A FLITH TOUCH OF MY SHADOW


ABHIRUP PAL:Can you remember Chuni Kotal?No,She is not a character of novel,infact she is a common student of Westbengal of the last decade of twentieth century. And can you imagine, she wanted to change her fate like Ekalabya,What a innocent fool!But how can she dare to deflect the norms and the sequence of the society?After all she is a routed line!She wanted to became a hostile factor,she forgot that she was a woman and not registered in gentle civil society and deprived from the right to allege.So she had to suffer. She had to take up suicide for his deed.After all it is India,hum?

An another name, Puspa Bhakta,a headmistress of a primary school,can anyone mind that name?She was a shoot of vilify infront of her student.Her only failing was that she was from Lodha tribe.

Mit chakva, a examinee of class 12,a victim of public belial from Gujrat.Why did he came to give exam inspite of doing physical labour? So he had to endure a lam from public whose only sympathetic onlooker was a tree where he was trussed to coup.His only fault was that he was from lower class ‘Hindu’.

Literature and Mythology also says a lot that they can only be used,but when it comes the question of admiration…….hahahhha…Consider ‘Ganadevata’,’Panchagram’,or ‘Chandimandap’, you can find untouchable Patu bayen’s caretaker can get access into the higher society for taking care of child. You can descry highclassed Khatriya Bhim can marry Hirimba to get security or Arjun can marry uncomely Chitranganda or Ulupi for political favour.But Ghatotkoch, Iraban or Bavrubahan can’t get social okeh from the higher class,from own religion.

Now think a bit,when you say an other caste or religion is torturing our community isn’t it a hipocracy?Where Class and community division is retained to protect a special power for so called gentle society there this cant of religious and sectarian discord in modern politics,do you think is a overplay?I think it is not.Where education thuds for the last breathe for most of the people,there it is common. Because moral laws are there to break it…isn’t it?


Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started