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Sunday, June 12, 2011

Accept people for who they are..


     This post was on its way for a long time now. Maybe, it had to wait a little while because I didn't have the right incident to relate to. So,the incident that triggered this post - the demise of India's most celebrated(really?? In what way??) painter, M.F. Hussain. 

     I was always told that Mr.Hussain was India's Picasso and so I would try hard to like his paintings when I got an opportunity to see them but honestly, I never knew what people liked in his paintings. Okay, now that is all the taste I might have in paintings and so his Bohemian ways never caught my attention. Argh! I digress. 

     I am no journalist or a follower of his art works but with my little knowledge about him that I gained from reading about him all over the Internet and in the newspaper, this is what I figured out. Mr.Hussain lived his last few years in exile as he was forced to leave India in the face of intimidations and harassments even to the extent of vandalizing his art exhibitions by a certain cult citing his depiction of their deities as the reason. I am not sure how he depicted them but it doesn't really require an analyst to state that it was our country's shame to have not given a 'HUMAN BEING' a sense of home and force him to spend his last few years in exile.
    
     As I was pondering over this, I was reminded again on how Jesus dealt with such 'acceptance issues'.


     When Jesus lived on Earth, he did a lot of travelling. During one such journey from Judea to Galilee, He passed through Samaria. The Jews in those days made a detour around Samaria to avoid contact with the Samaritans as there had been a long running conflict between the two groups, basically, a religious conflict. But Jesus took the Samaria route and even got into a conversation with a woman by a well. This woman was not someone with a great reputation. In fact, she had an ominous record when it came to relationships, having 5 husbands is ominous enough, I believe! So by taking the Samaria route and by getting into a conversation with the woman, what did Jesus(who was a Jew Himself) want to teach all of us?

1. Jesus first asked the woman for water as he was weary of his travel to which the woman said,"How is it that you, a Jew, ask me a Samaritan for a drink?" because Jews did not share things in common with the Samaritans then but Jesus showed how religion, caste or creed didn't matter to Him and how much He wanted to break that barrier that existed. 
2. The woman then interrogated Him to which Jesus patiently responded which shows how 'people' mattered to Him the most, irrespective of their background.
3.  As they were conversing, Jesus asked her to call her husband to which the woman denied of having one. Now, that Jesus is omniscient and that he knew her life history, He could have easily condemned her for what she had done. But Jesus doesn't work that way. He found an opportunity to spot the good in her and at the same time convict her of her sin. He replied, "You are right when you say you have no husband. The fact is, you have had five husbands, and the man you now have is not your husband. What you have just said is quite true." Wow.. how remarkable was that reply? What would we have done if we were in His place?

I thought, much similar to this was the story of M.F. Hussain. I am not saying anything about how good or detestable his paintings were. All I want to say is that, all of us are bound to make mistakes as human beings but the key lies in learning to accept people for who they are and make them feel loved and secure. After all, that is what separates us from the other creations of God, right?

Caste and creed, don't lay the seed, Love and peace, that's what we need!

If an omniscient, pure and holy God can accept us the way we are, why can't we reciprocate the same to our fellow humans and spread some love? What if we were a little more like Jesus??!!



4 comments:

settaikaaran said...

good one ! @settaikaaran

Jenifer Sam said...

@settaikaaran thanks for taking time to read! :)

Anonymous said...

well written.. very meaningful

@joe_chennai

Jenifer Sam said...

Thank you @joe_chennai! :)

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