Monday 17 June 2013

after the rains....

Monday, 17 June 2013.
Not really after the rains, for it appears the rains are still on, and as per the Met reports in the papers this morning will be on for the next couple of days too! The papers also mention it is the monsoon that's arrived in North India - a clear 13-days early, the earliest this has happened in more than five decades! If so, it is rather unfair that I and my neighbourhood were denied all those 'pre'monsoon rains the rest of north India and especially the surrounding neighbourhood to Gurgaon enjoyed over the last two weeks - letting us particularly suffer and stew in our own sticky sweat, making us 'enjoy' the blistering summer heat that much longer.
I believe Palam next door in my immediate neighbourhood, recorded a rainfall yesterday of 117.8mm of rain. That's more that four inches of rain between 8:30am amd 5:30pm. Wow... !
Much as the rain ushered in the much needed and waited for relief from the high temperatures - there were also the usual and inevitable party poopers to contend with yesterday: the massive power outages, blocked drains and resultant water-logging and threat of flooding and seepage..... The home front was hit hard with the electrical lines going totally dead and driving away all that joy of the rains. This affected the Invertor-alternate power-supply, the functioning of the AC and fans, the microwave and television-viewing; even the internet connectivity. The power line got restored much after nightfall, acting the total party spoiler till then.
As I stepped out for my walk this morning, found a light drizzle on. Normal me would've been cautious to avoid getting wet, be it my hair, clothes and shoes. But after skipping yesterday's walk I felt I needed my walk today, so braced myself for the consequences if any and set off. I'm glad I did - but for a couple of brief spells during which I felt the moisty spray, most of my two rounds around DeviLal Park didn't trouble me at all.
In the park I was confronted with the loud and incessant cacophony of frogs croaking away - something I have not experienced for some time. The noise was stark and lod. Looking for the source, there were not many my searching eyes could detect, but the ones present had enough volumes to bring the skys down. The frogs were not large either, mostly in the 2 to 2.5 inches category, and the rare one sizing about three inches. Listening to the irritating and incessant din that tended to destroy the morning serenity inside the rain drenched park, my mind couldn't help transport itself back to the days on Magadi estate, and more particularly my childhood in Mangalore with frogs aplenty in the abounding pools ponds and streams that were part of one's surroundings. And remember when it rained, it was not a few, but veritable armies of frogs that let go their rain-calls. It was part of the environment, of nature, and never worried any one! It was expected - like Sonal expected the Peacocks on my roof top and terrace to dance in the rain yesterday!
Frogs apparently feel the rains coming and start croaking in relief and in joy. They naturally loved rain and croak away to share this announcement with everyone. Rains herald in their mating season too, so male frogs croak away to call in females to mate with - and simultaneously, they croak to mark their territory and warn other male frogs to keep away! They plan to mate, lay eggs, and get to safety before all that nice, clean water evaporates and disappears! They could be a menace too, especially at night, for people who were light sleepers. I can never forget the nightly apparition of Fr Denis Pinto, my first Boarding-House Director at St Aloysius', beside the garden pond with the cane he used to discipline us boys with, to rap the frog that was disturbing his sleep in his room immediately upstairs!
At Sukh-Sagar, Dadajji's & Nana's Mangalore house we grew up in, our compound had many water bodies/ ponds where frogs abounded. Like the tiny fish we collected in bottles from these ponds for little aquariums to adorn our study tables, tadpoles and baby frogs were no less a target for similar pastimes. But the mighty six-incher that dominated our drinking-water well and greeted us by floating up to the surface each time he sensed our little heads peeping over the well wall, is the one I remember most. It was also fascinating how he was never harmed each year during the annual ritual of cleaning the well, when he was carefully collected from the well-waters in a basket, protected from harm in the interregnum, and released into the well once again after the cleaners had finished with their well-cleaning job!

Wednesday 22 May 2013

Tweet from Maxwell Pereira (@maxpk44)

Maxwell Pereira (@maxpk44) tweeted at 8:02 AM on Wed, May 22, 2013:
Oklahoma Tornado: Human resilience & calibre of a people standout in times of crisis, disaster & tragedy. Kudos to the people of Moore town.
(https://twitter.com/maxpk44/status/337033289049198592)

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Tweet from Maxwell Pereira (@maxpk44)

Maxwell Pereira (@maxpk44) tweeted at 7:41 AM on Wed, May 22, 2013:
Passing thought: "Were I 20yrs younger, would I qualify to be in Phaneesh Murthy's shoes? ...for the money, or women he exploits & v'versa?
(https://twitter.com/maxpk44/status/337027824668000256)

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Tweet from Maxwell Pereira (@maxpk44)

Maxwell Pereira (@maxpk44) tweeted at 7:29 AM on Wed, May 22, 2013:
Thumbs up to TOI's call to GenNext to be a change catalyst: "I will stop pointing fingers. I must be the change I wish to see in the world"
(https://twitter.com/maxpk44/status/337024939792162816)

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Monday 22 April 2013

130422: Social Perversity- Police Insensitivity: Public Outcry: Anil Chowdhary

My friend Anil Chowdhary's take in Rediff.Com on the East Delhi Rape case....


Another incident of rape and bestiality in the capital this time in East District, perhaps even more shocking than the gang rape in a bus in South Delhi on December 16, 2012. The victim was a five year old girl child. One more round of public outcry and demonstrations against the Delhi Police over poor response to the horrible crime, despite prompt action against the officers alleged to have delayed action on the complaint by the child’s parents and misbehaved against a woman demonstrator. They were placed under suspension and an enquiry instituted the very next day. The success of the Delhi Police in quickly apprehending the culprit from across states, as in the case of the apprehension of accused in the gang rape case, as also the basic issue of checking the depravity which appears to have overtaken Indian society got buried under the weight of the public/ media attacks, even calling for the scalp of the Police Commissioner
 Whoever, from the police told the parents to be happy that the child was alive and offered Rs 2,000 to hush up the case deserves to be severely punished The manhandling of a young girl demonstrator  also needs to be strongly condemned and punished. If the enquiry establishes their culpability, they should be given exemplary punishment. But let us be a little more patient and balanced. Whether the owner of the one room tenement which was taken on rent by the culprit just one week back had taken the requisite steps to get his antecedents verified also needs to be gone into. Each one of us needs to play a role in making our society safer instead of leaving it to the police to do everything.
 
 My attempt is to focus attention on some core issues thrown up by this horrible incident and the need to address them collectively. The extent to which Indian society has sunk in the area of commission of crimes against women and the apparent impunity with which such crimes continue to be reported from all parts of the country. Much more media attention is naturally received when such cases occur in the capital. The basic issue of decline in family and social checks over deviant behavior, parenting, schooling or lack of it deserve attention. A serious debate needs to be started at every available forum by including not only the intelligentsia and the political leadership but also representatives of the underprivileged living in our villages and slums of our cities who bear the brunt of sexual abuse of children and other forms of sexual crimes. We must try to find out what is going wrong and try to check this social malady before it acquires demonic proportions and puts our entire country to shame in the civilized world.
While on the subject of rising crimes against women, I can’t but help drawing attention to a general climate of disorder and disregard for law which is visible to all of us on roads and public places in Delhi. Multiple factors responsible for this very undesirable phenomenon need to be gone into in depth and remedial action set afoot. For this I suggest zero tolerance for public nuisance offences based on the “broken windows” theory of criminal psychology. If petty crimes are checked, the more serious ones will automatically decline. This has been applied successfully in New York which was considered the world’s crime capital in the eighties, but witnessed a sharp decline in the nineties when the NYPD Commissioner applied the “broken windows” technique.

Now about improving policing in our country to make it people friendly and service oriented, based on my own experience from within, we need to attract persons of higher caliber, education, and better orientation to our civil police manning Stations and Posts at the level of Constables and subordinate police officers, especially in our metropolitan cities. They are the most visible functionaries of the Government with maximum public interface. The minimum qualification for constables should immediately be made graduation and their compensation packets doubled. Their recruitment should be entrusted to the State Public Commissions through open competitive examinations. Many of my friends belonging to the elitist sections of Delhi often compare Delhi Police Constables with the London Bobby who incidentally became the highest paid civil servants in the UK a country following a wide strike by policemen all over England in the early eighties.
India being a poor country we cannot afford this, the opponents of police reforms might argue. The solution I suggest is to drastically curtail expansion of the paramilitary forces and spend the money on civil police manning PSs and Posts both in term of quality and quantity. If the there is a price for peace and better protection of the life and property of the Aam Aadmi, let us pay it.   

---------- Anil Chowdhry IPS ( Retd), former Secretary Internal security Union Home Ministry.

Tuesday 16 April 2013

2013.0416: Boston blasts

Request the Indian media especially the audio-visual, to watch closely how the American/western media is handling the Boston blasts .....and please, please learn!
There is no screaming, no screeching, there is no blame game... only rallying round all the services involved.... helping, encouraging, informing....
Not one melodramatic picture/ scene of dead bodies/ injured, etc etc... No invasion of anyone's privacy.... no histrionics !
No disgusting one-upmanship or competition between TV-channels....
While everyone brought on screen is calm and collected, delivering their say in a sober controlled manner - in stark contrast whatever screaming on the TV even now being witnessed is that indulged in by the Indian channels, covering the details proxy - from a distance...
When will we learn... ?

Sunday 13 January 2013

Learning from the West ---- Narayana Murty

Precise to the point 
Guess every minister in the country has read it and will now practice it!

A  BRILLIANT  SPEECH !!!!!
Learning from the West ---- Narayana Murty

Ladies and gentlemen: 
It is a pleasure to be here at the Lal Bahadur Shastri Institute of Management. Lal Bahadur Shastri was a man of strong values and he epitomized simple living. He was a freedom fighter and innovative administrator who contributed to nation building in full measure. It is indeed a matter of pride for me to be chosen for the Lal Bahadur Shastri Award for Public Administration and Management Sciences. I thank the jury for this honor.
When I got the invitation to speak here, I decided to speak on an important topic on which I have pondered for years - the role of Western values in contemporary Indian society. Coming from a company that is built on strong values, the topic is close to my heart. Moreover, an organization is representative of society, and some of the lessons that I have learnt are applicable in the national context. In fact, values drive progress and define quality of life in society.
The word community joins two Latin words com ("together" or "with") and unus ("one"). A community, then, is both one and many. It is a unified multitude and not a mere group of people. As it is said in the Vedas: Man can live individually, but can survive only collectively. Hence, the challenge is to form a progressive community by balancing the interests of the individual and that of the society. To meet this, we need to develop a value system where people accept modest sacrifices for the common good.
What is a value system? It is the protocol for behavior that enhances the trust, confidence and commitment of members of the community. It goes beyond the domain of legality - it is about decent and desirable behavior. Further, it includes putting the community interests ahead of your own. Thus, our collective survival and progress is predicated on sound values.
There are two pillars of the cultural value system - loyalty to family and loyalty to community. One should not be in isolation to the other, because, successful societies are those which combine both harmoniously. It is in this context that I will discuss the role of Western values in contemporary Indian society.
Some of you here might say that most of what I am going to discuss are actually Indian values in old ages, and not Western values. I live in the present, not in the bygone era. Therefore, I have seen these values practiced primarily in the West and not in India. Hence, the title of the topic.
I am happy as long as we practice these values - whether we call it Western or old Indian values. As an Indian, I am proud to be part of a culture, which has deep-rooted family values. We have tremendous loyalty to the family. For instance, parents make enormous sacrifices for their children. They support them until they can stand on their own feet. On the other side, children consider it their duty to take care of aged parents.
We believe: Mathru devo bhava - mother is God, and pithru devo bhava - father is God. Further, brothers and sisters sacrifice for each other. In fact, the eldest brother or sister is respected by all the other siblings. As for marriage, it is held to be a sacred union - husband and wife are bonded, most often, for life. In joint families, the entire family works towards the welfare of the family. There is so much love and affection in our family life.
This is the essence of Indian values and one of our key strengths. Our families act as a critical support mechanism for us. In fact, the credit to the success of Infosys goes, as much to the founders as to their families, for supporting them through the tough times. Unfortunately, our attitude towards family life is not reflected in our attitude towards community behavior. From littering the streets to corruption to breaking of contractual obligations, we are apathetic to the common good. In the West - the US, Canada, Europe, Australia, New Zealand - individuals understand that they have to be responsible towards their community.
The primary difference between the West and us is that, there, people have a much better societal orientation. They care more for the society than we do. Further, they generally sacrifice more for the society than us. Quality of life is enhanced because of this. This is where we need to learn from the West.
 
I will talk about some of the lessons that we, Indians, can learn from the West.
In the West, there is respect for the public good. For instance, parks free of litter, clean streets, public toilets free of graffiti - all these are instances of care for the public good. On the contrary, in India, we keep our houses clean and water our gardens everyday - but, when we go to a park, we do not think twice before littering the place.
Corruption, as we see in India, is another example of putting the interest of oneself, and at best that of one's family, above that of the society. Society is relatively corruption free in the West. For instance, it is very difficult to bribe a police officer into avoiding a speeding ticket.
This is because of the individual's responsible behavior towards the community as a whole On the contrary, in India, corruption, tax evasion, cheating and bribery have eaten into our vitals. For instance, contractors bribe officials, and construct low-quality roads and bridges. The result is that society loses in the form of substandard defence equipment and infrastructure, and low-quality recruitment, just to name a few impediments. Unfortunately, this behavior is condoned by almost everyone.
Apathy in solving community matters has held us back from making progress, which is otherwise within our reach. We see serious problems around us but do not try to solve them. We behave as if the problems do not exist or is somebody else's. On the other hand, in the West, people solve societal problems proactively. There are several examples of our apathetic attitude. For instance, all of us are aware of the problem of drought in India.
More than 40 years ago, Dr. K. L. Rao - an irrigation expert, suggested creation of a water grid connecting all the rivers in North and South India, to solve this problem. Unfortunately, nothing has been done about this. The story of power shortage in Bangalore is another instance. In 1983, it was decided to build a thermal power plant to meet Bangalore's power requirements. Unfortunately, we have still not started it. Further, the Milan subway in Bombay is in a deplorable state for the last 40 years, and no action has been taken.
To quote another example, considering the constant travel required in the software industry; five years ago, I had suggested a 240-page passport. This would eliminate frequent visits to the passport office. In fact, we are ready to pay for it. However, I am yet to hear from the Ministry of External Affairs on this.
We, Indians, would do well to remember Thomas Hunter's words: Idleness travels very slowly, and poverty soon overtakes it. What could be the reason for all this? We were ruled by foreigners for over thousand years. Thus, we have always believed that public issues belonged to some foreign ruler and that we have no role in solving them.
Moreover, we have lost the will to proactively solve our own problems. Thus, we have got used to just executing someone else's orders. Borrowing Aristotle's words: We are what we repeatedly do. Thus, having done this over the years, the decision-makers in our society are not trained for solving problems. Our decision-makers look to somebody else to take decisions. Unfortunately, there is nobody to look up to, and this is the tragedy.
Our intellectual arrogance has also not helped our society. I have traveled extensively, and in my experience, have not come across another society where people are as contemptuous of better societies as we are, with as little progress as we have achieved. Remember that arrogance breeds hypocrisy. No other society gloats so much about the past as we do, with as little current accomplishment.
Friends, this is not a new phenomenon, but at least a thousand years old. For instance, Al Barouni, the famous Arabic logician and traveler of the 10th century, who spent about 30 years in India from 997 AD to around 1027 AD, referred to this trait of Indians. According to him, during his visit, most Indian pundits considered it below their dignity even to hold arguments with him. In fact, on a few occasions when a pundit was willing to listen to hm, and found his arguments to be very sound, he invariably asked Barouni: which Indian pundit taught these smart things!
The most important attribute of a progressive society is respect for others who have accomplished more than they themselves have, and learn from them. Contrary to this, our leaders make us believe that other societies do not know anything! At the same time, everyday, in the newspapers, you will find numerous claims from our leaders that ours is the greatest nation. These people would do well to remember Thomas Carlyle's words: The greatest of faults is to be conscious of none.
If we have to progress, we have to change this attitude, listen to people who have performed better than us, learn from them and perform better than them. Infosys is a good example of such an attitude. We continue to rationalize our failures. No other society has mastered this part as well as we have. Obviously, this is an excuse to justify our incompetence, corruption, and apathy. This attitude has to change. As Sir Josiah Stamp has said: It is easy to dodge our responsibilities, but we cannot dodge the consequences of dodging our responsibilities.
Another interesting attribute, which we Indians can learn from the West, is their accountability. Irrespective of your position, in the West, you are held accountable for what you do. However, in India, the more 'important' you are, the less answerable you are. For instance, a senior politician once declared that he 'forgot' to file his tax returns for 10 consecutive years - and he got away with it. To quote another instance, there are over 100 loss making public sector units (central) in India. Nevertheless, I have not seen action taken for bad performance against top managers in these organizations.
Dignity of labor is an integral part of the Western value system. In the West, each person is proud about his or her labor that raises honest sweat. On the other hand, in India, we tend to overlook the significance of those who are not in professional jobs. We have a mind set that reveres only supposedly intellectual work.
For instance, I have seen many engineers, fresh from college, who only want to do cutting-edge work and not work that is of relevance to business and the country. However, be it an organization or society, there are different people performing different roles. For success, all these people are required to discharge their duties. This includes everyone from the CEO to the person who serves tea - every role is important. Hence, we need a mind set that reveres everyone who puts in honest work.
Indians become intimate even without being friendly. They ask favors of strangers without any hesitation. For instance, the other day, while I was traveling from Bangalore to Mantralaya, I met a fellow traveler on the train. Hardly 5 minutes into the conversation, he requested me to speak to his MD about removing him from the bottom 10% list in his company, earmarked for disciplinary action. I was reminded of what Rudyard Kipling once said: A westerner can be friendly without being intimate while an easterner tends to be intimate without being friendly.
Yet another lesson to be learnt from the West, is about their professionalism in dealings. The common good being more important than personal equations, people do not let personal relations interfere with their professional dealings. For instance, they don't hesitate to chastise a colleague, even if he is a personal friend, for incompetent work.
In India, I have seen that we tend to view even work interactions from a personal perspective. Further, we are the most 'thin-skinned' society in the world - we see insults where none is meant. This may be because we were not free for most of the last thousand years. Further, we seem to extend this lack of professionalism to our sense of punctuality. We do not seem to respect the other person's time.
The Indian Standard Time somehow seems to be always running late. Moreover, deadlines are typically not met. How many public projects are completed on time? The disheartening aspect is that we have accepted this as the norm rather than the exception. In the West, they show professionalism by embracing meritocracy. Meritocracy by definition means that we cannot let personal prejudices affect our evaluation of an individual's performance. As we increasingly start to benchmark ourselves with global standards, we have to embrace meritocracy.
In the West, right from a very young age, parents teach their children to be independent in thinking. Thus, they grow up to be strong, confident individuals. In India, we still suffer from feudal thinking. I have seen people, who are otherwise bright, refusing to show independence and preferring to be told what to do by their boss. We need to overcome this attitude if we have to succeed globally.
The Western value system teaches respect to contractual obligation. In the West, contractual obligations are seldom dishonored. This is important - enforceability of legal rights and contracts is the most important factor in the enhancement of credibility of our people and nation.
In India, we consider our marriage vows as sacred. We are willing to sacrifice in order to respect our marriage vows. However, we do not extend this to the public domain. For instance, India had an unfavorable contract with Enron. Instead of punishing the people responsible for negotiating this, we reneged on the contract - this was much before we came to know about the illegal activities at Enron.
To quote another instance, I had given recommendations to several students for the national scholarship for higher studies in US universities. Most of them did not return to India even though contractually they were obliged to spend five years after their degree in India.
In fact, according to a professor at a reputed US university, the maximum default rate for student loans is among Indians - all of these students pass out in flying colors and land lucrative jobs, yet they refuse to pay back their loans. Thus, their action has made it difficult for the students after them, from India, to obtain loans. We have to change this attitude.
Further, we Indians do not display intellectual honesty. For example, our political leaders use mobile phones to tell journalists on the other side that they do not believe in technology! If we want our youngsters to progress, such hypocrisy must be stopped. We are all aware of our rights as citizens. Nevertheless, we often fail to acknowledge the duty that accompanies every right. To borrow Dwight Eisenhower's words: People that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both. Our duty is towards the community as a whole, as much as it is towards our families.
We have to remember that fundamental social problems grow out of a lack of commitment to the common good. To quote Henry Beecher: Culture is that which helps us to work for the betterment of all. Hence, friends, I do believe that we can make our society even better by assimilating these Western values into our own culture - we will be stronger for it.
Most of our behavior comes from greed, lack of self-confidence, lack of confidence in the nation, and lack of respect for the society. To borrow Gandhi's words: There is enough in this world for everyone's need, but not enough for everyone's greed. Let us work towards a society where we would do unto others what we would have others do unto us. Let us all be responsible citizens who make our country a great place to live. In the words of Churchill: Responsibility is the price of greatness. We have to extend our family values beyond the boundaries of our home.
Finally, let us work towards maximum welfare of the maximum people - Samasta janaanaam sukhino bhavantu. Thus, let us - people of this generation, conduct ourselves as great citizens rather than just good people so that we can serve as good examples for our younger generation.