Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Faith can’t encroach upon the right to movement

The absence of designated times or places for rallies and procession­s — religious or otherwise — is frustratin­g

- lalita.panicker@hindustant­imes.com LALITA PANICKER

Your right to your faith cannot literally encroach on my right to movement. But this is precisely what happens on large swathes of public roads when the kanwarias make their way to pilgrimage sites across north India. Now that it is over, we can breathe a sigh of relief and once again exercise our right of smooth passage when we are not being held up by other such procession­s and rallies. Given the fact that theirs is a religious mission, even the authoritie­s seem to quail at telling them that the public thoroughfa­res cannot be taken over in the name of devotion.

What was once a quiet pilgrimage of penance and faith has today become a mega-decibel sponsored event, with film songs blaring out of six-foot high speakers, throwing ordinary commuters into disarray and confusion. The faithful are housed in makeshift tents, the state government­s makes available a host of amenities from ambulances to water and the kanwarias go their merry way leaving mountains of garbage and clogged roads in their wake. But one cannot single out the kanwarias. All faiths today, barring perhaps the Parsis, tend to be aggressive, loud and completely oblivious of public sensibilit­ies. The deities have become muscular and overbearin­g. The gentle Ganesh at the chaturthi is warrior-like, his angry tusks and visage nothing like the playful god he is meant to be. In Kerala, every other day, there are Christian procession­s to places of worship accompanie­d by vans fitted with loudspeake­rs taking over the narrow roads. Across India, come festivals, jagrans or devotional songs – sometimes Hindi film songs -- are belted out at such high decibels are to render one temporaril­y deaf.

Taking over public roads could mean the difference between life and death if an ambulance is passing. There are no designated times or places for rallies and procession­s, religious or otherwise. Wedding parties take over roads with gas lights, horses and wild dancing leading to monster traffic jams. No question of permits or payment, just take over public property and deface it with no penalty at all. Clearly, the concept that public places cannot be usurped by private parties, whether kanwarias or wedding guests, seems alien to us as a society.

The kanwaria situation is not likely to ease up next year. Already, local politician­s have formed welcome parties for them, the kanwarias wear T-shirts bearing the name of one or other chief minister and they have become a law unto themselves. What about the public who has to endure days of suffering? Or have to wait patiently missing hours of work or an examinatio­n as rallies and procession pass through busy roads? They can complain all they like, but no one is listening.

 ?? RAVI CHOUDHARY/HT PHOTO ?? Kanwarias trigger a traffic jam on the National Highway 24 in Delhi, July 21. All faiths today tend to be aggressive and oblivious of public sensibilit­ies
RAVI CHOUDHARY/HT PHOTO Kanwarias trigger a traffic jam on the National Highway 24 in Delhi, July 21. All faiths today tend to be aggressive and oblivious of public sensibilit­ies
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India