Books About Wars in Your Country
<https://www.newsclick.in/books-about-wars-your-country>
A brief history of books, resistance, the police and politicians.
Subhash Gatade <https://www.newsclick.in/author/Subhash%20Gatade>
 (https://www.newsclick.in/books-about-wars-your-country)
[image: War and Peace]
<https://www.newsclick.in/sites/default/files/2019-08/War%20and%20Peace%20.jpg>

It is humanly impossible for even the most learned judge to have read every
book referred to in their court. For a brief while this week, the judge
conducting the trial of activist Vernon Gonsalves, an accused in the Bhima
Koregaon incident of 2018, became an example of this. That was until the
judge clarified that he is, in fact, aware of the Russian writer Leo
Tolstoy and his epical novel War and Peace.

His response when the Bhima Koregaon
<https://www.newsclick.in/articles/Bhima%20Koregaon> charge sheet was
placed before his court proves he knew of the provenance and contents of
War and Peace. The confusion, it now appears, arose because the charge
sheet had mentioned another book
<https://www.newsclick.in/objectionable-war-and-peace-marathi-printed-state-govt-itself>
with
a similar title. That is how the judge had ended up asking Gonsalves’
lawyers why their client possessed a book about wars in “other countries.”

It is not the judge’s knowledge of great literature but his belief that
books about wars in other countries should not be owned (or read) by
Indians that is a bigger surprise. Of course, since that remark, many
commentators have pointed out that Tolstoy’s writings supported peace and
not war. Accordingly, Mahatma Gandhi’s long correspondence
<https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Correspondence_between_Tolstoy_and_Gandhi> with
the literary legend is being highlighted afresh.

That said, this is not the first time that judges have expressed a curious
indifference to the value of the written word
<https://www.newsclick.in/Only-Words-Writers-Matter-Times-Deceit>, whether
fictional or literary. The question arises, how can we tell if this
incident is an aberration or the tip of an iceberg of flimsy excuses to
keep people behind bars.

Criminalising the mere possession of books or literature is not new.
Even a children’s
magazine
<https://frontline.thehindu.com/the-nation/muslims-and-police/article6672575.ece>
has
fallen prey to this old tried and tested tactic of the ruling
establishment. The eminent lawyer AG Noorani, in a thought-provoking
article, has shared details of the effect these kinds of overzealous trials
have on dalits and Muslims. “Muzamil Jaleel exposed the patently ridiculous
evidence on which Students’ Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) members were
targeted in The Indian Express (September 25, 26 and 28, 2012). The
‘evidence’ could be just anything—a children’s magazine, Urdu poetry, a
newspaper, just anything could land the person targeted by the police in
jail. Iftikhar Gilani was put in prison and tortured for being in
possession of literature that is freely available in the public domain.”

These events are criticised not just by Noorani but many others, each time
these happen.

Consider again the Bhima Koregaon case and the manner in which those
accused in it were arrested
<https://www.newsclick.in/bhima-koregaon-verdict-arrest-should-be-last-step-investigation-not-starting-point-one>.
Simultaneous nationwide raids
<https://www.newsclick.in/index.php/pune-police-raid-dalit-activists-and-lawyers-houses-bhima-koregaon-case>
on
their houses and arrests had created a national uproar. One of those raided
by the police was noted scholar K Satyanarayana, apparently because he
happened to be the son-in-law of one of the accused in the same case, the
poet Varavara Rao.

Satyanarayana is dean of the department of cultural studies and
inter-disciplinary studies at the English and Foreign Languages University
in Hyderabad. He has many publications to his credit from India and abroad
and yet was treated like a “terrorist”.

“They were picking all material that was printed in red or had mentions of
dalits, caste or photos of Karl Marx,” Satyanarayana said at the time. “We
draw conclusions after extensive reading, but they were asking why we read
all these books.” His wife Pavana also said about the police’s behaviour:
“They even said that if we read so many books we might be dangerous.”

Or, revisit this <https://www.countercurrents.org/hr-gatade301006.htm>
experience
from more than a decade ago. Delhi-based book distributors Daanish Books,
who used to organise book exhibitions of progressive literature around the
country, faced the high-handedness of the police at their stall at in
Deekshabhoomi, a site in Nagpur that the Buddhists consider sacred and also
the place where Bhimrao Ambedkar, the first law minister and Dalit leader,
converted to Buddhism.

“The police arrived with a random list of books that it perceived as
‘dangerous’. The books that were then confiscated make for interesting
reading. These included the Marathi translation of Thoughts of Bhagat
Singh, Ramdeen Ka Sapna by BD Sharma, Jati Vyavastha- Bhartiya Kranti Ki
Khasiyat by Vaskar Nandy, Monarchy vs Democracy by Baburam Bhattarai,
Nepali Samargaatha: Maowadi Janyuddha ka Aankhon Dekha Vivaran (Hindi
translation of the eminent American Journalist Li Onesto’s celebrated book
Dispatches from the People’s War in Nepal, translated by Anand Swarup
Varma), Daliton par Badhati Jyadatiya aur Unka Krantikari Jawab, Chhapamar
Yudhha by Che Guevara and books on Marxism and Leninism and people’s
struggles.”

Only ceaseless pressure exerted by the international community on the state
government of Maharashtra could stop the book distributor from facing
severe trouble under draconian provisions of anti-terrorist laws of the
time.

The law in such cases is explicit
<https://www.newsclick.in/mere-statement-against-govt-or-military-not-sedition-kerala-hc>.
Mere statements, or just possessing a book or compilation of literature
does not automatically implicate the person in whose possession it is. Nor
does it make the owner liable in any “militant” or “terrorist” act. As the
Supreme Court has noted in 2016, while hearing the case of Binayak Sen: “No
case of sedition is made out on the basis of materials in possession unless
you show that he was actively helping or harbouring Maoists.”

Yet, reality seems to be at variance with this position even after it is
explicitly stated and re-affirmed. The powers that be buy time to prolong
detentions by presenting feeble charges that someone was in possession of
“explosive” literature.

Every Establishment Dreads Books

Books are not compilations of printed material but carriers of ideas that
can get people to start thinking about their circumstances. Perhaps the
rulers have drawn the proper lesson from history.

Take the case of the novel, Uncle Tom’s Cabin or Life Among the Lowly, an
anti-slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe. Published in
1852, the novel that helped
<https://www.americanhistoryusa.com/topic/uncle-toms-cabin/> lay the
“groundwork for the (American) Civil War”.

The popularity of Uncle Tom’s Cabin can be gauged from the fact that it
made it to the list of best-selling novels of the 19th century. It was the
second most sold book of the century, after only the Bible. Its strength
was how it illustrated the effect of slavery on families. That helped
readers empathise with the enslaved characters in the book.

In the 1950s, the American poet-activist Langston Hughes called Uncle Tom’s
Cabin a “moral battle cry for freedom”. Legend has it that Abraham Lincoln,
the 16th president of the United States, had greeted Harriet Beecher Stowe
in 1862 by saying, “So you are the little woman who wrote the book that
started this great war.”

In the late 18th century, the Parisian police also put writers and artists
under surveillance along with criminals and political figures. The
protectors of internal security of the day knew that the men of
letters—Victor Hugo, Honore De Balzac and Charles Dickens—though they write
fiction, kept a sharp focus on the hypocrisy of the aristocrats of their
time.

How the French police went about surveillance is recorded in La Police des
Ecrivains or Writers’ Police by Bruno Fuligni, published in 2006. An
employee of the French Parliament, Fuligni uncovered archives of the
Parisian police to detail how even the greatest writers (Paul Verlaine,
Jules Valles, Victor Hugo) who were living in Paris at that time, were kept
under surveillance.

The agenda for the surveillance was very specific. It was to protect the
tottering regime of the day. In France, the powers that be feared fiction
that highlights everyday issues of ordinary people. It was felt that they
were adding to the growing turmoil in the country. They knew all too well
that this fiction for the masses was turning out to be a critique with a
sharp political edge. The writing was hitting the right target and becoming
a catalyst for change.

History is witness that all the meticulous efforts of the police to curtail
ideas prove futile. Events like the French Revolution still occurred,
becoming beacons of hope for all thinking people. Once again, ideas are
being criminalised and the independence of thought is being discouraged.
Yet, as a dialogue in a recent Bollywood movie reminds us—‘apna time
aayega’—our time will come. This could well be a slogan for hope in the
future.

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