Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

In Hind Sight: Flags On Fire

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • In Hind Sight: Flags On Fire

    IN HIND SIGHT: FLAGS ON FIRE
    Raouf Gangjee

    The Statesman
    http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.ph p?clid=19&theme=&usrsess=1&id=187548
    J an 26 2008
    India

    I'm a bit scared of the national flag. What if someday I accidentally
    swing my feet or more lowly parts toward it, and find myself in jail
    for no intended affront?

    Sania Mirza was recently called for a foot fault committed in another
    country. She was photographed sitting with her feet directed toward
    a small plastic tricolour, and some super-patriots decided to kick up
    a racket over it. She has been summoned by an Indian court. After all
    this she reportedly considered hanging up her racquet, if not herself.

    In Australia, the country where she made the faux pas, there are no
    restrictions on what you can do with their flag. You may burn it. It
    has even been destroyed in the name of art, by a Melbourne artist who
    torched and mounted his national flag as an exhibit at a Melburnian
    gallery. Such are the hot trends.

    The Australian prime minister's comment at the time was, "I don't
    think we achieve anything by making it a criminal offense. We only
    turn yahoo behaviour into martyrdom."

    In the USA, defacing a flag is a citizen's constitutional right. In
    the judgment establishing this, Justice William J Brennan of their
    Supreme Court wrote, "We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its
    desecration, for in doing so we dilute the freedom that this cherished
    emblem represents."

    But if you really want to have fun with flag-burning, go to Denmark.

    There, you're allowed to desecrate the Danish flag yet not the flag
    of any other country. I plan to travel there one day and cook their
    colours, while taunting them with, "Make my day, Danes! Just try it
    with mine!"

    India has a Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act under which
    one can be jailed for up to three years if bringing the flag 'into
    contempt'. Thus I have little to say about our honour, whether as an
    Act or actuality; but will remind you that around the world many a
    dignitary's prickly sense of pride has bred contempt for human rights.

    In Turkey, the charge of 'insulting national honour' has been used
    to silence people and deny the Armenian Genocide under the Ottomans.

    (Guess who had the box seats!) When politicians talk too loudly about
    honour they are usually trying to cover a fault or commit a crime.

    And when the media do it, it's to make people rage and spend their
    wage, as in the recent cricket controversy where all objectivity was
    lost over a ball game (it's the eyeball game that counts for us). One
    is reminded of the Football War between El Salvador and Honduras in
    1969, where the media helped inflame enmities, lower standards and
    drive everyone up the pole.

    When freedom is restricted it can be a slippery slope. Let's not
    forget that the Nazis began by banning some types of art, and went on
    to ban types of human beings. The Taliban first spoke of transparent
    consensus and ended with a one-eyed dictator leading the veiled. And
    Simon Cowell started in the mail room at EMI Music but now 'goes
    postal' each time he hears a nasal singer.

    Should banners symbolise banning everything? Let's hope the fabric
    of democracy is stronger than a piece of cloth. And that its citizens
    don't get burned up by every matchstick man.
Working...
X