With progress, we have created more
miseries for countless human beings and other species than we have brought
comfort to the few. The trophy of progress stands on a mountain of miseries.
Just that we stare and clap at the shiny crown and take the rubble at the base merely
as the cost of production and efficiency.
How I wish that our policies were
directed by a collective sense of consideration and empathy. The world would
have been materially advanced with far less suffering and far more happiness
and joy. There is a tendency for a selfish task to go into regression after a
point to start eating into the original cause it began with. Then you are not
just a creator, you are basically fighting to ward off the evil effects of the
heartless deeds. This is not progress. It’s a mere struggle. And struggles
never get to happiness and joy. They rob the smile of your face. They turn you
more prone to get angry.
I just need to look around the life
in general in the countryside and see through the flimsy veil of progress and
development. The birds are rapidly vanishing from my village. As tractors take
angry mechanized burps, cattle bellow, buffaloes bray, still-remaining
house sparrows tweet, still-surviving flocks of pigeons coo, irritated crows
croak and pigs snort, the peacocks add their voice to the rustic humdrum. The
peacocks scream. Is it a mating call or distressed cry of plight, I’m not sure.
I don’t think our national bird,
occupying a lofty position in the rule book, likes humans as such. It’s a
punishable offence to kill a peacock. But the killing should be direct,
specific, with the proofs of blood and slaying visible on the spot. However,
indirect killing, the slow killing over a period of time, in the form of loss
of habitat and introduction of poisonous inputs in the farms, goes unpunished—as usually happens with slow crimes
that unfold over a period of time, losing the track of offense and the
perpetrators spreading over whole groups of society and institutions.
The farmlands are poisoned. Nothing
survives there except the mono-cultured crops of wheat and paddy. The peacocks
risk their lives to enter the human habitation. It’s a forced migration. A
feathered riot of colors, they are the latest beggars among the species who can
no longer sustain for themselves and look to mankind for survival. The irony is,
it is the same man who has grabbed their share from nature. But then the robber
can very well impersonate as a philanthropist. It massages the conscience for a
mushy-mushy feeling.
The peacocks look forward to get
survival crumbs here. The nature is dying, so how will its offshoot, this
feathered riot of colors, survive under the onslaught. They prefer to run on
their paws in a forest. But that is perilous in a village street. Dogs chase
them, cats stalk predatorily and urchins throw stones. So the peacocks with
multi-hued splendor of their trains have
to heave their huge feathering from roof-top to roof-top, looking out for
grains and chapatti thrown by their enemy to salvage some punya from
the basket of sins.
Their
trumpeting peehoo goes vain like rest of the species’ role in
making nature what it was and brought mankind to this level. The peacock even
holds the copyright to the best of colors that we humans boast about in our
designs and aesthetic portraits. But the poor thing doesn’t have the right to
encash the royalty born of this copyright. Its metallic blue, bluish-green,
iridescent greenish blue,
bronze-green, black and copper markings and glossy green shading is no longer a
wonder for the modern man. It does not create awe anymore. The long train made
up of elongated upper-tail bearing colorful eyespots is just a pattern on
a bird.
Whenever there is a
chance for courtship, the train is raised into a fan and shaken to impress the
females. Love in times of war. There are risks of being caught and preyed upon.
At least the male attracts some iota of appreciation due to its colors. Poor
peahens, on the other hand, with their greenish lower neck and dull brown
plumage hardy get noticed. If there is a crumb to be thrown, people prefer the
peacock and shoo away the unattractive female.
The land under
cultivation, where they forage for grains, snakes, lizards and small rodents,
is under poisonous assault. That land is no longer for them. In fact, it is not
even for the farmers—in the medium term. With population blast, decreasing
land-holdings, increasing costs and decreasing returns, the farmers delve
deeper into their pockets to buy more killer pesticides and poisons. They just
cannot afford to lose a crop. A season’s loss and their fates go down the
drain. So the survival comes at huge costs of injecting insecticides,
pesticides and weedicides.
The poison not only
kills the small world that sustains birds like peacocks, it enters the ground
water and goes into the food chain as well. The cases of cancer in the villages
are on the rise. The numbers are far more than the cities ill-reputed for
life-style diseases born of pollution and lack of physical activity. The
farmers die of slow poison, dozens every year due to cancer in almost all the
farming villages. The peacocks roam around the villages screaming ominously.
It’s a gloomy shriek. The world is but too busy in short-term gains, even if it
comes at the cost of slow, painful death some years down the line.
You may call it an
advanced world, but the evil effects of our hardened selves, shrunk hearts and
ironed souls are too glaring to ignore. We may try to pass them off as mere
throwaways in garbage dumps, but how long we will be successful in looking
away? Let’s build a culture based on love that boosts healthy excellence,
instead of unaesthetic competition that robs us of the best quality we have,
conscious levels of love and consideration.