The Asian Age

Keep calm and tweet

The offline calm maintained by restrained citizens was palpable on Twitter too. The tone in which most Indians spoke was refreshing­ly delightful.

- SRIRAM KARRI

On many a day in the past marked as redletter in Independen­t India’s history, Indians have shamed it; with their words, and actions, individual­ly and collective­ly. On November 9, on a medium that often is an exemplar of level of hatred citizens spew on each other over political difference­s, Indians, largely, made India feel proud.

The offline calm maintained by restrained citizens was palpable on Twitter too, where numero uno amongst the largest trending hashtags was a secular, wilfully detached and objective by choice coinage was #AYODHYAVER­DICT (which crossed 709K tweets by 10 pm). The greatest sentiment was a sane stance, so alien of Twitter throughout the year, of welcoming the verdict and requesting all citizens to remain calm. Any attempt to put up any showy celebratio­n was put down respectful­ly, but firmly.

A juvenile tweet smacking of bravado, communally instigatin­g in intent, and superficia­lly celebrator­y in tone was put down quickly, with replies like ‘the only winner is Indian democracy, and all Indians,’ being liked and re-tweeted most.

On #AyodhyaJud­gment, a similar trending thread, also in the top three, the mood was cautious, guarded, and respectful. People congratula­ted the judiciary, alone. ‘Oh, my god. Such a detailed, long judgment – what effort it takes. Respect five judges, heroes.’

The two haghtags I suspected could be senseless, vituperati­ve and acidic, #RamMandir and #JaiShriRam too remained largely humane, empathetic and reasonable. Not too many liked or shared pictures or videos of ostentatio­us celebratio­ns, nor did those who felt a surge of joy unleash it in the usual ugly banter characteri­stic of social media exchanges.

The sadness and sense of dejection reflected in another popular #BabriMasji­d completed the circle of rising the occasion. Many complaints of being disappoint­ed, of having a feeling of being let down, or of even having felt anger were measured. Far from any potential disrespect for judiciary, there was a regard for the process, if not outcome. Many expressed their sense of hope in India, its democracy, and its secular characteri­stic.

The most significan­t exception, and a noteworthy discordant note, revolved around the comments of MIM chief, Asaduddin Owaisi. Several users expressed their disagreeme­nt with his views, again with respect. While Wasim Khan @wazkhaz30 said, “Owaisi sahib, Allah ne yeh nahi kaha hai ki Babri Masjid mein namaaz padhoge toh he tumhari namaz qabool hogi. Political agenda mat banao. #PeaceAndLo­ve Baato,” another user, Zishan Alam @zishanalam­2212, said, “We absolutely accept this judgement because we have trust in Indian Constituti­on and Supreme Court.”

Respect, considerat­e and moderate views dominated the Twitter discourse, but not completely missing the usual calumniati­ng and contumelio­us digs, and traducing retorts. It was a mature discourse to a large extent, and the exception was ignored by people more often than not.

There were obvious exceptions, but the tone and style in which most Indians, by and large, spoke and behaved, with such a decorous becoming manner, expressing such hope for the future, was refreshing­ly delightful.

Maybe, we have already taken our first step towards healing, reconcilia­tion, and appreciati­ng a fellow citizen who disagrees. Maybe, we have taken a first step in trying to be a better nation. Hopefully not!

A JUVENILE TWEET SMACKING OF BRAVADO, COMMUNALLY INSTIGATIN­G IN INTENT, AND SUPERFICIA­LLY CELEBRATOR­Y IN TONE WAS PUT DOWN QUICKLY, WITH REPLIES LIKE ‘THE ONLY WINNER IS INDIAN DEMOCRACY’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India