In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God. And then God
committed one of his periodical goof-ups, the first after the original mistake
of creating Eve and involving us for perpetuity in sexual molestation cases: he
created the Bureaucracy and the Bureaucrat took over the Word. Originally
intended to convey meaning, the Word now became a means to conceal!- a
mechanism which even the Right to Information Act has not been able to dent. But let’s not scoff
at this, for concealment is an art- given the sheer scale of goof-ups and
gerrymandering constantly going on in the labyrinths of power, concealing them
behind just a few words requires far more skill than merely revealing to us
that our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought. Shelley may
well have been right when he said that, but could he have hidden behind words a
hefty kickback in danger of disappearing? That's what one Minister was once
required to do, without Mr. Vinod Rai finding out about it.
Having successfully
negotiated the required payola from a contractor, a Minister called for the
file and wrote on it "Approved". The contractor, secure in the false
illusion (like Lalu Yadav a-la Nitish Kumar) that the Minister was now
committed and could not go back on either his word or file noting, refused to
pay up. Unfazed, the Minister requisitioned the file again and simply added the
word "Not" before "Approved". The now chastened
contractor, acknowledging defeat at the hands of a master, prostrated himself (like Nitish Kumar a-la Amit Shah) before the icon of democracy and begged for
his contract back, wondering at the same time how the worthy would find a way
around the neological cul-de-sac. The Minister, a wordsmith par excellence,
extracted the file from his drawer and just added the letter "e" to
the word "Not". The final noting read "Note Approved"- two
simple words that concealed twists worthy of a Saki or an O'Henry !
In the mid eighties in Shimla a powerful
Principal Secretary to the Chief Minister, whose wife wished to devote all her
time to disciplining other IAS wives and thus delegate her culinary
responsibilities to a cook, moved the Finance Deptt. for the creation of a
Class D post. The file duly reached the Joint Secretary (JS) in Finance. Now a JS, compared to a Principal Secretary to Chief Minister, occupies a slot in the bureaucratic food chain
comparable to the position of the plankton in relation to the sperm whale, and
in the normal course the file should have been cleared without a whimper, or
whatever sounds the plankton emits when under stress. In this case, however, this humble organism
(born and bred in the badass corridors of Hindu College) refused to accept his
humble station in life and rejected it ! A livid Principal Secretary to CM, accustomed to
worms squirming before him and not turning, returned the file with the noting:
"Has this file been seen by the Finance Secretary? If not, it may be put
up before him". (I may mention here that senior Secretaries belong to the same lunch club, operate on the principles of the Cosa Nostra, and are
usually more adept than the macaque monkey in scratching each others' backs).
The JS returned said file after recording on it the standard default option of
all Finance Deptts.: "FD regrets to reiterate its rejection of the
proposal". An epileptic Secretary to CM decided to teach this callow fledgling
a lesson. Confident that he now had this amoeba cornered, he put the ball back
in the JS's court with a thunderous ace: "At what level has this decision been
taken?", thinking that this would expose the lack of jurisdiction of the JS. The latter, however, having dealt with seven foot Jats on a daily basis in
Jubilee hall of Delhi Universit, was unfazed and responded with a classic cross-court of his own:
"Secretary to CM is respectfully informed that the decision has been
taken at the competent level." Game, set and match. No actionable
information revealed. The sperm whale retired shortly thereafter, sans cook.
Another story which comes to
mind is that of a young Deputy Secretary (DS) in Shimla , now grown long in the tooth and safely parked in the USA, whose
newly acquired wife happened to be in Delhi. He kept applying for leave to spend
some time with her, especially during those long winter nights in Shimla when a
quilt is not enough to keep one warm. His applications were invariably rejected
by the Chief Secretary (CS) who had long ago replaced his wife with a bottle of
triple XXX rum. The DS then changed tack: he requested for leave on
"compassionate grounds", stating that he had to check up on his aging
parents in Delhi. Even this crap did not cut any ice with the CS (the mixed
metaphor may be excused). The increasingly desperate DS then made his final
gambit, taking a huge chance: he applied again, this time on "passionate
grounds" viz. that he was only recently married and had not seen his wife
for many months and would not be able to recognize her if he did not see her soon!
It worked! Off he went to Delhi and he has not left her side since then- much
to her annoyance, of course. The power of the word- the deletion of three
letters- made all the difference between marital bliss and enforced
"vanprastha". Why, he may even have joined the RSS if denied leave
again, left his wife and become a Chief Minister !
My own favourite is the one
about the officer who wanted a bigger garage built in his official residence to
park his two cars. He sent a note to the Secretary PWD requesting that the
"garrage be constructed immediately.'' The latter's response revealed his
stout English Literature background: "Request approved. However the
officer may be informed that while a garage can always contain two cars it can
never contain two R's "!
The good Lord need not
worry- His Word is in good hands.
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