Are Indians Boorish?

Nov 12, 2010 


Despite those titles, power and pelp,
The wretch, centred all in all in self,
Living shall forfeit fair reknown,
And, doubly dying, shall go down
To the vile dust from where he sprung,
Unwept, unhonoured and unsung.

 - Sir Walter Scott, Scottish novelist (1771-1832).
 

Echoing Scott is George Eliot (Real name: Mary Ann Evans Cross), English author (1819-1880): “He was like a cock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow”.
 
Take, for instance, Suresh Kalmadi, the chief architect of Commonwealth Games scam, confusing Duchess of Cornwall, Camilla Parker Bowles, second wife of Prince Charles, who had come to inaugurate the Games, for the divorced wife of the Prince, Princess Diana. Again, Kalmadi addressed, at the Games inauguration, addressed the former President of India as Abdul Kalam Azad. It reflects uncouthness of a person addressing 60,000 spectators and world press and electronic media. He was not addressing a street corner political rabble and he had the option to read from a prepared script.


Ego-bloated Minister

Take, another instance, the front-page lead report in The New Indian Express (17-8-10) titled “Bachche Gowda, gunman assault motorist for overtaking his car”. Who is this Gowda? Express gives an answer in its lead line: “He was not even aware that I am a Minister, how can he overtake my car, fumes Minister after joining his aides in hitting, abusing businessman near Nelamangala on Sunday (Independence Day!); case also booked against victim.”
 
The incident occurred when Gowda was returning from Hassan on Sunday. Near Nelamangala, Bharath, overtook the Minister’s car. Offended by this, Gowda’s driver intercepted the car. When Bharath stopped, the driver and gunman left Bharath’s nose bloodied. The Minister too came out of the car and assaulted and abused Bharath even as his children, wife and father-in-law pleaded for forgiveness. The Minister lodged a complaint with the police who booked a case of negligent driving. Express quoted the police saying Bharath was innocent and the case was filed following the Minister’s insistence. (The only saving factor in this episode is that the Chief Minister apologized for the Minister’s uncouth conduct). Gowda complained that Bharath spoke to him in the singular, hurting his ego. He and his ilk need a lesson from William Hazlitt, English writer (1778-1830): “A gentleman is one who understands and shows every mark of deference to the claims of self-love in others, and expects it in return”.
 
The Minister’s action is typical of many of his ilk whose vehicles rush off at breakneck speed, with pilot cars blaring, and sometimes hitting other vehicles and pedestrians. But, such arrogance is not the monopoly of netas in power. Writing in India Today (16-8-10) on The Uncivil Indian, Ravi Shankar notes that “Courtesy is necessary for an evolved society but India is missing the point in its haste for progress”. He cites the case of an urban bully intimidating a traffic cop by asking (a la Gowda), “Do you know who I am?”; five young, drunk citizens abusing reporters and the police after crashing their car, narrowly missing four labourers. “In the increasingly uncouth world, the Indian stands out as an uncivil being…The offence of communities make up the rap sheet of history. The graffiti that deface monuments is the calligraphy of our times, the screams of lovers being tortured with heated iron rods is the soundtrack of a diseased society”.
 

Public Vandalism

A Kannada epigram says: “Horage Thota Singara, Volage Goli Soppu”. (Decorated external façade, indoor shamble) But Shankar has a different take. Most Indians lead an existence of comfortable speciousness. Come morning, they sweep and scrub their floors clean enough to reflect their pious soul; they then proceed to throw their garbage into the streets outside. We plaster road signs and milestones with posters and political pamphlets showing young, rosy-cheeked politicians smiling like deceptive cherubs of democracy.

Politics is traditionally the science of confrontation and subterfuge but our lawmakers smash benches and heads in legislatures. Perhaps only in India exist walls bearing ‘stick no bills’ notices, walls which passerby treat like a dog a lamppost. Spitting is a national pastime, and the surfaces of most buildings are stained paan-red with the residue of masticatory pleasure. Indians defecate on roadsides and along railway lines. The citizen who prides himself as global Indian may be adept at beheading artichokes, but his pastoral cousins back home use axes to decapitate those the khaps disapprove of. These may be extreme examples of inhuman behaviour, but everywhere in India incivility is on rampart display – jostling crowds cause stampedes, murderous driving sprees and road rage result in fatalities. Dowry deaths are unique to Indian society, with brides murdered for things as banal as a steel almirah or a scooter.
 
Shankar concludes that we, as trustees of today’s India, need to begin a national conversation on how important it is not to park in a slot meant for the handicapped as much as it is to stay the murdering hands of a caste-blinded khap. Isn’t it our daily experience to see that seats reserved for women, handicapped and senior citizens in buses are occupied by young people and the conductor studiedly pretends to be occupied or looks the other way? There are no such reservations for ladies with infants in arms or women in advanced stages of pregnancy. Yet, they are allowed to hang on the bus strap, while the driver drives jerkily or breaks suddenly endangering the infant or foetus. Can we call ourselves civil or simply uncouth?
 
The tragedy is the uncouthness of Indians descends from the top.

“Poverty wants much; but avarice, everything.” – Publicius Syrus, Syrian mimographer  (Circa BC  42).
 

Parliamentary Rowdyism

On August 20, 2010, even after the proposed three-fold increase in the pay of MPs, from Rs. 16,000 to Rs, 50,000 per month, members, asking for Rs. 80,001, to beat the salary of Rs. 80,000 paid to Secretaries, got the Lok Sabha adjourned and conducted a mock parliament, designating themselves as Prime Minister, Speakers, etc. This sort of rowdy behaviour is the daily bread of parliamentary conduct at the Central and State levels. In Karnataka the legislative assembly was converted into a choultry (inn) for protesting MLAs to sleep and board. All this gets wide coverage in the print and electronic media and our growing children have perverse role models to imitate.
 
What does this translate in terms of world image of India and Indians. A website sponsored by Air India and Ministry of Tourism had issued advisories for Commonwealth Games visitors, the most important of which was one about public toilets. “In India, public toilet facilities are few and far between and outside of hotels and restaurants can be of dubious cleanliness. We recommend taking every opportunity you can to use the clean toilet in hotels and restaurants and that you carry tissue/wet wipes with you.”
 
An Indian multinational I worked for was getting hordes of high profile business visitors to cut deals. The company took care of them from the time they landed to the time they enplaned on the return flight. But, the landing airport was invariably Bangalore. They didn’t want to take the risk of landing at Santacruz in Mumbai or Thambaram in Chennai and driving to the city exposing them to the sight of hundreds of exposed bare bottoms of slum dwellers along the route to the city. In all probability some of the visitors would have requested the company to put them on the first return flight. Once adjusted to the Indian environment via the Bangalore gateway and happy with the company’s hospitality, the other destinations were a cake-walk.
 

Beyond Redemption?

So, is uncouthness inborn in Indians and are we beyond redemption? This brings me to the tale of three toilets at Gateway of India in Mumbai. Hordes of people, specially north Indians who never get to see the sea, descend on Gateway every single day. They cannot control their bowels and bladders for long and mess up the sea walls and plaza. The Taj Mahal Hotel, which has a ground-level 24-hour coffee shop called Shamiana under its tower block, could not stand the sight and smell. It built a toilet block that happily merged with the surroundings – without shouting out its presence. Another one was taken up for construction on the plaza touching the harbour wall. People calling themselves environmentalists and heritage guardians went to the high court and got an injunction to stop work. It took five years to vacate the stay and now we have a functioning toilet block mimicking the Gateway structure. A third one, on the Gateway south promenade, next to the Radio Club pier, while under construction, was stayed by a local star hotel through the court, and subsequently razed down.  
 

Bowels and Bladders

In the early 1960s, famous nudes artist Ara and his artist friends, who used to hang around Jehangir Art Gallery in the Museum compound, couldn’t stand the sight and smell of the mess made by visiting tourists along the Museum boundary wall. They went and painted the wall with Hindu gods and goddesses, Christian crosses and Muslim crescents. But, all the gods could not control bloated bladders and bowels. Since then a toilet block has been constructed on the pavement.
 
Thus, there is need to look at things pragmatically and provide requisite infrastructure to take care of cleanliness and hygiene. This applies to garbage collection as well. We, in Mangalore, for in instance, have concrete ring bins. They receive less garbage than what is spilt around them. Do we see letters and parcels spilt around post office letter boxes? Has anybody tried to design a garbage bin on the lines of a letter box? Or, take currency notes. They are full of writings and their life is shortened at considerable expense of replacing with new ones. Do we write on our passports, ration cards or bank pass-books? If it is decreed that bank notes with writings on them will be invalid, would we dare disfigure them? The answer is simple, Mr. Watson. Create a setting to promote and sustain civility and reduce or eliminate uncouth behaviour. Chew on this!

John B Monteiro, author and journalist, is editor of his bebsite www.welcometoreason.com (Interactive Cerebral Challenger).
 

 

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By John B Monteiro
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Comment on this article

  • Arjun, India

    Thu, Nov 18 2010

    John, you have addressed an issue that can be corrected only by each individual. Even a person who has experienced water scarcity and drought will indulge in wasting water. Abusing the system without any regard to fellow beings and environment is the root cause. We mourn when tragedies occur and then forget it without addressing fix for the root cause. Diseases such as malaria, chikin-guniya etc has become a nightmare. It doesn't mean we cannot do anything, every person can do his effort to get things corrected- "together we can".

  • Joel, Mangalore/Bangalore

    Tue, Nov 16 2010

    We don't have to go very far... Just read some of the comments written to some of the news in daijiworld, you will come to know the mentality of so called educated people, people want a reason to blame each other, you don't care wether it is right or wrong

  • Girish Kumar, Mangalore

    Sat, Nov 13 2010

    In a democracy, people get the government they deserve. It is pointless blaming politicians or civil servants for their incompetence because it is us who elected them. As long as we tolerate incompetence, corruption.... our country will not improve. The difference between developed and under developed nations is that, in develpoed nations, citizens hold their elected leaders accounatble. Sadly, this is not the case in 3rd world countries.

  • UDAY, MANGALORE/ABU DHABI

    Sat, Nov 13 2010

    Dear Sir,
    We Indians lack civility. Saying Thank you, Sorry or opening the door for a lady/elderly person is something we Indians shy away from. I am in the construction industry and the way our Indian workers behave is really shameful. Eating paan and spitting inspite of the ban, littering in places maintained clean are the order of the day in some areas. Lazing around and picking up fights comes easily. Yes, it is true that our neighbours also behave in similar fashion but when people leave their country some sort of respect and understanding for others is expected. The biggest problem is we will not watch and learn. "Hum Nahi Sudrenge" is our motto and "Sab Chalta Hai with Jugad" is what will take us down.

  • Pradeep, Mangalore

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    The are 4 kinds of people in India
    1) Educated and Civilized
    2) Educated and Uncivilized
    3) Uneducated and Civilized
    4) Uneducated and Uncivilized

    Type 2 is the most dangerous of the lot and our society is creating more and more of these. We are nation of filled who crib a lot but do nothing worthwhile to create civilized citizens. Teachers and Parents who have the primary responsibility of creating civilized youth are not doing their jobs but are quick enough jump on the debate of Indian boorishness

  • RAHUL, MANGALORE

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    INDIANS HEROTIC COMES TO LIHT WHEN THEY ARE IN THOUSANDS & OPPOSITION IS FEW OTHERWISE WE ARE GOOD FOR NOTHING. TAKE THE INSTANCE RIOT CASES, COMMUNAL DISHARMONY-IN ALL THIS INSTANCES WE CAN FIND OUT OUR STREANGTH.BUT WHEN LADY IS ASSULTED, RAPED OR THROWN ACID IN BUS OR RAILWYS NOBODY SHOWS HEROITICS TO SAVE THAT WOMEN.

  • dr.indian , talapady/london

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    Excellent article . I do think always how is the change for better going to come in India and when?Then tryin to be optimistic I tell myself may be it will take time.But all that fades away when I visit India and see things getting worse in every aspects of life.Politicians are busy tryin to save their seat ,so where is the time to concentrate on development.By corruption they lost 1.73 lakh Crores telecom deal which probably would have been enough to eradicate poverty out of India!!We can blame the British rule and now Pakistan for problems but without all this I dont think we would have been any better.I think the British were able to rule us because of our infighting and our nature of killing each other which we still do.
    We can on paper call ourself a Super-power and satisfy out indian ego but i dont think it will take us anywhere as we know people are suffering and dying on a daily basis from poverty, accidents, oppression and what not. Countless lives are lost everyday from avoidable circumstances.Again i thought with the well educated new generation corruption would reduce but seems like its part of our genetic make up and not going to die down easily.
    Everyone seems to be religious and proud of it and what not but the mainstay of all religions 'TRUTH and HUMANITY' doesnt seems to exist! wonder when a true revolution for change in India is going to come to make it Peaceful,truthful and Everyone human is equal regardless of money ,power ,religion etc.

  • adshenoy, mangloor

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    Are we saying the oldest civilisation is uncivilised?

  • alwyn, neermarga, mangalore

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    i really like statement of Rani, Udupi/UK, i am working in dubai last 10 years i never seen this type of dirty. for india simple it will take 20 years to get clean city and clean govt. because within 20 years all 3rd class politician will expire and new and young politician can do somthing for india. when am going every year my one month vacation i am spending less time in my family and spending more time in cleaning city visiting jail, hospital, i want to request karnataka govt. kindly give me any govt. job i want to do some good work for our karnataka poeople. i will show u how to keep city clean.

  • Eric Coelho, Mangalore

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    We are undoubtedly living in a country of Greed, Cruelty, Selfish, arrogance, Evil and Ego. The Poor steal to survive, the Rich also steals to protect their ego, arrogance and also for survival, the Leaders or Politicians also steal to protect their arrogance, ego and survival and the common man also steals to make a decent living. In simple words Let us all cheat the mother nature and let us not change. If I have done wrong there is someone else to say if he has done wrong what is wrong in me doing it. To cover one's sin let us also point out other person's sin. They say never call a human being a dog because it is like insulting a dog. A female dog will not give away her puppy on her own unless we steal it but we human's will kill a child whether a boy or girl especially to girl child it happens. Let us accept in reality the world is filled with evil, arrogance, ego, selfish, greed and all the negative words.

  • Rani, Udupi/UK

    Fri, Nov 12 2010

    A thought provoking article....On a daily basis I think of more or less similar issues and wonder why Indians cant behave more civilized, be clean and watch their public behaviour. Is this because we have taken the word democracy for granted? OR are we ignorant? The condition is so bad in India that I remember walking for a long distance looking for a bin and eventually when I found a bin, it was disgusting to go near it. Why cant we have proper system of bins that can be removed than concrete ones and why do we not have a system of emptying them regularly. If this can happen abroad, having all the resources, why India is not able to achieve a simple thing such as 'Garbage Disposal'?
    Regarding vandalism, I think one of the reasons is the lack of awareness among people and being easily influenciable. Tax payers dont realise that its their money they are burning when they set fire to a bus, train or any public property. OR is it that the one engage in vandalism have never paid his tax!!! TO ACQUIRE CHANGE IN BEHAVIOUR WE NEED TO EDUCATE EVERYONE. I am not talking about basic education but to empower every citizen and lead from example. BUT WHO IS GOING TO DO THIS???

  • A.S.Mathew, U.S.A.

    Thu, Nov 11 2010

    Even for very silly issues, and for one Re or less amount, a good number of people will start a fight
    without realizing the consequences.

    Road rage, street fights, beating the helpless are quite common every day, because many may not
    have any fear of law or lack of respect for others.

    When I watched the street boys kicking an helpless old begger in Bombay years back, it broke my
    heart, but I was helpless to defend the begger, but nobody showed any interest to defend the
    suffering begger. 

    The author has addressed a national problem of rage and lawlessness.


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