Eleftheria (Freedom)

Freedom. An ubiquitous need for every living soul. It gets defined, understood, interpreted & lived in different ways And yet it is possibly THE MOST important need for all. Freedom is a nasha, an intoxication, a desire in every heart & drives most human thought & effort. Amongst all human values & aspirations Freedom is the zenith, the highest point. Like the limit in calculus, it is point which is always ahead of you, which keeps drawing you to it’s center. Freedom’s attraction is the independence it gives you to rise above your given situation & aspire to do better, & better. Ad infinitum!

Maya Angelou explains it well,” Independence is a heady draft, and if you drink it in your youth, it can have the same effect on the brain as young wine does. It does not matter that its taste is not always appealing. It is addictive and with each drink you want more.” To me Freedom & independence is always bi-directional. What you want to do. And also what you do not want to do. Both define freedom. As an HR person, I wanted to do what was best for the organization & the people I worked with. Defining those goals clearly, & working towards them gave me the strength & confidence to do what gave me joy. But by that very definition & clarity, other things fell apart. They also defined what paths I would not take, where I would not go.

In Johnson & Johnson, we decided we wanted to be a Great Place to Work. Though not the best pay-master, we wanted to create an employee experience which retained people & made them proud & committed to J&J. So that meant constant feedback from employees, understanding what they want, changing policies & practices that drove superlative employee experience. Correspondingly, that defined what we would not do. No favoritism, No personalized promotions or career plans, No personnel decisions which we could not defend with data & logic, No ethical compromises, & so on. What we stood for automatically proscribed what we would not do. On the sharp end of the business also, while we wanted sales & growth, all of it had to be driven by clean & pure business practices which would stand the scrutiny of any auditor. And our own conscience!!!

Aeons ago, Nikos Kazantzakis (you may recognize him as the author of Zorba the Greek) beautifully pronounced, ” I hope for nothing. I fear nothing. I am free”. Fundamentally, this is also the root of Gautama Buddha’s teachings. All sorrow/suffering is due to our desires, needs & wants. Rise above the desires & you are in a state of perpetual bliss, supreme freedom from wants which tie you down & desires which cause sorrow.

. Decluttering is about removing things we do not want. But Minimalism is discovering & being rooted in how little we actually need. When you are not hankering after worldly desires and possessions, you rise into a space of pure freedom. Kazantzakis etched a role model for all of us when he created the character of Zorba. Zorba’s love of the vast seas & fundamentally his life affirming philosophy epitomized by his dance (so beautifully brought to life by Anthony Quinn in the movie) is real freedom.

Despite problems & challenges in his life, Zorba’s determined optimism is explicitly shown to be a response to, & in defiance of, the cruelties and vicissitudes of life. In the movie, their lignite mining fails, their timber business is not successful, the whole village is against him & yet Zorba’s response is dance. The straight laced Alan Bates (Basil) asks Zorba to teach him to the siritaki dance steps.  Zorba tells Basil that the one thing he (Basil) is missing is the element of ‘madness’ which enables a man to ‘break free’. The implication of “madness” being, free from circumstance, responsibility, care. The perfect translation of this madness is “Junoon” जूनून As sung by KK यारों / जीभर के जी ले पल / लगता है आज कल/ दौर अपना आएगा/ यारों जो खुद पे हो यकीन / तो ज़िन्दगी हसीं / तुझे कल बुलाएगा/ है जूनून, है जूनून सा सीने मे I Zorba movie ends with Zorba & Basil dancing with abandon & enjoying the moves of the siritaki dance…pure freedom!!!

The Greek philosopher Epictetus reminds, “Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish? Nothing else.”. Yet Freedom in the truest sense cannot be bestowed by anyone else. It must be achieved by one’s own efforts. And once achieved there must be constant vigilance to maintain the hard earned freedom. A study of all Dictators in world history prove again & again that Freedom is never given freely by the oppressor. In the struggle to rise, the oppressor, having reached the top of the heap, loves status quo and wants to remain on top, with others following his bidding. Right from Alexander to Aurangzeb & even modern politicians all who rise to power want to stick to their power. In this context, freedom must be demanded by the oppressed. From the French Revolution to the recent developments in Pakistan all bear testimony to the fact the arbitrary rule of others does get resented & the effort is soon afoot to overthrow this yoke & gain freedom. This desire to decide one’s own destiny is true not only in public life but even in academic institutions & corporates of today. The means of protest & challenge may differ, but the effort is unequivocally towards self-determination. Look at the Organized Labor movements or today what we are seeing even amongst the learned bourgeoise, when post the work-from-home experience companies tried to get employees back to office, in a regulated working space & time. Moshe Dayan rightly called Freedom the oxygen of the soul. Remember Herbert Hoover proclamation,” Freedom is the open window through which pours the sunlight of the human spirit & of human dignity.” Indeed Freedom is as important as sunlight for growth & life itself.

So what will you pay for Freedom? can it be measured at all? Or is it a constant sacrifice you must commit to? Freedom lies in being bold. In standing up for what one holds dear & challenging others who wish to deviate from the golden path. Freedom is indeed an uneasy crown of thorns. Challenging. Difficult. Freedom brings it own sense of duty. Freedom is not just doing what you want, but it should be seen as a responsibility. A serious responsibility to do what is right, & hold others also accountable to that higher contribution. Liberty and Freedom , when they begin to take root, are plants of rapid growth. As Dalai Lama said, “ Brute force, no matter how strongly applied, can never subdue the basic human desire for freedom.” Question is, are we ready to walk that path firmly and with conviction?

Let me end with Noam Chomsky’s question for all of us. “If you assume that there is an instinct for freedom, there are opportunities to change things, there’s a chance you may contribute to making a better world. The choice is yours.”

so tell me, where do you stand? vikas

What Freedom Means to Me

I am no bird; and no net ensnares me/ I am a free human being with an independent will” postulated Charlotte Bronte in Jane Eyre. I will tell you what freedom is to me. No Fear. Walk where your heart leads you. Sans all restrictions and burdens. And yet Voltaire averred,” Man is born free but everywhere he is in chains” . Societal, Familial, Collegial, Organizational to say nothing of Religious and Ideological … pressures abound from all directions. Even my own history & experiences serve to bamboozle me. Slowly Freedom becomes a chimera we all admire & aspire for… but like the horizon, it fades further as we move towards it. And, those who do not move, do not notice the chains that bind them. And thus remain in the false impression that they are free!!! So, immediately after India celebrated it’s 75 years of Independence, I am sitting down to understand what freedom means to me.

If I look back in my own life, freedom was choosing to study Humanities/Arts when all my well-wishers wanted me to be a doctor or an engineer. Freedom was deciding to marry my cousin when others were proposing alternatives. Freedom was deciding to adopt a baby girl, and not a boy. While all these were decisions of importance, Freedom also was declaring that now that I am in a house of my own, i will not force myself to eat everything & clean my plate, as was expected in my father’s house. Rather petulantly I declared I will “waste” food & not force myself to eat all. Not showing obeisance to elders, refusal to touch their feet as expected in Indian society; Wearing dark shirts and light color trousers, when everyone went for the other way round, all were an expression of freedom. Wearing crumpled clothes & hair very, very short was freedom. Every rebellious act could be a statement of freedom. One followed Robert Frost in letter and spirit who said,” Freedom lies in being Bold”.

To me 3 names come to mind when I think of Freedom. Krishna, Savarkar & Mandela. Let me explain. Mythologically, the story of Krishna is a classic mix of freedom and free will. We are all aware of the events and activities surrounding Krishna’s birth in prison, Vasudeva carrying him out on that fateful night of torrential rain, Krishna being brought up by Nanda and Yoshoda. As Krishna started growing up his divine/free will started exerting and the actions that he took…killing of Puthana, Trinavrata and Bakasur all show actions taken to rid the surroundings of nefarious demons who were making the life of the common people difficult. Krishna’s role on Mahabharata & the expounding of the Bhagwat Geeta give us the importance of decisive action in life. The entire concept of Krishna Leela is a classic example of freedom of will & acting to ensure greatest good of the maximum number. The mythological stories of Krishna or Vishnu or Ram all underline the importance of doing the right thing and following the dictates of the heart, boldly and free of any restrictions.

Talk of Freedom, and to every Maharashtrian, the one name which shines the brightest is that of Vinayak Damodar Savarkar. Savarkar’s iconic escape from the ship, which was carrying him back to India, while it was docked at Marseilles is a story often repeated when people talk of the love for freedom. His incarceration at the Cellular Jail (Kaala Pani) in the Andamans physically imprisoned him, but most of his time was spent writing books, essays, novels and poetry which were nationalistic in fervor and urged all Hindus to agitate for freedom. Freedom was his first love and literally he laid his life down for freedom of thought and expression. To me George Orwell’s words ring truest when we think of Savarkar’s contribution,” If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear”. The clarion call of Savarkar rings loud and clear even now.

Historically Nelson Mandela is the 3rd person who comes to my mind when we talk of freedom of action & thought. This champion of Freedom, just like the other 2 we referred to above, spent a large part of his life in prison. Having been born in the Royal family of Thembu, trained as a lawyer, Mandela got into ANC early to oppose apartheid. He flirted with communism, was arrested many times for sedition. He negotiated an end to apartheid and paved the way to the first Multi Cultural General Election after which he served as the 1st President of South Africa in 1994. Mandela believed and professed that “Freedom is something that dies unless it is used” (Hunter Thompson). Under his government, South Africa made great strides in reconciliation between country’s multiple racial groups. Revenge was eschewed and people were free to profess & live with their differences. The secret to Happiness is Freedom. The secret to Freedom is Courage. Mandela taught this truth to a hurting nation.

So what does Freedom mean to me? Freedom is being what you are without having to seek anybody’s permission. Accepting yourself as you are. Accepting others as they are. And no one makes an effort to change the other. Let everyone be. Respect and encourage diversity. As Hans Christian Anderson taught us through the Fairy Tales we all loved and grew up with,” Just living is not enough. One must have sunshine, freedom and a little flower”. Virginia Woolf says the same thing less romantically in A Room of One’s Own ,” Lock up your libraries if you like, but there is no gate, no lock, no bolt that you can set upon the freedom of my mind”

Take inspiration then from Independence, & be a Zealous Warrior to guard Freedom : vikas