August 15, 2016: Modi’s Deceptive Rhetoric versus the Inspiring Una Resolve

When the people of India fought for freedom from British colonial rule,
there was one ideological-political stream which not only stayed away from
that great struggle but tried its best to disrupt and derail it with its
thoroughly communal and casteist agenda of Hindutva. Today that stream
holds the reins of ‘governance’ in the country and is bent upon
appropriating the mantle of freedom even as it uses the state machinery to
the hilt to subvert the values and aspirations of the freedom movement.
Halfway through his term, Modi asked the BJP to celebrate a ‘festival of
freedom’ around the Independence Day this year as he delivered his third
August 15 lecture from the ramparts of the Red Fort.

True to his demagogic track record, Modi made a few astoundingly misleading
claims in his speech. He said while previous governments were all
surrounded by complaints and allegations, his government only has to
confront the expectations of the people. Well, to tell the truth, the
expectations were based on the promises he had made in the 2014 election
campaign, and with his government going back on those promises much of
those expectations have today turned into frustration and anger. The much
touted promises of 2014 were of course conspicuously missing once again in
Modi’s Independence Day address.

Modi claimed to have brought down the rate of inflation when the common
people are reeling under soaring prices. When the whole world is heaving a
sigh of relief over the declining petroleum prices, his government has
inflicted steep increases in railway fares. And now in the name of ending
‘tax terrorism’ on the rich, his government has drawn up a blueprint of
hefty regressive taxation on the goods and services consumed by the common
people which will add fresh fuel to the fire of price-rise.

Modi talked about the alleged efficiency of governance he has ushered in
and called upon the people to match this efficiency by ensuring ‘social
unity’. A strong economy and a strong society would make India a strong
nation. But we have already seen that Modi’s ‘strong economy’ does not care
for either the welfare of the common people or the self-reliance and
sovereignty of the nation – all it cares for is faster accumulation of
corporate wealth and bigger inflow of FDI. Likewise, Modi’s ‘strong
society’ is all about maintaining the status quo within a
patriarchal-casteist order and that too on lines drawn by an increasingly
aggressive and intrusive Sangh brigade which would like to dictate the
terms of inter-personal relationships, social interaction, cultural
discourse and constitutional liberties in India.

Modi’s deceptive phrase of ‘strong society’ became very clear when he
invoked Ambedkar as a champion of ‘social unity’. Everybody knows that the
Constitution drafted under the leadership of Ambedkar proclaimed the
formation of the Indian Republic on the foundations of liberty, equality
and fraternity. Without liberty and equality, fraternity becomes an empty
word and unity can only mean subjugation. When Modi eulogises the notion of
‘strong economy’ and ‘strong society’ – there is of course also the
implicit third element of ‘strong’ or ‘hard state’ which Modi chooses not
to mention in his Independence Day address – he does it by effectively
undermining the modern democratic principles of liberty, equality and
fraternity.

It is significant that Modi used his ID address to mention the so-called
gratitude that some people from Balochistan, Gilgit and Pakistan-occupied
Kashmir have apparently expressed to him while keeping absolutely silent
about the continuing spate of civilian killings and injuries and the
anguished cries of pain and anger of the Kashmiri people who are ruled by
the Indian state. He talked about social unity rising above caste divisions
but said not a word about the oppression being unleashed on Dalits and
Muslims in the name of ‘cow protection’ by cow vigilantes sponsored by the
RSS and governments run by his own party in different states.

But despite elaborate plans to appropriate the mantle of freedom, Modi’s
Independence Day address and the BJP’s so-called ‘festival of freedom’ only
underscored the growing isolation and failure of his government. For the
people of India, the real resolve of freedom this year came from Una where
Dalits, Muslims and progressive citizens from other sections marched to Una
in their thousands, defying physical attacks and threats of more Unas to
come, and resolved to intensify their battle for freedom. They resolved to
reject the Brahminical code of labour which despises manual labour and
reserves all menial jobs for Dalits and demanded five acres of arable land
for every landless Dalit family. By linking the question of social dignity
and equality for Dalits with the question of land rights, Una has signalled
a new direction for the Dalit movement in the country. Following the Una
rally, there are reports of renewed attacks on Dalits in Gujarat and
progressive democratic forces across the country must unite to overcome
this desperate assault by casteist forces.

Fifty years ago the revolutionary peasant uprising of Naxalbari had
addressed the agrarian question as the central question of Indian democracy
and in the process it had triggered a massive awakening of the landless
poor. It inspired a new wave of communist movement in Bihar where the
question of freedom from social oppression became the central agenda
alongside the issue of land and wages. The Dalit movement too took a
radical turn at this juncture with the emergence of the Dalit Panthers and
radical Dalit literature in Maharashtra and elsewhere. Today Una has once
again galvanized the radical stream of the Dalit movement, squarely placing
the agenda of social equality and land reforms at the centre of the radical
democratic agenda of Dalit emancipation.

The infamous laboratory of Hindutva fascism is now witnessing a great
resistance that has galvanized the entire Dalit community in protests and
is also drawing in Muslims and Adivasis to pose a formidable challenge to
an increasingly isolated BJP regime. It is also encouraging to note that
Una has struck a chord across the country among the oppressed and fighting
people who have come out on the streets to express their fullest solidarity
and resolve to grasp this new juncture in the battle for real freedom and
democracy. The Una exhortation of unity of Dalits and Muslims, women and
workers will defeat the RSS-dictated 'social subjugation' camouflaged as
'social unity'.

Anti-Imperialism Day Observed Across the Country on 9 August 2016

On the anniversary of the August revolution, CPI (ML), AICCTU, All India
Kissan Mahasabha and other fronts observed anti-imperialism day throughout
the country. In Jharkhand, this day was also celebrated as the world
‘Adivasi Day’. Marches were taken out across states in several districts.
The purpose of the marches was to expose the anti-people, anti-national,
divisive, destructive, pro-corporate, communal and fascist policies of the
Modi led central government aimed at forcing India into the stranglehold of
imperialism and selling India’s natural resources and sovereignty into the
hands of the multinational companies.

In Patna, AICCTU leaders and activists offered tributes at the Shaheed
memorial outside the Bihar assembly and a protest meeting was organised in
which slogans were raised against American imperialism and the
pro-imperialist policies of the Modi government. Other trade union leaders
and activists also joined the protest meeting and pledged to ensure the
success of the 2nd September All India General Strike.

CPI(ML) and AICCTU organized ‘Adhikar March’ in Ranchi and Bokaro in
Jharkhand on the Adivasi Diwas (International Day of the World's Indigenous
Peoples) which is observed on 9 August. As the politics of both Jharkhand
as well as the country remains captured by the corporate houses, the
questions of the workers and the masses are at the margins. The assaults on
the rights of the Dalits, tribals, minorities and the workers continue
unabated. Addressing the march at Albert Ekka Chowk in Ranchi, CPI (ML)
central committee member Com. Shubhendu Sen stressed on the need for
another August revolution against the Company Raj. Com. Bhuvaneshwar said
that celebration of ‘Adivasi Diwas’ by the government which had failed to
put an end to the loot of water, forests, land, minerals and other natural
resources was a farce. In Bokaro, an adhikaar march was jointly organized
by trade unions. Besides submitting a charter of demands to the steel plant
manager, a call was given to ensure the success of 2nd September All India
General Strike. In Koderma, a dharna was organized under the leadership of
All India Kisaan Mahasabha to protest against the designs of the state
government to snatch the land from the poor in the name of wrong
settlement. A march was also taken out under the leadership of All India
Kisan Mahasabha in Ramgarh, in which several hundred people participated,
raising the slogans “Corporate-Company Raj Down Down”, “Waive the loan
taken by farmers immediately”,etc. The speakers addressing the march said
that far from supporting and encouraging farmers, the government was
determined to discourage them. Modi’s favourite Gautam Adani was procuring
several million quintal grains from the farmers at the rate of Rs.30/- per
kilo and hoarding the same and the Modi government was selling the same
grains at Rs. 100/- per kilo. Several farmers were being forced to commit
suicide. In Garhwa district, after years of struggle, tribals of Tiwari
Marhatiya village were able to procure their legal rights on the Raiyatti
land. Since 3 August 2016, they had sat on an indefinite hunger strike
outside the DC office. CPI (ML) activists from Garhwa district committee
also joined the hunger strike in support of the tribals. They also demanded
that immediate compensation be paid to those whose crops were destroyed and
the officers guilty of ensuring the destruction of crops be punished. A
mahadharna in support of these demands had earlier been organized on 6
August. After the successful completion of the strike, ‘a vijay juloos’ of
the local tribals was also carried out under the leadership of CPI (ML). In
Bagodar, a ‘chetaavni’ (warning) march was taken out by those who have been
displaced due to the policies of the state government. They also protested
against the inadequate compensation.

CPI (ML) activists also organized protests outside DM offices in several
places in Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana, and other states against the
oppression and persecution of Dalits and minorities by the associates of
RSS in the name of ‘cow protection’. In Gorakhpur, several people and Dalit
leaders and activists also joined these protests. The speakers warned the
local administration that if the provisions of accommodation, ration and
work in MNREGA were not ensured for the Dalits, poor and the workers, a
gherao of the district office would be done.

9th August also marked the end of the second phase of CPI (ML)’s
countrywide campaign- ‘Utho Mere Desh, Naye Bharat ke vaaste, Bhagat
Singh-Ambedkar ke raaste’ (Rise my nation- for a new India, in the path of
Bhagat Singh and Ambedkar). A huge dharna was organized to in Kanpur as a
part of this campaign. The speakers talked about the increasing attacks on
Dalits and minorities and the anti-people policies of the government. In
Lucknow, a dharna was called near the Ambedkar statue in Hazratganj. The
meeting was presided by Com. Kaushal Kishore, state president of Jan
Sanskriti Manch (JSM). Addressing the meeting he said today once again
slavery was being enforced on us by the Modi government. This slavery,
besides being economic, is also social and cultural. However, we are also
witnessing an unprecedented resistance. The Dalit upsurge in Gujarat, the
resistance from Kashmir to Hyderabad, the coming together of youth and
students across states shows that struggle for a new India against the
sanghi nationalism is gaining strength. The participants raised slogans
against cow protection vigilante groups, demanding a ban on them. Marches
were also taken out in Gazipur, Varanasi, Chandauli, Lakhimpur, Badohi,
Sitapur, Mirzapur, Faizabad, Allahabad, Baliya, Mau, Muradabad and other
places.

A pratirodh march was organized in Lalkuan in Nainital, Uttarakhand,
against false cases filed against protestors in the struggle against making
Bindukhatta a municipality. Several hundreds of people including a large
number of women joined this march called by Uttarakhand unit of All India
Kisan Mahasabha. CPI (ML) state secretary Com. Rajendra Pratholi urged
people to rout out the anti-farmer Rawat government.
[ML Update
A CPI(ML) Weekly News Magazine
Vol. 19 | No. 34 | 16 – 22 August 2016]


-- 

You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up
a nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on
the foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.in

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http://kmvenuannur.livejournal.com

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