| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 7, Issue 15, Dated April 17, 2010 |
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The Man Who
Stole Their Fire
Swami Agnivesh is churning up a quiet revolution,
this time on television, says NISHITA JHA
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| Photo : Shailendra Pandey |
SWAMI AGNIVESH is a man on fire. Do not
be fooled by his tranquil smile. Some
years ago he famously said, “Agnivesh mera naam hai, aag lagana mera kaam
hai”. A reminder of this bravado makes
his eyes twinkle with mischief even at 74
— “I do want to start fires. I want to burn blind faith,
discrimination, illiteracy, poverty, corruption…” The list
is endless, a tall order perhaps, even for this swami who
is president of the World Council of Arya Samaj (WCAS).
But the startling thing about Swami Agnivesh is that in
spite of being swathed in saffron from head to toe he
seems ordinary compared to the verbose godmen on
television. There is no obfuscating talk about the Vedas
and Puranas, no Sanskrit terms hurled at you to make
you feel like you are negotiating a deal with god’s middleman.
He is direct, concise and shockingly logical.
In a relaxed mood after a press conference, he
speaks of his latest media venture — Vichar Manthan, a
show aired on Lok Sabha TV. The format is fairly standard
— Swami Agnivesh moderating an audience full of
young students, usually along with an eminent panel,
discussing current affairs. But there is nothing standard
about the social reform he promotes through his show.
Watching him embrace AIDS patients, wash the feet of
Dalit scavengers, shake hands with lepers — makes you
linger at the remote instead of changing the channel at
warp speed upon encountering saffron on screen.
Usually against capital punishment, Agnivesh supports
judge Vani Gopal Sharma’s death sentence to the
members of Tilawana Khap Panchayat — for the honour-
killing of Manoj and Babli, who married within the
same gotra. “Often you cannot control who you fall in
love with. Then how can your elders decide? This vocabulary
of caste makes no sense in the language of love.”
In a similarly radical vein, he holds forth on the Maha
Kumbh mela “We have started an awareness campaign
at the Kumbh — these ‘holy dips’ will do nothing to
purify your soul. It is a fiction created by orthodox elements,
funded by a supposedly secular government that has far more serious issues to deal with. Why not utilise
all the wealth and manpower for a better cause, like
cleaning the holy river?” Additionally, the ex-business
management lecturer is planning to launch an RTI
against the UP government to explain how the huge
amount of public funds spent on the mela were utilised.
WHILE some of his ideas might make conservative
stomachs queasy, his belief that the
crux of all evil lies in the distribution of
narcotics and cheap liquor, is supported by religious
heads such as the Dalai Lama, Baba Ramdev and
Swami Chidanand. Nationwide prohibition is the next
step on Swami Agnivesh’s agenda.
Interviewing an audience of ragpickers, for a Vichar
Manthan episode, he asks them what made them poor.
A girl finally replies, “Our parents did something that
made god upset with us.”
“And all those children who go to school in cars,
speak in English — do you believe their parents made
god very happy?”
With a simple question, he forces her to examine
something she clung to as the explanation for her terrible
life. Akin to a similar manthan from a different age,
when gods and demons fought over the elixir of life —
you begin to wonder if this ordinary man is churning up
something truly extraordinary.
WRITER’S EMAIL
nishita@tehelka.com |