August 23, 2010

CULTURES IN PROXIMITY: NEPALESE ‘JANAI PURNIMA’ AND MALAYALEES ‘ONAM’

[They also observe the occasion as "Kwati Purnima". Kwati, a soup prepared from nine different beans, is a special delicacy added to the Nepali menu today. In Tamil Nadu, the state government declared local holiday in Chennai, Coimbatore and Kanyakumari districts. ’Onasadya’ (a sumptuous feast) was another highlight of the day as people assembled for their lunch in their homes after invoking the blessings of King Mahabali.]


KATHMANDU, Aug 24: The "Tagadhari" or those who wear the "Janai" (sacred thread) on their bodies change the sacred thread on Tuesday after having a haircut and a bath on the occasion of "Janai Purnima," also known as "Rishi Tarpani".

This festival observed by the Hindus, especially of the Shaiva sect, on the full moon day of August is also popularly known as "Gunhu Punhi" in the Newar community. 

 According to time-honoured tradition, the people receive the ´Rakshya Bandhan´ thread, which is tied around the wrist as an amulet. The yellow thread is purified through the chanting of mantras by Brahmins as a symbol of protection from fear and disease. They also observe the occasion as "Kwati Purnima".

Kwati, a soup prepared from nine different beans, is a special delicacy added to the Nepali menu today.

The "Kulabarna Tantra" Tantrik text says that the soup is highly nutritious and keeps diseases at bay.

In the Terai region, there is a tradition in which sisters tie an attractive "Rakhi" around the wrists of their brothers wishing them long life and prosperity.

Today, thousands of devotees worship lord Shiva at Pashupatinath in Kathmandu and at Kumbheswor in Lalitpur and take holy dips in ponds and lakes.

Religious fairs are held at Gosaikund, an alpine area in Rasuwa District, and at Dansanghu, Triveni in Jumla District to observe the festival with offerings of worship to Lord Shiva.

A big religious fair takes place at the Gosaikund Lake and pilgrims come from far away places to take a holy dip in this lake and other lakes nearby.

By Sathyalaya Ramakrishnan


'Pookolam', a decoration with colourful flower petals, 
outside their residence on the occasion of Onam festival in Chennai.

Malayalees living in Tamil Nadu and all over the world on Monday celebrated "ONAM" festival commemorating the egalitarian utopia under the reign of mythical King Kahabali during which people lived in plenty, prosperity and equality.

People cutting across Class and caste, decorated their homes with floral carpets (Aththa Poo Kolam) to welcome the annual re-visit of Mahabali.

The legend has it that ‘Asura’ king Mahabali was banished to the netherworld by Lord Vishnu, who took the incarnation of Vamana (the dwarf), under pressure from ’Devas’, who were jealous of the King’s popularity.

Before his departure, the King secured an assurance from Lord Vishnu that he would be allowed to visit his subjects on ‘Thiruvonam’ day of Malayalam calendar every year.

The festivities scaled to its crescendo in the last couple of days with towns and villages thronged by men, women and children going out for their festive shopping. Most items associated with Onam celebrations including flowers are brought from neighboring States as Kerala’s domestic production is not enough to meet the festive demand.

Bringing relief of the common-man, the State agencies organised hundreds of special fares across Kerala where essentials and vegetables were sold at subsidized rates.

Cultural events, showcasing the best of Kerala’s performing arts, were organised here as well as other cities and towns for a week.

The Kerala state officially honored renowned actor Kamal Hasan, who was the chief guest at the Onam-Tourism Week celebrations in Trivandrum on Sunday night. The actor launched a massive eye-donation campaign in the State.

In rural areas, local youth clubs organized art and sports competitions to revive folk arts and rural sporting traditions, many of which are on the verge of extinction.

’Onasadya’ (a sumptuous feast) was another highlight of the day as people assembled for their lunch in their homes after invoking the blessings of King Mahabali.

Tamil Nadu Governer Surjit Singh Barnala, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi main opposition leader and former Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa, Kerala Governor R.S. Gavai, Chief Minister V.S. Achtuthanandan and leaders of all political parties greeted Malayalees at home as well as abroad.

In Tamil Nadu, the state government declared local holiday in Chennai, Coimbatore and Kanyakumari districts.

UNABLE TO PAY DISCHARGE BILL MOTHER DENIED HER NEWBORN AT A BAPTIST HOSPITAL

[The hospital refused to hand over the girl to her parents despite being informed of the family’s poor financial condition. But he was told that the hospital cannot run if patients stop paying. A kind nurse informed the Pawan couple that the girl would be fed milk, after which the couple returned to Nepal. ]
            
By Upendra Lamichhane
Shobhadevi Paswan
BIRGUNJ, Aug 24: At Duncan Hospital in Raxaul, India, a newborn, who has been denied her mother’s breast milk, has been wailing for 37 days. Her parents returned to Nepal after being unable to pay delivery expenses. The girl was born on July 15 at the mission hospital, where the walls are full of Jesus Christ´s quotes.

Forty kilometers away, at Charaiya village of Uchidi-3, Bara district, the newborn’s mother Shobhadevi Paswan lies in the corner of her house, wondering at the cruelty of life. 

 The thatched roof of the house that has just one room is fighting a losing battle against rain. Inside, Shobhadevi lets the milk overflowing from her breasts go in waste. For her inability to manage the sum needed to free her daughter, she is scared to visit the hospital.

On July 11, the Narayani Sub-Regional Hospital in Birgunj expressed its inability to handle Shobhadevi´s case. She went to Duncan Hospital where she gave birth to the child after four days.

“A Cesarean section had to be conducted, which was costly,” said Kamal, Shobhadevi´s husband, adding, “We couldn’t bring the child home because we couldn’t bear the surgery cost.”

According to Kamal, the hospital refused to hand over the girl to her parents despite being informed of the family’s poor financial condition. But he was told that the hospital cannot run if patients stop paying.

A kind nurse informed the Pawan couple that the girl would be fed milk, after which the couple returned to Nepal.

“We cannot manage two meals a day,” said Kamal. “I don’t know how long it could take to arrange the money and bring the daughter back.”

The estrangement has left Shobhadevi inconsolable. According to her neighbors, she wails at times. 
Shobhadevi breast-fed her daughter for just two days.

Duncan Hospital, India
“I know when she grows hungry,” she said, lamenting her inability to even go and see the newborn. “We don’t have money. I am scared to visit the hospital,” she said. 

For a living, the Paswan household depends on earning made from tilling other´s land. Whatever they had saved was insufficient for the surgery, according to Nandalal, a neighbor, who estimated the total cost of the surgery to be between Rs 50,000 to Rs 60,000. 

According to Kamal, donation from villagers and loan taken from a neighbor was not enough to pay the medical bill.

The hospital has refused to comment on the matter. A nurse who had agreed to allow Republica to look at the newborn was eventually stopped by a gynecologist. “We will allow only the girl’s parents to look at her,” the gynecologist said. “We won’t say anything more.”

End Note: The Duncan Hospital is one of the  projects  of  Emmanuel Hiospital Association in New Delhi, India. In its website it says, "EHA 80% self-supporting of its budget of just over two million pounds Sterling, with not less than 10% being given as charity to the poor and in a number of places a much higher percentage. Currently 20% of the budget is met from international sources for community health and development, replacement of worn out equipment, the launch of new and innovative programmes and associated research. Growth by replication will require the investment in a new generation of leaders and the forging of new an innovative partnerships within India and internationally. EHA’s greatest resource is its dedicated 1500 staff of whom about 156 are doctors."

IT IS PARADOXICAL FOR UNITED STATES TO SERMONIZE ON HUMAN RIGHTS

[Intriguingly, what it implies is that human rights laws are applicable in Swat and Balochistan only and not in FATA (Federally Administered Tribal Areas)  . Human rights laws are also not applicable in India-held Kashmir against Kashmiris where unarmed protestors including teenage boys are being gunned down almost daily since June, and atrocities against Indian Muslims, Sikhs, Dalits and Christians in India is a routine affair. Likewise, Israel has also been absolved of human rights abuses despite its policy of repression against Palestinians and keeping Gaza under economic blockade since 1987. Recent monstrous raid by Israeli storm troopers on peace flotilla near Gazan coast has also not been censured by USA.]
By Asif Haroon Raja
The US has earned the dubious reputation of pursuing double standards and making unsubstantiated allegations against a country which it wants to browbeat. These unholy tactics are applicable to friends and foes alike except for Israel, India and western world. Ironic part of the story is that it doesn’t feel an iota of embarrassment in leveling accusations on aspects which are applicable to the US, Israel and India the most.
Pakistan’s brilliant success in Malakand and Swat operations in May-June 2009 was applauded by all and sundry including USA, but in actuality the outcome was not to the liking of Indo-US-Israeli nexus. The trio had expected the Army getting irretrievably bogged down since huge supplies had been provided to Maulvi Fazlullah led militants to make Swat fortress impregnable. Not only Pakistan Army overturned series of strongholds in record time of one month, it also laid bare huge stocks of weapons provided by foreign powers. Caught with pants down, the strategic partners took cover behind its tool of propaganda from September onwards so as to put Pakistan on the defensive and to spoil the image of Pak Army that had soared.
The US had the audacity of leveling a charge of extra judicial killings in Swat on Pakistan. Several US officials expressed their deep concern. They based their observations on New York based Human Rights Watch, which claimed it had mounting evidence of over 200 summary executions in Swat Valley. Its spokesman Malinowski said that pace of extra judicial killings in Pakistan was not slowing down. He added that the Army was targeting civilians voicing support for Taliban or providing food and shelter. He made a reference to US law which bans assistance to units involved in this practice.
The matter had been aired in September 2009 soon after the successful Rah-e-Rast operation in Malakand Division and Swat and further drummed by US spokeswomen Asma Jahangir, a known critic of Army, establishment and Islamists and supporter of American and Indian policies. ICFI report of 16 September about mass graves in Swat, Times magazine report of one Akhtar Ali and a clip showing an army officer kicking a suspect in Swat aired by local and foreign media indicated a trend to undermine Army’s achievements. The motivated propaganda died down when 2.3 million displaced persons returned and cheered the Army lustily. Army’s efforts were also lauded by the Pakistani public and the world. Yapping tongues of the propagandists got silenced when the Army added another feather in its cap by overpowering the impregnable fortress of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan in South Waziristan (SW) in a month’s time. The adversaries who till then were upbraiding Pak Army and accusing it of being hand-in-glove with Taliban were compelled to change their tunes from admonishment to extolment.
When the wind that had blown against Pakistan for over eight years became relatively steady, allegation of extra judicial killing seemed strange but was not without a definite purpose. Other than the frowns of Robert Gates, Geoff Morrell said that ‘irrespective of close Pak-US partnership in combating terrorism, the US takes human rights abuses seriously’. It is well known that human right violation is one of the sticks the US has in its armory which it brandishes to make the other obey its dictates. This stick has never been used on India or Israel, the two most horrible human rights violators.
It is paradoxical that the US notorious for worst human rights violations and being the biggest violator of law today stands up as a pleader of human rights and upholder of law. Its past gory acts are too many to recount. It has turned Iraq and Afghanistan into killing grounds where over 1.6 million have been hacked to death; millions injured critically, tens of thousands rendered homeless, widowed and orphaned. Thousands have suffered gruesome tortures in US run infamous jails, which have so far not been closed despite world protest and commitment given by Obama. George W. Bush and his team of neo-cons along with Tony Blair should have been tried as war criminals for the crimes committed against humanity and that too under false pretexts.
Till November 2009, ruthless killing of militants as well as civilians was justified under the comical label of collateral damage. Deaths of civilians in each cross fire or aerial attacks were taken as a natural phenomenon in war conditions. It was only when security situation in Afghanistan spun out of control that Gen McChrystal, notorious for brutal actions in Iraq suddenly transformed himself and tried to put up a soft face by instructing his under commands to keep collateral damage to bare minimum. Despite his commands, cases of excesses kept occurring and resentment against restrictions kept mounting. McChrystal’s softness towards Afghan civilians became one of the reasons for his sacking. His successor Gen Petraeus has removed the curbs.
Pakistan Army had to all along fight war on terror imposed upon it with its one hand tied to the back because of the factor of collateral damage. In their effort to limit fatalities to the civilians, the army took huge risks by resorting to controlled and precision firing in the face of indiscriminate firing by militants camouflaged among civil population. The soldiers always remained mindful of the fact that they were up against misled brethren and use of more carrot and little stick might bring them back on the right path. This policy didn’t work because the militants were paid huge salaries and other perks by foreign conspirators while Pakistan lacked resources to develop impoverished FATA. In order to avoid losses to civilians, Malakand Division, Swat, Bajaur and SW were got vacated prior to launching operations.
People of Swat and Bajaur celebrated the ouster of militants and garlanded the soldiers as their saviors and benefactors. Never before the people of these regions had come so close to the Army. Pak Army has been sharing their rations with the affected persons, rendering medical services, distributing relief goods and its sappers reconstructing destroyed houses, mosques, small bridges and culverts etc. Affectionate response of the affected people belies false claims made by vested interests.
Pak Army is once again winning the hearts and minds of people caught up in worst ever floods by providing them all possible assistance. Under special instructions from Gen Kayani, officers and men are working round the clock to cope with the unprecedented natural calamity. Pak Army’s heavy commitment in flood duties is not at the cost of war on terror which is proceeding unhindered. It is not allowing terrorists to take advantage of floods to win the sympathies of flood affectees.
Army has launched scores of operations in seven tribal agencies of FATA (Federally Administered Tribal Areas)  since 2002 but the US never made any complaint of human rights abuses. Rather, it always expressed its displeasure and was averse to peace deals and repeatedly pressed Pakistan to do more since it was not doing enough. In other words, what it meant was to make use of stick only with full force in complete disregard to pro and anti-Pakistan militants and not to even spare the sympathizers providing food and shelter to militants. It wants complete cleansing of extremist forces in the two Waziristan and adjoining agencies and is not bothered about its catastrophic consequences on Pakistan’s social fabric.
Intriguingly, what it implies is that human rights laws are applicable in Swat and Balochistan only and not in FATA (Federally Administered Tribal Areas) . Human rights laws are also not applicable in India-held Kashmir against Kashmiris where unarmed protestors including teenage boys are being gunned down almost daily since June, and atrocities against Indian Muslims, Sikhs, Dalits and Christians in India is a routine affair. Likewise, Israel has also been absolved of human rights abuses despite its policy of repression against Palestinians and keeping Gaza under economic blockade since 1987. Recent monstrous raid by Israeli storm troopers on peace flotilla near Gazan coast has also not been censured by USA.
With this kind of track record it makes one laugh to hear US officials sermonizing about abuses in Swat and gloating over US laws and principles of counter insurgency and trying to show the right path to Pakistan.