Sunday, February 3, 2013





The Spiraling Descent of Truth




As a student of Communication studies, I have always been interested in digging a little deeper into the various mysteries that shroud the discipline. Today, I was engrossed in reading about one of the communication theories called Spiral of Silence, proposed by German political scientist Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann in 1974.  Quite forgetting the fact that I was supposed to be studying this theory from the standpoint of my upcoming exams, fascination got the better of me and I lost myself in the depths of this theory.

Neumann essentially says that this theory is an attempt to explain how public opinion is formed. According to this theory, people tend to become withdrawn and remain silent when they feel that their views are in minority.

Now, this is something which is quite simple to comprehend. Indeed, right from a first grade school-goer to office-going elders, people think twice about articulating their views in public. They fear isolation more than not getting an opportunity to voice their judgement. Man is after all a social animal and the fear of being marginalized from mainstream society is always great.

Undoubtedly, Neumann has outdone herself by proposing this theory as early as the 1970s. However, my appeal for this theory increased manifold when I was able to draw a connection to this theory and trace its roots back to our puranic times, more than 5000 years ago- an example in the Mahabharata which gives examples for this theory and also disproves it.

The example which proves the existence of the spiral of silence theory as early as 5000 years ago can be seen in the scene where the Pandavas have lost everything in the game of dice-their sovereignty, wealth, themselves, and their wife, the fire-born Draupadi, to the Kauravas. Rapacious Duryodhana brashly orders his brother Dusshasana to drag the empress of Indraprastha to the sabha.

Once Draupadi is dragged into the sabha, Duryodhana says that the Pandavas have gambled her away and lost and thus, she is the slave of the Kauravas. Subsequently, he orders Dusshasana to strip her naked in front of the most powerful Kuru veterans like  Bhishma, Drona, Kripa, Dhritarashtra and others.

The Pandavas, despite watching the humiliation that their wife undergoes, do not utter a word in protest as they feel that doing so will go against the code of Dharma as they have, after all, gambled away their wife and lost. 

However, what about all the other veterans present there? Bhishma was the pitamaha, the grand-old-sir of the Kurus. He did not voice his dissent against the sacrilege that was being committed in the sabha. Neither did Drona, the all-powerful acharya of the Kurus. According to the epic, each of them had a reason for remaining silent- Bhishma had promised Satyavati, his step-mother and father Shantanu that his loyalty would always remain with the throne of Hastinapura. Drona had regained his lost respect and had risen to great renown only under the king of Hastinapura Dhritarashtra’s patronage. Thus, voicing their opinions against what Duryodhana, Dhritarashtra’s son was doing, was out of question.

This instance can also be seen from the point of view of Neumann’s theory- Drona probably felt that when eminent Kuru elders like Bhishma, Kripaacharya, Dhritarashtra, etc did not express their outlook, if he, Drona protested against the injustice being meted out to Draupadi, he might probably be in the minority.  In fact, the only person who spoke out against Duryodhana was his brother Vikarna who said that this heinous sin on their part would bring about the ruin of the Kauravas, and Draupadi had to be accorded nothing less than the utmost respect.

Vikarna is thus, a classic exception to the rule of theory of spiral of silence while Dronacharya, Bhishma and the others are excellent examples that prove this theory.

This, more than anything else, bears ample testimony to the Sanskrit adage about the Mahabharata - “Yad iha asti tadanyatra, yenne haasti na tat quachit ” -  What is here(in the Mahabharata) is everywhere else, what is not mentioned here(in the Mahabharata) will not be found anywhere else.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013


GODdammnedMen= Godmen
God. Godmen. God.Godmen. Oh god, these darn godmen!




















Krishna, in the Mahabharata, told the Pandavas that Kali Yuga would be the era in which man, by merely chanting the name of god with staunch devotion and not undergoing severe penance (a feature of the other three yugas),could easily attain moksha or salvation- a concept in Hinduism which talks about eternal freedom from the exhausting cycle of birth and death.

Does this explain the sudden influx of Babas and Swamijis in the nation? Does this perhaps explain the rise of self-proclaimed god-men like Nithyananda, Ramdev, and the now notoriously-renowned Asaram Bapu?

To the point of sounding extremely cynical yet realistic, this is the world as we know it- supposedly advanced in thought and outlook, but full of nut-case politicians for whom mere wealth is synonymous with power,deranged rapists, and now, added to this elite group are god-men. Oh joy. 

What is it with society, well, with the world, today? Intellectuals all over are preaching about how thinking and planning ahead can put India on the map of developed nations; how one has to think big in order to achieve anything. Countries world-over are talking about adopting traditional Indian concepts like thayir sadam to cool the body, curry leaves for jet black hair, yoga for a perfect body, so on and so forth. Yet, men in India seem to fall back on the age-old obsolete convention of treating women like rag-dolls  5000 odd years ago, we had Duryodhana and Dusshasana almost stripping their sister-in-law Draupadi naked in a sabha full of Kuru veterans. Before that, we had Ravana pulling Sita by her hair and taking her captive to Lanka. Now, we have a group of men who think that their masculinity stems from their ability to gang-rape a woman mercilessly, and god-men who flippantly and irrationally comment on how women in such position should seek mercy from their ruthless captors, in order to save themselves from the dishonour of rape. 

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I had come across a bizarre but extremely accurate definition of the term rape a few weeks ago on the internet- this is how it goes:
Rape: The only crime where the victim becomes the accused.’

The more I read the definition and went over it in my head, the more convinced I was of how cynical it was ,but also how very true it was. In my previous post, I'd expressed the murderous feeling I had harboured towards men, more-so after reading about the demons who had gang-raped a girl in Delhi. However, after writing about it, I had started to simmer down. Now, I've barely gotten over how much frustration I feel towards men and society in general, and Asaram Bapu has done it again! 

The self-proclaimed god-man, the charlatan I truly believe Asaram Bapu is, imparted what he mulishly presumed was gyaan- if ever a woman is about to be raped, refer to the potential rapist as bhaiya- brother. According to a report on CNN-IBN, the so-called spiritual leader advised women on the verge of being raped to say- "Bhaiya! Main abla hoon, tum mere bhai ho. Dharam ke bhai ho. Bhagwan ke naam lekar haath pakadti, pair pakadti."   

Yes, 5000 years ago, while Duryodhana and Dusshasana tried to strip Draupadi naked in spite of her begging them to show mercy, in spite of her being their sister-in-law, today, women merely have to refer to strange men who are trying to rape them as bhaiya and they are saved.

So, all you women out there, or abla naaris, as Asaram Bapu thinks you are, it's simple ,according to him- if ever you are in danger of being raped, forget about pepper-spray, forget about chilly-powder. Whip out the trusted rakhi from your handbags and refer to the monster as bhaiya. Then, the concept of rape will cease to exist in India. Poverty cannot be eradicated, nor can India become a developed nation by 2020. But, use a rakhi on your potential rapist , and the concept of rape will undoubtedly be wiped out from India, nay, from the world itself.   

In conclusion: God-men, men, BAH.