Wednesday, January 18, 2012

An evening with Dr. Binayak Sen



A rare honor. A rare privilege. An evening with Dr. Binayak Sen. 

Dr Binayak Sen  was with us at Centre for Public Health and Equity (CPHE) and later at the Community Health Cell, yesterday  (17th January 2012) evening. The evening was one filled with discussions that moved from the personal story of a continuing struggle to fight for justice, when one comes in direct opposition with the sate and state machinery to the larger issues of the political economy of health and oneness of people coming together towards conviviality (Ivan Illich).

I thought I’d share just a few aspects of the discussions we had with Dr Sen, and provide for the group a few readings to help us understand what we are engaging in through the work that is driven to health, wellbeing, equity and justice. (The links that I provide here are clearly some of the reading I have myself carried on, post the evening, and thought I’d share it with you as well).

Dr Sen in his quiet, reflective and acutely perceptive manner spoke to each one of us in the meeting, attentively listening to the work that some of our fellow friends do – this brought out a discussion of the conditions, the lives the pauracarmikas lead, and the prevailing oppression and injustice the community feels. The discussion highlighted the reality that manual scavenging is seen even in urban places and cities where deaths are a regular occurrence that often goes unnoticed.

Dr. Sen spoke of his personal struggles in jail and outside. One thing that has bound the movement together (and one that take it to other areas of issues) is the sense of fellowship that continued to build through the Free Binayak Sen campaign and now beyond. Through all of this, it  brought one thing to centre stage for sure – a realization that the growing phenomenon of the opposition to/with the state affects all of us. This has given us the mechanism to come together – where human rights, equity and justice are a collective struggle. 

The Voices of Dissent Disappear
Dr . Sen mentioned one important concern that is plaguing the world around us – the disappearance of people who voice their dissent against the state are “vaporised” (I make use of this Orwellian expression here).

He brought out the example of Jaswant Singh Khalra who disappeared one day , when he was last seen washing his car. Jaswant Singh Khalra discovered cremation records that proved Indian security forces illegally killed thousands of Sikhs in the 1980s and 1990s. Khalra connected the police to the disappearances of over 2,000 Sikhs in Amritsar district, located in the north-western Indian state of Punjab.  On the morning of September 6, 1995, witnesses saw uniformed and armed Indian police personnel abduct Khalra from outside his home, who had previously been warned by the police to discontinue his efforts or he too would be disappeared. Police tortured Khalra for weeks before killing him.
The Human Rights Law Network (HRLN) had conducted the National Consultation on Human Rights Defenders conference where the widow of Jaswant Singh Khalra spoke her inaugural  address highlighting the human rights abuses that took place in Punjab have not been addressed by the state.  Today there is a similar pattern of disappearance everywhere. Formally it was believed that these instances were rampant in places like Kashmir and the North East.

Read more :


Living in the time of Famines
Dr. Sen highlighted the fact that we live in a time where “famine” is a constant. The image that we have of famine is often a wrong imagery – that it happens due to natural calamities or occurrences. The fact that India is battling Undernutrition shows this phenomenon.  The body mass index (below 18.5)  is regarded as chronic nutrition.  37% of our adult population have a body mass index below 18.5.  This is severe in scheduled tribes, with 50% of the people having a body mass index below 18.5.  Among scheduled castes, the figures are more than 60% . He drew attention to the World Health Organization technical report that mentions that if in any community has more than 40% of the people with a BMI of below 18.5, that the community can justifiably be regarded as being in a state of famine.

The Age of Barbarism
An important reading that one should carry out is: When state makes war on its own people. This is a report on violations of people's rights during the Salwa Judum campaign in Dantewada, Chhitsgarh, April 2006. You can read the full report from the link provided here.


Dr Sen spoke of the barbarism that exists in the world today, where every 3 seconds there is a death of a child due to poverty and in the 3 seconds over 250$ is spent in "arming" the world. 

Public Health reduced to Techniques
One notices that “Public Health” is becoming a popular stream, and we see that it has now been reduced to techniques. It is rare to find discussions about the social dimensions toe health.

We at SOCHARA can feel worthy ( and feel proud)  that we do not allow the social dimensions to be lost, when sometimes a reductionist mode of understanding health and equity  is often a trap that most can easily slip into. Through all our discussion, reflection, engagements and research we draw out the community, social paradigms of change. We bring the community to the fore.

Monday, January 16, 2012

The Feeling Wheel


Here are my many reflections that I bundle up, after attending (despite my awful-groggy voice and my perpetual bouts of coughing) my first class of  Interpersonal Communication and Listening Skills (Module One) course at Parivarthan. 

To say the least the first session has surely opened an accelerating feeling -  that will open up opportunities of empowerment in the seven weeks of the course.
Parivarthan is a Counselling, Training and Research Center that offers counselling for children, adolescents and individuals, where their training is geared to help towards human development and life skills. Of particular interest is that they conduct research in the area of mental health.

The course I am attending emphasizes on personal growth of an individual through "pertinent" tools of self-awareness. I am sure this reflective space will go a long way in improving not just my approach to mediating with the world, but also consolidate my strengths to engage in communities comprehensively and holistically. 

What I take home from day one is the insights into ones own "Feeling Wheel". Often one is not in touch with ones feeling - we are programmed culturally not be to be in touch with our feelings. Being in touch with "feelings" is to be emotional. Being "emotional" means being soft, and allowing the "intellect" to cave in to emotions!  The feeling wheel surely broadens our vocabulary to the many nuances of over a hundred different nuanced meanings for different shades of emotions! Today with the shrinking language, we  we surely have shrink our experiences by uttering just a few "colloquial" expressions. Take the example of the word OK. It means many things and yet not. It means anything depending on the lines of: alright, well, good, not so good but just about good, maybe, a question - more often a statement in itself! Phew! so much for just this word!

As one delves in to listening simply to the self, several "Trigger Points" come to the surface. The trigger points that is  cumulative of life's experiences - that we have acquired, and that of what we are born into.

Being aware of trigger points, one starts thinking about the I. It further expands ones thinking and forcing one to examine ones relationship with the environment. 

When I mean Trigger Points, I mean that there are several trigger points in each of us - our age, our name, our birth order, then the caste, creed, religion, spirituality to the more social - Family structure, school, college, memories of travel, habits, friends, work. Each of us will have several trigger points that are a repository of feelings and experiences that are unique - and that can bring a flood of positive and not so positive emotions.

Today, a "Date with I"  gave me a chance to re-visit some of them. I am sure I will be re-visiting many more of these in the days to come. This is a wonderful exercise to mediate, engage and perhaps look at things from multiple angles at situations that befell us with experience, those often not necessarily pleasant. 

I realize that the I alters all the time. There are moments when we discover a different I, that was not necessarily the same a few minutes ago, and perhaps will not be the same after the “THIS” moment passes on to the other. 

Our moments of greatest strength is in stark opposition of our greatest weakness. 

Through this changing I, often in a continuum of  change, conflict and alteration, one can say that the I is dynamic. It is never static. Thanks to the trigger points that have allowed fossils of emotions to bury within the I-US in time.

The emotional residue remains day after day, year after year, and with this shifts the I.   

I guess, today was entirely a "date with I".  This provided a meeting with 13 wonderful people - who have sometimes the same and yet unique experiences. 

This journey of deep introspection will  provide me the tools to engage with every “relationship transaction” more effectively. This I am sure will go a long way in helping me in my interaction with children. 

My working with children in need of care and protection will be the wheel of time that will expand an exhilarated,  creative, aware and mindful journey, through my life and beyond.

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