Silence Eva Jayate - Outlook Article

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Posted: 13 years ago
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Magazine | Jul 23, 2012
Silence Eva Jayate
Aamir Khan not only deviously censored any discussion of Ambedkar and Reservation, but seemed content to use the 1920s language of high-caste reformers
S. Anand
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This Sunday morning I received a call from a friend who alerted me to the tenth episode of Aamir Khan-anchored Satyamev Jayate since the focus was on caste and untouchability. I mumbled something about his spoiling my Sunday, but tuned in nevertheless. It began with Kaushal Panwar narrating her harrowing tale for about twenty minutes: from her childhood where she was forced to join her mother in cleaning shit to her pursuit of a PhD in Sanskrit. I was glad that the audience heard her say that the discrimination she had experienced in her school in a Haryana village was no different from what she faced in the enlightened campus of Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi—where she continues to be denied a rightful job.

Following Kaushal, we were allowed a glimpse into the life of Balwant Singh, author of the tract An Untouchable in the IAS. I noticed a shot of him looking up to a larger-than-life portrait of Dr B.R. Ambedkar in his Saharanhpur house, and realized that so far—30 minutes into the show—there had been no verbal mention of Ambedkar. Balwant Singh, among the first dalits to enter a career in civil service in post-independence India, had said in his interview that he was perhaps the first and only IAS officer ever to be demoted to the rank of tehsildar. That had been edited out. I intuitively felt the show was going to scrupulously avoid any mention of two key ideas—Reservation and Ambedkar. I was hoping to be proved wrong. I wasn't.

How did Kaushal Panwar do her BA, MA and PhD and land a job with Delhi University? What is it that facilitates access to hitherto-excluded spaces for dalits? What is the one policy that enables dalits to stop cleaning shit and reclaim their humanity? The one weapon that helps them get an education? Get a job? Reservation. And who made this policy possible? Ambedkar. But Aamir Khan wouldn't mention the R and A words even once for fear of alienating his middle class audience, which as a friend perceptively said, is fed "bourgeois moralism of the most pathological sort," on a programme where "the only solution turns out to be nothing more than emotional catharsis".

Not surprisingly, Khan would also not mention the fact that an atrocity is committed on a dalit every 18 minutes according to the National Crime Records Bureau. The penchant Khan and his research team showed for various laws and statistics in the first two episodes of SJ that I had seen—on prenatal sex determination and domestic violence—was nowhere on display here. Hence no mention of the Prevention of Atrocities Act of 1989 and its dismal failure to curb violence against dalits. No discussion of a case like Khairlanji, where, in 2006, the mother and daughter, Surekha Bhotmange and Priyanka Bhotmange, had not just been raped repeatedly but tortured in ghastly ways (stripped, paraded naked, with fact-finding reports saying bullock cart pokers were thrust into their vaginas, and that Priyanka was raped even after her death). An interview with Bhaiyalal Bhotmange, the sole survivor of the Khairlanji carnage, may have not fit into the preordained script.

Then the show featured documentary filmmaker Stalin K. Padma and several clips from his three-hour film India Untouched. Again, the cherry-picked excerpts skirted any reference to A and R. In a cringe-worthy moment, Stalin even fawned on Khan and congratulated him for taking up the issue of untouchability on television 65 years after independence.

This was followed by homilies from His Holiness, Justice (retired) C.S. Dharmadhikari, who in his self-introduction, pretending to denounce labels, paraded every label of privilege that adorned his CV—including the 'blessings' allegedly bestowed by Adi Sankara on his ancestors. This man could equally pompously announce his Deshastha Brahmanness as his apparent rejection of it. I would have given up right then but for the fact that I had spotted Bezwada Wilson in the audience, and I was waiting to see if this leader of the Safai Karamchari Andolan—a man who had pioneered the demolition of dry latrines across India—would salvage the morning. He too was asked to narrate his early life, and he too shed tears. As did Khan with practised ease.

The next day I called Wilson and told him I was annoyed that even he did not bother to mention Ambedkar and Reservation. Wilson clarified that he indeed had. It had been edited out, as was his rant against the Supreme Court and Parliament—since both institutions had been dragging their feet on the issue of manual scavenging. Then he revealed something that shocked me. He said he had not been in the audience when Kaushal Panwar was being interviewed by Khan. I countered saying I had seen him 'reacting' to what Kaushal said on stage. "Even I saw myself in the audience and hence was shocked," said Wilson. He said Kaushal had been interviewed in total isolation, in an empty studio. And yet on Sunday we saw, every once in a while, close-ups of fretful, anxious, pained and agonised faces of members of the studio audience as Kaushal was narrating her story. They even clapped on cue, like when Khan asked Kaushal her heroic father's name. Clearly, all this had been manipulated and faked—with clever editing and splicing of shots.

I checked with Kaushal if this was true. It was. I further found that Khan and his team had shot interviews with two members of the Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry—its chairman Milind Kamble and key advisor Ashok Khade. They were informed just a week ahead of the 8 July telecast that their interviews wouldn't be aired since they "did not fit in with the story". In fact, when Chandra Bhan Prasad, mentor to DICCI and an exponent of 'dalit capitalism', watched the show with Kamble in Pune, they could not believe their eyes. Kamble's interview with Khan had been shot with Dharmadhikari and Kamble seated next to each other on the studio couch; but Kamble had been weeded out. Prasad wondered if some 'dirty trick editing' made this possible. More likely, Dharmadhikari took a leaf out of Khan's book and did not mind giving a 'fresh take' minus the unsuitable presence of Kamble. I also discovered that every participant on the show is forced to sign a 'confidentiality agreement' saying they will not speak about their participation—recorded many months ahead—in any social media.

In his weekly column in The Hindu, Khan began his discourse with "Gandhiji's struggle" for "those ostracized as untouchables". Perhaps Khan and his ghostwriters did not ever hear about what young Bhimrao had to face right in Satara at age 10. After a few paragraphs extolling Gandhi, Khan mentions "Babasaheb Ambedkar" in passing, as someone who led the drafting of the Constitution. Since the bulk of SJ's episode chose to focus on manual scavenging, and since Dharmadhikari and Khan chose to highlight Gandhi's imagined role in the fight against this practice—an issue largely and sadly neglected even within the dalit movement—let us turn briefly to what Gandhi said about "the most honourable occupation".

Gandhi wrote in Harijan in 1934: "I call scavenging as one of the most honourable occupations to which mankind is called. I don't consider it an unclean occupation by any means. That you have to handle dirt is true. But that every mother is doing and has to do. But nobody says a mother's occupation is unclean." In another essay entitled 'The Ideal Bhangi' in 1936 he wrote, "My ideal Bhangi would know the quality of night-soil and urine. He would keep a close watch on these and give a timely warning to the individual concerned. Thus he will give a timely notice of the results of his examination of the excreta. That presupposes a scientific knowledge of the requirements of his profession." It is this stranglehold of Gandhism that has kept manual scavenging alive.

Ambedkar held a view that was the exact opposite: "Under Hinduism scavenging was not a matter of choice, it was a matter of force. What does Gandhism do? It seeks to perpetuate this system by praising scavenging as the noblest service to society! What is the use of telling the scavenger that even a Brahmin is prepared to do scavenging when it is clear that according to Hindu Shastras and Hindu notions even if a Brahmin did scavenging he would never be subject to the disabilities of one who is a born scavenger?" Ambedkar argued that in India a man is not a scavenger because of his work, but because of his birth irrespective of whether he does scavenging or not.

Khan and his team not only deviously censored any discussion of Ambedkar and Reservation, they seemed content to use the 1920s language of high-caste reformers. A friend chided me saying I shouldn't expect Khan to be an activist. But surely my friend did not know how Khan manipulates and fools his audience—in the studio and outside—to nod and cry at moments he chooses. Wilson said, "In fact, during the shoot it was not I who actually began crying. Aamir Khan started to cry, so I was forced to cry along." Khan obviously thinks we can flush away middle class shit with tears.

S. Anand is publisher, Navayana. A shorter, edited version of this appears in print.


http://m.outlookindia.com/story.aspx?sid=4&aid=281646#.UAIs_MFVjyE.twitter


Personally i feel the article is written with a lot of cynicism but i do condone the sensationalism tactics

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axeion thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#2
The author identifies with my ilk... well-written :-)
swarajgir thumbnail
Posted: 13 years ago
#3
very true about Khan. the article covered everything that i too thought about. infact there were many episodes where i felt that a lot of content was either missing or skipped. the episode on Caste system had 2 issues to be dealt with: Caste system and Manual scavenging. Even if manual scavenging is done with, will the caste system be done with? both the topics could have been dealth with much better if they were 2 seperate episodes.
i was laughing when they were showing the public opinion on caste system. surely they have cut the poll to only show only those clippings that they want to show. when we see caste system throghout around us in terms of reservation, arranged marriage etc., how can we deny it?
Amir's tears are becoming a repellent now. i can't help but exclaim "Oh Man! not again!"
The latest episode on the Old people was an even bigger let down. i was expecting them to tell the viewers more on what action the elderly can take incase the children throw them out. but instead the episode felt more like... incase you are thrown out, don't worry, you can join elderly homes or live-in with another elderly. Clarification... i am not against both of these, but i want the elderly to know what they can do when they face such situations.
Satyameva has lost its charm. but i still continue to watch it, merely to see what Amir misses to tell the viewers. :-(
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Posted: 13 years ago
#4
I dont feel the show has lost its charm yet

if am a cynic, yes the tears seem forced. but wouldnt i end up n tears if i see someone s courage in front of me even after so much ..
axeion thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#5
Well, I don't know if the has lost its charm or not... for I was never enchanted by its charm. But yes, the cast does go ovvevr-board with their tears n expressions. I won't say just the hosst or guests, but the general audience as well. Yes, I would be touched by the story but not to the extent of being in tears. Probably, I would be more angry on some stories where the victims try to portray themselves as victims instead of retaliating back. Weak people and victims don't go well with my nature.
charminggenie thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#6
First I dont watch the show for the charm or any melodrama, my attention is grabbed because these issues appeal to me and I strongly feel for them, so dont care if Aamir sports a camel toe or a crew cut, he aint getting any emotions from me coz of his "sexiness".

Agreed the show is marred with several technical flaws, editing, poor camera shots, isolated interviews etc but we have to understand its not a matinee movie or a fiction story whose narration would get affected, its a show based to be part of our society's everyday conversation, lets people question themselves and their surroundings , get them to reflect , introspect etc.If the show has managed to achieve even half of that intent and if Aamir's tears contributed anything, then Mr Khan cry away!

See, for the fact that the team conducts many interviews , its not possible to feature all, so they filter and only show those which might appeal most to the audience.Call it trp trap , I call it more eyeballs, issues like CSA being featured in the living rooms, casteism not brushed under the carpet, I care for that.

Now coming to the mentioned episode on casteism, agreed it is a very vaste topic and reservation is a resultant not the cause.This episode , like Aamir defended on Asar , emphasized on the casue and Psychology.Any reservation debate would have shifted focus away from the real problem that it the people's Physchology and narrow-mindedness.So i am rather grateful to SJ team for not touching it in that episode, could they have followed it with an episode after on it , maybe.

Omission of Ambedkar, no doubt the man is iconic and his contribution to the social reforms is unquestionable, but I rather commerate the SJ team for taking the issue above any individual and religion.We take up cartoons featuring the great man and argue but we never argue for the issues he stood for! Amen to the irony.We all know his contributions , we have his statues all acrosss but sumwhere we have made hm bigger than the issues, no action s taken to further his vision limiting it to hero worshipping.

Lets not argue whether Hinduism promoted it or not, everythin is lost in translation, fact is we are not living in that age and era, we are not limited as far as our life and thinking is concerned.We do so many things which might not go down well with our religion, yet we shrug and say times change , then change your perception about casteism as well. let the education come good for something, dont blanket the moral flaws of us the individuals and as a socety by using the excuse of religion and traditions. Whatt an excuse they are!

See constructive criticism is one thing but down right questioning the integrity and pupose of the show is an excuse for not changing and not evolving.Let Aamir do this show for selfish reasons only, let him make money and grab accolades, I care a damn, these issues exist- thats the reality so FACE IT.

Please the so called magazines and bloggers ,write how the educated class on twitter still defend DV, how a growing young generation think elders should be treated like that coz they belong to the dinosaur era and how we vehemently deny casteism and CSA.Thats the issue , if you are not talking about it and rather doin expose on SJ then my dearest you are doing what you are writing about-GRABBING TRPS!
axeion thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#7

Did they talk about a solution to the only casteism-related problem 'Manual Scavenging (as per their research)? Just curious before I jump-in and reply to ur post.

ps- Hey Genie! 🤗 Howz Swades Bhraman coming along?

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Posted: 13 years ago
#8
Couldn't agree more Charming.

I too, don't watch the show for Aamir's dress sense or his sex appeal. I watch it for the very real issues brought to light. Do I care that other channels have broadcast the same over the years? Hell no. Why, because what's happening now is what matters. I am not jaded. I am not desensitized. I am shocked is what i am. I am not from India but these episodes have enlightened me so muCh and made me more grateful for my circumstances growing up. I am appalled at the complacency prevalent and the lack of wanting to change at an individual level.

As Charming stated, introspection is required regardless of the 'glamour' of the communication. I don't care if Aamir cries. I don't care if it is sincere or not. What I care about is that these atrocities still have the ability to make me cry. I don't care if Aamir has celebrity guests or not. What I care about is their ability to positively influence the right outcome.

If Oprah, has Hollywood celebrities,regular folks and other intellectuals on her shows and when she shows emotion, everyone goes gaga over her. She has made millions, she is capitalizing on her fame, she raises awareness and funds, why is no one questioning her integrity? These so called critics should get off their high horses and attempt to do something themselves rather than sitting in ivory towers and criticising those who want to do something to make a difference.
charminggenie thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#9
@Axeion,

Hugsss, days for swades brahman numbered, the fear of cooking for myself begins...pity days.

Well, they mentioned that they are going to take all the feedback to the the govt, Actually Aamir today met the PM and pushed for a stronger implementtaton,especally in Railways which employ the max number of people.They are donating the money for the cause and also in Asar, the baby show for Sj , they asked for more use of green toilets.


axeion thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#10
Haha, don't tell me about self-cooking. I haven't cooked a proper meal in months now... I bake something or the other and am managing 😆
Back to the issue! With all due respect to the show, it's makers and followers, does Mr.Khan even realize that Indian Railways is the biggest railway network in the world in terms of kilometres covered? And did he do the math of using green toilets for our railways? I bet not! And did he look into the the health hazards surrounding the long-term usage of self-composting a.k.a. green toilets by multiple people? Maybe yes, for he needs another topic for discussion on SMJ Season - 3,4,5... maybe 6?

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