Laaltain

KISS, CAMERA, CAUGHT

5 اکتوبر، 2013

Anony­mous

kiss camera

“YOU HAVE BEEN CAUGHT,” sneered the direc­tor, his eyes twin­kling like malev­o­lent pearls in a face like grey cement. Reclin­ing in his chair, he put his hands behind his head and looked down his nose at his vic­tim.

The room was cold, so cold that Rahim Tufail, a lean young man of twen­ty and a final year stu­dent of Com­put­er Sci­ence at the Nation­al Uni­ver­si­ty, shiv­ered in his seat. Sit­ting across from the direc­tor, star­ing into his eyes, he found it hard to blink.

He opened his mouth to utter a response but no sound came out. And at that moment it seemed to Rahim that silence, peren­ni­al­ly, had been the state of the world; from the begin­nings of the uni­verse to this moment, there had been only silence. Time seemed infi­nite and sta­tion­ary, and the room was cold, very cold.

But then, as if from far away, he heard his own voice:

“Sir, it was a mis­take, sir, it was a sin. I admit, we admit. Sir, for the last three con­sec­u­tive semes­ters I’ve been on the dean’s list. Sir, I’m study­ing on a uni­ver­si­ty loan, so sir, how can I trans­fer my cred­its to anoth­er cam­pus, as you’ve kind­ly sug­gest­ed, and still keep my fund­ing? Sir, my father is a rick­shaw dri­ver, my grand­fa­ther was a coach­man, sir, how will I pay my way? It was a mis­take – a sin but a mis­take, sir. For Allah’s sake par­don me. I didn’t… we didn’t mean any­thing by it. It was … just a touch.”

The direc­tor turned to the head of the dis­ci­pli­nary com­mit­tee, Madam Ismat Unais, a PhD from a renowned Eng­lish uni­ver­si­ty in the new­ly emerg­ing field of Cloud Com­put­ing. Madam Unais had been brows­ing through the text mes­sages in Rahim’s mobile phone through­out his impas­sioned plea to the dean.

“Let me read you this, sir, if you per­mit,” she began vicious­ly, “this boy’s phone was con­fis­cat­ed on the spot, as soon as we caught them, and it con­tains all the evi­dence to prove him guilty”

The direc­tor nod­ded, and madam Unais con­tin­ued, “Just lis­ten to this sir, it says, ‘Thanks for mak­ing my day’. And this was sent in the morn­ing. Only Allah knows what’s hap­pened since then, which hasn’t been caught on any cam­era.”

The direc­tor quiv­ered slight­ly before he spoke again, “Only two weeks back I had dis­patched an email to all stu­dents. Now, Mr. Rahim Tufail, did you receive that email?” Rahim nod­ded meek­ly, “Could you please recount for us the con­tents of that email?”

“Sir that…sir…”

“Please speak up,” said the direc­tor emphat­i­cal­ly, “we don’t have all day.”

“Sir, it con­tained guide­lines on the cam­pus dress code, for female stu­dents, for­bid­ding flashy clothes, no make­up, noth­ing reveal­ing, sir. And it was advised that they wear dopat­ta.”

“We know that part,” the direc­tor snapped, “enlight­en us on the code of con­duct please, par­tic­u­lar­ly the part about main­tain­ing phys­i­cal dis­tance.”

Rahim spoke shril­ly, “It said sir, that clear and vis­i­ble dis­tance between male and female stu­dents is essen­tial at all times. No phys­i­cal con­tact what­so­ev­er is per­mit­ted. It also said, sir, that boys and girls sit­ting togeth­er in the cor­ri­dors, or on the stairs, is strict­ly pro­hib­it­ed. And at night­time, stu­dents must remain in light­ed areas; nobody should ven­ture into the dark­er parts of the cor­ri­dors or gar­dens.”

“Cor­rect,” the direc­tor said, strange­ly tri­umphant at hear­ing these words, “and it was made known, very clear­ly, that a sur­veil­lance sys­tem is active through­out this cam­pus. No event can go unno­ticed. The penal­ty for digres­sions was also stip­u­lat­ed, in bold ital­ics: EXPULSION. In your case, you would of course be required to also return your loan imme­di­ate­ly. Your grades, and your progress thus far, shall stand nul­li­fied. It was all stip­u­lat­ed, Rahim Tufail; and yet, you went and shamed your­self.”

“Sir please…” Rahim start­ed, but he was imme­di­ate­ly cut short.

“What else have you done? Tell us!” Madam Unais thun­dered.

Rahim blanked out for anoth­er moment.

He knew that Madam Unais spoke on behalf of the entire dis­ci­pli­nary com­mit­tee at the Nation­al Uni­ver­si­ty. The com­mit­tee was respon­si­ble for main­tain­ing dis­ci­pline on cam­pus, and for hand­ing out penal­ties to trans­gres­sors. When a stu­dent was deemed guilty and a pun­ish­ment was hand­ed out, the news was post­ed on notice boards and dis­sem­i­nat­ed via mass emails. And pun­ish­ments were hand­ed out often.

It was also well known that cer­tain mis­de­meanors were con­sid­ered unpar­don­able, and none more so than a breach of the code of phys­i­cal con­duct. There were sev­er­al instances of stu­dents being expelled for such activ­i­ties.

Rahim remem­bered a sto­ry about one such inci­dent, where a boy and girl had been caught act­ing ‘inap­pro­pri­ate­ly’ on the mobile phone cam­era of a math­e­mat­ics teacher. The teacher had hid behind a table to film the guilty pair. Once the stu­dents had been expelled, the video, which was used as evi­dence before the dis­ci­pli­nary com­mit­tee, had been mys­te­ri­ous­ly leaked. It was an acci­dent, it was said. But the video had soon made it to sev­er­al web­sites, draw­ing the atten­tion of the entire cam­pus, and much of the stu­dent body through­out the city, and soon, peo­ple through­out the coun­try had seen it. The girl had attempt­ed sui­cide, and the boy had faced much dis­grace.

The thought of the inci­dent jolt­ed Rahim entire­ly, and he lis­tened, once again, to the ques­tion­ing voice of Madam Unais, “What else have you done?”

“Noth­ing madam, noth­ing,” he plead­ed, “I swear by Allah, this was just a mes­sage, and it was sent last night, not this morn­ing. It was a mis­take, sir, a sin, but a mis­take.”

Madam Unais shook her head dis­mis­sive­ly as she read out anoth­er damn­ing mes­sage. She seemed full of pro­fes­sion­al zeal, almost rel­ish­ing the sit­u­a­tion before her. There was a cer­tain stub­born­ness about Rahim which exas­per­at­ed her; and his pathet­ic please for mer­cy didn’t help.

Even­tu­al­ly, the direc­tor said “The only way out for you, as I’ve already stat­ed, is to change cam­pus by trans­fer­ring your cred­its, or sim­ply walk­ing away. We have no place for the likes of you on this cam­pus.”

“I appeal for mer­cy, sir. Madam, I appeal for mer­cy. Nobody in our fam­i­ly has a degree from any­where. My father, sir, has nev­er seen the inside of a uni­ver­si­ty, but he takes great pride in my being here. I tell you, I am gen­uine­ly sor­ry for what I’ve done. Sir, it is against my reli­gion, and against the val­ues which I’ve been brought up with. It was a mis­take, madam, a sin, but a mis­take.”

The direc­tor looked severe­ly at Rahim, “We take great pride in our tra­di­tion­al val­ues. This was no mis­take Mr. Tufail, but as you said your­self, a sin. More impor­tant­ly, it is a mat­ter of uni­ver­si­ty deco­rum. We don’t just teach our stu­dents the mere tech­ni­cal­i­ties of their fields; we are here to make them cul­tured indi­vid­u­als and cul­ti­vat­ed and pro­duc­tive cit­i­zens. The eth­i­cal and moral con­duct of our stu­dents is of para­mount impor­tance to us. And from what I’ve seen on that video clip, your atro­cious phys­i­cal mis­con­duct (which I will not elab­o­rate upon in a lady’s pres­ence) is sim­ply unpar­don­able.”

“It might be in your favor though,” said Madam Unais, look­ing over her thin steel-frame glass­es at Rahim, “to expli­cate a full account of your activ­i­ties over the last months. Explain these mes­sages, and you may be offered the option of trans­fer­ring to anoth­er cam­pus, albeit with your fund­ing dis­con­tin­ued. Are you will­ing to do that? We would need a writ­ten account, duly signed and dat­ed, ready by tomor­row evening. This is the most that can be done for you, keep­ing in mind your need, and the fact that you have a clean track record.”

The air around him seemed suf­fo­cat­ing as Rahim began to pon­der the pos­si­bil­i­ties.

A fast-for­ward ver­sion of his three years at Nation­al Uni­ver­si­ty: How in the begin­ning he was sim­ply clue­less. How he had strug­gled to com­mu­ni­cate in Eng­lish and knew lit­tle about com­put­ers. And then how, one day, the pro­fes­sor of com­put­er pro­gram­ming had asked a sub­tle ques­tion to which nobody – the sons of indus­tri­al­ists, land­lords, doc­tors, engi­neers, and even com­put­er pro­gram­mers – had an answer. And how Rahim Tufail Hus­sain, son of the rick­shaw dri­ver Tufail Hus­sain, grand­son of the coach­man Azam Hus­sain, had felt some­thing click inside his brain, and had felt his heart surge and race, hear­ing him­self artic­u­lat­ing a response. And how the pro­fes­sor had praised him for his knowl­edge. And how, in those twen­ty sec­onds of mir­a­cle he, Rahim Tufail, had shrugged off the fate of his ances­tors from his teenage shoul­ders…

… and then there was Naima, the daugh­ter of a sur­geon, niece of a brigadier. How he had yearned for Naima, dreamed about her. How he had wished but nev­er dared. Nev­er dared, because it was not his lev­el of cor­rup­tion. A sin, it would’ve been, and one much beyond a rick­shaw driver’s son. And then how, in a moment of mad­ness.…

Rahim burst into tears. Before Madam Unais or the direc­tor could react, he had flung him­self at their feet, and there he cried and con­vulsed, his lips touch­ing the leather instep of the direc­tors boots, tast­ing the salt of his own tears.

For sev­er­al sec­onds he remained there, with the two teach­ers watch­ing in shocked silence as he shud­dered vio­lent­ly at their feet.

“Fine, fine,” cried the direc­tor, final­ly draw­ing his feet away, swivel­ing on his chair.

Madam Unais had moved away too, but was find­ing it hard to recov­er from what she had just wit­nessed. Even­tu­al­ly, she mum­bled, “You should’ve thought about this when com­mit­ting that heinous act. I think, sir, we should dis­miss this meet­ing for now.” She moved away, dust­ing her clothes as if try­ing to remove the mem­o­ry of a few min­utes ago from her mind.

But Rahim con­tin­ued to cry and plead for mer­cy, until final­ly the direc­tor con­sent­ed that once he had writ­ten up a detailed account of his wrong­do­ings and sub­mit­ted the same to his office by the next evening, his case would be recon­sid­ered. And this because he was a good stu­dent, and a gen­uine­ly needy one.

Rahim left the director’s office feel­ing much lighter than before. He walked briskly out of the cor­ri­dor and into the lawn before the uni­ver­si­ty. He avoid­ed the oth­er stu­dents, for the news of his dis­grace had already spread and he could feel the heat of a thou­sand stares. He walked straight out of the lawn, then out of the uni­ver­si­ty gates, pon­der­ing over the con­tents of his con­fes­sion­al report.

He was in a quandary about where he should begin, and what details he should add to make a com­plete case. What oth­er instances, what shroud­ed, shame­ful truths, must he invent so as to sat­is­fy the dis­ci­pli­nary com­mit­tee? He racked his brain, gaz­ing blankly at his past, try­ing in vain to recall a rel­e­vant mem­o­ry. The effort made his head spin, but again and again he con­clud­ed that there real­ly was noth­ing. Noth­ing except that moment, now cap­tured on the university’s sur­veil­lance sys­tem. Noth­ing that could be count­ed as sin.

How­ev­er, unbe­knownst to Rahim, the case against him and Naima had been dis­missed almost as soon as he had stepped out of the director’s office. The rea­son was a cer­tain phone call that the direc­tor had received: orders from the Vice Chan­cel­lor of the Nation­al Uni­ver­si­ty to dis­solve the case. This phone call had been pre­ced­ed by anoth­er call made to the Vice Chan­cel­lor an hour ear­li­er: a renowned sen­a­tor demand­ing that the VC should take imme­di­ate action to drop the charges against the two stu­dents.

And the ball was set rolling by the brigadier, Naima’s uncle, who had met the sen­a­tor at his Mar­gala Hills res­i­dence ear­li­er that day and men­tioned to him, amongst oth­er more impor­tant things, the lit­tle prob­lem per­tain­ing to his niece.

In the end though, it was real­ly an acci­dent. A recent­ly installed cam­era on the top cor­ri­dor of the lab­o­ra­to­ry build­ing of the Nation­al Uni­ver­si­ty had turned, and focused like the eye of God, on Rahim Tufail.

And an hour before, Rahim Tufail had laughed.


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