A Delusion
That Our Lives Were Better During The Cold-War?
Saeed Naqvi
Pictures of unrelieved despair everywhere
on TV and, that too, in the course of an extended house arrest (lockdown), does
leave one, to use Faiz’s words, with “pain where the heart once was”. Heaven knows
there were problems then too, but in these days of stress, I reflect on the
period of the cold war with an almost irreparable sense of loss. The period
spanned my childhood, between my village and Lucknow, school, college,
employment at The Statesman, The Indian Express, with papers in London, Boston and
Salem, Massachusetts. All of this experience was without religion ever being an
obstacle in the three continents where I worked. During my spell at Salem, my
wife and I lived in nearby Marblehead where we were much pampered members of
the prestigious North Shore Jewish Community Centre, something unthinkable in the
post 9/11 Islamophobia.
I find it difficult to believe at this
distance in time, the warmth with which the gorgeous Bathsheba Hermon, donning a
large straw hat, Public Relations officer for the Jerusalem municipality,
received me at Ben Gurion airport. The year was 1969: an Australian lunatic had
set fire to the Al Aqsa mosque. Israel in those days was a series of
cooperatives called Kibbutz, collectively owned by the inhabitants, an almost
dreamy kind of socialism. Total partiality to the Palestinian issue on my part did
not obstruct a benign contemplation of the Kibbutz system. This response must
be attributed to two factors – attractions of soft socialism and Bathsheba
Hermon as the tour guide.
Hard to believe in the days of the
Ayatullahs that one route from Ben Gurion to New Delhi was via Teheran. North Teheran
those days was Paris to the power of infinity. The elite were totally unaware
of the diligence of the clergy in the mosques and the Tudeh (Communists) who
had latched assiduously onto the national mood after Socialist Prime Minister
Mohammad Mosaddeq’s ouster by the Anglo-American combine in 1953.
Compared to Beirut, Teheran was, well,
tinsel. European cosmopolitanism with an Arab soul best defined Beirut. Casino du
Liban and the Crazy Horse Casino (which came from Paris for seasonal spells)
and pubs, restaurants, café sparkled with conversations. I was a junior journalist,
insistent on ambitious itineraries, my ears always cocked for scraps of
conversation to be picked up, say, where Edward Said, Faiz Ahmad Faiz and Eqbal
Ahmad were in attendance. Beirut was the world’s most charming city, the only
one where sport enthusiasts could, within the space of two hours, ski and swim
in sea.
The metropolis never could rediscover
its élan after Israeli Defence Minister, Ariel Sharon’s brutal invasion of
Lebanon in 1982. Cairo’s early Arab socialism had its attractions but
intellectual life centered largely around Nasser’s moves, revealed in Hassanein
Heikal’s columns in the Al Ahram which were debated and scrutinized for the
entire week. Whatever the limitations of the system, editorials did matter because
they were the bridge between public opinion and the state. They provided
insights into what policy makers were thinking. Post-Cold War Murdochization of
the media afflicted all continents; it proceeded hand in hand with
globalization whose central grid was to be in Washington. The collapse of that
project and global Establishments obstinately stonewalling any change in
direction is at the heart of our current misery.
Even though Australian multicultural
experience could never measure upto Canada’s, the period between the cold war
and its end, was exactly when Australia was at its most relaxed, particularly
after Prime Minister Malcolm Frazer (1975-83) buried for good Australia’s “White
only” policy. Slowly multiculturalism picked up, the odd Pauline Hanson, Australia’s
Marine Le Pen, notwithstanding. I interviewed a Chinese Mayor of Sydney in the
late 80s, early 90s.
The project was hit for a six when Prime
Minister, John Howard, Britain’s Tony Blair hitched their wagons to President
George W Bush’s Islamophobia – all post cold-war, remember. For peace on earth,
it was a terrible trio.
Indian multiculturalism was weak in its
foundation from the very beginning in 1947. How could there not have been
incipient communalism when a Muslim state is created next door but the larger part
which falls to the Hindu’s lot, must, per force, be called a secular state. Initially
communalism’s was the “Hindu rate of growth”, an expression made famous by
economist K.N. Raj for describing the crawl of the Indian economy. Even so it
did impact lives. In the golden period I have described at the outset the
prejudice I faced was in finding a house until Kuldip Nayar and Bikram Singh,
intervened. That intervention is totally missing today.
Congress-BJP competition for the Hindu
vote, Prime Minister V.P. Singh stirring the caste cauldron accelerated
communalism beyond the “Hindu rate of growth”, but the neo-liberal economic
policies added fuel to the fire by creating unspeakably wide inequalities
worldwide. Popular discontent was crying for policies that would redistribute
wealth, strengthen the welfare net, provide universal health care, education, Universal
basic income. It suited establishments to duck economic demands. Instead,
popular discontent was channelized into the gutters of identity politics. In India,
identity politics translates quite simply into communalism which already had
lethal inputs from “1,200 years of foreign subjugation” (Modi’s phrase) and
caste. And yet we have the same, tired list of economists paraded on our TV
screens, sunk in the deepest layers of thought, proposing ways to “place the
economy on track” the unmistakable assumption being that the “tracks” have been
laid to perfection.
With coronavirus on a gallop, the
economy in free fall, I wonder if millions who have walked will be satisfied
with dollops of identity politics alone. Some bread may be required.
Meanwhile, all the cheerful places
mentioned in the snippets from my diary from 60s to the 90s have today been
transformed into desolations by the authors of the post Cold-War world. And,
for want of space, I have not even mentioned the wilful destruction of Tripoli,
Damascus and Baghdad.
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