Archive for the ‘Punjab’ Category

12
Feb

Farmers Protest: 99 ZU EINS, Berlin

   Posted by: aman Tags: ,

Dear Friends,

in the absence of mainstream media covering the #FarmersProtest adequately, I am thankful that 99 ZU EINS, Berlin talked in detail with me on the Farmers Protest.

Please see here …

12
Feb

Farmers Protest: TRT World, Turkey

   Posted by: aman Tags: ,

Dear Friends,

Sometimes, head nods speak louder than words.

Last night, on a TRT World, Turkey TV panel discussion, a BJP spokesman Gopal Krishna Agarwal said the government is ‘ready to legalise MSP, give it in writing’! All our ears went up. What? What is this claim on foreign TV? Why has it never been stated in Indian media, in official statements?

It took Ali Mustafa, the host, a little probing for the spokesman to quickly shift from ‘give in writing’ to ‘discussion’ to ‘as MSP stands today’ which as you know is at 6 per cent of all India farmers. Not wanting to say so on foreign TV, but in the larger interest of world learning the BJP government’s flip flop, I had to state it up front.

Please listen to Prof Ashok Swain, Mr Aggarwal and me. 26.25 minutes.

Please listen here …

12
Feb

Farmers Protest: A News, Turkey

   Posted by: aman Tags: ,

Dear Friends,

a few days back, A News, Turkey interviewed me briefly on the ongoing #FarmersProtest in India.
Here is what I spoke. 8 mins.

Please see here …

This was a news story that appeared on January 27, a day after the Red Fort flag fracas. I am posting it late because I discovered it late. The Mint had asked me my opinion and has reproduced it here.

Please read here …

12
Feb

Boom Live: On Flag Controversy

   Posted by: aman Tags:

Dear Friends,

Boom Live also tweeted my comments on the flag controversy on Republic Day. I am not a theologian so feels odd to have to comment on religious symbolism. Yet, the need was to keep up the narrative.

Please see here …

9
Feb

Farmers Protest: Tikri’s Andolanjeevis

   Posted by: aman

Day 76

Toll 219

Missing 123 (official, could be 300-500)

Jailed 128 (not reconciled with above 123)

#FarmersProtest

Tikri’s Andolanjeevis

In all the hullabaloo from Singhu and Ghazipur – Samyukt Kisan Morcha and Rakesh Tikait – news of all these Mahapanchayats, communities across religious and caste lines rising, just remember the third vertex of the protests – Tikri.

Farmers at Tikri are mostly from BKU Ekta Ugrahan, BKU Chaduni, Haryana Khaps, and others. While tenacity, resourcefulness and fatalism are defining characteristics of farmers in general, the Tikri ones are shaped through long years of struggle against various state policies and atrocities. They know that instead of expending energy on daily newsy stuff, they need to conserve energy for the long haul.

In BKU EU’s view, this protest – ghol in Panjabi – is not just about Laws and MSP or Human Rights violations, but stands in opposition to the entire structure of the neo-liberal state apparatus. That is why the struggle is not until October 2nd as Tikait said, or 2024 as Pandher said. The real struggle is much longer though it will keep changing tactics and strategies. For now, BKU EU has dug in its heels and when all this hullabaloo settles you will still see it standing – pahad warge honsle, said Kanwar Grewal in a song. Courage like mountains!

Grewal’s song Ailaan, which had garnered 13 million hits, seems to have been taken off YouTube. It has again been uploaded by the producers. I feel such pity for those who believe they can control the voice of those struggling. Not only have they not learnt anything from history, they also suffer the worst delusion – invincibility. Ailaan or other songs have sunk into public consciousness, they live in the hearts of protesters. What will the powers do? Remove the hearts? Decimate memory? Just like they have done to themselves?

It was the same approach in Parliament yesterday when Modi coined a new term Andolanjeevi. Overnight the term has been spoofed so much. It is amazing how since BJP was formed in 1980, has been in power in the Centre for nearly 15 years (Congress has been in power 22 years) suddenly BJP now labels any Opposition to itself in the same trope as anti-national. Whether it was its parent organisation RSS or Jana Sangh, they were always in Opposition to the Congress view of India. They did not even adopt the Tricolour until Vajpayee convinced them to use it early 2000s. Now suddenly those who oppose your sell-out of India to corporates have to be labelled?

During the Freedom Struggle, the freedom fighters were andolanjeevi while BJP parent organization leaders were writing mercy petitions to British; during Emergency the Janata Parivar, from which BJP split – along with Akalis whose contribution they do not acknowledge – were andolanjeevi. 40,000 out of above 1 lakh arrested and jailed during Emergency were Akalis. Unlike RSS who wrote pardon letters to Indira Gandhi, the Akalis refused any compromise and Panjab suffered greatly as a consequence in 1980s-90s. Yet, Modi has the gall to term the farmers who sustain the nation as andolanjeevi.

The core issue, as revealed by 7 years of mis-rule, is that Hindutva has no talent except clever usage of language. Now the earth on which they stand has challenged them and they are clueless on what do with the burgeoning voice rising against them. Hence, these silly language games. That is all they know, inversion of language. But truth is beyond language. They can maul history, create new terms, but the earth speaks, the winds are blowing. Sadly, their arrogance does not allow them to feel or listen.

These language games won’t work. This censoring never worked. It just shows the obstinacy of those in power. The more rigid they get, the greater will be their fall. We shall all watch that happen.

Day 69

Toll 194

#FarmersProtest

When I put up my posts, when I see other posts, many people respond: we are praying for peace.

Each and every prayer is important. Each and every prayer creates focus and mindfulness. Yet, when the struggle is against a set of people who claim monopoly on one religion, want power in the name of that religion to actually betray the people, sell them off, they desecrate prayers.
Yet, the farmers who feed us, our annadatas, chant and pray in unison. Listen to this, perhaps the most soothing chant from the protests led by the Bard of these protests – Kanwar Grewal.

Notice, this is the stage, in front in Singhu, under the greatest assault by the government’s goons. 5 big and small attacks in last five days. This area is almost fully barricaded, even from Singhu main protest site. No arrests, no FIRs.

Heavens forbid, if an real attack happens, this area will be eye of the storm. Translation of text follows.

‘Waheguru n, Hare Ram n, Allah Hu n.

‘We chant them all. That is why we say, you are ours, we are yours. Let there not be a single arm, hand, that does not touch the sky.

‘Zindabaad – long live. Farmers, workers unity – Zindabaad.

‘A wonder is unfolding. Panjab Haryana, Rajasthan, all states unity – Zindabaad. Chardi Kala – high spiritedness.

‘It is your blessing (o God), it is your mercy, your kindness that we all stand together, we are calm, our spirit is at its peak.’

Look at the face of the little girl in front when Zindabaad comes.

h/t Simran Kaur Chardi Kalla

See video here …

 

8
Feb

PANJAB: Review in Rashtriya Sahara

   Posted by: aman

Dear Friends,

I feel touched that one and a half year after PANJAB Journeys Through Fault Lines appeared, it keeps getting reviewed. Also, in these farmers protests, so many references to the book in news items quoting me. Humbled.

Thank you Ashutosh Takhur.

Please read here …

 

Jan 28, 2021

So thankful to anonymous who put up the translation of my post in Hindi on twitter.

Please see here …

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.