Sunday, December 13, 2020

Calling the Shots!

Hurray for the Pfizer vaccine — humanity’s best hope to beat Covid — and achieving it in 11 months was quite remarkable! It is a ray of hope in a devastating year, but that may be the only good news in an annus horribilis!


Since I’m a glass-half-empty kind of gal, I can’t help but dwell on America’s abysmal response thus far to the pandemic: so many avoidable deaths, so much pain and suffering, such an absence of leadership. Nine months in and they still can’t get anything right: what with testing, tracing, ventilator and PPE shortages, dithering over mask mandates, lockdowns, and stay at home orders — so why would they get vaccine distribution right?  


But, hey, let’s hope for the best even while pointing out the total lack of a comprehensive and evidence-based national strategy to track key metrics. 


Based on his own experience when he fell ill, Trump took it for granted that the world-class and life-saving experimental treatment he received from a government run program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center was the exact same care other Americans could easily get. He was so wrong!


Undue Access


There’s also the issue of Trump associates gaining undue access to drugs that are in such short supply that hospitals have a lottery system! Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani bragged of special care because of his "celebrity” status and getting the same drugs as Trump! Guiliani is not a D.C. resident, so should not have had access to them at a D.C. hospital. 


Similarly, HUD Secretary Ben Carson said Trump "cleared" him for a “monoclonal antibody therapy” that most Americans would never get — the same with former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, also from Trump’s inner circle.


This is a type of corruption that only exists in societies controlled by oligarchs and autocrats where friends and family of the dictator get first dibs! It shouldn’t happen in America!


Also, what is it with these science-deniers who now believe in science when it suits them? 


Jumping the Queue!


Will that also happen with the vaccine? Will the powerful, the connected, and the rich jump to the top of the queue ahead of front line health workers and the elderly? 


Meanwhile, videos have circulated showing mask-less guests crowding together at Trump-hosted Hanukkah parties at the White House! Is it any wonder then that his staff and guests keep testing positive for Covid? But they’re the privileged few who can get access to experimental treatment and recover unlike ordinary citizens (like you and I!) who can get sick — and die! 


Grim Numbers


Meanwhile, more than 300,000 Americans have already died from Covid — that’s more than U.S. battlefield fatalities in World War II! That number is the population of Pittsburgh, says the New York Times! More than 3,000 deaths per day on several days this month translates to single-day tolls worse than 9/11 (2,900 deaths) or the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor (2,400 deaths)! Digest those grim stats for a moment. 


It is difficult to assess the number of years lost and lives disrupted by the sheer complacency of this Administration and its errors of commission and omission. Clearly, many lives might have been saved if more blatant mistakes had been prevented, common sense safeguards put in place, and top shelf treatment made more universally available.


Beware of Pandemic Fatigue!


We are in a state of pandemic fatigue, fed up of endless precautions and restrictions and lack of activities to engage in, resulting in depression, mood swings, and sheer ennui! This has led some to abandon safety protocols and risk catching the disease. Beware!  


The main reason we are currently experiencing huge coronoavirus spikes throughout the country with resultant severe shortages in ER beds is because millions of Americans ignored medical advice and traveled during Thanksgiving. With Christmas coming up, expect more of the same, much more!


Season of Giving!


Changing the subject: how about a little philanthropy and what better time than the present? I can recommend these charities, see Weblinks below — KIND (Kids in Need of Desks) that donates desks to children in Malawi, CAMFED (Campaign for Female Education), an African movement promoting education for girls, and the Himalayan Cataract Project (also known as Cure Blindness) which fights blindness in Asia and Africa and can restore a person’s sight for as little as $25.


There are many other World Bank and UNICEF-supported charities where the WB matches donations dollar for dollar at this time of year through its Community Connections Campaign. 


Another worthwhile place to donate is to soup kitchens and other organizations that deliver food packages for families in need. People are stealing food because they’re hungry — that shouldn’t be happening in America either!


All the very best for Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Winter Solstice! Let’s hope 2021 is better (could hardly be worse) — I’m kidding, of course! I’m sure it will be a “grand year” as my former boss used to say!


Christmas Star or the Great Conjunction of 2020!  


For all you stargazers, get ready to train those amateur telescopes to the sky on December 21st! Look out for the “rings of Saturn and the moons of Jupiter” on the northern hemisphere’s longest and darkest night of the year, the Winter Solstice! (Check out article and pics below and tips on how to see it!)


This is a major cosmic event: a double planet view of two giants, Jupiter and Saturn, drawing closer together than they have in centuries! Known as the Great Conjunction of 2020 (the last time they were this close to each other was 800 years ago), they will light up the night sky as if “locked in an embrace and creating a double planet effect!” (Who knew astronomers could be lyrical?)


Also known as the “Christmas Star,” note that the Biblical story of the Star of Bethlehem could well have been a planetary conjunction — but not Jupiter and Saturn. More than two thousand years ago, that bright star in the heavens was actually Venus and Jupiter, the same star that the Three Wise Men and humble shepherds followed to the manger in Bethlehem! 


See how science explains everything even if you prefer it to fudge a bit and preserve childhood fantasies! I just caught myself humming the Christmas Star carol! Bummer!  


Ludi Joseph

Washington, D.C.

December 14, 2020



https://www.msnbc.com/kindfund

https://camfed.org/

https://www.cureblindness.org/


https://www.cincinnati.com/story/entertainment/2020/12/14/jupiter-saturn-conjunction-good-wont-happen-again-until-2080/6544068002/


How to see the Conjunction!

Face southwest on Dec. 21st, 6:15-6:45 p.m. Jupiter will be one of the brightest stars you see with a fainter Saturn to Jupiter’s right. They will be low in the sky, so find a clear unobstructed view to the southwestern horizon. Jupiter and Saturn will appear nearest on Dec. 21st but they will also be close Dec. 18-24. 






Friday, December 11, 2020

Will A Suitable Boy Meet Expectations? 
... and more reviews!

I was struck by BBC TV’s adaptation of Suitable Boy which began streaming Stateside on Acorn TV earlier this month and have seen three of the six episodes aired so far. My first thought was that the series deserved more than six episodes. Didn’t Downton Abbey get six seasons and a movie? 

It is a take on Vikram Seth’s celebrated 1993 epic novel set in 1951 — in a newly independent India — against a backdrop of political and religious upheaval. The central character is the young and rebellious Lata Mehra whose mother is trying to find her a husband (“a suitable boy” of the title). As a fan of the 1,500 page book, I was afraid of being disappointed — but loving it so far!

Directed by Mira Nair (of Salaam BombayMonsoon Wedding and The Namesake fame) it is lush and colorful. Through the relationships of four families, the Mehras, Chatterjis, Kapoors, and Khans, Nair presents a country that keeps failing (killing of peaceful protesters, sectarian riots, Hindu nationalism) but remains aspirational (general elections, land reforms, inter-faith love). 

As one of the most expensive BBC series ever made, Nair has splurged on gorgeous costumes, fine jewelry, and lavish parties, including an elaborate wedding, celebration of Holi (a spring festival), and scenic boat rides on the Ganges.

Nawabi (Princely) Culture

Nair, who (like Seth) grew up in a similar public school educated, secular Indian tradition as many of her generation, has a way of recreating time, place, and historical context — as in Lucknow’s famed Nawabi or Princely culture — that is deeply nostalgic and strongly evocative of an India that once was! 

The book’s fictional Brahmpur is filmed on location along the Ganges between Benares and Patna. Besides Lucknow, the series also features Calcutta, Delhi, Kanpur, and Maheshwar (Madhya Pradesh in central India), and feels compellingly authentic. 

There is a large ensemble cast. Lata (played by Tanya Maniktala) and Kabir (Danesh Razvi) fall in love after meeting at university but Lata is a Hindu and Kabir a Muslim in a country riven by unrest and painful religious differences. Lata realizes that Kabir is not the “suitable boy” her mother would like her to marry!

Lata’s brother-in-law Maan, played by Ishaan Khatter, embarrasses his dad (high-ranking politician Mahesh) by pursuing Saeeda Bai, an older courtesan and ghazal singer, played by Tabu. Mahesh’s land reforms are opposed by greedy landowners who want to maintain the status quo. 

I enjoyed the hilarious scenes of tango dancing at a party in Calcutta, which used to have (still has) a distinct rather Westernized club culture rarely found elsewhere in India.

Political Turmoil 


The series reflects the socio-economic and political turmoil of the times with the pull between tradition and progress, bitter class and caste conflict, wealthy landowners exploiting the poor, and the taboo of inter-faith marriage. 


Nair has said in interviews that she was drawn to the political backdrop of a post-independence India as it prepared for its first national election as a democracy, and the modernity and optimism embodied in Lata’s character. 


Also interesting is that the themes covered — of religious intolerance, the complexities of family life, the position of women, the pressure of society on the individual, and the danger of democracy slipping into autocracy — are being played out just as intensely in today’s India.  


Media Flak!


The series, a first by the Beeb with an entirely South Asian cast, was met with praise in Britain but not so much in India where there was flak about it being almost entirely in English. But the world of Seth’s book is also very anglicized, influenced by two centuries of Colonial rule. Many Indian families of Nair’s and Seth’s milieu grew up speaking only (or mainly) English. 


Critics found fault with the actors’ accents and accused them of “trying to sound browner,” “taking a Peter Sellers approach,” and the drollest one, “the BBC’s revenge on Indians for writing better English!” In my view, what you hear is a clearly enunciated, slower, 1950s English, the kind not in use today but, I think, appropriate!  


I agree, though, that it is odd to hear Indian village characters speak to each other in English. When they converse in Hindi, as Saeeda with her maid, the flow sounds more natural.


Indian critics were also peeved that award-winning British screenwriter Andrew Davies, who adapted Pride and Prejudice, was chosen by Seth to do the screenplay — shouldn’t that be the decision of the author?


Intolerance for Dissent


Meanwhile, a controversy has erupted over kissing scenes! Indian ruling party politicians of the Hindu fundamentalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have claimed that “religious sentiments” were “hurt” because the series showed a Hindu girl kissing a Muslim boy against the backdrop of a temple! They called for a nationwide boycott of Netflix whose officials were booked by police, told to remove offensive content, and apologize for “encouraging love jihad.”  


The absurd love jihad conspiracy theory claims that Muslim men are part of a plot to lure Hindu women into marriage and force their conversion to Islam! A few years ago, it was a fringe notion of the lunatic right feeding a culture of suspicion around inter-faith couples — it has now gone mainstream!


I find it odd that the series was even shown in India! It is a time of total intolerance for dissent with secularism and free speech under threat and Muslims reviled and persecuted in ways previously unseen — all of it happening with police complicity, little recourse to justice, and much of the elite and media seeming to acquiesce with such blatant bigotry. Sad times, indeed!


Lucknow


The Urdu poetry of Mirza Ghalib, Mir Taqi Mir, and Daagh Dehlvi in the scenes with Saeeda are a celebration of Lucknow’s rich and historic Indo-Muslim culture that clearly belong to an earlier more liberal era, unsullied by today’s dark cloud of Hindu fundamentalism! 


Lucknow is famed for its “Tehzeeb” (mannerisms and culture) that derived from the Muslim Nawabs (Princes) of the erstwhile Kingdom of Awadh (also called Oudh). The city’s Nawabi culture speaks to its refinement, courtesy, etiquette, sophistication, and fine taste in dance (Kathak), Urdu poetry (ghazals, qawwali), music, literature, drama, and cuisine.


It reminded me of two of my favorite Lucknow-based Indian films. One is Satyajit Ray’s Shatranj ke Khiladi (Chess Players), the story of the 1856 British annexation of Awadh on the eve of the Indian Rebellion (Sepoy Mutiny). The two main characters are so immersed in playing chess, they ignore the invasion taking place! For classic performances, look no further than Amjad Khan in a heartrending role as the Nawab, Sanjeev Kumar and Saeed Jaffrey as the chess players, Shabana Azmi as Sanjeev’s philandering wife, Farooq Shaikh as her lover, with Richard Attenborough, Victor Bannerji, Tom Alter, and Barry John. 


Another is Umrao Jaan, the 1981, visually stunning, Muzaffar Ali-helmed film starring Rekha (not the bad 2006 remake!) which outshone its Bollywood “nawab and nautch girl” genre. Also set during the 1857 Mutiny, the film beautifully recreated the Lucknow of the period with its pigeon flight contests (kabootar baazi) and Indian hop scotch (ikkal dukkal)! It was also a feast for Urdu and Kathak (Indian classical dance) fans! 


More Reviews: Jane Austen, Daphne du Maurier


The new film adaptation of Jane Austen’s Emma which mixes social satire, romantic intrigue, and match-making was excellent with live musical performances giving it a decided edge! Emma (Anna Taylor-Joy) plays the piano and sings “‘Tis the Last Rose of Summer” and Mr Knightley (Johnny Flynn) plays the violin and gives a commanding performance of “Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes” from Ben Johnson’s To Celia. (English Majors will be familiar with those classic poems/chansons/lieder!)


A Suitable Boy has its own German lied, Schubert’s Die Nebensonnen (The Sun Dogs), beautifully sung in the third episode by a character described as a music teacher. Seth himself sings Schubert — I heard him in Delhi many years ago at the home of Austrian diplomat Peter Launsky who later married Seth’s sister, Aradhana, a designer. 


I’m intrigued that many new British adaptations of period literature and historical plays seem to sneak in a live musical performance now and again, such as, in the film version of My Cousin Rachel, with Rachel Weisz and Sam Claflin, based on the Daphne du Maurier novel.


Victoria and Albert


Victoria, a PBS Masterpiece Theatre drama by ITV, also included a live performance with a young Queen Victoria, played by Jenna Coleman, singing a Bach hymn “O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden,” (O sacred Head, now wounded) in German. But wasn’t it Prince Albert of the Duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, who soulfully sang “Drink to Me Only...” to Victoria which made her pick him over Ernest, his more charming older brother? I waited in vain! He didn’t sing it in the PBS drama!


I wonder how the disastrous six-part ITV historical drama, Beecham House (on PBS Masterpiece Theatre, directed by Gurinder Chadha) played in India. Not everyone can do period films! Chadha, who also directed the films Bend it Like Beckham and Bhaji on the Beach, co-wrote Beecham House. One of the kindest things said about it by The Guardian was “risible!”


Sorry to report that the new film version of Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca with Armie Hammer, Lily James, and Kristin Scott-Thomas was drab, poorly directed, and oh-so disappointing! Du Maurier deserved better!


Let’s hope 2021 will be an improvement — for films, streaming shows, and life in general! Meanwhile, waiting impatiently for the next three episodes of A Suitable Boy!  


Note that Seth is writing a sequel novel called A Suitable Girl where an aging Lata, now a grandmother, has come full circle and is looking for a wife for her grandson!


Ludi Joseph

Washington, D.C.

December 16, 2020

Check out NPR Interview with Mira Nair: https://www.npr.org/2020/12/12/945788759/mira-nairs-a-suitable-boy-makes-us-streaming-premiere