SACW | March 26-27, 2007 | Pakistan Cricket Team / Sri Lanka's displaced / India: anti fascist tribunal, secular schools, farmers, fundamentalists in Tamil Nadu, UK: Secularism and Muslims

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Mar 27 03:05:07 CDT 2007


South Asia Citizens Wire  | March 26-27, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2383 - Year 9

[1]  This innuendo about the Pakistan team is a disgrace (Mike Marqusee)
[2]  Sri Lanka: More than One Third of Tamils in 
B'Caloa Dist are Displaced (D.B.S. Jeyaraj)
[3]  India: Independent Tribunal on Rise of 
Fascist Forces and the Attack on the Secular State
[4]  India: Gyan Vigyan Vidyalaya - Schools for 
Democracy, Secularism, Equity and Scientific 
Temper
[5]  UK: Muslims can benefit from secularism and 
the debate it encourages (Reem Maghribi)
[6]  India: The situation in Bastar
[7]  India: National Farmers Rally against SEZ: A 
small report (Aseem Shrivastava)
[8]  India: In Tamil Nadu, fundamentalists play 
moral cops, even kill (Jaya Menon)
[9]  Book Review: Culture and colonialism (Nalini Taneja)
[10]  Publication announcement: The Politics 
Behind Anti-Christian Violence by Ram Puniyani
[11] Upcoming Events:
(i) 150 years of South Asian Resistance - 1857 (London, 30 March 2007)
(ii) Nigah Queer Fest'07 (New Delhi, May 25 to June 3, 2007)
(iii) Winter Course on Forced Migration (Kolkata,1-15 December 2007)

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[1]

The Guardian
March 26, 2007

THIS INNUENDO ABOUT THE PAKISTAN TEAM IS A DISGRACE

Reaction to the murder of cricket coach Bob 
Woolmer has more to do with stereotyping and 
hyperbole than the facts

Mike Marqusee

It is a serious matter - as umpire Darrell Hair 
found out - to accuse a team, purely on the basis 
of supposition, of cheating to win a cricket 
match. It is an even more serious matter to 
accuse a team, or a player, of taking bribes to 
lose a match. But to accuse a player or a team of 
being involved in the death of their coach raises 
the stakes by several orders of magnitude.

Hyperbole may be the bane of sports journalism, 
but the unsubtle innuendo linking Pakistani 
cricketers to Bob Woolmer's ghastly murder goes 
beyond sensationalism. The rush to judgment here 
is fuelled by that other bane of sports 
journalism, national stereotyping.

Pakistan's shock loss to cricketing minnows 
Ireland, which led to their elimination from the 
World Cup, is said to be "under the microscope". 
The implication is that the match was fixed and 
that this is somehow related to Woolmer's murder. 
As conspiracy theories go, this one is 
particularly weak.

Given the team's abject performance on the day, 
virtually all the players would have had to have 
been bribed and the bribes would have had to have 
been on a colossal scale - sufficient to 
compensate for the huge financial loss, public 
humiliation, and termination of careers that 
would accompany an early exit from the cup. 
Neither the putative motive nor means are 
credible here.

There is, to hand, an alternative explanation: in 
recent months Pakistan has played dreadfully 
inconsistent cricket. Weeks before the players' 
arrival in the West Indies they were beaten by 
South Africa 3-1, bowled out once for a measly 
107 and then for a barely more respectable 153. 
Ireland had already pulled off a surprise by 
tying with Zimbabwe days before encountering 
Pakistan.

The fact that three members of Pakistan's squad, 
including the captain, Inzamam-ul-Haq, were 
questioned by police on Saturday was blazed in 
banner headlines. That police immediately 
confirmed the questioning was routine and 
declared that the entire team was free to leave 
the country was buried in the columns below.

But never mind the facts, it's easier to stick to 
stereotypes. We all know that south Asians take 
their cricket too seriously (which they do), that 
corruption is rife in these societies (which is 
true), and that wiliness and duplicity are part 
of the oriental (or Muslim) character (which is 
idiocy).

Since the Irish humiliation, the Pakistan cricket 
management - the chairman of the cricket board, 
the selectors and the captain - have all 
resigned. This represents an instance of rapid 
accountability exceptional in either the cricket 
world or in Pakistani public life. Significantly, 
it leaves Pakistan cricket entirely in the hands 
of its "patron in chief", General Musharraf.

While "factionalism" is often cited as a source 
of the malaise of Pakistani cricket, little is 
said about the bugbear of authoritarianism. The 
US-backed military dictatorship - which controls 
all the cricket structures - is treated by the 
cricket media as a natural state of affairs.

Ironically, in recent days, the English-language 
Pakistani press has displayed a greater sense of 
proportion than its British counterparts. The 
headlines there have been about the clash between 
Musharraf and the judiciary. On March 9, the 
general sacked the chief justice, who was then 
roughed up and confined to his house. Soon after, 
lawyers protesting in Lahore were baton-charged 
and tear-gassed by police, who also vandalised an 
independent TV station in Islamabad. After eight 
and a half years in power, Musharraf clearly has 
no intention of loosening his grip. That is 
rightly considered bigger news than the 
disappointment on the field and the tragedy off 
it which have beset the cricketers.

Can I propose a ban on the use of the word 
"volatile" by British journalists in relation to 
Pakistani (or south Asian) cricket? Like cliches 
in general, it's a tell-tale sign of a failure to 
reflect, and from a media addicted to the 
heroes-to-zeroes script, somewhat hypocritical: 
witness the wild mood swings that accompanied 
England's entry and exit from the football World 
Cup and Freddie Flintoff's transformation from 
Ashes messiah to pedalo piss-artist?

Virtually all contemporary societies take sport 
too seriously. That's not about national 
cultures, it's about global economics. Thanks to 
the IT and media explosions, international sport 
is becoming ever bigger business and consuming an 
ever larger slice of public attention. Hence the 
escalating investments by broadcasters, sponsors 
and advertisers, and, on the other side of the 
equation, the atomisation of spectators and the 
decline of other forms of collective 
identification.

The Jamaican police and the ICC should rigorously 
investigate any possible link between Woolmer's 
murder and match-fixing. But for the moment, what 
remains most disturbing is the juxtaposition of 
the triviality of sport with the taking of a 
human life. That's hard for any of us to 
assimilate.

· Mike Marqusee is the author of Anyone But 
England: An Outsider Looks at English Cricket


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[2]

Transcurrents
March 16th, 2007

MORE THAN ONE THIRD OF TAMILS IN B'CALOA DIST ARE DISPLACED

by D.B.S. Jeyaraj

Batticaloa , the only Tamil majority district in 
the Eastern province is becoming a region of 
internally displaced persons. With the recent 
three - tiered military offensive by the army, 
special task force and air force, inflicting 
terrible destruction on civilian areas massive 
displacement is taking place. According to latest 
figures supplied by officials at Batticaloa 
district secretariat more than one - third of 
B'caloa's Tamil population of 422, 674 are now 
displaced.

According to civil administration figures the 
number of IDP's registered with the Govt was 156, 
384 on Thursday March 15th. Of these 21,497 are 
from the Trincomalee district and 7,654 from the 
Koralaipattru north (Vaakarai) AGA division. The 
rest are from five AGA divisions dominated by the 
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

The AGA divisions concerned are Poratheevupattru 
(Vellaveli) Pattippalai (Kokkaticholai) Manmunai 
West (Vavunatheevu)Koralaipattru West (Kiran) and 
Eravoorpattru (Chenkalladdy). According to 
revised figures from the B'caloa secretariat 145, 
619 people from 32, 565 families were living in 
these areas. Though the greater part of these 
five divisions were under LTTE control 
significant parts , particularly in the littoral, 
were under Govt control.

More than 127, 000 displaced people from these 
five divisions are registered with the Dist 
secretariat as IDP's. Tens of thousands were 
displaced in the latest military offensive 
codenamed "Operation human shield".Many of the 
earlier IDP's of registered IDP's are staying 
independently with friends and relatives. The 
rest both "old and new" IDP's are housed at 89 
camps called welfare centers. In addition to 
these registered 156, 384 IDP's an estimated 15, 
000 plus are yet to be registered. People in this 
category are living either with relatives and 
friends or living under trees.

Vaakarai or Koralaipattru North division had 14, 
301 IDP's at one stage. About 6500 have been re- 
settled in haphazard fashion. Most IDP's were 
reluctant to go but were compelled to do so by 
the authorities. If the displaced from six AGA 
divisions including Koralaipattru North are taken 
together the number of registered displaced 
persons in Batticaloa exceeds 140, 000. If the 
estimated unregistered 15, 000 IDP"s are added on 
the number reaches more than 155,000. This 
amounts to more than one - thirds of the total 
Tamil population (422, 674)in B'caloa.

The district administrative machinery is 
struggling to cope with this rapid increase in 
IDP's. One method resorted to is to forcibly re- 
settle some of the IDP"s from Trincomalee 
district in their original villages. Their 
"vacancies" will be filled by the new B'caloa 
refugees it is envisaged. But most IDP's are 
reluctant to move out in an uncertain climate and 
tensions are rising. One notable incident 
illustrates the situation vividly.

Displaced persons staying at five refugee camps 
in Batticaloa district were forcibly removed to 
Trincomalee district in a sudden "operation" 
masterminded by an Assistant Superintendent of 
Police around noon on Thursday March 15th. Though 
exact figures are not known NGO sources said that 
nearly a thousand people were taken against their 
will in thirty buses to Trincomalee district.

The Batticaloa district Government Agent or 
divisional secretaries were not informed of this 
action by the authorities concerned. An NGO 
official said that civil administration officials 
in B'caloa were totally in the dark when informed 
of the incident.

A Sinhala speaking ASP had come down from 
Trincomalee to supervise the entire forced re- 
location. He was acting on authority provided by 
the Trincomalee Government Agent who is a retired 
major - general of the Sri Lankan army.

According to informed sources 30 buses were used 
in the operation. Five camps for Internally 
displaced persons (IDP's) staying at refugee 
camps known as welfare centers were the targets. 
The five camps were located at 
Savukkadi,Aiyankerni, Palaacholai, Kirimutti and 
Kiran in the Eravoorpattru (Chenkalladdy) and 
Koralaipattru West )Kiran) AGA or Pradeshiya 
divisions.

Six buses were parked near each IDP camp at five 
places. Police officers brought from Trincomalee 
along with Security personnel deployed in B'caloa 
district swooped down on the five camps suddenly 
and began forcibly removing people to the buses. 
While hundreds of people fled the camps to avoid 
being taken to the buses many others particularly 
those senior in age were "caught".

People were forced to bring their meagre 
belongings along and packed into buses. The 
belongings were put in one bus while the human 
cargo was packed into the other five buses parked 
at each of the five camps. Some people were 
cooking at the time but had to leave food and 
utensils behind. Others had to leave their drying 
clothes which they had washed earlier.

It is also alleged that family units were 
ruptured as some children were away in temporary 
"school" and other members were away at the time 
or had fled.

In an operation conducted with military precision 
and brute force the roughly 25 - 35 people were 
herded into each of the 25 buses with Policemen 
guarding them. Their belongings "travelled" 
separately in five buses. The name of the ASP 
from Trincomalee who "commanded" the operation is 
not known.

All peeople forcibly removed were originally from 
nine Grama Sevakha or Village Services divisions 
in Muthur and Eechilampatru in Trinco dist. . The 
nine GS divisions were Mallikaitheevu,Periyavely, 
Pattithidal, Kiliveddy, Bharathypuram, Menkaamam, 
Kanguveli, Iruthayapuram and Paalathadicenai.

The people are being taken to a transit camp in 
Kiliveddy first. They will be re- settled in 
their own villages in due course.

With displacement on a massive scale being 
underway in B' caloa district due to military 
action the Govt is now planning to re- locate 
IDP's from Trincomalee dist to their own places 
and fill the "vacancies" with new B'caloa IDP"s.

While the Tamil inhabitants of certain places 
considered militarily "strategic" like Sampoor, 
Koonitheevu, Senaiyoor, Ilakkanthai, 
Kattaiparichaan, Ilankaithuraimuhathuvaaram, 
Nallur, Pattalipuram etc in Trinco are not being 
allowed to return the Govt is applying force to 
re- settle others from places .

The people however are unwilling to be re- 
settled as the security situation is fragile and 
large - scale hostilities could break out at any 
time. This could result in further displacement 
tey fear.

Another problem is that all infra - structure in 
Muthur and Eechilampattru divisions are 
destroyed. Most dwellings too are destroyed. 
Besides their belongings left behind have been 
looted. Also the re- located people are being 
forced to live amidst poor surroundings in 
makeshift shelters akin to an IDP camp.Most 
people feel it would be better to remain in 
B'caloa and re- locate only after a permanent 
peace is assured.

This is the reason for their reluctance to move 
out. The UNHCR has emphasised that no one should 
be forces to return against their will. But the 
Rajapakse regime well - known for flouting 
civilised norms is bent on removing this segment 
of the IDP"s while creating more IDP"s through 
shelling and bombing.

One reason for the Government's strong show of 
force in re-locating IDP"s is the incident on 
March 12th. On that day 2803 people from 771 
families from Trincomalee district were 
officially scheduled to be removed from the IDP 
camps in B'caloa. But when 35 buses moved in most 
people ran away and escaped forcible removal. 
Only 781 people from 228 families were taken away.

Authorities were miffed over this incident and 
Thursday's operation was a sequel to the earlier 
one. Most people taken ere those who avoided re- 
location on March 12th.

Meanwhile three Ministers from the North - East , 
Riyaz Badiuddeen, Basheer Segu Dawood and Ameer 
Ali were attending a meeting at the Sithandy camp 
to discuss matters of IDP re- settlement. They 
were inaccessible to the media and it is not 
known whether they were aware of this forcible 
removal incident or not.

The UNHCR in a press release issued in Geneva 
drew attention to the emerging crisis."The 
government, through local officials, has made an 
urgent appeal for immediate food assistance for 
at least the next four weeks. With existing 
displacement sites already overcrowded and 
continued difficulties in allocating land, we are 
concerned about the welfare of the displaced in 
the district" the release said."As fighting 
continues, more people may be forced to flee, and 
we have asked the government to step up efforts 
to meet the needs of the displaced."it added.

The UNHCR also referred to the pressure exerted 
on IDP's to return home against their will. "At 
the same time, UNHCR and other agencies are 
monitoring the return of civilians from six 
divisions in Batticaloa to the Trincomalee 
district. The returns began yesterday." the 
statement said.

"More than 300 people have already been 
transported to a transit centre in Killaveddi. 
The Government of Sri Lanka has assured us that 
all return movements will be voluntary.

However, interagency monitoring reports from 
Batticaloa indicate that heavy pressure has been 
applied on internally displaced people, IDPs, 
including local authority statements that 
assistance will be stopped if they stay in 
Batticaloa.

This pressure, coupled with security concerns in 
the sites for internally displaced people, has 
forced many IDPs to return to Trincomalee even 
though they have expressed serious reservations 
about the security situation in their areas of 
origin.

UNHCR is continuing to advocate for voluntary 
return, without undue pressure or duress. We have 
offered to accompany the process. UNHCR insists 
on removing the obstacles for return and we want 
to help prepare for conducive conditions for any 
return. " the statement further said.

Another disturbing development was the alleged 
abduction of youths from IDP camps by the 
Breakaway LTTE faction headed by Vinayagamoorthy 
Muraleetharan alias "Col" Karuna.The Amnesty 
International issued a statement on March 13th 
over this issue. Relevant excerpts are given 
below -

"Armed groups, some identified as part of a 
breakaway group of Tamil Tigers known as the 
Karuna faction, are infiltrating camps for newly 
displaced people and abducting residents, 
according to sources known to Amnesty 
International.

Tens of thousands of people have been fleeing 
their homes after intense fighting in the eastern 
region of Batticaloa over the weekend, pushing 
the number of displaced people to well over 
120,000.

"We are hearing reports of armed men, wearing the 
uniforms of the Karuna faction, roaming the camps 
and even distributing relief goods," said Purna 
Sen, Asia Pacific Direct at Amnesty 
International. "The Karuna faction appears to 
operate throughout Batticaloa town with the 
complicity of the Sri Lankan authorities."

The military action of the Karuna faction in the 
east has increased violence and displacement. 
Analysts observe that the Sri Lankan Army 
tolerates its military camps as the Karuna 
faction has assisted in the Sri Lankan military 
campaign against the Tamil Tigers.

"The people who have been forced to flee the 
fighting are in an extremely vulnerable position: 
they have left behind their livelihoods and their 
homes, they may not know the area and they are 
likely to be very scared. The government has a 
responsibility to ensure that camps are safe and 
civilian in nature - it is unacceptable for men 
with guns to be wandering around as if they're in 
control."

There have also been reports of armed men 
abducting young people from internally displaced 
people (IDP) camps. In one previously unreported 
incident on 9 March, a 15-year-old boy was 
approached by a white van as he waited for a bus 
at a temple near an IDP camp. Armed men tried to 
pull him into the van, but his struggling and 
screams attracted a crowd and the abductors fled. 
A witness said members of the Sri Lankan army 
watched the incident but did not step in to help 
the boy.

Food shortages and overcrowding in the camps for 
displaced people are another concern and Amnesty 
International is calling on the government to 
ensure it provides food, water, housing and 
medical care to all those who have been displaced 
by the fighting.

"As the fighting continues, we fear even more 
people will be forced to seek protection in the 
camps - and basic necessities like food and water 
will be stretched even further," said Purna Sen. 
"The government must act now to ensure supplies 
can meet the increasing demand."

Amnesty International is also concerned at 
reports of people who have been displaced being 
forced to resettle in the north of the country. 
Over the weekend displaced people were asked to 
leave Batticaloa to go to the north-eastern town 
of Muthur. Around 40 buses transported them away; 
some of the people apparently did not wish to go.

In a welcome move, the Sri Lankan government 
invited the UN Secretary General's Representative 
on internally displaced people to visit at the 
opening of the UN Human Rights Council earlier 
this week. Given the humanitarian crisis, Amnesty 
International urges the government to allow the 
visit to take place as soon as possible.".

Meanwhile the United Nations Emergency Relief 
Coordinator called on both sides in strife-torn 
Sri Lanka to allow humanitarian assistance to get 
through to those civilians trapped on the 
frontlines, while also highlighting the plight of 
over 130,000 people in the east of the island 
forced to flee their homes because of the recent 
upsurge in fighting.

"I am extremely concerned that tens of thousands 
of civilians have had to flee their homes once 
again in eastern Sri Lanka due to the new 
escalation in violence. I appeal to both parties 
in the conflict to respect the lives of the 
civilians in accordance with international 
humanitarian law," said Under-Secretary-General 
for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes.

"My main worry at the moment is for the civilians 
who have been unable to leave the conflict zones. 
The UN agencies are unable to operate in 
frontline areas and therefore cannot help the 
civilians living there," he said. "All parties to 
the Sri Lanka conflict must grant access to 
humanitarian agencies so that they can help those 
trapped in the crossfire."




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[3] 

INDEPENDENT PEOPLE'S TRIBUNAL ON RISE OF FASCIST 
FORCES AND THE ATTACK ON THE SECULAR STATE
New Delhi: March 20-22, 2007


About three hundred women and men from different 
states of India who had confronted communal 
campaigns and experienced its brutality had 
assembled in Delhi from 20-23 March to give their 
testimony to an independent people's tribunal 
organized by a Delhi based voluntary 
organization, ANHAD and Human Rights Law Network. 
They consisted of people who have suffered mental 
and physical torture, driven out of their homes 
and have lost their dear and near ones. The 
testimonies rendered by them before the tribunal 
have clearly demonstrated that communalization is 
on a fast track in the country and a take over of 
the state by fascist forces is a distinct 
possibility. They shared their pain and anguish 
the myriad ways in which communal forces are 
expanding their sphere of influence, both through 
propaganda and coercion.

Those who deposed before the tribunal came from 
16 states. These included: Gujarat, Rajasthan, 
Maharashtra, Goa, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, 
Jharkhand, Chattisgarh, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil 
Nadu, Orissa, Manipur, West Bengal, Nagaland, 
Jammu & Kashmir.  Their depositions were 
supported by affidavits and documents. These 
depositions clearly brought out the strategies 
employed by the communal forces to further their 
influence both in the rural and urban areas.

Most of these activities led to serious 
violations of human rights and dignity of women. 
Although, these atrocities are locally specific, 
there are certain uniform, discernible 
tendencies. The deionization of minorities, both 
Muslims and Christians, and their consequent 
marginalization and physical attack has been 
noticed all over the country. It is particularly 
important that the states in which the Bharatiya 
Janta Party (BJP) is in power like Gujarat, 
Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, this has been quite 
widespread. The victims of communal aggression 
have failed to get any help form the state. The 
role of the police is particularly dubious, as in 
most cases, the victims were not even able to 
file  FIR. Often it is noticed that the victims 
are turned into perpetrators of crime. As a 
result the minorities feel a sense of 
helplessness. In most states the testimonies 
indicate that a situation akin to that of Gujarat 
is developing.

Another unfortunate trend is the ghettoization of 
the minorities since they feel that they are not 
safe in the mixed localities they tend to seek 
safety in the company of co-religionists. This 
actually increases a fear psychosis. Moreover, it 
tends to destroy the secular character of social 
life.

Several other disturbing trends were noticed 
across the states. Some of these are:

Systematic clearing or dispossession of lands 
belonging to the minority communities.

Communalisation of bureaucracy, especially lower 
level officials, police and district 
administration and the injustice faced by the 
minority communities at their hands.

The emergence of a clear pattern of activities by 
Hindutva forces to ferment troubles where there 
may have been none.

Inroads being made by Hindutva forces among the 
oppressed, i.e. the Dalits and the Tribals and 
the hinduisation of their cultural practices.

The hurdles faced in advocating justice for the minority communities.

The criminal justice system in several states 
appears to be under the influence of Hindutva 
forces. Consequently we see clear initiatives of 
false cases being foisted against innocent 
Muslims and they are being forced to undergo 
repression behind bars. Also no or inadequate 
compensation was provided to the victims and 
medical assistance to the injured was denied.

Saffronisation is increasingly impacting on 
economic activity. Ghettoisation through 
socio-economic boycott renders these communities 
further vulnerable to other forms of violence.

The criminal justice system has failed to protect 
the rights of minorities and has failed to punish 
the perpetrators.

The textbooks are saffronsiationed.

Testimonies underlined an increasing role of 
religious leaders in communal mobilization.

Several pamphlets with anti-minority propaganda 
were circulated in different states.

The Jury of the Tribunal consisted of the 
following: Prof. K.N. Panikkar, Justice Suresh, 
Justice S.N. Bhargava, Dr. Asghar Ali Engineer, 
Ali Asghar, Syeeda Hameed, Prof. Akoijam Bimol, 
Prof. Subhranjan Dasgupta, Nikhil Wagle, Kumar 
Ketkar, Dr. Sandeep Pandey, Annie Raja, Gagan 
Sethi, John Dayal, Justice Hosbet Suresh, Vincent 
Manoharan, Dr. Angana Chatterjee, Dr. K. M. 
Shrimali, Dr. Ram Puniyani, Henri Tiphagne, Prof. 
Kamal Mitra Chenoy, Jaya Mehta, Dr., Prof. 
Purshottam Agarwal, S. Irfan Habib, Sheetla 
Singh, Uma Chakravarty, Dr. R Vashum, Lalit 
Surjan.

Tribunal Organized by: ANHAD and Human Rights Law Network (HRLN).
Supported by:     Aman Samudaya, AVHRS, Insaaf, 
Janvikas, Peace, People Research Society, PUCL 
Rajasthan, Sandarbh, Vikas Adhyayan Kendra.


______


[4]

GYAN VIGYAN VIDYALAYA

Community Schools for Democracy, Secularism, Equity and Scientific Temper

Where as our constitution decrees that the Indian 
state shall be based on values such as Democracy, 
Secularism and Equality, it is a matter of grave 
concern that many deliberate interventions and 
actions are weakening these basic foundations of 
our country. In particular, education through 
certain kind of schools is being used to promote 
obscurantism and hatred based on religious and 
other social differences. While the struggle must 
go on to pressurise the Governments to curb and 
outlaw such unconstitutional educational 
practices, it has become increasingly evident 
that mere pleas for state intervention will not 
suffice. A much more deep and extensive civil 
society effort to spread values enshrined in our 
constitution at grass -roots has become a dire 
need. The setting up of Gyan Vigyan Vidyalayas 
(GVV's) by Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti(BGVS) stems 
from such an understanding.

Through Mass Literacy Campaigns, BGVS has in the 
past fifteen years attempted to harness the 
idealism of crores of volunteers for improving 
the conditions of the impoverished of the 
country. Consequently, a demand emerged from the 
grass roots for education and schools that 
promote values of democracy, secularism, equality 
and scientific thinking. It is this demand that 
BGVS has chnnelised into Gyan Vigyan Education 
Programme, and specifically, GVV's, in the past 
two years.

Opening and Managing a GVV

A GVV can be opened by the community, other 
social and mass organization or, could be a 
school of the Government, but must fulfill the 
following conditions:

A GVV shall not belong to an individual or a 
single family and will not be used to generate 
personal profit. It is a community rather than a 
commercial venture.
Every GVV shall be managed by a School Management 
Committee (SMC).Half the members of the SMC must 
be women, preferably mothers of children in a 
particular GVV. The other half shall be composed 
of representatives of dalits and other 
marginalized groups, some elected panchayat 
members, local teachers and a representatives of 
the local BGVS unit.
Every GVV shall function like a community center. 
It shall also function as the village library, 
children's activity center, a self-help group of 
the mothers of the children studying there and a 
primary health center.
Each GVV shall be registered and accredited to 
the relevant education authority. The 
registration shall be in the name of the SMC, and 
not BGVS
The school shall be managed by the SMC. Selection 
of teachers and payment of their honararium, 
making available a place, land and rooms, 
teaching-learning materials shall be the tasks of 
the SMC's. For this the SMC shall mobilize 
resources from the community. It may charge 
nominal fees from some children, but no poor 
child shall be denied access. Thee will be no 
project or NGO funds available to the GVV for its 
day to day running.
  Teaching - Learning Process

Since GVV's are accredited schools, they will 
have to use the state syllabus and books, but 
they will be transacted differently. Teacher 
orientations, preparation of supplementary 
materials, teacher handbooks and other academic 
tasks shall be the responsibility of BGVS.

The T-L methodology shall be based on creating a 
fear-free learning environment, and centered 
around activity, exploration and discovery, 
critical analysis and creativity, keeping the 
child's social and cultural location in mind. In 
the process values pertaining to democracy, 
secularism, cooperation, respect for pluralism 
and peace will be transacted.

No particular religion shall be promoted in the 
GVV, but respect for each religion will be 
fostered. Accordingly, songs, stories and 
activities promoting equality and respect for 
different identities shall replace religious 
prayers and rituals.

  Where and How Many

The total number of GVV's set up till March 2007, 
in less than two years, is 1102. Over 4000 
teachers have been trained for the purpose during 
this period. The numbers are growing, and the 
demand is more than the BGVS capacity to train 
teachers! The state-wise break up at this point 
of time is the following:

Assam - 449, Bihar - 110, Orissa - 192, Jharkhand - 220, UP - 25,

Uttarakhand - 02, MP - 60, Gujarat - 10, Chhatisgarh - 34

At an underestimate of Rs. 2 lakhs for school 
infrastructure per GVV, the community has already 
spent or committed to spend Rs. 22 crores for the 
1102 GVV's. And at an average salary of Rs. 1000 
per teacher per month, the community has already 
paid Rs. 10 crores as teacher honararium in the 
past two years. Against this, the BGVS has spent 
around Rs. 1.5 crores in residential teacher 
trainings, material preparation and monitoring in 
the same period. So for every rupee invested by 
the BGVS, the community has invested over twenty 
rupees.

       About BGVS

Set up in 1989 to extend the Mass Literacy 
Campaigns all over the country, BGVS has 20 state 
units, 328 district units with sub-district units 
involving nearly four lakh volunteers. BGVS works 
in Literacy, Continuing Education, Health, 
Children's Education, Self-Help Groups and Samata 
for women, Watershed Development, Cultural Action 
and to spread scientific temper.

For further Information

(donations - sorry BGVS does not accept foriegn 
funds - and expressions of solodarity,

please contact Vinod Raina at:
1. Basic Education Resource Center (BGVS)
     E7/32B, Arera Colony, Bhopal 462016
2. BGVS, YWA Hostel No. 2, G-Block
     Saket, New Delhi 110 017

bgvs_delhi at yahoo.co.in

vinod.raina at vsnl.com

(a GVV handbook in Hindi is available for Rs. 50 at the above addresses)


______


[5]


The Guardian
March 19, 2007

A LITTLE MORE CONVERSATION

Muslims can benefit from secularism and the 
political and theological debate it encourages.
by Reem Maghribi

I am involved with at least two organisations 
which work on the basis of a belief in secularism 
- SharqMagazine.com, which presents and addresses 
issues with nationalism as a basis of identity, 
and British Muslims for Secular Society, an 
organisation seeking to promote a total 
separation of religion and state. It is therefore 
appropriate for me to outline my main argument in 
favour of secularism.

The intention of Islam was that all people live 
together as Muslims under the ideology preached 
in the Qur'an.

We are not all Muslims, and even in countries 
where the vast majority are, the rules of Islam 
are not preached and enforced in their entirety. 
An ideology can only be practiced in its 
entirety. It is not moral or just, for example, 
to cut off the hand of a thief if you have not 
first ensured factors which should have prevented 
him needing to steal, such as being cared for by 
his community, family and government, and are 
equally preached in Islamic ideology, are in 
place.

Additionally, the Qur'an says that it can be 
applied to every time and every place. I agree. 
Because the Qur'an itself gives us the people - 
all the people - the power to discuss and debate. 
Islam was given to us to make life better and 
easier - not for the minority but the collective. 
We spend so much time looking for ways to 
reinterpret the Qur'an for fear of being judged 
for contradicting the word of God when he 
himself, through his holy book, encouraged us to 
discuss and debate. If he wanted all rules to be 
inflexible and set in stone he would have made 
them all fundamentals and pillars of Islam, 
instead of only identifying five.

If we accept the concept of democracy, then in 
any society - be it Europe or a country with a 
Muslim majority - secularism is the best option.

In countries where a version of Sharia is 
enforced, the people cannot debate the laws for 
fear of being told they contradict the word of 
God. This effectively creates an environment of 
dictatorship.

Ultimately our beliefs shape our morals and 
interests, which in turn influence the way we 
vote and lobby in a democratic society.

We can stay within the spirit of Islam and look 
at the intentions behind its preaching and apply 
them in a manner suitable to today's 
circumstances.

Secularism encourages increased participation 
from the masses in both governance and 
theological debate by enabling each to exist 
separately without one dominating or being 
threatened by the other.

I will no doubt get comments from those asking me 
for my qualifications in theology. I don't need 
any. It is my right as a human being to read a 
book and use my common sense and personal 
judgement to analyse and interpret it as I see 
fit. When one insists on following the preaching 
of an Imam or "scholar" - wherever he may take 
them - they are forsaking the most cherished gift 
God ever gave man - the ability to think and 
reason.

Regardless of my personal beliefs on the topic, I 
would very much like to hear a woman discussing 
her belief in the veil using personal reasoning 
as opposed to reference to the local scholar and 
preaching of the Qur'an. I cannot engage in a 
debate when you ultimately refer me to your 
scholar. And he will likely refer me to words on 
a page. Do you really have no desire to analyse 
and philosophise about the words of the Qur'an? 
Does it deserve no more of your respect than to 
simply learn and recite it by heart? You'll 
dissect every line of a Jane Austin novel for 
school homework but you won't analyse the words 
of a book to which you say you dedicate your life?

I am not in favour of reinterpreting the Qur'an 
for the sake of forging a legitimate link between 
words in the Qur'an and our intentions and 
actions through warped semantics. This ultimately 
gives everyone with an ability to manipulate 
words the power to do what they want in the name 
of the Qur'an. Give me your actual arguments. 
Reason with me. Unless of course you do not 
believe Islam is based on reason. In which case I 
have nothing more to say to you - mainly because 
you would have nothing more to say back, seeing 
as you clearly don't like debates.

I do. Tell me you want to cover your hair so as 
to dress modestly and I'll likely suggest you 
simply tie your hair back and wear no make-up. I 
would then look forward to hearing what the many 
women who cover their hair but wear full make-up 
would have to say. I am certainly not suggesting 
all women in hijab do this. In fact those who 
don't - those who truly appear to be dressing 
modestly - are probably just as annoyed by the 
women who use the headscarf as an accessory to 
accent their eyeshadow as I am. Where is the 
modesty? You paint a masterpiece of your face and 
place it within a silk frame.

The last two paragraphs have focused on the 
hypocritical among us (I do hope, but doubt, they 
are in the minority). Let us speak of them (or to 
them) no more. If you don't agree with me (on any 
point) and want to throw in some meat for the 
debate (ie reasoned arguments - no secondary 
source references) then find the comment box 
below and type away.

______


[6] 

Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2007 13:16:35 +05-30

THE SITUATION IN BASTAR

Dear Friends

The situation in Bastar is at a critical stage, 
with clashes on 27-28 Feb trying to force land 
acquisition for Tata's steel plant. The 
"manufactured civil war" pursued by Salwa Judum 
continues with at least 80,000 tribal refugees in 
what are virtually concentration camps.
The steel plant is planned on 2,000+ hectares of 
tribal land belonging to 10 villages in 
Lohandiguda block, near the amazing Chitrakot 
waterfall on Indravati river. The agreement for 
the plant was signed between the Chhattisgarh 
Govt & Tata in June 2005 - precisely the month 
when Salwa Judum was formed - labelled a 
"people's movement against the Naxalites" but 
actually a police sponsored terror  militia 
forcing the evacuation of one tribal village 
after another, with refugees pressurized to join 
SJ.
On 27 Feb police in the 10 villages to try & 
force thro land acquisition arrested a number of 
tribal leaders and were pelted with stones. The 
next day (28th) a leading non-tribal activist who 
had come to support the people was hounded out of 
Bastar. He was slapped in front of the hotel 
manager where he had stayed in Jagdalpur, who was 
warned the hotel would be burnt if he put him up 
again, and all Jagdalpur's hotelowners have been 
told not to accept any guests who may be opposing 
Tata. This activist was then hounded by violent 
mobs threatening to burn him alive, and also 
police accusing him of running someone over. 
There is an ONLINE PETITION TO APPEAL TO CANCEL 
THE PROJECT. Please sign. This is at 
Gopetition.com - the petition is called "Protect 
the property rights of poor tribals".
The next day (1st March) the Collector of 
Dantewara Dustrict called a meeting of all the 
political parties (except CPI who are sidinmg 
with the tribals), journalists, business leaders 
etc, and reiterated the message that opposition 
to the Tata project will not be tolerated.
The area is outstanding for the tribal culture as 
well as outstanding for nature - this part of 
Bastar is one of the few places in India where 
wild buffaloes & Cattle survive. The tribal 
culture of the Maria Gond & other tribes is one 
of the world's most beautiful & wise of all 
surviving tribal cultures, written about 
beautifully by Grigson & Elwin in the 1930s-40s. 
Their culture survived intact at least till 2005 
when the Salwa Judum war started, which has split 
virtually all the tribal villages into SJ versus 
Maoists. There have been 1000s of deaths & rapes. 
See e.g. human rights reports by Peoples Union of 
Civil Liberties (pucl.org) and Asia Forum for 
human rights.
On 17th Feb an organisation called Rambhau Mhalgi 
Prabodhini organised a day seminar in Delhi as 
propaganda for SJ, at which the Chief Minister of 
Chh.  Raman Singh talked about Naxalism as 
India's greatest threat, and the Director General 
of Chh. police called SJ "a process of 
purification". Other pro-SJ academics & 
journalists spoke of it as a "people's struggle - 
the most important since Independence" etc. This 
is the greatest inversion of the truth I 
personally have ever come across, similar to 
holocaust denial. The Naxalites are undoiubtedly 
misguided to use violence, but they are opposing 
an extreme level of exploitation & corruption, 
and stand up for the rights of tribal people, and 
appear alot more principled than the SJ & State 
forces opposing them. Since Bastar tribals have 
been opposing Tata steel plant plans for many 
years, it does actually seem that SJ was largely 
set up to implement Tata & other mining/metal 
plans. (The Chh Govt is also recommending Tata to 
prospect at Bailadila iron ore Mt range)
Please circulate news about what's happening in 
the tribal heart of India, and the terror tactics 
& utter thuggery being used to promote Tata, 
whose steel plant plans in Orissa at Kalinganagar 
caused 13 deaths in Jan 2006, and are still being 
opposed there, and similar terror tactics at 
Singur in W.Bengal. Please sign the petition or 
take any other appropriate action.


orissa sakhi

______


[7]

Subject: NATIONAL FARMERS RALLY AGAINST SEZ: A SMALL REPORT
Date: Tue, 27 Mar 2007 05:48:40 +0000

by Aseem Shrivastava

This is a brief report on the National Farmers 
Rally against Special Economic Zones (SEZ) in 
Ramlila Maidan, New Delhi on March 23, 2007. It 
becomes necessary to do this only because neither 
the electronic nor the print media gave any 
coverage to it. Even the vernacular press ignored 
it.


The rally was one of the biggest seen in Delhi in 
recent years. There were at least 1,50,000 
kisans, mazdoors and tribals from all over India, 
and possibly upwards of 2,00,000 or even 
2,50,000. Red-flag waving protestors - women and 
men, young and old - filled up much of the area 
between Delhi Gate and Ajmeri Gate.The rally was 
organized by the Far Left ML groups, perhaps the 
reason that the media ignored it altogether. But 
this is no time to be sectarian and by not paying 
attention to such mass protests we only make the 
use of political violence by Naxalites a more 
likely default option for peasants and indigenous 
populations.

There were kisans from virtually every part of 
the country - West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, 
Jharkhand, Chhatisgarh, UP, Punjab, Haryana, MP, 
Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Andhra, Tamil Nadu, 
Karnataka, Kerala...there were pamphlets being 
distributed in a number of languages, even some 
of the languages from the South. Some of us 
distributed a factsheet on SEZs in Hindi and 
English.

There were the usual round of fiery speeches from 
the pulpit, but by far the more interesting 
conversations were being held in small groups. 
Many people did not know what SEZs were: they 
were merely opposed to the takeover of their 
land. Some said that they did not believe in 
selling land, even if the govt was willing to 
compensate them. Some had heard about Singur and 
Nandigram, others hadn't.

People were enraged at the short-shrifting of 
agriculture under recent economic policies. They 
were opposed to SEZs because they were being 
built on land which they had farmed for 
generations. One old small farmer from Bihar 
wondered what purpose monetary compensation (even 
if it were to materialize) would serve for him. 
He was too old to learn a new skill which could 
fetch his family a livelihood. Why should he 
leave certain livelihood for an uncertain job in 
the future, he said.

A Punjab peasant commented on the loss of dignity 
that his community was feeling about losing their 
freedom to farm. And while it was true that 
farming had become uneconomical for most people, 
he said that government policies had a lot to 
answer for it. What right did they have to ask us 
to give up not merely our livelihood but our way 
of life itself?

Inflation was also a topic of discussion. Are 
they going to give us food at affordable prices 
if they take away our right to grow our own food, 
one farmer mused.

In sum, the rally indicated the resentment and 
rage that is building up around the country 
against the economic policies of the state. There 
is a crying need to see the commonality of 
patterns that are emerging in order to make a 
thorough intellectual critique of the prevailing 
framework and work towards a sustainable 
alternative vision.

______


[8]
Indian Express
March 26, 2007

IN TAMIL NADU TOWN, FUNDAMENTALISTS PLAY MORAL COPS, EVEN KILL TO HAVE WAY
Jaya Menon

Melapalayam (Tirunelveli), March 25 : Over a 
fortnight ago, 35-year-old Mumtaz was killed by a 
group of young men in Melapalayam in south Tamil 
Nadu.

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They murdered her when she was returning from a 
local beedi company after collecting leaves and 
tobacco. They accosted her on the road, warned 
her against a affair she was allegedly having 
with a married man and the local manager of a 
beedi company.

She just told them to mind their own business.

They first threw stones at her. Then, some of 
them came closer and stabbed her. Mumtaz died on 
the spot.

In Melapalayam, which the police say has been a 
hotbed of fundamentalism with a strong presence 
of Al Umma, there has been little outrage.

"Many in the town believe that Mumtaz deserved 
it," said Abdul Subahan (18), the district 
secretary of the student wing of Tamil Nadu 
Muslim Munnetra Kazham, a political outfit which 
police think is linked to Al Umma.

Residents of the town say Mumtaz had been given 
"sufficient warning" to keep away from her 
"paramour." But she had not.

Her sister Nabeena said: "People in the town are 
saying she deserved it. We don't know what to 
think."

Her mother, Zubeida Hussein, who had left her 
daughter a few months ago after she began 
receiving threats, said: "Our heads bow in shame."

The mob murder on March 9 by the self-styled 
'moral police' was not the first honour killing 
in this small town. Mumtaz is just the first 
woman victim.

In August 1997, Selvakumar, a homeopath doctor, 
was killed for having "relationships" with Muslim 
women. The same day, 16 Al Umma sympathizers 
hacked to death two RSS workers who were 
karsevaks in the Babri Masjid demolition.

* In 2001, Sathyaseelan was murdered by nine Al 
Umma members for "having contacts with a Muslim 
woman."

* Two months ago, three youths, all Al Umma 
sympathizers, were arrested after they threatened 
another single woman in the town "on suspicion" 
that she was having an "illicit" relationship 
with a married man. "They snatched her mobile 
phone and extorted Rs. 1,000 from her and told 
her to behave herself," says Inspector Stanley 
Jones, the investigating officer in the Mumtaz 
murder case.

The Melapalayam town chief, Khaludeen, felt the 
youths should have brought the case before the 
local Jamaat. "Only a year back we threw a woman 
out of the town with her seven-month-old baby boy 
whom she begot through an illicit relationship," 
he said.

According to him, the married man accused of 
getting her pregnant, had "sworn" on Allah that 
he was not responsible. "Once a man swears on 
Allah, we believe him," said Khaludeen. But the 
woman had to leave the town.

Said Dr Bhagat Singh, the TMMK's district 
secretary: "The youths (accused of killing 
Mumtaz) should not have taken law into their 
hands. They read the Quran and make their own 
interpretations. To prevent such incidents, the 
Government should introduce the practice of 
stoning immoral women to death. Many Middle-East 
countries follow this practice and keep women 
under check. That's the only way to handle such 
issues."

Two days after Mumtaz's murder, the police 
arrested S Rasool Moideen (22), Shahul Hameed 
(21), his brother K Noushad Ali (19), K Imran 
(19), Mohamed Hussain alias Allappa (23) and 
Mohamed Moideen, all from Melapalayam. Two of 
them are college students. The police are 
searching for Shahul Hameed (27), who is said to 
be the mastermind.

Police say Al Umma, the fundamentalist outfit 
which had become weak after the arrest of more 
than 100 of its members in the Coimbatore case, 
has been rejuvenated and is trying to enforce 
edicts on the Muslim community in Melapalayam.

"We believe there are some agencies trying to lay 
down stiff rules for the society. They don't 
represent the larger community and behave like 
outlaws," said N K Senthamarai Kannan, the 
Tirunelveli District Superintendent of Police.

"Unless someone comes forward with a complaint, 
we cannot do anything. They (the town residents) 
don't have the courage to initiate the legal 
process as they feel they have to co-exist with 
the community," he said.

______


[9]

Book Review / The Hindu
March 27, 2007)

Culture and colonialism

Nalini Taneja

This collection of essays discusses various forms 
of resistance to colonial rule


COLONIALISM, CULTURE AND RESISTANCE: K. N. 
Panikkar; Oxford University Press, YMCA Library 
Building, Jai Singh Road, New Delhi-110001. Rs. 
595.

This book is a part of the series of collections 
of essays of eminent scholars that OUP has been 
bringing out from time to time. K.N. Panikkar is 
among the foremost historians of modern India, 
and has written extensively on intellectual and 
cultural history. As the preface to this book 
states, and its title suggests, "the common 
thread which binds together the essays in this 
volume is the idea of resistance to colonialism 
as a source of alternative modernity."

While the volume is a book of history, and covers 
the colonial period - barring one essay on the 
changes in history textbooks during the NDA 
regime - the concerns of the present reverberate 
throughout the book. It is clear that as a 
historian he is deeply disturbed by the "the 
failure of [an] alternative modernity" in India, 
which, in his opinion has "led the way to the 
uncritical acceptance of globalisation and to 
sympathetic response to cultural revivalism" 
during the last two decades. Therefore, from the 
large body of his work, he has chosen for this 
volume those essays which reflect the different 
forms of resistance to colonial rule and which 
analyse the vicissitudes and the incompleteness 
of the efforts of independent cultural 
expression, free from the constraints of both 
colonial hegemony and the shackles of tradition.

The essays cover three broad categories: armed 
resistance, intellectual preparation, and 
cultural practice. Culture as reflected in this 
book is not some apolitical space; it is 
inextricably connected with the colonial reality, 
and notions of nation that arise from a 
differentiated cultural expression of the 
intelligentsia during the 19th century, which is 
in turn strongly influenced by colonialism and 
the social matrix in which they emerged.

At a juncture when many other historians of 
modern India are prone to wish away the 
overarching reality of colonialism and its 
hegemonic presence in the lives of the Indian 
people, he is emphatic that "colonial domination 
and resistance occupied the centre of historical 
experience" during the period described by him. 
The consciousness about an alternative formed 
very slowly, he says, primarily because the 
intelligentsia, to begin with, tended to identify 
colonial rule as an agency of liberal 
dispensation, and when they did seek to 
transgress it their political perspective 
remained circumscribed by liberalism, and then 
increasingly came to accommodate tradition in the 
same way that colonialism did: this created a 
cultural crisis for the intelligentsia. This 
trajectory is explored in some depth through the 
studies on different forms of cultural 
articulation of the 19th century and to an extent 
early 20th.

Themes

He describes the plurality of forms of 
resistance, analyses many of them, and shows how 
these were an aspect of challenging and 
transgressing the limits of colonial modernity, 
yet "influenced partly by the way power was 
exercised by the colonizer", as much as by what 
came to be seen as tradition under colonial rule.

The themes covered range from the formation of 
cultural consciousness to questions of cultural 
pasts and national identity; matters of dress and 
manners and social reform in the context of 
tradition, power and concern for legitimacy; 
literature, literacy and educational initiatives, 
the expansion of print media and creation of new 
cultural tastes and notions of nation; indigenous 
medicine and coming to terms with new knowledge 
and colonial hegemony; and the early armed 
revolts and peasant resistance in the backdrop of 
agrarian laws of the time, specifically as 
reflected in the revolts of Velu Tampi and of the 
Malabar peasantry.

Implications

The essays explore the implications these forms 
of resistance had for the formation of political 
and cultural consciousness, and how these forms 
of resistance constituted what he calls "the 
proto history of political and cultural 
nationalism."

In a short review it would be fruitful to simply 
encapsulate some of his propositions and 
conclusions on the varied themes covered in the 
book: both renaissance and revivalism were 
integral to the search for identity, neither 
being overtly against colonialism; colonial 
cultural interventions did not mean a departure 
from the traditional pattern of life, even to 
those directly exposed to the influence of the 
colonial, social and cultural engineering; the 
lack of integration between political and 
cultural struggles had important implications; a 
critique of religion is essential for the battle 
over transformation of consciousness for a social 
revolution; and unlike in Africa or South 
America, the colonialists hegemonised Indian 
society by both expropriating and appropriating 
many traditional cultural symbols.

His analyses of the Malayalam novel Indulekha and 
the `Great Shoe Question' reveal the complexities 
of contestations over cultural symbols and 
self-perceptions of individual identities in the 
social matrix of colonial hegemony and need for 
traditional legitimacy. The dynamics of the 
peasant revolts discussed reveal the vital 
interconnections within popular struggles between 
traditional religious ideology and `the hidden 
transcripts' of a challenge to the dominance of 
the landowning classes and the agrarian laws of 
the colonial state.

Alternative

He strongly argues that the vital force that 
could have emerged from a creative dialogue 
between the spirit of rationality and 
universalism derived from the Renaissance and the 
Enlightenment on the one hand and an equally 
enlightened choice from within the tradition, 
remained split into two distinct tendencies. In 
the event, he says, the void has been filled 
either by the culture of the capitalist West or 
the obscurantism of tradition, currently being 
advocated by the Hindutva forces.

He concludes even more emphatically that "the 
cultural alternative contemporary India is 
seeking is therefore located in a choice between 
the elements inherited from the renaissance and 
those promoted by revivalism. At a time when 
there are attempts to redefine the identity of 
the nation, the choice is imbued with a meaning 
not purely cultural but also political."

To this we may add that in an era of `cultural 
nationalism', when the field of culture and its 
centrality to politics and transformation of 
Indian society has suffered great neglect from 
secular, left-liberal historians, and when the 
Hindu right wing seems to have hijacked the 
entire discourse on culture, this book is a 
timely warning to take culture seriously, and to 
evolve an effective agenda for cultural action.

______


[10]

Book Publication Announcement


THE POLITICS BEHIND ANTI-CHRISTIAN VIOLENCE

Ram Puniyani (Editor) <mailto:ram.puniyani at gmail.com>ram.puniyani at gmail.com

Foreword- Prof. K.N.Panikkar

Last decade and a half has seen gradual 
intensification of violence against Christians. 
The worst of this was the burning alive of Pastor 
Graham Stains. The propaganda doing rounds 
against them is very vicious and ill founded. In 
the face of this violence the state machinery has 
not acted firmly and the suitable protective 
action is missing.

Various human rights groups have investigated 
these violations of democratic rights. This book 
is a compilation of most of the (12) citizen's 
inquiry reports. It also includes the report of 
Wadhva Commission. This commission was appointed 
by NDA in the aftermath of the ghastly murder of 
Pastor Stains. It also has reports from Gujarat. 
MP and Mahrashtra. Some these reports take an all 
Indian view and have investigated anti Christian 
violence cutting across different states.

It has some analytical articles on the theme. The 
contributors to these articles are Rudolf 
Heredia, Vinay Lal, K.N.Panikkar, Ram Puniyani, 
Rowena Robinson, M. Prakash Singh, Rowena 
Robinson and Virginius Xaxa.


Pages 864, HB, Rs 495

Publisher
Media House
375-A, Pocket-2, Mayur Vihar Phase 1, Delhi 110091
(mediahousedelhi at gmail.com , www.mediahousedelhi.org)

   
______


[11]  EVENTS:

(i)

150 YEARS OF SOUTH ASIAN RESISTANCE

1857 saw the first major uprising against British 
rule in India. Although dubbed the 'Indian 
Mutiny' in many colonial history books, the 
uprising which spread across much of the northern 
half of South Asia (at that time called India, 
now including India, Pakistan and Bangladesh) and 
lasted almost a year had all the characteristics 
of a war against imperialism and for independence.

South Asia Solidarity Group and the 1857 
Committee are organising a series of events to 
celebrate the 150th anniversary of the 1857 
uprisings. The aim of these events is not only to 
remember what happened in 1857, but to highlight 
the continuities and parallels with the situation 
in South Asia and globally today. In particular, 
we will be looking at 1857 as one of the high 
points of continuing popular anti-imperialist 
resistance, in which people identifying with 
different communities and religions but sharing 
many aspects of culture consciously came together 
to resist an aggressively racist colonial power. 
In the process we will talk about contemporary 
imperialism, racism and the rise of the religious 
right, and the struggles against them in South 
Asia and here in Britain.

Currently the rise of intense anti-Muslim racism 
in Britain (along with other developments, like 
the rise of Hindutva in India) has polarised 
South Asian communities. It is urgent to reclaim 
our shared history of anti-colonial struggle and 
draw parallels with the British state's current 
role in imperialism and war.

The events taking place throughout 2007 will 
include drama, exhibitions, concerts and 
film-screenings. They will culminate in a two-day 
conference in London on 6 and 7 October 2007. 
Some of the key themes of this conference include

The repressive state in Britain and South Asia and the construction of 'terror'
The ravages of corporate capital from the East India Company to today
Land seizures, poverty and people's struggles for resources
'Divide and rule', and the religious right and 
popular movements against communalism
Changing strategies of state intervention and 
control: 'culture' 'race' and gender


For more information on events taking place in 
London, Birmingham and Manchester, contact:

<mailto:sasg at southasiasolidarity.org>sasg at southasiasolidarity.org, 
<mailto:committee1857 at yahoo.co.uk>committee1857 at yahoo.co.uk, 
<http://www.1857.org.uk/>www.1857.org.uk



The first of the planned events is:

Unity and Resistance
Celebrating the150th anniversary of the
1857 Uprisings against British rule in India

Artworks from students at:

St Paul's Way Community School, Bethnal Green,

Northolt High School, Heathland School,

George Mitchell School, Leyton

Drama from students at Heathland School in Hounslow,

Discussion of themes and how to get involved in future activities

led by South Asia Solidarity Group

Friday 30th March 2007

3pm-6pm at

V&A Museum of childhood, Cambridge Heath Road E2 9PA 


1857 saw the first major uprising against British rule in India.
Although dubbed the Indian Mutiny in many 
colonial history books, the uprising which spread 
across much of the northern half of South Asia 
(at that time called India, now including India, 
Pakistan and Bangladesh) and lasted almost a year 
had all the characteristics of a war against 
imperialism and for independence.

School Students' drama and artworks have drawn on 
the continuities between the events of 1857 and 
their experiences. They have questioned dominant 
ideas of who we are and how we are seen.

Details: <mailto:sasg at southasiasolidarity.org>sasg at southasiasolidarity.org


Organised by:  London Development Education Centre
293-299 Kentish Town Road, London,
londec at hotmail.com


o o o

(ii)

THE NIGAH QUEER FEST'07!

The NigahQueerFest'07 is a celebration of 
sexuality and queerness. Part of emerging voices 
that question dominant norms of gender   and 
sexuality, the festival will showcase films, 
photography, workshops, talks and performances in 
venues across the city from May 25th to June 3rd 
in New Delhi.

Calls for entry to the Film and Photography parts 
of the festival can also be downloaded from the 
website at  www.nigahmedia.com/queerfest.html.

o o o

(iii)

FIFTH WINTER COURSE ON FORCED MIGRATION

Applications are invited for a 15-day orientation 
course on Forced Migration to be held in Kolkata, 
India (1-15 December 2007). The short-term winter 
course, organised each year by the Mahanirban 
Calcutta Research Group, will be preceded by a 
two and a half month long programme of distance 
education. The course is intended for younger 
academics, refugee activists and others working 
in the field of human rights and humanitarian 
assistance for victims of forced displacement. 
The curriculum will deal with themes of 
nationalism, ethnicity, partition, and 
partition-refugees, national regimes and the 
international regime of protection, political 
issues relating to regional trends in migration 
in South Asia, internal displacement, the 
gendered nature of forced migration and 
protection framework, resource politics, 
environmental degradation, and several other 
issues related to the forced displacement of 
people. The course will put emphasis on the 
experiences of displacement, creative writings on 
refugee life, critical legal and policy analysis, 
and analysis of relevant notions such as 
vulnerability, care, risk, protection, return and 
settlement. The course will include fieldwork and 
other exercises. For content and structure of 
past courses, please consult the Archives section 
of the CRG website at 
http://www.mcrg.ac.in/winter.htm.

Applicants must have (a) 3 years experience in 
the work of protection of the victims of forced 
displacement, OR hold a post-graduate degree in 
Social Sciences and (b) proficiency in English. 
Besides giving all necessary particulars, 
application must be accompanied by an appropriate 
recommendation letter and a 500-1000 word 
write-up on how the programme is relevant to the 
applicant's work and may benefit the applicant. 
Selected candidates from South Asia will have to 
pay INR 5000 each as registration fee (from 
outside South Asia the fee is US $ 400). CRG will 
bear accommodation and other course expenses for 
all participants.

Applications, addressed to the Course 
Coordinator, can be sent by e-mail to 
forcedmigrationdesk at mcrg.ac.in or by post, and 
must reach the following address by 31 May 2007:

Mahanirban Calcutta Research Group
GC-45, First Floor,
Sector-III
Salt Lake City
Kolkata-700 106
West Bengal
India

For details visit our web site 
http://www.mcrg.ac.in. Inquiries relating to the 
application procedure are welcome.

_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), 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/
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