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Thursday, July 09, 2026
War Minus The Shooting
By Shevlin Sebastian
COLUMN: Tunnel Of Time
When Uruguay, the last South American side, went out of the 2010 World Cup, our hearts were truly broken. It was going to be an all-European final on Sunday: Spain Vs Holland. Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and Ghana: by losing they made us bleed. Why do we Indians root for these countries? It is primarily because their football is free-flowing and magical.
When Lionel Messi of Argentina is given the space to move around, his ball control is dazzling. The 'zero angle' goal that Brazilian right-back Maicon scored against North Korea was breathtaking.
There is a joy which one experiences in the face of such wonderful skills, shown especially by the South Americans. Then you remember the tough backgrounds that most of them came from. Argentine forward, Carlos Tevez, like the great Diego Maradona, grew up in a crime-ridden neighbourhood in Buenos Aires. Both surmounted formidable hurdles to make a mark on the international stage.
On the other hand, look at the Europeans. Many European nations have excellent football academies, top-notch coaches, and some of the richest domestic leagues in the world. They enjoy advantages that footballers in poorer nations do not.
During the quarter-final between Argentina and Germany, at Cape Town, we saw how the free-flowing creative skills of the South Americans were stymied by clever strategy, and the indomitable willpower of the Europeans.
This match created a moment of introspection. Should we follow the Eastern way, of treating life like a river and going along with the flow, which is what the late spiritual leader Osho had suggested, or should we follow the European method: have aims and goals, plan your strategies, and be ruthless.
A football match is also a metaphor for our daily lives. You are moving in society, showing good skills, but there are people lurking about, at the side, in front, and at the back, who are ready to trip you. You dribble past one, two, and even three adversaries, but it is inevitable that you will get tripped and fall. But you stand up again, and the attempts at tripping continue. Sometimes, those who do the ‘paara’ (Malayalam word for tripping) are exposed. They are shown the red card, and asked to leave the field.
But the dilemma continues: what does one do when faced with non-stop aggression? Keep calm and work your way around the antagonist? Or kick back at the foe and risk the danger of getting a yellow or a red card?
There are no clear-cut answers because life is messy, just as when a player moves forward with the ball, he faces messy situations. But here is how author George Orwell analysed the game of football, and, in an indirect way, life: “Sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence: in other words it is War Minus The Shooting!”
(Published in The New Indian Express, Kerala, on July 10, 2010)
Friday, June 12, 2026
Short Story: 'The Earth Remembers'
The Earth Remembers
By Shevlin Sebastian
Ahiga touched the rock. It was warm. When he slept next to his mother, sometimes, he touched her face. The same warmth. Ma, you left so early.
He caressed her necklace around his throat. My lucky charm.
'Ahiga, come.'
He turned back.
It was Dakota.
He looked at the fire. The meat was turning brown.
He moved closer.
Dakota pointed at the ground. Ahiga sat next to him.
Inola poked the fire with a long stick. Flames flared up.
He said, 'Ahiga provided this bison.'
The group clapped. Ahiga looked around. Everybody had smiles on their faces.
The moment he spotted the bison, his heart started racing. He approached on his horse from the right. He aimed for the sweet spot, behind the front leg. The shot punctured the heart. The bison let out a deep guttural groan. And fell with a thud to the ground.
Ahiga's breathing quickened. 'Thank you.'
Inola added, 'When are you getting married?'
Ahiga scratched at the mud.
Dakota poked his ribs.
'I don't know. Waiting for Seone.'
'To say yes?'
'Yes.'
Onacona smiled. 'I see you are always wrapping a blanket around Seone near the stream.'
Sweet Seone. Her braided black hair. Her mischievous smile. Oh, her fragrance.
Ahiga touched his warm cheeks. 'Very cold.'
Dakota said, tongue in cheek, 'She also had her blanket.'
Ahiga blurted out, 'It was still cold.'
'So two blankets needed,' said Inola.
The laughter echoed in his ears.
Ahiga pointed. 'Meat is ready.'
'Changing the subject?' said Inola sarcastically.
Ahiga looked up. The flap of the tepee opened. Chief Wohali straightened his headgear.
That terrible day. All of them on horses, in the canyon. A shot rang out. From the mountain on the left.
Neske fell. Bow and arrows scattered. His horse neighed, the muscles trembling. Chief Wohali bent down. His son had died instantly. Ahiga's hand holding the stirrup shook.
A few went in chase. But the white man left no trace. Wohali's eyes. Red all the time. His wife Behita with her stooped shoulders.
Wohali sat down.
'Onacona, tell me, what's the latest?'
'Chief, the whites have set up their homes.'
'Where?'
'A few miles from here.'
'What did you see?'
'Rifles and pistols.'
'And we have only bows and arrows.'
'Yes, Chief. We need to move fast.'
Ahiga's heart sank. His time with Seone at the stream. Finished.
Somebody said, 'Will we find water?'
'I don't know.'
The aroma of roasting meat arose in the air. Ahiga's nose twitched.
Wohali looked at the men one by one. Ahiga met his eyes. 'We will move tomorrow.'
The meat had been cut. Ahiga wrapped a bit in a leaf and took it to his tepee, to eat with boiled beans and corn. Should I call Seone?... not today, tomorrow.
Inside, his father, Kohko, was lying on a rug on the floor.
'How is your shoulder pain?' Ahiga said.
'Improving. Have put a wild mint poultice.'
Ahiga peered closer at the dark green paste. 'Ma always said this works.'
'Yes.'
'Here, take some.' Ahiga shared the meat with Kohko.
They ate.
Kohko looked up. 'Your bison?'
Ahiga nodded.
'First?'
'No. Third.'
'Good. You're getting better than Neske.'
Ahiga's cheeks turned warm. It was so quiet inside the tepee. Ma was the chatterbox.
The sound of a rattle. A sweet voice arose. Oh, that's Inola's wife, Neva. She's singing a lullaby.
'Sleep, my little one, sleep.
The buffalo are near.
The stars watch over you.
Sleep.'
'Did Ma sing this?' Kohko said.
Ahiga let out a sob. His throat burned.
Kohko touched him on his arm with his callused palms. 'It's all right.'
Somebody began playing a flute.
Ahiga bent and tightened his moccasins. He pulled the strap with the bow and arrows across his back. 'Father, I have to go.'
He parted the tepee flap and stepped out. As he walked, he patted his full stomach. He burped.
Most tepees were in darkness. The flute-playing stopped. He moved silently, and reached the outcrop.
'Hi Dakota.'
'All quiet?'
'Yes.'
Ahiga threw twigs and leaves into the fire.
They sat on their haunches in silence.
He turned to Dakota. 'Do you have anybody?'
Dakota stared at the fire. 'Not yet.'
He patted his friend's back. 'Be patient. You will find somebody.'
Dakota swallowed and looked away. 'Hope I'm alive till then.'
By 1 a.m., Dakota’s head drooped. He closed his eyes and drifted off to sleep.
Ahiga looked up. Neske. Ma. Ma. Neske.
A coldness at the side of his neck. He reached out with his hand. Blood spurted out.
The knife sliced through the neck.
As they stared at Ahiga, Austin whispered to his friend, Brock, 'The bastard's smiling.'
Brock leaned close. 'You're right.'
'I feel bad. A strapping young man.'
'Kill or be killed, Austin. You know that.'
Brock fingered the necklace. 'Look at the necklace.'
Austin peered.
Brock said, 'Take it. Give it to Susan.'
'What will I say?'
'Bought it at the trading post.'
'Good idea.'
He lifted the necklace, then wiped the blood off on Ahiga's leather trousers.
Austin and Brock beckoned with their hands.
Several men came up. They had tied their horses some distance away around a few tree trunks. The men walked the rest of the distance, coming in from the other side of the stream.
The men had brought burning coals with them in a hollowed-out bison horn. One by one, they lifted the flaps and threw the coals inside.
The tepees caught fire.
As the flames grew in intensity, the shouts of the Cheyenne rose in a crescendo.
Thick plumes of black smoke rose into the sky. There was an acrid smell.
As the families came rushing out, the frontiersmen opened fire. There were shouts and agonising groans. A woman sobbed as she held a dead child in her arms. Moments later, she was shot dead. A Cheyenne placed an arrow against his bowstring. A bullet pierced his forehead. Inola's throat had a large hole. Wohali soiled his pants. He sat up, murmured, 'Behita' before falling back dead.
Neva lay on her back, her baby on her chest. Both were dead. Right next to her lay an unmoving Seone, wearing a small heart pendant, drenched in blood. Blood flowed from wounds on the head, face, chest, stomach, and legs.
'Okay count them,' said Brock.
Two men walked about. 'Forty.'
They brought the shovels that had been kept in pouches strapped to their saddles.
They moved a few feet away and dug into the ground. The men let out grunts and exhaled.
The minutes passed. A small mound of mud formed at the edges. Everybody inhaled the damp smell.
It took two hours to build a large enough pit.
One man held the hands and another the feet and they threw the bodies into the pit. For the children, one man could do the job, holding their legs with one hand. They tossed them as if they weighed nothing. The bodies lay piled up, one on top of the other. Finally, they threw in Ahiga and Dakota.
The men stared at the pit. They wiped their faces with a kerchief. Some sat on their haunches, trying to get their breath back.
In the eerie silence, a coyote let out a bark followed by a howl.
They shovelled the mud back into the pit, and covered it. The men used the back of the shovels to tap down the mud and make it a smooth surface.
Austin went to the stream and washed the necklace. Now it shone in the moonlight. He placed it in his pocket.
With sweaty foreheads and open mouths they trudged towards the horses.
The next morning, Austin took out the necklace and presented it to Susan with both hands.
Her eyes bulged as she held it in her palms. 'So beautiful. Where did you get it?'
'Trading post. Wear it.'
She did. Stepped back. 'How do I look?'
'Beautiful.'
He reached out and kissed her. She nuzzled his nose. 'You're kind. Thank you.'
'How did the battle go?' she said.
'Easy. They ran away.'
She held Austin's eyes. 'Just like that.'
He looked away and said, 'Yes.'
A day later, the men poked the ashes with wooden sticks to look for valuables. Some found silver rings and beaded necklaces. Brock found a flute.
He played a few notes.
'Hey, can I take it?' said one of the men.
'Sure.'
Within a few days, the white settlers took over the land. They began building their cabins. In the daytime, the boys ran to the bank of the stream. They took off their shirts and jumped into the water, letting out squeals of delight.
They were not aware that other children of their age were rotting in a nearby pit, killed by their fathers. Sometimes, the women took the clothes and scrubbed them by the side of the stream. It was calm and peaceful beside the stream.
There was no sign anymore that there had been a Cheyenne camp anywhere.
Soon, flowers, grass and weeds would grow over the pit. The bodies would decompose. A few bones would remain.
Only the earth would remember.
Wednesday, June 03, 2026
'Politicians lit the fuse'
Column: Tunnel of Time
Shevlin Sebastian talks to a rioter
Fourteen-year-old Afzal of Jannagar bustee spoke of what he did on Monday, December 7.
“After the mosque was razed, my mother looked at me and said, ‘As a self-respecting Muslim you must go out into the streets and fight for your rights.’ What could I do? I went out and joined the boys. We were all shocked, we never expected it. It was decided a procession would be taken out. A crowd gathered.
“As we were crossing CIT Road my father saw me. He pulled me out, grabbed my ears, and said, ‘Go back home, don’t get into all this.’ But my friends were watching. How could I walk away like that? I broke free of my father’s grasp and joined the procession.
Afzal and I sat on the green patch of Park Circus Maidan. It was a clear day. A light breeze was blowing. Afzal had wide, big eyes. They were full of surprise and shock. He could not imagine he had been a party to such violence. Afzal was thin. He smiled now and then but could not conceal the guilt.
“The Muslims are very angry,’ he said. “They have never been so angry before, especially in West Bengal. But we are aware it is the politicians who create these problems. We have nothing against Hindus. They are good, decent people. But the politicians... they light the fuse and then go and sit at home, secure. Nothing happens to them. We are the ones who suffer. The poor suffer all the time. We are running out of food. Unlike you we don’t have a refrigerator in our homes.
“At Padmapukur we were attacked with stones and bombs. I saw young boys who never had the courage so much as to lift a stone transformed before my eyes. This is what happens in a crowd. I saw a boy my age pick up a bomb which had been thrown at us but had not exploded. He just picked it up and hurled it back. How did he get so much courage? Had the bomb burst at that moment his hand would have been blown off.
“We returned and attacked some shops on Park Street. We knew one grocery store owner was a known sympathiser of the Bharatiya Janata Party and used to provide funds to it. We attacked the store. I took part in the attack for a while, breaking down the door, entering the shop and grabbing packets of biscuits and chocolates. But after a while I was frightened and ran back home.
“Later we collected money from the mohalla to buy bombs and arms. In half an hour we had Rs 5,000. Had we gone around asking people for money for somebody’s marriage the same people would have turned us down. But on that day money was no problem. The police were of no consequence. We were not scared of them. In fact we frightened them away.
“This should stop. This hatred will lead us nowhere. We heard when the news of the demolition of the mosque spread to the bustee areas of Number Four Bridge, the Hindu cobblers there celebrated by distributing sweets. Will this not make Muslims angry? I am so confused. I am afraid a bomb will explode any moment and I’ll lose my arm.
“My father slapped me hard when I returned home. He asked me if I had gone mad and said I should not indulge in violence. What has happened has happened. Hindus and Muslims will have to live together. I agreed with him. I like the Hindus. They have helped me a lot. I work for a Hindu in his house as a servant, but I am also afraid. Who knows what will happen?”
(Published in The Telegraph, December 25, 1992)
Saturday, May 09, 2026
Many thanks to award-winning journalist Fr. CM Paul for this write-up
Captions: Swimmer Loraine Varghese; children's book author Vernon Thomas; my photo by Ratheesh Sundaram
Fr. Paul was former editor of The Herald, Kolkata, founded in 1839, and is now the Vice Principal, Sciences, at Salesian College Autonomous, Siliguri.
He was the Founder-Director of Radio Salesian and Salesian
TV-YouTube. He also established the Mass
Communication Departments at Don Bosco University in Guwahati and Salesian
College in Sonada, Darjeeling. And he is also the founder of the Mother Teresa
International Film Festival in Kolkata.
By C. M. Paul
In 1992, swimmer Loraine Varghese broke a silence that had
long shadowed Indian sports.
Her allegations of sexual harassment in national camps,
reported by journalist Shevlin Sebastian, marked the first time such claims
were publicly aired in post-Independence India. The scoop reverberated through
Parliament, exposing the darker realities behind medals and glory.
Today, more than three decades later, Sebastian’s name
surfaces again—this time in the literary world. The veteran journalist, with
over 4,500 published articles across leading Indian publications, has been
named a finalist in the UK-based Globe Soup international short story
competition.
Sebastian became a finalist at the Globe Soup Lit Fest in
London for his short story Tightrope Walk, an allegory about the state of the
world told through a man and his pet monkey. For a man who has chronicled the
struggles and triumphs of countless others, the recognition is a reminder that
his own story is equally compelling.
Born in Kolkata, Sebastian’s career began at Sportsworld of
Kolkata’s Ananda Bazar Patrika Group, before spanning The Week, Hindustan
Times, and The New Indian Express. His reporting has taken him from the Asian
Games in Beijing to the Cricket World Cup in Johannesburg and the Olympic Games
in Athens, weaving narratives that combined athletic triumph with human
vulnerability.
Sebastian credits his literary and journalistic leanings to
his Kolkata mentors: Vernon Thomas and Jesuit Fr Horace Rosario. Thomas was a
prolific Anglo-Indian children’s author who modelled discipline and
storytelling craft, and The Herald weekly’s editor Rosario as a mentor figure
who encouraged Sebastian’s early writing and helped him see literature as a
vocation rather than just journalism.
Sebastian’s career has not been confined to the newsroom. He
has ventured into fiction, publishing four novels for children, and his short
stories have found homes in diverse literary platforms. Singapore-based
journals like Kitaab and Borderless Journal, Toronto’s Scarlet Leaf Review,
Pune’s Active Muse, Guwahati’s Twist and Twain, and India’s juggernaut.in have
all carried his work. These publications reveal a writer unafraid to cross
borders, both literal and literary, in pursuit of narrative expression.
Yet, it is his courage in 1992—amplifying Varghese’s voice
against entrenched systems—that remains a landmark. At a time when athlete
protection frameworks were non-existent, Sebastian’s scoop forced uncomfortable
questions and set a precedent for investigative sports journalism in India.
His recognition by Globe Soup now situates him within an
international community of storytellers, affirming that his themes—justice,
resilience, and the human condition—transcend borders. For readers and aspiring
journalists alike, Sebastian’s journey is a testament to persistence,
versatility, and the enduring power of words.
(Published in Mattersindia.com)
https://mattersindia.com/2026/03/sports-scandal-reporter-lands-in-londons-globe-soup/
Friday, April 17, 2026
Condom’s Query
COLUMN: Tunnel of Time
By Shevlin Sebastian
A huge cry erupted in Condom Parliament on the first day of
the Assembly session: “Condoms of the world unite!”
After the shouting died down, all the multi-coloured condoms
sat down and waited for the Prime Minister Adam Condom to speak.
The PM cleared his throat and said, “For much too long, we
have been an exploited group. We are probably the only group in the world who
work to exhaustion on holidays like Christmas, Holi, Diwali, Independence Day,
the Pujas and the numerous bandhs. We rarely get a break at all.
“Except when a man suffers from a slipped disc or his wife
has left him or he is full of ‘Old Monk’ rum (then he behaves like an old monk
himself). Otherwise, it is just work, work, work all the time.
“And the most bitter pill to swallow (my apologies here to my
birth-control friends) is that the condom companies do not give us a share of
the profits. And yet, we have seen how, at the end of every month, company
executives take their profits (in crores of rupees) in their suitcases to the
banks and to their homes.”
Prime Minister Adam Condom stopped speaking and gazed at the
condoms sitting in tiers in front of him.
He raised his right fist and shouted: “I have a dream! I have
a dream that one day we will be recognised as a proper industry, with proper
working hours, and with provident fund and gratuity paid to us. We should also
be given incentives for reducing the world population so easily and cheaply.
“I have a dream that one day condom companies will share
their profits with us. We must stop being second-class citizens. It’s time to
shoot from the lip, rather than the hip… now I have a few suggestions to make.
“Firstly, we should give more money to Amnesty Condom
International, so that they can document condom ill-treatment throughout the
world. I have heard that in war-torn Ethiopia, the air force pilots are going
crazy. They are using one condom for several sorties. The reason is that they
are too poor to buy more condoms. (Question: what has happened to the proceeds
from the Band Aid concert?). The result is that our Ethiopian brethren are
grossly overworked.
“Nkoma Bwana, the Ethiopian PM told me over the phone that that
no sooner had his countrymen returned from an all-night raid, that they were
asked to go out again. Some of them have died of exhaustion. This is an extreme
form of exploitation. It reminds me of bonded labour condoms in our great state
of Bihar, ruled by that tyrant, Kaka Kaloo (Education: Class two failed).”
“Hear, hear,” the Condom Parliamentarians said, banging their
palms on the desks in front of them.
“I have also heard about the over-use of condoms by dictator
Bad Man Badmaash of Iraq. Ever since he managed to stay in power after the
great war and now that President Big Cat Bush has lost the American election,
he has gone into a frenzy of celebrations.
“Condoms in Iraq say that they are partying 24 hours a day,
and most of them are dog tired. And let me add here, and I request the Condom
Press not to report it, since children also read newspapers, that Bad Man
Badmaash does not even spare dogs. I’m sorry to say that it’s a dog’s world in
Iraq.
“Secondly, we need more money for STUDS [Sudden Totally Unexpected
Deflation Syndrome] research. In places like Santa Calcutta, the bold and the
beautiful are leading such active lives that STUDS is the inevitable result.
After all, we know from personal experience that no man is a machine.
“We need to find a vaccine to combat this growing disease.
Otherwise, our livelihood will be threatened. Also, in order to create national
awareness, the Rubber Dealers’ Association is hosting a seminar with the theme,
‘We need studs, not STUDS!’ International STUDS fighter Elizabeth Taylor will
inaugurate the seminar.
“But, you know, it’s so sad that although we care so much for
human beings, they care two hoots about our welfare. All they want is a good
time. After all, we have seen what happens regularly, late at night. Then the
man returns from the party, accompanied by a beautiful woman, a complete stranger,
and after he has persuaded her that he can show her the way to heaven, how
desperately he comes in search of us.
“He checks his wallet, looks under the pillow, raises the
mattress, opens the drawer in the cupboard and peeks into the medicine cabinet
in the bathroom. At that moment, they make us feel like the way the US treats
China: most favoured nation. But once they have used us, and you must have
experienced this, with what contempt and disregard they flush us down the
toilet. I mean, we work so hard and we get nothing in return. And in the words
of our greatest dramatist, Stiffspeare, ‘We doth protest too little’.”
Prime Minister Adam Condom paused and then he said, in a soft
voice, “I am sorry to sound so pessimistic. So here’s a joke:
Question: why are the babus of Condom Writer’s Building
similar to sperms?
Answer: Because one in a million works!”
The Condom Parliament, along with the PM, broke out into loud
laughter.
“I end my speech,” Adam Condom said, a smile still on his
face, “with felicitations to our sister, Kama Sutra Condom for becoming such a
hit among the young generation in India. The other day, while I was at work at
the Italian Ambassador’s residence in Chanakyapuri, his son barged into the
room and said, ‘Papa and Mama, do you know what comes between Meenakshi, my
Indian girlfriend and me?’
“And when his parents shook their heads, the son answered, ‘Why
KS, of course!’ Such is her popularity. It has spread through the length and
breadth of India.”
Kama Sutra Condom stood up, looking ravishing in a short,
frilly pink dress. The Condom Parliament erupted in sustained applause.
She said, in a husky voice, “Down with South Korean-made
condoms. We need better rights, better money and more media attention for the
working condom. Three cheers!”
(Published in Fantasy Magazine, January, 1994)














