SACW | 15 May 2004
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Fri May 14 19:55:45 CDT 2004
South Asia Citizens Wire | 15 May, 2004
via: www.sacw.net
[1] Bangladesh: Police inactive as Ahmadiyyas attacked in Rangpur
[2] India: Let us hope the darkness has passed (Arundhati Roy)
[3] India: The Big Idea: Back to the future (Praful Bidwai)
[4] India: India's New Era (Salman Rushdie)
[5] India: A Congress-Communist Coalition Augurs
Well for All (S. P. Udayakumar)
[6] Thoughts on the victory in India (Manu Bhagavan)
[7] India: Press Statement (All India Christian Council)
[8] Upcoming event: Network on Communal Harmony meeting on May 21 (Bombay)
--------------
[1]
The Daily Star [Bangladesh]
May 15, 2004
POLICE INACTIVE AS AHMADIYYAS ATTACKED IN RANGPUR, HR ACTIVISTS SAY
A Correspondent, Rangpur
A fundamentalist group attacked houses belonging
to Ahmadia community in four villages under
Baderganj upzila in Rangpur but police did not
take any action, human rights and legal aid
activists alleged.
They made the allegation at a press conference
here on Wednesday after visiting Dalapara,
Gazipara, Dhamapur, and Shibpur villages. The
attack was made on April 29.
Held at the Zila Parishad auditorium, it was
addressed by Khushi Kabir, Coordainator of
Nijwera Kori, an NGO. The team included, Sultana
Kamal and Dr. Hamida Hossen, Executive Director
and director respectively of Ayin O Shalish
Kendra (a legal aid forum), Rangpur Lawyers
Association Secretary Samsuzzman and Gonotantri
Party leader Afzal Hossen and representatives of
some local NGOs.
Khushi Kabir quoted local Ahmadia community
leaders and said about three thousand people
ransacked and looted their houses in the four
villages on April 29. But when contacted,
Officer-in-Charge of Baderganj thana Md Golam
Mostafa said he did not know anything about the
attack, she said.
During the visit, the community leaders told the
team that their members were isolated from the
society. Their children are not allowed to go to
school or madrassah and they can not go to
markets, she quoted them as saying.
Abdul High, a member of the community, told the
team that he is fleeing homes since April 29 as
police, instead of arresting the attackers, are
after him.
Jaedul, another member, complained to the team
that some local leaders of Zamaat-e-Islami barred
Imams of mosques to offer Namaz-e-Janaja of his
elder brother Nazrul Islam who died on April 7,
she said. Tension mounted in the area after the
incident.
Aiyunuudin, another member, said police arrested
his son Aiyub Ali though court granted him bail
in connection with an incident in Rangpur Sader
upzila. This is an allegation of police
harassment.
After the visit, the team called on Rangpur
Deputy Commissioner Anwarul Karim at his office
and urged him to take all necessary steps to
protect the Ahmadias in the four villages.
The victims told the team that after the attack
the OC refused to record any case.
Khushi Kabir told the newsmen that they were
surprised when the Baderganj thana OC said he was
not informed of any attack on Ahmadias on April
29.
______
[2]
The Guardian [UK]
May 14, 2004
LET US HOPE THE DARKNESS HAS PASSED
India's real and virtual worlds have collided in a humiliation of power
by Arundhati Roy
For many of us who feel estranged from mainstream
politics, there are rare, ephemeral moments of
celebration. Today is one of them. When India
went to the polls, we were negotiating the
dangerous cross-currents of neo-liberalism and
neo-fascism - an assault on the poor and minority
communities.
None of the pundits and psephologists predicted
the results. The rightwing BJP-led coalition has
not just been voted out of power, it has been
humiliated. It cannot but be seen as a decisive
vote against communalism, and neo-liberalism's
economic "reforms". The Congress has become the
largest party. The left parties, the only parties
to be overtly (but ineffectively) critical of the
reforms, have been given an unprecedented
mandate. But even as we celebrate, we know that
on every major issue besides overt Hindu
nationalism (nuclear bombs, big dams and
privatisation), the Congress and the BJP have no
major ideological differences. We know the legacy
of the Congress led us to the horror of the BJP.
Still, we celebrate because surely a darkness has
passed. Or has it?
Recently, a young friend was talking to me about
Kashmir. About the morass of political venality,
the brutality of the security forces, the
inchoate edges of a society saturated in
violence, where militants, police, intelligence
officers, government servants, businessmen and
even journalists encounter each other, and
gradually, over time, become each other. About
having to live with the endless killing, the
mounting "disappearances", the whispering, the
fear, the rumours, the insane disconnection
between what Kashmiris know is happening and what
the rest of us are told is happening in Kashmir.
He said: "Kashmir used to be a business. Now it's
a mental asylum."
Admittedly, the conflicts in Kashmir and the
north-eastern states make them separate wings
that house the more perilous wards in the asylum.
But in the heartland too, the schism between
knowledge and information, between fact and
conjecture, between the "real" world and the
virtual world, has become a place of endless
speculation and potential insanity.
Each time there is a so-called terrorist strike,
the BJP government has rushed in, eager to assign
culpability with little or no investigation. The
attack on the parliament building, on December 13
2001, and the burning of the Sabarmati Express,
in Godhra, the following year are fine examples.
In both cases, the evidence that surfaced raised
disturbing questions and so was put into cold
storage. Everybody believed what they wanted to,
but the incidents were used to whip up communal
bigotry in a haze of heightened Hindu nationalism.
Many governments - state as well as centre;
Congress, BJP, as well as regional parties - have
used this climate of manufactured frenzy to mount
an assault on human rights on a scale that would
shame the world's better known despotic regimes.
In recent years, the number of people killed by
the police and security forces runs into tens of
thousands. Andhra Pradesh (neo-liberalism's
poster state) chalks up an average of about 200
deaths of "extremists" in "encounters" every
year. In Kashmir an estimated 80,000 people have
been killed since 1989. Thousands have simply
"disappeared".
According to the Association of Parents of
Disappeared People in Kashmir, more than 2,500
people were killed in 2003. In the last 18 months
there have been 54 deaths in custody. The Indian
state's proclivity to harass and terrorise has
been institutionalised by the draconian
Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA). In Tamil
Nadu, the act has been used to stifle criticism
of the state government. In Jharkhand, 3,200
people, mostly poor adivasis (indigenous people)
accused of being Maoists, have been named in POTA
cases. In eastern Uttar Pradesh, the act is used
to clamp down on those who protest about the
dispossession of their land. In Gujarat and
Mumbai, it is used almost exclusively against
Muslims. In Gujarat, after the 2002 pogrom in
which an estimated 2,000 Muslims were killed, 287
people were accused under POTA: 286 were Muslim
and one a Sikh. POTA allows confessions extracted
in police custody to be admitted as evidence.
Under the POTA regime, torture tends to replace
investigation in our police stations: that's
everything from people being forced to drink
urine, to being stripped, humiliated, given
electric shocks, burned with cigarette butts and
having iron rods put up their anuses, to being
beaten to death.
Under POTA you cannot get bail unless you can
prove that you are innocent - of a crime that you
have not been formally charged with. It would be
naive to imagine that POTA is being "misused". It
is being used for precisely the reasons it was
enacted. This year in the UN, 181 countries voted
for increased protection of human rights. Even
the US voted in favour. India abstained.
Meanwhile, economists cheering from the pages of
corporate newspapers inform us that the GDP
growth rate is phenomenal, unprecedented. Shops
are overflowing with consumer goods. Government
storehouses are overflowing with grain. Outside
this circle of light, the past five years have
seen the most violent increase in rural-urban
income inequalities since independence. Farmers
steeped in debt are committing suicide in
hundreds; 40% of the rural population in India
has the same foodgrain absorption level as
sub-Saharan Africa, and 47% of Indian children
under three suffer from malnutrition.
But in urban India, shops, restaurants, railway
stations, airports, gymnasiums, hospitals have TV
monitors in which India's Shining, Feeling Good.
You only have to close your ears to the sickening
crunch of the policeman's boot on someone's ribs,
you only have to raise your eyes from the
squalor, the slums, the ragged broken people on
the streets and seek a friendly TV monitor, and
you will be in that other beautiful world. The
singing, dancing world of Bollywood's permanent
pelvic thrusts, of permanently privileged, happy
Indians waving the tricolour and Feeling Good.
Laws like POTA are like buttons on a TV. You can
use it to switch off the poor, the troublesome,
the unwanted.
When POTA was passed, the Congress staged a noisy
opposition in Parliament. However, repealing POTA
never figured in its election campaign. Even
before it has formed a government, there have
been overt reassurances that "reforms" will
continue. Exactly what kind of reforms, we'll
have to wait and see. Fortunately the Congress
will be hobbled by the fact that it needs the
support of left parties to form a government.
Hopefully, things will change. A little. It's
been a pretty hellish six years.
( Arundhati Roy is the author of The God of Small
Things and The Ordinary Person's Guide to Empire)
_____
[3]
Hindustan Times
May 15, 2004 |
Delhi Edition Pg 10: Edit Page
THE BIG IDEA: BACK TO THE FUTURE
by Praful Bidwai
May 14
This election marks a defining moment in our
politics, of the same significance as, say, the
post-bank nationalisation Garibi Hatao elections
of 1971 or the post-Emergency elections of 1977.
It opens up more possibilities for a politics of
transformation and popular empowerment.
The changes of the Seventies, although momentous,
were largely directed from 'above', by parties,
leaders and slogans. The latest verdict, people's
gut-level concerns and choices from 'below' have
played a decisive role. Political parties have
acted as their instruments.
The single-most important message is that the
Indian people comprehensively reject the BJP's
politics with its characteristic combination of
communalism, parochialism, divisiveness,
deception and unabashed economic elitism. Let's
put the issue bluntly. The BJP set out not just
to rule for another five years, but to firmly
establish a middle class-driven system, an Indian
version of 'property-owning democracy' based on
the 'India Shining' myth, in which the
underprivileged would be effectively
disenfranchised, the ethnic-religious minorities
would submit to Hindutva's majoritarian dictates,
and where rapacious corporations would rule
unhampered by democratic control.
This project, and the entire set of social and
economic policies that came with it, has been
voted out. The significance of the verdict goes
infinitely deeper than shifts in vote-shares,
striking of alliances, the burdens or advantages
of incumbency, appeals of different 'brands'
(like 'Atal' or 'Sonia'), or various strategies
of election 'micro-management'.
Three very dissimilar states capture the essence:
Gujarat, Andhra and UP. In Gujarat, the
electorate finally punished the BJP for its
viciously Right-wing, oppressively dualistic
economic policies, its years of misgovernance and
India's worst State-sponsored communal carnage.
The anti-BJP undercurrent, evident in all local
elections two years before February 2002, was
temporarily, artificially, suppressed by the
polarisation following the carnage, and the
absence of a political alternative. (The Congress
was then playing as Hindutva's 'B' team.)
The BJP received its worst drubbing in the very
areas (central and northern Gujarat) where the
violence was the fiercest. Modi's politics -
crudely communal, blatantly imperious, and using
language bordering on the obscene - has become a
huge liability. So has the neo-liberal legacy in
which capital thrives only by virtue of
deindustrialisation and casualisation of
production, and through rapacious labour
exploitation (witness Alang's ship-breaking
yards).
Andhra's results are an unambiguous rejection of
Chandrababu Naidu's corporate-CEO-style politics.
Naidu's Andhra was turning into
Chile-under-Pinochet, with massive transfers of
public assets into private hands, starving of
social sector spending and big tax-breaks for
corporates. For Naidu, attending the Davos forum
and blowing up huge sums on PR to impress
potential investors was always a higher priority
than redressing acute hunger or indebtedness
(which drove over 3,000 farmers to suicide).
Naidu stood exposed as a communally compromised
politician when he refused to criticise the BJP's
outrageous conduct and its defence of the Gujarat
pogrom.
As agrarian distress grew, the Andhras readily
compared his tall claims about information
technology with reality - IT's measly 2 per cent
share in state GDP and the state's falling
software-export rank. The people couldn't take
deception anymore. One more reason for Naidu's
rout is that Andhra was the only state where the
opposition mobilised people in a sustained way.
In UP, the BJP has not only suffered a halving of
its seats and substantial decrease in votes in
all regions. Its social base has shrunk: even
Brahmins are deserting it and the OBCs aren't
returning despite Kalyan Singh. The party's
defeat in Faizabad-Ayodhya, Kashi and Mathura
only confirms what's known: the temple issue is
dead.
The principal reason for the BJP's growing
unpopularity is agrarian distress, unemployment,
and popular exhaustion with Machiavellian
politics, reflected for example, in Vajpayee's
pitiable attempt first to get, and then divide,
the Muslim vote by twisting facts to present
Mulayam Singh as an ally.
The BJP may soon be out of UP's reckoning even as
the Congress revitalises itself through the
projection of youth, dynamism and transparent
earnestness. (That's Rahul's image at least
today). The BJP could shrink into what it was
before the mid-Eighties - a relatively minor
western India party, with 30 (or 50?) Lok Sabha
seats.
The Congress's performance has outstripped the
most optimistic projections, including its own.
The credit must go to the party's projection of a
left-of-centre identity, based on pluralism and
inclusivism, willingness to forge alliances, and
Sonia Gandhi's tireless, focused campaigning. She
consistently drew vastly larger crowds than
Vajpayee when she stressed gut-level livelihood
issues and unsparingly attacked communalism. She
has grown in acceptance and stature - as a
serious, dignified and yet accessible leader, who
is tough on the BJP but who never descended to
its gutter-level personal attacks.
Vajpayee's manufactured image no longer sells. It
has shrivelled badly in the past three weeks. In
any case, he's unlikely to lead the BJP into the
next election. The Congress did well where it was
combative and unabashedly left-of-centre. It
fared poorly where plagued by despair, drift and
confusion about what agendas to emphasise. It
must now rediscover the worth of good 'populism'
- a much-maligned word, once used to kill the
best programme designed for Indian children,
namely mid-day meals. The future lies in ordinary
people's sensibilities, not the Sensex, leave
alone global finance.
The Left has put up its best-ever performance and
assured for itself a moral-political stature far
higher than its 62 seats. This derives from its
fundamental commitment to popular sovereignty,
secularism, its leaders' intellectual qualities,
and its clean politics. A Congress-Left alliance
must form the core of the next government. To be
inclusive, representative and durable, it should
draw in Deve Gowda's JD(S), Mulayam's SP, and
Ajit Singh's RLD, besides the Tamil parties.
However, it would be a huge mistake to rush into
alliances without negotiating a proper,
comprehensive common agenda, which reflects
popular aspirations as well as rational
priorities. This will be important in four areas:
economics, social policy, institutional
structures, and foreign and security policy.
The economic priorities include major employment
programmes, quantum-jumps in social spending,
macro-economic correction through progressive
taxation and democratisation and reform of the
public sector, not its privatisation. Crucial
here is reversal of past policies which have
added to inequalities and regional disparities
and which generated nominal growth while
impoverishing people.
It's vital to reaffirm secularism and pluralism
actively by exemplarily bringing the Gujarat
pogrom's villains to justice, by resolving the
Ayodhya dispute through a formula such as V.P.
Singh's temple-plus-mosque, banning and
penalising Togadia-style hate-speech, and
extensively revising communal textbooks. Our
public discourse must change towards genuine
tolerance and respect for difference. Structures
and institutions corrupted by the BJP - the PMO,
the Akademis, the ICSSR-ICHR, Prasar Bharati,
numerous official and advisory committees - must
be thoroughly cleansed and reformed.
Our foreign policy has become unbalanced as
regards the US, Israel and the Iraq crisis. It's
basically disengaged from the neighbours, barring
Pakistan. India must return to its broad-range
policy orientation, which emphasises
non-alignment and a multipolar, non-hegemonic,
multilateral, peaceful and rule-based world
order. Similarly, our security policy must be
freed of the jingoism the BJP has imposed on it.
The nuclear policy must be turned upside-down,
with disarmament as the top priority.
This is a big agenda - but the minimum the new
government will need to command credibility and
authority and launch a politics of transformation.
_____
[4]
The Washington Post
Friday, May 14, 2004; Page A25
INDIA'S NEW ERA
By Salman Rushdie
The fall of the Indian government is a huge
political shock that strikingly echoes the only
comparable electoral upset, the defeat of Indira
Gandhi in 1977. Then as now, just about the
entire commentariat was convinced that the
incumbent would win; then as now, the opposition
was widely written off; then as now, India's
voters left the politicians and media with egg on
their faces. Both elections are high points in
the history of Indian democracy. An ornery
electorate that doesn't do what it's supposed to
do is a fine and cheering thing.
In the 21/2 years before the 1977 election,
Gandhi's autocratic "emergency" regime, initiated
after she was found guilty of electoral
malpractice in 1975, had been guilty of many
civil and human rights abuses, including forced
sterilizations and vasectomies. The National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition led by Atal
Bihari Vajpayee's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
was not by any means a dictatorship, but its
leaders have turned a blind eye to some terrible
deeds, notably the mass killings, mainly of
Muslims, in the state of Gujarat, where the
BJP-led state government itself is accused of a
role in the slaughter of 2002. The Congress
Party's success in Gujarat suggests that voters
have been sickened by what they have seen, just
as Gandhi's fall in 1977 was an expression of
national disgust at her government's brutalities.
The oldest Indian rivalries of all have
resurfaced in this election, as they also did in
1977. Then as now, much of the urban bourgeoisie
voted for the government, while the impoverished
Indian masses, in particular the rural poor,
mostly voted against it. The Indian battle for
centrality in the debate about the country's
future has always been, to some degree, a battle
between the city and the village. It is between,
on the one hand, the urbanized, industrialized
India favored by both the socialist-inclined
Jawaharlal Nehru and the free-market architects
of "India Shining," the new India in which a
highly successful capitalist class has
transformed the heights of the economy; and, on
the other hand, the agricultural, homespun India
beloved of Mahatma Gandhi, the immense
countryside India where three-quarters of the
population still lives and which has not
benefited in the slightest from the recent
economic boom.
It's no accident that the ruling alliance lost
heavily in Andhra Pradesh and in Tamil Nadu,
precisely the states that wooed information
technology giants such as Microsoft to set up
shop, turning sleepy "second cities" such as
Madras, Bangalore and Hyderabad into new-tech
boom towns. That's because while the rich got
richer, the fortunes of the poor, such as the
farmers of Andhra, declined year by year. The
gulf between India's rich and poor has never
looked wider than it does today, and the
government has fallen into that chasm.
The failure of the NDA's ubiquitous "India
Shining" slogan has backfired just as, in Indira
Gandhi's hour of defeat, her grandiose slogan
Garibi Hatao -- "remove poverty" -- was
successfully rewritten by her opponents as Indira
Hatao -- "remove Indira."
India's business elite has hastened to welcome
the Congress victory, and we shall have to see
how the change of government affects market
confidence. But the dispossessed of India have
dealt a mighty blow to the assumptions of the
country's political and economic chieftains, and
the lesson should be learned by all parties:
Ignore the well-being of the masses at your peril.
I have two immediate wishes for the new era. The
first is that the debates about "foreignness" can
be laid to rest. Those of us who are part of the
Indian diaspora, and who have fought for years to
have Indians recognized as full citizens of the
societies in which we have settled and in which
our children have been born and raised, have
found the attack on the Italian origins of Sonia
Gandhi, the Congress Party's leader and widow of
the slain prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, to be
highly unpleasant. Even more unpleasant were the
BJP's suggestions that her children, the children
of Rajiv Gandhi, were also somehow aliens. You
can't have it both ways. If Indians outside India
are to be seen as "belonging" to their new
homelands, then those who make India their home,
as Sonia Gandhi has done for 40 years or so, must
be given the same respect. Gratifyingly, the
electorate has shown it just doesn't care about
the "foreignness" issue. A BJP leader foolishly
said in the immediate aftermath of his party's
rejection that he thought it "shameful" that
India might be led by a foreigner. Such slurs are
part of the reason for the BJP defeat. They are
essentially racist, and must cease.
My second wish is that the study of India's
history can now be rescued from the extremists
and ideologues. The outgoing government's
politicization of historical scholarship -- its
determination to impose textbooks peddling a
narrow, revisionist, Hindu-nationalist vision of
India's past on the country's schools and
colleges, and its deriding of the work of the
greatest Indian historians, such as Professor
Romila Thapar -- was one of its most alarming
initiatives. The BJP has often seemed to want to
inflame our perceptions of the past in order to
inflame the passions of the present. Congress and
its allies have it in their power to restore the
atmosphere of cool objectivity that true learning
requires.
Delightful as it is to watch democracy on such a
scale in action, one doesn't have to give the new
government an unreserved welcome. Time will tell
whether this new coalition will hold or
disintegrate. The Congress Party will have to
relearn the arts of government after the long
wilderness years, and Sonia Gandhi -- who has
proved she has the stomach for the fight -- will
have to prove that she is not just keeping the
leader's seat warm for her son or daughter to
inherit, that she is a true, unifying leader.
Time will tell, too, whether the defeated BJP
casts off, in opposition, the velvet glove of
moderation that Vajpayee imposed during its time
of power, and reinvents itself as a hard-line
communalist force. If that happens the years
ahead could be full of conflict and violence.
Meanwhile, we can enjoy this rare moment of hope.
The writer is a novelist and essayist. His latest
book is "Step Across This Line," a collection of
essays.
______
[5]
A CONGRESS-COMMUNIST COALITION AUGURS WELL FOR ALL
by S. P. Udayakumar
(Submitted to The Hindu, May 15, 2004)
The Congress (I) and the Communist parties are
toying with the idea of coming closer to form a
coalition government at the Centre. The upshot of
it all may be, besides showing the door to the
BJP-led government, the Congress getting back its
reformatory vigor and the Communists occupying
the political center stage. The biggest winner
will be, of course, India who will gain a
progressive political climate and a new
orientation.
The ideological travails of Congress have been so
long and arduous that the social radicalism and
reformatory zeal were gradually lost on the way.
From 1934 onwards the party had an inner group
called the Congress Socialist Party of
Jayaprakash Narayan and others even as Mahatma
Gandhi was replacing the "gentlemanly class" as
the main voice
of Indian nationalism through large-scale
mobilization and organizational activism. The CSP
that claimed to have come to apply Marxism
correctly to the Indian situation had to exit the
Congress soon after independence. Pundit
Jawaharlal Nehru set out to transform
the country into an industrialized, secular,
liberal democracy with Western rationality and
science along with Gandhian values and vision
that completely contradicted the former.
Indira Gandhi, who inherited her father's
centralized economic planning, ended up
centralizing Indian politics as well. With the
Nehruvian model aground in the 1980s, it was all
downhill for the Congress party. Having lost the
confidence of both minority and
majority communities all over the country, the
party stood completely discredited with
accusations of corruption and inefficiency. The
party tried to revert back to their traditional
dynastic sycophancy and to prepare a road map for
their aimless political
journey under the leadership of Sonia Gandhi. It
is important to note that even now the Indian
voters have not handed the Congress party a clear
mandate to rule them. In the light of the above
situation, it is definitely in their best
interest to join hands with the Communists and
inject some radical ideology into their otherwise
sterile politics.
Communists, on the other hand, have often lurked
in the margins of national politics. The
Communist Party of India itself was formed almost
40 years after the Indian National Congress came
into being. As per the policy reversal of the
Sixth Congress of the Communist International in
1928, the CPI heeded on building themselves up
rather
than cooperating with the nationalist
organizations in the independence struggle. This
kind of "sectarian mistakes" which had kept the
party aloof from the mass movements of the period
did not offer them a good start. Broadening the
concrete Congress-led
national struggle for freedom to a vague
Soviet-led international struggle against
imperialism, they marginalized themselves even
further.
However, the mainstream Communist parties have
overcome some of the unfavorable assessments of
the public and begun to play seminal roles in the
national politics. They are no longer seen as
Moscow-bent or Beijing-slanted fire-spitting
rabble-rousers. Nor are they considered anymore
as hard-headed ideologues lost in their
rhetorical Utopian
fantasies. They are rather well respected
pragmatic politicians who combine revolutionary
agenda and responsible governance. They are
successful Chief Ministers, erstwhile Home
Minister, potential Prime Ministers, and
respectable elder statesmen to whom the country
can turn for advice and direction.
Despite the mutual contempt the Congress workers
and Communists have for each other, they do share
some commonalities. Congress has gone far away
from Mahatma Gandhi who wanted the party to be
disbanded on achieving independence. Communists
have not lived up to their ideology quite
strictly either. Both groups have varying degrees
of
corruption, opportunism, confusion, dilution of
political will, and lack of a viable political
program. However, if there are some sincere
patriots and genuine `possibilists' left in India
in the midst of all the gloom and doom, many of
them are in these two camps. Communists and the
Congress have a reasonably good number of leaders
with mature political background, personal
integrity and commitment.
The Congress-Communist alliance may bring one of
two things to the country. If the Congress sticks
to the Gandhis of lower order, and the Communists
stay tuned to distant borders, India may suffer
yet another political miscarriage and will have a
near-sighted government for a short period of
time. On the contrary, the country may gain much
more
if the former decides to look higher toward the
original Gandhi and the Communists look down at
the subcontinental ground reality they are faced
with. However, such a union may not result in
bringing about Gandhian Marxists or Marxist
Gandhians for obvious reasons.
Late veteran Communist leader E. M. S.
Namboodiripad commented (in a 1997 edited volume
Gandhi and the Future of Humanity) on the
complementarities and contradictions between
Gandhians and Communists. While Gandhi was
committed to nonviolence in his fight against the
British, the Communists's were for the
revolutionary overthrow of the
British rulers and their Indian minions. Their
motto was "nonviolence if possible, violence if
necessary" which was in direct contrast with the
Gandhian position. Nampoodiripad explained at
length how Gandhi's non-violent means "meant the
subordination of militant mass action to the
requirements of a negotiated settlement with the
British rulers."
Besides the means, Gandhians and Communists also
differed on the ends. Although Mahatma Gandhi was
committed to the cause of serving the poor, he
did not want the poor to be the ruling classes.
He was, according to Namboodiripad, "thinking of
replacing the alien rulers with India's own
ruling classes." The Communists, however, wanted
the
complete eonomic and political emancipation of
the industrial and agricultural workers, the
working peasants, toiling middle classes and
other oppressed and exploited sections of the
society.
Though critical of Gandhi's method of leading the
freedom struggle, his compromises with the
British rulers and his partiality for the Indian
vested interests, the Communists hailed his
service to the poor during the post-partition
violence. His admitting `failure' in his mission
in life "shows how great he was as a person."
Namboodiripad concluded: "We Communists,
therefore, hold him in high esteem, even while
continuing to be critical of his ideology,
politics, strategy and tactics."
Some of the other differences between Gandhi and
Communists could be their understanding of state,
economic development, social evolution etc. As
Bhikhu Parekh contends in his 1989 book Gandhi's
Political Philosophy: A Critical Examination that
Gandhi spent all his life fighting against the
state and he shared the rebel's deep suspicion
and biased view of it. For him, human as a soul
and the state (organized along the lines of
modern science) as a 'soul-less machine' could
not co-exist. This product of material
civilization was particularly unsuited to India
because it had a spiritual civilization. So
Gandhi felt the need for a "a new type of
non-statal polity" which he called 'enlightened
anarchy.'
Under this 'ordered anarchy' socially responsible
and morally disciplined men and women would enjoy
maximum freedom with minimum necessary order.
This polity would be based on non-violence; place
people at the center; build up courage, autonomy
and a sense of power among them; foster strong
and vibrant local communities; and regenerate
Indian society and culture. It would have a
central government but no centralized structure
of authority; it would cultivate a sense of
nationality but rely on autonomous and
self-governing local communities.
Gandhi never considered himself as a visionary or
a philosopher but as a `practical idealist' who
tried to combine high moral standing and a series
of 'experiments with truth'. His `Truth' was
neither positivistic nor absolutistic, and his
efforts were ongoing
experiments from which he kept learning valuable
lessons all the time. He had a unique knack of
communicating with the people of India by using
indigenous metaphors and methods that had been
there on the Indian masses' psyche. Equipped with
such flexibility and ingenuity, he could easily
motivate the people of India for mass political
action. That is why even today invoking the
Mahatma's name turns people's heads in India, and
Marx or Mao means little to most people.
An impartial scrutiny of both Gandhi and
Communists would reveal quite a few holes in both
their politics. Neither of them is perfect.
Informed Gandhians would readily admit that.
Communists have been forced to face that fact.
Now that independence has been achieved and that
we have come a long way from 1947, some of the
basic differences
between Gandhians and Communists can and should
be overlooked. After all, mainstream Communists
are not engaging in "class war" or random acts of
violence, and the largely marginalized Gandhians
are not colluding with the ruling classes either.
Combining the strengths of both Gandhian and
Communist politics and building up on their
shared interests such as Ahimsa/nonviolence,
Sarvodaya/egalitarianism, Satya/emancipation, and
Satyagraha/organized struggle, they can and
should steer Indian politics to a dignified
destination. Both groups need to upgrade
themselves and become more user-friendly. We are
not looking for an unprincipled mega-merger but a
strategic joint-venture to accomplish a specific
objective: to create a favorable political
climate in the country that will help the healthy
human seeds sprout, grow, and bloom into Gandhian
Leftists and Leftist Gandhians. To adapt a quote
of Swami Vivekananda, a few millions of such `Red
Indians' fired with the zeal for social justice
and fortified with eternal faith in human dignity
and freedom should go over the length and breadth
of India preaching and practicing the gospel of
salvation, the gospel of socioeconomic-political
emancipation, and the gospel of true independence.
S. P. Udayakumar is Managing Trustee of South
Asian Community Center for Education and Research
Trust, Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu
<drspudayakumar at yahoo.com>.
______
[6]
Date: Fri, 14 May 2004 19:23:31 -0600
Subject: Thoughts on the victory in India
Dear Friends:
With the swirl of hatred that has taken over the world in the last several
years, it is with immense pleasure and pride that I write in regards to the
just-completed elections in India, "the world's largest democracy." For the
past 5 years or so, India has been ruled by right-wing militaristic forces,
the heirs of the assassins of Mahatma Gandhi. In their hands, open
admiration of Hitler and his "final solution" became fashionable. In their
hands, gruesome violence became all too common, nowhere more visceral than
in a state-sponsored pogrom in the West Indian state of Gujarat two years
ago. In their hands, India marched steadily towards nuclear-powered
fascism. And with this as their record, India was brought to an election
campaign premised on the slogan "India Shining."
And now the people have spoken. The forces of fascism and hate have been
turned away. The liberal Congress party, in collaboration with regional
social justice parties and Communist forces, together in a massive secular
alliance have won an unexpected but resounding victory. It is time to
celebrate! And to marvel at the truly awesome and majestic power of
democracy.
Although Sonia Gandhi and her glamorous children Rahul and Priyanka, the
heirs of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, are the face of this victory, it is the
teeming masses of India who have spoken. Rejecting "reforms for the rich"
schemes, and instead demanding basic infrastructure, clean water, and basic
health care, India's millions have overturned the consolidated power of the
urban elite. The new view is simple: the people want universal justice and
sustainable development. The forces of sanity--and the soul of Mahatma
Gandhi--have returned to India. It is wondrous to behold.
Let's not be under delusions. There are many problems ahead. And the new
government must not betray the trust reposed in them, as constituent
elements have done in the past. But this election proves that in any event
the ruling elite will be held accountable. And the standard to which they
shall be held is one that celebrates diversity and pluralism, that respects
human rights, that demands equality and social justice for all.
India--now--is truly shining.
Sincerely,
Manu Bhagavan
Assistant Professor
Department of History and Political Science
Manchester College
N. Manchester, IN 46962 [USA}
______
[7]
ALL INDIA CHRISTIAN COUNCIL
Regd. Office: 8-2-601/B/17 Bhanu Society Banjara
Hills, Hyderabad 500034 Andhra Pradesh, India
President: Dr Joseph D Souza Secretary General: Dr. John Dayal
Please correspond with Secretary General at:
505 Link Society, 18 I.P. Extension, Delhi 110092 India
Phone (91 11) 22722262 Mobile 09811021072
Email: johndayal at vsnl.com
PRESS STATEMENT
14 May 2004
Christian Council congratulates people for
rejecting fascist cultural nationalism; Young
India votes for a secular future
New government must challenge poverty, purge
system of Hindutva fanatics, help economic growth
of minorities
[All India Christian Council President Dr Joseph
D Souza and Secretary general Dr John Dayal have
issued the following statement on the results of
the General elections to the 14th Lok Sabha]
The All India Christian Council congratulates the
people of India for summarily rejecting, in the
largest exercise of democratic franchise in
history, all purveyors of the politics of hate,
revenge and communalism, and their ideology of
narrow nationalism, religion and ethnicity. The
defeat of the Bharatiya Janata Party-Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh NDA alliance in the 2004
General Elections to the 14th Lok Sabha echoes
the united voice of an essentially young
electorate demanding a secure future for
themselves in which there is food and jobs for
all, genuine freedom of faith, cultural
pluralism, and opportunity of growth.
Slogans of India Shining and Cyber-politics were
not been able to close the eyes of the people to
the carnage in Gujarat 2002, the farmers
suicides in Andhra 2003 and the persecution of
small Christian community from 1997 to 2004. Nor
could the expensive propaganda hide the denial of
development to Dalits and rural poor, and the
absence of the minority communities from higher
echelons of the State, including the judiciary,
the police and the administration. The elections
therefore become a referendum rejecting attempts
to constrict secular space and reserve
development only for the elite.
The election results are a call for equity,
Freedom of Faith and the Rule of Law once more,
free of the shadow of groups that invidiously
hijacked the national agenda in 1992 and held
national peace and unity hostage for 12 years.
The fact that the BJP or its allies still rule at
the state level in the entire tribal belt of
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhatisgarh and
Orissa, remains a cause for concern. The divisive
forces of the RSS, aided and abetted by money
from Non resident Indians and the state
machinery, are still dividing innocent
communities in these states, and contaminating
the minds of an entire generation.
The Peoples mandate to the Congress Party and
its Allies also devolves on them the
responsibility to restore the confidence of the
people specially the Dalits and the Minorities
-- in the System, and in national institutions
including the Judiciary, the police and the
administration across the nation. This would
also demand entirely re-structuring the National
Commissions for Minorities, the National
Commission for Scheduled castes and the National
Commission for Women, which in the past six years
became willing slaves and vassals of the RSS and
the BJP.
There may be need to purge these institutions of
the RSS cadres and ideology that have been
planted in them over the last six years. This
would also involve expurgating from the
Educational system all that was forced into it in
the guise of defining culture, and rewriting
history, and which mitigates against the
Constitution and the wonderful variety of India.
The new Government must of course evolve priority
policies that provide a safety net to the poor,
the minorities and the Dalits from the
delinquency of globalisation and liberalization.
The Council also calls on new Government to take
steps to punish the guilty of Gujarat 2002 and
all those responsible for the persecution of
Christians in various states. The FCRA regime
must be dismantled, a Directorate of Minority
Education set up to ensure that the spirit and
letter of Article 30 of the Constitution is not
diluted, and restrictions now faced by minority
institutions in the education, medical and social
service sectors be removed forthwith. The
National Integration Council must be revived, and
measures taken for reparations to victims of
communal violence. The Tenth Plan must also
provide for the economic emancipation of
minorities the worst island of non-development.
For the Christian community, successive
governments and Parliaments have ignored our
demands for changes in personal laws of marriage,
inheritance and adoption. For fifty years, the
Dalits who profess Christianity have demanded the
same civil rights as their brethren in the Hindu,
Sikh and Buddhist faiths. And the regulations of
Visas have discriminated against Christian
priests and preachers. The Christian community
demands no more, and no less, than the rights and
privileges given to other communities as citizens
of a free India. The new government must honour
this basic guarantee of equality in the eye of
the law.
______
[8]
-------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 14 May 2004 05:39:59 -0700 (PDT)
From: suma josson
Representatives from various groups and individuals
will be meeting to discuss the above subject: NETWORK
ON COMMUNAL HARMONY. This meeting will be on May 21,
at 6 p.m. at Shramik, Dadar (E), on the second lane
behind the Swami Narayan temple. [Bombay]
Dear Friends,
After the recent election results, Ram Madhav, the RSS
spokesman has gone on record saying that it was the
dilution of the Hindutva ideology that was the cause
for the poor performance of the BJP. So this becomes
the context in which we have to work.
It has often been said that the secular forces come
together in times of crises and then battle such
emergencies with fire fighting endeavours and efforts.
When things calm down we go back into our routine
lives until we wait for the next outbreak.
But then Gujarat happened and we saw the unbelievable
take place. We also saw the slow poison of hate
silently spreading across the country, right from
textbooks, to institutions, to the Constitution.
It is in this context that some of us felt that we
should form a platform/network of various groups with
the central issue being that of communal harmony and
peace. We also felt that there is a growing need to
ensure that all these energies are coordinated and
that they draw from each other, to strengthen the
tasks on hand in a consistent manner.
Thus while each group goes ahead with itís own
programmes, this forum will merely be platform where
we collect information, disseminate, interact, and
help each other out.
The most important issue is that we must find ways and
means to address the unconverted.
Here are SOME points on which we can work together.
1) We are in dire need of speakers who can counter the
false propaganda unleashed by the RSS. Therefore it is
necessary to organise ëTraining of Trainersí
programmes. These speakers should come from various
backgrounds like colleges, trade unions, bastis and so
on.
2) To respond to the violation of secular values by
the state and the communal groups we need organized
forms of protest. This protest can be in the form of
demonstrations, petitions, letters to concerned
authorities, letters in the newspapers, legal
interventions wherever feasible, and area-wide
meetings on this issue.
3) Culture is a very important form of intervention
and we have to work out ways of implementing this.
4) We can run awareness campaigns in certain areas.
Groups can adopt a basti for example and run a
campaign there.
5) We have to put together our resources to ensure
that in case of violence/riots we can intervene
effectively.
6) Work out strategies for the coming Assembly
elections.
The organizational aspects of the platform
a. A small rotating secretariat
b. Specialized committees as and when the need
arises. Like for example one for the ëTraining of
Trainersí. One to do with intervention in Colleges
etc.
c. Directory of individuals/ groups wanting to
contribute in this work
d. E-group to inform about the activities
e. We meet once in a month
Anjum Rajbali
Ankur Dutta
Athar Querishi
Arjun Dangle
Bhau Korde
Charul Joshi
Dolphy DíSouza
Firoz Mithiborwalla
Geeta Seshu
Golandaz
Himmatbhai Zaveri
Irfan Engineer
Jaya Menon
Kumar Prashant
Leslie Rodericks
Mihir Desai
Nandkumar Vagarya
Priyanka Josson
Rajeev Kalelkar
Ram Punyani
Sandhya Gokhale
Santosh Panighri
Sudhir Paranjpe
Sukla Sen
Shweta Tambe
Suma Josson
TRK Somaiya
Uday Mehta
Vahida Nainar
Vasudevan
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Buzz on the perils of fundamentalist politics, on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South
Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
The complete SACW archive is available at:
bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/
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initiative, provides a partial back -up and
archive for SACW: snipurl.com/sacip
See also associated site: www.s-asians-against-nukes.org
DISCLAIMER: Opinions expressed in materials carried in the posts do not
necessarily reflect the views of SACW compilers.
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