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(This
article is in response to an article in
Hindustan Times of Friday by Rajdeep Sardesai
raising Bihar bashing by the mainstream media to
a new level.
Here's the link.)
"Wise
men talk because they have something to say;
fools talk because they have to say something" -
Plato
Bihar has been the favourite punching bag of the
Indian English language journalist community,
actually not just the journalists but many
English speaking "elite" of India. We see the
parody of Bihar bashing being played out
everyday. Sometimes one feels upset, sometime
angry and sometimes pities those indulging in
this. If one had hoped that with the end of the
Lalu raj in Bihar, Bihar bashing would stop or
at least abate, well nothing of the sort has
happened.
What is it that makes Bihar bashing such a
favourite pastime? Actually, it is not just a
pastime, but a vocation or "dhandha" for a
certain class of the journalist brethren, as we
shall presently see.
History
Come to think of it, the rusticity of Lalu was
just another ruse to denigrate Bihar and
Biharis. Making fun of Bihar has existed for
much longer than that.
There are unsavoury references to Biharis since
the early days of journalism in Bengali. I
remember seeing a black and white Bengali film
whose protagonist was a thief who gradually
reforms himself to become a saint. This person
starts as a Hindi speaking guy when he is
portrayed as a thief, but gradually starts to
speak Bangla – his fluency in Bangla language
keeps improving as he reforms himself. There is
also the oft repeated joke about the Bihari who
was counting the floors of a tall building at
the Chowringhee. A policeman catches him asking
how many floors he had counted. Our rustic
replies 8 floors and the policeman asks him to
pay a fine of Rs 40 for having counted those
floors without permission, Once the policeman
departs, our man mumbles to himself, but I saved
thirty rupees as I had counted fourteen floors
by then!
Though not in a very good taste, this was
something that one could live with, even make
fun when interacting with one's Bengali friends.
To be fair, Biharis gave it back to them as well
with equally comical stories about the lack of
courage of the Bengali and the score was more or
less even.
There were also fulsome praise of Bihari leaders
like Dr Rajendra Prasad and Syed Ali Imam. Hence
one may conclude that the fun poking was done
with sensitivity, a bit like sibling leg pulling
and without much malice.
Post Independence India
However, Independent India brought in its wake
competition amongst the states for development
funds. That unfortunately proved to be the
undoing of Bihar as Bihar bashing was raised to
a different level. There was only so much fund
for irrigation and one who could project the
image of a more progressive administration could
walk away with the cake. There were only five
IITs that had to be located amongst the various
states, So states started to enlist the services
of the journalists to project their image so
that you could win. And Bihar govt did nothing
of the sorts. Though Bihar started to lose at
this stage, the damage was still controllable,
The image started to take a battering of a
vicious kind sometime in the sixties when the
examinations of the universities started to get
delayed due to student agitations. In the state
elections, the socialists came to power.
Whatever be the merit or otherwise of his
policies, Mahamaya Prasad Sinha became a
favourite whipping boy of the so called
establishment oriented newspapers. The political
situation was complex, and it required a very
sensitive portrayal by the press. Unfortunately,
they chose to play their own game. It did not
help matter that there were no media barons who
were native of Bihar. If anything, the situation
became worse due to lack of press empathy with
the ground situation and non-sensitive
portrayal.
Days of JP's Movement and Janata Party Days
The situation somewhat improved when the
Congress came to power and the "National" press
held its gun back. But that proved the legendary
lull before the storm. With JPs movement, all
the media guns started to blaze in full glory,
demonising Bihar to ingratiate themselves to the
powers that be. This is the time when MV Kamath,
then editor of the Illustrated Weekly of India,
wrote his infamous "Biharis are not fit to rule
Bihar" essay. In many ways, this essay may be
called the turning point in vicious journalism
for the portrayal of Bihar. It was to the utter
dismay of the public of Bihar that no non-Bihari
journalist of any standing deemed it fit to
rebut Kamath. It was left to the speaker of the
Bihar legislative Assembly to issue a rejoinder.
Due to the lack of fluency in English, the
rebuttal, even though of very sound logic, could
not be very forceful and the journal of the
powerful editor even used the rebuttal to
further demonise Bihar.
It was expected that with the coming to power of
the Janata Party, the situation would improve.
However, Morarji Desai, suffering from a strange
complex, soon sought to assert his 'authority'
and distanced himself from JP. I still remember
his totally unprovoked speech at Daltongunj
asserting JP is not the Government of India as
if Jayaprakash Narayan was interfering with the
working of the government!!
Somewhere around this time, the Bhagalpur
blinding incident was reported by the Indian
Express and the 'national' press got a ready
handle to start cursing Bihar. It is to the
perpetual discredit of the editors and
journalists of the time that none of them tried
to see the other side of the picture. The same
journalists who had earlier defended the police
action against Naxals in Bengal or later went
out of the way to defend KPS Gill, found
absolutely no merit in the police officers who
had sought to cleanse the riverine area near
Bhagalpur of crime. In their hurry to denigrate
Bihar, they refused to examine why the local
people of Bhagalpur were so supportive of the
police action. In a throwback to the colonial
hangover, the 'national' press sought to portray
this support of the local masses as some kind of
innate love for crime by the Bihari people.
There was hardly any mention of the fact that
some of the criminals so blinded had committed
up to 40 murders and the criminal justice system
had utterly failed to bring them to justice. It
was left to the deft hands of Prakash Jha a
couple of decades later to give us a sensitive
portrayal of the build up to the blindings in
his movie Ganga Jal.
Sometime later, Belchi happened – an opportunity
seized by Mrs Indira Gandhi to ride back to
power. Again, the unfortunate caste killings
were sought to be portrayed as the innate
weakness in the character of the Bihari public.
No serious debate on the socio political
situation ensued, only denigration of Bihar.
Alas, this shortcut has resulted in many Belchis
since. It is a result of the limited
intellectual capacity of the journalists and the
social scientists that to this day, the increase
in caste violence is portrayed in the simplistic
term of the empowerment of the hitherto
un-empowered. Nobody has ever sought to
seriously examine the increased social rift and
its causes.
Bihar portrayal in eighties and nineties
In the eighties, every Bihar ill was attributed
by the 'national' press to Casteism and Land
Reforms. I did not observe any journalist of the
national press examining the serious under-
investment in the agriculture of Bihar. Nobody
ever sought to question why there has been such
rural prosperity in Punjab and Himalayan UP (now
Uttaranchal) where there is no land ceiling.
Nobody sought to question why our Ministry of
External Affairs had failed to engage Nepal for
any meaningful solution to the floods of North
Bihar. The column-centimetres devoted to
Bangladesh's flood problems and India's role in
it in the 'national' newspapers would be order
of magnitude more than to our own North Bihar's
problem!!! There are no central universities,
IITs, IIMs, CSIR labs or DRDO Labs in the land
of Nalanda and Vikramshila. Yet the 'national'
press has failed to see the injustice of it all.
The modern highways of the Golden Quadrilateral
and the East West corridor would avoid each town
and city in the twin state of Jharkhand and
Bihar like plague. Muzaffarpur is the only
exception to prove the rule that the planners at
Delhi consider each Bihari population centres
unfit to be served by these modern means of
communication. Yet these have never been sought
to be highlighted by the 'national' fourth
estate.
I have reasons to believe that the national
planning commission refused to clear the Ganga
Bridge at Patna in late sixties saying it is
economically unfeasible. These so called
journalists who are so vocal in seeing each
transfer and posting done by Govt of Bihar
through the prism of caste considerations have
never sought to question this. From the power
enjoyed by the son of Jagjiwan Babu to that of
Ram Lakhan Singh Yadav and now by the family of
Lalu Yadav, the national press has always
highlighted how Bihar is the fountain head of
dynastic politics. Yet they refused to
acknowledge the contribution of the brilliant
engineer Neel Kanth Prasad, son of former CM KB
Sahay, who kept the dream of the Ganga Bridge
alive in spite of very limited resources in
extremely trying circumstances and managed to
execute it successfully. This great hero of
Bihar finds no mention in any 'National' press.
In the nineties, the newsmagazines and the
electronic media started to gain prominence and
the importance of the Old lady of Boribunder and
the Virgin Spinster of Chennai started to loose
their importance in the National media. For
sometime, there was relief as the new media
barons sought to portray new ground. However,
this was a short-lived honeymoon. Soon the new
media discovered the power of denigrating Bihar
to further their financial success. If one
examines the news related to Bihar in the
'national' English press of this period, one
would instead find the three issues of Land
Reforms, Casteism and Criminalization of
Politics. Like a broken record, each of these
three issues was repeated to death. The
portrayal became so hackneyed and to a script
that one could almost predict the 'news' without
going through it. Many journalistic careers were
launched over the debris of Bihar by the tried
and tested formula of raising these triple
issues. Soon they found the success educated
Biharis were seeing in various competitive
examinations like civil services and officers of
the bank and the issue of the corruption in
education was added. Among these four, you could
cover by far the majority of the articles on
Bihar in the 'national' English media. I
sometimes wondered if there was a special
subject in journalism to indoctrinate the
budding journalists in them.
Sometime around this period, the National media
discovered Lalu and his rusticity and they had a
new stick to beat Bihar. Mind you, Lalu was
introduced only as a character in the script,
the issues remained the same. None of the issues
that Lalu stood for ever got a column centimetre
of space. No consideration was spared for what
Lalu meant to his constituency. It was either
hate Lalu or love Lalu. If the journalist hated
Lalu, he lamented what Bihar had become thereby
giving full verbosity to his bile. If he loved
Lalu, he would lament what Lalu had inherited,
again repeating the same three or four points
that I have mentioned above. Either way, Bihar
came out as the living hell that the two types
of journalists took turn to describe. And thus
we stumbled into the twentieth century. If this
were a joke, one would have had a hearty laugh.
Unfortunately, this was the question of the
future of so many youths from Bihar who would be
joining the job market in days to come.
Modern Times Bihar haters
In this media savvy age, image is as important
if not more important than the real stuff. We
just can't afford to ignore the image anymore.
With the objective to get a fair coverage to
Bihar and Bihari, I would now try to analyse the
characteristics of the modern Bihar bashers who
increasingly operate in the interactive and
instantaneous mode. The modern mainstream media
is largely TV led since the channels are the
ones with the power of money. The visual impact
scores over every other way of reaching out to
the audience.
The instantaneous nature of coverage by TV
ensures there is little time to verify what is
being reported. The visual appeal ensures that
anecdotal evidence scores over well researched
material. The debate format of coverage ensures
that one can use casual language to bring home
one's point. This also affords the opportunity
to hit below the belt and draw instant
conclusions.
This then brings us to the examination of the
types of the modern era Bihar bashers whom I
prefer to call the Oye Bihari Brigade or OBBs
for short.
The most influential of the OBBs are the pseudo
liberals. They are very fluent in English and
are educated at a particular college of Delhi
University. Many of them also have a degree from
UK. They are a throwback to the days when going
abroad itself was an achievement. Acquiring a
degree abroad was the equivalent of being blue
blood, even if the degree was in some obscure
subject from some obscure university. They use a
language that is quite peculiar, let us call it
OBBLISH. It has heavy usage of terms like
Biharisation, or Biharism as if these have
already replaced terms like hopeless, dregs of
the society and uncouth from the lexicon of
English. It is as if the editorial board of the
Oxford English Dictionary had already adopted
this OBBLISH term into its latest edition.
Then comes the OBB category of the Bully. They
are the unabashed Bihar haters. Not very
sophisticated, the intensity of their hate is
the highest. They were probably beaten by a
Bihari in whatever pursuit they had undertaken
in their younger days and carry that to this
day. They are most likely to have a Bihar
connection, though the connection is often
tenuous, like marriage to a Bihari or posting of
the parent in Bihar when they were kids. Short
on self confidence, they have to denigrate
something to feel better, and Bihar and Biharis
are the easiest targets. Usage of OBBLISH is the
highest in this category since they are always
in the race with the pseudo liberal described
above. They are also the easiest to spot. Due to
the high intensity of their hate towards Bihar,
they lose their influence pretty fast and are
consigned to the dustbin of history. However,
there are always new ones joining rank ensuring
an unbroken chain of this variety.
The next category is of the prodigal child – he
comes in two varieties: One who altogether
denies his Bihari roots and clings on to his
Cal/Noida/Mumbai/UK/US education or upbringing.
In the Delhi Univ of the seventies, they were
called the Harrys. The second variety of the
prodigal son is loud in his proclamation of
Bihari roots, but feels if he can be equally
stringent in his criticism of Bihar, somehow the
'sin' of his Bihari roots would be washed away.
Insensitivity to Bihari sensitivity is rather
conspicuous in his demeanour as he is well aware
of the Bihari sensitivity in the first place. A
variant of this type is the eternal moralist who
was born to find fault in the Bihari culture.
From usage of Khaini to consumption of Sattu, he
can find fault in the most innocent of
situations. He can always find an explanation as
to why Biharis are not doing well. If you want
to provoke this type, criticise someone who is
criticising Bihar and watch the fun.
A common characteristic to judge all the three
types described is their superficial behaviour:
More superficial a person, more insensitive and
stringent he would be in condemning Bihar. Thus
superficial behaviour is a rather accurate
barometer to ascertain the Bihar Bashing
Propensity: These dumb witted supercilious homo
sapiens were brought up believing Bihar is the
very nadir of civilisation. When they find a
successful Bihari who more than matches their
template of agreeable traits, the limited grey
matter of these low on self esteem creatures is
unable to explain the phenomenon. They then
resort to hitting below the belt.
If you want to see the output of the OBBs, just
pick up any Indian English media published from
a metro and you would find of examples of that.
|
Comments: |
The author and other readers who
feel strongly about this issue,
should follow the feedback link at
the bottom of Rajdeep Sardesai's
article, "Westside story" (see the
link to the original article at the
beginning of the author's article.),
and tell how they feel about the
article written by Rajdeep Sardesai.
As always, I will stress that what
you say should be weighed down with
logic not rhetoric. Make your point
in a convincing civil manner, or
else you will be supporting Mr.
Sardesai's assertions rather than
disputing them. - Aarcee - Sept.
19, 2006
Dear Mr. Sinha,
The least I could say about your
comment is that it is a factual
representation about how many
Biharis like me felt about this
biased pattern of reporting that is
slowly becoming more and more
apparent. The article in question
(Maharashtra: The New Bihar) focuses
on Maharashtra, and the message
could have easily be conveyed
without using Bihar as an adjective.
I am also very impressed by your
contestation about the avocation and
satirizing of Bihar and Biharis in
English print and online media.
Thanks a lot.
To Mr. Aarcee,
I absolutely agree with you that an
argument/ discussion should be based
on logic and not mere rhetoric. And
I have read all the comments many
times over, the people who support
this kind of article are 35% (29),
people who protest against is 52%
(43), people who view this article
as a pivot for regional bias are 9%,
the remaining comments are not
displayed.
The rating of the article is 2.5/
10, the number of views is above
700.
Use your logic and come to your own
conclusion. - Chandan - Sept. 20.
2006
I first wrote to that feedback link
only. However, due to the strange
policy that the said newspaper uses,
the comments never got published.
Stung, I wrote this piece.
We later discovered that the Rajdeep
article was also put up at
ibnlive.
They have been more accommodating in
letting the views of the Bihari
brethren published. - T. V. Sinha
- Sept. 20. 2006
I too have noticed the policy of
Hindustan Times of not publishing
comments to articles. Mr. T. V.
Sinha is absolutely right on that. I
am stung too! I checked out the
responses on the ibnlive.com. I was
overjoyed to see that Rajdeep "Sarfira"
Sardesai's article did not bring out
anyone rooting for him in his
condemnation of Bihar. In fact, he
received a sound criticism on his
attitude from both Biharis and Non
Biharis in over 91 comments that
were posted when I read it.
"If only Bihar had a seaport. If
only Bihar wasn't flooded annually
by rains in Nepal, If only Bihar
hadn't been screwed by British
Colonists and made to grow indigo &
opium....."
Well, all that is beyond any
Sarfira's imagination. "Kewal aala
utha lene so koi doctor nahin banta...
chaar line angrezi ki likh lene se
koi journalist nahin banta." If Mr.
Rajdeep sticks to this divisive
technique of such Yellow Journalism,
he will soon find himself writing
porn for a living. - Aarcee -
Sept. 21, 2006
Following is what I wrote in my
feedback to this article. Hindustan
Times did not publish it and the
ibnlive website spilt my messages
into incoherent pieces. Boy am I
glad that at least PatnaDaily is
much more open than these so-called
big newspaper regarding publishing
views of the common man:
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Mr. Rajdeep Sardesai if you want to
be a journalist with any credibility
you need to write in a more logical
and rational manner and avoid taking
extremist views and demeaning a huge
section of an Indian population akin
to being a racist.
The last I heard, no Bihari farmer
has committed suicide similar to
thousands of suicides by the farmers
in Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh.
This is a clear indication of Bihar
taking care of its citizens at the
most basic level. Plus it also shows
the boldness of Bihari farmers to
migrate to other states when the
going gets tough. This should be a
wakeup call for certain Indian
states to rise above marketing
gimmicks and understand and resolve
their fundamental weakness.
Biharis enjoy better health than
rest of the country. You wouldn't
find Biharis starving and eating
lemon rice and besan rice and trying
to put rest of the money in bank
account. I am sure Mr. Sardesai you
have heard of the saying Health is
Wealth. Health is a big indicator of
a society's well-being and Biharis
are healthier than the rest of the
country.
India without Bihar is a very poor
culturally! When Indians come to the
US, I have seen enough non-Biharis
Indians boasting that they come from
the land of The Buddha, Mahavir,
Ashoka, Chandragupta, Aryabhatta,
Chanakya, Shushruta and Charaka.
When the Biharis say the same thing
within India you call us living in
the past. Yes we Biharis invented
the concept of zero and the field of
algebra (Aryabhatta) for which the
entire country of India seems to be
taking credit. Yes we Biharis
invented logical and rational
thinking by way of Buddhism and the
entire country seems to be taking
the credit. Yes we Biharis are proud
that when Alexander the Great
crushed the whole world from Greece
to Turkey to Egypt to Mesopotamia to
Persia to Punjab he cannot win
against the Bihari Chandragupt
Maurya who won back all the Indian
lands from the foreign invaders. Yes
we Biharis are proud that we
invented surgery (Shushruta) and the
formal Ayurvedic system of medicine
(Charaka) for which the entire
Indian nation takes credit. Why do
certain Indian people and
journalists boast about this Bihari
Indian heritage as their own Indian
heritage but at the same time hate
the state of Bihar so much? Sounds
quite illogical to me!
Wait for the day when we Biharis
take care of the menace of casteism
amongst us and then you will see the
true Bihari identity leading the
nation towards progress and
innovation. - Som Vishwakarma,
USA - Sept. 23, 2006
My mail to Rajdeep Sardesai -
Hi Rajdeep,
I have always appreciated your
journalism except this piece of
article that is not in good taste.
I am from Bihar working in
Australia.
I guess it is fair to compare two
states but not by denigrating one of
them to prove your point.
I know you will be smiling that at
least you got responses and your
journalism struck a right chord and
reached its goal of starting a
debate, I must tell you that you
have lost an admirer.
Please visit this link to here what
others have to say:
http://www.patnadaily.com/readerswrite/2006/sep/tvsinha1.html
I hope you had the guts to show the
rest of India (rest of world has the
right image) how Bihar is trying to
come back to normalcy.
Regards,
Nitesh Naveen - Sept. 25, 2006 |
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