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This Is My Truth

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Do you pay a price for being truthful
and honest? Mallika Sarabhai gives us a first-hand account of her struggle to
lead a transparent life and stick to her
purpose
Many years ago,I saw a film
called 'The Deer Hunter'.
In it, a group of well-to-do businessmen, good
family men, went on a yearly deer hunt. This was an all-male vacation that all
of them spent the year looking forward to - the highlight of the year. So far so
good; except that the men, in fact, hunted other humans. This was their sport of
sports, the biggest orgasm of their mundane lives. I wondered then how the
hunted felt. Today I know.
How did
it begin? When did it begin?
Did it begin when I was 12 and decided that
I would follow my father's footsteps in making my own decisions about what is
right and wrong in life, irrespective of whether they were acceptable to society
or not? Or did it begin when I first started living with someone at a time when
live-in relationships were not fashionable? Or when I decided to quit a
lucrative film career because I didn't like the people involved? Or when I stood
up to authority or refused to be cowed down by 'better sense'? Or when, as a
dancer, it made more sense to me to bring out the horrors of caste violence than
of 'bhakti' and the love for
Shiva?
Twenty-three years into an
arts and activist career.
Many battles and many scars. Mine has been a
constant attempt to lead a transparent life because I believe that is the best
way to empower others, by showing them yourself - hurt, battered but still
standing. And by sharing the process of healing, coming out of a bloodied
battlefield and sharing with thousands of other women the process of
regeneration. My articles, my shows, my interviews, my work has been with this
purpose.
What are the charges? That
I stole Rs 20,000 from a student?
That I am actually not a dancer, that
Darpana Academy, the institution with 24,000 graduates and 25,000 performances,
is not an arts institution but a den of human trafficking? Are these worth
answering? Do I want to address myself to anyone foolish enough, or uninformed
enough to give these accusations countenance?
No.
But there are much larger issues
at stake.
Issues of the freedom to live as Indians, to live by our
Constitution, to live with larger ideals than those of upholding the values of
one's own family or clan.
I am
beginning to feel that I live in a time warp
. I live in a time when
cynicism rules our lives. We have seen so many icons blighted, corrupted, sold
out for greed, selfishness and self-preservation, or for sheer callousness, that
as a society we have become incapable of believing that some people do what they
do because they think it is right.
Yes, of course I like to be
respected, admired, in demand and thought of as beautiful and talented.
But I like even more to be able to wake up every morning with a burning wish to
right some wrongs, to use that adulation and fame to break walls of lies and
silence that oppress groups or castes or societies. Yes, I think I am uniquely
placed for this, being the inheritor of the mantle of two families who have
given their all to nation building and to spreading truth, fearlessness and
pride in being Indian - but I do not think I am the only one so placed. Yes, it
would be much more comfortable performing dances at conferences and congresses,
but that would be denying what I feel is the purpose of my
life.
Why do I care so much for
India?
I don't know. But I care for our people. Because I love life and I
think divisions based on caste, creed, religion and gender, are ways in which we
hide our fear of facing and living life truly and fully. To hide behind the
mask of my 'gotra' is to not be able to take on the joys of being. It is to live
in a trap and like the bird in a cage, we mistake imprisonment for safety. And
then spend our lives looking for a meaning, through yoga, parties and wealth and
the show of wealth. And we pander to those institutions that have now become the
walls of the edifice that we call our world. Yet, we all know that that world is
putrid and crumbling.
Is it not fear
of facing the truth that makes us so happy when we see someone truthful brought
to the dust?
"Ah, you see how false is her moralistic stand?" we enjoy
saying. Why? Because it makes us feel better to cheat and be immoral as long as
it is not known by the public? Why am I talking of all this, when I have been
given an opportunity to speak the truth about the abuse levelled at me? Why am I
not talking here about how Darpana arrived at the arithmetic of that tour or
other tours or of how the circumstances and timing of the case against me are
suspicious? Because this IS my truth. This is what has lead me to where I am,
pilloried, tried by an unethical local press, gloated over by those who are
delighted to see what they think is the seamy side of my public stand for
honesty and transparency.
I think divisions based on caste, creed,
religion and gender, are ways in which we hide our fear of facing and living
life truly and fully. But this is also where my 'dharma' tells me to continue
being.
Mallika Sarabhai spoke to Swati Sucharita
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