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Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Hey there, I'm an occasional blogger, writing whenever the mood catches on...I'd love to hear your thoughts/ opinions on my pieces, so it wld be grt if u cld leave a comment...u can reach me at pixiepaxi@hotmail.com...Happy reading, folks

Saturday, August 30, 2008

‘All Shook up’ – Like its shaken, not stirred equivalent!

‘All Shook up’, the latest in the series of musicals from the Leila Alvares stable, opened to a packed house in Bangalore last evening. I'm sure there would be critic's reviews that follow but this is a personal account of it, as a avid theatre lover. Ever since the play was announced the previous week, I was eager to see it, especially since it spoke of an Elvis twist. Also, I must confess that in the past few years, I have watched 4-5 of their productions and enjoyed them immensely. Last year, getting to watch ‘Joseph and his Amazing Techni-colour Dream coat’ was a struggle of sorts. All places selling the tickets had sold out and we finally landed up going to Kavita Kasturi’s house to buy the last few of them [she’s in charge of organizing the tickets]. Well, the struggle was worth it – the play was a delight - and with that, Leila Alvares’ productions firmly established on my annual social calendar.


And there we were, the six of us, on opening night and in seats to die for – right in front of the centre stage [all thanks to Kavita]. It started with a bang with the song “Jail house bird”, setting the context for the Elvis flavoured play and getting us all in the mood, with each one in the audience, singing along and swaying to the beat. In the next 2 hours that followed, it was a treat after treat. Eternal Elvis songs were revisited; the audience, one with the humours on the stage, crooning wherever they knew the lyrics; roles of lead characters etched well; the actors [many recognizable from last year’s production including Arvind Kasturi & Prem Koshy] well cast, confident and impressive; dancers, entertaining and lending the essence of exaggeration to the stage; the costumes and sets, detailed and apt; and the music as foot-tapping as ever.


“As always, the music and singing was live”, as Leila repeatedly conveyed, and there was full justice to the theme of a musical, never mind the hiccups of sound quality and faulty audio control. Among the actors, the favourites this year, no doubt, were Neville Nazareth, as the very cool, Elvis spirited, women-exciting, leather jacketed Chad and Jude Lazaro [known more as last year’s Joseph] in his endearing ‘Side-kick’ role.


A satisfying performance, enveloped in great music and fine singing, made our evening thoroughly enjoyable. Only when Leila, during her credits speech, talked about seeing us next year, I realized that it was a one ‘long’ year before we got to see another such play. Hmmm, anyway, for now, we left with flashing eyes reflecting our pleasure, strains of “Can’t help falling in love” and “a little less conversation” playing in our heads, and gushing conversation about the interesting men in the play [read: Chad, Dennis, Dean].


Thursday, August 28, 2008

The ‘Staine-d’ State?

No prizes for guessing that I’m talking about Orissa. The staine-d state! Shame!


Like we didn’t have enough of the tragic Staine murder in 1999 that again we have the same and more incidents of violence in the same light. Burning people alive; killing hapless missionary victims and people working in churches; damaging churches and prayer halls; attacking schools and children’s hostels; literally holding the Christians in the state to ransom; evoking a sense of huge insecurity and non- belief in the country’s ability to protect its citizens; making them live in fear.


When the Staine murder was exposed, the overriding emotion that I felt was sorrow – hurt that a selfless man of God, one who dedicated his potentially good Australian life to helping and alleviating the plight of the poor, was burnt alive with his young sons in a jeep. This time around, there isn’t a public name like Graham Staine – but the number of victims is larger.


The tragedies are similar, if not more. A number of people have been killed, threatened, made to feel like second class citizens, countless are in hiding in the forests and atleast 2 people including one lady was charred to death while 10 others have died in the communal rage. Orissa burns, Christians are running for their lives. This time, the sense of loss trails far behind. In is place, is a growing sense of resentment and anger.


As a society, how can we sit back and accept this? Do we not have any responsibility beyond condoning the incidents? Do we allow the state machinery to take its own sweet time and still do nothing to ensure that we don’t see such tragedies played out in future time and again? It was already 48 hrs since Orissa was caught up in the flare-up and only then was the deployment of extra forces to curb the violence announced. The home ministry in today’s TOI talks of managing the situation in 48 hrs. How many more people’s lives are ese next 48 hrs going to cost? Mr Naveen Patnaik, CM of Orissa, what will it take to wake you up and get you moving?


Unless significant efforts are taken to control the situation and protect the fundamental rights of the Christians there; unless non-negotiable actions are publicly deployed against the perpetuators of such strife; unless we start asking tough questions and someone answers them; we will not have a permanent solution. Anything else will just be mere lip-service, a half-hearted attempt to overtly calm the frayed and angry tempers to a temporary numbing and gradual silence of defeat and forgetfulness. Atleast until it rears its ugly head once again.


If conversion were really the issue and the concern for the tribals’ interest been the root of the problem, the VHP supporters would not have attacked the dispensary of Mount Carmel Convent in Baligura. This was the lone source of first aid to the tribals in that entire region. At the very least, the VHP would have organized someone to restore or provide the necessary medical aid to tribals in the region. Negative to both, as reports highlighting the desperate need for medical help, come streaming in. So much for the saffron mobs acting in the interests of tribals!


Infact, Christians might as well get accustomed in Orissa to living life as a compromise, as lesser human beings. Amongst states with dangerous associations, if Bihar has its gun culture and gunda raj, if Assam has the ULFA and underground rebels, if Andhra has the Naxalites, then as a Christian, for me, Orissa has the Staine-rs – ready to kill, without a thought, without a cause, without any care of consequence or retribution. Exploitation of a religion in the name of protecting another. Mindlessly. I’m sure there is a Nemesis waiting to catch up. Till then, shame on Orissa!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Quick Tales - The LiveJournal - The Caferati Flash Fiction Contest

Write a in 500 words or less. On offer: delicious cash prizes, global visibility and the chance to be part of a book.

The theme is "Journal," and your deadline is 7th September. Prizes? The top 5 winning entries take home cash prizes of Rs 19,999, Rs 16,000, Rs 12,000, Rs 8,000 and Rs 4,000, respectively. Each of the top 100 entries will also be highlighted on LJ's India Writing community - http://community.livejournal.com/india_writing/ - for the world to see. (Short-listed stories may also be included in a book that LiveJournal plans to publish at a later date.) For more info, link to the site - http://livejournal.caferati.com