The Auditor’s Tragedy
On hearing Ram’s cries of help, Sita insisted that Lakshman go to his rescue. Lakshman hesitated. If he went out to help Ram, who would protect Sita? He came up with a solution: he drew a line around their grass hut. ‘Stay within!’ he told his sister-in-law, ‘Within is culture, where you are safe. Without is the forest, where no one is safe.’
This story of Lakshman Rekha, the line drawn by Lakshmana around Sita’s hut, comes to us from regional Ramayanas like the Bengali Krittivasa Ramayana and the Telugu Ranganatha Ramayana, written about seven centuries years ago. It is not found in the old Sanskrit Ramayana of Valmiki, written two thousand years ago, or even the oldest regional Ramayana, written in Tamil by Kamban, a thousand years ago.
How do we view the Lakshman Rekha? A symbol of love, created by a young man to protect his sister-in-law? Or as a symbol of oppression, created by a man to control the movements of a woman. In the 21st century, much of feminist literature has conditioned us to see it as the latter. Lakshman, at best, comes across as patronizing patriarch. So it is in business.
Rules are created to protect organization. Some rules create efficiency while others de-risk the company. Together they contribute to the prosperity and security of the company. Together they ensure the organization becomes controllable, predictable, and manageable. Various technologies are created to ensure people follow the rules. There are technologies to communicate the rules: the various protocols, guidelines, regulations, procedures, and policies. There are technologies to measure if they rules are being followed or violated. There are technologies to flag repeat violations and escalate issues. Essentially rules help us domesticate and organize ourselves.
Then come the auditors: the internal and external, who check if we have complied. They go through our documents and our spending patterns and check if investor wealth is safe, and if implementation aligns with agreed upon strategies and tactics, and if the organization fulfills its obligations of society by paying taxes on time, and explaining all its costs and expenses that erode into profit. The auditor is the Lakshman of the organization, protecting the institution for the Board of Directors and Investors.
The analogy can upset many people for it equates Sita to the institution, and makes her property of Ram. It endorses patriarchy. Yet the relationship between the Board of Directors and the institution is the same as Ram and Sita. Without the institution (Sita), the Board of Directors (Ram) have no value or purpose, or even meaning. Their entire existence depends on nourishing and protecting the institution, and the institution in exchange makes them valuable, and glamorous, worthy of respect, even worship.
It is the auditor (Lakshman) who ensures institution is safe. He ensures rules are followed and even creates rules to ensure other rules are followed. To the people in the organization, he can seem like an oppressor. For his actions limit movement. His demands take away freedom and agility. The larger the company, the larger the investments, the more the rules, the more important the auditor, the less nimble is the organization. It takes away quick decisions, and puts obstacles on the entrepreneurial spirit.
It is the auditor who is hauled up when it turns out that the promoter has been misusing investor wealth to increase personal wealth at the cost of the institution. In other words, when the one who is supposed to be Ram turns into Ravana and gets the institution to break rules for his own benefit. It is the auditor who has to prove his honesty, and diligence, when there is a takeover. We often mock the auditor, or the company secretary, as the oppressor who forces us to comply with rules we don’t want to, who retards us, makes us inflexible and not very nimble, especially when we are large organization. But he is Ram’s younger brother, loyal and determined to protect all that his brother stands for.
HR Professional with 27+ years of work experience in diverse organizations and sectors.
7 年I don't think analogy is correct. Lakshmana was more of a Trustee and not Auditor.
Geologist at ONGC Western Onshore Basin, Vadodara Gold Medalist University of Delhi
7 年Like your articles very much. Lakshman rekha was a line between prikriti (nature, forest) side and sanskriti (culture). If Site can cross the Lakshman Rekha and can move from culture side to nature side, why Ravana can not move from nature side to culture side? Can one move from Matsya Nayay to Gram Vyavstha?
Digital Marketing Executive at FITnBLISS.com
7 年instead of putting lakshman rekha , lakshman could have given sita some device which would protect her from ravaan. less rules implies more creativity and better flourished institution
--
7 年I wish to refer to Rashtrapita Gandhiji's comment on Katherine Mayo's book in respect to DP that DP looks at the Ram-Sita relationship with the eyes of a 'Drain Inspector'. It's a sad example of misuse of talents which DP certainly possesses. Surprisingly DP has lots of fans who appreciate his depressing view point. May I suggest them to look at the works of Mr Vijay Agarwal (secretary to the former President of India) and Mr Subhash Chandra (of Z-News) who are uplifting, inspiring, hopeful and positive, always.
The whole analogy is flawed when using Freudian Psychoanalysis attempts to compartmentalise relationships, continually falling into a quagmire of love and oppression. Following in the footsteps of Sheldon Pollock who confessed “I wish Saraswati had invited me to be her lover” DP commits the same mistake, ignoring RESPECT. https://www.hindupost.in/society-culture/sheldon-pollock-pereverted-remark-ma-sarswati/ Whether BhismaPitah in Mahabharat was right or wrong but was RESPECTED on either side. Laxman was given a duty to protect he is complying with that whether Pratyaksh/Apratyaksh. Rules (ignorantia juris non excusat/Dharma) is/are to be followed or respected responsibly, applying inane philology tantamounts to adharmic interpretations like oppression, patriarchy etc where none exists. Its best DP refrains from this atrocity literature under the guise of scholarship.