Tag: Chandrayaan 3

  • The Moon, Modi, Manipur and the Media

    PM witnessing successful landing of Chandrayaan 3 via video conferencing. Picture (edited) source: Press Information Bureau

     

     

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Ranjona BanerjiIndia made history on August 23, when the Vikram Lander made a successful soft landing close to the South Pole of the Moon. No other space-exploring nation has managed this. It was a thrilling moment, when the graphic of the rover touched down on the moon’s surface and the control room burst into applause and cheers.

    A great triumph for India’s space programme, for the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and all the scientists involved.

    Of course, this is India. Therefore, the Indian media – most of it anyway – and the ISRO feed itself, had focused as much on the face of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he watched the landing as it did on the landing itself. And then, before we heard anything about the landing, we had to hear the Prime Minister speak from South Africa. There was no connection between the two events, that is the Prime Minister and the moon-landing. But like I said, this is India. Politicians rule.

    The result of this was no science and all congratulatory hysteria. TV channels showed endless images of the moon-landing. All of these were computer generated, but it appears they forgot to tell their viewers. Or maybe the anchors themselves did not know. Who did they think took these images of the landing?

    Later ISRO released the first photos of the moon’s surface, one of which showed the leg of the lander.

    In all the coverage, very little was discussed about why we have undertaken this mission and what we expect to learn from it. You often hear people moaning about India’s lack of scientific temperament. Well, this is why. Our public science outreach is pathetic, science journalism is not encouraged and the result is ignorance. And when ignorance is coupled with jingoism, all you get is a general pall of stupidity.

    While on the Prime Minister and South Africa, the Daily Maverick, a South African online news publication with a weekly newspaper, put out an intriguing story, also on August 23. It stated that the Indian Prime Minister landed in South Africa for the BRICS summit and then refused to get off his plane at Waterkloof Air Force Base, because only a Cabinet minister had come to receive him. The headline called it a “tantrum”.

    This is of course a South African publication which owes no allegiance to the Indian government or the BJP. Shocking!

    The day before, President Cyril Ramaphosa had received the Chinese President Xi Jianping, who was on a state visit. PM Modi was not on a state visit.

    According to the Daily Maverick, Ramaphosa then had to despatch his deputy, who was busy with summit preparations, to receive Modi.

    https://www.freepressjournal.in/world/ pm-modi-refused-to-deboard-plane-as-sa-govt-sent-minister-not-prez-to-welcome- him-in-contrast-to-chinas-xi-report

    https://thewire.in/diplomacy/modi-brics-south-africa-plane-disembark-controversy

    So why have I not posted the original report from Daily Maverick?

    That story is as intriguing.

    It took the official system – and I include the BJP IT Cell here – time to respond to this story. Mind you, no Indian media had carried reports any such incident. Instead, they spun the usual tale of NRIs dancing for Modi.

    But people who went to the Daily Maverick site in a couple of hours, found they were blocked.

    According a series of tweets or Xs or posts on X by the Daily Maverick, they were forced to bar India from accessing their site because of a massive cyberattack from India, attempting to take down their site.

    Later, the South African government denied the Daily Maverick claim, while the Daily Maverick stuck to its story (screenshots attached).

    Even now, most Indian media houses have found it difficult to report on this. The Free Press Journal was the first however to show its calibre and courage. And others like The Telegraph, the Newsminute, Wire followed. But for our “godi” or lapdog media, cue in the outrage at a foreign publication daring to report unfavourably on Modi.

    While on the Newsminute, here’s an excellent report, in a fine series, from Manipur. You know, the place not as far as the moon or South Africa, which PM Modi barely acknowledges exists. Almost four months of anarchy, civil unrest, death and destruction there now.

    https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/walked-all-day-four-kids-kuki-woman-recalls-horror-fleeing-her-village-181488

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior journalist and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia on Tuesdays and Fridays. Her views here are personal.

  • Over the moon, and how!

     

     

    By Avik Chattopadhyay

     

    Avik ChattopadhyayWe made it. Once again. The Indian “Space Programme”, since it kicked off with the setting up of INCOSPAR [now ISRO] under Dr Vikram Sarabhai in 1962, has been one of the best  ambassadors of Brand India. It has embodied the true Indian spirit of inquiry, ingenuity and innovation. The age-old scientific temper of one of the world’s oldest civilisations comes alive not merely in the number of engineers and doctors that go abroad to work but in those that consciously choose to stay back to create institutions and ecosystems which are global benchmarks. As someone quipped in a WhatsApp group, “The Chandrayaan 3 mission cost less than the budget to make the movie Aadipurush”.

     

    While a large part of the nation was glued to the news updates for 30 full minutes, what I find fascinating is the genres and variety of memes and messages that took off as soon as Mr Somnath announced: “India is on the moon.”

     

    This piece is about the unique ecosystem of communication that is created around key milestones, good or bad. The fact that the memes I share here landed on my phone within minutes of the milestone show that there are hundreds amongst us who have invested time in preparing them well in advance, both as individuals as well as organisations or corporates.

     

    I picked 17 specific memes from the close to a hundred I received across groups and individual contacts. The different levels of creativity are a wonderful sight to behold for they stand for the sentiment of the people at large. They can be classified as [a] celebratory, [b] topical and [c] corporate.

     

    The celebratory ones I share here range from the typical play of words to expected images to the excellent use of humour in the one on the right, shared below..

     

     

    Then we have the topical memes. With Raksha Bandhan coming up on the 30th of this month, there had to be one on that theme which was one of the more popular ones doing the rounds. Going by our obsession with Pakistan, there had to be one with a jibe at our neighbours too. It was however pleasant to learn of many from across the border wishing the mission all the very best on social media. I found the one about Pakistan very subtle as if implying that there is always a part of India in Pakistan.

     

     

    There are two memes which I loved. Not to be understood by most but those that did, enjoyed both of them. One was with Pink Floyd’s iconic music album “The Dark Side of the Moon”. Given that Vikram landed on the southern and dark side of the moon lent itself to this meme. Given it happens to be the album’s 50th anniversary, there could not been a better coincidental tribute, especially for a fan like me. And then there was this wickedly corny take on Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s character in “Sacred Games”. Both deserve to be archived.

     

     

    Then we have the corporates who wanted to encash on this achievement and show solidarity with the mission.

     

    The one by Amaron was ‘cute’ while the one by KFC was surely over the top but does bring a smile, something more apt in an issue of Mad.

     

     

    Then there were posts by the e-commerce guys which were absolutely pedestrian and so predictable. If you do not have a really powerful thought, you might as well not communicate. But the fear of not being seen doing something on such a momentous occasion gets the better of you. When the Chandrayaan had taken off, Ixigo had come up with a brilliant little film which spread like wild fire [maybe not the most appropriate term to use right now].

     

     

    Here is the YouTube link to the simply loveable Ixigo video.

     

    And then there was this really esoteric one by Lexus. Obviously, it is the moonscape of the future with a Lexus branded building and a launchpad…hopefully. I really did not get it. Hope the Lexus owners have.

     

     

    How can corporates messaging be discussed without sharing what Amul did. True to its DNA, it came up with yet another little masterpiece using their unmatched play with words. Very correctly, the true taste of India and the occasion.

     

     

    My last two mentions span from the ridiculous to the sublime. The former is a meme created by one Mr Krishanshu Garg about the supposed permanent imprint the Pragyan rover has left on the moon’s surface. Much before landing happened. Yet people, in the sheer enthusiasm and enormity of the situation, shared this as yet another “moment of pride”. Tells you that creativity can go seriously overboard at times.

     

     

    I finish with the one I would preserve as the image I would retain for life if asked to choose just one. Created by The Minimalist, it is indeed simple and sublime. Possibly the best tribute to all our fellow citizens who have given us this rare moment of celebration and pride! Jai Hind.