire. The International Literacy Day global celebration lies at the heart of regional, country and local levels. As such, this year’s outstanding programmes and literacy practices will be announced through the 2022 UNESCO International Literacy Prizes award ceremony,” UNESCO said.

International Literacy Day – History

Though the idea behind celebrating International Literacy Day dates back to the “World Conference of Ministers of Education on the Eradication of Illiteracy” held in Tehran, Iran in 1965, it was UNESCO which finally declared September 8 as the International Literacy Day in 1966.

International Literacy Day-Significance

The main purpose behind celebrating the day is to remind the international community of the need for literacy for individuals, communities and societies, the cruciality of taking efforts towards creating literate societies.

The day aims towards motivating individuals, societies and nations to make efforts to end illiteracy.

International Literacy Day- Traditions

On this day, individuals and organization work towards providing help, encouraging those who face difficulty in reading and writing. Books are donated to libraries and tuition, learning is sponsored for those in need.Government, private institutions and international organization organize campaigns for literacy at the grassroots level. They also host fundraisers for the cause.

Source: The Federal, 08/09/22

Wednesday, September 07, 2022

Quote of the Day

 

“Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old.”
Franz Kafka
“कोई भी व्यक्ति जो सुंदरता को देखने की योग्यता को बनाए रखता है, वह कभी भी वृद्ध नहीं होता है।”
फ्रेंक काफ्का

Current Affairs-September 5, 2022

 

INDIA

– ISRO tests system to recover spent rocket stages; Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator successfully test-flown by VSSC (Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre) on a Rohini-300 sounding rocket
– Former Kerala Health Minister K. K. Shailaja rejects Ramon Magsaysay award offered to her for her contributions to preventing COVID-19 and Nipah virus, says it was a collective effort

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– Former Tata group chairman Cyrus Mistry, 54, dies in car accident on Mumbai-Ahmedabad route

WORLD

– IAEA says, Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant loses link to main power line
– UN Secretary-General Guterres appoints former Kyrgyzstan President Roza Otunbayeva as Special Representative for Afghanistan and Head of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA)
– China & Japan ground ferries, flights as Typhoon Hinnamnor approaches
– Former U.S. President Barack Obama wins Emmy for narrating documentary series ‘Our Great National Parks’

SPORTS

– Kerala: Pallathuruthy Boat Club (PBC) wins 68th edition of Nehru Trophy Boat Race in Punnamada lake in Alappuzha
– Pune: Odisha Juggernauts beat Telugu Yoddhas 46-45 in final to win Ultimate Kho Kho tournament
– Max Verstappen of Red Bull wins Formula One Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort
– Japan Open badminton in Osaka: Home favourites Kenta Nishimoto (men’s) and Akane Yamaguchi (women’s) win singles titles
– India’s Aravindh Chithambaram wins Dubai Open chess tournament
– Let’s roar Savaj, the mascot for 36th National Games to be held in Gujarat from Sept. 27, unveiled
– Asia Cup Cricket: Pakistan (182/5 in 19.5) beats India (181/7 in 20) by 5 wickets in T20I at Dubai
– 6th All India Prison Duty Meet sports being held in Ahmedabad on September 4-6

Current Affairs-September 6, 2022

 

INDIA

– Jharkhand CM Hemant Soren wins confidence motion with 48 votes in 81-member Assembly, BJP stages walkout
– PM announces development and upgradation of 14,500 schools across the country under PM-SHRI (Pradhan Mantri Schools For Rising India) Yojana

– President Droupadi Murmu confers National Awards to distinguished teachers on Teachers Day
– UGC launches new research fellowship and research grants schemes on Teachers Day
– Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina holds talks with the External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar in New Delhi
– Nepal’s President Bidya Devi Bhandari confers honorary title to Indian Army chief Gen. Manoj Pande in Kathmandu

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– CCI clears Prosus-backed PayU’s $4.7-billion acquisition of BillDesk
– Krishnan Sankarasubramaniam takes over as Tamilnad Mercantile Bank MD & CEO
– India to celebrate National Cinema Day on September 16 says Multiplex Association of India (MAI), tickets priced at Rs 75

WORLD

– UK: Foreign Minister Liz Truss elected new leader of the governing Conservative Party, becomes next PM of Britain
– Afghanistan: Two Russian diplomats killed along with several locals in blast outside Russian embassy in Kabul
– China: 6.8-magnitude earthquake hits Sichuan Province, 21 killed
– International Day of Charity observed on September 5; death anniversary of Mother Teresa of Calcutta

Economic & Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 57, Issue No. 36, 03 Sep, 2022

Engage Articles

Editorials

From the Editor's Desk

From 50 Years Ago

Alternative Standpoint

Commentary

Book Reviews

Special Articles

Current Statistics

Letters

Unhappy rank: Deaths by suicide at its highest in India

 National Crime Records Bureau for 2021 showed an increase of 7.2 per cent over those in 2020 — from 1.53 lakh deaths to 1.64 lakh


The virus was not the only mass killer during the pandemic. Deaths by suicide reported by the National Crime Records Bureau for 2021 showed an increase of 7.2 per cent over those in 2020 — from 1.53 lakh deaths to 1.64 lakh. In 2019, such deaths numbered 1.39 lakh. A 2021 Lancet study pointed out that India had the highest number of suicide deaths in the world. One reason for concern here is that the NCRB uses data from police reports, which leaves open the possibility that the facts are incomplete, because the associated social stigma often drives families to conceal the nature of death. Social stigma and confusion about the legal status of self-harm seem to have added to the authorities’ strange indifference to the countrywide tragedy that has been growing steadily. Creating categories such as ‘farmer suicides’ and ‘student suicides’ is not enough. In 2020 and 2021, however, the number of suicides that has grown faster than the average rate of increase is that of daily wage earners: one in four suicides comes from this group. While the pandemic hurt them severely, the increase must also be placed in the context of the ceaseless rise in suicide deaths among them since 2014.

Unemployment in 2020, and bankruptcy and debt in 2021 pushed more working-age people, especially men, over the edge. This is, again, pandemic driven, but these causes converge with older ones of family problems and illness. A large proportion of the illness behind suicide has to do with mental health, which adds to the stigma. Women’s suicides for illness increased in both 2020 and 2021, while it was, with family problems, the greatest cause of self-harm for senior citizens. Close confines, acute insecurity and even hunger must have contributed to the sense of hopelessness. Perhaps the general misery was reflected in the growth of drug abuse as one of the greatest causes of self-harm for people of working age, men mainly; together with illness, drugs as cause of suicide showed rapid growth. The NCRB data are, as always, more than adequate to unearth the roots of the tragedy — these are various, although often allied. Perhaps the numbers are now staggering enough for the busiest government to pay attention to clear-cut policies of suicide prevention. 

Source: The Telegraph, 02/09/22