03-14-2010, 11:56 PM
[size="6"][url="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/12/world/asia/12iht-letter.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss"]Opening Up to the World and Its Evils[/url][/size]
PONDICHERRY, INDIA ââ¬â A dark wind blew into this sleepy, coastal town recently ââ¬â it carried the threat of global terrorism, of bombs and gunmen and unprovoked attacks on soft targets.
On Feb. 13, people thought to be Islamic terrorists bombed a restaurant in the northern city of Pune, killing 17 people. Speculation followed that the location had been chosen for its popularity with Western tourists. The government warned that terrorists appeared to be targeting foreigners in India, and soon a specific advisory was issued for this former French colonial outpost, a popular tourist destination usually associated with yoga, spirituality and the quest for inner peace.
A team of commandos in combat gear was seen driving around town in a jeep, automatic rifles at the ready.
At the French Consulate, on the beach road, where middle-aged pensioners take their evening walks, security forces set up roadblocks and sandbags.
The police and extra security were evident at hotels and tourist attractions. In a depressingly familiar ââ¬â yet in these parts, utterly new ââ¬â routine, visitors were frisked, and bags were examined.
Many of the precautions were clearly for show, designed to instill public confidence. Still, there was a definite undercurrent of worry, a certain anxiety that sprang as much from fear as disbelief. Bars and restaurants were filled with jocular conversations about black bags and unattended luggage. At the entrance to hotels and shopping malls, it was possible to hear derisory ââ¬â and slightly nervous ââ¬â comments about the lax security.
Outlook, a national magazine, ran a cover package that asked: ââ¬ÅAre terrorists targeting foreigners?ââ¬Â One of the stories included photos of Pondicherry and a dramatic quote from a Frenchman who owns a popular restaurant, a backpackerââ¬â¢s hangout now said to be a possible target.
ââ¬ÅWhen you come to India, you donââ¬â¢t mind dying in India,ââ¬Â said Pierre Elouard, the restaurant owner and an acquaintance of mine.
It was all bizarre ââ¬â surreal, really. It was hard to imagine that this peaceful part of the country ââ¬â a town without an airport or until recently even a broad-gauge rail connection, a sun-baked, slow-moving corner that has always felt at the edge of world ââ¬â could really be on the map of global jihad.
Pondicherryââ¬â¢s charm has always lain for me in its isolation ââ¬â its seclusion, its distance from the world, and the sense of perspective (and safety) afforded by that distance.
Yet the more I thought about it, the less surprising the apparent erosion of that safety seemed. After all, weââ¬â¢ve been subjected to wave after wave of globalization over the last couple of decades. I suppose terrorism is just the latest.
Pondicherry has reaped many of the benefits of globalization. In the 1990s, soon after India liberalized its economy, integrated it with the world, the countryââ¬â¢s new wealth started trickling down here, transforming the quiet, tree-lined streets and the surrounding farms and fields.
Old French mansions, high-ceilinged villas that had until then been sequestered behind bright bougainvillea, were opened to the public, turned into restaurants and designer hotels.
Farms gave way to real-estate development, the open plains and coconut plantations of rural South India slowly choked by ornate apartment blocks.
Pondicherry woke up, grew more ambitious ââ¬â and more wealthy. The wealth was evident in the flash of new jewelry stores and shopping malls, in the shine of the cars and S.U.V.ââ¬â¢s, many imported, that clogged its roads.
Globalization is a multifaceted phenomenon, of course, a modern Hydra, and from the beginning this wealth has been accompanied, too, by certain less desirable characteristics.
Like much of India, Pondicherry has suffered from growing congestion, noise and environmental pollution. The wealth has not been distributed equally. Old patterns of living have been disrupted, and the resulting social disorientation has occasionally broken out into lawlessness and violence.
All this we have learned to accept as the modern condition. We take ââ¬â we have been forced to take ââ¬â the bad with the good. We know that globalization is a package, inseparable into its component parts.
Now, we are being confronted with a new part of the package. Global terrorism is inextricably linked to global capitalism ââ¬â financed by it, a reaction to it, fueled by the resentments it has engendered around the globe.
Money always has a cost. I suppose it would have been naïve to think that we could take it ââ¬â that we could grow wealthy, climb out of the poverty that has for so long defined this area ââ¬â without paying a price.
I suppose it was naïve, too, to hope that we could sit in our living rooms, watching the senseless violence of the world unfold on our televisions, pretending all the while that we werenââ¬â¢t part of that world. No corner, how matter how geographically remote, is immune. Globalization, as the former United Nations secretary general, Kofi Annan, once put it, is a force like gravity ââ¬â unstoppable, inevitable and frequently crushing.
On a recent Friday evening, rumors swept through town that a bomb had been found in the train station. The police fanned out to other potential targets, warning shopkeepers and hotel owners. They asked them to install metal detectors. They advised them to screen customers carefully.
By the next day, it turned out to have been a false alarm. An abandoned bag had indeed been found; a bomb squad had been deployed, but the bag contained only some clothes and utensils.
So the panic was premature. Pondicherry is still safe. But I canââ¬â¢t help feeling that weââ¬â¢ve crossed a certain line ââ¬â that weââ¬â¢ve been thrust into a battle we never imagined ourselves part of, that weââ¬â¢ve been forced to confront an evil we always assumed had no interest in us.
No matter how often I tell myself that I have moved here to move away from the world, that I have found a safe haven for my children, a place where they can grow up removed from the madness of out there, reality keeps intruding. The world keeps reminding me that Iââ¬â¢m part of it.
PONDICHERRY, INDIA ââ¬â A dark wind blew into this sleepy, coastal town recently ââ¬â it carried the threat of global terrorism, of bombs and gunmen and unprovoked attacks on soft targets.
On Feb. 13, people thought to be Islamic terrorists bombed a restaurant in the northern city of Pune, killing 17 people. Speculation followed that the location had been chosen for its popularity with Western tourists. The government warned that terrorists appeared to be targeting foreigners in India, and soon a specific advisory was issued for this former French colonial outpost, a popular tourist destination usually associated with yoga, spirituality and the quest for inner peace.
A team of commandos in combat gear was seen driving around town in a jeep, automatic rifles at the ready.
At the French Consulate, on the beach road, where middle-aged pensioners take their evening walks, security forces set up roadblocks and sandbags.
The police and extra security were evident at hotels and tourist attractions. In a depressingly familiar ââ¬â yet in these parts, utterly new ââ¬â routine, visitors were frisked, and bags were examined.
Many of the precautions were clearly for show, designed to instill public confidence. Still, there was a definite undercurrent of worry, a certain anxiety that sprang as much from fear as disbelief. Bars and restaurants were filled with jocular conversations about black bags and unattended luggage. At the entrance to hotels and shopping malls, it was possible to hear derisory ââ¬â and slightly nervous ââ¬â comments about the lax security.
Outlook, a national magazine, ran a cover package that asked: ââ¬ÅAre terrorists targeting foreigners?ââ¬Â One of the stories included photos of Pondicherry and a dramatic quote from a Frenchman who owns a popular restaurant, a backpackerââ¬â¢s hangout now said to be a possible target.
ââ¬ÅWhen you come to India, you donââ¬â¢t mind dying in India,ââ¬Â said Pierre Elouard, the restaurant owner and an acquaintance of mine.
It was all bizarre ââ¬â surreal, really. It was hard to imagine that this peaceful part of the country ââ¬â a town without an airport or until recently even a broad-gauge rail connection, a sun-baked, slow-moving corner that has always felt at the edge of world ââ¬â could really be on the map of global jihad.
Pondicherryââ¬â¢s charm has always lain for me in its isolation ââ¬â its seclusion, its distance from the world, and the sense of perspective (and safety) afforded by that distance.
Yet the more I thought about it, the less surprising the apparent erosion of that safety seemed. After all, weââ¬â¢ve been subjected to wave after wave of globalization over the last couple of decades. I suppose terrorism is just the latest.
Pondicherry has reaped many of the benefits of globalization. In the 1990s, soon after India liberalized its economy, integrated it with the world, the countryââ¬â¢s new wealth started trickling down here, transforming the quiet, tree-lined streets and the surrounding farms and fields.
Old French mansions, high-ceilinged villas that had until then been sequestered behind bright bougainvillea, were opened to the public, turned into restaurants and designer hotels.
Farms gave way to real-estate development, the open plains and coconut plantations of rural South India slowly choked by ornate apartment blocks.
Pondicherry woke up, grew more ambitious ââ¬â and more wealthy. The wealth was evident in the flash of new jewelry stores and shopping malls, in the shine of the cars and S.U.V.ââ¬â¢s, many imported, that clogged its roads.
Globalization is a multifaceted phenomenon, of course, a modern Hydra, and from the beginning this wealth has been accompanied, too, by certain less desirable characteristics.
Like much of India, Pondicherry has suffered from growing congestion, noise and environmental pollution. The wealth has not been distributed equally. Old patterns of living have been disrupted, and the resulting social disorientation has occasionally broken out into lawlessness and violence.
All this we have learned to accept as the modern condition. We take ââ¬â we have been forced to take ââ¬â the bad with the good. We know that globalization is a package, inseparable into its component parts.
Now, we are being confronted with a new part of the package. Global terrorism is inextricably linked to global capitalism ââ¬â financed by it, a reaction to it, fueled by the resentments it has engendered around the globe.
Money always has a cost. I suppose it would have been naïve to think that we could take it ââ¬â that we could grow wealthy, climb out of the poverty that has for so long defined this area ââ¬â without paying a price.
I suppose it was naïve, too, to hope that we could sit in our living rooms, watching the senseless violence of the world unfold on our televisions, pretending all the while that we werenââ¬â¢t part of that world. No corner, how matter how geographically remote, is immune. Globalization, as the former United Nations secretary general, Kofi Annan, once put it, is a force like gravity ââ¬â unstoppable, inevitable and frequently crushing.
On a recent Friday evening, rumors swept through town that a bomb had been found in the train station. The police fanned out to other potential targets, warning shopkeepers and hotel owners. They asked them to install metal detectors. They advised them to screen customers carefully.
By the next day, it turned out to have been a false alarm. An abandoned bag had indeed been found; a bomb squad had been deployed, but the bag contained only some clothes and utensils.
So the panic was premature. Pondicherry is still safe. But I canââ¬â¢t help feeling that weââ¬â¢ve crossed a certain line ââ¬â that weââ¬â¢ve been thrust into a battle we never imagined ourselves part of, that weââ¬â¢ve been forced to confront an evil we always assumed had no interest in us.
No matter how often I tell myself that I have moved here to move away from the world, that I have found a safe haven for my children, a place where they can grow up removed from the madness of out there, reality keeps intruding. The world keeps reminding me that Iââ¬â¢m part of it.