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Savage killing of Felani - A Letter to India…

idune

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A Letter to India…

January 25, 2011

Dear India,
Recent killings of children in both the United States and Bangladesh have moved me. When I can’t wrap my mind around what can happen in this world, the order and structure imposed by verse can help clear my mind. Therefore, I have enclosed a poem at the bottom of the write-up.

We Americans have about one image that we can keep in our head about a country at a time. The one many of us have of India is that of Gandhi, peacefully leading a march to the sea to make salt. We tend to think of India as a spiritual, non-violent land. Perhaps that’s why so many people I’ve mentioned it to here are shocked by India’s border killings of innocent Bangladeshis, especially the girl, Felani. It doesn’t fit with the image we in America have of India.

How can any nation justify such abuses of basic human rights, especially a nation that, because of its colonial history, should understand the sufferings of the oppressed? I suppose you can counter, “Well, how can the United States, alleged proponent of liberty, ever support repressive regimes?”

Granted, we are guilty of our own forms of hypocrisy. Our hands aren’t clean either. Still, we the individual citizens of any nation have the right and the duty to stand up and say something when we hear of atrocities, wherever they occur. First and foremost, I am a father and a family man. I have a 15-year-old daughter. That gives me an emotional bond with Felani’s father that I can’t dismiss silently. I must respond, and perhaps keep responding, until this senseless slaughter is just an unfortunate chapter in the history of India. A father of one child is the father of all children. The sons and daughters of Bangladesh are my sons and daughters as well.

I know India and Bangladesh are going to address these matters. India promises within the next few months to “resolve these matters”. This is a positive step forward, but it does not bring back the dead, or answer the question as to how a government steps over the line from a misplaced sense of superiority into a callous disregard for human life. No high-level talks should have to be conducted for governments to prescribe to some very basic level of human decency, especially among friends and neighbours. Those who perpetrated and ordered these acts are criminals, and those who, to this point, condoned these acts should be brought to justice. Felani was not the first innocent child to die.

The Killing of 15-year-old Felani by Indian Border Guards… An American Father Responds.

Mahatma, help me make some sense

Of slaughtered children on your fence

Your nation stained, your image scarred

By Sahib Death, the Border Guard.



On the wire, mournful cries

Of parents rise into the skies

The bullets steal a nation’s youth

While politics obscure the truth.



If madness and mistrust increase

If we can slay our men of peace

Can killing children be that hard,

For Sahib Death, The Border Guard?



I hear a father’s cry of grief

Of agony beyond belief

And wonder what a monstrous thief

Could snuff a light so bright, so brief?



Our tears and rage won’t make us blind

We can’t be violent, kill in kind

For we’d grow soulless, damned and hard

As Sahib Death, the Border Guard.



Back here, we’ve suffered tragic ends

The work of madmen, not of friends.

My nation mourns the rare events

That happen daily on your fence.



At least we know each precious soul

Has eluded death’s patrol,

Has reached a land which can’t be barred

By Sahib Death, the Border Guard.



Descendants of the dead who fell

Into a distant Martyr’s well

Belay the murd’rous disregard

Of Sahib Death, your border guard!



Beloved readers, I have said it before. Bangladesh, from this “Martian” perspective, to quote aladin’s article of last week, is a nation of colour and energy. I could do a whole piece on how people use colours to decorate that which is most important to them, our street signs are colourful, our advertisements are colourful, our cars are colourful. Even our gas stations are colourful. In Bangladesh, looking at the photographs of the election queues, it seems that the people themselves are the most colourful element on the landscape. Everyone is so brightly, so lavishly dressed. What this means to me is that yours is a nation that subconsciously understands and celebrates its people above all else. When any of this colourful number, especially children, has her life brutally cut short, I feel it a world away.

This article originally stopped at the end of the poem. My editor emailed me to ask if this was really all I had to say. As I did research on this issue, read the story about that 13-year-old boy shot dead across the border during a shouting match with an Indian border guard a few years back, or this girl who was shot and left to die on the fence, at the age of 15, I had no words. My youngest daughter is 15, and my youngest son is 13. They are the elements of my life that I would dress in bright colours. Every parent worries about their children’s futures. I know, only from an American perspective what it is to burrow through the couch to find change to buy milk, or use a newspaper and some sphagnum moss as a diaper, and even how your ears burn when the nice person next to you in church gives you money because they see, as a new and struggling parent, that you need the money. And you face it all, you struggle and you fight, because you are a father and you do it for the sake of your child. Of all the ways to identify yourself: nationality, religion, race, party, or social class, above everything else, parenthood has the power to transform the way you live your life. It is a universal identifier. We, the fathers of the world, belong to a common brotherhood.

I struggled in the early years of fatherhood because my wife and I were still students, and students are universally poor. Here in American want is often just a temporary condition for the soon to be middle-class. This is a puddle that evaporates within a few years, and though my family walked the tightrope all those years ago, we were never without the safety net of my own father, if we really needed help. I never had to risk being shot by foreign soldiers, allies at that, to put bread on the table.

But I imagine a Bangladeshi father on the day his daughter dressed to go with him and arrange the particulars of a marriage with a husband in India. I imagine how a tear might have caught in the father’s throat to see his girl dressed up, grown and engaged to be married, how it would pain him to part with her, especially since he would eventually be separated from her new family and from his grandchildren, by a national border. I imagine the memories Felani’s dad would have of his little girl’s childhood, the struggles, the dreams, the prayers that all fathers have for their cherished daughters, who, no matter how old they get, we fathers permanently regard as loving, big-eyed seven year olds. I know the thought that sometimes goes through a father’s head. “In my youth, I dreamed big dreams that didn’t come true, but I have this wonderful child. If this was the trade, my dreams for in exchange for her life, I got the best of the bargain.” I know the memory of the soft hand of a ten year old girl, holding her father’s own rough, calloused hand, telegraphing through her warm fingers her absolute faith and trust in her father’s protective strength. I know the secret prayer of all fathers that God make them worthy of that trust. We see a horrible picture of a girl on a fence, but I see the father, present for her 15 years, for every stroke of the hairbrush, for every wiggly baby tooth, worrying, dreaming of a safer, happier life for his daughter.

I don’t know whether Felani’s father was rich or poor, or what sort of safety net he had for his daughter. I only know that all of his earthly struggle, love, and concern were erased by a single barbarous act. I only know that now, as this far-off brother of mine walks home from his labours searching for blessings, the absence of his little girl’s hand will permanently remind him that he was not strong enough to protect his own trusting little angel from the cruel indifference of this world.

By: Frank Domenico Cipriani

A Letter to India… | Opinion
 
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Dear Bangladesh,

India and all the Indians regret the loss of lives in the Indo-BD border region.
The incident that resulted in loss of life of a girl recently really makes us cry. we see BD as a fiendly neighbour who supports India and vice versa, but India is shocked why BDR, bangladesh's border guards, allow their citizen to cross over or even come near the border fence whenit is known to be used by smugglers and criminals? India is also angry at BD for not taking any step on stopping illegal infiltration into India from its soil, inspite of several deaths and unfortunate loss of lives. India requests you to agree wit India on erecting the fence and electrifying it.so that no more deaths occure by BSF bullet.

May felani's soul rest in peace.

your neighbour on the west,
India
 
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Dear Bangladesh,

India and all the Indians regret the loss of lives in the Indo-BD border region.
The incident that resulted in loss of life of a girl recently really makes us cry. we see BD as a fiendly neighbour who supports India and vice versa, but India is shocked why BDR, bangladesh's border guards, allow their citizen to cross over or even come near the border fence whenit is known to be used by smugglers and criminals? India is also angry at BD for not taking any step on stopping illegal infiltration into India from its soil, inspite of several deaths and unfortunate loss of lives. India requests you to agree wit India on erecting the fence and electrifying it.so that no more deaths occure by BSF bullet.

May felani's soul rest in peace.

your neighbour on the west,
India

Singh is King. :lol:

p.s.: Also add mining the border for 20 metres from the fence.
 
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It was a regrettable incident which should not have happen if proper procedure was followed .

RIP :(
 
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Dear Bangladesh and Bangladeshis..

We r also not happy by killing Bangladeshis..

But ur Govt should also take care,why will u leave ur citizen to come near border,where smugglers try to cross...
Wat's ur police force doing..
why don't u r stop ur people from illegally entering India...
so please take care of that..u r govt should act..
We want a peaceful bangladesh,that's why we created bangladesh..

Because Gandhi was born,we cant let smugglers and terrorists to come in india,we can't ignore them because we r peaceful country...

By mistake,feelani has tried to cross,at the time,wat would be visible,so they have shot..
We respect women more than men...
Bad time,she was there at wrong place..
i regret for that mistake....

But ur Police and Govt is doing nothing to stop citizen to come near border..

Rest In Peace Feelani...

NO Indian want a young person,that too a girl to be killed..
please Bangladesh govt take care of it...
 
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I would really wish, the Barbaric neighbor (India) of Bangladesh would be civilized somehow on someday.
 
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I would really wish, the Barbaric neighbor (India) of Bangladesh would be civilized somehow on someday.

Everybody is playing civilly on this thread uptill now
but you guys have a tendency of Pissing off Indians on this board and then play the victim.
 
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I am really saddened to see the smiley icons used in this thread.It seems that Indians have lost their humanity.Yes i admit BSF did the right thing but they could have instead detained them and deported them.Imagine a young women who had full life ahead shot to death.I am sure it was not her hobby to cross border.Poverty led her to this.It's just sad.
 
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Everybody is playing civilly on this thread uptill now
but you guys have a tendency of Pissing off Indians on this board and then play the victim.

Dude, gave little advices from ur civilized (still now) neighbor. A civilized person always expect a civilized neighbor, nothing wrong in this.
 
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La-Hasian has all the time in the world to bicker about 40 year old incident but no time or gut to protest about little girl death. This innocent inhumane death could have been used to prove to the world that India is a savaged nation. The world could have see a demon hiding behind secular label.

But Bangladesh, what a funny country called Bangladesh!!
 
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La-Hasian has all the time in the world to bicker about 40 year old incident but no time or gut to protest about little girl death. This innocent inhumane death could have been used to prove to the world that India is a savaged nation. The world could have see a demon hiding behind secular label.

But Bangladesh, what a funny country called Bangladesh!!

:what: What does India's claim to secularism have to do with the topic troll?
 
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