MIRZA GHALIB AND THE VETERANS
Mirza
Asad-Ullah Khan Ghalib died a poor, miserable man. Like most geniuses,
his work got its true approbation long after he wasn’t around to bask in
the glory. But the lack of recognition was only part of the reason for
his misery. He had much too high an opinion of himself to hanker for
praise from lesser mortals, though admittedly it never hurt to be
extoled at mushairas. The major cause of his melancholy was the
indignity he had to face as a petitioner before the British government.
Ghalib’s
uncle, who was also his guardian after his father’s death, was the
governor of Agra under the Marathas. When the territory was annexed by
the British, they appointed him an officer of 400 cavalrymen and apart
from a fixed salary, gave him a grant of land near Mathura. When he
died, the land was taken away and a pension fixed for his next of kin in
its place. Ghalib had a small share in this being one of the heirs. The
British delegated the responsibility for paying the pension to the
Nawab of Firozepur Jhirka, to whom the land had been transferred. The
Nawab arbitrarily reduced the pension, including Ghalib’s share, to less
than one third. Now, being a poet (just like being an author and
blogger) is not something one can make a living out of. So the pension
mattered greatly, and not getting what was his rightful due rankled.
Thus Ghalib spent a large part of his life fighting for his pension to
be restored to the rightful amount.
He
even undertook a long journey from Delhi to Calcutta, which was the
capital then, to put his case directly before the British government,
leaving Delhi in 1827 and returning in 1830. He expressed the affront at
the shoddy manner in which he was treated in his inimitable manner as
follows:-
Har ek baat pe kahte ho tum ki tu kya hai tumhin kaho ke ye andaaz-e-guftagu kya hai
(On every conversation/utterance of mine, you say “what are you?” Pray let me know what form of conversing is this?)
He
may not have been a man of means, and was here as a petitioner, but as
an intellectual and as a member of the nobility, he expected some basic
courtesies which were not extended to him. He never did get his dues,
mainly because even though the British were favourably inclined, the
order had to be implemented by the reticent Nawab of Firozepur Jhirka.
Almost
200 years later, with the British long gone, the Indian armed forces
veterans are getting a taste of the bitter medicine administered to
Ghalib. They have been fighting a frustrating battle for their rightful
dues just as Ghalib did. The differences – they are up against a
democratically elected government and bureaucrats of their own
independent nation, not a colonial power and a whimsical Nawab. And the
dues are for the blood and sweat shed by them personally, and not by a
distant ancestor. These factors make the situation even more galling
than it must have been for the ‘Sukhanwar’. And though they may not have
Ghalib’s gift of rhetoric to express their anguish, the veterans chose
other means like returning their medals and publicly burning their
artificial limbs.
Last
year, in the run up to the elections, both major alliances tripped over
each other to promise the implementation of this long standing demand.
The National Democratic Alliance rode to power on popular aspirations,
one of which was the veteran’s hope of OROP finally being implemented.
One year down the line, the veterans are still waiting. Waiting, after
the Prime Minister and the Defence Minister have both categorically
expressed their commitment towards giving them their dues. As per
reports, the case is shuttling between the babus of Ministries of
Defence and Finance, while the veterans wait. Hoping that the decision
makers of today are more successful in ensuring the modern day Nawabs
follow their writ.
(SOURCE- Swordarm - Rohit Agarwal's blog: Mirza Ghalib and the veterans http://swordarm.in/?p=879 )
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