Monday 15 July 2013

Where are my Sparrows gone?

Sparrows, one of man’s oldest living commensals. Oh! Are they alive?

No, I cannot see them anymore. Today, most Indians would perhaps know this bird only through photographs. The bird is listed as ‘least concern’ in the IUCN Red list.

As an avid bird watcher I am shocked to learn that the sparrow is difficult to locate in urban India. Earlier I used to see sparrows daily by the side of my apartment. It flies in and out of terrace holes unmindful of bumper to bumper traffic. And I remember sparrows building their nests in the roof rafters, carrying pieces of straw, feathers and twigs. Now, gone are the days when little birdie was flying through my balcony.

Believed in Nokia’s tagline ‘Connecting People’ as the bird lives only among humans, now seems that connection got faded between the human and birdie.

Pollution may be a factor or pest controlling around us, from communication towers to use of steel and glass in our buildings that has reduced the availability of nesting sites and food. Similarly, the vulture population in India collapsed not due to any lack of food, but due to the use of certain medicines for cattle, consumption of whose meat led to kidney failure in vultures.


The simple act of providing millets strew in the terraces, garden hedge or a nesting box are all that it will take to protect a bird that lives alongside humans but is fast disappearing. C’mon do your bit.

Tuesday 2 July 2013

Who are you to judge us?

It's 9:00 pm. Time to catch the daily dose of a shrill debate on a news channel.

C’mon aren’t you getting bored of watching a debate, which is self manufactured controversy and manipulated by voices and clans without any democratic credentials and public accountability.

Who are the TV anchors? Are they judges of the Supreme Court? Are they liable for their unwanted judgments?

Electronic media in India needs to learn from their worldwide counterparts. Most of the daily debates on TV channel are undiluted waste of time.

Does something come out of these debates when panelist gets not more than two minutes to speak?

TV channels are just fanning the sentiments of viewers by generating unnecessary controversies on prime time. Controversies have become the breadwinners for these self-acclaimed anchors, who distract the citizens from main agenda and feed viewers with Television’s Real Poison (TRP).

Most severe threat to our society is not from illiterates, but from `learned intellectuals' of our society whom we see on our Idiot box with unflinching regularity. Electronic media has become a virus that wants to destroy our social fabric.

With intellectual debate cornered and eschewed into the labyrinth of ignorance, can India plunge into progressive society, demonstrating free spirit, or remain the nation of petty politics?

Anchors and the team, hello, you need to work on your plans.
Wake up, and smell the coffee.