Thursday, May 1, 2008
Real-time Violence on TV By Randeep Wadehra
Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Of this slap and that By Randeep Wadehra
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Women in politics, and at its receiving end By Randeep Wadehra
Reservations for women edited by Meena Dhanda; series editor: Rajeswari Sundar Rajan
Women Unlimited & Kali for Women. Pages: xl+390. Price: Rs. 600/-
What decides a more hospitable political space for women? If it is education and socio-economic emancipation then women in the West should have been better off than those in, say, Asia – which is not the case. If democracy is the enabling force then it is bemusing to note that women in Pakistan and China enjoy better representation than their sisters in India. Although women in India have enjoyed equal voting rights right from the time of our Constitution’s founding their empowerment still remains an issue. Women’s representation in parliament is poor despite a few individual successes. Should there be reservation for women? Before this question is answered semiological problems pertaining to commonly used terms like empowerment have been dealt with in the debate. Coming back to the question of women’s reservation in the political sphere feminists in the pre-independence era like Sarojini Naidu were not in its favour. However, in 1974 Lotika Sarkar and Vina Mazumdar advocated ‘special representation’ for women. This collection of well informed essays takes a comprehensive look at the status of women in politics – giving a global perspective to the Indian situation. It is not just the issue of women’s representation in the parliament, but the entire system from panchayats upwards that comes under the scanner. The historical, social, economic and political reasons for women’s sparse presence in political sphere have been discussed in detail.
Pratibha Patil by Kumar Pankaj & Ayushma Sharma
Diamond Books. Pages: 176. Price: Rs. 95/-
Pitchforked into limelight from the shadows of relative anonymity Pratibha Devisingh Patil became the first woman president of the Republic of India. And the most unlikely one too. Consider the more erudite and deserving women of substance whose presence in the august office would have been far more advisable – Najma Heptullah, Mohsina Kidwai and Nirmala Deshpande, to name just three. But the vagaries of Indian politics favoured her, albeit as a hasty alternative to another political/intellectual lightweight, viz., Shivraj Patil after more accomplished men like Pranab Mukherji and Karan Singh lost the race due to lack of consensus. However, so far there has been no occasion to regret her elevation to the President’s post. This book is understandably eulogistic in tone and tenor. It gives us glimpses of her personal and political life peppered with interesting trivia including her photo as a toddler.
Lali by BS Thapliyal.
Selective & Scientific Books, N. Delhi. Pages: 241. Price: Rs. 295/-
A consequence of dangerous and disgraceful political games, 1984 became a climactic year for Punjabis, Punjab and India. The spewing of communal hatred, the killing of innocents after pulling them out of buses and their homes in mofussil towns and the countryside, the failed attempts at ethnic cleansing of Punjab turning into general bloodbath, the Operation Bluestar, the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and the resultant anti-Sikh riots have left deep scars on our collective psyche. This novel portrays the travails of a Sikh family caught in the nightmarish anti-Sikh violence and its aftermath. Lali, the novel’s female protagonist, symbolizes the agony and abjectness of those evil days.
Breaking all records
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Good government By Randeep Wadehra
The ‘Content’ of Leadership By Amar Nath Wadehra
A hymn for humanity By Amar Nath Wadehra

Sukhmani Sahib by Sri Guru Arjan Dev (Presentation: Syed Afzal Haider)
Izharsons, Lahore, Pakistan. Pages: ll+320. Price: Rs. 1200/-. US $ 33/-
In every community scriptures play a vital, multifaceted role. They act as guiding lights for smooth functioning of a society, facilitate spiritual discipline and elevation, and, during crises become sources of equipoise. Even if one is not a practicing theist prayers help him acquire self-confidence while facing vagaries of life. Sukhmani Sahib is one such font of spiritual, moral and psychological strength. There are any number of legends and parables highlighting its healing powers. One such relates to Hakim Alimuddin Ansari who was then the Governor of Lahore. He was suffering from acute and chronic stomach ailment. One day he happened to visit Amritsar. There Baba Buddha cured him with a massage and directed him to the fifth guru of Sikhs Arjan Dev. The latter asked him to listen to the Sukhmani recitation every day, which Ansari did and benefitted both physically as well as spiritually.
Variously described as the beatitude of mind, the jewel of bliss, the psalm of peace and the provider of comfort, this collection of hymns – authored by Guru Arjan Dev – is part and parcel of daily prayers in the homes of many a devout Sikh and Hindu. Forming a part of Guru Granth Sahib, Sukhmani Sahib has structural unity. It has twenty four salokas. There are twenty four cantos called Ashtpadis, each containing eight stanzas. Each stanza has ten lines that form five couplets. The saloka of each canto gives the general idea of the stanzas that follow. This archetypal hymn has thematic unity too, viz., moral, spiritual and temporal evolvement of the individual.
While presenting this tome Haider has underscored similarities between Islamic and Sikh precepts. To buttress this thesis he has juxtaposed certain aayats – both Arabic original and English translation – from the Holy Quran (Sura Nur, Sura Baqra et al) with verses from Guru Granth Sahib that preach monotheism or the oneness of God. He also acknowledges that Sikh Gurus were all well read in the field of comparative religions. Further, he points out the non-sectarian character of the composition. His expatiations on Zikr, Tauheed and the essence of Sukhmani Sahib are illuminating. What makes this excellently produced work a collector’s item is the presentation of the verses in Gurmukhi along with their translation as well as transliteration in Urdu and English. The translations are lucid and should attract readership transcending linguistic, religious and cultural stratifications.
The price is a bit on the high side, but then good things seldom come cheap.
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