Summary
The unanswered questions, the justice
delayed, the unbearable memoriesâ€â€the three days of 1984 when over 3000
Sikhs were slaughtered, have indelibly marked the lives of thousands
more who continue to exist in a twilight of bitterness and despair.
It
was outrage at this state of affairs that led Jarnail Singh, an
unassuming, law- abiding journalist, to throw his shoe at home minister
P Chidambaram during a press conference in New Delhi. He readily
acknowledges that this was not an appropriate means of protest, but
asks why, twenty-five years after the massacres, so little has been
done to address the issues that are still unresolved and unanswered and
a source of anguish to the whole community.
Who initiated the pogrom and why?
Why did the state apparatus allow it to happen?
Why,
despite the many commissions and committees set up to investigate the
events, have the perpetrators not been brought to book?
I Accuse
is a powerful and passionate indictment of the state’s response to the
killings of 1984. It explores the chain of events, the survivors’
stories and the continuing shadow it casts over their lives. Because,
finally, 1984 was not an attack on the Sikh community alone; it
was an attack on the idea at the very core of democracyâ€â€that every
citizen, irrespective of faith and community, has a right to life,
liberty and security.