Personal integrity is not about flaunting the principles
that you claim you stand by. It is how you live by them, even through small,
seemingly inconsequential, everyday acts – especially when no one’s watching!
Last evening I was visiting a friend. A visitor
arrived at his door when we were there. He was a vendor, as I soon discovered,
of pirated movies. My friend, quite nonplussed by my consternation (I don’t
think he was even aware of, or cared to know, what I felt about what he was
doing), bought several of them – new movies (some of whom were still playing in
cinemas currently) in English, Hindi, Tamil and Malayalam. I was, honestly,
appalled. My friend is a young, talented, hard-working professional. That he
would indulge in an illegal act, buying and watching pirated movies, disturbed
me. I politely communicated my disapproval of his action and left his place soon after.
But indulging in such an act is not something
that is unique to my friend. Most of us Indians prefer choosing the ‘easy way
out’ in most situations – be it watching pirated movies or bribing a traffic
cop who has issued a ticket or getting a ticket examiner on an overbooked train
to confirm a berth out of turn. And yet, rather hypocritically, we participate
in protests seeking an end to corruption in the country. The stand we, often
subconsciously, take is that everyone and the system is corrupt; let everyone
and the system come clean; then, and only then, will I believe that things will
change and be part of that change. And so no one changes and the system thrives
– on the self-centeredness and holier-than-thou attitude of a people!
There are several thousand ways in which as a
nation, a culture, we are corrupt. But we must realize that we are really
sowing the seeds of such a culture in the minds of impressionable young people
in the manner in which behave in our homes. The most rampant form of our
“corrupt” thinking is when we watch pirated movies at home – either by buying
pirated DVDs or streaming pirated content online. And worse, we think there’s
nothing “wrong” in what we are doing. We brazenly brag that we do so on social
media and in public. Now, let’s
understand that movie piracy is stealing someone else’s intellectual property. Would we steal someone’s handbag or wallet? Would we
encourage our children to steal from store shelves? Then why are we stealing in
this fashion – movies or such entertainment content? Let’s remember that each
time we watch a pirated movie we are telling our family and our children that
it is “okay” to be dishonest and it is “fine” to steal. When we bribe a traffic
cop for a ticket he has legitimately issued we are contributing to corruption
staying deep-rooted in Indian society. These may appear to be inconsequential
acts to us, but consistently indulging in them is ruining our nation’s social and
moral fabric in more ways than we can even imagine.

I have not shared my thoughts here because I
want you to follow them. Or endorse them or accept them. I am not saying this
is the only way to practise personal integrity. All I am sharing here is that
let there be some consistency in what you say you believe in – which is,
integrity and principle-based living – and what you do and how you live. For, only
when, as Gandhi taught us, what you think, what you say and what you do are in
sync, will there be inner peace and happiness!
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