Second Take
Kalpana Sharma
Readers of Times of India woke up to shocking news on
The sentiments behind the Aman ki Asha project cannot be doubted. It is about time the media on both sides of the project actively participated in peace building. Yet what we should not lose sight of is that what the Times and the Jang group propose to do with their substantial resources has been attempted by civil society groups on both sides, with little or no funding, over several decades.
The group that pioneered the idea of people-to-people contact was the Pakistan India People?s Forum for Peace and Democracy. This initiative resulted in a hundred people from either side crossing the border each year to discuss all aspects of the India Pakistan relationship including controversial issues like the future of
Journalists too have been active in the India Pakistan peace process. Veteran journalists like Kuldip Nayar have been at the forefront for years promoting dialogue. He has been a part of the annual candle light vigil held at the Wagah border by peace activists on either side during the respective Independence Days. Earlier too, editors on both sides agreed to feature columnists in each other?s newspapers in order to get across the opposite point of view to readers.
Groups like the Centre for Dialogue and Reconciliation (CDR) based in
Trade unions from both sides of the border have held meetings on common issues of concern about workers? rights but also the need to build a permanent peace between the two countries.
People in the world of arts, theatre, literature and music have constantly facilitated exchanges between artists from
Even in
So inevitably, one has to ask why the most powerful media house in
The sceptics in
The Editor of TOI, in his note on page two of the paper, admits that TOI is not blameless. In a virtual mea culpa he writes: ?We believe the media can serve as facilitators in fostering greater understanding between people. Unfortunately ? and TOI cannot entirely escape blame ? we tend to focus far too much on the negative. In the process, the good that people do is drowned out by the sensational, and by the constant flow of death-and-destruction headlines?. Well said, Jaideep Bose.
So the first step that the Times Group needs to take in its Aman ki Asha project is to get the Times Now anchors to tone down their anti-Pakistan rhetoric. It will be interesting to monitor the channel in the next weeks to see if it displays a sudden change of heart.
If the media in India and Pakistan try and project a more complete image of each other?s countries, the constituency for peace that does exist on both sides will be strengthened. By writing only on security issues and
The proof of the sincerity of the Times Group will lie not in the cultural exchanges that it has already announced but how it reports the next episode of tension between the two countries, something that is inevitable given the history of friction of the last 62 years. Will it train its journalists in ?writing peace?, where you pause before you use a particular adjective or a phrase, where you control your desire to editorialise, where you ensure that what you are reporting is substantiated and not sourced from the hawks that proliferate in the establishment on both sides of the border, where you hold yourself back from playing up every little incident that shows up the weakness and villainy of the other side and where you balance the security issues with stories about what life is like for the ordinary people on both sides, many of whom live in poverty.
Peace is not like instant noodles. It is a process, often a halting one. It cannot be time-bound. And we cannot expect to produce ?success stories? within a short time. In this age of marketing, where all ideas are reduced to simple equations of lighting candles and holding hands, it is important to underline the complexity of peace-building, particularly between