[<<As an anthropologist, I find it difficult to simply focus on the larger
political picture in which Kerala characteristically emerges as an
anti-fascist inspiration, as Prashad (2019), for instance, has done. An
anthropological approach produces a more realistic picture, sensitive to
the crucial local question of caste, but also to the effects of global
processes of capital accumulation on class formation in Kerala (see Steur
2017). This picture presents a less rosy image of what is going on in
Kerala today. And yet, it should be clear by now that advancing an agenda
of universal social emancipation in the old way leads to a dead end. It no
longer works to engage oppressed social groups in the progressive struggle
only as voiceless followers; to let Dalits and women speak only in those
rare moments when electoral calculations are not of the utmost importance
and only if they forever prioritize political and economic equality over
and above their passionate desire to abolish caste and patriarchy in all
their manifestations. It is precisely this tendency that has led to the
rise of “identity politics” of oppressed groups in antagonism to the Left:
under the existing priorities of the Left, these oppressed social groups
will only fall in line with it, reluctantly, in times of actual fascist
menace. This, I’m afraid, is the real meaning of the Women’s Wall in
Kerala.>>]

http://www.focaalblog.com/2019/01/20/luisa-steur-a-womens-wall-against-the-fascist-menace-in-kerala-some-less-comfortable-observations/?fbclid=IwAR2GBTdoku8rBuJy0A5rtESyf3c0ARyQdQSzOuj9Zs23OAcsHMJTrJBPQwg

Luisa Steur

A Women’s Wall against the fascist menace in Kerala? Some less-comfortable
observations

January 20, 2019

On New Year’s Day, the world was treated to the spectacle of a
640-kilometer-long “Women’s Wall” in Kerala (South India). This human chain
of more than five million women stretched the length of the state, making a
spectacular statement for the “renaissance values” of women’s equity and
rational thinking. Progressive organizations linked to Kerala’s Communist
government organized the demonstration to counter the hate-filled Hindu
protests that had been ongoing since 28 September 2018, when the Supreme
Court of India ruled that the Sabarimala temple’s ban on women of
menstruating age was unconstitutional and had to be lifted. Implementation
of this court order had so far been sabotaged by the militant protests of
orthodox Hindus, fueled by the BJP (the Hindu nationalist party).


Figure 1: Women’s Wall at Angamaly, 1 January 2019 (© Navaneeth Krishnan S,
via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0).
Women’s Wall at Angamaly, 1 January 2019 (© Navaneeth Krishnan S, via
Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0).

These Hindutva protests frame the Sabarimala issue as an example of how
“Hindu identity” is under threat in India today. Right-wing Hindu activists
warn of a liberal, secular elite that is progressively dismantling Hindu
India and will leave it unarmed in the face of the “Muslim enemy.”
Right-wing commentators also like to claim a position of “indigeneity,”
defending an “indigenous” Hindu tradition against a foreign constitutional
ideal. What is at stake at Sabarimala, they argue, is an ancient Hindu
custom, grounded in holy scriptures: Lord Ayyappa, worshipped at
Sabarimala, is a celibate god who is not to be confronted with young women.
To enter the temple, moreover, it is necessary to avoid all forms of
“pollution” for 41 days prior—impossible of course for women of
menstruating age (10 to 50 years old), as menstruation is seen as a
pollutant.

This right-wing discourse has been criticized from many angles.
Environmentalists point to the contradiction between the supposed obsession
with “purity” and the actual functioning of Sabarimala as a billionaire
enterprise that ignores all court verdicts against ongoing construction on
forest lands and receives millions of pilgrims every year, a process that
progressively erodes all that was “pure” in the Periyar National Park and
Wildlife Sanctuary surrounding the temple (Gurukkal 2018). Transgender
activists have criticized the right-wing discourse for advancing
patriarchal and homophobic values under the guise of religion: trans women
don’t menstruate, yet they too have been turned away from the temple (Deep
and Rana 2018).

Crowd management at Sabaramila, 5 December 2007 (© ragesh ev, via Wikimedia
Commons, CC BY 2.0).
Crowd management at Sabaramila, 5 December 2007 (© ragesh ev, via Wikimedia
Commons, CC BY 2.0).

Another forceful criticism of the supposed “indigenous” Hindu tradition of
banning women came from actual “indigenous” people (Adivasis) themselves.
In the weeks following the Supreme Court order, various Dalit-Adivasi
organizations participated in protests and “Villuvandi marches,”[1]
demanding the temple be restored to the Mala Arayan, the indigenous people
it belonged to before it was taken over by Namboodiri Brahmins. It turns
out that though Sabarimala itself is indeed “ancient,” the practice of
banning women is of modern making, only gradually introduced by Brahmin
high priests in the second half of the twentieth century and turned into
law in 1991. The actual “ancient custom” at the shrine, developed from the
fifteenth to the nineteenth century when Sabarimala was still in the hands
of the local population, was one of ritual openness and social flexibility.
Ayyappa was open to all, regardless of caste and even of religion: Ayyappa
was closely associated to Vavar, a Muslim, so Ayyappa devotees used to pay
homage to the Vavar mosque en route to Sabarimala. As for gender, fertile
women were considered auspicious by the Mala Arayan and used to be
particularly welcome at Sabarimala (Gurukkal 2018).

 Women’s Wall platform at Kollam, 27 January 2018. The banner reads,
“Kerala comes together to protect renaissance values” (© Sai K Shanmugam,
via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0).
Women’s Wall platform at Kollam, 27 January 2018. The banner reads, “Kerala
comes together to protect renaissance values” (© Sai K Shanmugam, via
Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0).

Defending the court order on Sabarimala thus seemed to allow for a perfect
political alignment on the Left: environmentalist, queer, Adivasi, and
feminist critiques could not only converge; they moreover could naturally
do so under an anti-fascist agenda. Opposing the BJP’s defense of an
orthodox Hindu practice that stigmatizes women as periodically
“untouchable” is an entirely straightforward progressive stance, unlike the
more complex case of the politics around the “triple talaq” judgment two
years ago.[2] It was also obvious the BJP was fomenting the violent,
hate-filled orthodox Hindu protests in Kerala because of the forthcoming
national elections in April (Dennis 2018). Indeed, in order to capture the
votes of the majority Hindu community, the BJP has in recent decades
consistently orchestrated violent religious polarization before every major
election.[3] In preparation for the national elections in April 2019, then,
BJP strategists spotted what the Kerala BJP chief openly called a “golden
opportunity” in the local protests against the judgment on Sabarimala.

But surely the BJP was mistaken in thinking its usual tactic of fomenting
religious bigotry for electoral gain could work in Kerala? The massive
success of the Women’s Wall has suggested to many commentators that the BJP
made an epic miscalculation this time. And indeed, I initially shared the
sense of optimism of commentators like Vijaj Prashad (2019), whose widely
circulated post portrays Kerala’s Left Democratic Front government—and
Kerala’s women “of all ages and backgrounds”—as standing steadfast,
explicitly speaking out against the everyday humiliation of women on
grounds of religious orthodoxy, and demonstrating once more that the BJP
had little chance of gaining ground in Kerala. But, just as I was about to
sit back and watch the spectacle of the BJP meeting its nemesis in Kerala,
more nuanced stories started to reach me from Kerala’s anti-caste activists
and intellectuals—those that were the focus of my earlier research in the
state (see Steur 2017).

The shaky foundations of the Women’s Wall
First of all, the generally suggested picture of an organized but
spontaneously expanding momentum of women joining to stand for equality
turned out to be somewhat misleading. In organizing the Wall, women’s
organizations themselves apparently had played only a subordinate role. One
could even say the Communist government was using women for waging its own
battle with the BJP: it even diverted funds earmarked for women’s safety
toward organizing the Wall (Abraham 2019). Stories reached me, moreover,
that suggested Kerala’s widely praised Self-Help Groups for women had been
instrumentalized in unsavory ways: Wall organizers had threatened to
withhold some of these groups’ government subsidies if women did not ensure
that all members of their group showed up. The apparent need for such
heavy-handedness in bringing women to the Wall was a worrying sign that
perhaps Kerala was not as unitedly progressive as the Women’s Wall
suggested at first glance.


Women’s Villuvandi March Declaration, 15 December 2018. Radical women
activists (feminist, Dalit, forest rights, transgender) declaring their
right to enter the temple (© Diyva K).

Sunny Kappikad speaking at Erumely. In background , holding a green
placard, is Bindu, one of the women who entered Sabarimala on 2 January (©
Divya K, reproduced with permission).
Sunny Kappikad speaking at Erumely. In background , holding a green
placard, is Bindu, one of the women who entered Sabarimala on 2 January (©
Divya K, reproduced with permission).

Consequently, I learned the Wall organizers had carefully avoided an
explicit call for the right of women to enter Sabarimala. The whole effort
had unfolded under the somewhat vague heading of “renaissance values.”[4]
Some of the Communist government leadership—notably, Chief Minister
Pinarayi Vijayan himself—were coming out in favor of the Supreme Court
judgment, but there was no public statement about this regarding the
Women’s Wall, and the government failed to de facto implement the order:
women were still being stopped by orthodox Hindu protesters, and evidently,
even the police were advising women not to enter the temple (see Abraham
2019; Devika 2019a). When two women—one Nair (upper-caste) “devout Hindu”
and one Dalit gender activist (Ameerudheen 2019a)—finally entered the
temple at dawn on 2 January, such Hindutva violence was sparked that the
women, and other feminist activists, feared for their lives (Devika 2019b).
For days, the whole state of Kerala grid to a halt.

Progressive commentators have been eager to portray the Hindu protests
against the court injunction as instigated and financed by the BJP (Dennis
2018). But before the BJP came in, the Hindu crowds were already quite
sizeable. In fact, many local leaders who had initially welcomed the
Supreme Court judgment made an opportunistic U-turn[5] after being
confronted with the “popular sentiments” visible in the Save Sabarimala
agitations—with crowds of women and men in nama japa yatras (hymn-singing
marches)—and the Ready to Wait sloganeering of young Hindu women (Ittyipe
2018). Progressive commentators also conveniently ignore the fact that the
neo-Brahmanical, upper-caste movements at the forefront of these protests
seem to thrive in Kerala today (Sunny Kappikad, cited in Ameerudheen
2019b).[6]

Figure 5: BJP strike protesting against young women entry in Sabarimala, 3
January 2019 (© Ranjithsiji, via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0).
BJP strike protesting against young women entry in Sabarimala, 3 January
2019 (© Ranjithsiji, via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0).

It is, finally, questionable to what extent the less vocal masses in Kerala
are actually opposed to the militant Hindu protests: the more local stories
I hear, the more it seems to me that people from various backgrounds
(including Christians) are actually in favor of “respecting the religious
custom” of banning women. They don’t like the confrontational attitude of
women trying to enter Sabarimala,[7] they aren’t eager to open up the taboo
about women’s menstruation, and they blame those pushing for women’s entry
to Sabarimala—not the BJP, which was actually calling for the violent
strikes—for paralyzing everyday life in Kerala. The masses in Kerala are no
longer the proletarian classes struggling together with the Communist Party
to emancipate themselves from the various oppressive structures: the masses
in Kerala today have become rather “bourgeoisified,” largely thanks to
money earned in the Persian Gulf and elsewhere abroad. These are by and
large politically and economically emancipated middle classes now engaged
in a fierce competition for cultural capital, of which a key ingredient is
the modesty and general “pleasantness” of the family’s women in accordance
with the expectations of caste. Though they like to wear the badge of
progressive cosmopolitanism vis-à-vis other Indian states, the Keralese
certainly don’t want the status quo to be shaken up too much. The Communist
Party seeks to accommodate these conservative desires by avoiding explicit
action against religiously ingrained patriarchal and casteist practices.
While the media present starkly polarized images of the demure woman
devotee versus the assertive sloganeering woman (Carmel, forthcoming), the
Communist Party in general seems unable to take sides.

As an anthropologist, I find it difficult to simply focus on the larger
political picture in which Kerala characteristically emerges as an
anti-fascist inspiration, as Prashad (2019), for instance, has done. An
anthropological approach produces a more realistic picture, sensitive to
the crucial local question of caste, but also to the effects of global
processes of capital accumulation on class formation in Kerala (see Steur
2017). This picture presents a less rosy image of what is going on in
Kerala today. And yet, it should be clear by now that advancing an agenda
of universal social emancipation in the old way leads to a dead end. It no
longer works to engage oppressed social groups in the progressive struggle
only as voiceless followers; to let Dalits and women speak only in those
rare moments when electoral calculations are not of the utmost importance
and only if they forever prioritize political and economic equality over
and above their passionate desire to abolish caste and patriarchy in all
their manifestations. It is precisely this tendency that has led to the
rise of “identity politics” of oppressed groups in antagonism to the Left:
under the existing priorities of the Left, these oppressed social groups
will only fall in line with it, reluctantly, in times of actual fascist
menace. This, I’m afraid, is the real meaning of the Women’s Wall in Kerala.

Luisa Steur is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the
University of Amsterdam. She is Managing and Lead Editor of Focaal—Journal
of Global and Historical Anthropology and the author of Indigenist
Mobilization: Confronting Electoral Communism and Precarious livelihoods in
Post-reform Kerala (Berghahn Books, 2017). Extending her work on
Dalit-Adivasi resistance in Kerala, she is now engaged in comparative
research on racial inequality and black activism in Cuba

Notes

[1]. Villuvandi marches proceed with bullock carts and are a form of
protest echoing the tactics of Ayyankali (1863–1941), the renowned Dalit
social reformer from Kerala.

[2]. The 2017 judgment posed quite a dilemma for progressive feminists.
Muslim feminists had been working for years to repeal the legality of
“triple talaq,” a custom in certain Muslim communities whereby a man merely
had to pronounce three times that he wanted a divorce from his wife in
order for it to become realized. Valid feminist arguments said this made it
much too easy for men to (threaten to) abandon their marital obligations,
while women’s possible calls for a divorce were incomparably more limited.
The BJP jumped on the issue, however, and made it very awkward politically.
The BJP supposedly clamored for women’s rights while in fact its interests
obviously were to once again stigmatize all Muslims as “backward” and
demonstrate Hindu power to curtail Muslim religious practices. In reaction,
there were many splits on the Left between those prioritizing the feminist
case and those refusing to play into the BJP’s Hindu majoritarian agenda.

[3]. The archetypical case was the violent Hindu campaign to demolish the
Babri Masjid mosque at Ayodhya, followed by the anti-Muslim pogroms in 2002
in Gujarat under Narendra Modi’s chief ministership, and repeated in 2013
at Muzaffarnagar in Utter Pradesh in the run-up to the national electoral
victory of the BJP in 2014.

[4]. These renaissance values refer to the caste-reform movements active in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Kerala. Radical
anti-caste intellectuals argue that these social reform movements have been
suppressed by the Communist movement’s consolidation since the 1930s (see
Steur 2017: 160ff.).

[5]. The latest politician to do so is Rahul Gandhi, who erstwhile said:
“My personal view . . . is that men and women are equal. All women should
get permission to enter into the temple.” As of 14 January 2019, per the
Times of India, Gandhi has adjusted this “personal view.”

[6]. Kappikad (cited in Ameerudheen 2019b) discusses neo-Brahmanism as
follows: “Brahmanical practices in the 19th century mainly focused on
religious rituals. But in the 21st century, it transformed into a political
narrative and this is known as neo-Brahmanism, which thrives on the premise
that India has a rich Brahmanical tradition and all Indians should protect
Brahmin culture if they want to defend India.”

[7]. One of the women who had entered Sabarimala was beaten up by her own
relatives on returning home.

References

Abraham, Alice. 2019. “Why are some women against the Kerala’s government’s
Women’s Wall?” Feminism in India, 2 January.

Ameerudheen, TA. 2019a. “Gender justice activist and devout Hindu: Meet the
women who made history by entering Sabarimala.” Scroll.in, 2 January.

Ameerudheen, TA. 2019b. “Interview: Sabarimala protests are a reminder of
the role of caste in Kerala’s enlightened society” Scroll.in, 3 January.

Carmel, Christy K. J. Forthcoming. “Sabarimala: A spectacle as it unfolds.”
The Conversation.

Deep, Pratyush, and Priyamvada Rana. 2018. “Ayyappa is genderfluid, and
trans women will enter Sabarimala.” The Citizen, 25 December.

Devika, J. 2019a. “The triumph of streevaashi! Women break the wall of
caste at Sabarimala.” Kafila, 2 January.

Devika, J. 2019b. “Hindutva terror and left hegemony: After women’s entry
into Sabarimala.” Kafila, 3 January.

Dennis, Subin. 2018. “Renaissance versus reaction: Ahi storical battle
unfolds in Kerala.” People’s Democracy, 25 November.

Gurukkal, Rajan. 2018. “Yes, Sabarimala is in peril, but not the way you
think.” Outlook, 25 October.

Ittyipe, Minu. 2018. “Sabarimala fiasco reveals fragility of Kerala’s
much-vaunted progressiveness.” Outlook, 22 November.

Prashad, Vijaj. 2019. “5.5 women build their wall.” Daily Hampshire
Gazette, 9 January.

Steur, Luisa. 2017. Indigenist mobilization: Confronting electoral
Communism and precarious lives in post-reform Kerala. Oxford: Berghahn
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