Monday, September 12, 2011

Festivals, Occasions and Celebrations

Festivals are occasions of social importance and interaction where people meet/greet each other and enjoy themselves. Its a celebration of some aspect of life. In earlier days it used to be linked to harvesting, agriculture, seasons etc., while these days it is that, plus a lot more. The olden festivals like diwali, holi etc. have rituals that we follow, like pujas, putting colors etc. Festivals like these had a lot to do with the farmers crop getting harvested and hence him/her being happy for the produce or for the onset of the season that was a big relief.

However, on each such occasion or festival I find myself awfully out of place. I know its a festival and for some reason I am supposed to be excited about it but truly speaking, on most such days, I feel no different from the day before or the day after. I now think its not because I am a social anomaly but that the whole social context has changed since these festivals were invented. For a farmer it made sense to be happy after a good harvest. In today's context probably we should have festivals revolving around world cup wins or the announcement and disbursement of bonuses. The idea being that there has to be a trigger for a festival, other than the occurrence of a day according to the calendar. Also, prevalence of A/C should eventually make climate linked festivals obsolete. Of course, in both these contexts, I find celebrating a new year hard to justify.

Anyway, once we settle the question of what we celebrate comes the idea of how we celebrate. Now this is the aspect where I think that there's so little creativity. Since the last so many years whenever I am happy about something, all I can think of is going to a good restaurant and having good food. Also, to me the overused (and according to me utterly mundane) way of celebrating by consuming alcohol does not really appeal. Nonetheless, I think that there are very few ways to celebrate anything.

In my experience it is difficult to find a person with whom you can share your sorrows without being pitied or made fun of. However, I think a person would have to be equally lucky to have someone with whom a moment of happiness can be shared without arousing the feeling of jealousy. I think that, ironically, it is the moments of happiness, the moments of celebration where one often finds himself at a loss on how and with whom to express his happiness. Maybe it is time we invent a totally new way of celebrating. Or maybe, given the right set of people, it would not even matter on how a festival/occasion has to be celebrated.

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

Heroes

2nd April 2011. That's the day when the gross total happiness in this world would have been at its highest. That's when India won the world cup. I have never seen so many people so happy together. To put it in Ravi Shastri's words, the streets were jam packed and the atmosphere electric. There was a wave of nationalism and the usual chants of "Bharat Mata ki Jai". Of course, being in Hyderabad, I was witness to a couple of bizarre slogans of "Jai Telengana" and "Jai Shri Ram"!

5th April 2011. Anna Hazare went on fast unto death to force the government to commit to civil (non-political) representation in committee drafting the Anti-Corruption bill, a committee which has fair representation for some of the most corrupt politicians of the nation. For once, there is a sense of unity amongst the people on a cause (Of course, Arundhati Roy and her band of social reformers are missing from the scene. And why shouldn't they be, Anna Hazare is not out on an armed rampage to prove his point). In recent times, this kind of unity is surpassed only by the one I described in the above paragraph.

Now, when the country hails our cricket team as heroes, I see them as nothing more than creations of the media/advertisers to encash the elated feelings of the people when the people project the team's success as their own. While on the other hand, today, Anna Hazare to me is the personification of the pain that most people feel and want to act against but just don't know how. More importantly, his actions give us hope that there might yet be things that can be done to prevent the moral fabric of our society from completely disintegrating. I pray, more than I did for the Indian team to win the world cup, that Anna Hazare is successful in his cause. Our cause. Because, for me, he is a real hero. A hero by choice, not by chance.