Thursday, 24 December 2015

Muslim ya Hindu?


Kis Ravan ki katun baahein,
Kis lanka mein aag lagaon,
Ghar ghar ravan, pag pag lanka,
Itne ram kahan se laon.
Nafraton ka asar dekho,
Janwaron ka batwara ho gaya,
Gaay hindu ho gayee aur bakra musalman ho gaya.
Mandiron mein hindu dekhe,
Masjidon mein musalman,
Sham ko jab maikhane mein dekha,
Tab jaakar dekhe insaan.
Ye ped ye patte ye shakhein bhi pareshan ho jayein,
Agar parinde bhi hindu aur musalman ho jayein.
Sukhe mewe bhi ye dekh kar pareshan ho gaye,
Na jaane kab nariyal hindu aur khajoor musalman ho gaye.
Na masjid ko jaante hain; na shiwalon ko jaante hain,
Jo bhoke pet hote hain; woh sirf niwalon ko jaante hain,
Mera yahi andaaz logon ko khalta hai,
Ki mera chirag hawa ke khilaf kyun jalta hai.
Mein aman pasand hoan; mere shahar mein aman rehne do,
Laal aur hare mein mat baaton,
Meri chhat par tiranga rehne do.
#Satyam_Bruyat

Tuesday, 15 December 2015

Word "Prostitute"


Don’t judge people by their profession but instead judge them
by their character.
A prostitute sells her soul to make a living but most people
fake their emotions to deceive others. But still, a “kothewaali”
is looked upon as a characterless sl*t and people who fool
others are categorized as ‘smart’.
There is no right or wrong but the thinking makes it so.
So what if a 30-year-old woman makes a choice to sleep with
strangers to feed her only child, when her estranged and
abusive husband throws her out of the house.
Did she make a mistake? Or her husband? Think it over.
Love cannot buy you life but money can.
Love cannot cure you from cancer and it definitely cannot
provide you a roof for shelter. But a woman who decides to
become a prostitute to cure her ailing father, who is battling
cancer, is degraded by society.
I respect her. Do you?
Life is defined by the choices we make.
Women became prostitutes for many different reasons and
child abuse is often regarded as a primary one but media
misleads the audience by stating sexual curiosity as their sole
purpose.
How proud are you of all your choices?
Sex is not a taboo but our mind has made it one.
Why is sex a taboo? Just because it involves dropping off your
pants and being naked with someone you love. Or may be
because you delete ‘history’ every time after watching porn to
keep your lappy non-adulterated.
Mind is the only sex organ.
If the purpose of love is getting into bed, I guess prostitutes
are the most auspicious lovers.
Alone and depressed, demons roam her mind, as the sun sets
and her customers multiply, losing all concept of time, she
gives herself to a man she hardly knows.
But she never found love. Never.
#Satyam_Bruyat

Sunday, 29 November 2015

Where does it hurt? Do tell



If I would be the "one" who would have been raped brutally &
thrown off on a street, lying with my body ripped apart & not a
single bystander to help me... If I would be the one who would
be battling to hold on to life through multiple surgeries & organ
failures while the media made a moolah by turning me into a
"breaking news"... If I would be the one who would be flown
off to die in a foreign shore only to pacify the unrest & anger...
I WOULD NOT REST IN PEACE...
I would come back to haunt the perpetrators, the spineless
system that fails to protect the less powerful, the people who
are still go on debating on what should be the punishment for
such a heinous act, the mourners who would move on to
celebrate the coming of new year only to get rid of a bad
year... I would haunt, trouble & give each one of you sleepless
nights till your conscience is not rattled enough to find
answers to the black spot called "rape" & make way where one
doesn't have to go out to "reclaim the night"...
NO, I WOULD NOT REST IN PEACE !

If Jesus were alive today, would we call him a “punk” or “soft” for expressing unconditional love? 
If Martin Luther King or Mahatma Gandhi were alive today, would we chastise them for advocating love and renouncing violence? 
Ironically, we celebrate the lives of these powerful men but choose to castrate those who attempt to walk in their footsteps. We can create a stronger community for our families if all men choose to embrace our feminine traits along with our masculine ones. When this happens, positive competition transforms into a desire to be better and more complete humans being for the sake of the entire group instead of for self-gain. The expression of emotional pain becomes acknowledged and nurtured instead of ridiculed. An expression of love starts to be recognized as strength instead of weakness.
If we want a better world with better relationships, we first have to work toward being better, and more complete, individuals.
Omission of some elements make huge difference, when removed at right time!!Politicians removed from a country and religion removed from humans will solve most of the problems. Maybe! Particularly India!


#Satyam_ Bruyat

Friday, 27 November 2015

The “macho man” stigma is getting old!

Growing up in the city, I quickly learned how male vulnerability leads to questions about your manhood. There was constant pressure to prove you were “tough enough.” 
Many of my classmates would act out of character to create a tougher image of themselves. No one wanted to risk being characterized as “soft” or a “punk.” 

I was lucky to have a strong father who taught me the importance of standing up for myself.  

He showed me that love was part of the definition of manhood. It was obvious that most of the kids I knew did not have this kind of male role model in their lives. I was lucky. 

Patriarchy aims to suppress (both consciously and unconsciously) feminine “energy” in both women and men, creating generations of men that equate expressing love and pain as signs of weakness. Stereotypical masculinity is the most obvious gender performance for men, which means many men suppress their feminine side, including qualities such as compassion, cooperation, emotional honesty, and creativity. 

Emotional suppression warps who men truly are as boyfriends, husbands, fathers, and sons. 

Male peer pressure creates boys who hold back emotions to protect themselves from being judged. Eventually, the accumulating emotional pain reaches a boiling point, overflows and ultimately manifests itself in the form of violence. This violence is encouraged by many people as the best way to resolve problems.
 Many boys do not learn emotional intelligence skills early on. Instead, they’re encouraged to “man up” to defend a particular type of masculinity, which fuels their aggression. 

This common dysfunction bleeds into men’s relationships with women. 

Whereas many women want to connect with men on a deeper emotional level, the process is strained when a man lacks the experience of embracing his emotions and expressing himself. This denial of self-expression leads many men to live their lives in an emotional coma. 
So how do men break this vicious cycle of emotional disequilibrium and violence? In the context of both culture and relationships, the key is for all of us (men and women) to take on the responsibility of redefining manhood.
 We should no longer allow the media to define it for us. 


Women can help men wake up from this emotional coma in these 3 ways:


 1. Stop supporting and looking for machismo and violence in a man. 
2. Stop labeling men who express pain or who ask for help as weak. 
3. Choose to nurture a man with an open heart and support his goals of becoming a complete human being.

 Men can assist each other to break the emotional coma cycle in these 4 ways: 

1. Stop ridiculing other men for expressing their emotion, compassion and pain. Instead, support complex masculinity. 
2. Stop equating manhood to violence.
 3. Choose to be completely open with women by being fully present and emotionally available. 
4. Support and encourage creativity in men.

 If Jesus were alive today, would we call him a “punk” or “soft” for expressing unconditional love? 

 If Martin Luther King or Mahatma Gandhi were alive today, would we chastise them for advocating love and renouncing violence?

 Ironically, we celebrate the lives of these powerful men but choose to castrate those who attempt to walk in their footsteps. 

We can create a stronger community for our families if all men choose to embrace our feminine traits along with our masculine ones. When this happens, positive competition transforms into a desire to be better and more complete humans being for the sake of the entire group instead of for self-gain. 
The expression of emotional pain becomes acknowledged and nurtured instead of ridiculed. An expression of love starts to be recognized as strength instead of weakness. 

If we want a better world with better relationships, we first have to work toward being better, and more complete, individuals.

#Satyam_Bruyat


Tuesday, 24 November 2015

The capital city: Delhi


On my recent visit to  Delhi I met some of the very common people.
Being the capital city of the country, it lives up to its name.
On one side where we have Connaught place, a well known place. On the other side we also have places where people strive for a meager meal of two times a day.

You must be wondering who this lady is and what this post is all about!
Met this lady near India gate selling corns and thought of inquiring about her.

She's from Bengal and was married off at a small age and came to Delhi and has been working since then around Delhi.

What touched me from inside was "people come from all sorts of places to see India gate and then there are people for whom it doesn't matter whether its there or not".

Each time 25 year old Salma takes her one year old son Zubair to the Batla Clinic (a private clinic in Delhi) for a shot of the DPT, the cost of transportation and the vaccine adds up to approximately Rs.500.

When it is time for Zubair to take the next immunization dose, Salma may find that the expenses have entirely spiraled out of her reach.

New vaccines and expensive brands of baby foods and tonics are flooding the market. Three shots of the Pneumococcle cost Rs.12, 000; a dose of the Diarrohea Rota Virus comes for Rs.2000; the polio injectible (IPV) comes for approximately Rs.2000.

“We end up spending approximately Rs.20,000 on vaccinating one child alone. These expenses are not covered under any insurance scheme. My husband earns a decent sum, but we find it difficult to meet the rising medical expenses.” Said Shweta Jha, mother of two, who owns a three bedroom house in an up-market locality in Delhi’s outskirts in Noida.

For Salma, spending Rs.500 (for a shot of the DPT) is hugely prohibitive. She shells out a monthly Rs.1000 rent for a damp and un-ventilated one room house crammed in between the narrow and foul smelling streets of Madanpur Khadar wher– in the absence of civic or sewerage facilities – mosquitoes breed in cesspools and mountains of garbage are stacked up everywhere. A foamy yellow liquid spurts out of the municipality taps – which is used up in the toilets and for washing clothes.

Like many of her neighbours, Salma spends Rs.12 to buy a 20 liter can of water filled from the nearby tube-wells for cooking and drinking purposes. “We spend approximately Rs.3,000 each month on medical expenses. My husband Zakir Hussain works as a clerk in a private bank (the family’s only bread earner) and brings home a monthly salary of just Rs.7,000 in all”, said Salma.


Rich versus poor divide 
Like several resettlement colonies of the poor, Madanpur Khadar – sandwiched between the blue-glass fronted corporate offices and spanking new malls of Sarita Vihar, adjoining the imposing Apollo Hospital – does not have a primary health centre. “People go to quacks or to the private doctors for treatment”, said Madan Lal of the “Mobile Creches” – a voluntary organization working for welfare of children of migrant labor. 

Diarrohea, typhoid and respiratory diseases are common among children living at Madanpur Khadar. The 2010 study by the Delhi Forces Neev – a network of organizations working on child-related issues - found 20% children at Madanpur Khadar as being severely malnourished.

Delhi- metamorphosing into a capital of the new world and a city that boasts of the country’s second largest per capita income – has an ugly face tucked away in its innards.

The Delhi government does not have an estimate of the number of poor living in the metropolis. “We have now started the process of identifying the poor”, women and child development minister Dr. Kiran Walia said.

The 'mobile creches' estimates are that more than half of Delhi (64% of the population) is poor – family earnings less than a monthly Rs/4,000.


Even after government's claim of being on the track of a better India, we can barely see changes that should have taken place.
Isn't it?

#Satyam_Bruyat

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Change


Omission of some elements make huge difference, when
removed at right time!!
Politicians removed from a country and religion removed from
humans will solve most of the problems. Maybe!
Particularly India!
# Satyam_Bruyat

Friday, 13 November 2015

Prove me wrong!!


 Looks familiar, isn't it?
Tried to summarise that all of us have seen at one point or the other but silence seems to be the best reply to all these issues. 
The World Bank, in 2011 based on 2005's PPPs International Comparison Program, estimated 23.6% of Indian population, or about 276 million people, lived below $1.25 per day on purchasing power parity.








 If one asks me i would say nothing has changed, only the time has passed.
''Give time some time, it heals everything'', probably not these things.
While we are still stuck at shitty issues like communalism,fascism and what not!! Changes(positive) are negligible and rarely seen.
  According to the National Crime Records Bureau 2013 annual report, 24,923 rape cases were reported across India in 2012, a place where a large number of goddesses are worshiped. Irony!!

Prove me wrong, anyone?
Incredible India!!
“If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.” 
‪#‎Satyam_Bruyat‬

Wednesday, 11 November 2015

Honor killings: Fate of love in India

You don't get to meet a person who's seen honor killing in front of his eyes, openly shares the despondent truth and still feels proud about it.
Recently met a person from my native place, shamefully. What he said was shocking as well as downcast. This is what he said-
"In our village(area) whenever a couple elopes, they are called back by their parents with a promise to get them married and if they return they are reduced to ashes in front of the whole village and that too with the consent of parents and villagers. Further you can't put the whole village behind bars.
The reason being that in future no one dares to bring disgrace to the family and village.''
Partial blame goes towards traditions, religion and the sick mentality. Surely no one would want to be born in such a place.


Love wins!!
Incredible India!!
#Satyam_Bruyat

Tuesday, 10 November 2015

Why everyone remains silent?

In Karnataka school, every day she writes in midday meal diary: ‘No one ate today.' 


Every day Radhamma takes out a diary she is required to maintain as part of the mid-day meal scheme in government schools in Karnataka and writes four words, “No one ate today.” Every day for the past five months.
Radhamma is a Scheduled Caste, and the condition that she not make food is the only way she can retain her job of head cook at the Government Higher Primary School in Kagganahalli village in Kolar district of Karnataka. In January 2014, there were 118 students at the school, from Classes I to VIII. Since her appointment in February 2014, 100 have left. The remaining 18 continue on the condition, laid down by their parents, that Radhamma not make the mid-may meal.
It earns her Rs 1,700 per month, but every paisa counts for her family of seven persons belonging to the Adi Karnataka caste.

The only reason being that she's been termed as a dalit. And we've kind enough to let her feel and show where she belongs. Its just one incidence, there are countless. Maybe its our so called ancestral traditions and customs that have kept us bound. Whats the use of such traditions where we can't give respect to fellow human?
Prove me wrong, anyone?
Incredible India!!
I stand with Radhamma and if i get chance i'll surely eat the food she makes.

#Satyam_Bruyat

Monday, 2 November 2015

From deep inside!!


So here I am once again on the topic of rising communal
tensions, particularly between two communities!! Though i
believe in brutal criticism but still one thing that always makes
me feel low is the fake nationalism that people possess.
It hurts when people ask: " So you are from Pakistan, or
associated in any kind"?
My reply is that, I'm an Indian and love this country same as
you do.
I don't love Pakistan as a Muslim, neither i hate Pakistan as an
Indian!!
The world would have been a better place without borders and
hatred, much better!!
One day without hatred and the world would be a much better
place!!
#Satyam_Bruyat

Irom Sharmila: "Iron Lady of Manipur"



    The 42-year-old Manipuri started her fast in 2000, after the death of 10 Manipuris at the hands of the Assam Rifles in Imphal.

    Her only friends are the pair of guinea pigs she has adopted in confinement!

    Also known as the "Iron Lady of Manipur" or "Mengoubi" ("the fair one") is a civil rights activist, political activist, and poet from the Indian state of Manipur. On 2 November 2000, she began a hunger strike which is still ongoing. Having refused food and water for more than 500 weeks.
    She was already involved in local peace movements with regard to human rights abuses in Manipur when, on 2 November 2000, in Malom, a town in the Imphal Valley ofManipur, ten civilians were shot and killed while waiting at a bus stop. The incident, known as the "Malom Massacre", was allegedly committed by the Assam Rifles, one of the Indian Paramilitary forces operating in the state. The victims included Leisangbam Ibetombi, a 62-year-old woman, and 18-year-old Sinam Chandramani, a 1988 National Bravery Award winner.
    Sharmila, who was 28 at the time of Malom Massacre, began to fast in protest.[12] Her primary demand to the Indian government has been the repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act (AFSPA). She began her fast in Malom on 5 November, and vowed not to eat, drink, comb her hair or look in a mirror until AFSPA was repealed.
    Three days after she began her strike, she was arrested by the police and charged with an "attempt to commit suicide", which was unlawful under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) at that time, and was later transferred to judicial custody. However, Amnesty International and the World Medical Association both dispute that a hunger strike is equivalent to suicide as hunger strikers "generally hope and intend to survive".] Her health deteriorated rapidly, and nasogastric intubation was forced on her from November 21 in order to keep her alive while under arrest.

    By 2004, Sharmila had become an "icon of public resistance." Following her procedural release on 2 October 2006 Irom Sharmila Chanu went to Raj Ghat, New Delhi, which she said was "to pay floral tribute to my ideal, Mahatma Gandhi." Later that evening, Sharmila headed for Jantar Mantar for a protest demonstration where she was joined by students, human rights activists and other concerned citizens. 30 women protested naked in support of Sharmila in front of the Assam Rifles headquarters. They held a banner saying "Indian Army rape us" and all of them were imprisoned for three months.
    This is how Indian judicial system works, where right to expression and those found protesting are put behind bars without even listening to them.

     In November 2013 she gave an interview to NDTV in which she discussed tensions with her organisation, the Just Peace Foundation, in which she claimed that members had made honour killing death threats against her due to her relationship with Desmond Coutinho, a British citizen, and complained that the foundation was preventing her from giving prize money she had been awarded to people or causes she wanted to help.

    I am not a goddess; I can also fall in love: Irom Sharmila

    A historic day went by quietly on Sunday as human rights activist from Manipur, Irom Sharmila, completed 15 years of her hunger strike against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act. The 42-year-old Manipuri started her fast in 2000, after the death of 10 Manipuris at the hands of the Assam Rifles in Imphal. Amnesty International, on Sunday said it was "15 years of the selfless and unparalleled protest".
    Unfortunately, as the solemn gathering recognised, the state does not seem to listen. According to the activists these are the most peaceful times the north eastern states have seen in the recent past. However, "fractured" the Mizo Accord for peace with these groups, it has held for 30 years. Yet, as Amnesty said "despite repeated calls to withdraw the AFSPA from UN experts as well as national and international groups, the Act continues to be enforced and continues to cause flagrant human rights violations."

    Sharmila herself, said Babloo Loitongbam, from Human Rights Alert, is living a legal and political paradox. Her fight, he said, was for the right to live. In her own words, she didn't want to die but live a full life. Yet, she has been charged with attempt to suicide and remanded to judicial custody 365 times; a "ritual" that takes place every 15 days. Loitongbam said that Sharmila wanted "people of prominence" to come to court with her to repeat her arguments.
    The Special Ward at the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences in Imphal, Manipur, is cut off from the swirl of chaos that is the life of a hospital. Here, in Room No. 1, 42-year-old Irom Sharmila Chanu, the most recognisable face of this conflict-ridden state in the Northeast, has lived for 14 years.

    The four walls of Sharmila’s room, a bright sea-green that has paled over the years, enclose her entire world. Mementoes of her friendships and love, gifts and letters from her family and supporters, are stacked on overflowing tables, stashed in the sole cupboard or plastered on the walls. A poster of Irish birds of prey and the front page of the Irish Times, on the day Nelson Mandela died, are on the same wall as bright yellow Tweety bird stickers and hand-drawn cards. She has received six letters today. One is from a Frenchwoman, wishing her a happy Halloween in French.

    The others are from her fiancé Desmond Coutinho, a British-Indian of Goan origin. (They fell in love through an exchange of letters.) She doesn’t open them in front of us. “He said he will visit me on my birthday, which is March 14,’’ she says with a shy, half-hidden smile. No videography is allowed in her room and each visitor is permitted no longer than 20 minutes. Though she is allowed visitors thrice a week, her family members or supporters are rarely permitted to meet the “undertrial prisoner”.

    The walls of her room are plastered with posters people have gifted her!

    Solitude fills the days of her life, shapes the hours and flows through the minutes — in the absence of human company, television, phones or internet or even a regular schedule. But she is not lonely, she says. “I have a very busy mind. My thoughts keep me company, they keep me busy,’’ she says.
     Time means absolutely nothing to her, she says, and you look around and see that there is, indeed, not a single clock on the wall. Happiness comes from her pets, a pair of guinea pigs she calls Thoi, (“Sometimes I get up in the middle of the night to see if they’re okay. They are my babies.”), the unexpected messages of support from strangers whose lives she has touched with her protest (an Australian woman in Vietnam writes to her regularly, and fasts once every three months in solidarity with her cause).
     Letters from her family and Coutinho, and the many soft toys that he sends her way give her joy. The newest addition to the menagerie is a brown bear. “He told me that he is like a brown bear, so this is to remind me of him,’’ she says with a laugh.

    Who was Sharmila before the protest took over her life? Home was a large compound in Porompat colony in Imphal, where an extended family of 19 members lived. She was the youngest of nine siblings, a loner who stood out from the rest of the riotous gang of brothers, sisters and cousins. She was not a sharp child at school, and gave up her dreams of becoming a doctor when she realised she did not have the “brains” for it. She tried but could not clear her Class XII examinations.


    That fast entered its 15th year this month. Though Sharmila has refused both water and food, the government continues to forcefeed her—and arrests her every year on the charge of attempt to suicide. She is fed Cerelac, juices like Appy, Horlicks and protein shakes—1,600 calories a day. “She refuses to drink water. So when we have to give her tablets or vitamins, they are crushed with her food,’’ says Dr Th Biren, head of the medicine department at JNIMS, and her attending doctor. 
    A team of six doctors checks on Sharmila daily. “We weigh her periodically. Today she weighs 46 kg, the same as last month. It’s extraordinary what she is doing. Medically, you can be fed through the Ryles tube for months even, as we do with patients with strokes. But for 14 years, that’s unimaginable,’’ Dr Biren says.


    In the 14 years of this remarkable, non-violent protest, much has changed in Manipur. The conflict has claimed more lives, found new icons in victims like Thangjam Manorama Devi, and even corroded Sharmila’s close ties with her brother. Though AFSPA was removed from a few parts of Imphal after Manorama’s rape and murder in 2004, the law has remained what it was. Against the implacable indifference of the Indian state, Sharmila continues to pit her iron will.
     “People in India see me as a separatist. But that’s not who I am. I am struggling for India’s integrity too. After the way the army has behaved here, if the government does not agree to repeal AFSPA, India will lose Manipur automatically. The government fears that repealing AFSPA will result in losing Jammu and Kashmir to Pakistan as well. I would like to ask the government: why don’t you try and connect to the hearts of the discontented people?” she says.

    Maybe one or two lives doesn't matter much to the Indian government, maybe!! Pity and shame once again.

    #Satyam_Bruyat


    Tuesday, 27 October 2015

    Woman Writer Threatened With Rape!!

    The signs are all here and those who are dismissing them are 'few random incidents' are simply failing at their attempts to veil the obvious.

    In the latest story emerging from Bengaluru, noted writer, film-maker and script writer Chetana Thirthahalli was threatened with rape, acid attack and other 'dire consequences' on Facebook.
    This after she wrote articles questioning Hindu customs in various magazines, including Muslim publications. She was also part of a recent rally in Bengaluru which supported beef consumption and saw attendence from numerous litterateurs and feminists. 
    For past few months she received numerous threats from various Facebook accounts which surely disagreed with her views that were expressed by her. Finally on Saturday, She lodged a complaint with Hanumantha Nagar police against operators of two Facebook accounts. 
    In her complaint, the writer said she had been receiving the messages from Jagrutha Bharatha and Madhusudhan Gowda on Facebook for 5-6 months. 

    "Initially, most of the messages were from fake profiles and were reactions to my posts on Facebook. I ignored them. However, of late, Madhusudhan has been messaging me regularly especially after reading about recent protests where I have been and so on. His threats and messages are communal, anti-feminist and often obs cene," she told STOI. 
    "With the killing of writer Kalburgi and little progress in its investigation, I do not feel safe now. I may not be anywhere near Kalburgis' stature, but I am afraid. So, I decided to file a complaint, especially when I realized that these people were following my every move, every post," she added.
    Police have registered a case under IPC section 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace), 506 (punishment for criminal intimidation) and 509 (word gesture or act intended to insult the modesty of a woman). They have also referred the case to the cyber crime cell to trace Madhusudhan.
    The question and topic here are not the prevailing controversial religious intolerance but the respect and life of a woman and writer. It is sad that everyone who stands up against something or dares to do so is put to a tragic end. This is the current situation in India. Pity and shame is all that i have to share, this is same India where goddesses re worshiped and daughters are killed!! Welcome to India!!  

    'A writer’s freedom is bound to be threatened if freedoms of Dalits and women are also threatened'


    In the latest incident in Karnataka, a young Dalit writer Huchangi Prasad was allegedly attacked by unidentified men for his “anti-Hindu” writings at Davangere in central Karnataka on Wednesday.
     The complaint was lodged by Chethana last week wherein she alleges that she started receiving threat messages on the social media after endorsing beef consumption. Chethana also said she had been receiving threat messages on the social media for the last one year but did not take them seriously.
     However, after the killing of Kannada writer and rationalist M M Kalburgi in August, she approached police. Kalburgi was shot dead by two men at his residence at Dharwad in north Karnataka, with the assassins still remaining elusive. 

    #Satyam_Bruyat


    Tuesday, 20 October 2015

    Indian politics!!


    Pic 1- Promises by Politicians
    Pic 2- Promises delivered
    Kahin suna suna lagta hai,
    yeh andaz to netao ka lagta hai!!
    ‪#‎Satyam_Bruyat‬

    Burned down for being a Dalit!! Incredible India

    Two children were charred to death whereas, parents suffered serious burn injuries in the incident.

    Vaibhabh and Dabboo

    Jitender alleged that the attackers were from Rajput caste and the family had a confrontation with them in October after which a case had been registered.
    "We were sleeping when they poured petrol from the window. I smelt the petrol and tried to wake up my wife but by then the fire had started. My children died in the fire...," said a wailing Jitender.
    "They had threatened me that they will finish my family, That I should never return to the village... I won't but please give me back my children," he said.
    The incident has led to tension in the area.
    "Security has been tightened in the village and we are investigating the matter," a police official said.
    Two people have been arrested in connection with the case and an investigation is on to nab the other suspects.  
    The attack caused tension in Ballabgarh area of Faridabad district. Officials said the attack could be the fallout of the arrest of 11 people last year in connection with some murders in the area.
    “Those who were victims in last year’s case are the accused in today’s case. The victims in today’s case named the accused and we registered a case against them,” said Subhash Yadav, the commissioner of police of Faridabad.
    Police registered the case under provisions of the Indian Penal Code and the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. A hunt has been launched for the attackers, officials said.

    The room in which victims were sleeping.


    While criticising the incident, Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar announced a compensation of Rs 10 lakh for the family.
    Now my question to you, is that 10 lakh sufficient for the lives lost?
    Or maybe in their terms 10 lakhs is perfect compensation for the lives of those two kids.
    India is on the way to set perfect example for setting a value of every living person.
    Alas, even after 60 years of Independence we are still living in the Neanderthal age, pity and shame  is all we have to share.

    Welcome to caste based, communalised and politics divided India!!

    #Satyam_Bruyat

    Monday, 19 October 2015

    Racism and India!! Nido Taniam's Life

    'Are you from China?' College student, 20,was  killed by racist thugs in 2014

    We have a peculiar habit of remembering or offering our fake sympathy only till media runs it, after that we get busy enough to forget everything.

    Its not new in India where justice is delayed every time, and when I say every time i mean it.

    This time I'll be telling you about how we treat others who are not like us physically:

    Indians from a part of nation near Myanmar and China say they face discrimination in rest of the country for their 'Asian' features.



    He was not a criminal but had committed one crime, he had Asiatic features!!
    Yes you heard that right, that's enough for a person to lose life in India!!












    He was a slight young man, who sported hipster eyeglasses and a wispy moustache. He had dyed his spiky hair blond, but that was not the only thing that made college student Nido Tania stand out in the Indian capital.
    Tania was from northeastern India, a narrow strip of territory wedged between China and Myanmar, whose people say they face discrimination in the rest of the country for having "Asian" facial features. When Tania, 20, stopped in a dairy to ask for directions on that afternoon, the shopkeeper taunted Tania for not knowing his way around, saying, "Are you from China?" and making fun of his hair.
    The incident escalated into a violent altercation in which several men thrashed him with sticks and steel rods, friends and officials said.
    He died in his bed the next day, succumbing to severe injuries to the chest and brain, according to preliminary medical results provided to his family.
    The incident has sparked outrage in New Delhi, which was already reeling from a spate of high-profile rape cases, and has added to a growing sense of insecurity in a capital that is aiming to be a showcase for India's growing economic might.

    "Our community is often targeted like this … We look different, so it's easy for people to see we're not from Delhi."

    "This happens every day in Delhi. Each and every one of us has experienced discrimination because of our physical features," said Sophy Chamroy, a 22-year-old student from the northeastern state of Manipur.
    India's 1.2 billion people have many languages and customs but, as with the rape cases, racially motivated assaults seem to occur in New Delhi and other major cities with regularity. Many victims from the northeast are young people who have migrated to the capital for school or job opportunities lacking in their poorer home areas.
    Two years back in New Delhi, three students from Manipur were beaten by neighbours. In a separate case, a 21-year-old beautician from Manipur was found dead in her apartment with injuries to her face and toes. Police labelled it a suicide and dropped the case but many suspected she was slain.
    So widespread is the discrimination against people from northeastern India that the federal government in 2012 passed a law that punishes the use of a racial slur with up to five years in prison. Still, activists say, authorities rarely enforce such laws and police are as likely to participate in discrimination as intervene to stop it.
    "You don't know what is on the minds of people in Delhi, because these incidents keep on recurring," said Geetartha Barua, an official with the state government of Arunachal Pradesh, where Tania lived.
    Tania was in New Delhi on vacation and going to visit an ailing friend in the area near Lajpat Nagar when he walked into the dairy, friends said.
    Tania smashed a glass display case in anger after being taunted, prompting the shopkeeper and several other men from the market to set upon him and a friend. The shopkeepers called the police, who got Tania to pay about US$120 for the broken glass. The police did not take any action against the assailants, Barua said.
    Police officers let Tania go, but when he passed the shop a second time the attackers beat him again, said Jotam Toko Tagam, the former president of a New Delhi organisation for students from Arunachal Pradesh. When he reached his sister's flat, where he was staying, he complained of pain and was bleeding from his wrist. He fell asleep early on Thursday morning after applying balms across his body, Tagam said. Around 1pm the next day, friends tried to wake him but found his body cold and limp. Brought to a nearby hospital, he was pronounced dead on arrival, Barua said.
    The case sparked an outcry across Indian media and websites with many criticising the response by the Delhi police. Three men reportedly have been detained for questioning. Barua said police did not open a murder investigation until 24 hours after Tania had died, after the incident had begun to make news.
    "We are being forced to go exert pressure on different quarters to get the police to investigate this matter properly, at a time when the situation is very sad," Barua said.

    In the recent study conducted by Jamia Millia Islamia's Centre for North East Studies and Policy Research with National Commission for Women (NCW) found that 60% of women from North East India, who have moved to major cities in India , are reported to face harassment and discrimination. City wise- New Delhi is reported to be most intolerant city towards women from north east India at a staggering rate of 81 per cent of women respondents facing racial discrimination. Racism is not only inherent among people; it is also practiced by the state authorities in the form of racial profiling of people from north east India . Women from north east India remains more vulnerable to racial discrimination and sexual violence.
     In 2007, the Delhi police published a much-criticized booklet, advising migrants from the northeast to avoid wearing revealing clothes and to not cook their native foods, such as bamboo shoots and fermented soy beans, for fear of upsetting Indian neighbors with unfamiliar smells. In 2011, the home affairs ministry made the use of hate-speech like “Chinky” punishable with five years in jail. Enforcement, naturally, is impossible, and legislation without the propagation of a multicultural and multiethnic view of India is meaningless.
    “Societies do not change on their own” 
    “Unless we recognize it and talk about it”

    There's more to this where and its not going to stop until we want it to stop.

    #Satyam_Bruyat