Will we ever 'Halla Bol'?

I just finished watching Halla Bol, its a lovely hindi film starring Ajav Devgan, Vidya Balan and Pankaj Kapoor. The movie is loosely based on the famous Jessica Lall murder case and raises some very valid issues in society today. The movie, in itself, has a very strong screenplay that is backed by some awesome direction and strong acting by the lead protagonists.

One of the things that this movie got me thinking about is how we, the youth of India busy ourselves with chasing the quintessential dream of making money (often in IT) that we forget our social responsibilities. How often have we turned a blind eye to the goondaism in our immediate surroundings? How often have we bribed the government 'babu' to move things along than to go by the law? How often have we complained incessantly about bad roads, intermittent electricity, severe lack of planning by a civic body, and others? How many of us have really done anything to make a difference? I know of a couple of people in my family who don't vote because "My vote will not change things at the ground level". If we don't go out and cast our democratic right to vote, do we still have the right to be an arm-chair critic about the M.L.A/M.P we never elected?

During my B.Tech, I briefly heard of a party called Lok Paritran, founded by 5 'crazy' IIT students. The party decided to take political bigwigs head on in an electoral battle, I am not sure if it actually managed to win any seats, but it is definitely taking a step in the right direction. If we, the youth of India can create corporate heavyweights, I'm pretty sure we can manage a couple of reasonably honest politicians. I don't expect a politician to be completely honest (or even an avatar of harishchandra for that matter!), (s)he can be corrupt and I wont complain as long as (s)he fulfills the basic electoral promises.

This brings me to the last question that I have been wanting to ask for years. I have often had friends tell me about dreams of lucrative careers in engineering/medicine/management but never (not once!) have I had anyone tell me that they would take up politics, bring a number of like-minded sincere honest people together and try to change the system. Why is it that we (the youth) are content writing computer programs (or answering support calls) to rake in the moolah but unwilling to partly shoulder the responsibility for a new social order? Are we truly spineless? or do we just don't love our country enough?

As I wind up my entry today, my question to you: Would you be willing to join Lok paritran in its fight to uproot this plague that affects our country? I know I would (Provided I have some like-minded people to guide me through the dirty waters of politics) Would be great to have a few other responses.

1 comments:

Harish said...

hey bala..how abt restarting ur blog again?
Lok Paritran was in the news for the wrong reasons recently. Them don't let the good guys stay good, do they?
IMO ppl are ready to do something but there isn't a leader who can make them come out of their inertia, thats all. Someone charismatic like Rajiv Gandhi or the leaders during independence.