Monday, January 18, 2010


The unwritten history of great genocide

The latest reports of Survival International apparently serve as death knells for the original inhabitants in several parts of the world. Modern man’s selfish deeds have resulted in their near-extinction. Leading a life in harmony with nature, these exploited lots now stand to be wiped out of their own land for good.
The Great Andaman Trunk Road has spelt doom for Jarwas, the tribe that inhabits central islands of Andaman. Adding to their miseries are, widespread encroachments on their land and illegal poaching. The case of the Onge and Sentinelese tribes are no different while the Jangil tribe of Rutland Island has already been part of history. Onges, who used to number more than 650 in 1900, are less than 100 today whereas Jarwas number less than 300. Despite a Supreme Court order and the growing protests by human rights activists, the work of the Trunk road continued, of course, in connivance with the local politicians. What the indigenous people got in return were some hitherto-unheard –of diseases.
For over a century between 1870 and 1970, over 150,000 native Indian children in Canada were taken away from their families and put in church-run residential schools. These government-funded schools were ostensibly set up to educate them. But their hidden motive was to Christianize and assimilate them into the European population. Uprooted from their families and put in an alien environment, these children were subjected to all sorts of emotional, physical and sexual abuse. They were treated like dogs and subjected to physical torture if they spoke their native languages.
Subjected to inhuman treatment, many took to drugs and alcohol. While thousands never went back to their parents half of them were estimated to have succumbed to deadly diseases in unhygienic school conditions. Though the Canadian government spends billions of dollars for them annually, they fare very badly on human development indices. Early-age deaths, suicides and alcoholism are common among them.
The state-funded Human Rights Commission says Australia's original inhabitants, whose cultures date several thousands of years back, aborigines would be deeply affected by the impact of global warming,. Blood-borne tropical diseases such as malaria and dengue fever would increase and food security of indigenous populations would be threatened. They have much higher rates of infant mortality, health problems and suicide than other Australians, with many living in squalid camps rife with unemployment, alcoholism and lawlessness. They are jailed five times more often than black males who were imprisoned in South Africa under apartheid. They are twice as likely as their non-Indigenous peers to be a victim of violent aggression, with 24 per cent of them reported as being victims of violence in every year and also11 times more likely to be in prison. At the time of white settlement in 1788 aborigines were believed to number more than one million, but now account for just 2.5 per cent of the population, with an estimated 517,000 people. A quarter of these lived in remote outback and coastal areas, with up to 80 per cent of adults in these communities relying on the natural environment for livelihood. They controlled, used, managed or had access to about 20 per cent of the Australian continent. Now they are considered uncivilized and have reached the disastrous stage where their language, culture and even their very survival are threatened.
In Botswana, the indigenous people of southern Africa known as The Bushmen of the Kalahari are on the verge of losing their ancestral homeland. The government forced out virtually all the Bushmen from their land in 1997, 2002 and 2005. Their homes were dismantled, their school and health post closed down, water supply destroyed and finally the people were trucked away. Although the Bushmen won a legal battle to go back to their land in 2006, the government did everything it could to make their return impossible. It banned them from using their water borehole, and refused to issue a single permit to hunt on their land, the state police arrested more than 50 Bushmen for hunting to feed their families, and also banned them from taking their small herds of goats back to the reserve. Survival International report says, “They now live in resettlement camps outside the reserve. Rarely able to hunt, and arrested and beaten when they do, they are dependent on government handouts. They are now gripped by alcoholism, boredom, depression, and illnesses such as TB and HIV/AIDS. Unless they can return to their ancestral lands, their unique societies and way of life will be destroyed, and many of them will die.’’
Before Portuguese invaders set their foot on the Brazilian land there were more than 50, 00000 original inhabitants. The atrocious exploitation and genocide reduced their count to 3, 50000. The current law of Brazil denies them the right to land and considers them as ‘minors’. In 1986, 4000 gold excavators encroached the land and granted them a new disease, malaria, which left 20 per cent of them dead.
In India, we are going to witness another cataclysmic act against the original inhabitants or Adivasis of the Naxal-affected area. Under the pretext of eradicating Naxals, the state government declared the war against its own tribal people. There is every reason to doubt that ‘Operation Green Hunt’ aims at the tribal people of the Naxal belt gifted with abundant treasures of minerals. The war within the nation is not for its people, but for the corporate giants who are lured into the huge collections of boxite, iron ore, silica, silver ore, and other minerals in Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Jharkhand, etc. The corporates like, Mittal, Tata, Posco , Vedanta and A star have only one obstacle: the tribal people who tirelessly quarrel with the government against the move to hand over the land to these companies.
Which established tradition or segment in history speaks about the survival of the indigenous people? Don’t they have right to live on their on land and preserve their age-old culture? Terminating indigenous people from their own land is, perhaps, what ‘the civilized” mean by being modern and trendy.
The history of holocaust was well-documented and is often reminded of in the present times, but these genocides remain shrouded in negligence in history, albeit those who lost their lives in them are hundred times more than those killed in the holocaust.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010


Rachel; The true martyr of the decade

March 16, 2003 in Palestine a girl from America stood before an Israeli Bulldozer with a held up head against Zionist terrorism to prevent a demolition of Palestine's house. The driver looked at her and listened to her pleads to get back from the mission, but he was as heinous as a demon then. He just drew the tank back and ran over her with out any hesitation. The tank fully pressed her in to the dry sand and cracked her head left her brutally killed in front her colleagues who were trying to stop the Bulldozer. Zionist terrorism again proved it gives zero value to the human lives. Thus she joined her hand with other innumerable Palestine victims.
The incident described above is the one which attracted the world attention towards the Zionist brutality in Palestine. Rachel corrie, that was her name, was member of International Solidarity Movement (ISM), a human right association including UK and USA activists. Taking a year off from her college, Evergreen State College,USA, she and her friends reached out Palestine and were working as “human shields" to protect the Palestine’s house from the Zionist demolition. It was the time Israel released its all monstrous acts against the Palestine settlement in Gaza. A lot of people were brutally murdered and several houses were demolished leaving thousands of Palestines with out shelter.
Like all other chances Rachel tried to stop the bulldozer was coming towards the house of Samir Nasrallah, a Palestinian pharmacist. Wearing her fluorescent jacket, she knelt down at least 15 meters in front of the bulldozer, and began waving her arms and shouting, just as activists had successfully done dozens of times that day... When it got so close that it was moving the earth beneath her, she climbed onto the pile of rubble being pushed by the bulldozer... Her head and upper torso were above the bulldozer’s blade, and the bulldozer driver and co-operator could clearly see her. Despite this, the driver continued forward, which caused her to fall back, out of view of the diver. He continued forward, and she tried to scoot back, but was quickly pulled underneath the bulldozer. We ran towards him, and waved our arms and shouted; one activist with the megaphone. But the bulldozer driver continued forward, until Rachel was all the way underneath the central section of the bulldozer.
Despite the big controversy emerged the incident never was taken seriously by the USA, who help relentlessly the Zionist to kill men, and the Israeli government. But she made an impact among the human right activists who keep the guts to stand against the inhuman action in the earth. More than 30 songs were written about and dedicated to her since 2003 by various musicians including Patti Smith, Alice Shields, Mike Stout, Billy Bragg, and Philip Munger. Every year philistines and human lovers remember her as the gem of martyrs’ history.
She is the genuine hero; she is the real martyr of last decade
Oh! Rachel you live in our heart still
As a red star blessed with the martyrdom!

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Indhira and a strange phenomenon in Kazakhstan

Indira Gandhi! It’s a name which will turn out assorted feelings among hearers, the victims of internal emergency will howl, the buffs will turn their heart in a fervent mood. But every one should at least don’t wry their face when they consider she is our ‘chachji’s daughter. I really condole and pray for the souls of the preys of internal emergency, but I ought to say the fable of Indiraji, not one you listened to frequently, contains quite amusing parts, one that you will never expect. Now let your ears to hear.The fable takes place, not in India, in Kazakhstan, the world's largest landlocked country, the land of Kazak nomads who made a great threat to Chengiz khan at the very time. The fable starts when Indhira Gandhi, visited Kazakhstan along with her father, our first prime minister, Nehru in 1955. When some country leaders visit other nations, reactions of people are deferent, some one abuses, others hoist black flags, pour black oil and abusive words, but new trend is ‘flinging shoos at’ the respected leader! But shoos deserve only the faces of wicked leaders like Bush. Indiraji never deserved it, if deserved, no one dared to throw at in India or in abroad.In Kazakhstan she was received with warm welcome as though she was the real guest of honors, frankly speaking she got much attention and fame than Premier Nehru! People of Kazak celebrated her arrival with fervor they made unusual holidays to make it up. The fable is not going to stop here, it prolonged after her departure. The after math of her visit was obviously astonishing, if you hear, and incredible.What after math? You may ask with out patience! Indiraji left a marvelouse influence among the people of that country so much so that the new born girls, born between 1980 and 1990, approximately one tenth of them, bear the name ‘Indira’. Indira mervova, Indira Opesnova, Ospanova Indira the names continue! In Astana, the main city of Kazakhstan, one of the main woman leader’s name is Indira.“It was my grand father who compelled to name me ‘Indira’” tells Indira Ospanova a five star hotel employee. “It is really proud to have the name of a world famous leader” Indira Smalgova, an air hostess of Air Astana, smiles with confidence. One of the main priests of Almati says Indira who spent only half day in capita along with Nehru left wonderful influence in their life. The ambassador of India in Kazakhstan witnesses that, says, “The people of Kazak keep a hearty relation ship with Indians”.Now, ‘dear opponents of Indiraji’ pleas be harmonious. This is not lie at all, believe me!