Sunday, October 12, 2014

Opinion: The king is no more; long live the Dasara

The town of Mysore never disappoints the travelers. It has enough interesting places to keep the tourists occupied for days. Closer proximity to many other places of interest bring many dedicated tourists to the town again and again, year after year.

The cultural capital of Karnataka celebrated its 404th Dasara festival last week. It was first celebrated in the year of 1610 by Raja Wodeyar I, and its splendor has never diminished since then. But what was different this year was the absence of Royal Darbar of the Wodeyar scion, following the demise of Srikantadatta Wodeyar. The point of discussion now is whether the Mysore Kings were the prime reason behind the famous Dasara festivity which Mysore observes or were they the enablers of it while the festival was truly hailed by its citizens?

The Mysore kings were next to God for their citizens. The goddess Chamundeshwari was family deity of Wodeyar dynasty. While they worshiped her, they promoted Dasara as ‘Naada Habba’ (State festival). It was the kings who organized the festivities and gave it prominence as the grandest festival observed in the kingdom. A look into the history suggests ‘Dasara’ was a grand festival well before the time of Mysore kings and the Wodeyar dynasty made it grander.

The Mysore kings were not independent rulers in the beginning but viceroy to the Vijayanagara kings. And Dasara was the grand festival observed in the Vijayanagara kingdom until the fall of its empire in 1565. The beginning of Dasara celebrations in Mysore by Wodeyar’s in the early 16th century was a reintroduction of the festival in an effort to rekindle the lost glory and might have been a way to win the hearts of commoners and gain wider acceptance in establishing their kingdom. Also the Mysore kings put their heart and passion into it and Dasara turned grander ever year passed under their rule.

Left: Goddess Durga slaying Mahishasura; Middle: Dasara procession during Mysore kings rule; Right: Modern procession

Though the effort of Mysore kings behind Dasara can never be undermined, the Navaratri festival is about worshiping the goddess Durga or Chamundeshwari. The goddess is worshiped since the time unknown and the legend has it that goddess Chamnudeshwari slayed a demon ‘Mahishasura’ whose name the modern name of the town is derived from. Another legend has it that the Banni tree (where the Dasara procession ends) was used by the Pandavas during their ‘Ajnatavasa’. Long before the Mysore region had its own ruler, goddess Chamndeshwari and Banni tree were worshiped. The kings, when in place, promoting the festival by worshiping the goddess Chamundeshwari and leading the Dasara procession that ends at Banni tree helped the popularity of the festival to reach its zenith.


After India gained its independence, the kingdoms fell apart. But the royal family of Mysore had a role to play in the Dasara festival while the State government was responsible for organizing the festival. This year Wodeyar dynasty lost its prince and no other family member is officially recognized as the head of the family yet. And the festival of Dasara could not wait for it. The king is no more, long live the Dasara.


Saturday, October 11, 2014

Opinion: New role models in the neighborhood

Nobel peace prize has given a common platform for both Indians and Pakistanis to be proud of. Two individuals who risked their lives for the rights of children are honored with this award. Indeed this is a noble deed. Noble hearts are awarded with Nobel Prize. At the right time, it puts emphasis on why the neighbors should stop the war at the borders and the war of words over media and change their focus to internal problems.

Left: Kailash Satyarthi braved bullets to save kids; Right: Malala was shot in the head and suffers permanent injuries
If a considerable chunk of children miss going to school and end up as child labors, what kind of skills do they acquire and how do you expect them to earn a good income when they grow up to be adults? While India is advancing, many are left behind, so the average income of an Indian is low compared to its neighbors in the Asian continent like Singapore or Taiwan. No wonder why ‘Services’ is the biggest component of GDP growth in India unlike in China or South Korea where manufacturing takes the lead. Countries with higher average incomes have skilled people at work who command higher wages. These skills take years of training to acquire. The ecosystem has to encourage the promotion of skilled labor force. Putting a stop to exploiting the children is the first hurdle to overcome.

Malala said “This award is for all the voiceless children”. Political leaders of Pakistan may ignore but the children of Pakistan are sure to take a note of this. It is the children and the young who will be the next generation will decide what is good for them in the decades to come. They may not have the right to education now but no one can steal their right to choose a role model. Malala is an inspiration to many already and she has certainly kicked off the change which Pakistan needs to embrace and only that storm has to get bigger.

If Nobel Prize is a barometer, look at the below list and see how India and Pakistan fare. US top the list in all categories except Literature. UK and Germany follow, thanks to the institutions they built and their citizen’s commitment to the development of science. Three of the awards India has won were during pre-independence, starting with Tagore for literature. So the independent India has won a Nobel Prize once in fifteen years on an average. Should we be content with this?

List complied from Wikipedia data
It is high time India and Pakistan moved beyond their addiction to religion, cricket and movies. And it is time we improved our scorecard at Olympics too. For this, we need to do our bit by not employing child labor on any occasion, help them to get to school and encourage them to take up science and sports.

Friday, October 10, 2014

Opinion: When oil loses, India wins

Crude oil prices have softened from a high of $125/barrel to $90/barrel and India is looking at a cut in Diesel prices after a gap of five years. This possibility was discussed in an earlier post on this blog. (Link: http://booksmarketsandplaces.blogspot.in/2013/11/diesel-prices-and-inflation-correlation.html)

Source: http://www.investing.com/commodities/brent-oil
While crude in a bear market is good news for India, it is likely find support around $80-85 per barrel. And a bounce from those levels may not be sustainable for following reasons.

Consumer turning into a producer: The biggest oil guzzler (USA) is focusing on domestic production and reducing its dependency on imported oil. A Bloomberg report says the oil production in the US has surpassed that of Saudi Arabia this year (Link: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-07-04/u-s-seen-as-biggest-oil-producer-after-overtaking-saudi.html)

Source: DOE
Overcapacity: As US reduced its import of oil and the rest of the world’s increase in oil demand does not offset this shortfall, oil producing countries are left with surplus production capacity. They cannot command the prices like before and the competition among oil producing countries led to sharp correction of prices over the last few weeks.

Reducing influence of geopolitics: With the changed scenario of the oil capacity glut, geopolitics has lost its edge on oil pricing. Most of the oil producing countries in the Middle-east, Africa and South America earn their major income by selling oil. While they were happy earning a living selling the precious natural resource – oil, the balance in the market slowly shifted from a seller's market towards the buyer. If those countries don’t sell the oil, they will go hungry. So war or no war, care is taken not to disturb the oil supply chain. As oil exploration is spreading to previously unexplored areas, it is becoming certain that oil sources are not limited to few regions on this globe, it is found at the bottom the oceans, below the glaciers, and new methods are being developed and deployed to extract the trapped oil. New oil routes are being set-up to take them to consumers. So using geopolitics as a tool to take oil prices to a new high will become a thing of the past. And a thing to forget in the days to come.

Benefits to India: 

The lower crude will help India to lower its import bills, so it reduces the trade deficit. Since the subsidy costs on diesel reduce or disappear, there is no need to finance it for the Govt. so the fiscal deficit will reduce. Narrowing deficits help Rupee to appreciate. Lower diesel prices help reduce the cost of transportation and will bring a small relief in inflation. When oil loses, India surely wins.

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Book Review: Imaginary Homelands by Salman Rushdie

This is a non-fiction work by Salman Rushdie. It is a collection of around 70 essays published during 1981-1991 in various periodicals put together in the form of a book. Most of them are critics on many subjects ranging from the subject of the books and their authors, movies, political leaders and situations, racism in Europe and so on.

The first essay “Imaginary Homelands” deals with the dilemma faced by those writers who left their homelands (emigrated from their home country) like Rushdie himself and cannot reclaim precisely what is lost but instead take the route of creating fictions of imaginary homelands. This theme and the related topic of emigrant writers in English not being considered on par with the native writers are present in many of the essays and critics of this book.


In one of the essays, Rushdie writes about Kipling that “There will always be plenty in Kipling that I will find difficult to forgive; but there is also enough truth in his stories to ignore”. I suppose the readers of Rushdie would form a similar opinion about him. Either you will love him or hate him but cannot ignore.

Though in most essays Rushdie appears to be complaining, taking digs at fellow writers, not praising anyone without ifs and buts, there are few exceptions too. In “The painter and the pest”, author points out how an Indian discovered a western painter and struggled to promote his work and helped him gain recognition and global acceptance. That is a delightful read, if the reader happens to be an Indian.

Regarding India, its religious integration, politics and the future, the author is deeply opinionated. But we can see that India did not run into troubles the author expected and wrote about two decades ago. It is jot just Rushdie who got it wrong. Many authors and political leaders in the 1980's believed India will disintegrate given the the outburst of communal violence. But I believe India has emerged out stronger and current generation does not see the issue in the same lens of their predecessors. 

This is a must read for those who like Salman Rushdie though the many of the essays on politics have lost relevance in current times (These essays were written 20 years ago). Writer’s intelligence, research skills are striking and admirable provided one can tolerate sarcasm and arrogance along with it.

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Book Review: No One Writes to the Colonel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez




The colonel and his ailing wife are living in poverty and monotony after their only son is killed in a political repression. The Colonel has no income; his house is mortgaged and he is counting the last pennies left which need to be spent for the daily expenses. For the last fifteen years he has been waiting for the pension cheque, but the postmaster always has one thing to say “No one writes to the Colonel”. But the Colonel, the hardened optimist he is, does not want to give up; he changes his lawyer in anticipation of things getting better. But yet he does not get his long due pension, the postmaster says the only thing certain to come is death. The colonel makes a failed attempt to sell the rooster which his son had trained for cockfight. The colonel has two other things to sell, a clock not in working condition and a picture which have no buyers. The Colonel still hopes either the rooster will win the cockfight and fetch him good money or he receives his pension payment. His wife says neither the hope nor dignity can be eaten so she asks the way to keep them alive. It does not seem to affect optimism of the Colonel.

This is a quick read (69 pages long). It is one of the earlier works (published in 1961) of the celebrated author Gabriel Garcia Marquez.