Vignettes of a South African Township called Mdantsane

Monday, April 7, 2014

Of Nandan Nilekani, Meera Sanyal and others: the lure of the Indian Parliament - Amitabh Mitra


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As India goes to polls, not many of those voting and even more, those who are grappling for a place in India's elite club, the Lok Sabha, would know that these days coincides with the 20th anniversary of a genocide, in the words of Samantha Power, the US Ambassador to United Nations,"devastating reminder that nightmares seemingly beyond imagination can in fact take place."

There were many objections as I slipped into Masisi, North Kivu, the first Indian ever to do so in my effort to assist the Tutsis in a Complex Humanitarian Emergency. But then an average Indian is far more entranced to a stand on much touted corruption free manifesto of corruption entrenched political parties, rather than thinking of a life beyond genocide in an African country.

Nandan Nilekani has just joined the Congess I. The Infosys executive will also be contesting from Bangalore. Then, Nandan is not alone. There is a virtual rush by political parties in acquiring big names and vice versa. Meera Sanyal, a former executive of the Bank of Scotland, is an AAP contender from a Mumbai constituency.

Nandan, at a TV show, explained the reason for joining Congress I; it was mainly because his family has always been a Nehruvian one and he aspires to the same principles. I thought of my late parents who had held the same Nehruvian principles and voted religiously for the Congress I. Their only son is now writing this article not really wishing to contest but just understand what made them - and people like them - to vote for political parties that never really cared for people. Then again, Gwalior always was and remains, a sleepy town; the elections at times, would break their slumber and people voted en masse without even thinking whether the candidate, after winning the Lok Sabha or Vidhan Sabha seat, will ever come back to thank them or at least hear their problems.

The 2014 Lok Sabha Polls would be witnessing the election of such people to India’s august body, the Parliament and the people who would be voting for them would strangely remain the same: the exploited and the overruled.

I have asked myself time and again that why should such people suddenly leave, when at their peak of their careers not to join ‘politics’ but to be elected to the parliament, and I really never found an answer

During the seventies, when Bunker Roy, a product of Doon School (Dosco) and a little known sociologist moved to Rajasthan for implementing a model for the betterment of rural communities, nobody actually understood him nor really cared. Similarly, when Kobad Ghandy another old student of Doon School and his wife, Anuradha, left their upper class environs to go to Dandakaranya with the sole ambition for working for tribal rights, people labelled them as ‘anarchists’ and ‘ultra leftists’. It was in the forests of Dandakaranya, Anuradha passed away in April, 2008, afflicted with the dreaded cerebral malaria. I could imagine her last moments wasted physically from the disease, her febrile mind still revolved around the job undone.

I also admire the danseuse, Mallika Sarabhai who recently declared that she wouldn’t stand for elections but would continue to be involved in political social reforms in the province of Modi led Gujarat.

I have also asked myself that if there will ever be a reason for a well known figure as popular as Advani ji to suddenly refuse to stand for elections, and instead suggest that he would rather work for the people at grassroot level as a common party volunteer. I know it’s a utopian question but then a human being has always grappled with such utopian values

The parliamentary seat is a symbol of glamour in India. It comes with its own perks and the individual can always refer himself or herself as a former member of parliament. Deglamourizing this parliamentary seat by actually coming down to work with the poorest of poor in India, is what we think sometimes but then a long trail of history of such elected candidates, corrupt to the core, tells us, an otherwise sad story. Criminalisation of Indian politics is a tale of yore right from independence.

If you take a peek at the careers of such bureaucrats, retired army generals, medical specialists and professors, one actually finds they all have a common trait of being overly ambitious; that they are overcome by a strange tunnel vision, transforming them to arrogant and uncouth individuals. They can never think creatively even in their day to day life, and each one of them has a false notion that they are successful and that they have finally made it to the end of a mighty straight line.

The fight for the Gwalior Lok Sabha seat would be interesting to watch. I do wish that a clean figure, as clean as somebody really 'unknown' would come forward and give hope to people’s aspirations

Meanwhile all the best to Nandan, Meera and people like them.


Thursday, March 20, 2014

Khushwant Singh

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Khushwant Singh Sahab, India's leading journalist, novelist and a lover of poetry, passed away today at his home in Delhi. I can only remember him as a humble person visiting me at my high altitude snow clad hospital at Chukha, Bhutan. He wrote about me in his columns in Times of India, 'With Malice Towards One and All' proclaiming me as 'The Mad Man of Bhutan'. This madness still persists. A Charcoal on Paper Drawing is all I did tonight, remembering of moments spent with him.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Rakshat Puri


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The softest and sweetest voice I have ever heard, it is that of Rakshat Puri on the telephone. A giant of a person in the Indo-English Poetry movement since the sixties, I grew up reading his poems, love his work and was inspired to write. When he passed away, I only wished that he should have been recognized with a Padma Award. But then such is the politics of our country, our India. He was an Artist, Poet, Writer and above all a fantastic human being, rare in such a contemporary environment.
His Lahore poems, are undoubtedly the best


Left Behind in Lahore, 1947
Left to its own echoes the house stood
Light brick red. The garden turned to a wood:
Recalled, the house brings back laughter filled days
Rocking logic loose in boyhood ways
Chaos came then in turbulent ways
Came in cloudless dust dimmed days.
Monsoons since then have flung through age bent years
Of Partition sneers, terrorist fears –
Recalled now, home and hearth, left behind
Bring back to an endlessly unstill mind
The presence
Of absence
Signify in memory’s remote recess
All that is now meaningfully meaningless
Left to its echoes, the recalled house now stands
In fading dream that only Time understands


Pen and Ink Drawing by Amitabh Mitra






Saturday, February 1, 2014

Cecilia Makiwane, Philatelic Stamp issued by former Ciskei

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Cecilia Makiwane, the first black registered nurse in apartheid South Africa was honored by a philatelic stamp issued by the former bantustan republic, Ciskei. Proud to have that stamp with me finally in my possession. Bought it from a Pretoria collector. The Cecilia Makiwane Hospital in Mdantsane, Eastern Cape is also named after her.

Amitabh Mitra

Friday, January 31, 2014

Life and Times of Amitabh Mitra


An Interview with Mohan Nair, Editor of Indians4Africa

Monday, January 20, 2014

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

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I always love painting the fort when I am not in Gwalior, rough pen drawings encircle a lingering legend, and thoughts of you do stay with it as always. The fort within is a river turbulent when skies remain unseen and suns have long drowned; summers have balked to rebel torsos, even before I had left. And I think of you just as I think of breathing in such a river. In darkness of such nights, someone whispers of longing, longing of this river to become a fort again, longing to see your eyes again in disbelief. If only another sun could rise again.

Pastel/Acrylic by Amitabh Mitra