Friday, October 30, 2009

Diwali Homework- TOK Essay on any movie of my Choice

Diwali Homework- TOK Essay on any movie of my Choice,
Movie Chosen by me: Chak de India (Hindi Bollywood Film)

One of the reasons for India’s slow development is the people’s way of thinking. Most Indian’s label themselves as patriots and thus think from the heart rather than the mind; i.e. become victims of emotion and shun reason, which results in the concoction of unreasonable judgements. Thus starts the film of Chak de India. Kabir Khan (played by Shahrukh Khan) is the captain of the Indian men’s national field hockey team and the team is playing in the Wold Cup Finals at the common Wealth Games. India is playing against Pakistan and the scores are India nil and Pakistan one. Kabir Khan in the last few minutes of the game gets a penalty shootout, but misses the goal by a few inches. The Indian team is shocked at their loss and the all the Indian hockey fans are filled with wrought. Soon after, the media begins to circulate a photograph of Khan accepting a handshake from the head of the Pakistani team, assuming that Khan, who is a Muslim, might be a traitor ad has allowed Pakistan to win on purpose. The religious prejudice shown towards Khan by the entire society at large, forces him and his mother out of their ancestral home and into exile. Seven years later, Khan wants to coach the Indian woman's field hockey team, a job no one else wants (as, an official indicates, the only long term role for women is to "cook and clean"). He trains the girls of the team. At first there are many differenses and disputes amongst the team members but they overcome their differences throughout the many matches and eventually learn to act as a single unit. This move leads them to victory and the restoration of Khan’s good name. In doing so, they not only destroy the prejudices which once separated them, but prove to their families and country the worth of women. At the end, Kabir Khan returns with his mother to their ancestral home, welcomed by those who had shunned them years before.
The film Chak de India explores the religious intolerance that prevails in India, despite being known as a cosmopolitan country. It also shows the perception of the male chauvinists who cause the differences between men and women, by exploring sexism in modern India through hockey. In the film, as the society is filled with anger and cannot overcome their strong emotion they rationalise. As India loses against the Pakistani hockey team because of Khan their powerful emotion is anger (primary emotion). Anger leads to a biased perception; the society overlooks all his years of serving the team as a captain. They forget that it is because of Khan’s good captainship India is in the finals. They only notice his one loss, which they do not realise can happen to anybody due to the state of nervousness. Such biased perception leads to fallacious reasoning and they make a hasty generalisation that as Kabir Khan is a Muslim, he is a traitor and has lost the match on purpose in order to allow Pakistan to win. This fallacy leads to emotive language and thus the society throws him and his mother out of their home and into exile.
Chak de India portrays the clash between reason and emotion throughout the film. There is a scene in the film where Kabir Khan the couch resigns the girl’s hockey team in anger, as they revolt against all his rules. However, as a sign of good will he treats them for lunch at McDonalds. During lunch, the anger in Khan and the team members subsides but when some local boys make a pass at Mary and Molly two team members, Balbir another team member loses control and attacks them violently. This leads to a fight between the boys and the entire team. One by one all the girls beat the boys brutally till their anger and frustration has been drained out. Emotion clouds their minds to such an extent that the hockey players have no control over their actions/body language and express themselves through an irrational behavior.
Is it ethical to differentiate between a man and a woman? Is it ethical to say that women are inferior to men? Chak de India shows how women are looked down upon in society. There is a scene in which the Indian women’s hockey team is banned from playing in the world cup; the reason given is, ‘because they are women.’ In this case, emotion again gets the upper hand of the women, and results in them proving to the society that women are no less than men, by playing a heated match against the Indian men’s hockey team and despite losing this match, their superb performance on the field forces the officials to change their mind and send the team to The World Championship. In this case it is evident that emotion if used in a positive way, in this case: as team spirit, then it does have good effects. In the film there are certain instances which portray how perception can damage the minds reasoning. Certain officials in the film are trapped in the’ prison of consistency’. They have taken a stand that the girls hockey team is hopeless compared to the boy’s hockey team and thus even though after seeing the spectacular performance of the girls, these officials do not compliment the girls, in fact they still say that the boys won the match and thus they should go to the World Championship. It is difficult to change their mind without losing face.
A mind clouded by emotion or perception has a great impact on reason and language. However, without perception, thinking will not take place and thus reasoning will not come into the picture. Thus perception is important. Similarly emotion is important as without it creative thinking and reasoning will not be possible. Without emotions life will be monotonous. Emotions serve as a part of the bases for language. Gestures and expressions are done to express emotions and thus convey the message. Without emotions, these expressions and gestures are redundant, and vice versa. Thus it will be preferable, to reason out a problem without jumping to conclusions however, emotions should not be shunned as they too play an important role in one’s life.

K@W - Diwali Holiday- "Jinnah. He had a pistol. He used it."

Jinnah. He had a pistol. He used it.
Tarun Vijay
Wednesday August 19, 2009

"I am not prepared to discuss ethics. We have a pistol and are in a position to use it." So said Mohammad Ali Jinnah while delivering his presidential speech at the Muslim League convention on July 19, 1946. What followed was an unimaginable massacre of Hindus in Kolkata on August 16, 1946. Six thousand killed, twenty thousand raped and maimed. Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee, the then leader of Hindu Mahasabha had said, "Jinnah is out to destroy the very soul of India." If one single instance should be cited to understand what Jinnah really was, it would not be his speech in the Constituent Assembly, Karachi, often quoted by Indian Hindus, but his call for "Direct Action".
That was August 16, 1946, known as the day of "great Calcutta killings". After the "Direct Action" resolution was passed by the Muslim League on July 19, 1946, its president, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, said in his valedictory speech: "What we have done today is the most historic act in our history. Never have we in the whole history of the League done anything except by the constitutional methods and by constitutionalism. But now we are obliged and forced into this position. This day we bid goodbye to constitutional methods…. Now the time has come for the Muslim Nation to resort to direct action. I am not prepared to discuss ethics. We have a pistol and are in a position to use it." Syama Prasad Mookerjee, the then leader of the Hindu Mahasabha, who had said, "Jinnah is out to destroy the very soul of India", organized Hindus fearlessly and foiled Jinnah’s plan to oust Hindus from Kolkata. He formed a volunteer group of the Hindus named the Hindusthan National Guards, resisted horrendous goondaism of the League and moved in the riot-affected areas giving courage to the victims of a planned slaughter and orgy of violence by the League’s marauders. Syama Prasad Mookerjee was traveling all over India awakening the masses to rise against the partition plot. On October 8, 1944, at a United Provinces Hindu Conference, he said, "The sooner Mr Jinnah understands that Pakistan in any form or shape will be resisted by Hindus and many others with the last drop of blood, the better for him, for he will then quietly descend on realities and himself plead for a just and equitable settlement. None but an agent of imperialism will so block the path of Indian unity and freedom as Mr Jinnah is doing." Dr Mookerjee, who is respected as the ideological icon and source of inspiration by the Bharatiya Janata Party, was a devotee of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother. In fact, he had been in close contact with Sri Aurobindo, who had said, "The idea of two nationalities in India is only a new-fangled notion invented by Jinnah for his purposes and contrary to the facts. More than 90% of the Indian Mussalmans are descendants of converted Hindus and belong as much to the Indian nation as the Hindus themselves. This process of conversion has continued all along; Jinnah is himself a descendant of a Hindu,converted in fairly recent times,named Jinabhai and many of the most famous Mahommedan leaders have a similar origin."(SABCL, vol.26, page 46).
It was Dr Mookerjee who stood firm and tried to organize a people's movement against partition. He said: “Hindus regard this country as their sacred and holy land. Irrespective of provincial barriers or the diversity in faiths and languages there exists a remarkable economic and cultural unity and inter-dependence which cannot be destroyed at the will of persons and parties who think it beneath their dignity to regard India as their motherland. We must live and die for India and her liberty.” (24th December 1944). He disagreed with Gandhi placating the Muslim demands and said,"As soon as the other communities realize that the Hindus of India are united and have pledged themselves to stand together for the attainment of their ideal and have adopted a policy of understanding and tolerance to all classes of people residing in India, other communities whose support we are seeking in vain today will then join us voluntarily and on terms honourable to all.”(“Awake Hindusthan”, Page 12). He further said: “Our experiences in recent years have proved that much as we would be willing to surrender the rights and interests of the Hindus for the purpose of placating other communities, much as we would like to pursue the policy of delivering “blank cheques” the response from the other side is slow and halting, if not sometimes hostile in character.("Awake Hindusthan", Page 13) In this context, I would like to add that however different Jinnah might have been , we just can't belittle Nehru before Jinnah. Nehru belonged to us; he fought for India’s freedom, spent years in jail and had an Indian dream. We may have a thousand differences with him on policies and programmes, but so what? That would be our "domestic matter". Jinnah led our motherland’s vivisection and he never fought for the freedom struggle.
MJ Akbar has written these lines describing his persona,"Muhammad Ali Jinnah, aristocrat by temperament, catholic in taste, sectarian in politics, and the father of Pakistan, was the unlikeliest parent that an Islamic republic could possibly have. He was the most British of the generation of Indians that won freedom in August 1947. As a child in the elite Christian Mission High School in Karachi, he changed his birthday from 20 October to Christmas Day. As a student at Lincoln's Inn, he anglicised his name from Jinnahbhai to Jinnah. For three years, between 1930 and 1933, he went into voluntary exile in Hampstead, acquired a British passport, set up residence with his sister Fatimah and daughter Dina, hired a British chauffeur (Bradley) for his Bentley, kept two dogs (a black Dobermann and a white West Highland terrier), indulged himself at the theatre (he had once wanted to be a professional actor so that he could play Hamlet) and appeared before the Privy Council to maintain himself in the style to which he was accustomed. He wore Savile Row suits, heavily starched shirts and two-tone leather or suede shoes……Despite being the Quaid-e-Azam, or the Great Leader of Muslims, he drank a moderate amount of alcohol and was embarrassingly unfamiliar with Islamic methods of prayer. He was uncomfortable in any language but English, and made his demand for Pakistan — in 1940 at Lahore — in English, despite catcalls from an audience that wanted to hear Urdu.” That was a bit of Syama Prasad and the related reflections that may prove worthwhile in the present political debate enveloping the nationalist school of politics. At the end of it, what the Gita has said and the RSS teaches us must make the final lines to this blogpost:
It’s better to die unwavering even in tatters than to change track midway and die stinking rich.
That’s Dharma.
Krishna said: "Swadharme nidhano shreyo (to live and die in ones’ own path alone is the life worthwhile and adopting the ‘other’ dharma is horrible)". For small desires we lose a lifetime’s achievements and glory. History was never made essentially by those who became state heads, but often by those who didn’t. Or by those who gave up everything for others’ good, honestly. Syama Prasad and Deen Dayal Upadhyaya are two major icons of faith for the Hindu nationalist parivar. Both created history and died in their early fifties. Both were mysteriously ‘murdered’. Their lives must light the path of those who care to follow swadharma. That’s BJP’s legacy too. As it is of other ideologically committed organisations of the saffron hue. Lincoln didn’t shy away from the civil war and stood like a rock on the question of American spirit and unity. So was Syama Prasad. He died but didn’t bend.

K@W :

The article given is biased editorial as its main focus is how Muhammad Ali Jinnah caused tremendous amounts of bloodshed in India and created Pakistan which caused a division between the Hindus and the Muslims. The article does not answer or even question ‘why Jinnah took such brutal measures?’ It is indeed true that Jinnah’s methods of creating Pakistan resulted in the killing of many Indians, which is gruesome, and to some extent he himself was blinded by his gaining of power and position that he could not see what destruction he was leading. Nevertheless, there are reasons, religious, sentimental and maybe mandatory, which Jinnah perceived to be important and thus created Pakistan. However, his blind folded mind was so corrupt with the dreams of power and a complete Muslim oriented country that he did not work with logic or even reason out the future consequences both India and Pakistan would have to face. It can be argued whether Jinnah worked with reason or was driven by emotion. Indian journalists generally perceive that Jinnah worked with emotion, but majority of the Pakistani journalists will say that Jinnah worked with reason and his methods were correctly used and justified. However, not many people question the cause that made Jinnah create the division, put aside the method being driven by reason or emotion.
“I am not prepared to discuss ethics. We have a pistol and are in a position to use it.” This statement made by Jinnah is quite unethical, however like Subash Chandra Bose’s slogan “Give me blood and I will give you freedom”, the statement can be a slogan, or a speech to invoke courage in the Pakistani’s. If Bose’s statement was respected by many, why is Jinnah’s statement not given the same respect? The language used by Jinnah is no novelty, as majority of the freedom fighters and people in power would speak that way to the masses to instil courage and confidence in people. The article clearly states that following the event in which Jinnah spoke the above words, “an unimaginable massacre of Hindus in Kolkata” took place. Massacre of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs was not new in that period. It was the time of Partition in India and people had long before encountered several massacres. The journalist of the article, Tarun Vijay, has framed his words in such a manner that the reader feels that Jinnah’s talk was the cause of the Hindu massacre in Kolkata. It may be true, but if false then the journalist is biased in his opinion. “Jinnah is out to destroy the very soul of India.” This statement made by Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee, the then leader of the Hindu Mahasabha is also very unethical and impolite; however Dr. Mookerjee was only voicing his own opinion and Jinnah’s methods drove him to say such a thing, he must have been overcome with emotion. Thus, here is an example which shows that if the mind is clouded with emotion rather than reason, then an individual does not have control over what he/she says (language).
There are several possibilities that led Jinnah to create the division of India and Pakistan. One of the main reasons was, to create a separate state for Muslims as per the Lahore Resolution. India is said to be a country that welcomes all religions and communities and everybody will live like brothers and sisters in the country. However, the name of India itself suggests that it is biased to one community. In Hindi India is called Hindusthan. The word means the place of the Hindus. Sthan means place. Indeed, other communities will feel insecure, especially the Muslims as they are always termed as intruders in the country. In history textbooks it is said that Hindus would label the Muslims as intruders in India and would call them the descendants of the Mughals in order to instigate them. Even the Congress had a majority of Hindus than Muslims. Maulana Abdul Kalaam Aazaad and Frontier Gandhi (Khan Abdul Gaffhar Khan) were the only Muslims who stood loyal to the Congress. Most of the Muslim members left the Congress due to its Hindu majority and felt that the Hindus were dominating it and were not allowing the Muslim members to have a say in any conversation. This angered Jinnah and gave him a reason to add to the countless reasons he had to create Pakistan. In addition, it is believed that he wanted the power. Also, the British played an important role, they wanted the Muslims to unite with them and be against the Hindus in order to get an upper hand, as they could see that Hindu-Muslim unity would prove to be a disaster for them. So, Jinnah is not the only one to be blamed, however he is the main cause and the man who initiated the idea, there are other factor and parties (the British and the Congress), which should also be taken into consideration before solely accusing Jinnah. [1]
In the article there is a mention about Jinnah’s talking in English rather than Urdu and about his English ways rather than Indian/Pakistani conducts. There is also a mention by MJ Akbar of Jinnah being “embarrassingly unfamiliar with Islamic methods of prayer”. Being the current President of India, does Ms. Prathiba Patil know each and every South Indian language? Being a Hindu does Ms. Patil know the holy Vedas, Puranaas and Upanishads by heart? Has Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh ever visited each and every temple in Punjab and Haryana? If no, then why question Jinnah’s inability of speaking Urdu fluently? Why question his unfamiliarity with the Islamic methods of prayer? However, it is a shame that, he was fighting for the establishment of an Islamic state and being a Muslim he did not know the Islamic prayers. But this is not our concern, if the Indian President and Prime Minister do not know all the Indian languages and customs of all religions originating from India, then we are no one to question Jinnah’s conducts and ways. In this case MJ Akbar has worked with emotion and has written something very redundant, only to affront Jinnah.
The author of the article is quoting Lord Krishna from the Bhagwat Gita (the holy book of the Hindus) and is talking about dharma, which means duty. However, he is forgetting or has overlooked one of the main principles stated by Lord Krishna in the Gita; Krishna has said that it is one’s dharma (duty) to respect one’s enemy. Jinnah by separating India and Pakistan has indeed become an enemy for most Indians, nevertheless the author has written disrespectful statements about him, and by doing so has not followed duty.


[1] Modern Indian History Contemporary World and Civics ICSE Class X
Avichal Publishing Company