Saturday, August 11, 2012

Feasting on the Moral Fiber


Revathi is cooking a hurried lunch for the family as her 8 year old daughter struggles with the makeshift trolley they use to ferry water to their makeshift dwelling. Revathi works as a sweeper at an International Bank and her mandate is to flush the toilet once again after each user has flushed it. Wasting away her entire month’s water needs every day. She feels she has slapped her daughter each time she pressed the lever. The fact that she isn’t even worth a chair to the organization, for she sits on an inverted bucket, doesn’t rub it in as much as the water that pulls at her entire existence, ravaging and raping her mentally a thousand times a month. Shouldn’t she get used to it? She would as a person but not as a mother.
Saavant has had a difficult month. His mother has taken ill and his wife is nursing their newborn and cannot go to work. Tired as he was after the double shift, he gratefully took up the temporary job of serving drinks at a Charity Event for the night. The money was respectable and he would be given transportation. Little did he know that the bitterness he would bring back home with him that night is going to stay with him forever. The Scotch, the dresses, the food, he had seen before. What he hadn’t seen was incapacitated drunk men throwing away money at paintings in one-upmanship and calling it charity. Their claiming to be doing it for the needy almost made him throw up. Unknown to Saavant, these experiences are taking down his moral structure one brick at a time.
It is not the affluence of others that affects a person of a decent enough moral fiber, it is the vulgarity with which at times some of the fortunate ones treat the less privileged. Treating someone as non-existent is tolerable, a folly but a tolerable one, as long as you do not spit in the space they occupy.
This disregard of sensitivities and ‘have it, flaunt it’ attitude can not only be catalytic to petty crimes like mugging but at times to more heinous crimes like murders, robberies and rapes.