Taslima and Aitzaz

There will be serious doubts about how Southasian we are if we cannot care for those who are suffering, and then rise to do something about it. In particular, there is a serious empathy deficit among the countries of our region today, where we seem unable to put ourselves in the sandals of someone across the frontier. We are made remote, of course, firstly by the borders that separate us, and the media that largely concentrates on news within those borders. But we also fail the test of rationality, each of us, because our vision is affected by ideological blinkers. Lastly, perhaps we keep quiet because, on many an occasion, we lack the courage of our convictions.

Take the case of Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasrin, charged with blasphemy and hounded from her own country in 1994 thereafter, thrashing about Scandinavia till finding refuge in Calcutta, from where she was expelled this past September, eventually travelling to Rajasthan and ending up in Delhi. Her portfolio of awards and fellowships are now all from the West. No Southasian (or very few, and none from the mainstream of any sector) dare welcome her, such is the hold of radical Islamist populism.

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