Scotland>
After the Scottish Macbeth murders the legitimate king, he looks for probable enemies, real or imagined.>
Among them, MacDuff tops his list.>
Aware of the danger to his life, MacDuff goes to England, leaving his family behind.>
The anarchist-fascist Macbeth nonetheless has his wife and all his children assassinated.>
When this news reaches him, this is what he wonders:>
“Did the heavens look on and not take their part?”>
No voice returns an answer from heaven.>
Gaza
How trenchantly MacDuff’s uncomprehending wonderment about the indifference of the gods has sprung to mind during the course of the unimpeded turkey-shoot slaughter of women and children in Gaza.>
In the Islamic context this bafflement is particularly piquant because (as a young teacher in my audience at a lecture delivered in Kashmir University some years ago underscored to me) good Muslims believe that not a leaf stirs without god’s will.
I remember suggesting to him that his argument would mean that all of Kashmir’s problems too had god’s assent; I did not receive an answer, only a hushed surprise and chuckle down the perceptive audience.>
So, who is to blame for the heart-wrenchingly unprecedented butchery in Gaza?
If not they, then where are the gods?>
Afghanistan>
We often think of death as the ultimate catastrophe.>
But, think again.>
Life-in-death may after all be the ultimate atrocity; reason why so many prefer to take their own lives rather than carry on living life-in-death?>
Also read: ‘Zionism Is Not Judaism’: Lessons From Rabbi David Weiss>
I am alluding to the women of Afghanistan who have now been forbidden to have their voices heard in public as per report.>
All that in pursuit of “virtue” by god’s own men deputed to combat “vice”.>
And no vice may ever be combated except by viciousness in the extreme.>
Afghan women are of course required to produce babies, preferably all male, so god’s men can proliferate and keep the women back in life-in-death quarantine.>
What makes this fate hurtful terminally is the fact that all the Afghan women one has met have far exceeded their men in intelligence and prowess.>
Looking at these puzzling circumstances among people who most fear and propitiate god, those other words from the Bard spring to the uninitiated, rude mind:>
“as flies to wanton boys>
are we to the gods;>
they kill us for their sport.”>
And the gods we know are often men in unchallenged authority bolstered by the inordinate lust of dominance, cannily fuelled by corporate lucre and religious proprietorship.>
I see the mangled faces and limbs of toddlers in Gaza in my dreams and all my education falls away from me like old paint from a crumbling edifice.>
On this “teacher’s day” I feel more ignorant than I did affecting the act of teaching over more than four decades.>
Badri Raina taught at Delhi University.>