I recently got a chance to visit Gujarat in the month of January. The atmosphere was highly charged, the Vibrant Gujarat Global Investor's summit, JITO (Jain International Trade Organisation) summit and Makar Sankranti, all coming around the same time frame.
All around, there were flyers promoting the Vibrant Gujarat summit and the JITO summit. There were several road signs put up to promote the events. The newspapers covered the summit very closely. Everyday, there were at least 4 pages endorsing the summit for its achievements. Maybe the attention was well deserved. After all, the Vibrant Gujarat summit of 2009 alone managed to sign MOUs worth a whopping Rs. 12 lakh crore. It was confusing though. The newspapers were endorsing Modi heavily on one hand, but on the other hand, they were also pointing out that only some percentage of investments pledged in the past 3 Global Investor's summits were actually realised.
However, the largest beneficiary of all this campaigning seemed not the investors, who the events were supposed to profit, nor Gujarat which may or may not actually get the investments pledged in this summit, but Narendra Modi. He was given credit for making Gujarat a huge industrial hub in India. He was highly endorsed for liberalising the state government policies to encourage huge investments in the state. It even went to the extent of him being projected as Prime Ministerial material by top honchos of the industry.
Not that I am against Modi or something. I do not consider myself suitable to comment on the 'Prime Minister' issue. I really appreciate how he has opened up the gates of his state to investments from companies. I applaud Modi for how beautiful he has made Gujarat with his Go Green plans. I was particularly awowed by the natural beauty of Gandhinagar.
I also want to make a slightly deviant point here. Amongst all this hugh and cry of the summits, somehow the ecstacy of the festival seemed lost.
Gujarat is historically known for its spirit during Makar Sankranti. People going crazy about Kite flying. Stalls being set up and run throughout nights selling kites and 'Maanja'. The awesome home-made chikkis and Til Laddus to be had on the terrace while flying kites. But somehow, the summit took the sheen away from the festival. The International Kite festival also managed to get only a little space in the newspapers as compared to the summit. Somehow, the energy of the festival got limited to only 2 days of January 14 and 15, as compared to a month of merriment people used to have in old days on the occasion of Sankranti.
One more incident moved me. A lady driving on her honda was killed, her neck being severed by the sharp glass powder on the kite 'Maanja'. I came to know later that she was the wife of my father's colleague. We came to know later that the couple had planned moving to the US with their family. They were spending their last few days waiting for the visa process to be completed. But fate had it otherwise.
Its a known fact in Gujarat that several people die every year because of this Maanja. These are people like us. They have family. The lady who died in the flyover incident I quoted in the last paragraph had a child. I pray to God that her soul rest in peace and may God bless her child. Has anybody thought that this time, it was this lady's turn, next time it could well be yours. Or one of your dear ones'.
It seems like these incidents have become sort of a part of the Makar Sankranti tradition. When such incidents are happening every year, and are being reported every year in the newspapers, why doesn't the government open their eyes while reading the newspaper and act upon it.
I mean, the least they could do is ban the coating of glass on kite Maanja. When they can ban late night Music on Dandiya nights, why not put a ban on this as well and see it is strictly followed.
I believe Makar Sankranti is more about the spirit of the festival than about the competitiveness of Kite flying. I do not say kite flying should be stopped. But I don't see a good deed in celebrating a happy occassion with some murders on the books. People may muse that they want to be the best at kite flying by beating their competitors in kite battle. But at what cost. There are people dying here. Leave alone the birds who die or are severely injured by this.
Even if the government considers this too trivial an issue to raise any restrictive action, or if the government actually decides to do something about it and takes a few years to come up with a solution, given how fast and agile our government is, I believe we citizens can at least act a bit responsible and compromise on the sharpness of our 'maanjas' to save a few lives. Maybe, you can be a little less spiritual, go only twice a week to a temple instead of thrice, but if you save a life by this simple deed of exercising a bit of self restraint, maybe you will earn more good in the eyes of the Almighty or for that matter your own.
What say?