FYI!. Biswomay Pati dissects the Kandhamal situation.

Regards

Kundan



November 4, 2006 Biswamoy Pati
September 02, 2008
First Published: 20:22 IST(2/9/2008)
Last Updated: 20:45 IST(2/9/2008)
In a crucified stateOrissa is in the news yet again. Except that unlike in
December 2007, the news of Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati's death is real.
Nevertheless, very much like the last time, the VHP has gone berserk again.
Political murders and killing of Christians (as 'imagined murderers') or
vandalising churches is unacceptable to any democratic society. The violence
inflicted has been meticulously planned and executed over two-three days
when the Orissa government and its affiliated agencies seemed overwhelmed by
what was going on.

When Mahatma Gandhi had visited coastal Orissa in 1921 he had said: "I was
prepared to see skeletons in Orissa but not to the extent I did. I had seen
terrible pictures but the reality was too terrible.' (Young India, April
1921). In fact, if he had visited western Orissa or the Kandhamal region
today, he would have echoed this sentiment.

We are talking about a region that has a predominantly tribal and Dalit
population, with 70-75 per cent of the people living below the poverty line.
In fact, western Orissa is an amazing 'hinterland' of contradictions. Along
with acute poverty, the region also harbours mega-projects associated with
the mining of bauxite needed to produce aluminium. Unfortunately, successive
governments in Orissa have been extremely careful about saving their
'marriage' with international capital, but have ignored the serious impact
of these mega-projects on people's lives and the region's environment.

The current BJD-BJP government has suppressed popular initiatives that have
questioned the displacement of people and highlighted hazards to the
environment. At the same time, it is puzzling that the government is neither
interested in nor is serious about maintaining law and order in this western
hinterland. And going by Saraswati's murder and the subsequent killings,
political scientists may well argue that what is being witnessed today
indicates the breakdown of civil society. However, the deeper question is:
has this tract ever seen civil society?

Whoever is responsible for the murder of Saraswati is definitely not
interested either in tribals or Dalits. This heinous act would most
certainly boost the VHP in a manner comparable to LK Advani's rath yatra.
After all, Saraswati was a major Sangh parivar functionary who had been
working among poor tribals since the late 1960s. He had been associated with
the schools and ashrams, working with the idea of improving the lot of the
poor tribals.

This needs to be located in a context where the government has virtually
abdicated its responsibility of providing basic features of civil society
like education and health. In the absence of any land reforms or serious
governmental interventions to improve the condition of the poor, the schools
and ashrams provide meagre alternatives, along with institutions run by
Christian missionaries and NGOs.

Ironically, the activities of the VHP correspond to what they accuse the
Christian missionaries of doing in western Orissa. Both work to attract and
convert people to their respective faiths – something that is allowed under
the Indian Constitution. Moreover, both have access to resources — internal
and external — to be used towards the uplift of the poor. But then how does
one explain the way in which the term 'conversion' appears to be synonymous
with Christian missionaries? This might appear to be a profound question.
But this is precisely where the Sangh parivar's hegemonic hold needs to be
loosened.

This is sustained by poverty, lack of land struggles and reforms and the
virtual non-existence of either civil society or the state in this area;
further clothed by a finely-crafted 'reality' created by the VHP. One could
cite two clear examples to illustrate this point: (a) that tribals are
Hindus and Christian missionaries are the villains, who are spreading
Christianity through inducements and converting the poor and ignorant
tribals; and (b) that the VHP has the right to re-convert them to their
original faith. It is indeed amazing that most of the reports on Kandhamal
wrongly assume that tribals are Hindus. In fact, what the Sangh parivar has
been attempting in Orissa — their post-Gujarat laboratory — is large-scale
conversion of tribals to Hinduism.

This is skilfully combined with terrorising sections of Dalits – who had
opted to convert to Christianity after suffering social discrimination – to
reconvert to Hinduism. This 'common sense' makes the conversion of tribals
appear as 're-conversion'. And this has been skilfully woven with terror
directed against Dalit Christians over quite some time. More significantly,
the majoritarian orientation of such conversion drives and their ancillaries
– viz the ghee-burning shuddhi karan (re-conversion) rituals as seen through
the electronic media — hides the real agenda.

This 'common sense' has enabled the VHP to make serious inroads in Orissa,
even as the world debates the conflicts among Dalit (Panas) Christians and
the adivasis (Kandhas) over diverse issues. The real problem in Kandhamal is
related to the aggressive drives to convert tribals to Hinduism, including
terror directed at Dalit Christians, who are the stumbling blocks in the
path of the Sangh parivar and the VHP.

(Biswamoy Pati is the author of Identity, Hegemony, Resistance : Towards a
Social History of Conversions in Orissa, 1800-2000)

http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/Print.aspx?Id=6d2a5ff7-1561-44f9-aa73-45a5dc770179
(c) Copyright 2007 Hindustan Times


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