  
The Voice
of the Free Indian
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True Allies
India & Daniel Pearl.
February 27, 2002 8:15 a.m.
http://www.nationalreview.com/jos/jos.shtml
hen the fact and gruesome details of Daniel Pearl's murder were
announced, they received headlines and lead stories all over the
world. But the Indian press treated them-strikingly with
almost more grief and anger than even the U.S. media.
Pearl's death struck the Indian soul at many levels. In life
this quiet American, who played a mean jazz violin, was personally
popular with his journalist colleagues and with the other Indians
he met in Bombay's lively cultural scene. The Indian Express devoted
most of its op-ed page to tributes that depict Pearl as a friend
of Indians and thus of India, like this one from a fellow jazz
musician: "He used to jam with us at the Indigo restaurant.
He was a real sweet easy-going guy . . ."
Another tribute asks, more ominously, "who will pay for
Danny's death?" For, in death, Pearl has been embraced by
a wider Indian public that sees him as a fellow victim of Islamist
terrorism. Less than three months ago, on December 13, the same
gang that murdered Pearl attacked the Indian parliament and killed
and killed nine parliamentarian servants. He now stands in the
same pantheon as these Indian martyrs.
Inevitably, an element of political calculation infects this
mourning. India and the U.S. have recently been forging a closer
friendship. That friendship is tentative as yet because the U.S.
is also restoring its alliance with India's bitter rival and neighbor,
Pakistan, which Indians blame for fostering terrorism both in
Kashmir a territory claimed by both nations and
within India itself. Indians cite Pearl's murder as evidence that
Pakistan's President Musharaff needs to crack down much more firmly
on his ISI intelligence service that originally helped train these
Islamist terrorist groups. And they want the U.S. to side firmly
with them in demanding such a crackdown.
How far the U.S. will go in pressuring Musharaff is uncertain
because it does not want to destabilize his government. But whatever
America's immediate difficulties in combining alliances with both
India and Pakistan, the long-term "fundamentals" look
good for a closer friendship between Delhi and Washington.
Ever since the end of the Cold War, in which India was a wary
fellow traveler of the Soviet Union, the country has been moving
crabwise towards a better relationship with the U.S. Many factors
have contributed to this: a common nervousness of China; India's
abandonment of failed socialist planning and its adoption of free-market
reforms; its emergence as a leader in information technology;
the growth of highly educated and successful Indian Diaspora within
the U.S.; the increasing importance of links based on the English
language in a world where the internet has dethroned geography
and elevated culture; the war on terrorism in which India and
the U.S. are compelled by their enemies to be allies; and, above
all, the fact that both nations are liberal constitutional democracies.
India's democracy often looks fragile, but it is deeply rooted
both in the cultural flexibility of Hinduism and in Britain's
legacy of the rule of law. And it survived a vital test in overcoming
the late Indira Gandhi's unconstitutional seizure of power in
the so-called "emergency" of 1975-77. On that occasion
the U.S. ambassador, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, announced the coup
to President Ford with the words: "Congratulations, Mr. President,
you are now the leader of the world's largest democracy."
Mrs. Gandhi censored the press, arrested parliamentarians, and
ruled by decree. But even she felt so restrained by India's democratic
traditions that she never suppressed opposition entirely and she
accepted her surprise defeat in an election called only because
she was confident of victory. In this survival of democracy against
the odds, both the Indian and the world media played their part.
If I remember it well, it is because it was my first foray as
a foreign correspondent and my only experience of journalism
as Hollywood thriller. At one point I had to stand at a street
corner reading the Times of India; a car pulled up; I got into
it and, blindfolded; was taken to a dinner with Indian parliamentarians
on the run from the cops which gave me excellent copy to
counter Mrs. Gandhi's claims of democracy as usual.
Green as I was, however, I would have broken no stories without
the fatherly guidance of the Daily Telegraph's local stringer,
a roly-poly bundle of energy named Ram Dass, who helped me discover
and report that Mrs. Gandhi had embarked on a cruel birth-control
policy of "forced sterilization." As an Indian national,
he could not risk putting his name on the sensational scoop he
had jointly authored. I am happy to make amends now with this
acknowledgement.
Reminiscing about those days with the editors of the Indo-Asian
News Service, I learned how they then young desk editors
at an official news agency had exploited the censor's rules
to discomfit the censor. One such rule forbade the publication
of bad news for India without his explicit consent. In due course
an international weather report forecasting storms and clouds
for the sub-continent arrived one late afternoon. Waiting until
2:00 A.M., they telephoned the censor at home in bed with an urgent
request for his consent to publishing this bad news. Grumpily
he agreed to listen. And as the catalogue of rain, hail, storms,
clouds, and typhoons was read to him, he gradually exploded with
fury and with frustration that he could hardly punish such
punctilious regard for his own instructions.
These acts of journalistic defiance may seem trivial in comparison
to the sacrifice made by Daniel Pearl. If so, that is not because
Indian journalists were not similarly devoted to their craft and
the freedom to practice it, but because the murderers of Daniel
Pearl were much more ruthless enemies of democracy and press freedom
than Mrs. Gandhi and her censors could bring themselves to be.
Pearl labored in life to bring India and America to a closer
understanding of each other. If Indian and American newspapers
could now jointly award a journalistic scholarship in his name,
it would be a fitting memorial to him in death. And a fitting
symbol of the Indo-American friendship that seems destined to
exercise a growing and surely beneficial influence on world politics.
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