Conversations with Tyler - Barkha Dutt on the Nuances of Indian Life

Episode Date: June 29, 2022

Growing up, Barkha Dutt was totally rootless. She spoke English, not her parent's Punjabi. She devoured Enid Blyton and studied English literature during college, but read few Indian novelists. She di...dn't even know her caste. This has opened her up to criticism as being a progressive elite who is out of touch with her heritage, and challenged her to be especially thoughtful in the way she examines the many overlapping values in Indian society. A successful broadcast journalist and columnist, she currently runs the YouTube-based news channel MoJo Story and recently published a new book, ​​Humans of COVID: To Hell and Back. Barkha joined Tyler to discuss how Westerners can gain a more complete picture of India, the misogyny still embedded in Indian society, why family law should be agnostic of religious belief, the causes of declining fertility in India, why relations between Hindus and Muslims seem to be worsening, how caste has persisted so strongly in India, the success of India's subsidized institutes of higher education, the best city for Indian food, the power of Amar Chitra Katha's comics, the influence of her English liberal arts education, the future of Anglo-American liberalism in India, the best ways to use Twitter, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded May 5th, 2022 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter  Follow Barkha on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. 

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Starting point is 00:00:03 Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems. Learn more at Mercadis.org. For a full transcript of every conversation, enhanced with helpful links, visit Conversationswithtyler.com. Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm chatting with Barka Dot. If you have a connection to India, she needs no further introduction,
Starting point is 00:00:36 but if you don't have such a connection, she is a very famous Indian television journalist. She is an owner of a YouTube news channel, Mojo Story. She's an opinion columnist with the Hindustan Times and the Washington Post, and she was part of NDTV's team for 21 years. She has two books. The most recent one out is Humans of COVID to Helen Back. Barka, welcome.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Thank you, Tyler, and thank you for having me. Which do you think are the most valuable conversations in India that the West is essentially blind to? I think the West is able to see India only through certain tropes and tropes that it has gathered from newspapers like the one I write for, Washington Post, as well at the New York Times. Some of these narratives that the West understands about India are true, but they are incomplete.
Starting point is 00:01:29 And therefore, the West understands India in terms of, let's say, debates around whether there is equality for religious minorities, whether there is a free press. These are valid questions. Many of them are raised by journalists like myself. But they do not tell the full story of a complex, paradoxical nation where there are multiple simultaneous truths. And therefore, I think that Indians are sometimes exasperated by the simplistic reductionist understanding of our very complicated 1.3 billion strong nation. So if I'm a westerner, where should I go in Western media to find the relatively better coverage of India? Or is that impossible?
Starting point is 00:02:09 I would say just don't go to any one source. And I think that a lot of Indians would say that the more diverse your sources are, that would perhaps be more representative. But we would also urge you to read and watch and listen to us. I think there's also a sense that there have been some great foreign correspondence, and I'd like to name two who have done cellar work on India, Ellen Barry of the New York Times and Annie Gawin of the Washington Post, both made it a point to do very, very textured reportage out of India. But, you know, those are individuals I'm naming and not platforms.
Starting point is 00:02:45 So I don't think that there is a platform that really captures the nuances and the texture of my country info. I have so many questions about India for you. In your earlier book, this unquiet land, you described India as, and I quote, essentially misogynistic. What do you think is the most deeply rooted structural account of how that came to be? Yeah. Though as I'm answering that, I'm struck by the fact that my nation has a much more progressive set of laws around abortion and the right to legal and safe abortion than the Americans
Starting point is 00:03:16 might have soon. So that's just an illustration of what I mean by complexity. You know, when I studied at Columbia, at the journalism school, I had a flatmate, and I think I write about this in the same book, who assumed that because I was an Indian woman, I would have an arranged marriage, I would have no rights, I wouldn't be outspoken. And then when we got to know each other better, I found that the Western rituals of the dating scene were often much more patriarchal than anything I'd experienced. That's it. Of course, I have sort of grown up and resisted entrenched patriarchy, entrenched misogyny, the expectations of what it means to be female at India come out in very sort of insidious everyday way. You know the big things, right? You know about where the public spaces are safe or not
Starting point is 00:04:00 safe for women. We had the infamous Nibhaya gang rape in Delhi, the capital of India, a gang rape of a 23-year-old medical student that brought hundreds of thousands of Indians on the streets to protest. There are sexual violence within the circle of trust. There is the refusal to legalize marital rape. Those are all the big examples. But it's the small examples that really get under my skin. way roles at home are gendered, the way that even when you're paid a compliment as a woman and presented as a superwoman, that's really code for tying you up in chains of gold. So you'll see this advertisement where there's this perfectly turned out woman and, you know, not a hair out of place, a perfect shiny string of pearls, a perfectly crisp sari or pantsuit,
Starting point is 00:04:46 ringing her house from her boardroom where she's just closed like a billion dollar deal, asking the help to make whatever, cottage cheese curry for dinner or Taduri chicken curry. for dinner. That's supposed to be a compliment, but what it's really doing is gendering the home as a space for women to run, wherein what ends up happening is that at the moment, the number of women working in India has actually declined instead of increased because most women cannot cope with the multiple pressures of home and work. And I always say that we speak so much about equality at work, we just do not talk about equality at home, that the premium on getting married, the premium on parenthood. There's so much to unpack here. So again, I would say to you,
Starting point is 00:05:29 Tyler, it's a very interesting inflection point for the United States where you are when it comes to the rights of women. The fact that there was so much misogynistic resistance to Hillary Clinton, for example, when she was running for president, all of those are things that we settled long ago. But we've got other some really, really grave issues that we fight literally every day, every hour of our lives. Would you agree with the common impression that overall in India, women have better in the south than in the north. And if so, what would you infer about underlying structural causes of misogyny in India? I would agree with that. And the reasons for that are many fold. Some relate to the fact that there are some societies, for example, in the southern state of
Starting point is 00:06:07 Kerala that are matriacal, where the very organization of society and the home itself, and it all keeps coming back to home. That settles a lot of your other affiliated freedom. So there is the organization of many of these societies as matriacal, the literacy and education, rates are higher. Local units of governance have in fact performed better. We saw this even in the COVID management across the board in the South. So I think a combination of culture and governance, the fact that there's been more investment on health care, on reproductive rights, all of this has led to, I would say, the South being a better place for women than the North. And I say this is a woman who actually lives and has grown up in North India. How much of that difference between
Starting point is 00:06:50 the North and the South do you think stems from Islam, which is a lot of. of course, more prevalent in the north? No, I don't know. So this is an interesting question. When India moved to strike down, the practice of triple talak, which I'll just explain simply was the practice of a Muslim man being able to divorce his wife by simply saying the words talak three times, I was all for that change. And I am one of those who actually, as a progressive, would typically support a uniform family
Starting point is 00:07:17 law. Just to explain if that's got too complicated, we do allow personal laws. for our religious minorities, which means that triple talak was supported by some Muslim groups with the argument that it was part of their personal law. I totally opposed that. The Hindu sort of personal law was reformed several decades ago and it is time for other personal laws to be reformed as well and modernized under the umbrella of a common family law. But I do not believe that one or the other religion is actually responsible for inequality. I believe, orthodoxies of all faiths militate against the rights of women.
Starting point is 00:07:57 All faiths. And therefore, I would, in another context, and we can speak about why that time is not now, in another context, I would be totally for a family law that is agnostic of religious belief. I am not among those liberals on the left if India, who believe that faiths must be allowed to practice their own sort of personal laws, because I do believe that those militate against the equality of men and women. However, I don't think that's specific to a religion, but yes, the Hindu law was reformed several decades ago, not fully so. There are changes that are needed culturally among the Hindus, among the Christians, as I said, among the orthodoxies of all religious faiths.
Starting point is 00:08:35 For its level of income and education, India seems to have a relatively low birth rate or total fertility rate. And for Hindus, they seem to be just about it replacement fertility. And that's been the case for what, seven years? Why do you think that is? Why is child rearing so relatively unattractive in India, especially amongst Hindus? That's such an interesting question, because one of the most politicized conversations in India is around population growth. And of course, the suggestion or the innuendo has always been that one day Muslims will outnumber Hindus because Muslims are growing at a galloping pace. Actually, the data tells you, and this is well documented both within India and in a recent survey that was released by Pew,
Starting point is 00:09:18 that though the rate of growth is higher among Muslims, definitely, than it is among Hindu communities, the rate of decline is also now the sharpest because there was a much higher rate of growth among Muslims and that the Muslims will never outnumber Hindus. But would I take that, to take your question, for there being a sort of lack of enthusiasm for child wearing? Not true. This has been a decades-old fight to get India's population under control and it has finally starting to yield results, which is why I actually disagree with legislations that are now being
Starting point is 00:09:53 proposed in several parts of India to actually either incentivize or penalize those who have more than two children. I think penalties don't necessarily work. Incentives can, but penalties certainly don't. We also have the added issue of female feticide, which is girls who are killed in their womb before they're allowed to be brought into this world because of the premium that is still placed very much across classes on a boy child. So I think what you're dealing with when you quoted those numbers, Tyler, is actually the success of India's what is called its family planning program, where there has been a very, very strong awareness campaign around urging families
Starting point is 00:10:33 to not have more than two children. And we are finally within striking distance of that figure. Well, will India eventually become underpopulated, and it will be quite an old country before it's ever truly rich? and have an inverse pyramid problem of supporting everyone, if that's the case? Okay. We've often been told our people, our demographics are our dividend and not our weakness. I think both of those narratives are somewhat simplistic.
Starting point is 00:10:58 I don't think we're ever going to go to China way where, you know, China's now having to reverse its one-child policy. And I think the reason that we're never going to go the China way is because we were never up until this point. And once briefly in the 70s, when Indra Gandhi's son tried to enforce a kind of population control program, we have. have never had the state force punishments for people who have more than X number of children. And I hope we continue to follow the progressive approach to family planning and population
Starting point is 00:11:27 management that we have, where people on their own are understanding that they should not be adding certainly more than two children to the demographics. And so no, I don't think we're going to ever be in that position, you know, where you're going to have this sort of reverse problem. I think we're steady on this. What concerns me more is the set of proposed legislations that actually now seeks to actually have a kind of enforced system of family planning, which I oppose, and I oppose it mostly because, again, to go back to that misogyny that we were talking about, it will actually end up penalizing women who are often denied the right access to contraception and sometimes the right to it as well in relationships that are not fully equal in the bedroom.
Starting point is 00:12:05 Many outsiders have the impression that relations between Hindus and Muslims and the aggregate in India have become worse over the last 10 to 15 years. If you put aside, particular actions of particular political personalities. And you try to think of a structural reason why that might be true. Because normally the intuition is people grow richer, they're more tolerant, there's more commercial interaction, there's more intermingling. What would be your structural account of why in some ways that problem has become worse? Well, you just spoke of intermingling, Tyler. And I think that one of the biggest reasons for the worsening relations or the othering, as it were, of communities that are not your own, is the ghettoization.
Starting point is 00:12:45 of how people live. So for example, if there were neighborhoods where people live cheek by Jal, that still happens, of course, in many cities, but it also happens less than it used to. And that is true. We are seeing a kind of Muslim quarter and, to give an example, or a Christian quarter,
Starting point is 00:13:02 in a way that we wouldn't have, before our cities were so ghettoized. And I think that kind of intermingling of living in the same housing societies or neighborhoods participating in each other's festivals as opposed to just tolerating them, those are the structural changes or shifts that we are witnessing. It's also true that it is tougher for a person from a religious minority,
Starting point is 00:13:22 in particular an Indian Muslim, to get a house as easily as a non-Muslim. And I think I would be lying if I did not acknowledge that. And also the last point is of interfaith marriages or interfaith love. This is a deeply politicized issue as well. While I'm talking to you in the last 24 hours in the southern city of Hyderabad, one of our big sort of technology hubs, We've had reports of a Muslim family that attacked a Hindu man for marrying a Muslim woman.
Starting point is 00:13:51 And in reverse, we see Muslim women also targeted all the time if they choose to marry Hindus. This is not helped by the fact that you've had several states now talking about what they call love jihad. That's the phrase they use for marriages that are across religious communities, in particular between Hindus and Muslims. The percentage of people, Indians, marrying not just outside their religion, but also outside their country. caste, which in Hindus is a kind of hierarchical systems of traditional occupation that you're born into is woefully low. I don't know if I remember my data correctly, but I think less than 5% of Indians actually marry outside of their own communities. And I would need to go back to that number and check it, but that's what I remember off the top of my head. And those are the
Starting point is 00:14:34 structural reasons. The fact that people don't love or have relationships outside of their community, don't live enough with people of diverse faiths and don't participate in each other's We used to have this politically correct phase called tolerance, which I actually just hate, and I keep nudging people towards the Indian military. The Indian military actually has a system of the commanding officer taking on the faith of his troops. During religious sort of prayers and the military has multi-religious places of worship. It even has something called an MMG, which is not just a medium machine gun, but a Mandir Masjid Gurduwara, which is all the different faiths praying together at the same place.
Starting point is 00:15:12 we don't see a lot of that kind of thing happening outside of the military. And another survey done by Pew reinforced this when it spoke of Indians today being more like a phthali than kichari. And let me just explain that. A thali is a silver tray where you get little sort of bowls of different food items. And so Pugh found that Hindus and Muslims, when surveyed, both spoke of the need for religious diversity as being a cornerstone of India. So they like the idea of this thali, India as the thali, where there were different little food items.
Starting point is 00:15:46 But separate food items. The kitchery is rice and lentils all mixed up and eaten with pickle. The kichari is that intermingling, the untidy overlapping. And we're just seeing less and less of that overlapping. And in my opinion, that is tragic. Where there is social interdependence, where there is economic interdependence, where there is personal interdependence, is when relationships thrive and flourish and get better. But when they remain ghettos, separations, just tolerating each other, that I think then remains in the realm of other ring.
Starting point is 00:16:20 Why has caste remained so strong in India? It's not supported by the state anymore. You would think there are considerable incentives to marry outside your caste or have business relationships outside your caste. Yet, as you said, the rate of marriage across cast, whatever the exact number may be, it's fairly low. Yeah. That's a surprise, right? What has happened to cause that persistence? So I'll tell you a little story about myself.
Starting point is 00:16:45 When I was 18, I studied in one of India's top liberal arts colleges, and I used to be asked, what is your cast? And I used to say, I don't know. And I was very proud of saying that. And I really didn't know. My parents had never told me what my cast was, and it was their sort of way of bringing me up to be a progressive Indian. And then many decades, not even many decades later,
Starting point is 00:17:04 a few years later, I did one of my first journalism stories in the gang rape of a Dalit woman in a business. village in Rajasthan. The Dalits are the people who are at the very bottom of the social hierarchy. They're often treated as outcast. They often do menial jobs like cleaning toilets or handling the dead skin of cattle, which then work into leather. It's shameful that this practice still exists, manual scavengers, which in other words, they literally carry the shit out of toilets that don't have water or clean our sewers. And for these reasons, they're often treated completely at the bottom of the caste hierarchy. And the woman, Bhavri Devi, who had been gang raped, she had been working
Starting point is 00:17:42 with a government program to stop child marriages in her village. And among the men who raped her was the father of a one-year-old child who she had been trying to stop from being married. After she complained, she was made to live on the outskirts of her village, not allowed access to the village well. And when one of the courts actually acquitted the men she had accused of rape, the judge remarked, men of a higher caste would not touch a woman of a lower caste, so this rape could not have taken place. I tell you the story to say that the disavowal of caste is a privilege of sorts. I've had to accept the hard way that you can't disown the reality of caste much as I would like to.
Starting point is 00:18:24 Has there been mobility out of the entrenched caste structures? There has been. In the cities you will see less and less of this kind of discrimination, of the kind that I have just described, having taken place. it was also two decades ago. You say the state does not recognize caste. In fact, the state has special affirmative action, which I support, for what are called scheduled caste and scheduled tribes,
Starting point is 00:18:46 which have traditionally been discriminated against for centuries. The problem is, Tyler, that now we have everybody wanting a slice of this affirmative action, which allows you quotas in jobs and education, at least in institutes that are run and managed by government. So you have something called the OBCs, the other backward classes, who say, you know, we're not at the bottom, but we're somewhere in the middle. And from state to state, we've also suffered either economic or social
Starting point is 00:19:14 discrimination. And so you have this highly politicized conversation. You have the entrenched social tradition, even where professional practices are no longer interlinked with caste. You have just this entrenched social structure. And it will not change, in my opinion, till there is economic, professional, and social mobility. And we're seeing some of that, a lot of that, in fact, a lot of things have changed, but not when it comes once again to love and marriage. And I kind of feel that that's where I think the real tests are of, it's like people who say, you know, some of my best friends are black, some of my best friends are Muslim, yes, but would you be comfortable with your daughter marrying one? That's where the test is. Why is there so much
Starting point is 00:19:58 talent coming out of India right now? Now, I know you could always say, for a long time, there's been a lot of talent coming out of India. Surely that's true. But it does seem there's a discreet break. If you look, say, at the number of Indian CEOs in Silicon Valley, who also have done extremely well, it seems fundamentally different from, say, 20 years ago. What accounts for that? Well, I actually think that those who are today leading the big companies, whether it's, I don't know, let's take Sondapachai of Google or any other sort of big tech sort of firm that you pick up, Tyler. The fact is that they actually left India several years ago, maybe even more than two decades ago. So that talent obviously migrated out much earlier and perhaps is today acceptable or recognized
Starting point is 00:20:40 or taken cognizance of because there's proof of concept, right? I think before Elon Musk took over Twitter, we had an Indian CEO of Twitter. I mean, I can name any number of companies you already know all of them, so does your audience. I think this proof of concept. You know, I think there have been people who've proven a mark. We've long been described in America as a model minority community. A lot of it has to do with our excellent subsidized institutes of foreign. higher education. If you were to look at the background of most of these CEOs who are today
Starting point is 00:21:07 leading conglomerates out of the West, most of them would have studied at institutes like the Indian Institute of Management or the Indian Institute of Technology, the IIT or the IIMs. These are very, very difficult to get into and they are subsidized, which means that you don't have to be rich or wealthy to actually be able to study at them. So they really do draw the best minds. And literally, I mean, almost everybody who's making global headlines today has studied at one of these institutes. And I think it speaks to one of the success stories, something that India got really right, which is very specialized, highly skilled institutes of technical learning. You know, we may not have got our liberal arts as right at the higher education level. But certainly our sciences, our management, our technical institutes, I think we've done a fabulous job with them.
Starting point is 00:21:55 Do you think it boosts the case for an avowedly elitist approach to education? which it seems India has done. It's very hard to get into those schools. They're very, very good. If you finish, you're branded, right? It's high quality in some way. And does that interact with caste in some manner that there's in general an elitist approach?
Starting point is 00:22:13 And when it comes to the foreign market, that pays off big time, or no? Yeah, that's an interesting question. And I don't know that there's a simple answer to it because I'm okay with an educational elite, actually. I think that there is some merit in keeping society competitive and aspiring and pushing people.
Starting point is 00:22:29 to do better and better, as long as there's a level playing field to access those centres of excellence. And the fact is that many of these Wiz kids, as they were once called, have actually studied at government schools or what are called Kendri Vidyalya systems and so on. All of them have gone to posh what are called private schools in the West and what are called public schools in India. So I do think that to create a competitively drawn elite that is elite, not because of what they earned, but because of how well they did in exams. maybe an old-fashioned idea, but it's one that I actually support. I think one of the reasons we actually do better and well outside of India
Starting point is 00:23:07 is because we come with some of these skills. We've been brought up to be industrious, hardworking. We've been told in middle-class homes and even in lower middle-class homes that education is everything. Education will make or break your life. If you get into a good college or a good institute, your life will change. This is the Indian ethos. This is what aspirational India is all about.
Starting point is 00:23:28 and I think it answers your question about why so many Indians are doing well outside India. Does it eliminate the caste question? Yes and no. As there are more institutes, as they draw people from more diverse groups, you are still seeing people who are at the bottom of the caste hierarchy, who could have an IOT degree and still face social discrimination when it comes to who they want to marry. They won't be cleaning toilets and they won't be denied access to the village well.
Starting point is 00:23:53 But if they want to marry, so to speak, above their caste, they will still face resistance. And so economics doesn't tell you the full story. It isn't that if you're at the bottom, you get a great degree and you become wealthy, that'll just buy you out of all the other forms of discrimination. It is like race. It is a little bit like the race debate. I mean, the fact is you can be, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:24:15 you can be a music legend, a cinema legend, a basketball legend, but it will not take away what happened with George Floyd. And so I think you're seeing something similar here where an educated elite person will not face the kind of discrimination that Bhavri Devi, whom I reported on decades ago did in her village in Rajasthan, but will not be totally free from all instances in all examples of discrimination. And the other important point to note is that where there are quotas, not all of them get filled. You do need a certain sort of baseline to get into these higher institutes, whether of medicine or technology. And that's where I think
Starting point is 00:24:54 we really have to work. I think our institutes of higher learning are excellent. I think where we lag behind are the institutes that come below, our schools, our colleges, our first degrees. That's where the gap is and that's what leaves some of those quotas at the higher level, you know, underfilled or underutilized. If I look at top CEOs in India, you know, very often they might come from, say, Gujarat and very often they're not Brahmins. If I look at the top CEOs outside of India, say in Silicon Valley, it seems most of them are Brahmins. Why that difference? I know that Silicon Valley has been grappling with questions around a caste discrimination. I know California in particular has, I actually know one of the women who first raised it,
Starting point is 00:25:35 wrote a whole book about Ayashikadat about growing up as a Dalit and then living like as a Dalit in America. And yet I can't say to you that there is a coincidence between caste and technology and success. I think what I can say to you is that there has been an overlapping coincidence of socio-economic, economic backwardness among marginalized groups. So that is Dalits. That is Muslims. So there is a coincidence because of the jobs and professions that these groups are typically employed in.
Starting point is 00:26:08 Now, if you're, let's say, a leather skin tanner, or your job is to cremate bodies, I'm giving you professions that are typically so-called lower caste, right? You're not going to earn a bunch of money to educate your children to do something else. or it'll be tougher for you. And therefore, that coincidence that you point out between Brahmins and success abroad
Starting point is 00:26:31 possibly came from the fact that if you're marginalised on the basis of your caste, you are most likely also earning less than other groups, which means that your ability to, let's say, go outside of India, is diminished compared to other caste groups. So there will be some coincidence. It's a little bit like if you look to the same CEOs in India, most CEOs are men.
Starting point is 00:26:53 there are coincidences, interrelated factors that explain why certain groups are able to access resources and opportunities in a way that other groups are not. I don't think it means that somebody set out to make all the CEOs of Silicon Valley Brahmins. I think it was a series of factors about access to opportunity and resources and education. Plenty of whites in the United States have resources education, but is it possible the Brahmins of India who come to America? They're better at cracking foreign cultural codes. They're more used to diversity. They're more used to strange environments. The complacency is taken away once they leave their country because it's not just they have done well. They have done especially well as leaders in particular kind of leadership
Starting point is 00:27:35 roles. I mean, I guess my hesitation in answering your question is that I hate essentialism. It's the same way that I hate it when people say women are better leaders because we are more empathetic. Because the problem with essentialism is the moment you pay yourself a complement, basis, gender, caste, religion, color of your skin, whatever, country of your origin, if you're going to accept one generalization is true, then you're going to have to suck up the generalizations and the caricatures that aren't so flattering. And I'm just hesitant in going beyond saying certain caste groups, like certain gender groups, like certain religious groups, were more influential in terms of places that they occupied
Starting point is 00:28:18 at the top of social hierarchies. So, for example, maybe exposure to culture among what are so-called upper caste groups was more because income was higher. Therefore, there was a luxury of, let's say, being also able to be exposed to classical music and classical dance.
Starting point is 00:28:34 You know, all of these things are things that flow from how society has treated you. I can't answer for why, you know, it would play out differently for, let's say, the white American male. But I hesitate to reinforce the... essentialism of your question. Maybe I don't know enough, but I'm just really uncomfortable with that beyond saying there's a coincidence of money, social hierarchy, opportunity, and education. Why is Indian food the very best food in the entire world? That essentialism I can accept.
Starting point is 00:29:07 And I can accept it. I'll tell you why. Because there's so many different kinds of it, right? I think the thing about this country, and in some ways an unlikely country in terms of not having a singular organizing principle to it in terms of religion or language, but just a broad idea, it is so diverse. The best thing about us is our diversity and that diversity is reflected in food. I mean, I haven't eaten so many cuisines within my country and I'm 50 and I haven't and it would take a lifetime for people to get to know Indian food. And I think the biggest reason that it's so interesting is one because there isn't one thing called Indian food. There isn't one kind of Indian food, but mostly because of flavor and spices. The one thing we can never be
Starting point is 00:29:50 accused of is being bland and neither our food nor our people. And there's a lot of sort of obviously experimentation with spice and with flavor and the palate has just now, I don't know, become that. There's no notion of ever having a meal that is not flavorful or full of aromas and spices and I don't cook but I eat a lot. As I said, that's one compliment. I'm happy to take as a generalized truth about my nation. As you know, there are plenty of reports of food aid, say rotting on the sides of the highways, not being delivered in time.
Starting point is 00:30:23 Yet what's also striking about most regional varieties of Indian food is just how extraordinary the vegetables are. How does that common picture fit together? There's a major infrastructure problem with food transport, yet arguably you have the best tastiest vegetables in the entire world. How can that be? I mean, it can be because it's our coal chain supply lines where the weaknesses are. There are weaknesses in our infrastructure, which is why you see in this
Starting point is 00:30:48 country where people still go hungry, that there are go downs full food corporation of India, which is the government-run, sort of manager as it were, of grains in the country. Every year, you'll see these pictures coming out of India, which will show you a mountain of underutilized wheat that has rotted. That there's a surplus, there's an underutilized mound, it has rotted. there are two problems. And I'm not an economist, you are, so you may have a view on this. There are two problems here. One is, of course, in the supply chains, how the efficiency of the transport system. The other is that governments still buy or procure grains at what's called a minimum support price. This was the context for a recent year-long unprecedented protest by
Starting point is 00:31:33 farmers of North India on the outskirts of India's capital, one that got global attention. because the Modi government moved to reform, or that was the word they used, and allow private players to come into this market. I don't know enough to say what is better and what is worse. There has been the suggestion that this minimum support price system has created a mismatch between demand and supply, that they have to be more efficient ways of treating agricultural markets. I've read and heard all the arguments.
Starting point is 00:32:00 I'm not an expert. I'm not an economist. But I do know that there is this often glut of grain in a country where so many millions are still poor, and therefore there is obviously something structurally wrong. That doesn't contradict the fact that there is plentyful variety of vegetables. It is just whether those vegetables actually managed to reach the markets in such a way that is a fair price for the farmer. Let's say you had to pick a single Indian city or region to eat from for the rest of your life. Probably it wouldn't be Delhi, but what would it be?
Starting point is 00:32:33 It would be Delhi. It would be Delhi. It would be Delhi. It would be Delhi, because, because one, I'm a connoisseur or a devourer, as it were, or a glutton when it comes to street food. And I think that there is no street food better in the world than in Delhi, especially if you go to the older quarters in a market called Chandi Chok, where you literally have rows and rows and rows of shops that will give you just the best, you know, both vegetarian and non-vegetarian options, but also because I think we managed to combine that street food culture with reasonably international food scene
Starting point is 00:33:07 as well as a regionally diverse food scene, Mumbai would come close. It would have to be between one of those two cities. I wanted to say Bangalore because it's one of my very favorite cities. But in terms of my own food experience, I think it's also that we are in the north. We eat more and we care about food more. We're also more unfit for that reason.
Starting point is 00:33:26 But it's true. I mean, again, you're drawing me into essentialisms that I had disavowed myself from. But culturally, the Punjabi... or the North Indian is obsessed with food. And the notion of hospitality, of how you treat your guests, is very tied into food. And you never let anyone go hungry from your home. It doesn't matter whether that person is a stranger or, you know, it's just steeped in the North Indian culture.
Starting point is 00:33:49 And I would pick Delhi because I think it does everything. It does the posh. It does the accessible, affordable. It does the street food. It does regionally diverse. And maybe I'm just more familiar with it because other than New York, this is the city I've lived in all my life. I would pick Chennai actually for the vegetables and put Bangalore near the bottom. I think Bangalore has a high average but relatively low peaks.
Starting point is 00:34:10 There's nothing there that's so special. In Calcutta, you can't dismiss either. Yeah, you can't dismiss any of these cities, but I guess I'm grading them in terms of the sheer variety of options. And I just think that the variety of options, so if the next time you're in Delhi, maybe I can prove my point. Which is your favorite Indian novel? Oh, that is an interesting question. There was a novel on the Indian bureaucracy and political system called Ragdhar Bari, which I read when I was in school, which is one of my very favorite books.
Starting point is 00:34:42 And I'm thinking hard because I don't read a lot of fiction in India. I was brought up on Enid Blytons and Amar Chitra Cata Comics. So Aymar Chitra Cata Comics, I don't know if comics count is worthy, but really my exposure to my culture was through comics. And it was actually really fascinating, all the fables, the me. myths, the stories of our classics were brought to us in comic form and I know it's not the answer you were looking for but really it was how much we've learned from Amachitra Kata cannot be discounted. The other book that comes to mind is English August which was again made into a film later
Starting point is 00:35:16 it's also a stellar book. I'm thinking Indian novels. Oh I'm reading a very interesting book right now by the first Indian novelist Gittanjali Sri who writes in Hindi to have been nominated for the booker and she actually wrote a very interesting booker. the original novel in Hindi, but it's now been translated. My Hindi is not so good that I could read the novel in Hindi. And it's actually about a woman in her 80s whose husband dies and she's treated as this sort of classic widow, sort of shunned by her family overlooked and how she discovers her zest for life again. And it is an extremely compelling sort of feminist fable as it were and an extremely compelling book. What would be a good non-Baliwood movie for an outsider to watch to
Starting point is 00:35:59 understand India better? Masan. Masan is set in Varanasi and it is today the Prime Minister's constituency in Uttar Pradesh, our most popular state. And we've been talking so much about caste and love and love across communities. And it is a movie that actually is set against the backdrop of the ghats of the Ganga River, where Hindus from all across the country bring those who have died to be cremated. And it is about the community that actually performs these last rights. and the story of a young man who does this for a living and who also falls in love outside of his cast. And therefore, it actually is at the intersection of many of the things we've been speaking about.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Its protagonist went on to become a big Bollywood star, but when the film came out, it had a kind of art house cast. It was very sort of low-key, and it's a really excellent recommended watch. Now, you majored in English literature in college. How did reading Jane Austen, or whatever else you might have read, make you a better reporter of Indian and international events? That's a great question, and I think it didn't make me a better reporter. I think my liberal arts education gave me away with words,
Starting point is 00:37:06 gave me a certain confidence and a set of communication skills. But I was totally deracinated. I was totally ruthless. I grew up in a bubble. I am what the right wing of India today disparagingly calls the Khan Market Gang. Khan Market refers to upmarket sort of bazaar of Delhi. And it's used as a metaphor for a certain kind of liberal progressive elite who is totally out of touch with her own roots. And while, of course, in a globalized world, it's very hard to define what is the product of colonization and what is yours.
Starting point is 00:37:39 There is truth in the fact that those three years studying literature at St. Stephen's College were wonderful, the happiest three years of my life, but completely dislocated me from the complexity of my country. And even in terms of language, I regret that mostly I dream and think in English. It's not because I think of English as an outsider language. In fact, I think of it as one of our own languages. But, you know, we have a three-language model in India that is now being questioned, and I'm against it being questioned, but it's basically English, Hindi and your mother tongue. And the point is my mother-tong is Punjabi, but my parents never taught me how to write in Gurmukhi.
Starting point is 00:38:15 They never taught me how to speak in Punjabi. I can understand it, but I can't speak it. I can speak in Hindi today because I became a reporter. and I traveled all across India and I learned the language. But I mostly grew up speaking, reading and writing in English and mostly knowing Jane Austen over, let's face it, the Indian novels you asked me about. I had read every end of Blighton, and I hadn't read an Indian novelist when I went to school. How do you feel when you read Kipling?
Starting point is 00:38:40 Is it a kind of offense? Like, oh, these colonial bastards? Or is it, well, this was just a thing if it's time, or I can't enjoy this anymore? or you side with it in some way? Or what's your gut emotional reaction? I'm able to separate writings from their time. I know this is a politically incorrect thing to say. But it's like I don't look at, you know,
Starting point is 00:39:01 noddy and gollywog and blighton and say, oh my God, how racist I probably should. I probably would if I were a child growing up today. It's the same for Kipling. Like all of us knew the poem if by heart, by wrote, we could all recite it. And we learned it in this decontextualized way. A lot of her education was completely decontextual.
Starting point is 00:39:17 Right? So we would just read it as a bunch of words. Oftentimes we didn't know what they stood for, what they represented. We had no idea. And because we imbibe them in a decontextualized way, they're more childhood associations rather than illustrations of colonization. And of course, yes, words matter, language matters, context matters. But I don't know.
Starting point is 00:39:38 I'm able to separate timing and literature. I would never enjoy Austin today. But hell, Bridgeton is the most what's. series on Netflix, I haven't watched it because I don't want to watch like women forcing themselves into corsets looking for an ideal man. But why is most of the world watching it? So, you know, I think there's something to be said about entertainment for its own sake, memory, nostalgia, words that formed you, shaped you that you can have a good laugh at, not take too seriously. For lack of a better word, I'll refer to Anglo-American liberalism. Do you think Anglo-American liberalism
Starting point is 00:40:13 has a future in India? Say the views of someone like Ramachandra Guha, who is is not a Hindu nationalist, broadly liberal. Maybe in the 1990s, people expected Anglo-American liberalism would become much stronger in India as the country globalized. It doesn't seem that's happened. What does the future look like for that strand of thought in India? I mean, I think that strand of thought needs to be more open about other strands of thought. Ram Goha is a friend and somebody whose readings and writings I've learned, you know, a lot from. I've sort of read him all my life. I read every book that he writes. I probably would be described in the same. I don't think of myself as that, but if you ask somebody maybe in India randomly, they'd classify me as that I suspect as an Anglo-American deracinated, rootless, sort of urban, liberal who doesn't know anything about her own culture.
Starting point is 00:41:01 I'm actually trying, and journalism has enabled that in me, Tyler, to learn more, to educate myself, to realize that simple, minded ideas I had of what's progressive, what works, let's take religion. I'm agnostic. I don't believe in any institutional religion. Many Anglo- whatever, Americanized liberals or Western liberals don't. There's a Nehruvian idea of a separation between state and religion. It doesn't work. This is a country where religion overlaps into culture every single day, every single moment. It's an untidy overlapping. And I think we've got to learn to return to the language of faith to spread and protect Indian pluralism rather than say, hey, I don't believe in any religion and somehow expect people to understand what I'm saying. I need a language of mass communication until the Indian liberal finds that language, whether it's Ram Guha or whether it's Barca dath or whether it's
Starting point is 00:41:57 somebody else, we will be destined to fail in this new India in communicating a message to a larger number of our countrymates. Why is the intelligentsia so prominent in Bengal and why historically have those individuals been so left-wing? Well, so tell me, I mean, is it a Isn't that true for America as well? I've often wondered about this. Why is there a coincidence between certain professions, certain spaces and being left? And I don't know. I don't know the answer to that.
Starting point is 00:42:27 I think it's because intelligentsia grows up questioning structures of power and conformity and social norms. And therefore, you end up being positioned on the left of any establishment that you're questioning. That would be my best guess. That said, one of the things that I think I didn't speak about when I spoke about the intelligentsia is that we are felled by dogma. And one of my quarrels with the Indian intelligentsia or sections of it is its failure to recognize and respect the sentimentalism around institutes of the state, the military, the flag, our veterans, our anthem, you know, this whole idea that we are all citizens of the world.
Starting point is 00:43:09 Yes, I'm also a product of a globalized world, but we again, you know, don't understand. that there is a constitutional patriotism is what we should be advocating instead of saying, oh, we're all one world. And so I guess what I'm saying is the intelligence and the left probably coincide because of this need to question all accepted norms. But I think that if you want to communicate with the larger section of people outside of your echo chambers, you need to be able to pick up the language of some of these norms, the ones you relate to, and convert them into idioms of modern expression.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Why do you think alcohol drinking has stayed at such low levels in India for so long? But now it's rising, of course. Will it eventually converge to Western levels of alcohol drinking? Has it declined? I mean, do you have numbers that show that? I don't know. I mean, illicit liquor is a huge, huge... No, it's growing.
Starting point is 00:44:00 But if you go back 30, 40 years ago, it seems there's much less alcohol being consumed in India than, say, in England, the former colonial master, or America. Again, it's a cultural sort of thing, right? we don't have the idea, for example, of a neighborhood pub. We don't have the concept of people dropping off after work to get a drink with their workmates. We still have judgments of women drinking. We are a society that is in a moment of churn where many traditional families have sent their kids, for example, abroad, to study, where there will be this sort of exposure to different cultures, but they'll still be mindful of it when they come back home.
Starting point is 00:44:35 They may not smoke or drink in front of their elderly family members. So it's culturally very different, but I do see us. city is changing. I also see a kind of illicit liquor consumption in rural India that is extremely entrenched and often results in massive tragedies, you know, because of spurious liquor and so on. And I completely disagree, by the way, with prohibition. And this has led to many feminist debates because there are states Bihar being one of them that actually outlawed alcohol by making the argument that it led to greater domestic violence at home. And there were women who supported this because their men would go and get drunk and come back and be violent with them.
Starting point is 00:45:11 I do not think that restricting anything and pushing it underground is the answer. I do think that there are cultural sort of conformities associated with how you drink, where you drink, you drink with family, do women drink? And maybe that leads to that gap between how the West looks at alcohol and how we do. Now, you're on Twitter. How is Indian Twitter different from, say, USA Twitter? I don't think it's different. I think everywhere trolling is an organized well-oiled machine.
Starting point is 00:45:39 It can be either political or paid. It targets women in a language that it spares men on. It is caught in the polarities of right and left. It's a whole lot of noise. You learn the hard way to not read your mentions or to speed read them. You grow a really thick skin and you use it for what it's good for. It's good for a few things. It connects you to people across continents and cultures.
Starting point is 00:46:01 If you're a journalist and you're interested in being exposed to a variety of thoughts, it exposes you to all of that. and it helps you find interesting speakers for your programs and for your reports. And sometimes I spend two years covering the pandemic. It creates a kind of community of very kind strangers. You know, we had a massive shutdown of public transport in our first lockdown. And I had people from Twitter saying, oh, do you need a place to stay here? You can stay here.
Starting point is 00:46:24 Do you need food? We'll send you food. Do you need shows? We'll send you shows. And it's a community. You have to know what to take from it. But otherwise, it is political as hell. It is noisy as hell.
Starting point is 00:46:33 It is coarse as hell. And it's a terrible place to be for women. I'd say in the United States there's a considerable backlash on Twitter against the possibility that Elon Musk will buy Twitter, which may very well happen. Is there a similar feeling in India or are people to shrug their shoulders? Ah, you know, some other rich guy from far away. No, no, there's a lot of interest in Musk taking over Twitter. India's right wing is super excited. They look at Twitter as this kind of woke, far-left platform that took Trump off and shouldn't have. By the way, I'm not alone among liberal friends who think de-platforming
Starting point is 00:47:06 Trump was wrong because I just don't like cancel culture and that's a whole different debate. Like you can take down specific tweets, but I'm not sure that you should be deplatforming people. It's a very complicated space. But yes, the Indian right wing is super excited. The Indian left is extremely worried. And Musk has already made his position clear that he wants a Twitter that is free from the far left and the far right. I mean, good luck with that. I think Twitter, you know, Chomsky spoke about manufactured consent.
Starting point is 00:47:32 I think we're in the age of manufactured dissent. And I think Twitter amplifies those disagreements, even if they don't exist offline. Your own YouTube channel aside, which kinds of videos do you watch on YouTube? I watch a lot of American satirists from Kober to Trevor Noa. Believe it or not, I watch a village cooking channel out of Tamil Nadu. Because as you now know, I love food. And this is a community channel that is run by these farmers who only speak Tamil. But you can look at that video and it is astonishing.
Starting point is 00:48:03 And I've been thinking for a long time, oh my God, I have to find out who runs this channel, who has done this for these farmers? Because it's superbly produced and it's beautifully shot. And you can just look at how they're cooking. They're cooking in the field. And every day they cook a new dish and they sort of release a new video. And I know it's a kind of odd example to give. But yeah, I mean, I watch a lot of that. I watch all of this.
Starting point is 00:48:26 What would be the name or search term for that just for our listeners? Village Cooking Channel Tamil Nadu should do it. Okay, great. Yeah. And do you watch TikTok at all or that's just too far? TikTok, well, it's banned right now, I think, because of the India-China standoff. It was one of the apps. But I don't watch.
Starting point is 00:48:43 I used to scrolls. I watch TikTok videos when they're shared on Twitter or Instagram. I'm totally off Facebook. I use Instagram because I'm in a broadcasting industry. Otherwise, the sort of vanity of it and the sort of filtered reality of it really gets to me. So actually, of all the platforms, I still find YouTube and Twitter the most productive because there's actually something to engage with. in terms of content. Everything else is one big sort of vanity parade in some ways.
Starting point is 00:49:09 Should India ban TikTok? No, no. I'm not a fan of the Chinese capture of the Indian markets. For example, every Diwali, it really bothers me. I grew up lighting sort of potter-made Diaz. And now you see the sort of cheap plastic that the Chinese have permeated our markets with. So I'm not a fan of that capture, but TikTok isn't going to send the Chinese sort of who are sitting on our territory in the High Himalayas out. And also, I think banning technology is useless. You can always create a VPN and get TikTok anyway. It's not even something that works. Why do you think WhatsApp has proven so especially popular in India? Two reasons. I think for most people, it is the way we talk now. No one SMSes, no one does text messages anymore. No one emails anymore.
Starting point is 00:49:54 You can share pictures, videos and have entire conversations. But I think it's also a vehicle of fake news. used as that by a multitude of players. So anytime you want to sort of spread negativity, it's, you know, as good as and useful as it is, it is the most effective vehicle of fake news. In India, at least, I don't know what it's like in other countries. And you've got these crazy... I, for example, had a WhatsApp forward sent to me about me,
Starting point is 00:50:21 which said that my politics was explained by the fact that I had been married three times to three Muslim men I've never been married. And this explained the fact that I believed in a pluralistic India. and they made up names of these men. And this was on a WhatsApp forward that got circulated so heavily that it was forwarded to me as well. So WhatsApp is almost like a political or a weaponized vehicle of fake news now,
Starting point is 00:50:40 but I use it all the time with friends. It's just an easier, non-intrusive way of talking. Barka Dot, it's been wonderful chatting with you. Again, her new book is Humans of COVID to Helen Back. Thank you, Tyler. Thank you for having me. And please do come to Delhi so I can prove that we are the food capital of India, if not the world.
Starting point is 00:50:58 I am coming to Northern India this August. I look forward to it. That'd be great. Thank you, Tyler. Bye-bye. Take care. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.
Starting point is 00:51:16 If you like this podcast, please consider giving us a rating and leaving a review. This helps other listeners find the show. On Twitter, I'm at Tyler Cowen, and the show is at Cowan Convos. Until next time, please keep listening. and learning.

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