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Thursday, May 17, 2012

ये जगह किसी साम्राज्यवादी भेड़िये का ‘थूथन’ भर नहीं है!

http://mohallalive.com/2012/05/17/kindness-virtual-strangers-twitter-saved-day/

 नज़रियाफेसबुक से

ये जगह किसी साम्राज्यवादी भेड़िये का 'थूथन' भर नहीं है!

17 MAY 2012 NO COMMENT

संस्‍तुति ♦ उदय प्रकाश

हरी संवेदनाएं, मानवीय सहकारिता और हरसंभव सहायता की अलक्ष्य कोशिशें इस 'वर्चुअल-समाज' में भी हैं। उस समाज से कहीं, (कई बार) अधिक और भावुक कर देने वाला, जिसे हम असली बाहर का 'यथार्थ' वाला समाज कहते हैं, लेकिन जो मीडिया, राजनीति और पूंजी की ताकतों का अनैतिक गंठजोड़ बनकर एक अर्ध-मानव भीड़ या लालची हिंसक झुंड में तब्दील हो रहा है। उसकी चेतना को लुप्त और धो-पोंछ कर 'सफा' कर देने वाली ताकतें बहुत सारी हैं। इसीलिए फेसबुक या ट्विटर या ब्‍लॉग्स किसी 'साम्राज्यवादी भेड़िये' का 'थूथन' या 'थोबड़ा' भर नहीं हैं। इस 'आभासी' (वर्चुअल) जगत में किसी संकट में घिरे अकेले निहत्थे मनुष्य की आवाजें भी सुनी जा सकती हैं। मुमताज बेगम का यह वाकया शायद यही कहता है। वे लोग, जिसमें बड़े सरकारी अफसर, भ्रष्ट राजनीतिक नेता, जातिव्यवस्था के ऊंचे पायदानों या शिखर पर बैठे लोग जब ऐसे 'सोशल-नेटवर्किंग' को सेंसर या समाप्त (प्रतिबंधित) करना चाहते हैं, तो शायद उन्हें 'इजिप्ट' और 'आक्युपाई वॉल स्ट्रीट' का डर सताता है। संकट में घेर दिये गये अकेले आदमी की आवाज यहां किसी भी 'मास-मीडिया' से ज्यादा साफ सुनाई देती है।

एक गाना है, पुराना, शायद 'जागृति' फिल्म का 'साथी हाथ बढ़ाना… एक अकेला थक …' अगर किसी दोस्त के पास हो तो, उसे आज मिल कर सुनते हैं। लेकिन पहले मुमताज बेगम के साथ हुई इस घटना को जरूर पढ़ें …


How the kindness of (virtual) strangers on Twitter saved my day

After Twitter followers helped me remove a BNP banner from my street on election day, it's my first port of call from now on

♦ Momtaz Begum-Hossain

Checking Twitter
'I'm sure there are an infinite number of people online each day, helping and assisting others.' Photograph: Sarah Lee for the Guardian

I've made a decision. From now on, if I need help, I'm heading straight to Twitter. I've tweeted pleas before. I once posted that I needed a job and the same afternoon got commissioned to write an article. But a few weeks ago, I discovered the true benefits of the virtual world.

It was election day and on my way back from a lunchtime trip to the launderette I discovered a huge BNP banner had been tied to the lamp post outside my flat. My immediate reaction was to pull it down. The trouble was, I'm short and it was higher than my tallest chair could reach.So I sent out a tweet. Could anyone help me tear down this monstrosity?

Within seconds my timeline was inundated with suggestions: from calling the council, hosing it down with water, to setting it alight. Minutes later, over 50 people had retweeted my predicament, but as I watched their avatars appear on my screen, I felt guilty that I wasn't physically doing anything to get it down. I inspected the situation again. It was a definite scissors and ladder job. I had the snippers; but who had the steps?

I pondered the idea of knocking door-to-door until I found a ladder-owning resident, but it's a busy main road where people are closely guarded and don't stop and chat. Then I spotted my immediate neighbour who's exceptionally tall. When I told him about the banner and the fact I needed help, he laughed and went indoors.

Which led me back to my computer. Over the next two hours I was immersed in a Twitterthon, tracking and responding to tweets. As word spread, the calibre of people interested in my plight increased. As well as discovering it had been posted on Facebook walls, I was contacted by a local councillor and a member of another political party, who advised that I should deal with the issue legally. I tried, but my council's environmental crime unit had me on hold for so long that I ran out of phone credit. The traditional methods were clearly not going to work.

Finally I got it. The tweet that saved the day. A message from a stranger to say assistance was on the way. Sure enough, two gentlemen promptly arrived with a ladder in tow. I tweeted a photo of them, and have since found out who they were, marking a satisfactory end to my tale.

It may sound like a small-scale success, but it's evidence of a growing consciousness in virtual kindness – helping people we don't know. After Claire Squires collapsed and died while running the London Marathon last month her Just Giving sponsorship page rose from £500 to nearly £1m – donated by over 79,000 donators who never knew her, but felt touched by her story. In the US, HopeMob exists with the sole purpose of building a community of generous strangers who donate to causes that help everyday people, like paying for their hospital bills. The organisation has over 285,000 Twitter followers who can vote to boost the chances of individual stories, helping them get coverage on the website until their financial target it met. It's a ground-level form of philanthropy where all the money goes directly to the cause, so donors know exactly where their cash is going. Similarly, it's common practice in the UK to hear of small businesses and bands asking for crowd funding where supporters and fans can contribute to help someone buy equipment, or release an album.

Virtual kindness can't be measured but I'm sure there are an infinite number of people online each day, anonymously helping and assisting others. They may not get recognition, but the positive consequences of their actions really do make a difference. Of course there's also the unfriendly virtual types. The ones who have left nasty comments on my blog and the fascists who felt obliged to tweet me and tell me to leave the country, but that's another story …

• This story was commissioned after a number of suggestions from Twitter users. Contact us on@commentisfree or visit our You tell us page if there's a subject you'd like to see covered on Comment is free

Writers Link http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/momtaz-begum-hossain


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