THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA INDIA AGAINST ITS OWN INDIGENOUS PEOPLES

PalahBiswas On Unique Identity No1.mpg

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Three Dangerous Faces of the NDA Sitaram Yechury

Three Dangerous Faces of the NDA



 Sitaram Yechury



The 40th anniversary of the draconian Emergency has become an occasion for those who seek to distort Indian history, to (mis) appropriate the united people's struggle against it.  For my generation, this struggle for restoration of democracy was a period of political maturation.  Many of us embraced politics as a consequence, visible cutting across today's political spectrum.  This commitment to create a better India is distinct from those who inherited family political heirlooms, or, joined politics to share the spoils of crony capitalism that the trajectory of neo-liberal economic reforms engenders.  This Modi government is pursuing the such policies more aggressively. While it took nearly seven years for exposure of major UPA scams, this Modi government needed just one year and is brazening out the current (Lalit) Modi-Gate exposures.

The then CPI(M) leader in Parliament, A. K. Gopalan exposed the real character of the Emergency in his famous speech (censored in media) in the Lok Sabha. Stating that over 3,000 CPI(M) activists were detained under the dreaded MISA and DIR,  he spelt out the CPI(M)'s position on July 21, 1975, (official proceedings of Lok Sabha debates). CPI(M) opposed the "new declaration of Emergency and its ratification in the House..We cannot betray the interests of the people and give our assent to the obliteration of all vestiges of democracy in India".  And, concluded by saying: "Our Party considers its foremost task to awaken and organize the people against the grave peril they are facing and throw them into the struggle for the withdrawal of the Emergency..".

This is in total contrast to the claims being made today by RSS/BJP to appropriate these people's struggles.  PM Modi, as is his won't, tweeted to this effect. L.K. Advani warned that under the present political dispensation the dangers of authoritarianism persist.  Soon, he hastened (under pressure?) to clarify that his comments target the Congress party.  The seeds of such apprehensions, given this Modi government's authoritarian tendencies, however, are sown.

The RSS capitulation  during the Emergency  was, then, well known.   Jayaprakash Narain who accepted support from the RSS and its then political arm, the Jan Sangh, in the movement against Indira Gandhi's corrupt and anti-people rule, the prelude to the Emergency, had said in 1968, "The secular protestations of the Jan Sangh will never be taken seriously unless it cuts the bonds that tie it firmly to the RSS machine. Nor can the RSS be treated as a cultural organization as long as it remains the mentor and effective  manipulator of a political party".  He had to die a disillusioned man failing to persuade Jan Sangh leaders to severe all links with the RSS when they merged with the Janata Party and joined the government. This `dual membership' issue ultimately wrecked this government formed following the people's struggle against Emergency.

During Emergency, RSS chief Deoras wrote several letters to Indira Gandhi. He wrote also to Vinoba Bhave seeking intervention for the withdrawal  of the ban on RSS.  Following the character of deceitful compromises that the earlier RSS chief, Golwalkar, writing to Sardar Patel sought the withdrawal of the RSS  ban following the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, Deoras wrote a cringing letter  to PM Indira Gandhi  from Yeravada Central Jail on 10.11.1975 congratulating the PM "as five judges of Supreme Court have declared the validity of your election". He wrote again pleading the withdrawal of the ban saying "lakhs of RSS volunteers will be utilized for national upliftment (government as well as non government)", clearly supporting Indira Gandhi's infamous `20 point declaration' during Emergency.  However, in none of these letters did the RSS chief plead for a lifting of the Emergency or for the release of all the detenues.

Respected socialist leader Baba Uddhav noted then, "written queries were circulated in the Yeravada Jail  three or four times asking detenues if they would be prepared to sign an undertaking (supporting Emergency). I have seen with my own eyes majority of the RSS detenues signing their assent to do so." Deoras's letter to Indira Gandhi said that the RSS "has no connection with these movements (JP movement)".  Such  servile confirmism not any `heroic struggle' against Emergency, was their character.

It is necessary to underline that no commitment to democracy in India can sustain without a commitment to secularism.  The secular democratic character of the Indian Republic implies a notion of secularism that goes beyond the post Westphalian definition of  European secularism and nationalism. Crucial to Indian nationalism was drawing in an inclusive way the vast mass of people respecting their multiple diversities, including religious diversity. It is such inclusiveness that defines the unfolding of the `idea of India' central to which is secular democracy.  Here secularism and democracy cannot be separated as distinct concepts.  But this is the distinction that the RSS/BJP today draws by relentlessly pursuing their project of converting our secular democratic Republic into a rabidly intolerant fascistic `Hindu Rashtra'.

It is this character of the RSS/BJP that has the inherent dangers of strengthening authoritarianism by denying/destroying democracy. The seeds are already evident.  Unscrupulous attacks against norms and methods of parliamentary democracy can be seen in bulldozing legislations without proper scrutiny exercising its `tyranny of majority' in the Lok Sabha and by seeking to bypass the Rajya Sabha where it does not have a majority.  Relations between the Centre and state governments are worsening.  Such authoritarian expression is one face of the trimoorti this Modi government is sculpting.  The other two are the aggressive pursuit of anti-people economic reforms and the unscrupulous recourse to sharpening communal polarization.

This 40th anniversary of Emergency must motivate the Indian people, once again, to safeguard secular democracy and defeat all tendencies towards a new form of authoritarianism.

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