[《Think also for one moment what might have transpired if a Dalit scholar
had said what Adityanath said – that Hanuman was a Dalit. A tsunami of
high-caste, righteous hate might have poured upon the streets of the
republic, where the Sangh’s ‘intellectuals’ would have launched a full
scale attack.

The simple point is never to let any scruple, any value, any principle,
however tom-tommed from one day to another, to come in the way of the
primary object of the totalitarian Rightwing: ergo, never to lose state
power at any cost.
...
One would like to think that the unprecedented plurality of nations within
the Indian nation still remains a guarantee against the sort of whole-scale
assimilation into the requirements of a totalitarian state. Yet, so
devastating have been the ravages over the last four and a half years that,
even if defeated at the hustings, the current ruling forces are likely to
have left behind a residue so toxic that pulling out the polity and the
institutions of the state from could well prove a herculean task.》]

https://thewire.in/caste/hanuman-dalit-adityanath-identity

Hanuman as a Dalit – the Right's Latest Ingenious Caste Game
A significant political message appears embedded in these recent
shenanigans: there is no lengths to which right-wingers will not go, and
that even gods and deities are not safe.

Hanuman as a Dalit – the Right's Latest Ingenious Caste Game
Credit: Reuters

Badri Raina
Badri Raina
326
interactions
CASTEPOLITICS
19 HOURS AGO
In March, the ministry of social justice and empowerment directed state
governments to “refrain from using the word Dalit” since the constitution
only mentions “Schedule Castes”.

Subsequently, in its order on August 7 – citing a directive of Nagpur bench
of the Bombay high court – the I&B ministry asked the Union government to
“consider the question of issuing such direction to the media and take
suitable decision soon within the next six weeks”.

Pushback to this motivated official diktat was quick and decisive: sections
of the media, social organisations, notable individual voices correctly saw
this move as a churlish and quixotic attempt to neutralise and erase the
political-historical charge of the nomenclature “Dalit”, and to
anaesthetise the gruesome memory and reality of caste oppression.

The word “Dalit”, as we know, carries with it the scent of a proudly
mounted resistance to such oppression and a resolve to fight it in informed
ways.

Also read: Do Not Say ‘Dalit’, For It Is Too Real

Now the redoubtable Adityanath has said that, after all, Hanuman too was a
Dalit.

Some other spokespersons of the parivar have made it known that Hanuman
indeed was no Dalit, but an “Arya”. One recalls a line in the ubiquitous
Hanuman Chalisa which speaks of Hanuman as a janeu-dhari, namely, a
twice-born.


Credit: Reuters

But a significant political message appears embedded in these shenanigans:
there is no lengths to which right-wingers will not go in its lust for
power. Proclaiming as they do on a regular basis – for public consumption –
how all Hindus are one and how it is an enemy trick always to speak of
diverse castes, when the need is felt, even gods and deities may be
bestowed with caste identities, depending on what constituency and audience
are to be placated. We shouldn’t be surprised if at some stage we also hear
of Lord Ram being declared as Kshatriya-Thakur.

If the last four years or so of our political history has taught us
anything, it is that the expediency of the right-wing has little to do with
scruple, everything to do with realpolitik. Think of how little the Sangh
has had to say about the fate of the hallowed cow in the states of Goa and
Arunachal, where it runs governments but where the holiness of the bovine
is happily subordinated to the food habits of the electorate. Ascribing
caste identities to the deities is part of that thought process.

Those that can make a Dalit of Hanuman and a Thakur of Ram can well have
made monkeys of vast numbers of people
For all the Sangh’s proclaimed aversions to Western ways , not only does
its brand of nationalism draw from the monochromatic models from Europe –
pinning nation-building on the exclusive privileges of a race, a language,
a religion – but its nimbleness in taking up and then also dumping ideas
and values likewise draws from successful colonial strategies.

Think of how the British in India first lauded Oriental learning (till such
time as they needed time to master our forms of knowledge and official
records) and then how, when the time for colonial-industrial dominance
came, requiring a new Indian consuming class of a different orientation,
Macaulay could say that one shelf of European books contained more
worthwhile knowledge than all of Oriental learning. Among other things, the
colonial power designated tribes and castes as and how it suited their
purposes. Not to mention polarising religious communities – a form of
statecraft that the Sangh has come to perfect.

Also read: Telling People Not to Use ‘Dalit’ Contravenes Both the Law and
the Dalit Cause

Narendra Modi was proud to be recognised as an OBC during his campaigns in
Uttar Pradesh; Sangh scions never tire of making it known how they gave the
country its first OBC prime minister, even as they pounce on C.P. Joshi for
making gauche casteist remarks.

Not surprising then that, in contravention of the directions and orders of
two ministeries of the Modi Cabinet, and even an order of the Bombay high
court, Yogi Adityanath has thought it fit to extend casteist identification
from mere mortals to the gods.

Think  also for  one moment  what might have transpired if a Dalit scholar
had said what Adityanath said – that Hanuman was a Dalit. A tsunami of
high-caste, righteous hate might have poured upon the streets of the
republic, where the Sangh’s ‘intellectuals’ would have launched a full
scale attack.

The simple point is never to let any scruple, any value, any principle,
however tom-tommed from one day to another, to come in the way of the
primary object of the totalitarian Rightwing: ergo, never to lose state
power at any cost.

Also read: To Be or Not to Be a ‘Dalit’?

One would like to think that the unprecedented plurality of nations within
the Indian nation still remains a guarantee against the sort of whole-scale
assimilation into the requirements of a totalitarian state. Yet, so
devastating have been the ravages over the last four and a half years that,
even if defeated at the hustings, the current ruling forces are likely to
have left behind a residue so toxic that pulling out the polity and the
institutions of the state from could well prove a herculean task.

Those that can make a Dalit of Hanuman and a Thakur of Ram can well have
made monkeys of vast numbers of people, scratching their heads at the
future.

If the establishment is so miffed at the current unprecedented organised
revolt of farming communities across party affiliations, the reason does
not lie merely in the numbers or in the proletarian dourness of heir
resolve to be heard and seen. It lies in the fact that these protesters
seem for now alarmingly beyond the reach of official spin. Their formidable
weapon clearly is t heir grip on facts and their refusal to be conned any
further by “alternate facts”.

Likewise, not many Dalit communities are likely to be weaned by this
ingenious construction of Hanuman as a Dalit. India will know sooner than
later how subaltern populations and subaltern gods – Hanuman foremost – are
due to respond to the suffocating clasp of virtual governance.

Badri Raina taught English literature at Delhi University for four decades.
He is the author of Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth, The Underside of
Things: India and the World, Kashmir: A Noble Tryst in Tatters and other
books.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to greenyouth+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send an email to greenyouth@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to