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"Catch
the magic," said the young lady who briefed me on what she
wanted me to write. Magic is an illusion and not a mood. But I had
a pretty good idea of what she meant. No one expected cricket matches
between India and Pakistan to turn into carnivals, no one expected
that such inveterate foes would put aside their deeply ingrained
hostility and party together, all sorrows forgotten, the moment
to be celebrated.
Will
the euphoria last? Or will it evaporate at the first touch of reality?
There have been other false dawns but they have not involved ordinary
people and I see cricket fans as ordinary people with no agenda
other than a longing to see more and more cricket matches between
the two countries. That cricket ties will facilitate a peace process
is, perhaps, too unrealistic, but it allows us to communicate with
each other at a pedestrian level without hurling angry slogans at
one another.
The cricket fans of both countries have served notice on
their leaders that cricket is too serious a business to be left
to their ambitions or made hostage. The decision to snap cricket
ties was taken by the Indian government in a post 9/11 environment
and accusations of terrorism would be heard by sympathetic but untutored
ears. But this is not a political article and I do not want to spoil
this friendship moment; I want to share in the good time that is
being had by all.
Still,
it is important that we do not build our hopes too high. Sports
can be a stepping-stone but it is not a bridge. Every four years,
we have the Olympic Games and these games have lofty goals. But
they have not stopped wars. There will be the Olympic Games in Athens
in a few weeks time but my guess is that the war in Iraq will still
be raging, the Israelis will still be killing Palestinians and the
neo-conservatives in Washington will be plotting the next target
in their grand design , it could be Iran or Syria or North Korea.
Millions had marched in anti-war protests in London but this did
not deter Tony Blair. So if, thousands of Indian visitors come across
to watch the cricket series and are received with open arms, all
we are doing is lighting candles, but the light they give is not
enough for the darkness. Peace needs trust. It means unlearning
what generation after generation have been taught in their history
books. This will take time and the process will have to proceed
uninterrupted.
What the cricket tour has achieved is that it has allowed
the Indian visitors to see a little bit of Pakistan for themselves
and it must have opened their eyes. Pakistan is not at all like
it has been portrayed to them. There is no militancy, no gut-animosity
and the Indian visitor will have seen a similarity of outlook in
the simpler desire of getting on with their lives and how much they
have in common, including venal politicians and the great divide
between the rich and the poor.
I had a friend called Ed Stegman when I was studying at the
University of Southern California. He was a World War-II veteran.
He was in the US Air Force and he would tell me that it was his
job to drop bombs on people he did not know. "I did not hate
those people but I hated my rear-gunner, " he would say, making
the point that he was being asked to kill the wrong enemy! The enemy
of both India and Pakistan is poverty.
Millions
of Indians will be watching the matches on television and they too
would be able to see how festive is the mood of the spectators and
the messages of the placards that some of them display and the sight
of Pakistan and Indian flags being waved joyously by respective
supporters. How different and how much more hopeful than angry,
fired-up mobs burning these flags at another time and at another
place. This indeed is magic, but one hopes not an illusion. 
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