Monday, February 18, 2008

Glory Road

Watched Glory Road last week, and thoroughly enjoyed the movie. Based on the true life story of a team that changed everything. It is about a basketball coach who selects/recruits blacks or coloureds for his team at a time when no blacks played Division I basketball. It depicts racist America, the discrimination the blacks faced and their struggles in a society dominated by the whites. The coach is a hard taskmaster who, through sheer grit and determination builds a team from scratch that went on to win the NCAA Championship. The film really reminds me of the discriminatory and racist attitude of mainland Indians towards the people of Northeast India, and I can really relate to the story. Let me reproduce here some of the great and inspiring conversations from the movie here:

The conversation between the coach and Bobby Joe Hill when he tries to recruit Bobby:

“You get real talent, why waste it, son?”

“I’ll tell you why. Ever since I was a kid, I only loved one thing-that was playing ball. Do you understand what that’s like? To have that ball in your hand. It’s like making sweet music with your hands. Only thing is you don’t wanna hear that song.”

“You gonna let a black player play from the get-go?”

“I don’t see colour. I see quick, I see skill, and that’s what you have. And that’s what I’m putting on the court.”

Coach to players:

“You’re here to learn fundamental, disciplined defensive basketball. Now, that means both on and off the court. No girls. No booze. No late nights. Nothing besides fundamental basketball. I speak. You listen. I don’t wanna hear “I can’t” or “won’t” or “Coach, I’m bleeding.” I don’t wanna hear anything except the basketball bounce. You play basketball my way. My way’s hard.”

“You wanna quit? You quit right now. You’re gonna quit everyday for the rest of your life.”

“I can’t have a big man who’s afraid to play like one.”

Coach to Bobby Joe:

“My old man drove a truck for the better half of his life. Now, there ain’t nothing wrong with that. Other than the fact that he hated it. But that’s the only way he knew how to put food on the table and give his kids a chance to do something they loved. I love the game. I love this game. I never was the greatest player. But I busted my butt, and I outworked better players. I ain’t the smartest coach, but I busted my butt and I outworked smarter coaches. And when I see the talent you got and I see you wasting it, it ticks me off.”

Cager:

“Coach, I’ll die if I don’t play. Coach, my whole life I only loved playing basketball…but I never stopped playing in the street. Never. ‘cause not to play, coach, man, that was like having something just crawl up and die in me.”

“They’re trying to take our dignity from us.”

“Your dignity’s inside you. Nobody can take something away from you if you don’t give them.”

Monday, February 11, 2008

I GAM KHANTOUHNA DIA POIMOH MASAPEN

This is an article I wrote in my language on the importance of roads.

I GAM KHANTOUHNA DIA POIMOH MASAPEN
-Joy Tonsing

I gam khantouhna din bang poimoh nasa pen a? Sixth Schedule mo? MLA politics? Kei ngaihdan in tuh i gam, adiakin singtang gam khantouhna’ng a poimoh masapen tuh lampi ahi. Lampi pentak gam khantouhna’ng in poimoh pen thepthup kenteh na chi maithei. Ngaihtuah thak mah dih. Lampi hoih omna munte khangtou hulhul mai hi. Na kiim na kiang daakvel mah dih. Lampi hoihlou a gam khangtou/changkang na mu din ka gingta kei.

I gam a lampite puahpha adiakin I hinna gui uh (lifeline) Guite Road bang hong hoih leh i gam in a phattuampih didan na ngaihtuah ngei hia? Lampi a hoih chiang in i gam a thil piangte zuakkhiakna bang hong baihlam dia, hiai in louneimite thanopna tunsak ding hi. Kisumdawntuahna (trade and commerce) hong khangtou ding hi. Huaiban ah government nasemte (teacher, doctor leh adangdangte) ten Lamka apat gal sep nawnlou in a sepna mun ua pai a lin nawn kei di uh. Tamtak te a nasepna ua a pai utlouhna uh pen lampi hoihlouh mahmah ziak hidi’n a gintaak huai. Lampi hoihna ah government nasemte posting ut zo ua, hiai in administration hoihsak tuan mahmah hi. Government teacher te a posting namun ua a pai chiang un singtang a i school te un gah hon suang dia, i gam ah laisiam hong pung ding hi. Sum neilou pipi a Lamka a tate school kaisak a ngai nawnkei dia, hiai in sum-le-pai haksatna hon dawn zangkhai tuan mahmah ding hi. Lampi hoihleh niteng van poimoh tuamtuam bang nuamtak in Lamka apat singtang kipotung thei ding a, singtang gam changkang sak tuan mahmah din gintak huai. Huaiban ah gari accident chihte bang hong tawm deuh dia, khualzin-gamvakte adin nuamtuam mahmah ding hi. Lamka toh kikawmtuahna hong nuam dia, damlouh-hitan tuah hun in kintak in damdawi inn naihthei ta di uhi. Lampi hong hoih chiang in Thanlon SDO office bangle Lamkanuai a omnawnlou dia, government teacher ten le correspondence a sem nawnlou ding uh ahi! Lampi hong hoih photphot leh adang ten zo hon zui mai di ahi.

Atung apat a lampi hoihleh i gam in a phattuampih dia muhthei khenkhatte:

1. Kisumdawntuahna (trade and commerce) hong hoih ding
2. Government nasemte a sepna mun ua pai di ua, administration hong hoih ding. Government nasemte a posting na chiat a hong om chiang un govt. in i gam hon puah maidi ahi.
3. Singtang apan a hithei teng Lamka kidenna chihpen a tawm deuh ding, tulai a i buaipih mahmah delimitation chih khawng bangle hiai ziak mahmah le ahi.
4. Gari accident a si chihte a tawm deuh ding.
5. Singtang a i school te kingakna tham hong hi dia, i gam ah cost-effective education omta ding hi. I gam ah laisiam hong pung ding hi.

Economist Robert Chambers in 1970s lai in hichiin ana gen, “If I had money, I would use it to build roads. If I had more money, I would build more roads. If I had still more money, I would still build more roads.”