Archive for the ‘Other’ Category

8
Feb

Farmers Protest: Lota Nun Oath

   Posted by: aman Tags: ,

Day 66

Toll 182

#FarmersProtest

Lota Nun Oath

Completely unreported in media, yesterday, lakhs of farmers from 36 Biradaris came together at the Muzzaffarnagar mahapanchyat and took the oath of Lota Nun for a social boycott – hukka paani bandh – of the Bhartiya Janata Party. Friends tell me this oath of salt (nun) in Ganga water in a spouted vessel (lota) signifies that each oath taker’s individual view is now subsumed in the community’s view and can never be separated.

The historical antecedents of this oath are yet to be established, they are not covered in textbooks. Very rarely in history have the Biradaris taken this oath. Most likely, its first occurrence was with Timur’s invasion of Delhi, 1398. It was taken in 1857, Meerut Uprising against British. Today is the anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination by RSS/Hindu Mahasabha. Gandhi had administered the Salt Pledge before Dandi March, not the same as Lota Nun, but similar idea.

I feel this oath, or the way Panjab and Haryana created Singhu and Tikri in the manner of how in the 18th century Sikh Misls advanced (military term: divisions, confederacy states) to establish encampments, as significant. Simply because people are ancient and our cultural history and memory in many ways define us, just like modernity defines us. If ancient practices have to be questioned on many occasions, which they must be, we also need to see how they are invoked to create unity – in this case against the Hindutva regime. The Lota Nun pledge has led to Ghazipur site swelling many times from the night of January 27, thousands upon thousands are still arriving.

This is a great mobilization and takes the battle of India to where it should always have been fought: the Hindi heartland. The need for this came about because of the Red Fort flag fracas the Hindutva forces enacted with complicity of some people and by firing the gun from the shoulder of the Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee. Hindutva was looking for an opening to create a gap between Hindus and Sikhs, isolating Panjab once again. It did not succeed. One call for ‘water from my village’ has led to this huge solidarity.

In fact, the heartland views the hoisting of Kissan flags, Nishan Sahib, some Union flags, not as insult to the Tricolour (for the national flag was not even touched) but a claiming of our nation’s historic building, the Red Fort, from the corporates to which the government has leased it out. This is exactly why the farmers are protesting – to prevent corporate takeover of agriculture. The heartland knows there is no established Khalistan flag, there is no Khalistan movement. Something that drove urban, middle-class India into paroxysms. Social media, take a break!

However, watching the Samyukth Kisan Morcha leadership fumble at Singhu for last few days over this amuses me. My posts are meant to inform not comment but I want to state: What is SKM’s great need to be defensive? Isn’t it time SKM reflects, bridges gaps with youth cadre, shakes hands with KMSC? At this critical juncture, SKM should refrain from publicly blaming KMSC for incidents of Republic Day Tractor March. It is anyway the past, it has gifted us a vastly reinforced Ghazipur.

In fact, yesterday, there was a Sanghi attack at Singhu. Godi media, of course, describes it as locals who attacked. There is clear footage of police standing by for a long time as the attackers started pelting stones at farmers. Police gets into action only when farmers group up, that too to teargas them, even Molotov Cocktails were used. Thankfully the tent towards which they were hurled did not catch fire. Some thirty to forty farmers sustained injuries. After that the police escorted the attackers as if they were state guests. No arrests were made.

It is clear that the state is down to dirty tricks. However, all sites are standing tall. Lota Nun means this is going to be a long year ahead. Remember, after 1857 it took us 90 years to get rid of the British.

A website chose to publish the post. Please see here …

8
Feb

Farmers Protest: What a Come Back!

   Posted by: aman

Day 65

#FarmersProtest

What a come back!

Any call to change status quo, any pushback against injustice of a regime, is a dynamic time-space. A lot can change overnight like we saw at Ghazipur. Let this be a lesson in history for times to come.

I slept 3 am, a bit assured with the night vigil, people out on roads with blankets, it is cold still. People from Haryana and Uttar Pradesh were trickling in. When you talk to these protesters, you learn that many of their earlier protests were ended by television not relaying them. I am so glad that did not happen this time. The television will not dictate our lives.

I woke up 5.30 am to see news pouring in. Thousands upon thousands came on the call of a senior farmer leader. Electricity was restored, tankers brought water, langars were on. The josh was back. This solidarity and our unity has rejuvenated the protests.

Police has started retreating, for now at least.

What this teaches us is there is a great need for vigilance. Even at Singhu and Tikri. There are reports that people evicted from smaller protests sites in Haryana are back at the sites. Langars have started.

The government can no longer use armed force or pliant media against us. It has to talk, it has to repeal bad Farm Laws, it has to legalise MSP.

Thank you Bharat!

8
Feb

Farmers Protest: Tikait’s Tears

   Posted by: aman

Jan 28, 2021, late evening

Dear Nation,

#FarmersProtest is not a circus, a spectacle for all to go ooh! ah! at a leader of Rakesh Tikait stature to be crying on national media. He is not crying for himself. He is crying because he has taken a stand: support the Sikhs, support the farmers of the nation.

In the 1980s, the narrative was twisted so much that the whole nation believed Sikhs were wrong. After the 1990s, the nation moved at such a breath taking speed that urban India forgot the rural India.

Tikait is crying because he stands with his brothers, with his land. This means so much to me who was growing up in the 1980s and saw the discourse on Sikhs turn from soldiers and farmers to traitors and terrorists. I find a warm embrace in his tears.

Would the nation give this warm embrace to its Sikhs, to its farmers? You know I have been active from Day 1 of the protests, just so we do not have a repeat of the 1980s. Just that much. I was a little boy then, an adult now. Would my understanding of India then and now be the same? Then what is the use of my life? Is it too much to ask? Is it too much to ask that we stand up against injustice and live in this nation?

Ask yourself: what you can do? Amplify the protests, reject the Hindutva propaganda machinery. Why does Tikait have to wait for his village to get him water? He has come to your home Dilli.

Dilli, we saw your big heart to January 26. Now once again please, get out on the streets to preserve the Ghazipur protest site. Get them water. Get them electricity.

Do it! Please.

8
Feb

A Compromised, Pliant, Lazy National Media

   Posted by: aman

June 28, 2021

Dear friends,

In spite of my personally alerting a lot of regular media – not even lapdog media – on the evening of January 25th, almost no one reached Mukarba Chowk, Sanjay Gandhi Transport Nagar on 26th morning. This is where the Kisan Mazdoor Sangarsh Committee had already announced they will enter the Outer Ring Road. See 1st comment.

Later, upon the march, the same media claimed innocence, ‘intelligence failure, lack of prior knowledge’. Media showed lathi charge and skirmishes but none of them, not a single one, mentioned that police had blocked even the approved routes for Tractor March. For example, The police tear gassed farmers at Ghazipur who sought to go down Akshardam to take a U-turn to march on approved roads. Or turn towards Geeta Colony. The police sent farmers to Red Fort and ITO, where they lathi-charged them. This in spite of prior knowledge. This is the hypocrisy of our media.

Yet, bravely, deserves my respect, independent film makers such as my friend Nakul Singh Sawhney, Kartik Nijhawan and others reached the spot that morning. ScoopWhoop ground reports in comments below. Nakul, unfortunately lost his phone during the day. Yet, he sent this dispatch:

I will probably write about everything that happened yesterday in greater detail later. But for now, one small note.

Before you get carried away by all those media ‘reports’ on the ‘violence’ by farmers and ‘indisciplined’ protesters, just try and remember one thing: there were easily 7-10 lakh people on the streets of Delhi yesterday. It’ll be safe to assume that over 90% of them were men. From possibly some of the most hyper masculine parts of the country.

And yet, there isn’t a single report about common civilians of Delhi being attacked or harassed or their properties being vandalised. Not a single report about common women on Delhi’s streets being harassed in any way. The only reports of ‘violence’ and ‘clashes’ was that against the police and RAF, basically the state apparatus.

As someone who saw a lot of the ‘violence’ I can assure you that most of it was provoked by the police. Not one civilian casualty (except of farmers themselves) have been reported.

So, breathe easy if you are so perturbed about the ‘violence’, because none of it was targeted against you.

A Very Happy Belated Republic Day!

My message to media outlets January 25, evening.

This is the message I sent out:

At the Farmers Protests, the Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee has declared that it does not abide by the Samyukt Kisan Morcha new route for the Tractor Parade. KMSC is independent of SKM.

KSMC has declared it will follow the generally declared plan on January 17 – Tractor March on Delhi’s Outer Ring Road. This would mean, 10 kms from Singhu, at Sanjay Gandhi Transport Nagar, Mubarka Chowk (sic), where SKM wants the rally to proceed right towards Bawana, KMSC will ask its union and those who act on their call to turn left towards Azadpur/ISBT.

This could be a point of conflict because the police will barricade the route to Azadpur/ISBT. KMSC has declared their march will be peaceful and disciplined and if the state exerts violence, they will not retaliate. Instead, they will take the blows or bullets but they want to exert the right of the nation’s citizens to celebrate the Republic Day.

I feel you may want this covered by your reporters.

8
Feb

Farmers Protest: Kashmir Model

   Posted by: aman

Day 63

#FarmersProtest

Kashmir Model

To me personally, the Tractor March on Delhi’s Outer Ring Road was a great event. Ordinary citizens of the nation – around 2 lakh tractors, at least 7-9 lakh famers – asserted their right to walk the national capital, mark the day we as a nation renew our pledge to live by our Constitution. Barring some unfortunate skirmishes, there was no damage to any person, private or public property. After the march, all farmers returned back to their camps at Singhu, Tikri, Ghazipur, Shahjahanabad, and Palval.

Based on my sporadic talks with some people on all protest sites, this is what I have learnt about what the farmers are feeling when they reached back their sites. We must know, the farmers are tired, they braved police tear gassing, lathi charges. They want to rest, catch some sleep. They feel this whole effort was such a drain of energy and are asking themselves if this march was even necessary? What have they gained from it. The exhaustion is so great that they do not even know if they should feel happy they accomplished the march.

- Flag on Red Fort: they learn that some individuals had been adventurous and installed the Sikh Nishan Sahib, flag, on Red Fort. No union or leader had made the call to install Sikh flags on Red Fort. As argued earlier in my posts, the act did not threaten the Indian state. No one touched the Tricolour. It was certainly not an act related to Khalistan.

Yet, Godi media has picked it up, some in urban India are having paroxysms.

The farmers are dismayed. They have been camping in Delhi for the past 63 days to get the Farm laws repealed. Not to play some symbolic games around flags. Their issues are political economy not religious. Such is history that for centuries these people have lived by the edge of their sword. In various movements of the past century, and for the last 63 days they have walked the razor’s edge of non-violence. Now they sense the state will turn repressive. They have seen repression earlier, they know it harms grievously.

Who are these people unfurling flags on Red Fort in imitation of Baba Baghel Singh in 1783? A flag is an important symbol. If unfurled politically, it must be defended. Yet, where is Deep Sidhu? He has run away! He is in hiding! They know he was Sunny Deol’s campaign manager in last elections, his pictures with Modi, his affiliation with BJP. They have been deeply suspicious of him since he set up the Shambhu Morcha. How dare he now jeopardise their farmer protest? They are angry. They know in their long history, how such moles have betrayed them in the past, in their wars with British. They are disgusted.

- Leadership Vacuum: the farmers are also wondering about their march – how many distractions, how many new routes, how many police barricades even on routes allowed. Singhu – they know at Mubarka Chowk there was a disagreement between Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee and Sanyukt Kisan Morcha. KSMC had given the call to enter Delhi. SKM wanted to march on outskirts of Delhi. KSMC was willing to break barricades, youth wanted to go with them. Yet, such teargassing! Why did the leaders not mutually resolve this beforehand?

Tikri – why were some tractors turned around at Nangloi and not allowing the march to Najafgarh as planned? Why did police lathi charge them? Where were the leaders? Ghazipur – why did police barricade both routes, to Akshardam and Geeta Colony? How could they then march? Their group landed up in Red Fort, the flag incident happened. Another group was trapped in ITO where they were badly canned.

Where were the leaders through all this? Did the leaders not say they will be in front? Did they not say, if police takes action, they will be the first to be hit? Where are they now, by evening, by next morning? Only at 10 am at Singhu did some leaders call for a meeting over mechanical mikes and speakers. What will they tell us badly beaten people? Will they help us process our emotions? What next from here – are Unions going to come together again and push for repeal of Black Laws or will there be a split now? Will our camps be the positives ‘melas and langars’ of resistance or will we be enveloped in gloom? What next on talks with government?

- Internet Blackout: why is their Internet blocked? Why can’t they call their near and dear ones and assure them they are safe? their families back home are worried. They want to connect with friends, share experiences, learn what happened through the day. They can’t! The government has cut the lines.

What are their leaders saying? What is the media saying? What is India saying? They stayed non-violent. They hope India knows this …

This is what happened in Kashmir. They supported Kashmir through its darkness. They know, terrible, terrible things were happening there. Yet, they tried to support. The courts blocked their protests, they continued to support.

They hope India now supports them.

Else, what happened to Kashmir, what is happening to them now, will happen to India, part by part. All the issues are to do with political economy, but they get distracted by religious symbolism.

Know this, do not fall for the Hindutva propaganda machinery. They showed you yesterday that the nation is its people.

The farmers protest against Farm Laws and for implementation of MSP continues. Sabr!

8
Feb

Farmers Protest: Mid-night Plot

   Posted by: aman

Day 59

#FarmersProtest

Ever since the farmers reached Delhi on #FarmersProtest, the Hindutva machinery has been accusing them of containing Khalistan elements.
Now look what the farmers busted last night: a plot to assassinate their leaders, use violence around the Farmer Tractor March on January 26th to create chaos.

Last night the accused was presented in a midnight press conference. The accused spills the beans on a massive undercover project to infiltrate crowds and start violence, points finger at the police for sponsoring and supporting the plot to defame the famers, talks about involvement in the previous Jat agitation in Haryana. Note, this is the latest among many times farmers have apprehended mischievous elements in the past weeks. This time, the intent is of grave concern – giving the police legitimacy to crackdown on protesters.

Also, look at the decency of the farmers: they allowed him to cover his face during the press conference (in link below), are not informing his family, something he requested.

Now are we citizens of the nation supposed to trust this very police? The same government? Who is anti-national is no longer a theoretical question. The violence is close, very close.

No one is under any delusion that the path to the Tractor March will be paved with roses. Yet, to discover such underhand measures?

Such cowards!

Dear Friends,

on December 12/13, 2020 we had the Bangalore Literature Festival. With great planning and care, the organisers conducted the festival in-person at the Bangalore International Centre.

At the festival I conducted a session on our response to the COVID-19 pandemic titled: The Masked Intruder – Pandemic and You.

Senior therapist and author Anna Chandy, doctor, author and now writer Dr Farah Adam joined me to talk about the Pandemic and Us.

Please listen…

Shinie Anthony, one of the organisers wrote a piece today on the festival. Please read … 

Dear Friends,

I spoke in two sessions at the Bangalore Literature Festival on December 12/13. In one of them I hosted psychotherapist Anna Chandy and Dr  Farah Adam. The Hindu covered it. Report here.

Dear Friends,

thanks to Arvinder Singh and Daljot Singh, I was on Global News, British Columbia, Canada for a few minutes.

In the context of the Bharat Bandh called by farmers tomorrow, Neetu Garcha and I spoke about reasons for the farmer protests, Trudeau’s comments and COVID19.

This is a very brief appearance. 4.12 minutes. Please see here and click video.

 

Dear Friends,

three days back, a message by Prathmesh Patil from Pune-based Indie Journal popped-up in my inbox seeking my mobile phone number. I shared it thinking they want a comment on the ongoing protests by farmers in Panjab against the draconian Farm Laws.

Pradeep Biradar spoke to me on the issue and the context. The Marathi story came out a few days back but I am now glad the magazine has decided to put out parts of the interview as well. Especially, on the state’s way of using the term ‘Khalistan’ for everything it does not want to address – an avoidance tactic.

Thank you! Please read here…