Russian empress Maria Feodorovna had supposedly changed a comma to save a life.
A
parallel can be drawn between the snippet of the Russian history and a
charge raised by anti-Gorkha Janmukti Morcha parties in the Darjeeling
hills on the wording of an agreement that decided on the annual bonus of
tea garden workers.
Maria, the wife of czar Alexander III who
ruled Russia from 1881 to 1894, purportedly changed Alexander’s
proclamation that read: “Pardon impossible, to send to Siberia.”
When
the czarina came across the document, she changed the comma to read:
“Pardon, impossible to send to Siberia.” The change in comma, it is
said, saved the life of a man.
There are many who refuse to buy
the story but nevertheless, this is an accepted example worldwide to
show how punctuation and wrong usage of words can make or break
situations.
In Darjeeling and two centuries later, the Joint
Forum, an umbrella body of over 20 unions of tea garden workers, is
demanding a change in the bonus agreement.
The agreement reads:
“The Darjeeling Tea Association and Indian Tea Association representing
the gardens of Darjeeling Tea industry as per the list given hereunder,
and all operating Trade Unions of Darjeeling, after protracted
discussions, have conclusively settled issue of Bonus for the accounting
year 2017-2018 as detailed below.”
The agreement was signed in
Calcutta on October 4. While most operating trade unions from the hills
had taken part in the discussions, only the Morcha-affiliated Darjeeling
Terai Dooars Plantation Labour Union signed the agreement where the
Darjeeling Tea Association agreed to disburse bonus at 15 per cent of
workers’ annual earnings.
Hence, the forum, which doesn’t have the unions of the Morcha and Trinamul, had frowned on the agreement.
The
rival parties are training their guns at the Morcha for agreeing to a
low rate and have made it an issue in the tea gardens of hills.
Against this background, the wording of the bonus settlement has become an issue.
Amar
Lama, a bureau member of the Jana Andolan Party whose union is a
constituent of the forum, said: “We have very strong objections to the
wording. We are writing to the DTA to rectify the sentence immediately.
All unions had participated in the deliberations but only the Morcha
agreed to the settlement. ‘All’ trade unions did not settle on the
rate.”
“The DTA is deliberately trying to make us party to the
agreement. We were only party to discussions. They have to rectify the
document,” he told The Telegraph.
Sandeep Mukherjee, the principal advisor to the DTA, however, said it was impossible to change the agreement.
“How
can the agreement be changed when the document has already been signed
and circulated. It is a fact that while all unions participated in the
discussions, only some leaders (of the Morcha) signed the document. The
fact is clear if one takes note of the signatories of the document,”
said Mukherjee.
When The Telegraph was discussing the
issue with industry representatives, one of them was quick to informally
add: “The media are also writing that the bonus was ‘fixed’, though it
was actually ‘settled’ between two parties.”
Words do matter.
The Telegraph
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