The Politics of Padma Awards
A man who said that any dog can buy a Padma Award has
been honoured with Padma Bhushan by the Modi government. And he accepted it
with pride. The man is Vellappally Natesan, one of the many third-rate
politicians of our country.
Ten years ago, an autorickshaw driver
died in Kerala while trying to save the lives of two cleaners who were trapped
in a manhole. The government of Kerala granted an ex-gratia payment of Rs 10
lakh to the driver’s family. Vellappally Natesan’s spontaneous remark was that
the government’s magnanimity was aroused only because the driver was a Muslim. “Noushad’s
family was given this compensation only because he was a Muslim. Would this
government make such gestures if he was a Hindu?” Those were his words.
Later he made many hate speeches against
Muslims and Christians. No wonder the Modi government decided to give him
nothing less than a Padma Bhushan, a national honour given to people for “distinguished
service of high order.” The only distinguished service of high order
that Vellappally Natesan has rendered to the Kerala society is to inflame
sectarian feelings against the minority communities in the state.
Since any dog is eligible for the
Padma awards, according to Vellappally, we needn’t be surprised that he
accepted the award happily and proudly too. Should we be surprised that the
Central government chose this man for such a high national honour? I guess we
have got used to this sort of situations. We have grown immune to surprises,
haven’t we?
The problem is that India seems to be
officially normalising majoritarian hostility towards the minorities. Even if
the government defends the award on administrative or organisational grounds,
it cannot escape responsibility for the symbolic endorsement it appears to
offer. An award, particularly one of such high dignity, reinforces the
qualities represented by the awardee. And what qualities does Vellappally
Natesan possess?
When the state honours divisive
speech as service, it quietly redraws the line between patriotism and
prejudice. Public awards, particularly the Padma awards in India, have been moral
symbols. They tell citizens which kinds of speech, conduct, and imagination are
considered compatible with national service. When those known for excluding or
vilifying entire communities are elevated without ethical scrutiny, prejudice
is subtly recast as cultural assertiveness or social leadership.
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Scandalous!
ReplyDeleteI'm just imagining this man rubbing shoulders with the great Malayalam actor Mammootty who also received the same award.
DeleteNadir.. of the Receiver.. And equally of the bestower. The anaesthesia of political consciousness and the Normalization of the political unconscious.
ReplyDeleteWe have become a Dystopia.
DeleteHari Om
ReplyDeleteIt makes a mockery of the award... YAM xx
We have made a mockery of all good things.
Delete