कुछ फासले जरूर हैं मेरे तुम्हारे दरमियाँ
उन फासलों के बावजूद देखो अभी जिन्दा हूँ मैं
माना तुम्हारी नज़र में मैंने ही कोशिश छोड़ दी
उगता हुआ सूरज था कभी समझो के ढल चला हूँ मैं
मुझको नहीं है ये पता क्यूँ इतना चाहा था तुम्हे
तुमने कहा "खुल के बरस" मुझको लगा खुदा हूँ मैं
इस मोड़ पर अब किस तरह अलविदा कह दूं तुम्हे
ये पहला प्यार था मेरा इस राह पर नया हूँ मैं
किसी बात पर गर नाराज़ हो कदमों में मुझको पाओगी
जब जब भी नम हुई हो तुम तब तब कहीं जला हूँ मैं
सोचो तो कुछ न माँगा था, न माँगा है तुमसे आज तक
गर दे सको तो इतना ही के समझो तो कभी के क्या हूँ मैं
कोई शाम हो तो कह सकूं के याद तुम न आये थे
जाने कबसे तुम्हारी याद में तनहा अकेला चला हूँ मैं
मैं जानता हूँ अब कोई उम्मीद रखना है गलत
ये बात कुछ नयी नहीं गर्दिश में ही पला हूँ मैं
इक दर्द था दबा दबा तुमसे कभी कहा नहीं
रोहित की उस ग़ज़ल से कहीं थोड़ा सा तो जला हूँ मैं
जाने अनजाने कब कहाँ तुमको इतना अपना लिया
तुम नहीं हो अब ये सोच कर पहले से डरा डरा हूँ मैं
जुल्फों को नागन लिख दिया,आखों को जाम कह दिया
शायद तुम्हारे ही लिए शायर बना फिरा हूँ मैं
अंतिम दिन जीवन के यदि ये
पीर हृदय की रह जाए
के दौड़-धूप में बीत गए पल
प्रियतम से कुछ ना कह पाएँ
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Indian Economic Worries and Possible solutions
The relentless fall of rupee,
high inflation, loss of purchasing power of rupee, poor GDP growth, growing
unemployment and high CAD are urgent economic concerns of India today, which
many economists argue is faced by most of the developing countries today.
Several commissions and advisory committees
have recommended reducing subsidies and correcting fiscal discipline. Kelkar committee
recommended removal of subsidy on urea. Last year the government put a cap on
the number of subsidised LPG cylinders that any house hold can purchase each
year. But the National Food Security Act, 2013 goes against such
recommendations. Though seen from a different perspective, if the common man
gets subsidised food grain then inflation worries will go down.
Lowering import bill is foremost
focus of the government in order to bring down the high CAD and stop the fast
decline of FoRex. Some steps have been taken to discourage purchase of gold,
but 80% of the import bill comprises of non elastic petroleum products. Some
suggestions like purchasing more and more oil from Iran, which accepts payment in
rupee are questionable as we do not know if Iran is ready to export oil to
India. Also growing tension in Syria will make India to take a stance. If India
opposes attack on Syria, she risks her relations with US. If India backs the USA,
India might lose Iran’s helping hand. Also, the policy of staying on the fence
wont work all the time as the growing stature of India in the region comes with
certain responsibilities and roles too.
India imports coal worth $15
billion, despite the fact that she has the world’s third largest coal reserves.
If steps are taken for speedy clearance of pending mining projects then this
can be brought to zero and thereby addressing the high CAD problem
significantly.
There is an urgent need to revive
the manufacturing sector which contributes on 16% of the GDA. The Nation Manufacturing Policy seems promising but huge investments are needed in the manufacturing sector
to improve the performance in short run. India needs to address the imbalance
of trade with China too.
The RBI seems to be helpless at
this point and its the turn of the government to take radical steps to bring
about the needed changes.
The high demographic dividend can become an asset in such dark times if proper steps are taken and the same can become an unsolvable problem if this opportunity to revamp the Indian Economy is missed by our policy makers.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
दिल के तारों को न छेड़ो साज़ वो काफी पुराना है
दिल के तारों को न छेड़ो साज़ वो काफी पुराना है
जो हमसे तुम पूछ रहे हो राज़ वो काफी पुराना है
दो लफ़्ज़ों की बात थी लेकिन जाने कितना बोल गए
उनके आगे भूल गए जो अलफ़ाज़ वो काफी पुराना है
बात न करना या यूँ करना के जैसे कोई बात नहीं
जुल्फों में ऊँगली उलझाना अंदाज़ को काफी पुराना है
Saturday, July 20, 2013
On Freedom and Society
On Freedom and Society
“Man
is a social animal and we live in a society. Each one of us is dependent on the
other directly or indirectly. For example, the milk man brings the milk to our
door step every day, the news paper boy throws the paper in our balcony every
morning, the washer man washes our cloths, our cloths are manufactured in
factories by the factory employees so on and so forth.” This was what my class
second teacher told our class while teaching something about profession of
people. I distinctly remember of having felt a deep pain and anger over the
idea of my being dependent on so many other people and not being free. It was
in that moment that I decided I will study Mathematics for the rest of my life
as that was the only subject in which ideas and concepts are built in air and
one has to not think of society and various un-freedoms. A man can be truly
free only in the realm of Mathematics. Mathematics gives the freedom I valued.
My love continues to this date. But I have realised no one can live in vacuum
and existence as a man implies there will be certain givens like – inter
depended-ness, relatedness, emotional bondages etc. By being ascetic one can
practice sacrifice and meditation. One can try to connect to God and be content
with the self but that is a though way of living and not all men turn to
monkhood. Is freedom, in its true sense, meant for monks only?
Living
in a society why should a man value the value system of the society even if he
disagrees with many? For example why should a man not go out naked on street?
Why should a woman behave in a certain dignified way only? Why should there be
conformity and not chaos? One answer can be chaos leads to destruction and man
wants to avoid destruction and look forward for peaceful re-creation or
creation of a new world around him. Man feels happy to be alive and develops a
love for nature. He learns from the conformity in nature. He sees how plants,
flowers, honey bees, butterflies, birds, trees, rivers, clouds etc are
dependent on each other and value each others’ existence. They nourish each
other and do not burn the earth for petty issues. I believe my decision to conform is not so much rooted in the fear of persecution by some hard-headed members of the society but is rather in the respect for natural order that I see around me.
For, I know that if I find something deeply moving and outrageous in the social
fabric, I rise in revolt and opposition. History is full of personalities who
rose against oppression, racial discrimination, gender issues, human rights
violations etc. against very strong powers. I would like to add another aspect
to this by presenting Jermey Betham’s
on the reason behind such co-operation between men: He believed that the human
beings by nature were hedonists. Each of their actions was motivated by a
desire to seek pleasure and avoid pain. Every human action has a cause and a
motive. “Take away all pleasure and all pain and you have no desire and without
desire there is no action.” Which probably is in contradiction with the
teachings from Bhagwad Geeta that directs men to act without the thought of the
fruit.
We have judicial system which is loaded with
work. People have a sense of being wronged or not being wronged and therefore
they seek justice. Because they think there is something like justice. Some way of living which is just. “In this little world, in which
children have their existence, nothing is so finely felt and perceived as
injustice”, says Pip in “The Great Expectation” by Charles Dickens. Man has a
sense of justice and injustice and around such (and similar such) senses social
fabric is woven.
It
is widely expected today, that men should be able to enjoy the freedoms they
value and they have reason to value (as
I might want to have the Taj Mahal
but I don’t have a reason to value such a freedom in a country of 1.2 billion
people. I can ofcourse have a piece of land and build a house but ownership of the Taj may not be the freedom which I
can value). I might want to hoard all the food grain stocks available in the
market for export so that I can build a Taj
Mahal for myself, but again that would mean everyone will go hungry and
therefore here again I have no reason to value such a want or whim. But I
certainly can want a freedom of speech, of choosing profession, religion,
faith, travelling, political freedoms etc. The United Nations Declaration of
Human Rights 1948 identified certain Rights which a Human Being should be able
to enjoy. Jeremy Bentham found the idea of human rights as non sense. He felt
that rights were children of law. Some scholars believe rights are parents of
law and laws are made under the light of the rights men should enjoy. I think
there is a duality here. In some cases rights can be parents of law for example
Right To Information or Right To Education are essentially rights that have now
translated into law and find their place in statue books. Also, some countries
have laws against abortion. Such laws override the Right To Life. Which shows
right can be child of law.
What
is the role of State? What is the aim of political setup?
Kant
believed that the aim of Politics not making the subjects happy, but is to
provide them with enough freedoms so that they can work forward for their own
happiness. It’s to provide an enabling environment where peaceful pursuit of
happiness is possible. He was opposed to benevolent despotism. Jeremy Bentham advocated
utilitarian ideas. He believed the purpose of a State should be to ensure
greatest good for greatest numbers. Amartya Sen critics such a view and says
that focus should be on means as well as ends. Greatest good can be achieved through
several means. But while achieving such ends the State should ensure that
people have freedoms to chose from. “Development”, to Sen, “is fundamentally a
aimed at empowerment.” There is a complementarity between freedom and
development. If freedom is enhanced the State would develop, if development is
done then freedoms (that men can enjoy) will get enhanced. The purpose of State
should be in only making the people empowered and let them work for their own
set goals. Public debates and reasoning should be given great importance to
weed out conflicts and seek solutions in conflicting situations. The society
might not be made totally just (no body knows what that is) but it certainly
can be made less unjust. And it is the State to take care of such
transformation from unjust to less unjust.
(...conclusion to be written
later)
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Enigma
Enigma
As the bluish haze started dimming into the pitch darkness of
the moonless night in the shivering winter of the town, a baby was heard
crying. The city of a hundred and fifty thousand houses with of concrete walls,
slept. Gardens slept, flowers slept and the old gardener too. The gates of the
ancient churches of the city were closed, and temples and mosques too.
The night passed, and the gates of the churches opened for
morning-prayer, and that of the temples and mosques too. People came for
morning walk in the garden, and flowers lifted their heads to smell the rising
sun. The old gardener kept himself busy humming an old tune and sweeping the
pavements. The concrete walls claimed their true colours and were no longer the
same.
A five year old kid came walking to me and asked while I was
sitting still and gazing the surface of the lake. “Did you hear someone cry
last night oh passerby? I heard and heard till the morning sun and now its
gone”, holding my hand he asked. I looked into his eyes and a tear rolled down
my bearded cheek. I showed him a pen. He looked and it and said, “Where is the
poem?” Since then we both have been here at the sides of this lake, watching.
The day passed and the sun kissed the horizon once again. The
gates of churches started closing and that of the temples and mosques too.
People went back to their houses and the as so did the old gardener. The kid
stood up and said, “The sun has set now, I cannot see it beyond the horizons
any more”. I stood up to see for myself and he was right, the sun wasn’t there.
The kid then walked into the lake and I just followed him. There
we met an old man playing a long flute with three hands and writing a song with
his forth hand. He stopped for a while and took out a small flute from his bag.
He gave that flute to the kid and asked him to play. The kid blew and blew into
the reed till he got frustrated and threw it away. The old man smiled and
continued to play. The kid then asked the old man, about the baby crying the
other night and the old man nodded while he played.
We walked a little longer and we were at a village of hens and
pigeons. They were living in mud houses amidst beautiful flowers and green
grasses. The kid rushed to a big white hen and told her about the old man we
met. The hen convened a meeting in the village hall. All the birds and insects
came, and the kid cried while he asked about the baby crying the last
night.
An old pigeon shook its head and made us sit on its back. It
then flew to the highest skies and made us see the world and the sun together.
As we looked down we saw our town and the sleeping old gardener with his broom.
We looked around and we heard no sound, there was no baby no cry no wind.
We then came down to take rest on a mountain peak. The snow
beneath our feet was hard, it was cold and we were hungry. The pigeon flew in
search of food and after an hour it came back with a piece of cloud. We took
two bites and threw the rest.
.................and the baby cried.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Science and Mysticism: Are they compatible?
(One of the four topics for essay from UPSC paper 2012)
Sharaabiyon ko
akeedat hai tumse, jo tu pilade to paani sharaab ho jaaye
Jisko tu muhabbat se
dekhe saaki wo sharaabi ho jaaye...
Sams, had a question
which no scholar of his time could answer. Finally he was asked to meet Rumi as
only he could answer such a question. It is said that when Sams asked his
question Rumi fell down of the ground, some say the book Rumi was holding is
his hand caught fire when Sams asked: “How great is my glory, we do not know You
as we should?”
Rumi, one of the
greatest Sufi poets the world has read, spent a long time in conversation with
his friend Sams. When he lost Sams, Rumi went from place to place to search for
his friend. Then one day he said:
Why should I seek? I
am the same as he.
His essence speaks
through me.
I have been looking
for myself.
The union became complete. Rumi merged with Sams – fana – is the apt word.
Such is the world of
mystic saint, where reality fuses into imagination and imagination becomes
reality.
Coming to our times, "Philosophy is dead” claimed Stephen Hawkins in
his book The Grand Design. The same
author left me deeply confused when I came across another book by the same
author whose title was Leopold Kronecker’s famous quote: God Created The Integers. He certainly would have not named a book
with such a title if he does not believes in God (or some form of his own God,
as we all have our own Gods), then he believes in religion and thus philosophy
too. For to me there can be no religion without philosophy.
Though such contemplation, rather confusion over what Stephen Hawkins truly
believes to be true, might not appear directly related to the topic of the
present article but I found it important to enter the realm of Science through
the eyes of one of the greatest scientists of our time, and enter the world mysticism
through the eyes of Rumi.
Philosophy is a word derived from a Greek work, philos, which means love of wisdom. Wikipedia defines it as:
“Philosophy
is the study of general and fundamental problems, such as those connected with
reality, existence, knowledge, values, reason, mind, and language”.
Religion on the other hand is defined as:
“Religion is
an organized collection of beliefs, cultural systems, and world views that
relate humanity to the supernatural, and to spirituality.”
Mysticism:
“Mysticism is the
pursuit of communion with, identity with, or conscious awareness of an ultimate
reality, divinity, spiritual truth, or God through direct experience,
intuition, instinct or insight. Mysticism usually centres on practices intended
to nurture those experiences. Mysticism may be dualistic, maintaining a
distinction between the self and the divine, or may be non-dualistic”.
Science:
“Science (from Latin scientia,
meaning "knowledge") is a systematic enterprise that builds and
organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about
the universe. In an older and closely related meaning, "science" also
refers to a body of knowledge itself, of the type that can be rationally
explained and reliably applied. A practitioner of science is known as a
scientist.”
At the very start I would like mention, that maintain that scientists
are not atheists by rule. Ramanujam, who was a Mathematician, claimed to derive
divine insights from the Goddess Namagiri.
Abraham Lincoln once said, “The
philosophy of the school room in one generation will be the philosophy of
government in the next.” In History we get several such examples. The French
Revolution which gave the went on to give ideas of the upcoming democracies.
The politics of tomorrow was defined in the precepts of philosophical schools
of yesterday. Gandhi ji said, ‘Those who say religion has to do nothing with
politics, do not understand religion’. Connecting the two thoughts, I find,
philosophy closely related to politics and religion closely concerned with
politics. The inter-marriage of the three is but inevitable. Politics cannot
live in vacuum and religion cannot be untouched of philosophy. Religion and
philosophy try to answer the eternal questions of mankind about life and its
meaning. While politics affects his life as a social animal in all possible
ways. A man once born cannot escape the three, such is the trap in which a thinking
mind finds itself.
Science, as we know it today, is not as old as religion or philosophy. Surely
there were scientists, chemists, biologists in antiquity, but talking about
modern Sciences we can say that the power centres were more in the clutches of
religious power centres rather than influenced by scientific ideas. Church had
a strong hold in the western countries even in the eighteenth century. It was
the twentieth century which saw rapid advances in sciences and the two world
wars brought tremendous new innovations. Engines were made, flights became
common, communication became easier, space explorations began in post second
world war period and continue to this day. Our curiosities have taken us to
distant lands of Mars as well. We live in a fast world, where ideas fly from one
corner of the world to another in no time. A Ghangam style of dance in East
Asia becomes common in west overnight. A rock song of west becomes the anthem
for the east the moment it gets uploaded on youtube or other such portals. In
such an age, it is not very popular to see people sitting in contemplation over
philosophic questions of the past.
One may say that though, a lot has changed but there is no point writing
epitaphs of philosophy or of religion. Both are very much alive.
Compatibility of the
two (Science and Mysticism) brings to fore the problem comparing the inputs and
outputs of the two. Science starts with questioning physical or natural phenomenon
and then skids into the realm of logical reasoning, laboratory experiments, observation,
hypothesis, proving and disproving to finally emerge to light with better
understanding of the initial problem. Sometimes the searches are accidental as
Madam Curie discovered radioactivity. Sometimes it is anxious waiting in the
dark as Albert Einstein said one discovering the relationship between energy
and mass: The years of anxious searching
in the dark, with their intense longing, their intense alternations of
confidence and exhaustion and the final emergence into the light—only those who
have experienced it can understand it. In Budhdhism such a state can be
said to be in some be equivalent to attaining Budhdhahood or enlightenment. Looking
for something hidden by nature from human perception and being more real than
reality, is in some way the aspiration of any seeker of God. The process might
be different but the final emergence to light which brings greater understand
of life can be said to be common to both the endeavors.
The desire to know
God:
"I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in
this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to
know His thoughts; the rest are details." - Albert Einstein.
“A naked man jumps in a river, hornets swarming above him. The water is
the zikr, remembering. There is no reality but God. There is only God.
The hornets are his sexual remembering, this woman,
that woman. Or if a woman, this man, that. The head comes up. They sting.
Breathe water. Become river head to foot. Hornets
leave you alone then. Even if you’re far from the river, they pay no attention.
No one looks for stars when the sun’s out. A person
blended into God does not disappear. He, or she, is just completely soaked in
God’s qualities. Do you need a quote from the Qur’an?
All shall be brought into our Presence.
Join those travellers. The lamps we burn go out, some
quickly. Some last till day break. Some are dim, some intense, all fed with
fuel.
If a light goes out in one house, that doesn’t
affect the next house. This is the story of the animal soul, not the divine
soul. The sun shines on every house. When it goes down, all houses get dark.
Light is the image of your teacher. Your enemies
love the dark. A spider weaves a web over a light, out of himself, or herself,
makes a veil.
Don’t try to control a wild horse by grabbing its
leg. Take hold the neck. Use a bridle. Be sensible. Then ride! There is a need
for self-denial.
Don’t be contemptuous of old obediences. They help.” – Rumi (Poem –
Zikr)
A mystic a more undisciplined in his
flights of imagination. Rumi once wondered:
Who makes these
changes?
I shoot an arrow
right.
It lands left.
I ride after a deer
and find myself
Chased by a hog.
I plot to get what I
want
And end up in prison.
I dig pits to trap
others
And fall in.
I should be
suspicious
Of what I want.
But the fanatic
desire to annihilate with the one and be the one who is immanent and yet hidden
is something which is same in both scientists and mystics.
As far as
compatibility is concerned they don’t seem to complement each other neither do
they come in conflict with each other. Science goes on evolving with time. Old
theories become obsolete, new ones come up. New understanding takes place of
old believes. And the process of knowing more and more through experiments and
observations goes on. The maddening distance from the One, pains and eludes the
wit of many thinkers. Some commit or attempt to suicide too.
A natural disaster
leaves both, the scientist and a mystic perplexed and ask how can the creator take
so many lives of innocents. Is there no creator. Voltaire said, if there is no
creator, we need to create one. Dostoevsky maintained that is there is no God,
then everything is permitted. The chaos, that shall unleash, in absence of the
idea of a creator, horrifies one and all. The compatibility or non
compatibility of the two rests of the one final question: Do the two seek the
same? This is the point where I must admit to the readers that I find the
question absurd, not worth answering.
Pale sunlight
Pale the wall
Love moves away
The light changes
I need more grace that I thought. - Rumi
Thursday, July 11, 2013
कैसे अब हम भूलें तुम्हें मुश्किल है
कैसे अब हम भूलें तुम्हें मुश्किल है ...
क्या करें बच्चों सा ये अपना दिल है ...
बाद तुम्हारे सूनी लगेंगी सब राहें
जहाँ अकेले हो जाएँ कैसी मंजिल है ..
वादा है अब न बोलेंगे दिल की बातें
यार मेरा देखो तो कितना संघ्दिल है ...
ग़ज़लें भी सब आप की हैं और नग्मे भी
आप न होंगे तो जीवन का क्या हासिल है
डूब ही जातें आप की आँखों में लेकिन
सोचते हैं के नाचीज कहाँ इस काबिल है ..
शायर शायर कह के लोग बुलाते हैं
कितनी फीकी देखो तो ये महफ़िल है...
दरिया से तो हो आये हम बच कर के
जान का दुश्मन बन बैठा ये साहिल है ...
मेरे सच्चे शेर
बड़ा पायाब रिश्ता है मेरा मेरी ही हस्ती से ज़रा सी आँख लग जाये, मैं ख़ुद को भूल जाता हूँ (पायाब: shallow) दरख़्तों को शिकायत है के तूफ़ाँ ...
-
(Note: Though I am not good at Urdu, its not my mother tounge, but I have made an attempt to translate it. I hope this will convey the gist...
-
(Ram V. Sir's explanation) vAsudhEvEndhra yogIndhram nathvA gnApradham gurum | mumukshUNAm hithArThAya thathvaboDhaH aBiDhIyathE || ...
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उन पे रोना, आँहें भरना, अपनी फ़ितरत ही नहीं… याद करके, टूट जाने, सी तबीयत ही नहीं रोग सा, भर के नसों में, फिल्मी गानों का नशा ख़ुद के हा...

