Heaven, hell in civil society
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| For a street-smart, clean shaven-sardar from our own rough streets, this new paradise is all but incomprehensible. |
| Driving us all over the pretty Emirates city, Kuldeep not merely played tourist guide but also informed us as to other things: No arbit challans, in fact, cops never man traffic, cameras are positioned at intersections to note violations and fines can be paid at the time of renewing the vehicle's annual permit. |
| If you are foolish enough to jump a light, an sms is sent out asking you to visit the relevant authority, no doubt with consequences that really serve as deterrent. |
| "When I took the driving test here," said Kuldeep (he had to take it afresh, after a month of lessons and with no less than four severe-looking passengers in the backseat), "all they kept repeating before giving me the license, was, sabr." |
| You don't have to know Arabic to get the drift. "Sabr" is a Hindustani word as well and means pretty much the same: Patience. In all situations, in traffic snarls, accidents, while waiting for school kids and pedestrians to crawl across the road when you are in a tearing hurry and so forth. |
| But the moment I landed in India after my longish break, it hit me afresh how much sabr we all really lack. Perhaps there is just too much competition here. |
| But even in the land of plenty, there are Indians who wish for a more "liberal" attitude. If Kuldeep is in heaven because of the implementation of certain laws, another Indian, a high-ranking woman executive, is going through personal hell. |
| An incident, recently, that has created a buzz in the community there concerns her: One night, the lady drove herself and a few friends to a pub. On the way back, she had a tyre burst and the car she was driving hit the pavement. |
| In the process, one of her friends was mildly hurt. It may not sound like much of a crime but she now faces trial and even possible imprisonment! It is this possibility that has many people like us, who can easily identify with her, horrified. |
| Obviously, if you go beyond this first-reaction and think of how even cold-blooded killers get away easily in our own country, you would no doubt root for a similar stringent state. Or would you? |
First Published: Feb 09 2008 | 12:00 AM IST