Blocking Blogging

Ethan Zuckerman writes:

Quick - what do India, Pakistan, China and Ethiopia have in common?

It’s not a love of cricket. Or clandestine nuclear arms programs. Or even a fondness for flatbread.

They’re all - apparently - blocking blogspot.com.

India is the newcomer to this party, and it’s unclear just what blogs are being blocked, whether all ISPs are complying, and whether all blogspot blogs will be blocked or just a subset of sites. Fortunately, Indian bloggers are on the case, rapidly documenting just what can and can’t be reached.

Neha Viswanathan - Global Voices editor for South Asia and lovely human being - is doing a fantastic job of documenting the situation on her blog. Reading from the top to the bottom of a recent post - with fourteen updates - you get an excellent sense of how Indian bloggers are figuring out just what, precisely, is going on. She points to several other articles, which have excellent summaries of the situation, as people currently understand it, including Rediff, Amit, and Dina.

Travel to Bihar


Uma’s
post about her driver NP’s journey back to Bihar by air is a very powerful and moving account of poor man’s travel to the world that he daily serves but rarely enters. What makes Uma’s record of events especially affecting is the way in which it builds on other events in the past, each of which in their own way excite empathy:

But NP has other concerns. “Flight mein koi kuch bolenge?” he asks uncertainly. Will someone say something to me in the flight? And then, with touching confidence: “Aapka card leke jaoonga.” I will carry your card. “Paani ka botal allowed karenge?” Will they let me take a waterbottle?

In the moving car I begin to write down for him, in tenth-standard Hindi – the first useful thing I have done with all those years of study of the language – what he should do at the airport. Starting with showing the tickets at the gate in order to get in. Then go inside, go to the Sahara counter. They will check your tickets and give you boarding cards with your seat numbers on them.

I am used to this systematic break-up of procedures into manageable steps. I have done it before, for very old and very young people. This time, I write the English words in Hindi script. Remember to put tags on your bags. You’ll get the tags at the counter. Then ask someone for Security Check and go there. Put your bags on the x-ray belt. Remember to take the bags when you are on the other side. Then wait for the flight announcement. Don’t miss the flight…

Once you get into the flight, find your seats and wear the seat-belts.

Photo above by Werner Bischof who visited the old Bihar, the Bihar of the fifties.