Power corrupts people in all walks of life. Even the media which has established itself as the powerful and influential fourth estate of this spluttering democracy. A case in point is the prolonged fratricidal war for editorial authority and dominance being waged in the venerable Chennai-based English daily The Hindu (estb. 1878). On January 5, Malini Parthasarathy, the JNU, Delhi and Columbia University-educated niece of G. Kasturi (former editor (1965-1991) of the daily), who was appointed editor less than a year ago, resigned abruptly on grounds that her sterling contribution to the development of the newspaper which included masterminding the launch of its Mumbai edition, was insufficiently appreciated by the board of directors of the closely-held G. Kasturi & Sons Ltd, which owns this highly-respected newspaper. According to B.S. Raghavan, a former journalist and columnist of The Hindu, Parthasarathy, although an excellent journalist and interviewer of the high and mighty, is ill-tempered and authoritarian, and is primarily responsible for highly regarded professionals such as Siddharth Vardarajan and P. Sainath exiting the daily. “The manner in which one faction of Kasturi & Co fraternity ganged up against another, and unceremoniously and uncouthly bundled out close kith and kin with no reasons adduced to readers is reminiscent of what used to be happening in Byzantium… With relatives swarming all over the place demanding to be accommodated in niches carved out for them, professionalism suffers,” writes Raghavan in his memoirs Fading Footprints (2013). More than a decade ago your then struggling correspondent proposed an agreement under which The Hindu would use its mighty muscle to distribute EducationWorld. Although we offered to pay for services rendered, the suggestion was contemptuously dismissed by N. Ram, then the editor of the daily and managing director of Kasturi & Sons. Ergo, even though one regrets the imminent decline of a great — even if somewhat unfortunately titled — newspaper, it’s difficult not to feel a small measure of schadenfreude about the sea of troubles in which the self-obsessed ruling family of The Hindu is floundering. Ad gurus’ pride deficit There’s a serious ethnic pride deficit within all sections of Indian society. Sixty-eight years after the very brown Mahatma wrested the country’s independence from the white man, dozens of skin lightening cream manufacturers led by compradors of Hindustan Unilever, whose racist propaganda is incorporated into its top-selling Fair & Lovely, are doing roaring business. For individuals with ethnic pride and sensitivity such as your editor, watching the news on television has become an ordeal as over made-up Bollywood mercenaries plug an assortment of skin-lightening creams and lotions which are touted as the ultimate expression of professional and personal success. Increasingly, Caucasian or quasi-caucasian actors and models are being employed to plug everything from real estate to snacks. In a frequently aired news television ad of India Bulls — a housing finance company — a male trogdolyte of seemingly Middle East ethnicity is shown appreciating the 21st century business properties funded by the company. In a Parle biscuits ad…
Sea of troubles
EducationWorld February 16 | EducationWorld