Gulf News

Why 2022 was year of the good fight

A year of many triumphs, successful marches, several victories and a special World Cup

- BY JYOTSNA MOHAN | Jyotsna Mohan is the author of the investigat­ive book ‘Stoned, Shamed, Depressed’. She was also a journalist with NDTV for 15 years.

It passed in a whirl and yet the year was long enough to test our comfort zones. Distractio­ns, diversions and outright defiance though were met by pockets of resistance; hatred, the year showed, can continue to have its interns but it was the well-meaning who held their own.

Rahul Gandhi walked the good walk, his Bharat Jodo Yatra has now criss-crossed 3,000 kms across the changing landscape of the country. Children hopping on his back, gnarled hands entrusting in his, women keeping frenetic pace, it has been a movement to reclaim the lost India, a step at a time.

The yatra was a much needed refresh button, one that signified the permeating relevance of harmony in an atmosphere where hate derailed like an all-season bad fruit. It also took the politician away from a pedestal of disconnect; walking with a sea of people, Rahul Gandhi captured the essence of a bygone era where leaders mingled and were accessible. His stop at former PM Atal Behari Vajpayee’s mausoleum also harked back to the dignity of rising beyond political difference­s.

If the world needed a final affirmatio­n, it came in the form of a man named Messi who saved the best of 2022 for last. As countries tilted right like a collapsing pack of cards with the ideologica­l crossing into the irrational, the Argentinia­n united the world in a way that nothing or no one did this year. In his victory was the promise, principals and discipline will find a day in the sun.

Earlier in the year another gentleman Swiss Roger Federer brought out similar emotions by heartening­ly showing that good guys can also come first. He quit, we cried but the openness to appreciate him and Messi was revealing, all was not surrendere­d.

New beginnings in India though as Droupadi Murmu became the first women Dalit president of the country. But the release of Bilkis Bano’s convicted rapists and murderers indicated how one step ahead can be quickly nullified by two steps back.

Bollywood kept standing and against a sustained attack, that was good enough – movies were cancelled, actors were deleted and propaganda films became tax free. SRK though showed why he remains the king; with dignity and wit he stayed true to self, teaching the novice and the trolls alike the nuances of a classy takedown.

Those who took the path of least resistance still didn’t collect the numbers as South Indian films went mainstream, its competing content shaking Hindi cinema from its hubris. Away from the movies there were hints of a pushback as the year was coming to a close. Amitabh Bachchan who assiduousl­y stayed silent till now, spoke. His words on freedom of expression were minimal but when Big B speaks, the impact is hard to whitewash. Meanwhile Bollywood’s outreach as a soft power transcende­d new heights, Deepika Padukone unveiling the Fifa trophy.

A year like others and yet different. 2022 was the year that stood out for the good fight. It can never go wrong.

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