SACW | June 21-22, 2007

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Fri Jun 22 09:36:24 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire | June 21-22, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2422 - Year 9

[1]  Bangladesh : Justice Fatigue  (Nazli Kibria)
[2]  Pakistan:  The question of press freedom (Tariq Rahman)
     + Pakistan - Expanding Nuclear Programme 
(Report by David Albright and Paul Brannan)
[3]  Bhutan/India/Nepal: The Right To Return Home (Pamela Philipose)
[4]  India: Behind the Veil of Lies  (Ram Puniyani)
[5]  The Latest Anti Rushdie Hullabaloo: is yet 
another sign of 'You can only write, paint, film 
or wear what is acceptable to so called guardians 
of religion industry'.
  (i) What writers some are saying about Salman Rushdie
  (ii) In defence of imagination - Honour reflects 
contribution to literature (Jo Glanville)
  (iii) Unwarranted fury (Editorial, The Hindu)
[6] India: St Stephen's: Murder In The Cathedral? (Ramachandra Guha)
[7] India: Memorandum to the President re - death 
penalty (Nandita Haksar and ND Pancholi)
[8] Afghanistan: The Enemies Of Happiness - A film by Eva Mulvad
[9] Announcements:
(i)  One Billion Eyes 2007 - Indian Documentary 
Film Festival  (Chennai, 15 to 20 August 2007)
(ii) Dhanak monthly Vigil starting (New Delhi, 23rd June 2007)

______

[1]

Progressive Bangladesh
29 May 2007

  JUSTICE FATIGUE 

by Nazli Kibria  

I was speaking with a Bangali friend the other 
day, a progressive activist whom I greatly admire 
for her energy, optimism and dedication to 
helping the poor and disenfranchised. We 
exchanged ideas about the recent political dramas 
of Bangladesh and I spoke with some despair about 
the assassination of my father, wondering if we 
would ever see justice. In a rare moment of 
pessimism and self-indulgence, my friend 
mournfully declared, "Justice fatigue, we all 
have justice fatigue for Bangladesh."
The long quest

It was two and a half years ago that my father 
Shah AMS Kibria was assassinated in a grenade 
attack that killed him and four other persons, 
include my cousin Manzur Huda. The official 2005 
investigation that was conducted under the 
BNP-Jamaat regime was deeply, indeed 
embarrassingly flawed, refusing as it did to deal 
with such basic questions as the source of the 
grenades and the source of the orders to carry 
out the attack.

Image
The Last Rites. Photo courtesy of SAMS-Kibria.org
In March of this year, the interim government 
officially re-opened the investigation, noting 
the emergence of new relevant information. Seeing 
it as the first sign of hope after two years of 
no progress, our family greeted this development 
with relief. And indeed we continue to hope that 
there will in fact be a new and thorough 
investigation, one that provides real answers and 
justice. But we are also discouraged by the fact 
that three months later, there has been no 
apparent progress.

There are of course many reasons these days, for 
those who care about Bangladesh, to feel justice 
fatigue. If there has been one consistent theme 
in our family's efforts over the past two and a 
half years, it is that the climate of impunity in 
Bangladesh must be challenged through the legal 
system. We want a fair and complete investigation 
and a fair and complete trial and a fair and 
complete conviction. If this seems like a tall 
order in the context of Bangladesh today, we also 
know that to accept anything less it to concede 
defeat.

Part of the struggle for justice is the struggle 
against forgetting, against the short memories of 
governments and publics, of acts of injustice. 
And so we will not give up on our efforts to seek 
justice for the brutal grenade attack of January 
27th 2005, in Habiganj, Sylhet.
Blue for Peace

Until recently, my mother conducted silent 
protest vigils every Thursday (the day of the 
week my father was killed) in various locations 
in Dhaka and other parts of Bangladesh, calling 
for justice for all victims of political 
violence. In a campaign she called Blue for Peace 
(Shantir Shopkkhe Nilima), she asked everyone to 
wear blue on Thursdays and if possible, to come 
and stand with her.

Over the past 2 years, I have often been taken 
unawares at the unexpected impacts of her 
unassuming campaign. There was the rickshaw 
driver in Dhaka last summer who, unaware of my 
identity, told me that he always wore blue or 
displayed a small blue flag on Thursdays. He 
muttered repeatedly: "Bichar chai, amra shobay 
bichar chai" - we all want justice.

And then there was the Bangali convenience store 
clerk with whom I struck up a casual conversation 
during a visit to Chicago. It was Thursday and he 
wore blue. Not a coincidence, he told me, but his 
own small way of feeling connected, of expressing 
solidarity with all those who wanted justice.

Since January, there have been no more Blue for 
Peace vigils. They are now prohibited under the 
laws banning political activity in Bangladesh. My 
mother's application for permission to continue 
Blue for Peace was denied.

Yet another reason for justice fatigue. But I 
fight it off, knowing that justice fatigue is 
part of the problem. It is the inaction produced 
by justice fatigue, the retreat into complacency, 
that will keep us from moving forward.



______


[2]

Dawn
June 19, 2007

THE QUESTION OF PRESS FREEDOM

by Dr Tariq Rahman

JUNE 11, 2007, was a hot day in Karachi. The air 
conditioners did not work and power supply played 
hide and seek all the time. It was on such a day 
that I found myself standing in an auditorium 
filled by more than 100 people and ready to 
deliver the Hamza Alavi lecture at the invitation 
of Rahat Saeed, the man who has kept the 
progressive magazine Irtiqa alive for decades.

Zubeida Mustafa, herself a fearless writer, was 
the stage secretary and the famous Ardeshir 
Cowasjee presided. The family and friends of 
Zamir Niazi had gathered there. And there I was - 
a man who was not a journalist and who had not 
known Zamir Niazi except through his books and 
who could not even pretend to have the kind of 
courage which Niazi had - daring to speak about 
him.

But I had my reasons. I could see a connection 
between journalism and the academia and, further, 
between our own freedoms as human beings and the 
freedom of the word. Aware that academic 
connections might not go down well in a gathering 
of brave journalists and members of civil society 
who wanted to hear more about what was happening 
in Pakistan as they sat dripping in perspiration, 
I nevertheless took the risk to speak. Here is 
the gist of what I said.

Zamir Niazi is the man who wrote a number of 
books in English and Urdu on the freedom of the 
press in British India and then in Pakistan 
beginning from Zia's military rule years onwards. 
The trilogy (The Press in Chain, The Press Under 
Siege, The Web of Censorship) is a diary of what 
the press has been up against since the early 
19th century in South Asia.

Niazi was meticulous in keeping records and he 
was brave. Without this he could not have been 
the conscience of the press for almost half of 
the life of the country. But what is more is that 
he was made of heroic stuff. Although under 
financial constraints and suffering from ill 
health, he actually returned the money that had 
been given with the Pride of Performance award 
when the government went against the freedom of 
the press.

The media constructs our realities which is why 
the powerful want to control the media. In our 
part of the world it started off as part of a 
huge spying network of the king and his 
governors. Emperor Akbar (1556-1605) had 'waqai 
nigars' and 'waqai navis' who noted the 
happenings of the week and sent them to the 
emperor through runners ('harkaras'). Then there 
were secret intelligence agents, 'khufia navis', 
who found out what was happening in the bazaars 
and reported this to the king. Questioning or 
subversion of power was not part of the project 
of these early prototypes of the media.

The media reports on history in the making thus 
influencing its course. Academia comments on 
concepts and processes which also shape history. 
Both are detested by the wielders of power 
because they challenge the status quo; they 
deconstruct the 'truths' constructed in the 
favour of the power-wielders and tend to weaken 
the powerful. Under despotic rule, they are 
killed, during dictatorships they are jailed; and 
in governments swearing by democracy they are 
bribed (carrot) and persecuted (stick).

We hear loud talk about the freedom of the media 
but Pemra laws swing into action when the 
government feels threatened. Channels go off air 
and restrictions are imposed. This is because the 
reality the press constructs threatens to write 
history anew. This is the phenomenon that Zamir 
Niazi spent his life to record and condemn.

But how do our freedoms go with these 'western 
luxuries' (free press and free universities), 
some people may ask. First, because our physical 
safety is dependent upon the rule of law and the 
notion of the rule of law is protected by the 
press. The press not only informs people about 
excesses against citizens but tells them what to 
do about them. It creates public opinion. More 
importantly, it creates and nourishes the notion 
that there are rights and that the powerful can 
be resisted. This leads to far greater personal 
security than is possible in states where the 
media is absent or subservient to the 
power-wielders.

Second, the press exposes people to ideas of 
pluralism, several value systems and various 
realities. Our societal norms envisage a certain 
code of conduct, a uniformity of sorts with 
deviations being the prerogative of the hypocrite 
or the powerful. The other contender for 
restricting choices is the interpretation of 
Islam. The media is a threat to both these forms 
of control - tradition and political religion - 
and thus the onslaught against it.

Third, the freedom of the media is linked with 
what is called a national character. We are not 
free to be as we like. There are many forces 
acting on us which are creating our beings at all 
times. Thus, contrary to the belief that courage 
and integrity are personal qualities or choices, 
the fact is that they are choices only under 
ideal conditions.

Whether they are personal qualities in any 
psychological or genetic sense is not for me to 
say. However, even if they are intrinsic to some 
natures more than to others, it is obvious that 
external conditions stifle or nurture them. If a 
person is sure that no bodily, psychological or 
economic harm will come to him or her for telling 
the truth, he or she will be encouraged to be 
truthful. If, however, the cost of truth is 
great, few people are ready to risk telling it. 
Thus, truthful and honest people are not born, 
they are created. When the press is no longer 
free, citizens are also no longer free to be 
honest or truthful, and become dishonest.

Fourth, we think we are free to pursue knowledge 
but we are not. Free or almost unrestricted 
pursuit of knowledge is a new phenomenon. It is 
as old as the rise of the free press and, indeed, 
both are inter-related.

In our country, we can test the limits of 
academic freedom when there is no scholarly 
debate but a lot of mud-slinging against Dr 
Ayesha Siddiqa for writing a book giving details 
about the military's business. If her data is 
wrong the correct data should be given but to 
threaten or humiliate her is to curtail academic 
freedom in a society which does not have a 
research culture anyway.

Lastly, societies with a free press do a number 
of things to create conditions for pursuing 
pleasure. First, they prevent elites from 
becoming too tyrannical. Second, they criticise 
rent-seeking economic elites (mostly the same as 
the political ones). Thirdly, they provide 
alternative voices against the puritanical clergy 
or ideologues who condemn all pleasures. 
Fourthly, they provide entertainment through 
drama, music, discussion, photography, etc. 
Fifthly, they give one a sense of participation. 
Lastly, they make one feel powerful. We may not 
be powerful in the personal sense, but with the 
media talking against the powerful, thus 
expressing our feelings, we feel we have some 
power.

We should not be complacent about these freedoms. 
They have come slowly because the British left us 
with some sterling ideas: freedom, rule of law, 
constitution, democracy. Even military regimes 
have not quite done away with this terminology 
which creates some space for us. But then, we 
should not forget that people have suffered and 
paid for these freedoms as the journalists who 
are facing the state's power have been doing 
since March 9.

Surely some of us have succumbed to pressure or 
bribery but then we are only human. Who has put 
the pressure? Who has bribed them? The agencies 
of the state, of course, who must be condemned 
clearly. We must also not forget that as long as 
the press is not controlled and owned by media 
persons it cannot be really free. Owners have 
their money to protect and they are fewer in 
number than media men, and are thus more 
controllable. We must understand that those in 
the media and in the universities stand for the 
same ideals of freedom which are currently under 
great stress. This is the time to respect the 
legacy of Zamir Niazi and to pass it on to the 
younger generation.

o o o

PAKISTAN APPEARS TO BE BUILDING A THIRD PLUTONIUM 
PRODUCTION REACTOR AT KHUSHAB NUCLEAR SITE
Time for a universal, verified halt to production 
of plutonium and highly enriched uranium for 
nuclear weapons

by David Albright and Paul Brannan

The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS)
June 21, 2007

Commercial satellite imagery from DigitalGlobe 
taken on June 3, 2007 indicates that Pakistan 
appears to be building a third plutonium 
production reactor at the Khushab nuclear site 
On July 24, 2006, ISIS published imagery 
revealing the construction of a second heavy 
water reactor at Khushab. The second heavy water 
reactor, which Pakistan began building between 
2000 and 2002, is still under construction in the 
June 3, 2007 imagery. When operational, this 
reactor could be as large as several hundred 
megawatts thermal, notwithstanding claims by 
Pakistan of its intended initial power capacity.
The third reactor appears to be a replica of the 
second heavy water reactor and is located a few 
hundred meters to the north, though construction 
is progressing much more quickly than the second. 
A GeoEye image of the same area in Khushab taken 
in August of 2006 shows only a faint dirt 
foundation and no structures (see Figure 2). 
Almost all of the third reactor construction 
visible in the June 3, 2007 image has taken place 
in the last 10 months.
The similarities between the second and third 
reactor construction projects indicate that the 
power of the third plutonium production reactor 
is likely to be similar to that of the second 
reactor (see Figures 1, 4, 5 and 6). The first 
Khushab reactor went critical in 1998 and looks 
significantly different from the second and third 
reactors (see Figure 3). The facilities at this 
site are not safeguarded by the IAEA and support 
Pakistan's nuclear weapons program.
ISIS reported in January 18, 2007 the resumption 
of construction of what appears to be a plutonium 
separation facility at Chashma, a facility 
approximately 80 km west of Khushab. This 
reprocessing facility, which would be Pakistan's 
second and is also unsafeguarded, is likely 
related to the construction of the two additional 
reactors at Khushab. When the reactors come on 
line, Pakistan's demand for reprocessing capacity 
would increase significantly. The expanded 
construction at Khushab, and apparent resumption 
of activity at the Chashma plutonium separation 
plant, all occurring within the last six years, 
imply that Pakistan's government has made a 
decision to increase significantly its production 
of plutonium for nuclear weapons.

Full Text at:
http://www.isis-online.org/publications/pakistan/ThirdKhushabReactor.pdf

______


[3]

Indian Express
June 01, 2007

THE RIGHT TO RETURN HOME

by Pamela Philipose

For over 17 years, the Bhutan refugee crisis has 
lingered on. In 1990-91, when 106,000 bonafide 
Bhutanese citizens of Nepali extraction, the 
Lhotshampas, found themselves rendered stateless 
and forced to live in the seven UNHCR-run refugee 
camps in southern Nepal, the world chose to 
ignore what is one of the largest attempts at 
ethnic cleansing in this region. India has 
pretended the problem does not exist, but the 
untenability of this stand was underlined on 
Monday, when Indian security forces had to open 
fire to prevent Bhutanese refugees from Nepal 
attempting to enter Bhutan. They can only do this 
by crossing India.

The process of stripping the Lhotshampas, many of 
whom have been living in Bhutan for over two 
centuries, of their citizenship rights was 
calibrated over a decade. Bhutan has three major 
ethnic groups: the Drukpas, the Sharchops and the 
Lhotshampas. The Drukpas, although less than a 
quarter of the population, have ruled Bhutan 
since Ugyen Wanchuk was crowned the 'Druk Gyalpo' 
(dragon king) in 1907. The Sharchops are 
ethnically related to local hill tribes, while 
the Lhotshampas are of Nepali origin.

There is also a religious divide here. The first 
two categories are Buddhist, while the 
Lhotshampas are largely Hindu. An accurate 
estimation of the numbers of these communities is 
difficult to get, but a 1980 census put the 
Lhotshampas at 53 per cent of the population, 
with the Sharchops accounting for 30 per cent and 
the ruling Drukpas, 17 per cent. Perhaps it is 
their sheer presence that led to the Lhotshampas 
being targeted.

First came the Marriage Act of 1980, which 
penalised Bhutanese for marrying "non-Bhutanese". 
Five years later, a citizenship act stripped many 
Lhotshampas of their citizenship rights. In 1989, 
the policy of 'One Nation, One People, One 
Language, One Dress', came into force. The 
Lhotshampas were increasingly subjected to 
eviction, and deprived of their assets until many 
among them were forced to flee the country. 
Today, an estimated one-sixth of Bhutan's 
original inhabitants live in refugee camps.

During a visit to Nepal last December, I had an 
opportunity to speak to some of them and gained 
glimpses into cramped lives denuded of meaning. 
Every family is entitled to a hut measuring 14 by 
8 feet. Since they are refugees, no one is 
entitled to employment. Children are given a 
basic education, but have few dreams of the 
future. They end up drifting around, much like 
their parents. As one man revealed, "Since 
refugees cannot work, the able-bodied among us 
just hang around cracking our knuckles."

This 17-year impasse remained unbroken. Last 
year, the US ambassador to Nepal, James Moriarty, 
indicated that America was willing to take 60,000 
refugees. But many in the community believe that 
such a move will divide them and end forever any 
prospect of their repatriation to Bhutan. They 
believe that their right of return must be 
recognised before they can even consider 
resettlement options.

India's studied silence is perplexing. Says Ram 
Kumar Shrestha, coordinator of the 
Kathmandu-based Friends of Bhutan, "India has the 
requisite experience and has played a role in 
Bhutan's development. So why has it allowed this 
situation to continue? Today, the world looks up 
to democratic India. It needs to be more active 
on the issue of the Bhutanese refugees, for its 
own credibility."

There are other considerations, too. The camps 
could become a serious security concern for 
India. Apart from this, the current drift means 
that India is forced to repulse every attempt by 
the refugees to make their way back home, like it 
had to do on Monday. This raises the threshold of 
anti-India feelings in the region.

Formally, India maintains that this is a matter 
for Nepal and Bhutan to sort out, and prefers to 
conform to the Treaty of Peace and Friendship 
signed with Bhutan in 1949, under which India has 
undertaken not to interfere in Bhutan's internal 
affairs in return for Bhutan agreeing to remain 
guided by India in its foreign policy. But India 
may have to revisit this stance given the 
untenable situation in the camps and rising 
tensions stoked partly by changes within Bhutan. 
The latest attempt of Bhutanese refugees to cross 
over into Bhutan was provoked by the idea of 
participating in a mock election exercise there. 
As the refugees have argued, Bhutan's ongoing 
exercise in ushering in democracy will make 
little sense if one-sixth of its population 
remains in the wilderness.

Given its rapport with Bhutan, India holds the 
key to resolving one of the most intractable 
issues of this region and one that has extracted 
a terrible human cost.


______


[4]

Hindustan Times
21 June 2007

BEHIND THE VEIL OF LIES 

by Ram Puniyani

Pratibha Patil, the Presidential nominee of UPA, 
in her address on the occasion of the birth day 
of Maharana Pratap, 17th June 2007, gave a very 
laudable advice about abolition of purdah (a veil 
which covers the face), with an understanding 
that purdah system is keeping the women backward. 
At the same time said that this purdah system 
came here to protect 'our' girls/women from the 
invading Mughals.

This statement of hers is a part of popular 
perception and has nothing to do with the truth. 
purdah was prevalent much before the Mughals 
attacked parts of India. Also it is not prevalent 
in all the parts where they ruled. The stories 
are prevalent that Mughals were defiling Hindu 
women so to protect them the purdah was 
introduced. Can this covering of face save one 
from the armed soldier or the attacking army? Is 
it a mechanism of protection from outsider or did 
it serve some other social function?

As such historically in many a societies women 
were made to use different types of covering of 
head, face and body. Sometimes it was a symbol of 
status but most of the times it was a mechanism 
of control over the bodies of women in a male 
dominated patriarchal society. Even in the Muslim 
world, large parts where the process of loosening 
up of feudal values has taken place, burqua is no 
longer used. Amongst Hindus it is prevalent 
mainly in Rajasthan and neighboring states, the 
places where the pre modern social values 
dominate the social scene.

What role did Mughal invasion play in the 
imposition of purdah on women? What has invasion 
to do with the purdah? It is true that Mughal 
army like most other past and present armies did 
atrocities on women. That Mughal armies committed 
atrocities is only part of the whole truth. The 
whole truth is that most of the armies, most of 
the times in the past and present have done and 
are doing the same. Cutting across different 
religions the marauding armies plundered wealth 
and raped women in the territory of 'other' king, 
the enemy.

How did this notion of, Mughal are responsible 
for our ills, come into being? British Historians 
in order to win over the loyalty of the people of 
this country had to demonize Muslim kings. They 
selectively presented acts of temple destruction, 
conversion to Islam, jizia and atrocities on 
women as the features of Mughal rule. This 
communal historiography on one hand won over 
masses of Hindus away from their loyalty to 
Muslim Kings and also sowed the seeds of policy 
of 'divide and rule' and initiated the 'hate 
other' between the two major communities. This 
communal historiography was put on its head by 
Muslim communal historians. This Muslim communal 
historiography in turn formed the base of Muslim 
communal politics and the one promoted by British 
served well for the goal of Hindu communal 
politics.

As such the period of Mughal kings on one side 
was a period of battles between the kings, but 
not along religious lines. One sees the alliance 
of Mansigh, Jaisingh with Akbar and Aurangzeb 
respectively. One also knows now that the 
administration of Mughal kings had heavy 
representation of Hindus, e.g. in the court of 
Aurangzeb 33% of his officials were Hindus. Rana 
Pratap, on whose anniversary Mrs. Patil was 
speaking had a loyal army genenrla with him, 
Hakim Khan Sur.

On the other hand it was also a period when the 
interaction between two major religious streams 
resulted in the mixed culture. This intermixing 
in the arena of music, literature, architecture, 
food, and clothing led to the advancement of our 
culture to higher levels in the subcontinenent. 
The highest point of this interaction was in the 
arena of religious traditions, where the Bhakti 
and Sufi saints presented religion as a moral 
force, a spiritual solace to bring the 
communities together. They presented the religion 
as the uniting force in contrast to the 
exclusionism of Olema and Brahmins.

Today extending the logic of communal 
historiography the Hindu communal stream has 
dumped all the ills of Hindu society on the 
Muslim invaders. Be it the caste rigidities, the 
purdah system or the female feticide, Muslims are 
held responsible for all this. The inner 
exclusionism, the hierarchy, the projected 
superiority of upper caste to exploit the lower 
castes in the name of religion was the root cause 
of the ills of Hindu society. Today by holding 
Muslims responsible for all these they 
successfully externalize the problem, and succeed 
in projecting their inner rigidities as the 
glorious past. The net result is an attempt to 
perpetuate the status quo of caste and gender, 
and to create an external enemy for the goal of 
political mobilization of a section of Hindus. 
One needs to scratch the surface to know the 
truth of social phenomenon, something which is 
missing in our social discourse, and that's what 
forms the base of "Hate other" and the consequent 
communal violence.

______


[5]   [ The Latest Anti Rushdie Hullabaloo: is 
yet another sign of 'You can only write, paint, 
film or wear what is acceptable to so called 
guardians of religion industry'. Progressives 
should speak up before all space is eaten up by 
fundamentalist forces]

(i)
http://www.englishpen.org/news/_1632/

WHAT WRITERS ARE SAYING ABOUT SALMAN RUSHDIE
June 21, 2007


The Pakistan National Assembly has called for 
Salman Rushdie's knighthood to be revoked. Here, 
writers from around the world explain why they 
believe Rushdie deserves this honour:

Lisa Appignanesi: 'It is hardly unexpected, yet 
nonetheless bizarre, that the Queen's recognition 
of Salman Rushdie's achievement by honouring him 
with a knighthood should raise such a storm of 
controversy. Judged purely in cultural rather 
than in political terms, after all, Rushdie is 
undeniably amongst the greats of British 
literature. He is the Dickens of our times. A 
visionary realist, his superbly inventive, 
grandly comic stories chart the great social 
transitions of our globalising, post-colonial 
world, with its migrations, its teeming hybrid 
cities, its clash of unlikenesses, its extremes 
of love and violence. They do so with a richness 
of language and narrative which is unsurpassed. 
For Iran's Foreign Ministry to wade into our 
honours system and portray the decision to honour 
Rushdie as 'an orchestrated act of aggression 
directed against Islamic societies' is to repeat 
the mistake which began with their Ayatollah 
Khomeini's Fatwa. That killing review chose 
utterly to misunderstand the place  fiction 
occupies in the west and subject it to a 
fundamentalist jurisdiction which essentially 
recognizes only one book, and that one holy. The 
journalists,  writers and academics who languish 
in Iran's prisons are a mark of that regime's 
intolerance of any form of dissent. This is 
hardly the Islam that most Muslims in Britain 
would wish to support.'

Linda Grant: 'We honour Salman Rushdie for his 
huge gifts as a writer. Writing gives offence, 
that is part of its role. I am enraged by the 
campaign to threaten Britain for honouring one of 
its greatest writers.'

Hari Kunzru: 'Salman Rushdie's knighthood is a 
recognition by Britain of his importance to the 
global cultural scene, and the pathways he has 
opened, not just for English literature, but the 
English language. The idea that it is some kind 
of calculated insult is an absurdity. The real 
insult - to the intelligence and decency of "the 
world's 1.5 billion muslims", for whom people 
such as Mohammed Ijaz ul-Haq, religious affairs 
minister of Pakistan, presume to speak - comes 
from the ignorance and paranoia of leaders who 
feel so threatened by a novelist that they'll 
call for him to be killed.'

David Mitchell: 'Salman Rushdie is a major figure 
in English literature, and deserves not only this 
honour, but also the support of anyone who 
believes in the freedoms of speech, religion and 
thought.'

Kathy Lette: 'On Saturday Salman Rushdie was 
awarded a knighthood. Being Australian, of 
course, I'm slightly allergic to royal anointing 
of any kind. (Although one reason to accept a 
Knighthood would be the fun it would give you 
being able to describe all future casual romantic 
liaisons as 'a one knight stand.') But I am 
definitely in favour of celebrating the 
achievements  of writers. And I'm particularly in 
favour of celebrating the achievements of Salman 
Rushdie, who deserves to win every accolade 
imaginable for his creative gifts, but also for 
his immense bravery.'

o o o

(ii)

http://www.indexonline.org/

BRITAIN: IN DEFENCE OF IMAGINATION

Honour reflects contribution to literature by Jo Glanville

Muslim leaders' complaints should not obscure 
Salman Rushdie's true status as a great writer 
and chronicler of the modern world, says Jo 
Glanville

The response to Salman Rushdie's knighthood has 
been predictable, as Muslim leaders and 
politicians compete with each other to register 
their outrage - if Rushdie gets an honour, it 
must be an affront to Islam.

Let's get one thing straight. This is not about 
Islam - it's a recognition of the achievements of 
one of Britain's finest writers, a writer who led 
a solitary, persecuted life for many years 
because of death threats against him. No novelist 
sets out on their career aiming for a knighthood. 
It is in fact ironic that Rushdie - an iconoclast 
and outsider as most artists are - should be 
embraced by the establishment. But Rushdie is one 
of the greatest and most influential contemporary 
writers working today. The Satanic Verses is just 
one of his novels (and perhaps not even his 
finest) - Rushdie's more striking achievement is 
to have created an original, post-colonial 
narrative in which East and West meet - an 
imaginative interpretation of the modern world we 
live in, shaped by migration. It is an 
interpretation that defies the boundaries of 
religion and culture - and it is the kind of 
artistic vision that can make sense of the world 
and promote understanding across the divide. The 
forces that decry and denounce Rushdie are in 
fact driving a wedge between East and West, 
between Muslim and non-Muslim, and between the 
literal and the imagination. They do more harm to 
Islam and Muslim culture than Rushdie ever has.

Yet somehow it has become a badge of credibility 
among certain Muslim leaders, politicians and 
organisations - whether Lord Ahmed or the Muslim 
Council of Britain or Mohammed Ijaz ul Haq, 
Pakistan's religious affairs minister - to be the 
one who shouts the loudest whenever there's a 
perceived slight to Islam. The spectacle of this 
self-regarding outrage has become wearingly 
familiar as Islam's self-appointed defenders seek 
to silence and intimidate critical or challenging 
voices. Rushdie, through no desire of his own, 
has been elevated beyond his literary output to 
become a symbol. He is, first and foremost, a 
novelist and it's clearly important to reiterate 
that no art can flourish without the licence of 
free expression.

This level of intimidation against writers and 
intellectuals who wish to explore, criticise or 
pass comment on Islam is anathema to free speech. 
As a knee-jerk response which seeks nothing but 
political gain it only brings discredit to its 
advocates.

20.06.2007

o o o

(iii)

The Hindu
Jun 21, 2007

  Editorial
UNWARRANTED FURY

There is an air of unreality about the protests 
that have consumed some countries against 
Britain's decision to confer a knighthood on 
Salman Rushdie. In countries such as Pakistan and 
Iran, the matter has gone beyond street-level 
demonstrations and assumed the dimensions of a 
full-fledged diplomatic row. Iran's foreign 
ministry, which described the decision to knight 
Rushdie as "insulting, suspicious and improper", 
summoned the British envoy in Teh eran to condemn 
the "provocative" act. Pakistan has gone even 
further with the country's National Assembly 
demanding that Britain "take back the title of 
Sir given to Rushdie." To top this, in an 
outrageous reaction, Pakistan's Religious Affairs 
Minister Mohammed Ijaz ul-Haq said that honouring 
Rushdie would justify suicide attacks. Later, in 
an unconvincing clarification, he suggested what 
he really meant was that honouring Rushdie - 
whose 1988 novel The Satanic Verses had angered 
Muslims around the world - will give suicide 
bombers a handle to justify their acts. As one 
might expect in this over-heated atmosphere, 
extremists and religious fundamentalists have 
rushed in to fan the flames. In Iran, a 
self-styled NGO has raised the $100,000 bounty 
the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini had offered 
for Rushdie's head by an additional $ 50,000; 
back home, in Kashmir, sundry organisations have 
called for strikes and State-wide agitations.

It is apparent that extremist forces in different 
parts of the Muslim world are striving hard to 
rekindle the frenzy that followed the publication 
of The Satanic Verses. This novel is but one of 
nine written by the Booker Prize winn er, who has 
also published four works of non-fiction. To 
suggest that the knighthood has been conferred 
for one 'anti-Islamic' novel is to be blinkered 
and to close one's eyes to the entire body of his 
work - in terms of political substance as well as 
literary quality. There has been a considerable 
amount of speculation about why the Tony Blair 
government conferred a knighthood on Rushdie. As 
atonement for the unhelpful official attitude 
during the writer's days of suffering following 
Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwa? A reward for the 
positions he adopted on Anglo-American foreign 
policy issues post-9/11? Whatever the truth, it 
is ludicrous to suggest - as those hell-bent on 
creating a furore have - that knighting Rushdie 
was an Islamophobic act, calculated to denigrate 
the religion and those who follow it. The British 
honours system, even as it symbolises state 
recognition of a person's contribution, is a 
relic from a feudal and colonial past. A system 
with knights, dames, and other archaic 
decorations deserves to evoke nothing more than a 
wry smile. It is not worthy of such bitterness 
and fury.

______


[6]

Outlook
June 25, 2007

ST STEPHEN'S: MURDER IN THE CATHEDRAL?
Narrow religiosity is contorting the grand ethos of a capital college ......
Ramachandra Guha

Somewhere in India, there is a virtual graveyard 
of once great educational institutions destroyed 
by the petty vanities of men. The corpses it 
contains come from all over the country, and bear 
identities that are secular as well as 
denominational. Among the residents of this 
kabristan are the Isabella Thoburn College, 
Lucknow; Elphinstone College, Mumbai; Queen 
Mary's College, Chennai; Presidency College, 
Calcutta; Patna College; the Aligarh Muslim 
University; and the Banaras Hindu University.

	This is St Stephen's College, Delhi. That 
the applicant has been ailing has been known for 
some time. Hope lingered that its illness might 
be reversed. However, news has just come in that 
the college authorities plan to inject a poison 
that would, in effect, kill off the patient.
When that happens, the corpse would command the 
largest tombstone in what is already a 
well-populated graveyard.

St Stephen's College was founded in 1881 by a 
band of priests from Cambridge. For the first few 
decades of its existence, it was not much more 
than a mofussil college. Then, in 1911, the 
British decided to shift the capital of India to 
Delhi. Now the influence of the college grew, and 
grew. In the years after Independence, it came to 
be primus inter pares among the colleges of the 
University of Delhi, itself India's first truly 
national university.

I speak as a Stephanian, but even the 
unprejudiced historian can make the case that 
this college has contributed as much as any other 
to the making of independent India. From its 
ranks have come many of our finest public 
servants, academics, writers and artists. From a 
list that can run into the hundreds, a few 
contemporary names must suffice: Shiv Shankar 
Menon, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Barkha Dutt, 
Kaushik Basu, Ketan Mehta, I. Allan Sealy and 
Amitav Ghosh.

There remains the feeling that this is an elitist 
college. The impression persists because St 
Stephen's has also produced hundreds of snobs and 
bores, who flaunt the fact that they once studied 
there. However, the tag of elitism can be 
repudiated by the names of the remarkable social 
workers who have passed through the college. 
Among the Stephanians who have lived their lives 
for and with the poor of India are (the late) 
Jugnu Ramaswamy, Mihir Shah, Rukmini (Rinki) 
Banerji and Sanjit (Bunker) Roy.

We know what these Stephanians have given the 
nation, but what did St Stephen's give them? 
Khushwant Singh, who studied in the college in 
the 1930s, says he learnt there that "parts of 
the Bible were great literature". He adds that 
"another thing that St Stephen's gave me was a 
consciousness of what is right and what is 
wrong". This didn't "come through sermons on 
morality, it was there in the atmosphere that 
pervaded the campus: you imbibed it, like 
inhaling fresh air".

When I studied in St Stephen's 40 years later, 
the air one inhaled was still fresh. The nicest 
thing about the college was that family 
background did not matter a whit. Here your 
father's profession or income was completely 
irrelevant; so also was your religion or mother 
tongue. What counted was how good you were at 
what counted: whether bowling a leg-break, 
delivering a speech, playing the guitar or 
mimicking a film star. Since these virtues spread 
themselves out over the population, and since 
each had its own special constituency, there were 
few Stephanians who felt left out.

An attractive feature of St Stephen's was that it 
was genuinely all-Indian. It had large 
contingents from Bihar and Rajasthan, who 
unselfconsciously spoke Hindi among themselves 
and to the rest of us. There were many students 
from the Northeast, and numerous South Indians.

The staff was similarly diverse: my own teachers 
included a Bengali, a Tamil, a Haryanvi Jat and a 
Delhi Kayastha. I studied economics; meanwhile, 
the history department was run by three stalwarts 
named Mohammad Amin, David Baker and Prem Sagar 
Dwivedi. This capacious catholicism marked out 
the college from its rivals: after all, 
Presidency College in Calcutta was basically for 
Bengalis, the Madras Christian College basically 
for Madrasis and, at a pinch, Malayalis.

This was, in theory, a Christian institution, but 
in practice its Christianity was understated. The 
two men who made St Stephen's what it was were 
the first Indian principal, S.K. Rudra, and his 
English associate, C.F. Andrews. Both were close 
friends of Mahatma Gandhi. Their tolerant and 
broad-minded version of Christianity seemed to 
blur into the benign Hindu traditions of bhakti. 
Love, service, charity, understanding-- these 
were the guiding principles of the faith of the 
two, and of the men who followed them.

Stephanian Christianity, if such a term can be 
coined, was a moral universe in which the 
specificities of one particular religion were 
rendered irrelevant. As with Gandhi's own 
ecumenical philosophy, this was a creed that, 
among its very many diverse followers, attracted 
an entirely voluntary adherence.

Faith and ethnic origin were irrelevant to being 
a Stephanian. That was its peculiar charm, and 
also its greatest asset. The 'morality' that 
Khushwant Singh and others imbibed at St 
Stephen's taught them to treat every human being 
as unique, as an individual to be dealt with on 
his or her terms. This, in a country so divided 
by the politics of identity, was hard to preach 
and harder to practise. That a measure of success 
was achieved is tribute to the visionaries who 
nurtured the college.

For most of its history, the governing ethos of 
St Stephen's was liberal, plural, cosmopolitan-- 
in a word, Indian. However, in the early 1990s, 
the Supreme Court permitted 'minority' 
institutions to allot up to 50 per cent of their 
seats on the basis of faith. Immediately, the 
pressure grew on St Stephen's to increase the 
number of Christian students. Slowly, the 
Christian intake began to grow.

Although the college keeps these figures secret, 
it is estimated that at present some 25 per cent 
of the student body is Christian. These students 
enter the college with a poorer school-leaving 
record than their peers. (The gap varies from 
course to course?it is higher in prized subjects 
like economics, and lower in subjects with fewer 
takers, such as chemistry.) Last week, it was 
announced that the creeping Christianisation of 
St Stephen's will be made a galloping one. Forty 
per cent of all seats are to be reserved for 
Christians; another 20 per cent for other special 
categories, such as sportsmen, the handicapped, 
and Scheduled Castes. To this shall be added the 
seats in the gift of the principal, ranking 
members of the Church, and (this being Delhi) 
senior bureaucrats and ministers. If the proposal 
goes through, three seats out of four will be 
filled on strictly 'non-academic' grounds.

The principal reason behind this move is the 
defeat of Christian ecumenism by Christian 
evangelism. Those who run the Church of North 
India today are far removed from the faith of the 
founders of St Stephen's. These new Christians 
seek not understanding and truth, but political 
mileage and economic gain. In the real sense of 
the word, they aren't 'Christian' at all-- in the 
same way as Narendra Modi is not 'Hindu' and 
Osama bin Laden not 'Muslim'. St Stephen's has 
stood for a catholic and truly Indian 
Christianity. Now, the college is in danger of 
being captured by a group of Christians who are 
insular and narrow-minded.

These power-brokers seek to usurp a highly valued 
brand, a brand deepened and developed by other 
people using altogether different (and more 
noble) methods. Once the student body has been 
made the property of a particular religion, 
pressures to remake the faculty in the same image 
will follow. At risk then would be St Stephen's 
reputation for intellectual excellence as well as 
its cosmopolitan character. Mediocrity and its 
even uglier cousin, parochialism, will rule.

It is important to note here that while St 
Stephen's was founded by Christians, it is funded 
by the state. According to the Union ministry of 
education, fully 95 per cent of the expenses of 
the college are met by the University Grants 
Commission. Why should a college that draws so 
heavily on the public exchequer be allowed to 
choose 40 per cent of its students from 2 per 
cent of the country's population? The new 
policies are claimed by their proponents to be 
'legal', but they are surely unethical. They are 
also profoundly unhistorical, based on a wilful 
ignorance of the traditions and legacy of St 
Stephen's College.

Great institutions are difficult to conceive of 
and even more difficult to build. But they are 
comparatively easy to destroy. The affection and 
admiration that St Stephen's now commands is the 
product of decades of patient, selfless work by 
hundreds of teachers and students: Christian and 
non-Christian, rich, poor and middle class, North 
Indian and South Indian and East Indian. And yet, 
the cumulative labours of these very many people 
over very many years can be undone by the 
shortsightedness of a few men, and within a 
day--that is, in the time it takes to formulate a 
new admission policy and get it passed. If its 
present administrators have their way, St 
Stephen's will soon become a corrupt Christian 
version of a Hindu shakha or a Muslim madrassa.

(Ramachandra Guha is the author of India After 
Gandhi. He was a student at St Stephen's from 
1974 to 1979.)



______



[7]


Dear friend,
Nirmala Deshpande, Nandita Haksar and the under 
signed (ND Pancholi) met President Kalam 
on Monday the 18th June,07 and urged upon him 
to accept  the clemency petitions of all the 
prisoners on death row   before he vacates his 
office.President listened and said that the issue 
of death penalty  has not been properly studied. 
He stressed for the need of a national debate on 
death penalty. The following  representation  in 
this connection was  also submitted to him. 
He assured  that he would consider it.

REPRESENTATION TO THE PRESIDENT : -

163 Vasant Enclave
New Delhi-110 057
# 011 26152680

June 18, 2007

His Excellency President of India                          
Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam
Rashtrapati Bhawan
New Delhi-110011

Your Excellency,

Re: Memorandum on question of death penalty

We are writing to you in our capacity as human 
rights lawyers and as citizens of our country. We 
would like to say that we, along with hundreds 
and thousands of fellow citizens regret deeply 
that you will soon no longer be our President. We 
believe that you have endeared yourself to lakhs 
of Indian citizens because somehow you were able 
to bridge the gap between Rashtrapati Bhawan and 
the ordinary citizen. We had begun to feel we 
could reach you, our President, personally, and 
somehow you would hear our grievances.

We belong to the human rights community and we 
were very excited and inspired when you took a 
public stand against death penalty. As lawyers 
who have been dealing with people in jails for 
more than three decades we feel a special concern 
for those locked behind high walls and who have 
no way to being heard.

India has committed itself to abolishing the 
death penalty in accordance with her obligations 
under international human rights law. We have 
reached a point in history when death penalty has 
been abolished even in cases of genocide and 
crimes against humanity. As you know that the 
Nuremberg and Tokyo Tribunals had provision for 
death penalty but the International Criminal 
Court (1998) and the International Criminal 
tribunal for Rwanda and Former Yugoslavia (1993) 
do not provide for capital punishment. As human 
rights lawyers and activists we long for the day 
when India will abolish this brutal, cruel and 
barbaric practice.

In a situation where there is provision for death 
penalty principles of natural justice require 
that the courts should apply the highest 
standards of impartiality, competence and 
objectivity and independence when sentencing 
anyone to death. However, in our country’s 
experience also we have seen that the “rarest of 
rare” doctrine has not led to fewer death 
sentences, in fact through the years the number 
of laws which provide for death penalty has 
increased and the sentencing shows that the 
standard is arbitrary and flexible.

Your Excellency, you have yourself observed that 
a disproportionate number of poor and uneducated 
get the death sentence. And today more than 90 
per cent of the cases pending before you from 
Bihar, Jharkhand and Kashmir are people who are 
poor and who have not been able to defend 
themselves because they could not afford to 
engage a competent lawyer.

Your Excellency, as human rights lawyers we see 
gross violation of human rights every day. But we 
continue to struggle because despite all the odds 
there is still democratic space within which 
people like us can fight for the rights of poor 
and oppressed. But when we see people who are 
condemned to death without a fair trial, or no 
trial at all we feel both outraged and absolutely 
helpless. It is this outrage and feeling of 
helplessness that has prompted to write to you.

We realize the fight to abolish death penalty is 
not easy. However, the fact that you have taken a 
public stand on the issue has kindled a new hope 
not only in the hearts of the human rights 
community but those waiting in death row, their 
families and friends.

Your Excellency, we have published Muhammad Afzal 
Guru’s petition to you. We have done this so that 
the facts of his trial are put in the public 
domain. We are a enclosing a copy of the book, 
entitled, The Afzal Petition: A Quest for 
Justice. We are also enclosing Nandita Haksar’s 
book, Framing Geelani, Hanging Afzal: Patriotism 
in Time of Terror. The book motivated many people 
of South Asian origin to join the campaign to 
save Afzal Guru from the gallows.

Your Excellency, we do not know for certain what 
stand the Government of India has taken with 
regard to Afzal Guru or the other unfortunate 
poor people in death row in Bihar and Jharkhand. 
But we fear that the Government would have 
advised that they all be hanged. Our conscience 
is outraged by the fact that more than a million 
farmers have committed suicide even as those 
 fighting for the right to minimum wages are 
being condemned to death in democratic India .

The decision in the Parliament attack case has 
sent shock waves throughout the world. Already 28 
British MPs have signed an Early Day Motion 
asking that Afzal be pardoned because the verdict 
lacked legitimacy. They have been shocked that 
the Supreme Court could have sentenced a man to 
death on the grounds that it would satisfy the 
collective conscience of our society.

Your Excellency, we ardently appeal to you to 
exercise your prerogative powers under the 
Proviso to Article 74 of the Indian Constitution 
and ask the Government to reconsider their 
decision. We ask this of you on behalf of all 
those millions of Indian citizens who believe in 
the values and cherish the noble ideals of India 
’s epic struggle against British colonial rule. 
We believe that the abolishment of the death 
penalty on the 150th anniversary of India ’s 
First War of Independence would be a wonderful 
way to remember the martyrs and celebrate Indian 
democracy’s ability to survive and grow deeper 
even in the midst of the most difficult of times. 

Please accept our best wishes,

Yours sincerely,

Nandita Haksar            N D Pancholi      

______



[8]


THE ENEMIES OF HAPPINESS

A film by Eva Mulvad


This film is about personal courage - courage to 
change the world and the courage to stand in the 
forefront of this battle.

Malalai Joya is a 28 year-old woman from 
Afghanistan. This film follows her parliamentary 
campaign to her election as a delegate in Wolesi 
Jirga, or National Assembly. It is the first 
democratic parliament election in Afghanistan in 
over 30 years. Surrounded by security, Malalai 
Joya spreads her political beliefs despite 
several death threats. There have been 4 attempts 
against her life.

Malalai Joya is famous and infamous. It all began 
in 2003, when the Afghanistan politicians met to 
lay the foundation for a democracy in "new" 
Afghanistan.  At this meeting, Malalai Joya 
challenged former Mujahidin leaders (Warlords), 
who according to her, attempt to maintain power 
through the new system. "Many of you here in this 
hall have blood on your hands and you should be 
tried in the world court." Her comments ignited 
outrage among the hard-liners who demanded that 
she be immediately removed from the sessions.

It is her courage and conviction which has made 
her into a folk hero. But since that fateful day, 
her life has been in danger. She has been 
threatened by the very same warlords she 
challenges. Her campaign becomes a 
life-threatening project. She is forced to live 
in hiding and when she is in public, she must be 
protected by armed guards.

In the Desert
Malalai Joya conducts her parliamentary campaign 
in the remote desert province of Farah, the heart 
of poverty in Afghanistan. To be a politician 
means that one's office must function as a social 
security office and even a hospital. She is the 
advocate of her people. They come to her with an 
assortment of problems. Women who wear black 
crowd the corriders. The dust settles heavily in 
the sunlight. It is here where she negotiates 
with clan leaders and opium kings. Adolescent 
girls cry because they must marry with the old 
men.

This film gives a unique insight into the 
conditions the people of Afghanistan must live. 
It is a society destroyed by war and run by a 
tradition. But despite this, there is also a 
strong longing to change. But how can democracy 
be implemented in a land where the people are 
illiterate? In a land where votes can be bought 
and where women do not have the luxury to leave 
their children so that they can vote? It is a 
film that reminds us that democracy can not be 
implemented merely by the presence of western 
diplomats and soldiers.

Front Figure
Malalai Joya is no diplomat. She is a 
controversial front figure for a people who have 
been promised peace and prosperity, but who 
continue to dogged by war and poverty.  Her 
uncompromising stance creates hope among a people 
who demand amends from history's greatest 
perpertrators.

But even heroes have their critics: there are 
those who accuse her for creating even more 
discord in a land that is already rife with 
conflict.

The Enemy of Happiness follows a radical freedom 
fighter and a land that is changing. But more 
importantly it is a film on personal courage and 
the belief that the ordinary person not only can, 
but will make a difference.


Contact:
BASTARD FILM A/S
Øster Farimagsgade 16B
2100 KBH Ø
+45 35 25 00 25

Press Contact
Josephine Michau
Mail: josephine [at] bastardfilm [dot] dk

World Sales
www.tv2world.dk

US distributor
www.wmm.com

Distribution
www.dfi.dk

______


[9] ANNOUNCEMENTS:

(i)

One Billion Eyes 2007

Indian Documentary Film Festival
The Prakriti Foundation, Chennai

Caste

One Billion Eyes, the annual Indian documentary 
film festival organised by the Prakriti 
Foundation, Chennai, is in its third year. This 
year's theme is Caste. The theme for 2005 was 
'Arts, Activism, Animals', and for 2006 it was 
'Our Cities: the Real and the Imagined'.

In India, caste consumes everyone. From the 
brahmin priests of the Chidambaram temple who 
continue to practice child marriage, to McDonalds 
substituting panneer for beef in their Indian 
burgers, to the dalits of Khairlanje who get 
lynched for asserting their humanity. But such 
has been the conditioning of mainstream, 
contemporary, urban sensibilities that to talk 
caste has meant to talk of reservation, dalits, 
OBCs, government/sarkari brahmins, atrocities 
against dalits, Mandal, Mayawati, gurjjars, 
meritocracy, state policy. Suddenly, it appears 
that caste is not a system of domination, 
discrimination and exploitation, but just a 
classificatory category. It appears as if 
brahmins, kayasths, banias and other privileged 
castes do not have anything to do with caste. It 
appears that matrimonial advertisements that 
demand a 'wheatish complexion Iyer Vadama 
non-Koundinya gotra 25-28 girl' for a 
caste-compatible IIT-IIM-educated brahmin based 
in Connecticut, or ads that explicitly seek to 
rent houses 'only for vegetarians' do not encode 
caste. In fact, the anti-reservation brigade 
recently managed to project itself in the media 
as anti-caste. Does the world of documentary 
films in India exhibit similar anxieties and 
stereotypes? While so many films get made about 
dalits and around dalit themes, do dalits get to 
make their/our films? What is the existing filmic 
discourse on caste? Have makers of short films 
sought to rethink caste?

This festival-juxtaposing screenings with 
literary readings, panel discussions and 
interventions from the audience-will seek to 
broaden the contours of the discourse on caste. 
Besides filmmakers and their films, it will 
feature poets, activists, students, victims, 
agent provocateurs, academicians, and of course a 
panel of judicious and judgmental but jolly 
judges who will decide on the best film for a 
prize of Rs 25,000.

We hope to have a wide range of caste subjects to 
choose from for this festival. And if this note 
makes you think afresh on caste, there's time to 
make a quick short and submit it by 15 July. 
Broad areas/themes where submissions are 
encouraged vis-à-vis caste are:

Advertisements, Apartheid, Atrocities, Arts, 
Bureaucracy, Class, Communalism, Cinema, Culture, 
Education, Environment, Fashion, Food, Gender, 
Geography, Healthcare, Labour, Media, 
Nationalism, Natural Disasters, Occupation, Race, 
Religion, Reservation, Science & Technology, 
Sports, Touchability, Untouchability, Violence, 
Xenophobia.

The entry form is available on our website 
<http://www.abillioneyes.in/>www.abillioneyes.in 

Key Dates:
Last date for entries: 15 July 2007.
Festival dates: 15 to 20 August 2007.

Selected list of films and detailed programme 
list will be circulated by 25 July.
Preferred entry format: DVDs/ VCDs
For further details contact 
<mailto:abillioneyes at gmail.com>abillioneyes at gmail.com 
or 
<mailto:anand.navayana at gmail.com>anand.navayana at gmail.com


o o o

(ii)

Dear All,

We at Dhanak are working towards building a 
culture of peace and harmony to counter the 
culture of fear and violence in the name of 
religion and caste.

Dhanak is organizing its first monthly Vigil on 
the 23rd June 2007 to reach out to the masses and 
to showcase the strength of people who believe 
Dhanak’s ideology of coexistence, universal peace 
& harmony. Such vigils will be organized on the 
3rd Saturday of each month. The dates for the 
vigil are 23rd June, 21st July, 18th August, 15th 
September, and 20th October. November is proposed 
for a National Level Solidarity Meet.

The duration of each vigil will be of 1 hour 
only. Plays/theatre, songs, paintings, photo 
exhibition, poem recitation, discussions, 
distribution of hand bills etc. will be part of 
the vigils. Media will be informed through press 
releases and personal contacts. 

Details about the 1st Vigil:

Venue               :     Indraprastha or Millennium Park.
                     (Adjacent to Sarai Kale Khan Bus Terminal, on outer ring
                     road)
Date               :     23rd June’ 2007
Time               :     7 to 8 p.m.
Assembly point     :     In front of Gate No. – 3
Please follow the following route:

While coming from Ashram or Maharani Bagh: Sarai 
Kale Khan bus terminal will come on your left 
side. The park starts immediately after the bus 
terminal on the same side.

If you are coming from ITO or Pragati Maidan: The 
park will come on your right side. Take a 'U' 
turn from Sarai Kale Khan Bus terminal to find 
the park entrance.

Note: There are 3 entrance gates to the park 
opening to the ring road. The gates are in series 
starting from gate no. 1. Gate no.3 is the last 
gate. Parking is available at all 3 gates.

We invite you to join the vigil with your friends or acquaintances.

With best wishes,
Asif  (09868563055)

_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South
Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
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