Walking the Tightrope
By Kamal
Sunavala
I left Prague
in November 2006 to embark upon yet another
grand adventure called India. I decided to inspect, for
myself, the madness I call 'life-changing decisions' and
see if it is worth the energy. Having been in Bombay for
over three months now, those who knew I'd been living in
Prague predicted I'd beat a hasty retreat to the land of
spires. Those who know me said I would battle it out for
at least six months. My Czech friends moaned that they
had lost me forever to the feminine wiles of an insatiable
mistress called India. Among all these various predictions,
the question asked unrelentingly, has been: So, how hard
has the adjustment been? Mind you, I was born in Bombay
and am no stranger to the city. But still, it's a fair
question.
Europe to Asia is a big adjustment,
never mind the time difference and the years in between.
It's a provocative question because the interviewer is
usually expecting to hear some meaty detail about how terrible
things are and how wonderful the colours are and how pungent
the food is and how beautiful and orderly Prague is.....and
you get the gist. What they don't like hearing is: I don't
know; I haven't made up my mind. The truth, ladies and
gentlemen, is often less scintillating because it ends
speculation. As journalists, we thrive on rumours and cross-fire.
When the simple unvarnished truth is presented, it's a
boring story that is 'wrapped up' to move on to the next
scandal.
I have plenty of food for thought,
though. Bombay and Prague, as they stand in 2007, are as
different as two children from the same mother but different
fathers. The first thing that comes to mind is the role
of the younger population. While sheer numbers cannot be
compared, the angst and the thrill of aspiration are common.
The new wave of fighters who know more, study more, want
more, build more and struggle more is a common factor binding
the under-fifty population in both cities. Whether the
end justifies the means, is a question best left for the
more sanctimonious. Fighting the old order of corrupt politicians
who resist change is a story that I have reported in both
countries. The ever increasing influence of the media,
sometimes telling the truth and sometimes contorting it,
is a dangerous Golem in both countries. In fact, there
is no greater advertiser of both countries, for better
or for worse, than its upcoming young media barons.
Power or the quest for it, breeds
corruption at the highest and most unimaginable levels.
Having spent the better half of 2006 reporting stories
of vile and avaricious power brokers- who step on weaker
toes to get what they want, at the cost of anything and
anyone- I am acquainted with the majority Czech attitude
of what-can-we-do. Cross the time zone to their brown-skinned
counterparts- politicians and constituents, alike- and
you'll find the makings of a beautiful friendship.
The Czech Republic is waking up to
two clear schools of thought, which India woke up to, a
tad earlier, on account of chronology. One is that it has
the potential to become a significant revenue generator
in a hundred ways it never deemed possible in the nineties.
Telecommunications and computers are the tip of the iceberg
for both countries. And the second school of thought is
that it is constantly bullied by its more powerful so-called
allies, into becoming a yes-man for schemes it doesn't
care about. Both countries have several political and economic
examples to back up both schools of thought. In the middle,
are caught the cautious people who are walking a tightrope
between money and morality- aptly named, the middle class.
The shattering of myths or the upholding
of them is a more colourful set of similarities. Czechs
are perceived as stoic, unsmiling boors punctuated by the
smiling, multi-lingual, yuppie corporates. Indians are
perceived as slaves to religion and blind tradition punctuated
by the liberal, norm-flouting, international celebrities.
Czechs are also known to be artistic and scientific geniuses,
Indians are also known to be artistic and scientific geniuses.
The white man versus the brown man is eternal fodder for
theorists.
How then, should I answer the question
of adjustment? A balanced answer which would bore you to
tears? Or a quotable quote which may sacrifice truth and
fairness? As I said, earlier, I don't know; I haven't made
up my mind. Ask me again in three months and I may take
sides, then.
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