(Dr,Sheila Balakrishnan, Open Page, The Hindu, 27:10:2013)
I was in London some time ago on a short visit and
happened to witness an incident. A very trivial one, but it set me
thinking. I was taking a walk in one of the suburbs and there was this
teenage girl ahead of me taking her pup for a walk. As is its wont, the
pup decided to use that moment to relieve itself. The girl took a paper
bag from her pocket, cleaned up the mess and then walked on to the
nearest bin to dispose of the poop!
What would have
happened in our country? Not hard to guess! What specially impressed me
was that this was a teenager. This is an age when there is a natural
tendency to rebel but this civic sense was so deeply ingrained in her
that she didn’t think twice about acting the way she did.
Whereas
we are enthralled by many things western they do not include the sense
of responsibility those citizens have. What about traffic rules? Every
single user of the road in India seems to feel that the road belongs to
him or her, be it the automobile driver, the two-wheeler user or the
pedestrian. At night, every driver tries to outshine the vehicles coming
in the opposing direction! And the incessant honking which we all know
is of no use at all. Even when the traffic is chock-a-blok! Compare that
with the disciplined silent driving in most other countries. Foreigners
who visit our country are appalled at our driving. Remember what Oprah
Winfrey said when she was asked to comment on what she didn’t like about
India!
Public place behaviour is another such
example. How many times do we see co-passengers in trains talking
loudly, with no consideration for our eardrums! And when children cry
loudly or disturb others, they look on indulgently with a proud smile.
Of course, our children are lovable even when they are a public
nuisance! It is a common practice to drag our children to hot, stuffy,
crowded places and torture both the child and the lookers-on!
When
I used to have private consultation, many couples would enter my room
with kids. And both parents would look on indulgently as the child
pulled down everything on my table including my stethoscope. While I
grit my teeth and try to smile! Later on I quit this façade and asked
them to refrain from bringing children into the consultation room. This
has caused many people to look at me with shocked faces!
On
mobile phone etiquette, the less said the better — the entire world is a
mouthpiece! The other day, I read that a cashier in a supermarket
abroad refused to serve a customer until she had finished speaking on
the phone. And though the supermarket management chastised the cashier,
even top political leaders deplored the action of the customer and
reiterated the importance of phone etiquette.
Civic
sense or rather the lack of it has been widely discussed and somehow it
is an undisputed fact that we Indians don’t seem to care much for it.
This attitude cuts across all ranks and sections. We don’t think it
deserves much importance. People today are so driven towards their
personal goals that civic sense as an ethic has become a low priority,
almost nuisance.
Many people think that civic sense
is just about keeping our surroundings and roads clean. No, it is much
more than that; it consists of abiding by laws, showing respect to and
consideration for fellow countrymen and maintaining decorum in public
places. Civic sense is social ethics. And, alas, right down at the
bottom of our list!
(
The writer heads the fertility unit at the Trivandrum Medical College and can be reached at drsheilabal@gmail.com
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