Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Sites | Writers | Advertise | My Orble | Login

Frank Thoughts - by reuben

Frank Thoughts - December 2006

What events changed you in 2006?

December 31st 2006 15:16
Happy New Year 2007!

With every year that passes by, there are events that have taken place, which affect you in some way or another and change your world. Occurrences that leave an indelible mark on your memory, and change you forever. Each one of us is affected in a different way, and each one of us reacts differently to the same event. This year too saw many such events. I have listed three that affected tremendously and changed me in some way, forever. Ironically, all the three I have listed, transpired within a week of each other.

Italy wins the FIFA Football World Cup/ Zinedine Zidane red carded towards end of his career (09 July 2006):

The recent football world cup will be remembered as one that belonged to the underdogs. Teams that were pitted to win the cup, like Germany, Argentina and Brazil, did not. Instead, two teams that were far from being at their best reached the finals. Both Italy and France reached the finals with a little luck and gritty football.

World Cup 2006 winners
The Azzuris with the cup
The stage was set for a great game of football, and what a game it turned out to be! Two thrilling goals scored, with each team scoring one. The atmosphere was tense yet exhilarating, adrenalin was pumping, pulses were racing, hearts were beating at an unbelievable pace, everyone who was watching was at the edge of their seats as the game went in to extra time. Then the unthinkable happened, Zinedine Zidane, the maestro who almost single-handedly brought his team to the finals, was given a red card, and was sent off the field! For sometime, nobody knew why? Then the incident was replayed on the giant screens at the stadium. Zidane made the word “headbutt” a household term almost instantaneously. We will never know what provoked him, and what Materazzi said to him. But, in an instant, an entire nation’s heart skipped a beat. Italy went on to win the cup 5-3, through a penalty shootout. What if Zidane was not sent off, would France lose?


Here I learned that you can achieve great things if you have belief in yourself and that it is not only one man’s efforts, but teamwork that matters. Also, that it takes only a fraction of a second for a nation to realise that its sporting idol is but human.

Mumbai suburban train bombings (11 July 2006)
This was one of the worst terror attacks the city has seen. They were a series of seven bomb blasts that took place over a period of 11 minutes on the Suburban Railway in Mumbai (formerly known as Bombay), capital city of the Indian state of Maharashtra and India's financial capital. 209 people lost their lives and over 700 were injured in the attacks.

The scenes of the terror attack were horrific. Yet in times like these, when the backbone of the city’s public transport network was crippled, people from all walks of life came out to help those who were stranded. The Western Railways did a commendable job of restoring the rail services to normalcy almost overnight!

I was in my office in South Mumbai when the blasts occurred, and got the news almost instantaneously of the blasts and the resulting situation. The first half hour or so was very tense as we tried frantically calling our loved ones informing them of our safety and inquiring about others. What added to the anxiety was that most mobile telephone networks collapsed. Most of my colleagues were stranded in office as the train routes were closed and traffic on the roads had come to a standstill, because of the traffic jams. I did not have too much of a problem getting home as I stayed a stone throw away from the office, but I decided to stay back with my colleagues. It was well worth the wait because as we waited, we all realised we all shared the same fears and concerns, and we also shared the same resilience to fight back. Anyone who knows the communal history of Mumbai, will know this when I say that, this could easily have turned in to a Hindu – Muslim flare up. As no terror group had claimed responsibility, and the previous few days witnessed stray incidents of communal violence in the outskirts of the city. But, on this day we knew that the people who had done this had no religion.

One of the severely damaged coaches

What transpired the next day was indeed a slap in the face of the monsters that carried out these attacks. People got back in the very same trains that only the previous day had witnessed gory scenes of violence. Some newspapers reported that this was the resilience and fighting spirit of the Mumaikar. Others claimed that these people had no other choice, because if they did not go to work they won’t be able to earn their daily bread. While still some others said that the people were too selfish and are not concerned with the world, as long as they and their family are safe. Whatever the reason, I knew for a fact that this terror attack failed miserably at what it was aimed at doing. The intended “terror” did not set in, people were more determined than before, to catch the guilty and punish them.

On this day I learned the fragility of life, any moment could be my last. Fragile as our life may be, the human spirit to live on is eternal and always triumphs when pushed against a wall.

Israel war on Lebanon (12 July – 14 August 2006)
The *2006 Israel-Lebanon military conflict in Lebanon and northern Israel was fought between the Hezbollah paramilitary forces and the Israeli military. This was a war that many thought was justified, as the Hezbollah “committed an act of war”.


To be honest, even I thought that what the Israelis did was justifiable, but as the days went by, I realised how terribly wrong I was and the rest who thought like me were. War in any form is wrong and cannot be justified. Violence only begets violence and does not solve anything.

Are there any such events that changed you in 2006?

*The conflict began when Hezbollah fired Katyusha rockets and mortars at Israeli military positions and border villages, diverting attention from another Hezbollah unit that crossed the border and abducted two Israeli soldiers and killed three others. Israeli troops attempted to rescue the abducted soldiers but were unsuccessful, losing five more in the attempt. Israel responded with massive air strikes and artillery fire on Lebanese civilian infrastructure, including Rafik Hariri International Airport which Israel said Hezbollah used to import weapons, an air and naval blockade, and a ground invasion of southern Lebanon. Hezbollah then launched rockets into northern Israel and engaged the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) in guerrilla warfare from hardened positions.

The conflict killed over 1,400 people, most of who were Lebanese citizens, severely damaged Lebanese infrastructure, displaced about 975,000 Lebanese and 300,000 Israelis and disrupted normal life across all of Lebanon and northern Israel. Even after the ceasefire, much of Southern Lebanon remained uninhabitable due to unexploded cluster bombs. As of 1 December 2006, an estimated 200,000 Lebanese remained internally displaced or refugees.
Taken from www.wikipedia.com
121
Vote
   


Oh holy night the stars are brightly shining…this is the night of our dear saviour’s birth!

Wishing one and all the peace and joy of Christ this Christmas season!

Christmas is the time of giving and sharing, it is the time when our families forget their differences and come together to celebrate. When we decorate our houses, put up christmas trees and spend enormous sums of money on clothes and gifts for ourselves and our loved ones. But very often we forget why we are doing all this…why am I writing about it? Maybe, because I too, almost completely forgot the reason why I celebrate Christmas in the first place!

As every year, this year too I went for the midnight service on Christmas eve to my church. I arrived fifteen minutes early, hoping to get a seat. But, to my surprise the church premises was overflowing with people, many of whom I had never seen before, not that I know everyone who comes there. But there were hawkers selling Santa Claus hats and balloons, children screaming, it was like I was in a middle of a fairground!

As the service began (I ended up standing right through), people started leaving! Then it dawned on me that these weren’t Christians at all, they were people from other faiths who had come to ‘experience’ the midnight service, like it was an annual fair. Then I looked around again, and it did seem like many of us (including me) had come there, like every year, more for tradition sake than because we wanted to celebrate and witness Christ’s birth at the service. We had become victims of the commercialisation of this beautiful event.

Thankfully, by the end of the service, I realised that the celebrations were meaningless if I didn’t completely understand God the Father’s love for me, and his expression of this love by sending Jesus to save me.

I sincerely hope that by the end of this Christmas season a majority of the world has experienced god’s love. I maybe optimistic, but deep down in my heart I know it is possible…do you?
114
Vote
   


Sometimes, however much you try, you can never get in to the Christmas mood. Even though everywhere you look you can see some semblance of the arrival of the Christmas season. But somehow you just cannot get yourself to feel that way. This is exactly how I was feeling till I decided to proactively do something about it. I decided to listen to my favourite Christmas carols, hymns and songs. So throughout the day (in office on ear phones), I started listening to various versions of Little Drummer Boy, Away in a Manger, Oh Come, All Ye Faithful, Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Silent Night etc…Now it seems like I won’t be able to get rid of this amazing feeling!

So, what's the difference between a Christmas hymn, carol and a song? Some experts believe that hymns are carols for adults. On this basis, Once in Royal David's City, and Silent Night, for example, are carols. The Oxford Book of Carols defines carols as "songs with a religious impulse that are simple, hilarious, popular and modern." And according to me, a carol that has a copyright and that some people use to make cartloads of money out of, during this season, are Christmas songs.

Almost all of us have a favourite Christmas song, carol or hymn. The ones that we can listen to over and over again. The ones that bring back warm memories of Christmases gone by. My favourite ones are, Little Drummer Boy, All I Want For Christmas Is My Two Front Teeth, When A Child Is Born, Feliz Navidad and The Christmas Song.

Which are your favourite?
88
Vote
   


Scenes of a few Australian cricketers gesturing to the president of the Board of Control of Cricket in India (BCCI), Sharad Pawar to leave the podium after the ICC Champions Trophy presentation had been flashed across all media worldwide. Pawar declined initially from commenting on the issue and dismissed it as something trivial. He however later, asked for a formal apology from the Australian team, because, “If they apologise, it would be a good signal to the people of this country (read India)”, as he put it. As per reports, the Australian team captain sent his formal apology to Pawar and has even tried to contact him personally. All this is fine…but was the Australian demeanour just Aussie arrogance, as perceived by the host nation, or were they just eager to receive the award? If so, then is this freedom of expression universal? Are there any limits to it? Or is just a matter of perspective? Who decides this?

Almost all democracies have signed the United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights and expressed their allegiance to uphold the freedom of expression. Ironically, all democracies have a clause that curtails this freedom. It may be interesting to note that the Australian Constitution does not have a direct reference to this freedom, but it is implied in various sections of it and the various international covenants signed by the Australian government. Most of the clauses curtailing this freedom have a yardstick that says, “What may be offensive or cause national unrest”. I can understand the “national unrest” bit, but, who is to decide the “offensive” part?

In India, there are self-appointed “moral police”, most of them from political parties who want to make their presence felt. Some of their areas of “offensiveness” are “Valentine’s Day”, “obscene movies”, “public display of affection”, and many similar such topics. They go on a rampage and accost anyone endorsing these. These people may feel they are doing society good by stopping such “morally offensive” behaviour. But they must realise that society is mature enough to think for itself and it does not need them to do so. Moreover, most civilisations in human history have prospered when there has been a healthy exchange of ideas and viewpoints. Expression awakens society and does wonders for it. How far one goes in expressing themselves depends entirely on the individual, and it is he or she who has to decide what is best.

Freedom of expression is a basic right of individuals, and must not be denied to them. According to me, it is very closely linked to the right to choose, as everyone is free to accept or decline what he or she is exposed to. If someone is bold enough to express himself or herself, they should be responsible and mature to face the consequences of it. Curtailing or suppressing this freedom will only lead to frustration and anger, which in the past has proven lethal to society at large.

Coming back to the Australian team, who were probably just carried away by the moment, and most Australians would agree to this But, one billion Indians who watched what transpired that day, believe that the Australian team was arrogant and impolite. Well, freedom of expression is probably just a matter of perspective!
92
Vote
   


New kid on the blog!

December 11th 2006 17:09
I can't sing like Luciano Pavarotti. I can't dance like John Travolta. I can't run the hundred metres in under 10 seconds like Carl Lewis. I can't act like Al Pacino. I can't cook like Anthony Bourdain. I can't write like...wait a minute...I can write...not like Thomas Friedman...but I can write…but I need help!!

There is always a first time to everything, and I must admit that this is my first attempt at writing a blog. So, don’t expect it to be a masterpiece. It could become one though, with your help.

[ Click here to read more ]
94
Vote
   


More Posts
1 Posts
1 Posts
1 Posts
13 Posts dating from December 2006
Email Subscription
Receive e-mail notifications of new posts on this blog:
Moderated by reuben
Copyright © 2006 2007 2008 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]