Saturday, October 4, 2025

Two Ways of being THE Woman

 I would not know about you, Dear Reader, but I adore Sherlock Holmes, despite all his quiddities. One of Sherlock's oddities is that he has a very low opinion about women, especially their intelligence. Yet, remember Irene Adler of "The Scandal in Bohemia", the brilliant, beautiful Irene who outsmarts him? He never ever mocks women's lack of brains after that episode. She forever remains THE woman for him 

Remembered all this jazz as they say, 'coz our blog today, as the title would indicate,  is going to talk about two unusual women. Well, the contemporary  AI (r)evolution is literally questioning what it is to be a human being. Allow me to say that since the 1960's, there was this great researcher whose take on Darwinian notions and whose 're-search' on/of chimpanzees literally re-wrote what is to be human(e).

I am anyways a Jane-ian. Well, I love Jane Austen whose (to use a Shashi Tharoor-ism) semiquincentennial, that is to say, two hundred and fiftieth birth anniversary we are celebrating this year. Jane Goodall is another Jane I highly respect.

 For six decades, this British primatologist studied the big ape in Tanzania. She proved that chimpanzees, gorillas have a complex intelligence, deep emotions and extremely interesting social structures, all the aspects which supposedly advanced human beings boast about as their "progress", unlike 'animals' disdainfully dismissed.

Currently, it is very fashionable to be a conservationist, and to be environmentally conscientious. We have actresses bursting in to tears publically over the plight et al of the planet! Jane Goodall literally lived these concepts for more than six decades. True to her surname, she proved that ''big or small/bright or dull/ play all a role full/ in evolution's rule''.

The other woman i would like to discuss in our blog today may not have this grand a stature for sure. After all, she was just an actress from the Marathi and Hindi film industry. 

She died of old age yesterday. Yes, I am referring to Sandhya, famous for her films such as 'Amar Bhoopali', 'Pinjara', 'Zanak Zanak payal baje', 'Navrang', and many more that mirror her skill as a danseuse. The way her body gyrated in the (mostly Vasant Desai) loveliest songs in such films made one almost think that instead of bones, she had elastic that never snapped however much stretched whichever way.

The impossible dance postures she attempted were, moreover,  gracefully fluid and lyrically beautiful so much so that school gatherings to inter-college/university events, the budding dancers would continue to do a Sandhya dance year after year, decade after decade. 

In brief, I would like to assert that her stylised dances and acting added to the expressionist aspects  of V. Shantaram's filmography in unique ways. She enriched the film industry through her own special rhythm. Hence this tribute! 

Pratima@ May their souls rest in peace!


Friday, October 3, 2025

Truly Touristy

 Recently was celebrated the World Tourism Day.  Tourism is truly the trade of the twenty-first century. There are countries whose major source of income is tourism, in addition to the immigrants who make their country of adoption richer by providing better and/or more service at remarkably lower wages. 

Right now let us concentrate more on the truly touristy trade, and less on the emigrants because that discussion leads to the inevitable identity issues. These days, it is undeniable that Indians travel tremendously. They tour mostly the "phoren", though actually India itself has all possible varieties, natural wonders and national parks, religious corridors, architectural beauties. You name it, and we have it. 

In addition, the tourist who visits India is greeted with all the hullabuloo typical of the chaos every which way overflowing in abundance. The truly touristy feel is rooted in that unique 'method in madness' that terribly touristy places in india comprise.

May be, hence I feel rather strongly that certain places cannot be, and should not be touristy. The Chardham Yatra full of the majesty and grandeur of the Himalayas cannot be tourist spots of the 'done that, been there" variety.  The ever winding trek of Yamunotri cannot be a pleasure trip, for instance. Nor is Kedarnath a family trip wherein six months old babies accompany rather ambitious and absolutely fool parents! 

The very vibe at Gangotri, Yamunotri and Kedarnath cannot jell with typical touristy trends. These are not LTC driven places of fun- and reel-making.  The Kedarnath temple, who could have built it, and how? Such spiritual wonders are these places, not producers of hillocks of garbage of all types

If human vanity and foolish/foolhardy behaviour of the tourists, matched with the avaricious, greedy, rude, corrupt and unruly locals, and (mis)management do not get streamlined, tragedies much worse than the 2013 floods are imminent, and on a much, much larger scale.

Tourists, in brief, must observe the decorum and dignity of the destination, while locals, who indeed depend on tourism, should not fleece them every which way. Otherwise, the internet, its AI insistence on "ask me", its Skype types do allow you to be a couch potato who can experience online all sorts  fun in 4-D, 5-D versions!

Pratima@ Tourism should lead to elation and/or enjoyment, and not to either exploitation or excesses. An example can be the natural habitats of wild animals in India. They are not open air zoos! The forests belong to them. Discretion, in brief, is the key to tourism, too!


Thursday, October 2, 2025

Indeed a unique day!

 October 2 this year! Indeed a unique day! On this day, our nation celebrates the birth anniversary of the most unassuming but truly tall leader ever, Lal Bahadur Shastri ji; while the world over gets celebrated the birth anniversary of Gandhiji. This year, on October 2, the RSS centenary year has reached its fruition, I suppose, though the formal date the organisation was established is September 27, 1925. In addition, on October 2 this year , we celebrate Dasara as well. 

 In this short piece, let us unravel what these occasions signify in the public sphere and in the private space. Let us begin with the political, next the social, and finally the religious/civilisational categories.

In my opinion, in the public space, Shastriji, the "hail, farmers; hail, soldiers" man stands for probity and integrity. Unbelievable, but absolutely true, anecdotes about his honesty are public knowledge. 

What does he signify in the private space? In my opinion, it is his humility and gentleness. Yet he was a brave person who stood up to all sorts of mockeries and wickednesses consciously planted in his way. A true statesman, very rare amongst politicians who mostly are power magnets! 

In the public sphere, Gandhiji would symbolise non-violence and the uncanny ability to mobilise mass support through moral ideas. In the private space, it is his ability to accept his own mistakes is what I find appealing. 

He seems to treat life as work in progress. Often, after a blunder, he collects the pieces together to form a new and a better mosaic of the self. Rather, I would say, like the Japanese art of kintsugi alias kintsukuroi which consists of piecing together broken heirloom vases, urns with an inlay of gold varnish, thus creating in the process a beautiful work of art, in fact, much better than the earlier valuable pottery pieces. 

In the public arena, the RSS may signify all sorts of ideologies to all sorts of people. In fact, it may very well be said of the organisation that there are absolutely contradictory, mutually exclusive/explosive opinions about the organisation. 

In my opinion, however, at least in my private sphere, the RSS stands for dedicated, selfless work that does not crave publicity. Silently but surely, the RSS people perform wonders. Let me quote two examples. When the Malin tragedy happened, the core Sangha people were the first to arrive and the last to leave there, and ready for any, literally any, duty. So it was during the COVID era. The RSS helped curb the super spread of COVID in Dharavi, and so much that an arch critic like Barkha Dutt eulogised, highly praised their contribution. 

Worthy of emulation are the RSS processions as well.  May be, that is because the Sangh processions on the Dasara day celebrate in a disciplined organised way the core Indic values, the civilisational principles.

 In the public sector, the Dasara may mean a holiday, such processions that celebrate the culmination of the "navratra", the return of Rama to Ayodhya, the boon granted by Kubera to King Raghu and Sage Kausts, the end of Pandavas' 'vanvaas', their unjust banishment, and so on. 

What do these myths and the public burning of the Ravana mean in the private space? I suppose, it would be recognising the a-sur, the a-vidya, the a-lakshmi within. In Sanskrit, the prefix 'a-' means negation. The a-surs in my life could be people who find the speck of dust, the mote in my eye, while consciously ignoring the beam in their own or their favourites' eye(s). Dasara means 're-cognising' such people, and cutting them to Size Zero in my reality. 

The a-vidya i must get rid of can be getting upset due to such vicious people and their activities, allowing them in derailing my 'dream' journey, worrying over their conscious nastiness, et al. 

The a-lakshmi can be wasting (wo)man hours through ignoring my health, for instance. Luckily, I am not addicted to the social media. Otherwise, the social media can be the worst cause of a-lakshmi, for instance. 

Dasara, in brief, is the 'haran', the dissolution or destruction of not only ten, 'dash', but as many as is possible of the 'a-' within!

Pratima@ The public is private, and the private could cleanse the public. 

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Old is gold!

 Those were charmed days, the last three years of the twentieth century, and the first three years  of the new millenium. Along with my doctoral studies, I was a rookie journalist  with such established newspapers as 'The New Indian Express', ' The Hindu' and the 'Newstime' of the Eenadu group. And, oh, yes, I had gotten the assignments sheerly on the basis of my writerly merit, in a place where I knew none! Even when I was a freelancer, I used to write at least one article literally every day for the Features' Desk. 

As a young woman, it was quite a high that I was the go-to person when it came to many, many themes. One of my regular duties was to review films, film festivals, et al. It was thus that I saw him at a premier of one of his films, most probably, his last, under his Navketan Banners. 

At eighty plus, he was his own usual  jaunty self, dressed impeccably, on his Sunday best behaviour. After the show, he was ready for a presseur. As fresh as a daisy. The film, well, he had tried his level best, but a new, different kind of filmography for a totally different kind of audience was the demand and command of the hour. Literally, there was a cultural shift. 

He had not changed though. The debonair unflapped hero of the yesteryears. Dev Anand. Honestly, during the press meet, I felt both awe and pity for him. Awe for his genuine sincerity, and pity for his failed attempt to remain relevant in times that were absolutely different from his heydays. 

Anyways, I have always admired Dev Anand for taking up different, nay, difficult challenges, such as film noirs, right at the beginning of his career. I also like his remaining true to his promise, and giving a chance to Guru Dutt whom everyone else was in a hurry to write off. I admire his attempt to keep his personal life private as proven by his dignified silence over the Suraiya connect. 

Values of/from times absolutely bygone! Now are the times when the older you are, younger you pretend to prove yourself to be, at least half your age! Unlike such supposedly young at heart oldies, Dev Anand belongs to an era when dignity mattered. Sure he started working when my parents would have just left the portals of primary school. Yet his persona appears relevant to the thoughtful even today. 

Hence this piece on him on October 1, the day dedicated to senior citizens! 

Pratima@ In an India for a long time boasting of the so-called demographic dividend, missing is such finesse, such professionalism, such commitment to a work ethic! Long live the senior citizens! Such old is indeed gold! 

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Translation trounced!

  September 30 is the Translation Day, celebrated the world over. What can be our catchiest slogan for the day? Well, it has to be, "Translation is a trade! Translation is dead!" Quite provocative for sure is this proclamation, right? Let us open it up. 

Why say "translation is dead"? Well, the Google, amongst many other, and online, machine translators, is getting better and better, and more accurate by the day. The "vodka is there, but meat is missing" kind of joke-y translation of " the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak" is passe now. 

These days technical (that is, engineering, medicine, pharmaceutical, legal, commercial, et al) translations can easily be executed online! Why, one of my students, when asked how he manages to make do with a foreign language when he bunks so many classes under the pretext of the NCC, et al, was "cool" enough to very kindly, and rather blithely, explain to me, "Every Android has a goggle lens, Ma'am"! Others chipped in to explicate it further, "Ma'am, we divide the pages amongst ourselves"!  Digital natives, you know! 

As if that is not enough, now we have the AI! Famous Marathi authors declare proudly that the AI wrote poems on them! Quite possible, tho' I would not know! I do not use the AI, but I do know perfectly very well that with the right prompt and enough data (actually the data size is already huge beyond belief), the AI can manage anything apparently impossible! 

Why else do you think everybody is in to ppt-production on such a large scale, and for every theme/thing under the sun! In a jiffy the AI manages, it seems, any ppt that otherwise would take weeks of referencing, and actual ppt-making!

Now the other half of the slogan, translation as a trade! Everybody apparently believes that in the age of the social media, nobody reads. That, however, is not true. There is a demand, not only in the mofussil area, but even in cities, for the DIY, the LIT books.

DIY refers to 'do it yourself', while LIT does not have anything to do with literature. Rather it abbreviates 'learn it yourself'. Comfortably, two or three editions of translations of non-fiction books that talk about the psychology of money, philosophy of relationships, sociology of success, economics of cricket, et al, get sold! 

How about textbooks, is that your question? Well, in today's era of skill development, people 'management' matters, you know. And, for the rest of it, if anything is there at all, you have "Perplexity", and the other such AI types! 

Forget all this cynicism though. Actually, there is a huge need of translating sensitive, intelligent books that build bridges because there are enormous  prisons such as identity politics, ideological differences, religious/regional/linguistic/gender differences that are locking up human beings. Such 'categorical imperatives', as Immanuel Kant would name them, are both 'hedge-y' and hazy enough!

In a larger and truer sense, translation is actually a tool for 'transnation'. Indeed, if continental  countries like ours, which are multi-lingual, multi-ethnic, multi-regional, multi-religious, are to survive, translation is the need of the hour. 

In addition to translating from English and other foreign languages in to the regional language, the other way round process as well as translating from Marathi in to Hindi, and vice versa, for example, are absolute necessities. So-called intellectuals, however, are busy prioritising Urdu over Hindi, or rather rarely, vice versa, as it is not chic enough! 

Huge necessity is there of inter-semiotic translation, too, given our 'media'-ted days. Who cares for a sincere, serious approach though? So long as you publish any stuff pleasing your friends, and 'well-wishers' in the process, who cares for quality anyways!?! The Tower of Babel prevails! Amen! 

Pratima@Without any posturing any which way, there is a need for translating from Sanskrit, for instance. Who bothers though? Without any knowledge of the actual realities (why, Dr. Ambedkar indeed wanted Sanskrit to be the National Language!),  people are busy declaring it a classical, even a dead (not to forget the favourite Bramhinical blame) language! They would sing paeans to Persian or even a tone-language like Mandarin, but they must downplay Sanskrit! Hobby horses are easy to ride! 

Daughters' Day!

 September 28 is a day dedicated to daughters. Daughters sure have come a long way. Many families these days do not "mind it", in fact, many might be happy, too, to have a daughter as their only 'issue' as Indian English puts it. "Mind it", to use the Indianism again, 'issue' in this context does not mean a problem, but a child. It is well-known even in small towns that the father determines the gender of the foetus, even if not many may know exactly and/or precisely about the decisive 'Y' chromosome.  

Not only is female infanticide comparatively much less, daughters sure are enjoying a better ambience, if not exactly a level field. Daughters do have a better representation in the workforce, though not many may get a permanent job with all the perks, et al. Sure the glass ceiling does exist. Women who reach higher echelons are still mostly merely representative, and somebody's somebody! Yet there is at least unmistakable horizontal spread, even though not much vertical growth. 

Undoubtedly, tough times might have minimised. Even in city ghettoes or in rural areas, daughters are getting basic education. They are getting the benefits of many an advantageous social reforms. There have been transformative measures such the Triple Talak Act, 2019 which indeed are game-changers. Houses are now registered in women's names, daughters have a share in parents' property, for instance.

Daughters, in brief, have indeed come a long way.  Their difficulties have not decreased, though. There is rampant sexual harassment. Due to the social media, and now the AI, it is assuming weirder forms, moreover. There are dowry deaths, rapes, all the usual culprits!

Much worse is the anti-women attitude hardening  due to the Delhi fridge kind of cases (headstrong daughters as a menace), for instance.  Given the significant rise of crime against men, the Bangalore case to the blue drum case or the Meghalay honey moon case, more and more is the perception that daughters are dangerous, especially because of their meddlesome maternal families. Silly stand up jokes and stupid comedies vitiate the atmosphere further and more. 

In other words, daughters, and their lot, are no longer derailed, even if not every sphere of growth and development enjoys a supersonic speed. Well, social structures, societal attitudes do change . They have a unique pace though. When they proceed one step ahead, they regress two steps backward!

Pratima@ Sad, however, it is to witness how daughters, who now have wider horizons, are wasting it all as slaves of consumerism! Fashion, food, fads, fun, frolicking through awful reel-making, Gen Z 'attitudes' are just that, attitudinizing, all froth and no solid substance! 

Monday, September 29, 2025

Standing tall!

 Our blog dated Sept. 28 ended with my unhappiness about the post match celebrations. This morning, I read about the stand of the team. I appreciate greatly Surya Kumar Yadav, the skipper, donating his entire series fees to the welfare of the Indian army and the Pahalgam victims.

 Yes, I feel vindicated. No, this is absolutely not targetting in any way. It is standing up to bullies. It is standing by principles that are human(e) and irrevocable. It is standing ovation! It is standing tall. Truly, absolutely!

Pratima@A stand is a stand is a stand!

Two Ways of being THE Woman

 I would not know about you, Dear Reader, but I adore Sherlock Holmes, despite all his quiddities. One of Sherlock's oddities is that he...