That political journalists are more likely to find themselves on a spiral of cynicism is a truism less acknowledged than the one attributed to ordinary citizenry. And when the journalist is a veteran correspondent with over four decades of reporting on wars, elections, riots and politics, scepticism, even disenchantment, is inevitable. However Saeed Naqvi’s Being the Other is not merely a picture of dark disquiet; it is a relentless documenting of failures on the part of leaders, the state and virtually all of civil society. And such is his bitterness, such is his aversion to the word ‘secular’ (he prefers ‘multiculturalism’) that Naqvi goes so far as to say, “Partition, in a way, was the gift the Congress gave to the Hindu right, which in the fullness of time, is today’s Hindutva.” Sparing none, not even Gandhi, he goes on to declare “...even for Nehru, like all the other leaders, including the Mahatma, the secular project was negotiable”.