I fear my Government, anywhere

At this moment, there are two petitions sitting in my feed-reader/email asking me to do the right thing – Get the Singapore government to repeal a law against gays and another asking for action against Myanmar.

In my heart I know the right thing to do is to sign these petitions. I also know I should be brave and put my name where my opinions are. Another part of me “knows” that this not really going to change the Singapore government’s opinions or actions.

Yet, a tiny voice in me stops me from clicking that final submit button. The voice that reminds me of the horrors that have visited so many of my country-men in India when they have stood up against corrupt or unjust officials. Lives broken, careers ruined, families torn apart.

The voice reminds me that I am living in a strange country – my only right to living and working here a small plastic card. That card keeps my family fed, puts a roof over our heads and allows us to fulfill a dream of owning a house.

It asks “Are you really sure you are safe? Confident that this will not get your visa canceled and have you sent back to India in disgrace?”.

I listen to the voice and I am afraid. I am embarrassed to be afraid, but I cannot click that Submit button.

This is the real price of living under an unjust government – you are too afraid to protest anytime, anywhere.

This entry was posted on Monday, October 15th, 2007 at 6:41 pm and is filed under Life. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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