The recent statement by Masood the
congress candidate from Saharanpur is reflective of the major malaise facing the political
system of the country. While Masood indeed crossed all limits of social behavior,
there have been similar incidents covering other political parties as well,
though on a relatively lower scale in the politically volatile state of Uttar
Pradesh. Is this reflective of the fact that goondaism has emerged as the core
of the political system in our country I wonder?
How refined the language that
the masses use is indicative of the state of development of the nation and if
the recent statements that emerged during the ongoing Mahabharata are any
indication, we have indeed come many notches down in so far as social values and
behavior are concerned. The mere thought that people like Masood have a fair
chance to sit in the hallowed portals of the parliament gives shivers to
ordinary mortals like us. This thought also makes us hang our heads in shame as
the parliament of the nation would stand disgraced by the presence of people
like him as compared to people of the stature of Nehru, Shastri, Atalji, Piloo Mody and
many others who raised the prestige of the august house by their presence and
their words. Indeed the hallowed portals are meant for knowledgeable debates, not for flaunting muscle power or the ability to start or perpetuate goonda raj.
And that leads me to wonder why
all the leaders are not adequately vocal about the biggest malaise afflicting
the nation at present – corruption. Why has no big leader ever expressed his
resolve to root out this malaise from the face of the nation. Even none of our
great and not so great prime ministers could find the courage or the resolve or
perhaps the moral authority to announce the beginning of the battle against
corruption while addressing the nation every independence day.
The answer is simple. The
political as well as the bureaucratic system of the country is mired deep into
corrupt practices and expecting one of them to announce the beginning of the
battle would therefore be asking for too much. And it is not as if the menace
is so big that it cannot be brought under control or eradicated. It merely
requires the resolve and the morality of those in power who have the
authority of the pen.
Perhaps the cesspool that the
nation appears to have entered into is so deep and so thick that getting out of
it is going to be difficult. Being a part of the system I appreciate the deep
rooted spread of the mess, yet I wish that the leader who emerges would take
this issue head on for only then the nation would have any chance of moving
forward in the real sense.