Tuesday, March 20, 2007

sandhya jain: nandigram

mar 19th, 2007

sandhya on nandigram

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sandhya

Pioneer-20 March 2007

Dialectics of dharma

 

Sandhya Jain

 

Nandigram has emerged as the symbol of what a soulless state leviathan driven by an imported ideology can do to unarmed natives resisting its grand design of social deconstruction and corporate engineering. Nandigram showcases how native India combats 'foreign' tyranny – with blood, bones, and the raw courage of men, women, and children. Nandigram shows that people's power can melt the barrel of the gun. At least two women have been raped, yet it is the government that has lost honour.

 

For chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya, it must be an unexpected lesson in the dialectics of dharma. As a saga of State-Party jugalbandi to grab village land for foreign capitalists, Nandigram surpasses the betrayal at Plassey and reaffirms the hierarchy of values enshrined in ancient India's varna vyvastha.

 

Varna gave order, legitimacy and rules of conduct to the aspirations of the myriad jatis comprising Hindu society. The brahmin as spiritual preceptor and scholar expounded and upheld dharma, but it was the king who established order and made it possible for traders, agriculturists and other groups to practice their trades and flourish. These were the wealthy groups in ancient India, and their prosperity contributed to the wealth of the kingdom and the king. All were restrained by dharma; the Hindu model of state did not permit varnas to gang-up against other varnas and disrupt social harmony.

 

It was only in its relationship with Islamic and Christian-Western rulers that Hindu society encountered the ruler as sheer appropriator of native wealth. The impoverishment of the Indian countryside as a result of these successive colonialisms, and the accompanying perversion of the social order, is well known to historians and sociologists. The post-independence license-permit-quota raj saw the birth of varying shades of what is now called crony capitalism, but farmers were spared the burden of unjust taxes and some kind of land reforms were attempted in the states with different levels of sincerity and success.

 

Nandigram, however, is a double sin. First the State and armed goons of the dominant ruling party unleashed a reign of terror that saw at least 14 persons shot dead (dozens missing, presumed dead and buried) and nearly 50 injured (and two confirmed rapes) in order to forcefully vacate private agricultural land for a foreign capitalist venture. Thus, instead of protecting the people and facilitating their legitimate activities, the State lent its muscle to a rich business conglomerate (Indonesia's Salim Group).

 

The sheer havoc wrecked by this kshatriya-vaishya marriage – mercifully reined in by the prompt intervention of the Governor, Mr. Gopalkrishna Gandhi, among others – is precisely why the Hindu social order did not permit wealth-generating classes to subordinate the state to their purposes. The Hindu state was a facilitator, not a collaborator, because Hindus do not view property as theft. Like merit, wealth too is earned.

 

Even worse, the attempt to alienate fertile multiple-crop yielding land for industrial purposes strikes at the root of the Hindu reverence for the land, the mother earth, and the humble farmer. Under the doctrine of debts (rinas), Indians owe a debt of hospitality to the entire universe, both human and non-human; they must respect and nurture the earth that nourishes them, and care for animals, elements, indeed, all creation. We have, of course, fallen far from these ideals, but that is no reason why we should willfully acquiesce in the move to render fertile land barren.

 

Nandigram's proximity to the Haldia port would benefit its proposed foreign masters by way of reduced transportation costs. That the CPM should therefore attempt to depopulate the area is reminiscent of the worst excesses of White colonialism in Africa. There is no comparable example in Stalinist Russia, and in any case, Marxism is a Western philosophy deeply rooted in Christianity; some scholars even call it a Christian sect.

 

The u-turn of a section of Indian Marxists from populist anti-industry attitudes towards economic reform and globalization is part of a larger move (directed by external forces) away from positions that gave them the high moral ground two decades ago. From being avid supporters of the cause of the environment (witnessed in the fervent support for Chipko and other movements), the Left has shied away from taking up the graver cause of global warming and its deleterious impact on the ice caps, sea levels, ozone layer et al.


���������� Unfortunately for the Marxists,
Nandigram has caught them red-handed (pun intended) in the public square, doing the capitalist u-turn. It will be difficult to live down the resultant loss of face. The Muslim factor in the area can only compound their misery, and the graceless anger against Governor Gandhi attests to this sense of impotent rage. The vanity of the vanguard has been ripped, stripped, and whipped.

����������� This is divine justice. The Special Economic Zone (SEZ) is no small scandal. It is officially designated as a duty-free enclave, to be treated as foreign territory for trade operations, duties and tariff. The Indian people have had no say in the formulation of such a policy, which is creating autonomous enclaves of wealth controlled by multinational corporations. In other words, the Indian State is creating mini-states (read colonies) within India, where the writ of foreign, Indian, or mixed corporates will run. This undermines national sovereignty and territorial integrity and, as Dr. S. Kalyanaraman, former director, Asian Development Bank, points out, is tantamount to colonialism by invitation.

This view is vindicated by the revelation that favoured industries need not even risk their own capital for the projects. At Singur, according the West Bengal industry minister Mr Nirupam Sen, Tata Motors will receive a loan of Rs 200 crores at the rate of one percent interest per annum from the West Bengal Industrial Development Corporation; WBIDC will raise this loan from the market! The small car project will further receive incentives on land, a soft term loan and refund of VAT for the first 10 years of a 90-year lease. The government has already acquired 997.11 acres of land, of which 645.47 acres has been handed over to the company on a 90-year lease. The remaining 290 acres has been earmarked for an ancillary unit or vendor park.

 

Karl Marx said the state would wither away; none realized it would do so in favour of the corporate robber baron.

 

EOM


����������

 


4 comments:

Hindu Fundamentalist said...

Hear it from CPI(M-L) on the Nandigram pogrom.

http://www.hindu.com/2007/03/19/stories/2007031909291200.htm

The survivors [of Nandigram pogrom] complained that Communist Party of India (Marxist) leaders and workers were involved in overseeing the `operation' and charged that there was "nexus'' between the police and the CPI (M).

The Chindu is working overtime to absolve CPM of any blame.

habc said...

Nandigram has a direct opposite in Pune

Force is not a multiplier
Excerpts
To learn what went wrong at Nandigram, study how Orissa handled Kalinganagar
But it is the differences between Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and Naveen Patnaik that are of great significance and which may hold lessons for those seeking a way forward from this quagmire.
The two significant differences in approach after similar tragedies were that, in West Bengal the police was sent in despite promises of not resorting to force, and large numbers of the ruling party cadre were also mobilised to deal with recalcitrant farmers. The lesson seems to be that Indians just don’t respond well to coercion, even when the government keeps assuring them that it is for their own good.

habc said...

Huge cache of arms leaves CPM Red-faced

http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_variable=front%5Fpage&file_name=story4%2Etxt&counter_img=4
In what could be a major loss of face for the ruling CPI(M), the CBI on Sunday maintained that many of those missing after Wednesday's police firing in Nandigram could actually have been killed and buried somewhere as a diary retrieved from the arrested CPI(M) cadre might suggest.
CBI sources said the names of 32 people mentioned in the diary of the arrested persons matched the list of those missing surmising these people might have been bumped off the accused "at the instance of some local CPI(M) leaders" whose names have also been found in the diary. "More truth will be revealed after sustained interrogation", CBI sources said.
Ten alleged Marxist cadre were arrested by the Central agency on Saturday from a brick kiln with huge quantity of arms and ammunition that included 9 Japanese and 11 Indian rifles, about 700 live bullets. Also recovered from the site were Left leaflets and Red flags.

non-carborundum said...

Something along the same lines was recently tried in Delhi by the Congress when they attempted to remove 5 lac odd traders and let big retail fill in the void. In doing such things Cngress/CPM have proven that they do not have any bias towards socialism/marxism/communism but are willing to adopt the bad features of capitalism as well if they meet the objective of ruining the country.