You are on page 1of 1

If the past had been milestoned by the fractions of divisiveness, the Verdict at half past five embodied a vision

for India, to be realised in the expectations of its burgeoning Youth. In its essence what mattered was, that no party was satisfied enough to earn the ire of the other. It was an immense balancing act where psychology played counter weight to an expected descent into reckless hyperbole. Because the verdict in its entirety favoured none, it did not disappoint enough to negate its own authority. The natural calm...the evident nothing is happening across the country should also drive home the point that there is a huge majority of post 1992 Indians, who have been born to the tune of a liberalised economy...where the hiccups of an erratic Sensex drives daggers of self centred chill through their world of prospective employment opportunity...and the demolition of a Babri Masjid or its replacement with another construction with a different architectural outlook, need remain confined to the haze of irrelevant history. The damp whiz of the Verdicts passage also rammed home the oft ignored other divide....India as seen from the North and the country as reflected in southern eyes... that while Ayodhya builds hallo induced pictures of Ram in the saffron charged northern reaches of India....the Sethusamudran connection probably has a bigger resonance to the R word in lands to the south. But on 30th of September 2010 India proved to itself that as a society, as a democracy and as a grouping of ethnic diversity it has reached that point where the anfractuosities of its blood splattered history can be laid to rest by the obvious apathy of goal oriented forward looking self centred young India of today and tomorrow.

You might also like