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It is the norm to file stories about political rallies at Sikh religious centres which attract thousands of devotees at one or the other kind of festival. Having done that during the Hola Mohalla of 2005, I somehow felt that the reader should get something more to soak in the atmosphere. The colour and the smells which the throngs celebrating Hola Mohalla soak in don’t figure in stories about the petty politics on religious occasions.  I wrote this piece to make up for the missing colours and smells, in whatever little way it  was possible to do so.

 
 
     

 

 

 

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"Newspapers always excite curiosity. No one ever lays one down without a feeling of disappointment."
Charles Lamb, 1833


"Frankly, despite my horror of the press, I’d love to rise from the grave every ten years or so and go buy a few newspapers."
Luis Buñuel,
Spanish filmmaker



"I often wonder what future historians will say about us. One sentence will suffice to describe modern man: he fornicated and he read newspapers."
Albert Camus,
French novelist, dramatist, philosopher, 1956

Khalsa Fervour Cauldron Simmers
With Faith, Puritanism And
Syncretism Traditions

S P Singh

Anandpur Sahib:

War cries of Bole So Nihal, balladeers singing hymns to martial streak of Sikhs, huge hoardings of slain militant leaders lining the roads, erstwhile Khalistanis displaying posters thanking Canada for acquitting Kanishka bombing accused and amid all of this Nihangs tending to huge cauldrons of 'Sukha', the bhang variant prepared at the centre of a city where intoxicants are officially banned and no Ponty can do anything about it.

Welcome to Hola Mohalla fervour of Anandpur Sahib, get drenched into a devout's version of Holi. It's absolutely holy. Religiosity throbbing in a vibrant democracy where amid the hustle and bustle of thousands of devotees praying at Khalsa's birthplace, near sedition and mainstream politics are vying for political turf.

Notwithstanding the political polemic, God and business were the only two things competing for centre stage. Hundreds of stalls lined the routes that devotees took to climb the steep gradient of this top temporal seat of Sikhs. Far away from the Akali Dal's rally, Gurcharan Singh Tohra, who many had predicted to become an iconic figure after his death, had just about made it to calendars being sold for Rs 10 apiece. The stall wasn't doing great business.

Puritanism was the flavour in certain nooks of this huge mela. "RSS is real enemy of Sikhs" and "Ban migrants from purchasing land" were slogans in currency in a different nook. People, however, walked past the stalls to see Guru Nanak's and Bhindranwale's posters being sold alongside not just the 'I-Love-You' variety but also of a number of Hindu gods. If you forgot it was Good Friday, that cross being sold by the Nihang reminded you.

No, he didn't even know he was displaying a tradition of syncretism vis-a-vis some filtered Puritanism. Poor guy was even selling a tortoise in a jar.

People walked miles to reach Anandpur Sahib, they hitch-hiked their way atop tractor trolleys. Over three hundred years ago too, people must have walked miles to see the Guru who made sure his devotees could stand their ground and put up a fight for their cause. Now, the top Akali leader lands in a Mitsubishi, the Congress Chief Minister in a cavalcade complete with a bomb-jammer. Neither is seen having langar. But in spite of these politicians, the holy cows of our democracy, the festival remains holy. It has to. After all, it’s Khalsa's. Waheguru Ji Ka Khalsa's.

March 25, 2005

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Match Points?

At a memorable point during the 2002 US Open, Chelsea Clinton was embraced by her companion Ian Klaus. People magazine soon found itself in hot water for publishing a photograph which captured the "exciting" encounter.

The Clintons found the photo in very poor taste - as did many People staffers. "Why don't we just run a photograph," one staffer said, "of his hands down her pants?"

Editors defended the publication, pointing out that the photo had been taken in a public setting. (Chelsea and Klaus were embarrassed again in October after a fire alarm sounded at Ian's
Oxford dorm in the middle of the night - and Chelsea was spotted standing outside the building wearing his pajamas.)

(Source: People magazine; San Francisco Examiner, 10/30/2002)

 

Horace Greeley: Toilet Paper

While traveling by train in New York one day, Tribune founder Horace Greeley happened to notice a fellow passenger reading the Sun. Greeley, curious about the appeal of the rival paper, casually asked the man why he didn't read the Tribune.

"It's a much more informative paper than the Sun," Greeley said. "I take the Tribune too," the man replied. "I use it to wipe my a-- with." "Keep it up," Greeley declared, "and eventually you'll have more brains in your a-- than you have in your head."

(Source: G. Fowler, Timber Line)

 
 
 

 

 

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People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news. But, if words were invented to conceal thought, newspapers are a great improvement of a bad invention.  Click on any below to find out:


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