Monday, June 17, 2019

Weddings bells for frogs as climate change looms over India


It is heartening to see that citizens are finally waking up to the acute water crisis that the country is facing. The most notable achievement has been that of the Udupi Citizen’s Forum which organised a grand wedding of two frogs to please the God in charge of rains. The Udupi Citizen’s Forum did not stop at just the wedding. The newly married frog couple has also been packed off for a honeymoon. Unlike my Marxist husband (yes, there are still a handful of them left in India) who hates gala weddings, I love them. Good food, sarees, dance and selfies (in a frog wedding selfie may be a bit difficult though) are the true essence of my life. Not just God and me, but I have a feeling the Citizen’s Forum has managed to please Rabindranath Tagore as well.
The young Tagore, as the manager of the family’s zamindari, was moved by the poverty and helplessness of the villagers and resolved to provide an example of rural reconstruction in his own zamindari. In his estate, the river was faraway and water scarcity was the main concern of the villagers. Young Tagore, keen to help the villagers, proposed that the villagers get together and dig a well while he would bear the costs of cementing it. Rationality, as any micro economics textbook would have us believe, would make the suffering villagers jump at such a proposal. But the villagers reasoned that such a collective action to address the water problem would help Tagore get an easy ticket to heaven. They firmly believed that by helping the villagers access water, Tagore would go to heaven, something that they felt they needed to prevent at all costs, even at the cost of their own inconvenience. So, the well never got made and they continued living in hell.  
Many such experiences with villagers deeply disappointed Tagore and subsequently led him to question the politics of the day around home rule and self-reliance. But had Tagore been alive today, he would surely have been very happy to see that people in India are at least bothered about their own welfare now and are also uniting to solve their own problems. Finally, self-reliance is here. Now that we have collectively managed to marry off two innocent frogs, off course without their consent, let us spend the next hundred years on working out rules of frog weddings. Firstly, we need to classify frogs according to castes and gotras. Marriage between a brahmin frog and low caste frog will surely annoy our Gods and worsen the water crisis. Secondly, dowry needs to be worked out and all the wedding expenses must be borne by the bride frog’s village or city. If two frogs dare to fall in love and decide to have a good time on their own then such frogs should be killed honourably and anti-Romeo squads must be formed immediately to make sure inter-religious and inter-caste frog unions don’t happen. We must do all this at once to please the Gods who will then address our water woes.
It will take another century for us to be able to collectively decide that in addition to lavish frog weddings, we need to better manage our water resources by recycling water, increasing the water-use efficiency in irrigation, water harvesting etc. What? We don’t have another century? The worst impacts of climate change will be felt in the next few decades itself? Majority of India’s river basins are vulnerable to droughts because of shifting rainfall patterns? Climate change and water stress would displace thousands of people in India in the coming decades? India’s food security is under severe threat because the frequency of droughts will increase? Shut up. Will you please? We will not let climate scientists, hydrologists, social scientists and others of that kind desist us from the holy duty of organising lavish frog weddings. All that these researchers ever want is to go to heaven. What exactly is the purpose behind their research? Heaven? More funds for their research? Awards? Money? No matter what their interest, we shall focus on frog weddings to please Gods. Let’s pray that the newly married frog couple falls in love in their honeymoon and they quickly have a baby frog. The frog offspring must be male off course. Thereafter, we will send the baby boy frog to Kota for coaching classes to crack the IIT entrance exams. A corporate job after IIT for the baby boy frog and then we will put him up for sale in the marriage market. What next? An even more lavish frog wedding. All to please the Gods for adequate rainfall. God helps those who help themselves? Shut up.

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