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June
3, 2001
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Straight
Face
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Walking
the talk
There
is a great deal of gargling with saline water going on in the whitewashed
corridors of power in the Capital, as vocal cords are being prepared
for the marathon session of talks that lies ahead of us. Listen
to its persistent ululation and youll understand that India
is very serious about the proposed talking.
It
was the former US ambassador to this nation, John Kenneth Galbraith
who, having observed us for many years at close quarters, once remarked,Of
all the races on earth, the Indians have the most nearly inexhaustible
appetite for oratory.
I believe Galbraith has not done sufficient justice to our national
genius. He has erred on the side of caution. Our appetite for oratory,
Mr Galbraith, is well and truly inexhaustible and no Galbraith can
take that away from us by resorting to a certain parsimony with
words.
Let
me put it this way. We, the Indian people, are gifted with voice
boxes that come with no volume control and certainly no stop button.
Loquaciousness flows through our lungs, volubility runs through
our veins, garrulity is imprinted in our genes. We are never at
a loss for a few words that end up multiplying faster than rabbits.
If I were to put it across in a more expeditious manner, no one,
no force on earth nuclear or otherwise can shut us
up if we dont want to be shut up (and we usually dont).
Remember
that nine-hour marathon speech V.K. Krishna Menon delivered at the
United Nations decades ago, and which record still has not been
bettered? To this day, witnesses to that display of yabbering who
happen to be still alive, are nursing headaches as a result of having
heard the Menon Marathon.
It is said that representatives of other member states went home,
had lunch, snatched a quick nap, had a leisurely cup of tea, watched
a play on Broadway, and returned to the UN only to discover that
Menon had still not discovered a full stop in his punctuation and
was, indeed, still in full flow. It may also be noted for the record
that the subject of his verbal exertions on that particular occasion
happened to be Kashmir.
Look
at brave K.C. Pant, the prime ministers special emissary for
talking in Kashmir. Pant wants talks so badly that he is combing
the hillsides of the state to find an audience. He pretends that
he only wants to listen but actually that is just a ruse to gather
an audience, an euphemism for an abiding desire to be heard. He
has already confabulated with the shikarawallahs and the apricot
sellers, engaged the peanut sellers and the pony-wallahs, played
interlocutor to carpet weavers and walnut wood carvers and, when
last heard, was sizing up the Chinars on the waterfront wondering
if they would care to listen to what he had to say.
I
must say, however, with all the deepest conviction at my command,
that my favourite talker is that last Englishman of India. I refer,
of course, to one who is presently the union minister of external
affairs who also happens to be the union minister of defence, the
ever erudite, polysyllabic, polysynthesing, polyglotic, epiglottic
Jaswant Singh.
People
say he was given additional charge of the ministry of defence (when
the earlier minister of defence had no defence against the Tehelka
charges), because the prime minister is partial to him. Nothing
can be farther from the truth. The prime minister, being an extremely
wise man and no mean talker himself, realised well enough that here
was a person with enough verbal ammunition to preside over not just
two ministries, but many more if so required.
Whats
more, the prime minister must have also shrewdly calculated that
if there was one man who could single-handedly throw the obstreperous
Indian media into a blue funk, it was this man. So preoccupied would
they be in running for cover and reaching for dictionaries to deconstruct
the defence-cum-external affairs ministers dialogic and occasionally
diatribic deliveries, that they would forget to ask him the right
questions.
This
horizontal ministerial proliferation, as Jaswant Singh would himself
have put it, is a most apt, apposite, appropriate, fitting, felicitous,
inspired, propitious appointment. This double-minister who talks
on the double is Indias secret weapon, more deadly than all
the Trishuls and Agnis we may have at our command.
The
Pakistanis, therefore, had better watch out as they walk down the
high road to talks. I would suggest that they arm themselves with
dictionaries, thesauruses, encylopaedias and wordbooks of every
description. And, yes, I would urge them to invest in some extra
large ear muffs and wads of cotton. Going by all indications, its
going to be a particularly ear-splitting July ahead, as we prepare
to walk the talk.
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