Foreign T.V. Channel Invasion on Bhutanese Culture:
Last Monday we started revising the above topic. I had
already selected 4 topics for the purpose. After I had finished writing the
topics on the board, I asked the students of XII Arts B to select one form them
and write an argumentative essay on the topic. After some discussion, the class
decided to write on the topic: The foreign T.V. Channels are detrimental to the
Bhutanese Culture.
Once the topic was chosen, I spent some time reminding them
about the Introduction of the essay. I told them that if they could write the
Introduction properly with ‘the hook’, background history, thesis statement containing
the supporting points and their stance, writing the rest of the essay may not
be a big problem. While they were writing their essays, I decided to give it a
try, writing the introductory part as well. I might have taken not more than 10
minutes for doing so. Once I had finished it, Ms. Deepa Rai wanted to have a
look at it. So did a couple of students more. I would like to share it with you
all for your comments and feedback.
Foreign T.V. Channels
Invasion on Bhutanese Culture:
Of late Bhutanese parents seem to have the devil’s own time
disciplining their children about the ill effects of whiling away their time
watching all those foreign T.V. channels. Foreign television channels like Zee,
Star World, Star Sports, HBO, B4U and so on are proving to be a bad influence
not only on the children but also on the youth and the adults alike. In a
recent survey conducted by a reputed organisation, most of the Bhutanese are
believed to be spending 7-8 hours on an average watching these T.V. Channels. Things
have come to such a pass that nowadays in places like Thimphu, Paro, Phuentsholing,
Samtse, the sight of the Bhutanese youth, dressed in torn jeans and T-shirts
with some eye-catching slogans written on them, with Korean hip-hop hair style
and tattoos all over their bodies has become quite common. If this trend goes
on, the day is not far off when the youth of the country will stop wearing the
national dress and feel ashamed of using the national language at the cost of
the unique identity and sovereignty of the country. It is absolutely a must therefore,
to ban most of these channels, if not all.
Now opponents of the idea may claim that ‘fashion maketh the
man’. The more colourful dresses the youth start wearing imitating their
favourite stars on the channels, the brighter will be the prospect of a growing
economy of the country. They have their point in thinking like that but a
growing economy at the cost of the age-old cultural heritage of the country can
never be a welcome idea. Dzongkha, the national language, has been a great
unifying factor over the years, having held the country through thick and thin.
Dzongkha gives the country its very identity. Their Majesties, Lyenchens,
Lyenpos, and the elite of the society, always prefer to speak in the national
language due to their pride in it and for the purpose of promoting the national
language. So long as Dzongkha retains its status as the national language of
Bhutan, just like the national dress, the independence and sovereignty of the
country rests assured. In spite of a handful of the Bhutanese youth seen in
foreign clothes and all, an invasion on the culture of the country is not even
remotely possible.
Those who disagree assert that a large section of the populace
is picking up foreign languages like ducks to water. They are found to be
conversing in Hindi, Korean, English and even in Japanese as if speaking in
these languages is the most important part of their lives. They have picked up
these languages from the T.V.Channels, no doubt. However, the gho and the kira
are some important components of the national dress. Just like the national
language, the national dress gives the country its unique identity. In a recently
posted video, Lyenchen Tshering Tobgay, honourable Prime Minister of Bhutan, is
seen addressing a packed auditorium in the American city of New York about the
significance of the national dress of Bhutan, dressed in the same! This goes to
show how proud he is of wearing the national dress of Bhutan. This is a perfect
example of wearing the national dress with pride and dignity. The lyenchen looks
a living embodiment in the video, of the preservation and promotion of the
cultural heritage through the very act of wearing the national dress of Bhutan with
pride while talking to a large assemblage of people dressed mostly in suits.
So, the argument of the critics is irrelevant and as long as the national dress
and the national language are used with pride, nothing can pose a serious
threat to the sovereignty of the country.
Critics have always made it a point to talk about what they
consider to be the disadvantages of the national dress and the national
language of Bhutan. They claim that a large section of the population in some
parts of the country find it difficult to speak in Dzongkha. They also speak of
how discomforting and time-consuming it is to put on the national dress. What
is wrong with the people trying to converse in English or Hindi for the matter?
These are international languages, they opine. What is wrong with the youth in
jeans, having their ears pierced or bodies tattooed? They are right upto a
certain extent in thinking like that. Wearing the national dress may be
time-consuming for some. But how will a Bhutanese dressed in an immaculate
suit, speaking in flawless English or Korean, be looked upon? Dressed that way,
he may look very smart but he will simply be one nobody among hundreds and
thousands of equally well-dressed people, simply for the very reason that he
will not have a distinct identity of his own. On the other side, imagine a
Bhutanese dressed like a Bhutanese (in gho or kira), speaking in English the
Bhutanese style while addressing an international gathering. Will he not be a
proud Bhutanese, proud of his unique identity and cultural heritage?
The long and the short of the matter is that as long as the
Bhutanese take pride in their national language and national dress, they stand
united as members of ‘One Nation, One People’. And the question of threat, like
the threat of the foreign channels posing a great challenge to the sovereignty
of the country does not arise. A small price for a nation, the leaders and the
people of which have always put the country before anything else selflessly and
defied all foreign invasions fearlessly for protecting the sovereignty of the
motherland.
V good essay
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