On the current turmoil in Manipur – what we need to know and what we need to do: NEFIS

The following paper is a detailed examination of the current turmoil in the North-East in its historical context. It has been prepared by a team of activists from different communities of the North-East and is intended for wider discussion and dissemination.  

First released on June 1, 2023 by North-East Forum for International Solidarity (NEFIS)

  1. Introduction

At present, there is an unprecedented social conflict raging in Manipur. The violence has affected all communities in the state. Over 100 people have been killed, 50,000 people are currently in more than 300 refugee camps and lacs have been displaced. Religious places, granaries, and homes belonging to the common people, especially those from the minority tribal communities have been burned. The minority community has a strong feeling of being persecuted. In reality, the lives and livelihoods of the labouring poor across communities have been lost. It is the women of all communities who have been the most vulnerable. To instigate conflicts among communities, fake news, and rumours were peddled by the communal groups which later became the pretext for the alleged lynchings and rapes of women. Miscreants and communal groups have conveniently sought revenge for incidents of violence faced by their respective communities by targeting and punishing those who are unconnected to the acts of violence for which ‘retribution’ is sought. A vicious, never-ending cycle of vengeful violence continues to erupt with the failure of the state to act against such miscreants.

Continue reading On the current turmoil in Manipur – what we need to know and what we need to do: NEFIS

How to Draw a Line on the Ground : Ravi Sinha

Comments for the Washington DC Diaspora Program on “Karnataka Election Outcome and the Two Contesting Ideologies”

Guest Post by Dr Ravi Sinha

I must begin with a disclaimer. I am no expert on how elections are won or lost. Nor can I claim any competence in deciphering an electionresultfor what has worked and what has not. I will not be offering, therefore, any fresh insights into the results of recently concluded Assembly elections in Karnataka beyond what is already well-known from the media reports and analyses. I plan to focus primarily on the latter half of the title of the discussion today – the Two Contesting Ideologies.

The question of ideologies too is not easy to pose, let alone answer, especially when it comes to the muddy fields of politics on the ground. It is one thing to draw a clear ideological line on paper; it is quite another to do so on the actual ground of politics. In the normal course of politics – at least in a polity that has managed to settle into a normal course – ideological lines are seldom clearly drawn. Those whoinsist ondrawing a clear ideological line in all circumstances are invariably pushed to the margins of thenormal mode of politics.

There are times, however, when politics must undergo a paradigm shift. Ideological battle lines are,more or less,clearly drawn under such conditions, and sometimes, even if rarely, revolutionary transformations ensue from such shifts. The ideological lines may or may not be clearly visible during the actual political turbulence, but one can decipher them in hindsight after the polity and the society settle into a new normal.

One cannot say that India today sits on the brink of a political paradigm shift that promises a revolution. In fact, a shift of decidedly regressive kind has taken place with the rise of Hindutva. Nearly a decade after 2014, it is clear now, at least to those who would care to see, what a disaster India has brought upon itself. The damage done to the economy, to the social fabric, to theinstitutions of governance, and to the democratic process itself,is being felt in the bones of the country. India has been pushed back by decades in what has been at best a slow advance to a reasonably enlightened democratic republic with a moderately prosperous and not too uncaring economy. It will take many decades to recover what has been lost in just one decade. And yet, there is no guarantee that we will stop hurtling towards an even greater disaster in 2024.

Under these circumstances,one should not be considered naïve or conservative if one were to wish fora restorative kind of paradigm shift. One realises now that merelyturning the political clock back by a decade would bring a huge sigh of relief to the country. In times of disasters like this one, it is not a crime to hope for a kind of restoration, especially when revolutions are nowhere on the horizon. It is for this reason that the success of Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra followed by the resounding victory of Congress Party in the Karnataka Assembly elections have come as a big sigh of relief and a desperately needed ray of hope in the aware citizenry and, to a significant extent, even among the suffering masses and oppressed communities across the country.

One must, however, ask the question: has the Karnataka outcome resulted from clearly drawing an ideological line at the ground level? Disappointing as it may sound, the answer is largely in the negative. Actually, it should not be as disappointing as it sounds. As I said,drawing such a line in the muddy fields of electoral politics is not a simple or at times even a desirable thing to do. Insisting on this in all circumstances may in fact be counter-productive. One can however ask the converse question: do these results shed some useful light on how to draw an ideological dividing line on the ground? The answer to this question is clearly affirmative. I will be dwelling mostly on this apparently paradoxical situation.

First thing to be noted in the Karnataka outcome is that Congress, which confronted the BJP and the saffron brigade directly, did score a decisive victory, but it is far from the case that Hindutva has suffered a fatal blow. The BJP maintained its vote percentage of roughly 36 percent it had garnered in 2018. At this aggregate level of electoral analysis, the gains of Congress appear to have come at the cost of Janata Dal Secular (JDS),a regional party whose vote percentage has declined by the same 5 percentage points.Despite its name, this party has clearly moved closer to the BJP in the aftermath of the elections.

But one should not rush to conclusions just on the basis of aggregate numbers. Congress has not won only because of its gains in the Mysore region where JDS has been strong. It has won most of the seats in northern Karnataka adjacent both to the Telugu states and to Maharashtra. It has made gains in the rural areas all over the state. The point to note, however, is that not only has the BJP maintained its aggregate vote percentage, it has also made gains in many areas. It has gained ground wherever communal divide has been pronounced and Hindutva is entrenched. In the coastal region of Udupi-Mangalore it has stood its ground and even improved its vote percentage. Same is the case with the urban conglomerate of Bengaluru where it has won 15 out of 28 seats. Spectacular is the case of Srirangapatna where its vote share skyrocketed from 6.4 percent in 2018 to 22.8 percent in 2023. This is the place where an intense communal campaign has been around claims of yet another mosque being a temple. It will be foolhardy to think that Hindutva has lost its ground in Karnataka.

A tell-tale sign of the hold of Hindutva was in the episode of Bajrang Dal and Bajrang Bali. When none other than the Prime Minister himself equated the hooligans with the monkey god, and sought help from the muscle power of one and the blessings of the other, many across the country laughed at this mockery. And yet, it was not a laughing matter. Many leaders of Congress bent over backwards to put on display their religious credentials – even D K Shivakumar, a key architect of Karnataka victory, made well-publicized visits to temples and Congress campaigners began to count how many Hanuman temples Mallikarjun Kharge, the Congress President, had built in his native Hyderabad region of Karnataka. Those who knew the situation on ground, and those who knew a thing or two about how elections are won and lost in India, did not take this matter lightly.

In the electoral analyses splattered across the media, the victory of Congress has been attributed to multiple factors, but three among them stand out – the so-called anti-incumbency of an exceptionally corrupt government, the economic hardships of the poor who area vast majority of the population, and a relatively strong organizational presence of the Congress Party in Karnataka. Such analyses also factor-in the role ofvote bankssupposedly based on castes and communities – Lingayats, Vokkaligas, Kurubas, Dalits, Muslims and so on. But, managing such vote banks is a necessary detail of any electoral strategy – often expressed in the euphemistic phrase of social engineering. It does not define an ideological dividing line. If one tries hard to extract some such line from the enormous complexity of Indian politics, two large conglomerates of factors stand out – Hindutva, cultural nationalism, religious and other traditional identities form one such conglomerate and the issues of poverty, class, basic security of life and material well-being form the other.

Given the history of the 20th century, class has been the centre-piece of the canonical definition of ideological dividing line. Many who swear by this definition and reject the possibility of any other definition would underline the fact that the Karnataka election was won because the poor, especially in the rural hinterlands, supported Congress. While this underlines the fact that the class factor hasn’t gone away anywhere, it does not explaina far more effective presence of the other factors. As I have already mentioned, the victory of Congress does not mean that Hindutva has been defeated in Karnataka and it is not the case that the poor have voted for Congress because they detest Hindutva.

Fact of the matter is that there seem to exist two different axes along which ideological dividing lines can be drawn in today’s politics. The class axis has been the canonical one, but there seems to be another axis.For want of a well-thought-out nomenclature let us call it the cultural axis.It includes identities based on religion, caste, race, ethnicity, community, languages and even civilisations.This axis has become far more operational in the arena of democratic and electoral politics. Actually, part of the question can be posed even more sharply. Why is it that the ever-present class axis almost never gives rise to a politically operational class identity? (The same question can be posed in relation to the gender axis too, even if in a different way.) As many a leftist trade unionist would testify, the class that comes together on the factory floor seldom remembers the class identity and solidarity in the voting booth. Here I would not even try to get into the high theory of relationship between class and culture. For the purpose at hand, I will take a pragmatic tack and treat these two realms as relatively autonomous even if connected at some deep subterranean layer.

The rise of culture in politics is not confined to the so-called Third World. Samuel Huntington, the Harvard don famous for his Clash of Civilizations, can be easily chastised by other dons of the progressive kinds, especially after he showed his true colours by prodding the Americans to ask the question – Who Are We? – and encouraged them to be wary of the Latino immigrants who pose a threat, in his reckoning, to the American national identity. Chastising him is the easy part. But how does one explain the rise of Donald Trump in American politics which has happened more or less along the same lines Huntington theorised? Trumps do not arise just because the likes of Huntington construct their theories. The sources of Trumpism lie in the deeper layers of American society. Similarly, the political traction of Hindutva arises, at least in parts, from the deeper layers of the Indian social mind.

To add to the puzzle and to the tragedy, democracy itself, especially of the fiercely competitive kind, plays a role in bringing the worst out of the hidden layers of the social mind. Who in the world can claim to have a better alternative to democracy? And yet, there are examples galore of democracy landing itself in very strange places. The example of Hitler coming to power through democracy may sound hackneyed except that the phenomenon is far more ubiquitous in the world today. You in the United States had your Trump and I am told that Trumpism hasn’t gone away anywhere. We in India haveNarendra Modi; Turkey just re-elected Erdogan who has been in power since 2003, first as Prime Minister and subsequently as President; Bolsanaro of Brazil was barely defeated; Putin is too well-known an example to forget. One can go on and on and cite examples where democracy finds curious ways to commit suicide. But one thing would be common in all such examples.The cultural axis playsa crucially important political role.

In saying all this I am aware of the fact that the cultural axis does not become operationalon its ownin the political arena. Popular democracy with competitive elections is not exclusively a cultural phenomenon. After all, this whole exercise is for constituting a State and electing a government for running an economic and a political system. This system constitutes itself in the political arena and ostensibly operates in that arena, but competitive electoral processes force it to dig into the cultural unconscious of the social mind. In analogy with depth psychology, I often describe it as depth politics. The cultural unconscious of the Indian social mind, whose layers have been deposited over centuries and millennia, becomes operational in modern politics through competitive electoral democracy.

In the case of the United States,one often hears about the deep state that pulls the wires of democracy while itself remaining beyond the reach of constitutional and democratic powers and procedures. In India the deep state may not be as deep, but it is definitely there and the existence of a cultural unconscious comes very handy to it. In fact, the Indian deep state does not feel the necessity to remain invisible and confined to the depths. There are examples galore of unconstitutional, undemocratic and unscrupulous acts on the part of the political as well as economic forces and agents. All that is being done to the Indian economy, to the public resources, to the constitutional and democratic institutions, is not very hidden. But the point to note is that the state, whether deep or otherwise, finds it handy to manipulate the cultural unconscious and democracy itself becomes an accomplice in this exercise.

Michael Walzer, the Princeton political philosopher, has drawn attention to another curious phenomenon in which, I suspect, the cultural axis is deeply implicated. In his book, The Paradox of Liberation, he points out examples of national liberation movements that led to independence from foreign rule and to establishment of secular, liberal and enlightened democracies, but within a few decades the secular revolutionsmade way forreligious counter-revolutions. The irony is that the counter-revolutions were brought about through the same democratic process which had been instituted by the founding fathers for the purpose of erecting a secular, democratic and enlightened republic. India figures prominently in Walzer’s Paradox, although being a large and complex country the replacement of “revolution” by “counter-revolution” has taken its time. It took half a century after the departure of Jawaharlal Nehru for someone like Narendra Modi to come to power and replace the Nehruvian hegemony with the hegemony of Hindutva.

In saying all this my purpose is to underline the obvious that is often ignored by those who are accustomed to drawing the ideological dividing line only across the class axis. The dividing line on the actual ground of politics cuts across both the axes of class and of culture. In the rough and tumble of competitive electoral politics one is no wiser if one can prove that the latter is a derivative of the former. If class were to be the only operational axis, the Left would have conquered the world rather easily. On the other hand, if culture were to be the only operational axis,it would become impossible to ward off the ascendance of the right-wing. Fortunately, this is not the case on the ground. Even the Sangh Parivar cannot live by Hindutva alone. Even Narendra Modi has to see beyond the Hindu-Muslim divide and talk – at least talk – of Sabka Saath, SabkaVikaas.

It is in this light that the lessons of Karnataka should be read off. By and large the cultural axis was tilted against Congress while the class axis was tilted in its favour. The art of drawing an ideological line on the actual ground requires navigating the political topography along both these axes. Congress managed to do this in Karnataka this time. The BJP lost primarily because the class axis became steeply tilted against it. Hardships faced by the poor had been greatly exacerbated by corruption and misrule.

One should not, however, read too much into the relative importance of class in the Karnataka example. As I have mentioned already, Hindutva has not disappeared from Karnataka. Congress managed to hit the sweet spot because it could take advantage of the class dimension without hurting itself along the culture axis. This situation can be contrasted with a hypothetical situation if the Left were to be the principal opponent of BJP. An equally strong Left would not have fared as well as Congress mainly because it does not know how to navigate itself along the cultural axis which is tilted too steeply against it in most places on the subcontinent.

At the same time, one should not take the eyes off the absolute necessity of drawing a clear ideological line. In the situation that has arisen in India after nearly a decade of Modi Rule, this has become a must even for electoral battles. Given the importance of two axes and the uneven-ness of the political topography, such a line may not be straight, but it must be clear. One can see its importance in the example of the Janata Dal (Secular) debacle. It failed to take up a clear ideological position and planned for winning enough seats through its traditional influence and regular vote-bank politics to be in the position of a king-maker. This tactic has worked in the past but it backfired in the present situation. People were wary of its lack of ideological commitment.

Beyond uplifting the morale of forces opposed to Hindutva and in addition to appearing as a ray of hope in the distressing political atmosphere in India, Karnataka results also have reasonably clear lessons for the all-important battle of 2024. But there are no strong indications that these lessons are being learnt by the entire opposition. In theloud clamours for opposition unity, parties and leaders areadopting negotiating positions as if they are already on the table for seat-sharing. Everyone seems to be angling for the largest piece of the opposition cake. There are talks of putting up one candidate of united opposition against each BJP candidate. There is much advice to Congress to be large-hearted and make sacrifices for the sake of opposition unity.

The obvious necessity of drawing a clear ideological line is getting lost in this noise of opposition unity. There are only two political forces with a relatively unblemished record of fighting against Hindutva – the Congress and the Left. The record of every other force is tainted in varying degrees. Some have been confused or short-sighted while there are many who have been downright opportunists.

There are problems with the two resolute fighters too. Left, as mentioned already, has been especially inept at fighting along the axis of culture. This adds to its handicaps arising out of other ailments such as dogmatism, sectarianism or unthinking populism. Congress, on the other hand, is a much larger political force, but it also has had much bigger problems. Given its long and complicated history, and its more recent omissions and commissions in the political arena, it cannot entirely be absolved from accusations of paving the way for Hindutva. It has often functioned as a half-way-house between secularism and Hindutva and has had leaders and cadres who can cross over to the other side without batting an eye-lid. Congress has never been a shining example of a clear ideology or a cadre-based party. And yet, things have been changing for the better in recent months and years. There has been much internal churning and Congress has emerged as the central force around which all other anti-Hindutva forces could be mobilised for the battle at hand.

Emergence of Rahul Gandhi as an ideological leader and a resolute fighter has been a turning point in the recent history of Congress. Bharat Jodo Yatra has changed the political atmosphere in the country. And yet, Rahul’s Congress is not in a strong enough position to bring about an ideological unity among the disparate political forces of the opposition. The problem is further complicated by the fact that many of the regional parties stand to lose if Congress gains ground in their part of the country. Nearly everyone wants Congress to be strong elsewhere but weak or non-existent in their own areas.

People like us cannot really chart out the course for the opposition in India. We are neither at the drawing board nor at the negotiating table. All we can do is to have a reasonable wish-list.But we have to be receptive to complexity when it comes to larger strategies. One corner of India is so different from another. In Kerala, for example, where Congress and Left are faced with each other, it will be alright if they continue to be at each other’s neck provided they keep the doors shut for BJP. In West Bengal on the other hand, it is not unthinkable that Congress and Left together fight against Mamta Banerjee’s TMC but in such a way that they snatch the ground from BJP and become the main opposition to TMC. In that part of India, this may be the most effective way to fight BJP at the national level. There are other parts of the country where, for example, opposing BJP by putting up one united opposition candidate in each constituency will be tantamount to ensuring that BJP gets more than 50 percent of the votes. One could go on and on about the complexities of India’s political geography.

Ideological line must be drawn but we cannot expect it to be very straight. We should expect Congress to play the lead role in the battle at hand and yet we should not expect it to bind its hand and feet with ideological ropes in such a way that it becomes as ineffective in fighting the real battle against Hindutvaas, for example, Left has become.

In the end, we should also remember that fascists may come to power through elections but they are not very amenable to being dislodged from power through elections. January 6th in the United States had a happy outcome thanks to the relative robustness of American institutions. The Indian analogue of the January 6thwould more likely be a death knell for Indian democracy which is already under a great deal of stress.

On that depressing note, let me stop here.

June 10, 2023

( Ravi Sinha is an activist-scholar who has been associated with progressive movements for nearly four decades. He is one of the founders and a leading member of New Socialist Initiative.)

Reimagining Jawaharlal Nehru Today

 https://youtu.be/041eWWvhC1c

Prof Manoj Kumar Jha, who is a National Spokesperson of the Rashtriya Janata Dal, (RJD), and a Member of Parliament in Rajya Sabha ( upper house of the Parliament) who works as a Professor at the Department of Social Work, Delhi University, Delhi has kindly agreed to deliver the 23 nd lecture in the Democracy Dialogues Series , organised by New Socialist Initiative.

He will be speaking on ‘Reimagining Jawaharlal Nehru Today’ on Sunday, 11 th June, 2023 at 6 PM.

The lecture will also be live streamed at facebook.com/newsocialistinitiative.nsi

Topic :

Reimagining Jawaharlal Nehru today would involve examining his legacy and contributions in the context of the present day. Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India, played a crucial role in shaping the country’s political, economic, and social landscape after its independence in 1947. While we reimagine today presuming he was here we shall have to look at our parliamentary democracy and the core policy issues which have undergone so much of change that he would disown. The idea is to speak about some of the critical concerns we face as a nation through the Nehruvian lens. 

Speaker:

Prof Manoj K Jha, who is a National Spokesperson of the Rashtriya Janata Dal, (RJD), and a Member of Parliament in Rajya Sabha is a leading voice of the opposition.

A consistent votary of the idea of social justice and a strong opponent of the politics of majoritarian authoritarianism, his debates and interventions in the Upper House of the Parliament are appreciated across the political spectrum and are widely watched.

Prof Jha, is a very popular teacher in the Delhi University, was also head of the Department of Social Work, Delhi University , for a few years.

Dismantle the structures of sexual violence, NOT the protesters’ tent! Statement by concerned citizens

On the day that the Prime Minister was inaugurating a new Parliament house, democratic space was being crushed outside.

More than 1150 people including activists, lawyers, academics, former civil servants, artists and concerned citizens have released a statement condemning the brutal police action against the protesting wrestlers and those who had come out in support of their call from all over Delhi, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh for a Mahila Samman Mahapanchayat today.

We, concerned individuals, are absolutely horrified to see the violence unleashed by the government and police today, to suppress the powerful grassroots support for our brave wrestlers and their struggle against Wrestling Federation of India chief Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, who stands accused of sexual harassment of women wrestlers stretching back over a decade. The wrestlers have been protesting since 18th of January, 2023. They had given a call to all women’s organisations, activists and all other civil society organisations to join a Mahila Samman Mahapanchayat outside the new parliament building today, i.e 28 May 2023.

Thousands of women from Delhi and nearby states responded to the call.  Fearing the  collective strength of Indian women – the police pre-emptively blocked all border roads, shut down proximal metro stations, and cordoned off roads. This is how scared a patriarchal State is of the sight of the women of India standing shoulder to shoulder with each other. Despite this crackdown, the government was unable to block the flow of solidarity; activists and concerned citizens found ways of trying to reach the protest site. Continue reading Dismantle the structures of sexual violence, NOT the protesters’ tent! Statement by concerned citizens

A Left that Specialises in Shape-Shifting

For some time, we have known this in Kerala, and I have written about it too. But it is important to keep writing about it. Because the image of the benevolent state in Kerala conceals too much. In fact, a worrying Kerala Story is precisely that of a widening range of insecurities about Muslims, from outright Islamophobia to creeping everyday fears of Muslims.

Continue reading A Left that Specialises in Shape-Shifting

Aggressors Claim Hurt Sentiments While Victims Face Trial

History is a thin excuse for unrelenting majoritarianism in India and its neighbourhood

Recently, a senior advocate in Karachi was charged with blasphemy after another fellow lawyer complained about his having affixed ‘Syed’ to his name in an affidavit. This, supposedly, hurt the lawyer’s religious sentiments. The case is just one instance of the tremendous persecution the Ahmadiyya minority in Pakistan has faced since the eighties when the Benazir Bhutto regime declared it non-Muslim. Ever since, no Ahmadiyya can use Islamic symbols or names, such as Syed. Their persecution began with the notion that Islam has no space for another prophet, as the followers of Mirza Qadiani, founder of the sect, believed he was. That declaration brought the community into the spotlight of Pakistan’s blasphemy law, and their exclusion has continually expanded—from being denied space in public life, education, and employment, now they are even proceeded against for using certain names or titles.

The situation in India is sometimes no different. ( Read the complete article here)

STOP THIS WITCH HUNT – DON’T MISUSE PMLA AGAINST SCHOLARS AND ACTIVISTS! Statement by concerned citizens

Over 500 concerned citizens, democratic rights’ activists across movements, women’s groups, students and academics condemned the misuse of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) against scholars and activists, raising constitutional issues and asking for the government’s accountability.

We the undersigned women’s organisations and concerned individuals strongly condemn the continuous and repeated harassment of a number of women activists and intellectuals, by the Enforcement Directorate(ED), under the guise of an inquiry, in Delhi. This is a clear abuse of its extraordinary and draconian powers under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA). As in the case of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), there are increasing instances of the misuse of PMLA, especially against persons who are vocal critics of the government and its policies, and those who raise issues of the poor and oppressed sections of society. The ED is being used as an intimidation tool for political vendetta, where the process is the punishment for the detention of dissenters.

In the course of the last few months, several women scholars and activists have been summoned repeatedly, made to wait long hours, often interrogated without any woman officer present throughout, asked to furnish documents over and over again, in an ED investigation. In a clear case of evergreening the inquiry, the process has become endless. It is quickly turning into a fishing expedition, with all kinds of irrelevant documents and personal information being demanded, such as those about other family members, having no relevance to the inquiry whatsoever. Continue reading STOP THIS WITCH HUNT – DON’T MISUSE PMLA AGAINST SCHOLARS AND ACTIVISTS! Statement by concerned citizens

Social Suffering in a World without Support – Report on the Mental Health of Indian Muslims: Bebaak Collective

Report by Bebaak Collective, December 2022

Bebaak Collective (‘Voices of the Fearless’) was founded in 2013 as an informal association of grassroots activists to advocate for the rights of Muslim women and community. It is a platform for engaging with feminist thought and practice, human rights issues, and the anti-discrimination struggle. It has been working in Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Rajasthan. With the rising onslaught against marginalised communities, the Collective has evolved into an advocacy group that strongly adheres to constitutional values and believes that the rights and principles enshrined in our constitution are inalienable from every Indian citizen, irrespective of their caste, gender, sexuality or religion.

Relatives of a victim of the Delhi pogrom 2020 in mourning. Source: The Guardian

Foreword

Mental health and its socio-political determinants are beginning to emerge from a shroud of silence and stigma into public discourse. There are several possible reasons for this, the most visible being the pandemic and the many narratives of suffering it brought to the fore from among the most vulnerable sections of society. Even before the pandemic, the relationship between social disadvantage and the mental health of certain communities and groups (some more than others) has been studied in the Indian context. Some examples of these include the mental health of women, homeless persons, Dalit, Bahujan, and Adivasi communities, and queer and trans persons. However, the mental health of Indian Muslims has been severely underrepresented and almost invisible within the mental health or development literature in India. Continue reading Social Suffering in a World without Support – Report on the Mental Health of Indian Muslims: Bebaak Collective

महिला पहलवानों का सुबकता चेहरा – राष्ट्र अपने अंतरात्मा के दर्पण में : माया जॉन

Guest post by MAYA JOHN

यह लेख डेक्कन हेरल्ड में लिखे गए लघु लेख का हिन्दी रूपान्तरण है।

रात के अंधेरे में महिला पहलवानों से दिल्ली पुलिस की हालिया हाथापाई के बाद उनका आँसुओं से भरा  चेहरा दिखा। अंतर्राष्ट्रीय ख्याति प्राप्त यह महिला पहलवान सत्तारूढ़ पार्टी के सांसद और भारतीय कुश्ती संघ के अध्यक्ष द्वारा महिला पहलवानों के कथित यौन उत्पीड़न के खिलाफ लगातार विरोध प्रदर्शन कर रही हैं। पिछले कुछ महीनों में आरोपी सांसद के खिलाफ इन विरोध प्रदर्शनों का यह दूसरा दौर है। विडम्बना है कि सुप्रीम कोर्ट में मामला पहुँचने के बाद ही आरोपी के खिलाफ प्राथमिकी दर्ज हो पाई। आरोपी के खिलाफ लैंगिक अपराधों से बालकों का संरक्षण (पोक्सो) अधिनियम के तहत मामला दर्ज होने के बावजूद उसकी अभी तक गिरफ्तारी नहीं हुई है, और यहाँ तक कि वो अभी भी कुश्ती संघ के अध्यक्ष पद पर आसीन है। पहलवानों के यूँ सुबकते चेहरे, उनके अपमान और हताशा हमारे ज़मीर को भी झकझोरते हैं कि आखिर हमारे देश की क्या हालत हो रही है।

Continue reading महिला पहलवानों का सुबकता चेहरा – राष्ट्र अपने अंतरात्मा के दर्पण में : माया जॉन

Decoding Jan Shakti at National Gallery of Modern Art -There is no Schindler’s List! Sandip K Luis

This post originally appeared on social media and refers to the on-going Jan Shakti exhibition at National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), Delhi, which according to its description, displayed “works of India’s top artists on themes covered in Mann Ki Baat such as Swachhata, water conservation, agriculture, space, India’s northeast, Nari Shakti, Yoga, and Ayurveda.”

For some days now, certain videos and photos of PM Narendra Modi, the authoritarian Supreme Leader now ruling one-sixth of the world’s population, have been circulating on social media. He is seen visiting the new exhibition ‘Jan Shakti: A Collective Power’ at NGMA dedicated to his propagandist radio programme Mann Ki Baat.

About a week ago, an uproar, however scattered, erupted on social media when this exhibition, guest-curated by Alka Pande, was opened to the public since the occasion also witnessed the presence and participation of some of the celebrated personalities of the Indian artworld. To name some of them, since they would be recorded in history’s hall of shame – Atul Dodiya, Vibha Galhotra, Riyas Komu, Ashim Purkayastha, G.R. Iranna, Thukral and Tagra, Manjunath Kamath, Jagannath Panda and  Kiran Nadar in her role as the “adviser” to the exhibition. Almost all of these luminaries and “top artists” (as it is reported in the media) again appeared when the PM visited the show, proudly posing for a photo with him.

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Prime Minister Narendra Modi poses for a photograph with a group while visiting Jana Shakti, an exhibition at the National Gallery of Modern Art in New Delhi on Sunday. (ANI Photo)

Continue reading Decoding Jan Shakti at National Gallery of Modern Art -There is no Schindler’s List! Sandip K Luis

75th year of Nakba – In solidarity with the Palestinian struggle

Yesterday, May 15, 2023 marked the 75th anniversary of Nakba or the dispossession of the people of Palestine by the Zionist state of Israel. This is the text of a talk delivered at an event organized by India Palestine Friendship Forum.

Stamp issued in 1981

In September 2012,  I had the incredible good fortune to visit Palestine. We stayed in Ramallah, visited and interacted with colleagues at Birzeit University and spoke at a conference organized by Muwatin, a research institute based in Ramallah. We met  a large number of inspiring people who pushed the frontiers of our minds, and we came away humbled and moved by the dignity of a people living through the brutal occupation of their lands by the  Zionist state of Israel, with limitless courage and bubbling sense of humour intact. Continue reading 75th year of Nakba – In solidarity with the Palestinian struggle

Hindutva Brigade Must Break Silence Over Espionage Allegation

The list of people associated with Hindutva outfits caught in damning revelations keeps growing.

Recent revelations involving alleged espionage involving Prof Pradeep Kurulkar at the Defence Research and Development Organisation should have shaken up the establishment. After all, Kurulkar is said to have handled crucial projects related to India’s defence and reportedly was the lead designer or team leader for projects on missile launchers and subsonic cruise missiles.

Reports say Kurulkar was in contact, over WhatsApp, with a Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agent late last year. His suspicious activities were reported to the police by DRDO, and in January, his laptop and two mobile phones were seized. The Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) is now handling the case. Kurulkar’s foreign trips are also under the scanner.

Such discoveries have long-term implications for India’s national security. Initial reports from ANI, a news agency known for its proximity to the ruling regime, did not mention Kurulkar’s name. The news agency did not initially mention his name in its tweets, though pictures of his face were circulating on social media and news outlets. The sequence of events left many wondering if the tweets deliberately concealed his name to create a doubt over his identity.

No doubt, Indian investigators will examine if the neighbouring country’s sleuths have penetrated India’s defence research sector and the extent to which Kurulkar has compromised India’s secrets. But it’s worth noting this case has not been handed over to the National Investigation Agency. Formed in the immediate aftermath of the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attack and supposedly more equipped and experienced to handle cases with cross-border ramifications, this agency has been busy filing plenty of cases—so, why not this one? ( Read the full article here)

How the Jayanagar Vote was Stolen – What Does Not Add Up: Amandeep Sandhu

Guest post by AMANDEEP SANDHU

[This post is a report on what went on in Jayanagar, a constituency in the southern parts of Bangalore, in the Vidhansabha Elections, May 2023]

Yesterday, 13 May, by 2.30 pm or so, the Jayanagar seat had gone in favour of Sowmya Reddy, Congress. It had been a very closely contested election with her rival CK Ramamurthy, BJP in close pursuit. Sowmya Reddy’s final lead, after 16 rounds, was 160 votes.

Flag 1: The Election Commission website was pretty up to date with all candidate results, but Sowmya Reddy’s results were very slow in coming. Her final result came online by around 6 pm while the counting was over, and she had gained her lead at 2.30 pm.

Another candidate stood from Jayanagar with a slight name variation – Sowmya A Reddy. She got 320 votes.

As Sowmya Reddy was leaving to collect her certificate, Ramamurthy also left the vote counting venue – SSMRV college. However, the Election Commission of India rules mandate that since the victory margin was lower than the number of postal ballots, a recount of postal ballots had become mandatory. When Sowmya Reddy was absent, Ramamurthy came back and requested for a recount of the postal ballot. Postal ballot is the term used for those votes which are cast by outstation voters and the pink form submitted by service personnel – police, officers, ambulance drivers and so on – who would be on duty during elections and can’t vote on election day. Their votes are recorded in advance. These votes are counted between 7.30 and 8 am, before strong rooms are opened and EVM vote count starts.

Continue reading How the Jayanagar Vote was Stolen – What Does Not Add Up: Amandeep Sandhu

The Kerala Story, Hindutva, and Malayali Women

The movie called The Kerala Story is hate-speech against a whole people, but our courts are great upholders of free speech. Of course, unless people with the surname ‘Modi’ are said to have been defamed. As an observer of how the ‘love jihad’ agenda has unfolded in Kerala since more than over a decade now, I think we need an explanation of why the very idea, discredited by the state machinery itself and thrown out in effect by the Supreme Court in the Hadiya Case, has been used over and over again, like a hammer, to beat Kerala (hopefully into a shape acceptable to Hindutva).

Continue reading The Kerala Story, Hindutva, and Malayali Women

भारत में अंतर्राष्ट्रीय मजदूर दिवस के 100 साल – तब और अब : माया जॉन

Guest post by MAYA JOHN

यह लेख इंडियन एक्सप्रेस में मई दिवस 2023 पर लिखे गए लघु लेख का हिन्दी रूपान्तरण है।

वो दिन ज़रूर आएगा जब हमारी खामोशी उन आवाज़ों से ज्यादा ताकतवर होगी जिनको आज तुम दबा रहे हो।

  • अमर शहीद अगस्त स्पाइज़ का हेमार्केट शहीद स्मारक पर उद्धृत कथन, अनुवाद हमारा

हर दिन मैं खुद को यह याद दिलाता हूँ कि मेरा अंदरूनी और बाहरी जीवन मृत और जीवित लोगों के श्रम पर आधारित है, और जो मुझे मिला है और मिल रहा है उसको उसी मात्रा में देने के लिए मुझे पुरज़ोर मेहनत करनी होगी।

  • अल्बर्ट आइंस्टीन, द वर्ल्ड एज़ आई सी इट (दुनिया मेरी नज़र में), अनुवाद हमारा

मई दिवस 2023 के साथ भारत में मई दिवस मनाए जाने के 100 साल पूरे हुए हैं। सिंगारावेलु चेट्टियार, जो कि भारत के स्वतंत्रता आंदोलन की बड़ी शख़्सियतों और जाति-विरोधी आंदोलन से जुड़े शुरुआती कम्युनिस्ट नेताओं में से एक थे, उनको भारत में सबसे पहले मद्रास शहर में 1 मई, 1923 को मई दिवस मनाने का श्रेय दिया जाता है। सिंगारावेलु ने भारत में मई दिवस की शुरुआत कर कोशिश की कि भारतीय मजदूरों के संघर्षों को वैश्विक-स्तर के मज़दूरों के प्रतिरोध के साथ जोड़ा जाए। शिकागो में मई 1886 में मजदूरों की रैली से शुरू हुए मई दिवस की तीव्र तरंगें जो भारतीय तट तक 1923 में पहुँचीं, उस संवेग को आज भी दुनिया के विभिन्न हिस्सों में महसूस किया जा रहा है।

Continue reading भारत में अंतर्राष्ट्रीय मजदूर दिवस के 100 साल – तब और अब : माया जॉन

Why I will go to the DHRM’s Meetings

Someone just asked me why I would ‘still be soft on’ the Dalit Human Rights Movement — why I would speak at their meetings. For those who have not heard of them, the DHRM is a mass movement against casteist oppression in Kerala that fought very hard to break out of the liberal and statist imagination of dalit liberation — and continue to do so, despite having to face the most horrifying state violence.

Continue reading Why I will go to the DHRM’s Meetings

B 32 to 44: Body Politics or No Body/Politics?

B 32 to 44 is the title of a movie — it refers to the bra sizes of the protagonists of director and scriptwriter Sruthi Sharanyam’s debut film, which has been generating highly positive reviews in the Malayalam facebook world. It has also been highly-awaited  after it received funding from the Ministry of Culture and the Kerala State Film Development Corporation.

Continue reading B 32 to 44: Body Politics or No Body/Politics?

Statement by Historians and Concerned Scholars on Recent Changes Made by NCERT in Textbooks

Received via Maya John, the following statement was issued by over 250 historians and concerned scholars, protesting against the blatantly ideologically driven agenda of the present government in deleting chapters and sections of the school textbooks.

The recent decision of the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) to drop entire chapters from the history textbooks for class 12, as well as from other classes and to delete statements from other textbooks is a matter of deep concern. Using the period of the pandemic-cum-lockdowns to argue that there was a need to lighten the load of the curriculum, the NCERT initiated a contentious process of dropping topics like the history of the Mughal courts, the 2002 communal riots in Gujarat, the Emergency, mention of Dalit writers, the Naxalite movement, and the fight for equality from social science, history, and political science textbooks of classes 6 to 12. The new editions of these NCERT books have simply made the deletions the norm even when we are in a post-pandemic context in which school education has limped back to normalcy and is no longer in the online mode.

Continue reading Statement by Historians and Concerned Scholars on Recent Changes Made by NCERT in Textbooks

Turning a Blind Eye: Power and the Intellectual in Kerala Today

Today someone who is an absolute darling of the post-socialist oligarchy in Kerala and their army of hanger-ons told me, without a tinge of irony, with the most endearing innocence, that they were not celebrated at all in Kerala. That they were excluded from circles that praised and glorified the work of many other authors. It was most intriguing, to say the least. I think it reveals a lot about how the present dispensation manages intellectuals and minimises critical thinking.

You can be a rebel without any serious losses in present-day Kerala if you desist from any serious criticism of the establishment and its acolytes. You can spout feminism, dalit politics, espousals of the solidarity economy, liberal Muslim thought, queer thinking, soft Hindutva– literally anything except Islamism if you keep your mouth shut about the establishment and the post-socialist oligarchy, or at least limit yourself to weak, occasional noises. You can also present yourself in combinations of the above laced with hints of your slant towards the establishment and reap much success in classrooms and academic fora, and much applause on the social media. If you have connections with the Nair deep state and ‘deep intellectual elite’, you can pornify, sell, any kind of abuse of women.

Continue reading Turning a Blind Eye: Power and the Intellectual in Kerala Today

The Goba of Ladakh – Current Relevance of a Traditional Governance System: Shrishtee Bajpai and Ashish Kothari

Guest post by SHRISHTEE BAJPAI and ASHISH KOTHARI

Abstract: Indigenous and other local communities across India have had traditional systems of local governance as unwritten or sometimes written codes of conduct and decision making. Many such systems are still being followed in parallel with the panchayat systems, or getting re-invented by combining the modern forms of governance with the traditional ones, especially in the case of communities still practising traditional occupations and ways of life (forest-based, pastoral, fishing, and/or farming). There are, however, very few studies of these systems interacting with modern state institutions, their current or continuing relevance, and their role in achieving goals of justice, well-being, and ecological sustainability.

Goba meeting to discuss study results, Leh Aug 2022.

This study focuses on documenting the present status and relevance of the traditional governance system of Ladakhi villages, with a focus on the goba (or lambardar/nambardar). For this, the study also looked at the interface between the local/traditional and new/modern governance systems, viz. the goba with the panchayat, Ladakh Hill Council and UT Administration.

Keywords: traditional governance, goba, democracy, natural resources, indigenous knowledge, environment

Continue reading The Goba of Ladakh – Current Relevance of a Traditional Governance System: Shrishtee Bajpai and Ashish Kothari

Can we now practice some love? Thoughts on safety and feminism from Kerala

Around two weeks back, just about a week after the ritual of Women’s Day celebrations in Thiruvananthapuram, a 49-year-old woman decided to go get herself some pain medication at 10 30 at night, after all home remedies failed against her persistent body ache. She lives in the beating heart of the city of Thiruvananthapuram in a rented house. This house is in a leading middle-class residential locality, full of houses, usually very quiet. She is , however, not a typical owner-resident. An employee at a local firm earning a very modest salary, she has lived alone for years in rented accommodation, raising her young daughter. The daughter is now a confident young woman who has worked for some years and now seeks to expand her career options. The rent takes up nearly half of her income, but mother and daughter have struggled together to protect each other.

Continue reading Can we now practice some love? Thoughts on safety and feminism from Kerala

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