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  • Hamas: Some people’s Terrorists are other people’s Freedom Fighter’s

    Hamas: Some people’s Terrorists are other people’s Freedom Fighter’s

    A four day truce has come into effect in the Israel-Hamas conflict.

    Hamas - Israel Conflict

    Some people blame Hamas for starting the recent hostilities. But they need to be reminded of the words of the great Indian freedom fighter, Bal Gangadhar Tilak when India was under British rule.

    In 1908, Indian revolutionaries launched a series of bomb attacks on British officials in Bengal, in which several Britishers were killed.

    Soon thereafter Tilak, who was critical of the moderate approach to the fight for independence from British rule, wrote in his newspaper ‘Kesari’: “ Violence, however deplorable, becomes inevitable when the rulers, who have converted the entire nation into a prison, begin to overawe the people in an endeavour to create despondency among them by terrible oppression and unduly frightening them. Then the sound of the bomb is spontaneously produced to impart to the authorities the knowledge that the people have reached the limit of their tolerance of oppression ”.

    The origin of the ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN dispute since 1948 has been explained by me in the video and articles below :

    Israel had conquered and occupied Gaza and the West Bank after the Six Day War in 1967, and thereafter converted them into virtual prison camps. The Palestians there, many of whom were refugees or their descendants after the ‘Nakba’ of 1948, were living in hellish conditions, without proper food, water, electricity etc, and often with severe restrictions on their freedom of movement.

    In the West Bank, Jewish settlers were often driving Palestinians from their land, though the UN had declared that illegal.

    The PLO ( Palestine Liberation Organisation, which had assumed power in the West Bank, no doubt protested against this, but only in words. Consequently, its leaders, such as Mahmoud Abbas, were perceived by most Palestinians as being covertly hand in glove with Israel and the Western powers.

    On the other hand, Hamas, which assumed power in Gaza, resorted to armed struggle against the Israeli oppression, launching two ‘intifadas‘.

    But this resulted in no basic change of the situation. Matters came to a head, however, on October 7th 2023 when Hamas launched an attack, and its soldiers entered southern Israel, killing many Israelis and taking many hostages.

    No doubt the Hamas soldiers committed some atrocities ( though the exact amount is unknown, since in war truth is the first casualty ), but the Israeli response was totally disproportionate. Its air force destroyed many apartment buildings and hospitals, and together with its army killed about 15,000 civilians, two third being women and children
    https://press.un.org/en/2023/sc15503.doc.htm

     The Israeli authorities ordered residents of northern Gaza to move to the south, and the Israeli army entered Gaza, a tiny strip of coastal land 25 miles long and 7 mile wide, with only about 2.2 million people, thus starting a Second Nakba

    Despite the onslaught of the well armed Israeli armed forces, and despite suffering heavy casualties, Hamas has bravely continued fighting, thus making their soldiers heroes in the eyes of the Palestinians, as well as of many people in the world. The people of Gaza are overwhelmingly supporting Hamas, and most Palestinians in the West Bank, Jordan, etc have switched their loyalties from the PLO to Hamas.

    Under the four day truce Hamas has last night released 24 hostages, and Israel has released 39 Palestinians

    More are set to be released on both sides in the next 3 days. of the truce.

    Whether the truce will hold beyond 4 days is uncertain. But one thing is clear. It is a significant victory for Hamas, as it bravely fought the powerful Israeli forces, armed by modern Western weapons ( including aircraft ), and has compelled it to declare a truce, however temporary. It has also bargained with Israel on equal terms for release of prisoners.

    USA and the European Union have no doubt declared Hamas a terrorist organisation.

    But in the eyes of the Palestinians, and many people throughout the world, they are freedom fighters and heroes

  • All Our Politicians are Panautis 

    All Our Politicians are Panautis 

    Rahul Gandhi has called Prime Minister Modi a ‘panauti’ ( ill omen, inauspicious, or ‘ashubh’ ) and a pickpocket.

    All Our Politicians are Panauti
    Rahul Gandhi

    But I would expand that statement.

    All Indian politicians are panautis and pickpockets. They only seek power and pelf, and have no genuine love for the people’s welfare. They are mostly selfish rogues, rascals, looters, deceivers, and mafia type bandits, who have taken India to the verge of ruin. 

    https://indicanews.com/justice-markandey-katju-the-truth-behind-indias-explosive-gdp-growth/

     In fact the worst panauti in our country is our parliamentary democracy and electoral politics, which runs largely on the basis of caste and religious vote banks ( as everyone knows ). Casteism and communalism are feudal forces, which have to be destroyed if India is to progress, but Parliamentary Democracy further entrenches them, as it largely runs on that basis. 

    https://indicanews.com/justice-markandey-katju-the-superficiality-and-inanity-of-prof-tarunabh-khaitan/

    Is Rahul Gandhi any less a panauti, a man who has only his arrogance of belonging to India’s ‘royal family’, but  has nothing in his head about how to solve India’s huge problems of massive poverty, record and rising unemployment, appalling level of child malnourishment ( every second child in the country is malnourished, according to Global Hunger Index ), and almost total lack of proper healthcare and good education for the masses ? And are any other of our politicians, who only have expertise in polarising the people, and spreading caste and communal hatred, any different ? They no doubt make a lot of tall promises to the people before elections, only to be forgotten once the elections are over.

    https://byjus.com/free-ias-prep/global-hunger-index/

    Parliamentary elections of 2024 are fast approaching, and the BJP will no doubt step up religious polarisation. But our ‘secular’ parties will not be left far behind. 

    Nitish Kumar, who like the French politician Talleyrand kept changing sides, depending on which way the political wind was blowing, has played his gambit of the caste census, with an eye on the backward votes, and many of the other ‘secular’ parties have supported the move.

    Owaisi is just the counterpart of the BJP, playing the Muslim card.

    So what is the way out of this predicament for the Indian people ? I have explained in the articles below that the only way out is by waging a mighty, historical, united people’s struggle, rising above caste and religion, led by modern minded leaders, who are determined to create an alternative political and social system under which there is rapid industrialisation and modernisation, and all Indians get a high standard of living and decent lives.

    https://indicanews.com/justice-katju-indian-subcontinents-current-historical-situation/

  • North Indian (Hindustani) Classical Music

    North Indian (Hindustani) Classical Music

    This brief note is to acquaint the uninitiated about North Indian (Hindustani) Classical music ( there is also a south Indian classical music called Carnatac music ).

    North Indian (Hindustani) Classical Music

    https://m.facebook.com/justicekatju/posts/787202724653609/

    The main form of Hindustani Classical music upto about 250 years ago was dhrupad, whereas the main form thereafter has been khyaal. About the middle of the 18th century khyaal gradually replaced dhrupad as the main form of Hindustani classical music, and now dhrupad is largely out of vogue, though it still has some exponents e.g. the Dagar brothers. Tansen, the famous court singer in Emperor Akbar’s court, mainly sang dhrupad.

    Khyaal is regarded more melodious than dhrupad. It permits greater improvization, and is freer and more flexible than dhrupad. It has greater variety of embellishment and ornamentation than dhrupad, which was relatively much more rigid.

    Khyaal is modal, each mode being called a raag. It is the most popular genre of Hindustani classical music today, though there are other forms like thumri, tappa, taraana, ghazal, qawwali, bhajan, etc.

    The shift from dhrupad to khyaal is often attributed to Niamat Khan ( also known as Sadarang), the court singer in the court of the Mughal Emperor, Mohammed Shah Rangila, who ruled from 1719 to 1749. Even now many of the bandishes (songs) in khyaal music mention the names of Mohammed Saheb ( this is Mohammed Shah Rangila and not Prophet Mohammed) and Sadarang.

    Hindustani classical music had several gharanas (literally ‘households’), e.g. Gwalior gharana (regarded by some as the parent of all gharanas), the Jaipur gharana, Kirana gharana, Agra gharana, etc. These gharanas had slight differences in their mode of presentation of music. The cause of the growth of these gharanas was that in the old days there was not much interaction between musicians in different parts of the country, because in those days there were no aeroplanes, trains and motor cars. Musicians were isolated from each other, and so could not create a mode common to everyone. Musicians usually taught their sons or close relatives only, and were patronized by feudal princes.

    The two persons who made the greatest contribution to the development of Hindustani classical music towards the end of the 19th century were Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande and Vishnu Digambar Paluskar, the former’s contribution being in the realm of theory, while the latter’s being in the practical field.

    Bhatkhande travelled extensively in India to visit singers of the various gharanas. He carefully studied their methods, and found slight defects (ashuddhis) in many gharanas. In the old days the disciple had to copy his master exactly, and hence if there was some ashuddhi in the master’s style, it was repeated by the disciple, and then his disciple in turn replicated the same. This way many defects were perpetuated.

    Bhatkhande studied all this and then wrote books explaining and removing these defects. He also sought to create a coherent theory of Hindustani classical music.

    Paluskar’s contribution, as mentioned before, was in the practical realm. Upto the 19th century singing was not regarded a respectable occupation by the genteel society. Paluskar made it respectable. He opened up music schools in various parts of India, often sending his disciples to head the new school., He set up the Gandharva Mahavidyalaya in 1901 in Lahore (later transferred to Bombay), for teaching Hindustani classical music. He organized music conferences in various places for popularizing Hindustani classical music.

    Great names in Hindustani classical music are D. V. Paluskar, Faiyyaz Khan, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Malikarjun Mansur, Bhimsen Joshi, Kumar Gandharva, Pandit Jasraj, Rashid Khan, Girja Devi, etc. Of the singers in recent times Malikarjun Mansur, was regarded by some as a shade above others.

    The communities which have made the greatest contribution in Hindustani classical music are Maharashtrians and Pathans ( the Khans).

    Hindustani classical music is often close to nature. For example, the malhar raag ( there are many forms of malhars, each having slight differences from the others e.g. mian ka malhar, megh malhar, sur malhar, gaud malhar, ramdasi malhar, shudh malhar, nat malhar, etc) is a raag of the monsoon season. On hearing it one feels that the clouds are coming, the lightning is flashing, and then it is raining.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7R4kdCi1zY…

    Some raags are sung in the morning, and gently wake one up, e.g. jaunpuri, bhairav, etc

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FU98N_4ESIw…

    Others are night raags and they gently put one to sleep, e.g. malkauns, darbari, etc,

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPE-bypfdiU…

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sDi69WRBgA…

    Others are sung in the afternoon e.g. bhimpalasi, vrindavani saarang, etc, and some in the evening e.g. yaman.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fR9DwGir4YM…

    There are also seasonal raags e.g. raag bahaar, which creates the ambience of spring.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtiQxUnSFRE…

    Raag malhaar creates the ambience of the rainy season ( as explained above ).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nriYn6EAq3U…

    Some raags like bhairavi can be sung at any time.

    In the morning please hear raag jaunpuri, and enjoy the ambience of the early morning, and at night please hear raags malkauns or darbari.

    I have deliberately not gone into greater detail on the subject as I thought the uninitiated should first be presented a broad outline. Later when he develops more interest in Hindustani classical music he can go into further details.

  • Mughal Emperor Akbar the Father of The Indian Nation

    Mughal Emperor Akbar the Father of The Indian Nation

    The architect of modern India was the great Mughal Emperor Akbar who gave equal respect to all religions, the only policy which can keep India, a country of tremendous diversity, united. He appointed people of all communities to the highest offices on their merits irrespective of their religion, caste, etc, e.g. Todar Mal ( the Finance Minister ), Man Singh and Birbal ( army commanders ).

    Mughul Emperor Akbar the Father of The Indian Nation

    The Emperor Akbar held discussions with scholars of all religions and gave respect not only to Muslim scholars, but also to Hindus, Christians, Parsis, Sikhs, etc. Those who came to his court were given respect, and the Emperor heard their views, sometimes alone, and sometimes in the Ibadatkhana (Hall of Worship), where people of all religions assembled and discussed their views in a tolerant spirit. 

    The Emperor declared his policy of Suleh-e-Kul, which means universal tolerance of all religions and communities. He abolished Jeziya in 1564 and the pilgrim tax in 1563 on Hindus, celebrated many Hindu festivals, and permitted his Hindu wife to continue practising her own religion even after their marriage. This is evident from the Jodha Bai Palace in Fatehpur Sikri which is built on Hindu architectural pattern.

     In 1578, the Parsi theologian Dastur Mahyarji Rana was invited to the Emperor’s court and he had detailed discussions with Emperor Akbar and acquainted him about the Parsi religion. Similarly, the Jesuit Priests Father Antonio Monserrate, Father Rodolfo Acquaviva and Father Francisco Enriques etc. also came to the Emperor’s court on his request and acquainted him about the Christian religion. The Emperor also became acquainted with Sikhism and came into contact with Guru Amar Das and Guru Ram Das (see ‘The Mughal Empire by R.C. Majumdar).

     Thus, as stated in the Cambridge History of India ( Vol.IV-The Mughal Period ), Emperor Akbar conceived the idea of becoming the father of all his subjects, rather than the leader of only the Muslims, and he was far ahead of his times. As mentioned by Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru in ‘The Discovery of India’ Emperor Akbar’s success is astonishing, for he created a sense of oneness among the diverse elements of India.

     In 1582, the Emperor invited and received a Jain delegation consisting of Hiravijaya Suri, Bhanuchandra Upadhyaya and Vijayasena Suri. Jainism, with its doctrine of non-violence, made a profound impression on him and influenced his personal life. He curtailed his food and drink and ultimately abstained from flesh diet altogether for several months in the year. He renounced hunting which was his favourite pastime, restricted the practice of fishing and released prisoners and caged birds. Slaughter of animals was prohibited on certain days and ultimately in 1587 for about half the days in the year.  

     As mentioned in Dr. Ishwari Prasad’s ‘The Mughal Empire’, the Jains had a great influence on the Emperor. 

     Having heard of the virtues and learning of Hir Vijaya Suri in 1582 the Emperor sent an invitation to him through the Mughal Viceroy at Ahmedabad, which he accepted. He was offered money by the Viceroy to defray the expenses of the journey to the then Moghul capital Fatehpur Sikri, but he refused. The delegation consisting of Hir Vijaya Suri, Bhanu Chandra Upadhyaya and Vijaya Sen Suri started on their journey and walked on foot to Fatehpur Sikri and were received with great honour befitting imperial guests. 

     When introduced to the Emperor he defended true religion and told him that the foundation of faith should be ‘daya’ (compassion) and that God is one though he is differently named by different faiths. 

    The Emperor received instruction in dharma from Suri, who explained the Jain doctrines to him. The Emperor was persuaded to abolish the Sujija Tax (Jeziya) and a Sulka ( a tax on pilgrims) and to free caged birds and prisoners. He stayed for four years at Akbar’s court, and left for Gujarat in 1586. He obtained various concessions to his religion. The Emperor is said to have taken a vow to refrain from hunting and expressed a desire to leave off meat eating for ever as it had become repulsive to him. On Suri’s departure, the Emperor presented to him Padma Sundar scriptures which were preserved in his palace. He offered them to Suri as a gift and was pressed by the Emperor to accept them. The killing of animals was forbidden for certain days.

     Emperor Akbar was a propagator of Suleh-i-Kul (universal toleration) at a time when Europeans were indulging in religious massacres e.g. the St. Bartholomew Day massacre in 1572 of Protestants, (called Huguenots) in France by the Catholics, the burning at the stake of Protestants by Queen Mary of England, the massacre by the Duke of Alva of thousands of people of Holland for their resistance to Rome, and the burning at the stake of Jews during the Spanish Inquisition. We may also mention the subsequent massacre of the Catholics in Ireland by Cromwell, and the mutual massacre of Catholics and Protestants in Germany during the thirty year war from 1618 to 1648 in which the population of Germany was reduced from 18 million to 12 million. 

    Thus, Emperor Akbar was far ahead of even the Europeans of his times. It was because of the wise policy of toleration of the Great Emperor Akbar that the Mughal empire lasted for so long, and hence the same wise policy of toleration alone can keep our country together, despite our diversity.   

    When I visited California a few years back, a gentleman,. Tasawar Jalali, a Kashmiri who is an M.Tech from Harvard, and has been living in USA for about 25 years, met me. I explained to him about the tremendous religious polarisation taking place in India, and the need to promote inter faith harmony if we wish to keep our country united. He agreed, and we formed an organisation called ‘Ibaadatkhana’.

    https://indicanews.com/the-historical-importance-of-the-ibaadatkhana-movement/

     Tasawar organised a meeting of some NRIs settled in the Bay Area to discuss formation of this body. One gentleman objected to the name Ibaadatkhana, saying it had a Muslim flavour. I explained that it was the name of a building ( which still exists in Fatehpur Sikri, the new capital of the Mughal Empire which Akbar built ), in which scholars of all religions, Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Jains, etc met frequently to discuss the good points in their religion amicably. This was a unique building in the world, which brought all religions together, instead of fighting one another.

     Hence the name had a historical significance and background. Thereupon everybody agreed, and we held an inaugural of the organisation in Fremont, California.

    https://indicanews.com/ibaadatkhana-function-and-unity-dinner/

    Thereafter also we have held several global webinars, which can be seen on youtube.

    As explained in my article ‘What is India‘, India is a country of tremendous diversity, as it is broadly a country of immigrants, like North America

    Hence to keep it together and on the path of progress we must give equal respect to all religions, as envisaged by the great Emperor Akbar. In fact it was because of this wise inclusive policy that the Mughal Empire lasted so long, and India became the most prosperous country of the world, with 25% of the world’s GDP and foreign trade

    https://www.news9live.com/knowledge/economy-during-mughal-rule-when-indias-gdp-was-the-worlds-largest-and-trade-and-industry-prospered-194330

    Emperor Akbar is truly the Father of the Indian Nation

  • Pakistani’s behaved stupidly in celebrating India’s defeat

    Pakistani’s behaved stupidly in celebrating India’s defeat

    I was sad to see on youtube many Pakistani’s celebrating India’s defeat in the World Cup Cricket final by Australia, as if Pakistan had won the World Cup.

    Naseem Shah delivering a crucial over in the Pakistan vs. Afghanistan cricket match
    Naseem Shah delivering a crucial over in the Pakistan vs. Afghanistan cricket match

    Many Pakistanis distributed sweets, danced, and did other foolish things

    These silly and misguided people did not realise that it was their own defeat too, since India and Pakistan are really one country, with a common culture, and were one for 500 years ( since the time of Mughal Emperor Akbar ). We were temporarily and artificially divided by that British swindle called Partition in 1947, on the basis of the bogus two nation theory, to keep Hindus and Muslims fighting each other, and thus to keep us weak and backward. But we are sure to reunite one day, like West and East Germany, or North and South Vietnam, under a secular government with modern minded leaders determined to transform our subcontinent into a highly modern, highly industrialised, and highly prosperous region, with its people enjoying a high standard of living, and leading decent lives.

    https://indicanews.com/justice-markandey-katju-indian-reunification-is-an-idea-whose-time-has-come/

    https://www.newslaundry.com/2015/12/08/we-must-reunite-why-pakistan-india-and-bangladesh-should-be-one-country

    https://indicanews.com/indo-pak-reunification/

    When Pakistan was defeated by England in the T20 World Cup cricket final on 13th November 2022,  I called Indians who celebrated it stupid, since it was really India’s defeat too ( since we are one nation )

    Babar Azam addresses the Pakistan cricket team - Motivation and unity for success.
    Babar Azam addresses the Pakistan cricket team – Motivation and unity for success.

    https://indicanews.com/justice-markandey-katju-did-pakistans-loss-against-england-call-for-an-indian-celebration-no/

    Throughout the World Cup series I supported the Pakistani team, regarding it my team too, and in the India-Pakistan match I supported both teams.

    So Pakistanis, it is high time you woke up

  • Justice Katju Calls for Support and Dignity for India’s Sex Workers

    Justice Katju Calls for Support and Dignity for India’s Sex Workers

    Former Supreme Court Justice Katju Advocates for Dignity and Support for India's Sex Workers, Urges Implementation of Vocational Training Programs

    Prostitution is a taboo word in India. It is hardly ever mentioned among people, in  the public discourse, among politicians, the so called ‘intellectuals’, in the educational institutions, or in the media, as if the unfortunate sex workers do not exist, or live on another planet, to be given a wide berth, like lepers in the past.

    Justice Katju Highlights the Need for Dignity and Support for India's Sex Workers

    And yet the truth is that in 2007 the Union Ministry of Women and Child Development reported that there are over 3 million female sex workers in India, ( unofficial estimates are there are upto 10 million, many of them children ). India has one of the largest sex industries in the world, a 1 billion dollar one, and fast growing. In perhaps all cities in India there are ‘red light areas’, e.g. G.B. Road in Delhi, Sonagachi in Kolkata, Sonapur in Mumbai, and Meerganj in my home town  Allahabad.

    There is massive poverty in India, and most women and girls enter the flesh trade not because they enjoy it but due to abject poverty, to fill their stomachs, and once in it they are stigmatised forever, and can never get out, and have to live forever beyond the pale of ‘civilised’ society, which shuns them.

    They live horrible lives, the brothel owners giving them little to eat or wear, and they are often brutally beaten by the latter or their customers.

    https://m.timesofindia.com/india/why-sex-workers-are-putting-their-health-and-safety-at-risk/articleshow/98475350.cms

    In one of his great poems ( called Chakle ) the Urdu poet Sahir Ludhianvi writes poignantly about their plight :

    ” Ye Kooche Ye Neelaam-Ghar Dil-Kashi Ke

    Ye Lutate Hue Kaarvaan Zindagi Ke
    Kahaan Hain Kahaan Hain Muhaafiz Khudi Ke
    Sanaa-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Ye Pur-Pench Galiyaan Ye Be-Khwaab Baazaar
    Ye Gumnaam Raahi Ye Sikkon Ki Jhankaar
    Ye Ismat Ke Saude Ye Saudon Pe Takraar
    Sana- Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Ta’ffun Se Pur Neem-Raushan Ye Galiyaan
    Ye Masli Hui Adh-Khuli Zard Kaliyaan
    Ye Bikti Hui Khokhli Rang-Raliyaan
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Wo Ujle Dareechon Mein Paayal Ki Chhan-Chhan
    Tanaffus Ki Ulajhan Pe Tabale Ki Dhan-Dhan
    Ye Be-Rooh Kamron Mein Khaansi Ki Dhan-Dhan
    Sanaa Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Ye Goonje Huwe Qah-Qahe Raaston Par
    Ye Chaaron Taraf Bheed Si Khidkiyon Par
    Ye Aawaazen Khinchte Huwe Aanchalon Par
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Ye Phoolon Ke Gajre, Ye Peekon Ke Chheente
    Ye Be-Baak Nazaren, Ye Gustaakh Fiqre
    Ye Dhalke Badan Aur Ye Madqooq Chehre
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Ye Bhookhi Nigaahen Haseenon Ki Jaanib
    Ye Badhte Huwe Haath Seenon Ki Jaanib
    Lapakte Huwe Paanv Zeenon Ki Jaanib
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Yahaan Peer Bhi Aa Chuke Hain Jawaan Bhi
    Tano-Mand Bete Bhi, Abbaa Miyaan Bhi
    Ye Beewi Bhi Hai Aur Bahan Bhi Hai, Maan Bhi
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Madad Chaahti Hai Ye Hawwa Ki Beti
    Yashodha Ki Ham Jins Raadha Ki Beti
    Payambar Ki Ummat Zulaikha Ki Beti
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain

    Zara Mulk Ke Rah-Baron Ko Bulaao
    Ye Galiyaan Ye Kooche Ye Manzar Dikhaao
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Ko Laao
    Sana-Khwaan-E-Taqdees-E-Mashriq Kahaan Hain ”.

    The plight of sex workers has been depicted in Indian and world literature, as mentioned below :

    https://www.facebook.com/justicekatju/posts/sex-workers-in-india-perhaps-there-are-millions-of-sex-workers-prostitutes-a-per/865321760175038/

    In the facebook post below I referred to a case, Buddhadeb Karmaskar vs State of West Bengal, which my bench ( with Justice Gyan Sudha Mishra ) decided in the Supreme Court. The ghastly facts of the case are mentioned in the fb post, hence I am not repeating hem.

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=652735931433623&id=506252812748603

    In that decision I said that sex workers are also entitled to a life of dignity, in view of Article 21 of the Indian Constitution, and directed the central and all state governments to frame schemes to give some vocational training to them, so that they could earn their bread by some vocation instead of by selling their bodies.

    https://indianexpress.com/article/news-archive/web/sex-workers-also-human-beings-entitled-to-a-life-of-dignity-says-sc/

    https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/govt-must-give-vocational-training-to-sex-workers-sc/articleshow/7498684.cms

    I retired from the Supreme Court soon after passing the above order, but another bench of the Court hearing the same case gave further directions in the matter

    Things being as they are in India, I doubt my order will be implemented ( except paying some lip service to it ), but at least I have the satisfaction of doing my little bit, and creating some awareness in the public about the plight, tribulations and travails of these unfortunate women and girls

  • Justice Katju Challenges Christian Beliefs: Jesus as a Reformer, Not Divine Figure

    Justice Katju Challenges Christian Beliefs: Jesus as a Reformer, Not Divine Figure

    Christians believe that Jesus Christ was the son of God, that he was resurrected to life after the third day of his death by crucifixion, that he performed miracles, etc, etc.

    Justice Katju Challenges Traditional Christian Beliefs: Advocates Jesus as a Reformer, Not Divine Figure

    As an atheist I obviously cannot believe all this. When there is no God, how can there be a son of God ? How can a dead person come alive after being dead for 2 days ? And since I believe in science, how can I believe in miracles ?

    What I believe is this : at the time of Jesus, the Jewish priests in Palestine, and particularly in Jerusalem, had become corrupt, and the Jewish religion had become a means of deceiving the gullible Jewish people. Jesus, being a good man, was horrified seeing all this. 

    Most people who see wrong things going on all around them, remain silent, fearing that if they raise their voice against it, the powerful vested interests profiting from these wrongs will retaliate and do them harm. 

    However, there are some sensitive and good people who simply cannot tolerate this state of affairs, and become determined to expose and oppose it, whatever the risk. Jesus was one of these. His aim was certainly not to create a new religion, but to reform the Jewish religion and practices, particularly the crooked practices of the Jewish priests. This so infuriated the latter, who fearing that their vested interests would be adversely affected, got him crucified.

    Now it seems that when he grew up, Jesus had become some kind of ‘sadhu’ ( like many who abound in India ). He claimed to be getting revelations and messages of God ( like Prophet Mohammad P.B.U.H 600 years later ), and had gathered numerous disciples and followers, particularly since he himself set very high personal moral standards of conduct. After his death, Jesus’ message was spread to many parts of the Roman Empire, particularly by Paul of Tarsus, who could do so because the Roman Empire provided security to travellers. 

    Jesus’ message was, in a nutshell, this : the Kingdom of God is at hand, i.e. it is imminent, and will come into existence very soon, within one’s lifetime, not in the remote future. So people should repent of their sins and become good, turning over a new leaf, and that will thereby send them to paradise when they die, where they will live a comfortable life, otherwise they will be sent to hell fire.

    This message may not make sense to us today, but it made a lot of sense to people living 2000 years ago, when most people were superstitious and unscientific.
    And it made a lot of sense to the slaves, artisans, and poor people of Rome, who together constituted about 90% population of Rome, and who toiled day and night, doing hard, continuous, unending, nerve wracking work of crushing drudgery, which stultified and degraded them. while the rich senators and merchants of Rome lived in great magnificence and luxury. 

    To escape from their miserable existence, the former readily accepted a religion which gave them a hope and prospect of leading a happy, comfortable afterlife, devoid of their sufferings. The preachers of this new religion were men who led austere, unblemished, very high personal moral lives, which made their words readily acceptable to the populace. 

    Once Christianity became well established in Rome, it rapidly spread to other parts of the Roman Empire, steadily gaining more and more converts, and this process was greatly accelerated by Constantine the Great, who became Roman Emperor in 306 A.D. and supported Christianity

    I respect Christianity because it gave a degree of social emancipation ( even if mostly in imagination ) to the suppressed sections of society, and I respect it for its ethical teachings. But beyond that, being a scientific person, I regard its metaphysics, etc as mostly unscientific nonsense.

    http://justicekatju.blogspot.com/2016/07/religion-and-science-are-diametrically.html

  • Long-term Struggle for Justice in Israel-Palestine

    Long-term Struggle for Justice in Israel-Palestine

    In 1908 Indian revolutionaries launched a series of bomb attacks on British officials in Bengal, in which several Britishers were killed.

    As a result, the great Indian freedom fighter Bal Gangadhar Tilak, who was critical of the moderate approach to the fight for independence from British rule, wrote  in his newspaper ‘Kesari’ :

    ” Violence, however deplorable, becomes inevitable when the rulers, who have converted the entire nation into a prison, begin to overawe the people in an endeavour to create despondency among them by terrible oppression and unduly frightening them. Then the sound of the bomb is spontaneously produced to impart to the authorities the knowledge that the people have reached the limit of their tolerance of oppression ”.

    This explains the Hamas attack on Israel on 7th October and the continuing war since then.

    https://indicanews.com/justice-katju-people-of-gaza-say-death-is-preferable-to-living-in-perpetual-hell/

    Many people have condemned the Hamas attack, but they overlook the 75 year long history of atrocities and oppression of the Palestinian Arabs.

    Before the state of Israel was created ( on the pretext that the persecuted Jews of Europe needed a homeland, but really to ensure safety of Middle East oil supplies for Western industries ), about 90% people living there were Palestinian Arabs. In 1948 Israeli attacks began on them, many of them including women and children were killed, and most of the remaining fled from their homeland out of fear ( an exodus known as the Nakba )

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakba_Day

     As a result, today only about 20% people living in Israel are Palestinian Arabs, the remaining 70% having been driven out of their homeland, and still living in horrible conditions in neighbouring Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria, often without employment, food, water, electricity, and medicines. 

    After the Six Day War of 1967 Israel conquered the West Bank, the territory west of the Jordan river, which was part of Jordan, and is still occupying most of it, and building Jewish settlements there, thus driving out more Palestinians from their homes.

     This was bound to create a reaction one day, for, as the adage goes, ‘wherever there is oppression there is resistance’, and the Hamas attack of 7th October must be understood in this context. It was an outburst of long existing grievances of Palestinians

    Of course Hamas committed some atrocities ( the true extent of which is still unknown, since in war truth is the first casualty ), but the Israeli response was horrific, and totally disproportionate

    https://reliefweb.int/report/occupied-palestinian-territory/friday-17-november-twenty-thousand-palestinians-believed-be-killed-israels-genocide-gaza

    Upto 20,000 Gazans have been killed in Israeli air strikes ( including many on apartment buildings, hospitals, etc ) and the Israeli army has occupied north Gaza, driving out the people there to the southern part of this congested strip of land.

    Many Israeli leaders say they will destroy Hamas, but they forget that most Palestinians are supporting it, and have identified themselves with it. Even in the West Bank, part of which is under the administration of the PLO ( Palestine Liberation Organisation, headed by Mahmoud Abbas ), most Palestinians have shifted their support to Hamas, giving up their earlier support to the PLO, whose leaders are perceived as Western puppets.

    If the Israelis thought that with the enormous fire power of their military they would easily and swiftly destroy Hamas and the Palestinian resistance, as in the Six Day War, by now they must be having second thoughts. It is not six days but six weeks since the hostilities began, with no sign of abatement. It is going to be a long haul, as the Americans found in Vietnam, or the Russians in Afghanistan, and there is no ‘light at the end of the tunnel’, as Gen Westmoreland, the US commander in Vietnam, proclaimed.

    This time it will not be a short war. It will not be another 1948 war, the Six Day War, the Yom Kippur war, or the ‘intifadas’.

    It will be a long drawn conflict with huge casualties, until justice is done to the long suffering Palestinians

  • High Court Judge Faces Backlash Over Science Reservations Verdict

    High Court Judge Faces Backlash Over Science Reservations Verdict

    I was appointed a Judge of the Allahabad High Court in November 1991, and was almost sacked a few months thereafter. This is an untold story which the readers may find interesting.

    A few months after I was appointed a Judge of the High Cout a case came before me, Naresh Chand vs. District Inspector of Schools, Ghaziabad ( see online  ) which I heard and decided.

    The facts of the case were that a young man, Naresh Chand, had been appointed a biology teacher on ad hoc basis by the management of an obscure High School in District Ghaziabad in the State of U.P. in India. Under the relevant rules, his appointment had to be approved by the District Inspector of Schools.

    The D.I.O.S. refused to approve his appointment on the ground that Naresh Chand belonged to an O.B.C. ( Other Backward Castes, which are the intermediate castes in India in the social ladder, below the so called ‘ upper castes ‘, but above the Scheduled Castes or dalits ), while the post had been reserved for a Scheduled Caste candidate. Consequently his appointment was cancelled by the management of the school and his service was terminated. Naresh Chand challenged this termination order before the Allahabad High Court, and the case came before me.

    I have always been passionate about science, and have always believed that science is the means of solving India’s huge problems. This case gave me an opportunity of putting forward my philosophy in a judgment.

    Caste reservations for admission to educational institutions and granting government jobs had been upheld by the Indian Supreme Court, e.g. in Indra Sawhney vs Union of India, as a compromise between merit and the need for advancement of the historically suppressed castes like dalits and OBCs, and so I could not invalidate them altogether. However, as mentioned above, I have always had an intense zeal and passion for promoting science, as I regard it vital for India’s progress.

    Now a Judge, while giving his verdicts, is supposed to set aside his personal beliefs, predilections, and notions, and decide cases according to the law alone. Normally I abided by that principle, but in some exceptional cases, where I thought a vital interest of the nation was involved, I departed from it to some extent. As said in a Latin maxim ” interest republicae suprema lex ” ( the interest of the republic is the supreme law ).

    Caste based reservations, though ostensibly intended for a wholesome purpose, had in reality degenerated in India into a vote catching device in our elections. And I simply could not bear its dilution of science, which was damaging the national interest.

    So the view I took was that though reservation on caste basis may be acceptable in other fields, they were just not acceptable in the fields of science and technology because these fields were vital for India’s progress, and hence no compromises were permissible in these fields. Consequently there could be no valid reservation in these fields, either for admission  in educational institutions or on jobs pertaining to these fields.  I remember a few passages of my judgment :

    ” The policy of reservations is basically a compromise between the need for excellence on the one hand, and the need to help the historically socially and economically disadvantaged classes on the other. However, in my opinion there can be no compromise in the fields of science and technology.

    Today our country is passing through one of its worst patches in our country’s 5000 year old known history. It is only science which can save us from total ruin. Unless we now adopt the scientific path and scientific outlook foreign nations will totally dominate and plunder us.

    When our country was on the scientific path it prospered. With the aid of science we had built mighty civilizations thousands of years ago when most people in Europe, except in Greece and Rome, were living in forests. We had made outstanding scientific discoveries, e.g. decimal system in mathematics, plastic surgery in medicine, etc. In the Harappa-Mohenjodaro civilization 4000 years ago our ancestors had built the Lothal harbour and a drainage system on a scientific basis.

    However, we subsequently took to the unscientific path of superstitions and empty rituals, which has led us to disaster. The way out therefore is to go back again to the scientific path shown by our ancestors, the path of Aryabhatta and Brahmagupta, Sushrut and Charak, Panini and Patanjali, Ramanujan and Raman.

    When we examine the validity of the reservation policy we must keep the above considerations in mind. While the socially and economically depressed classes should certainly be helped, the interest of the nation cannot be overlooked. As is said ‘ Interest Republicae Suprema Lex ‘ ( the interest of the republic is the supreme law ). A line has to be drawn somewhere to the policy of caste based reservations, and I draw the line at science. Science has no caste or religion. Hence there can be no valid reservations in the field of science and technology.

    For making an appointment of a person as a lecturer in chemistry, physics, biology, mathematics or any other scientific subject, or in making admissions in scientific institutions or colleges, or in making appointments on jobs in the field of science and technology, one has to choose the most meritorious candidate, and caste and religion are wholly extraneous and illegal considerations. In my opinion, the reservation policy cannot be extended to the scientific field (which includes medicine, technology and mathematics). 

    For example, when a man goes to a doctor he does not see the doctor’s caste or religion but he goes to the doctor who has the best reputation. In fact, an incompetent doctor can endanger public health, just as an incompetent engineer can endanger public safety by constructing a defective bridge or building which may collapse. 

    Similarly, when the Government wants to set up a nuclear reactor it seeks the most distinguished scientists and does not seek scientists of a particular caste or religion. When we launched the Agni Rocket surely the scientists involved in this great achievement were not chosen because of their caste.

    In my opinion this country can only progress if it adopts the scientific attitude and scientific thinking. Caste reservations in teaching posts in science (including medicine, engineering or mathematics ), or admission in educational institutions in the scientific field, or for making appointments in scientific posts on the basis of religion or caste is wholly arbitrary and against the country’s national interest of scientific development. An appointment of a Lecturer (or any other teaching post) in chemistry, physics, biology, mathematics or any other scientific subject can be made on the basis of merit alone, and as such teaching posts in the science and mathematics faculties cannot be validly reserved on the basis of caste or religion, and the same principle applies to admission in educational institutions or jobs in the scientific field.

    The argument in support of the reservation policy is that it aims at equality. The argument is that since the scheduled castes and other backward classes have been oppressed and down-trodden for long, hence compensatory state action is required for the purpose of making such people equal to the upper castes.

    The point, however, remains that this desire to make unequals equal cannot go to the extent of subverting the national interest, and hence it cannot be extended to the field of science and technology. I have already mentioned that we are now standing at a cross road in our nation’s long history. We must now either adopt the scientific path or perish. It is a matter of life or death for us. 

    Those who have read science know that it permits no compromise. It is a relentless pursuit of objective truth and must maintain very high standards. To dilute science by the policy of reservation is permitting impermissible compromises in a field which is of paramount importance to our nation’s destiny. 

    Those who talk of reservation in the scientific field probably do not know of the advances in modern science achieved by Western nations They would not be knowing the meaning of quantum mechanics, and the difference between quantum mechanics (as propounded by Heisenberg and Schrodinger) and the quantum theory (as propounded by Max Planck, and as explained by Einstein) and the researches of Prof. Stephen Hawkins on black holes (see ‘A Brief History of Time”).

    They may not be knowing of the brilliant discovery by Ramanujan (before whom even the greatest mathematician of the world, Hardy, bowed his head) of the mock theta function, made when he was practically on his death bed at the age of 32 (see ‘The Man who knew Infinity’), They may never have heard of the Raman effect or the Chandrashekhar limit. They possibly do not even know of the great discovery of Rutherford who through his famous gold foil experiment propounded the modern atomic theory, which was subsequently modified by Neils Bohr, Heisenberg, and Schrodinger’s equation.

    They may never have heard of the outstanding research in social science by Morgan, who studied the lives of the American Iroquol’s Indians whose Seneca tribe had adopted him (see Morgan’s ‘Ancient Society’). 

    It is distressing to note that while Western nations are day by day advancing in science and technology, thus widening the gap between their level advancement and ours, some of our people are insisting on caste based reservations in the scientific field which can only keep us backward. One can understand political compulsions, but then everything has a limit, and the limit is crossed when caste or religion based reservations are sought to be made in the field of science or technology ”.

      With these observations I quashed the order cancelling the appointment of Naresh Chand, and ordered his reinstatement.

     This judgment, delivered in 1992  (shortly after I had been appointed a Judge of the Allahabad High Court ), created a furore all over India. While huge rallies, particularly of students, were held in support of my judgment in many parts of India, there were counter rallies elsewhere, branding me of being casteist. The media commented on it widely for several days, a large section supporting me, but another section attacking me.

     In Allahabad an organisation called ‘ Social Justice Movement ‘  publicly burnt my effigy and copies of my judgment. They resolved to place a lock on the gates of the Allahabad High Court, but were prevented by the police from doing so. A large contingent of policemen had to be placed around the premises of the Allahabad High Court to protect it. I started receiving death threats by anonymous letters and on telephone.

     From the newspapers I learnt that the members of Parliament belonging to the Scheduled Castes and Tribes of all political parties held a meeting in Delhi and decided to bring a bill in Parliament for my impeachment..

      My wife and other family members were scared. I had just been appointed a High Court Judge, and here I was, on the verge of being sacked ! For a long time I could not go for walks ( which I am fond of ), and except for going from my residence to the High Court by car had to remain confined to my house.

    Some senior judges of the High Court told me that I had destroyed my career, as our politicians of all parties, who were all supporters of caste reservations, would never allow me to reach the Supreme Court.

     Fortunately, the storm blew over and I survived. 

    But it was a narrow shave

    https://indicanews.com/indians-were-once-leaders-in-science/

  • Justice Katju Grants Bail to Dr Binayak Sen Amidst Allegations of Fabricated Evidence

    Justice Katju Grants Bail to Dr Binayak Sen Amidst Allegations of Fabricated Evidence

    This is the story of how and why I granted bail to Dr Binayak Sen in May 2009

    Dr Binayak Sen was a Bengali medical doctor who was an M.D. from Christian Medical College, Vellore, one of the foremost medical colleges in India.

    Dr Binayak Sen
    Dr Binayak Sen

    He could have easily gone to USA or some other Western country and earned tons of money there. Instead he chose to serve the poorest of the poor, the tribals of Chattisgarh state, charging nothing from them for their medical treatment. His friends and relatives ( including his younger brother Dipanker Sen, a businessman in Antwerp, Belgium ) provided him the funds for medicines and medical equipment. 

    Dr Sen lived an austere life amongst the tribals while serving them medically. This probably created a belief in the Chattisgarh government and its police that he was secretly a Naxalite ( Naxalites are a group who believe in armed revolution ). At that time Naxalite activities were going on in the state of Chattisgarh, and any outsider who entered the state and started doing any social work among the tribals was immediately regarded a dangerous person, branded as a Naxalite, and arrested on trumped up charges.

    Consequently, the Chattisgarh police, at the instance of the state government, arrested Dr Sen in 2007 on the charge of being a secret Naxalite, and apparently manufactured/fabricated all kinds of false evidence against him, as is often the practice of police in India. 

    Dr Sen was in jail for 2 years, with seemingly no chance of release for many years, when fortunately for him his bail petition came before my 2 member bench, in which I was the senior judge, along with Justice Deepak Verma, in the summer of 2009 when I was a vacation judge in the Supreme Court. 

    The Court was closed at that time for summer vacations, but there are vacation judges during court vacations who hear urgent matters, and I had been designated by the Chief Justice of India as a vacation judge.

    Dr Sen’s earlier bail petition had been dismissed by another bench of the Supreme Court after long arguments ( after it had been dismissed by the district court and the High Court ), and had the Supreme Court been open his second bail petition would have gone to the same bench, as is the practice of the Court, which would in all likelihood have rejected it, as it had done to the earlier petition. But the judges who had heard the earlier petition were on vacation, so the second bail plea came before my bench, in which I was sitting as the senior vacation judge.

    It was my practice as a judge to read the files of cases in the evening previous to the day when they were to be heard. Among the files I read was that of Dr Sen’s case. After going through the record in great detail I was prima facie convinced that the evidence against him was concocted.

    Here was a doctor who could have gone to America and made a lot of money, as many Indian doctors have done, but instead he chose to serve the poor. If I had been the Chief Minister of Chattisgarh I would have called him and said ” Dr Sen, I have heard of your selfless work among the tribals of the state. Please prepare a scheme for medical service to the tribals throughout the state, and my government will give you all financial and other support to implement it”. 

    Instead, it was decided to jail him, and he would in all probability have remained in jail indefinitely, but for his good fortune that his second bail petition came before my bench.

    I was always a strong supporter of individual liberty

    Also, I was known to be a judge who disposed off cases quickly, since there was a huge pendency of cases in the Supreme Court, and I wanted to do my best to contribute to their early disposal. So I would often tell lawyers who appeared before me ” Be brief, be quick, and be off ”.

    When the case was taken up in Court, the courtroom was packed with a large number of lawyers, including senior counsels like Mr Shanti Bhushan, Mr Soli Sorabji, Mr Ram Jethmalani, etc present, along with many supporters of Dr Sen. Before the arguing counsel, Mr Shanti Bhushan, could begin his arguments i said ” Dr Sen has already been in jail for 2 years. The normal rule is bail not jail, as laid down by Justice Krishna Iyer in State of Rajasthan vs Balchand. I think bail should be granted. After all, bail is not an acquittal ”.

    My brother judge on the bench, Justice Vema, agreed with me.

    At this, Mr Mukul Rohatgi, the lawyer for the state of Chattisgarh, stood up and said he wants to go through the evidence in the case.

    I interrupted him, and said I had spent 2 hours the previous evening going through the record of the case, including the evidence,.and was well acquainted with it, so he need not take the trouble. And saying that I told him to sit down, and promptly granted bail to Dr Sen. The entire hearing lasted less than 2 minutes.

    A few people later criticised me for not permitting full arguments, but most people, including former Chief Justice of India, Justice J.S. Verma, hailed the verdict

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CVVkUzMhvcI&pp=ygUgYmFpbCB0byBiaW5heWFrIHNlbiAxNCB5ZWFycyBhZ28%3D