I consider Chidanand Rajghatta to be an extremely engaging and gifted writer, whether he is writing on politics, personalities, polemics or places. Most often, he goes beyond the mundane and offers a perspective which few can.
His latest book, Illiberal India: Gauri Lankesh and the Age of Unreason would surely have been his biggest and trickiest challenge as a writer to date; after all, he was writing about his ex-wife, with whom he had a bitter-sweet relationship, and who, he discovered after her tragic death, had transformed into sort of an icon he barely recognised.
Petite, energetic, humane, humorous, and bohemian, Gauri was, for close to 15 years, a thorough professional who wrote beautifully and objectively in English on any subject. Later, when circumstances forced her to take over a Kannada tabloid, her legendary writer-father, P. Lankesh, edited, she gradually identified herself with leftist radical activists and their causes, which turned her into a passionate activist-journalist.
Rajghatta evocatively captures their roller-coaster personal life of 바카라five years of courtship, five years of marriage (and divorce) and friendship till her dying day바카라, interspersing his story with their often overlapping journalistic journeys in Karnataka and his solo forays in New Delhi, Mumbai and Washington DC, which helped him overcome the pangs of a failed marriage. Rajghatta바카라s prose is almost poetic and his great sense of humour comes through, for instance, in his interaction with a relative who was miffed with his short, registered marriage. He writes: 바카라If you curtail your wedding, your married life too will be curtailed,바카라 hissed a family hussy. 바카라We will take the risk,바카라 I replied curtly바카라She must have died of smugness when her 바카라prophecy바카라 came true.바카라
Recalling their days of courtship when they were students of National College in Basavanagudi, Bangalore, Rajghatta pays handsome tribute to the inspirational role the college principal, H. Narasimhaiah, played in the lives of generations of students, and his fight with godman Satya Sai Baba and his ilk. Since P. Lankesh (Rajghatta바카라s father-in-law) also lived and brought out his publication from Basavanagudi, he gives a peek into Lankesh바카라s riotous 바카라adda바카라, and his electric relationships with other famous Kannada writers who all lived in a 2-km radius.
The sudden death of Lankesh in 2000 made Gauri not only relocate from Delhi, but switch to Kannada tabloid journalism and continue the Patrike, her father바카라s legacy. As Rajghatta notes, she was deeply disturbed by the encounter-killing of her friend-turned-Naxalite, Saketh Rajan, began to identify with their causes and later, tried to play the role of an intermediary between the Naxals and the government. As sensational stories are the staple diet of the tabloids, Gauri made several enemies who filed defamation cases in far-flung places to harass her. Those journeys to the hinterland바카라often alone바카라helped her connect with the adivasis, the Dalits and the minorities and write about their concerns, which the mainstream media largely ignored.
Gauri also became a strong votary of Lingayatism as a separate religion from Hinduism, which was being propagated by M.M. Kalburgi, the scholar who had done research in the field (Both Gauri and Chidanand were non-practising Lingayats). Rajghatta recalls an accidental, poignant meeting between Gauri and Kalburgi at Malebennur around 2004, and how religious bigots would target them in similar circumstances more than a decade later, in 바카라illiberal바카라 India.
Rajghatta makes a convincing argument about the links between the systematic, premeditated killings of Narendra Dabolkar, Govind Pansare, M.M. Kalburgi and Gauri Lankesh between 2014 and 2017 and points out how an atmosphere of intolerance is contributing to it. 바카라Someone, either an organisation or a coterie of individuals, is periodically targeting prominent rationalists, heretics, agnostics and sceptics,바카라 he writes. Based on some isolated incidents, calling India 바카라illiberal바카라 may sound a little alarmist, but Rajghatta offers his justification thus: 바카라Given the enormity and plurality of our population and the complexity of our society, it is remarkable that there is little strife. But even the little strife we see is a little too much.바카라
Pointing out that the 바카라argumentative Indian바카라 is degenerating into an intolerant and illiberal Indian, he says, 바카라It is not just religion or social (issues), but it is now spreading to every sphere of life. There is impatience, resentment and anger in the air, often ignited by and on social media바카라and the worst primitive and medieval instincts of India are on display바카라every single day.바카라 Rajghatta바카라s instincts suggested that he should settle on this provocative title, 바카라simply because we are on a slippery slope of ill-liberalism and a warning has to be sounded.바카라 Yes, indeed.