South Asia Citizens Wire - 9 June 2015 - No. 2860 
[since 1996]

Contents:
1. Sri Lanka: Civil society call for fresh parliamentary elections | CPA press 
release
2. Bangladesh: Hasina stands between us and the extremists | Masuda Bhatti
3. Bangladesh: Unbelief in an age of death squads | Mahmud Rahman
4. Imagine no border fences between India and Bangladesh | Zafar Sobhan
5. Pakistan: The Pervaiz Rasheed Affair | Pervez Hoodbhoy
6. Pakistan: Concern over threats to Parween Rahman’s family; Govt must protect 
those facing threats - media reports on civil society press conference
7. [The Chinese Industrial Corridor in Pakistan] What's a corridor without 
cultural backup? | Ayaz Amir
8. India: Withdraw police case against Prof Kancha Ilaiah and roll back the ban 
on Ambedkar Periyar Study Circle - Press release by PADS
9. India: IITM revokes ban on Ambedkar-Periyar study circle. The lesson for us 
in that we should resist arbitrary and retrograde decisions at all our 
workplaces
10. India: Politicians and officials spend tax payers money on Hindu rituals at 
initiation & launch of public projects - No one bats an eyelid
11. TRIBUTE: Mujeeb Rizvi (1934-2015) - A different Kind of secularist | 
Mahmood Farooqui
12. India: Condolence message in memory of the veteran radical humanist 
Subhankar Ray
13. India: Hindutva Right Wing Turn Begins For History Writing / Activist Wants 
focus on Vedas
14. India: Press Statement from civil society organisations to communal 
violence affected Atali village, Ballabhgarh, Haryana
15. Signs of rising instability says April - May 2015 briefing by India Study 
Group
16. India: Accidents and Discontent in Garment Factory’s of Udyog Vihar, 
Gurgaon - A Joint report by PUDR and Perspective
17. Recent On Communalism Watch:
 - Ban on Ambdekar Periyar Study Circle at II madras revoked - public pressure 
works
 - What does it mean to indianise education? (Ramachandra Guha)
 - India: N.K. Amin the cop who had been suspended for 8 yrs for shooting 
Ishrat Jahan reinstated in Gujarat
 - India: RSS with one hand keeps sucking up to Ambedkar and with the other 
defends ban on Ambedkar Periyar Student Circle at IIT madras
 - Bombay Family court stops Muslim man from marrying second time till he 
settles the rights and dues of his wife
 - India: Modi’s yoga celebration is a mix of cultural nationalism, 
commercialisation and subtle coercion (Ajaz Ashraf)
 - India: Keeping Alive the Battle for Justice in Hashimpura Case (Gaurav Vivek 
Bhatnagar - The Wire)
 - India - Atali village Vallabhgarh: An aged man from Atali reduces entire 
village to tears
 - The one year for Minorities in India (John Dayal)
 - India has no law to stop private sector from discriminating on grounds of 
faith (Abhishek Sudhir)
 - DNA Editorial on restriction on entry of non-Hindus in Gujarat's Somnath 
Temple
 - India: Imtiaz Ahmad on the transformation of Shab-e-Barat from a subdued 
occasion to one of pomp and show
 - India: Goa magistrate directs police to register a complaint on charges of 
obscenity against a naked Jain monk
 - India: Thousands of Bru tribals fled Mizoram in 1997 following ethnic 
violence, and lived in camps in Trupura, they are to be repatrated now 

::: Resources & Full Text :::
18. Afghanistan: Season of bloodshed - The Taliban are waging a fierce new 
offensive in the north (The Economist)
19. India: Eggs And Prejudice (Reetika Khera)
20. Understanding Global Indigeneity (Nicolas Rosenthal)
21. Spain: From Occupying Banks to City Hall - Meet Barcelona’s New Mayor Ada 
Colau
22. The South African Gandhi by Ashwin Desai and Goolam Vahed
23. Turkey: Sins of the Three Pashas | Edward Luttwak

========================================
1. SRI LANKA: CIVIL SOCIETY CALL FOR FRESH PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS | CPA press 
release
========================================
there is a rising perception of crisis and instability, which cannot be allowed 
to take root. The economy cannot afford this lack of political direction for 
much longer, and as importantly, the hope and aspiration created by the change 
of government in January demands both clarity in promises being kept and 
further progress in reforms, especially with regard to devolution and 
power-sharing. The time is ripe therefore for fresh parliamentary elections 
which would allow the people of Sri Lanka to have their say on reforms already 
enacted and to mandate the direction of the government for the next five years.
http://www.sacw.net/article11239.html

========================================
2. BANGLADESH: HASINA STANDS BETWEEN US AND THE EXTREMISTS | Masuda Bhatti
========================================
It is not clear what the character of the state is even after more than four 
decades of its birth. Bangladesh is, rather, at the crossroads of Islamism and 
secularism
http://www.sacw.net/article11258.html

========================================
3. BANGLADESH: UNBELIEF IN AN AGE OF DEATH SQUADS | Mahmud Rahman
========================================
The champions of death promise more. Two years ago, the Hefazat-e-Islam, an 
Islamist movement based in madrassas, delivered to the Home Ministry a list of 
84 atheist bloggers they wanted punished for blasphemy. The crime of those 
included: they used words that offended the self-appointed guardians of Islam. 
Despite their belief in an all-powerful Allah, the death squads were not ready 
to leave judgement in his hands – what this says about their own belief in a 
supreme being is a contradiction they never address. . . . how can free 
thought, science, and humanism in Bangladesh best be defended in an age of 
death squads?
http://www.sacw.net/article11251.html

=========================================
4. IMAGINE NO BORDER FENCES BETWEEN INDIA AND BANGLADESH | Zafar Sobhan
=========================================
We would have open borders, with Bangladeshis and Indians both having the right 
to live, work, and study in the other country. There would be no border 
shootings because there would be no need for illegal border crossings.
http://www.sacw.net/article11241.html

=========================================
5. PAKISTAN: THE PERVAIZ RASHEED AFFAIR | Pervez Hoodbhoy
=========================================
Sad story of how a serving minister is silenced for speaking his mind. Who has 
the courage of dealing with the enemy within ?
http://www.sacw.net/article11249.html

=========================================
6. PAKISTAN: CONCERN OVER THREATS TO PARWEEN RAHMAN’S FAMILY; GOVT MUST PROTECT 
THOSE FACING THREATS - SELECT MEDIA REPORTS
=========================================
In the last two years, three prominent women, Parween Rahman, Zahra Shahid and 
Sabeen Mahmud have been gunned down, she pointed out, saying that the space for 
people is being reduced.
http://www.sacw.net/article11238.html

=========================================
7. [THE CHINESE INDUSTRIAL CORRIDOR IN PAKISTAN] WHAT'S A CORRIDOR WITHOUT 
CULTURAL BACKUP? | Ayaz Amir
=========================================
The British came to the Subcontinent and brought with them notions of white 
superiority…and whisky and convent schools, and in time a railway network, a 
canal system for Punjab, and the concept of rule of law. The foundations of 
their imperial empire were strong and survive to this day, although we have 
spared no effort to dig them up.
http://www.sacw.net/article11240.html

=========================================
8. INDIA: WITHDRAW POLICE CASE AGAINST PROF KANCHA ILAIAH AND ROLL BACK THE BAN 
ON AMBEDKAR PERIYAR STUDY CIRCLE - PRESS RELEASE BY PADS
=========================================
People's Alliance for Democracy and Secularism demands that
    1. The police case under sections 153A and 295A against Prof Kancha Ilaiah 
be immediately withdrawn . . .
http://www.sacw.net/article11248.html

=========================================
9. INDIA: IITM REVOKES BAN ON AMBEDKAR-PERIYAR STUDY CIRCLE. THIS VICTORY HAS 
LESSONS FOR US IN THAT WE SHOULD RESIST ARBITRARY AND RETROGRADE DECISIONS AT 
ALL OUR WORKPLACES
=========================================
IIT Madras unhappy with rationalism and Modi critique - weblinks to commentary 
and statements 
http://www.sacw.net/article11221.html

=========================================
10. INDIA: POLITICIANS AND OFFICIALS SPEND TAX PAYERS MONEY ON HINDU RITUALS AT 
INITIATION & LAUNCH OF PUBLIC PROJECTS - NO ONE BATS AN EYELID
=========================================
In 'secular' India politicians of all make and public officials regularly seek 
the divine blessings in advertised events such as the inaugural ceremonies of 
state sponsored buildings and public projects and use religious priests to 
supervise laying of the foundation stones and undertake bhoomi puja (Worship of 
Earth) for the approval of the supernatural powers with the chanting of prayer. 
Even Virgins, Cows and astrologers are deployed at these events and no one bats 
an eyelid. Was'nt the state supposed to steer clear from religion? Why do Hindu 
rituals get precedence in a country of multiple denominations?
http://www.sacw.net/article11250.html

=========================================
11. TRIBUTE: MUJEEB RIZVI (1934-2015) - A DIFFERENT KIND OF SECULARIST | 
Mahmood Farooqui
=========================================
Mujeeb Rizvi was a scholar-teacher who fought the pundits and the bigots
http://www.sacw.net/article11255.html

=========================================
12. INDIA: CONDOLENCE MESSAGE IN MEMORY OF THE VETERAN RADICAL HUMANIST 
SUBHANKAR RAY
=========================================
Indian Renaissance Institute is deeply grieved over the sad demise of veteran 
radical humanist Subhankar Ray who died on the evening of 2nd June,2015 at 
Kolkata. He was a dedicated radical humanist and one of the main pillars of the 
radical humanist movement in the country for the last more than five decades.

=========================================
13. INDIA: HINDUTVA RIGHT WING TURN BEGINS FOR HISTORY WRITING / ACTIVIST WANTS 
FOCUS ON VEDAS
=========================================
A report in Vikas Pathak in Hindustan Times about plans for History books by 
Hindutva activist Dina Nath Batra and a second article by Prakash Kumar in 
Deccan herald on the Right wing turn in History writing in India.
http://www.sacw.net/article11243.html

=========================================
14. INDIA: PRESS STATEMENT FROM CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANISATIONS TO COMMUNAL 
VIOLENCE AFFECTED ATALI VILLAGE, BALLABHGARH, HARYANA
=========================================
Today a team consisting of members of PUCL, NAPM, Khudai Khidmatgar and 
Socialist Party visited the Atali village in Ballabhgarh District (Haryana) led 
by Justice Rajinder Sachar (Retd). Team met the Muslim residents who were 
attacked on 25th May, 2015, whose houses were burnt, belongings looted or 
destroyed and who had to flee from the village to save their lives and had 
taken shelter in a police station at Ballabhgarh till 3rd June.
http://www.sacw.net/article11242.html

=========================================
15. SIGNS OF RISING INSTABILITY SAYS APRIL - MAY 2015 BRIEFING BY INDIA STUDY 
GROUP
=========================================
One year into the rule of the National Democratic Alliance government, Indian 
politics is poised at an unusual point. The forces represented by Prime 
Minister Narendra Modi continue to be popular, but there is also a strong 
perception that they have reached the limits of their influence - and hence 
"politics as usual" is coming back.
http://www.sacw.net/article11247.html

=========================================
16. INDIA: ACCIDENTS AND DISCONTENT IN GARMENT FACTORY’S OF UDYOG VIHAR, 
GURGAON - A JOINT REPORT BY PUDR AND PERSPECTIVE
=========================================
Accidents in the industry and incidents of workers’ rage are testimony to the 
vulnerable and precarious lives of the workers employed in a sector which makes 
a significant contribution to India’s economy.
http://www.sacw.net/article11237.html

=========================================
17. RECENT ON COMMUNALISM WATCH:
=========================================
 - Ban on Ambdekar Periyar Study Circle at II madras revoked - public pressure 
works
 - What does it mean to indianise education? (Ramachandra Guha)
 - India: N.K. Amin the cop who had been suspended for 8 yrs for shooting 
Ishrat Jahan reinstated in Gujarat
 - India: RSS with one hand keeps sucking up to Ambedkar and with the other 
defends ban on Ambedkar Periyar Student Circle at IIT madras
 - Bombay Family court stops Muslim man from marrying second time till he 
settles the rights and dues of his wife
 - India: Modi’s yoga celebration is a mix of cultural nationalism, 
commercialisation and subtle coercion (Ajaz Ashraf)
 - India: Keeping Alive the Battle for Justice in Hashimpura Case (Gaurav Vivek 
Bhatnagar - The Wire)
 - India - Atali village Vallabhgarh: An aged man from Atali reduces entire 
village to tears
 - E-Digest - Ambedkar’s Appropriation by Hindutva Ideology - A compilation by 
Ram Puniyani (June 2015)
 - The one year for Minorities in India (John Dayal)
 - Visit by civil society groups to Atali village in Ballabgarh, Haryana 
following communal violence: Press Statement 5 June 2015
 - India has no law to stop private sector from discriminating on grounds of 
faith (Abhishek Sudhir)
 - DNA Editorial on restriction on entry of non-Hindus in Gujarat's Somnath 
Temple
 - India: Imtiaz Ahmad on the transformation of Shab-e-Barat from a subdued 
occasion to one of pomp and show
 - India: Goa magistrate directs police to register a complaint on charges of 
obscenity against a naked Jain monk
 - India: Police complaint against builder after 'non-veg' Marathi man denied 
an apartment
 - India: Thousands of Bru tribals fled Mizoram in 1997 following ethnic 
violence, and lived in camps in Trupura, they are to be repatrated now 

 - available at: http://communalism.blogspot.in/
 
::: RESOURCEs & FULL TEXT :::
=========================================
18. AFGHANISTAN: SEASON OF BLOODSHED
The Taliban are waging a fierce new offensive in the north
=========================================
(The Economist - May 30th 2015 | KUNDUZ | From the print edition)

ON THE edge of a dusty plateau near the northern city of Kunduz, Mohammad Khan 
and his family shelter in a threadbare tent. From here, he says, he can almost 
see his house 8km (5 miles) away across a river in Chahar Dara district. But 
there is a good chance it is now occupied by a Taliban fighter and his family. 
The area was recently overrun by insurgents who have made big advances in this 
part of Afghanistan, especially near the border with Tajikistan.

The Taliban, bolstered by foreign fighters, have chosen Kunduz—a city far from 
the traditional Taliban heartland in Pushtun-dominated areas beside the border 
with Pakistan—as the focus for their annual spring offensive. Fighting in May 
displaced perhaps 6,000 families in Kunduz province, after the city itself 
almost fell to the insurgents in late April. “The army can’t push them back, 
even with helicopters and heavy weapons,” says Mr Khan.

Because Afghan forces are fighting for the first time without much support from 
NATO, their casualties are unusually high. The authorities are reluctant to 
give figures, but a Western military official quoted by the New York Times said 
more than 1,800 soldiers and police officers had been killed and another 3,400 
wounded between January and April—65% more than in the same period last year. 
On May 25th 26 government soldiers were killed during a siege of a police 
headquarters in southern Helmand province. 

Despite such losses, many Afghans say their government is proving slow to 
respond to Taliban assaults. A full eight months after his inauguration as 
president, Ashraf Ghani has only just nominated a defence minister, who is yet 
to be approved by parliament. Not even Kabul feels safe. Two weeks ago, gunmen 
stormed a hotel in the capital, killing 14 people, including nine foreigners. A 
week later, a suicide bomber got into the grounds of the justice ministry, 
killing at least five employees. On May 27th an upmarket part of the city was 
attacked again. Four gunmen were killed after trying to storm a guesthouse. 

The national government has dispatched several thousand soldiers to help in 
Kunduz, the scene of the worst fighting so far. It has also resorted to less 
savoury tactics which have been routine since at least 2009, quietly recruiting 
local warlords and their militias (pictured) to help confront insurgents. That 
should help to check the immediate threat, but by adding to already big 
supplies of weapons on the ground the government risks spreading instability, 
as rival anti-Taliban groups clash among themselves.

It is not surprising that Kunduz is a scene of such conflict. Commanders from 
the former Northern Alliance have long fought, often brutally, for turf in the 
north of the country. For unlucky residents that has meant enduring extortion, 
harassment and revenge killings. Gradually the authority of the government has 
ebbed away.

Today a powerful militia commander, Mohammad Omar, claims to control 400 armed 
men in Khanabad district. He uses the moniker Pakhsaparan, meaning 
“wall-crusher”, and says he is fighting the Taliban without help from the 
national army and only $1,000 a month from the local police chief. “I get the 
rest in taxes from farmers,” he says, without elaborating on his collection 
methods.

The government denies rearming militias, though it admits to “selective 
voluntary citizens’ participation” in the fight against the Taliban. Either 
way, Mr Ghani’s supposed strategy of marginalising powerful warlords while 
strengthening local government appears to be forgotten.

One fear is that militias, locally called arbaki, could revert to rape, murder 
and other abuses of civilians, as happened during the civil war in the 1990s. 
That, in turn, could spread sympathy for the Taliban, which at least offer some 
form of order. “During the day they are arbaki, during the night they are 
thieves,” says Mr Khan, the refugee near Kunduz city.

Another worry is that a new faction of rebels could emerge. There are rumours 
that fighters under the black banner of the Islamic State (IS) are growing more 
powerful. Displaced villagers tell of seeing armed men in IS’s trademark masks 
and black clothes. They are said to be well equipped, and wealthy enough not to 
extort money from civilians. Accounts vary as to whether they are with or 
against the Taliban.

There is little evidence that IS has a force to be reckoned with in 
Afghanistan, nor that those who use its name have formal links with IS in the 
Middle East, which never mentions an Afghan presence. A group describing itself 
as IS claimed responsibility for an attack in the eastern city of Jalalabad in 
April that killed 30 people. But its connection, if any, with IS elsewhere is 
unclear.

More likely, disaffected members of the Taliban are adopting the IS brand 
because it is well-known and helps attract recruits and funding. Some younger 
fighters are said to complain that the Taliban lack strong leaders. The group’s 
spiritual head, Mullah Omar, has not been seen in public since 2001. A former 
Taliban commander, Mullah Abdul Rauf Khadim, who had been detained in 
Guantánamo Bay, began recruiting fighters in the name of IS this year in 
Helmand Province. He was killed by a drone strike in February. The Americans 
all but admitted they did it.

The Taliban would be unlikely bedfellows of IS. The Pushtun-nationalist Taliban 
have little interest in IS’s dream of a transcontinental caliphate. They seem 
ready to countenance political negotiations one day with authorities in Kabul, 
which IS would not. America’s most senior officer in Afghanistan, General John 
Campbell, talks up the idea that IS adherents have been clashing with the 
Taliban. But a proliferation of factions among the insurgents is hardly a 
reason to celebrate. On the government side, too, power is also being shared, 
with militias. That is a recipe for more uncertainty—and, presumably, for more 
bloodshed.

=========================================
19. INDIA: EGGS AND PREJUDICE
by Reetika Khera
=========================================
(Indian Express - 6 June 2015)

Child nutrition is being held hostage to spurious, largely upper caste, 
arguments.

Child nutrition, Child undernutrition, MP egg ban, egg ban mp, children egg 
ban, child malnutrition, child nutrition programmes, mp school egg ban, MP 
Child nutrition, school egg ban, indian express column, Reetika Khera column It 
is unfair to sacrifice children’s right to nutrition to spurious anti-egg 
arguments from a small minority among the upper castes.

Child nutrition is prime-time news only when a tragedy occurs. Child 
undernutrition is no less a tragedy but rarely recognised as such.

Attention to it, following the Madhya Pradesh chief minister’s rejection of a 
proposal to introduce eggs in anganwadis is significant and welcome.

Few people realise food intake in India is very poor. According to the 2005-06 
National Family Health Survey, around 10 per cent of breastfed children aged 
six to 23 months had meat, fish, poultry, egg or milk products the day before 
the survey. Among children who are not breastfed, the figures are equally bad.

In a TV debate, a BJP spokesperson praised milk as the best source of protein, 
failing to mention that MP does not provide that either at anganwadis or 
schools. The urgent need to improve the quality of food provided in the mid-day 
meal (MDM) and Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) schemes has not 
been adequately recognised.

Cost is a major constraint. Allocations for child nutrition programmes are 
quite small (Rs 5-7 per child per day). Only states where the government is 
committed to the issues make additional allocations required to provide 
nutritious foods such as eggs. This year’s cuts in Central allocations for ICDS 
and MDM are likely to strain state budgets further.

Perishability and fear of adulteration impede improvements in food quality. 
Though milk and dal are protein-rich, both can easily be diluted and milk is 
perishable. Creative thinking can lead to solutions. In Karnataka, milk powder 
is supplied.

Eggs provide a nutritious and affordable solution. They contain all the 
nutrients (except vitamin C) required by small children and are generally more 
nutrient-rich than vegetarian options — without the problems of perishability 
and adulteration). People can easily monitor whether they have got their full 
entitlement, whereas that’s quite difficult with milk or dal. Further, eggs are 
important for infants, as they are nutrition-dense. In Odisha, eggs have 
emerged as the perfect “take-home ration” for children under three. Children 
also seem to love eggs.

At a mixed-caste government school in Shimoga, Karnataka, when asked to raise 
their hand if they would like an egg, almost all hands went up.

Recent arguments for denying eggs to children and forcing vegetarianism on them 
include: the strongest animals, horses and elephants, are vegetarian; Sant 
Ravidas was vegetarian, so all Dalits should be like him; as Dalits cannot 
afford non-vegetarian food anyway, schools and anganwadis need not provide 
eggs; separate seating arrangements might be difficult to manage. Without 
saying it explicitly, the message has been clear: rather than hurt the 
sentiments of a few among the so-called upper castes, it is better to keep eggs 
out.

Caste resistance is an important part of why northern and western states do not 
provide eggs. Often, these arguments are disguised as “rational”. First, create 
an impression that if eggs are on the menu, vegetarians will be forced to eat 
them (ignoring that vegetarians can be given fruit instead). Then, dress it up 
as a “freedom to choose” issue. Ironically, those who deny free choice to 
non-vegetarians are the ones levelling this allegation.

Karnataka provides eggs in anganwadis, but not in school meals. Why? Quite 
likely, this is because the Akshaya Patra Foundation is a big player in the MDM 
programme but not in the ICDS. Since 2007, the BJP has resisted eggs. That 
year, two BJP leaders disagreed on the issue. When religious leaders opposed 
eggs, the government caved in. The Congress is not very different. It announced 
eggs in the MDM scheme only for the northern nutritionally deprived districts, 
but even that has not taken off.

Instead of surrendering to the egg-resisters, states like MP and Karnataka 
should learn from others where opposition, if any, was overcome. It is unfair 
to sacrifice children’s right to nutrition to spurious anti-egg arguments from 
a small minority among the upper castes.

The writer is associate professor, economics, IIT Delhi

=========================================
20. UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL INDIGENEITY
by Nicolas Rosenthal
=========================================
(H-Net)
James Clifford. Returns: Becoming Indigenous in the Twenty-First Century. 
Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2013. 366 pp. $39.95 (cloth), ISBN 
978-0-674-72492-1.

Reviewed by Nicolas Rosenthal (Loyola Marymount University)
Published on H-AmIndian (June, 2015)
Commissioned by F. Evan Nooe

Understanding Global Indigeneity

This third volume in a series of works by the prominent theorist, historian, 
and cultural anthropologist James Clifford holds tremendous potential for both 
directing scholarship and more widely reshaping the conversation on indigenous 
peoples throughout the world today. Following the influential The Predicament 
of Culture: Twentieth-Century Ethnography, Literature, and Art (1988) and 
Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth-Century (1997), Returns 
addresses the more recent past and the resurgence of “global indigeneity.” It 
begins with the breakdown of old colonial narratives of progress that presented 
indigenous people the choice between physical and cultural genocide, but always 
guaranteed their disappearance. By the early twenty-first century, the 
supremacy of the West has come into question and the “signs of systemic crisis 
and transition are everywhere” (p. 5). Against this backdrop, indigenous people 
have emerged through generations of survival, struggle, and renewal, adapted to 
modernity and increasingly visible as they move through local, regional, and 
global networks. To understand these recent changes, Clifford calls for an 
“ethnographic and historical realism” that eschews both Western triumphalism 
and savage romanticism in favor of close readings of indigenous experience 
embedded within shifting global conditions (p. 7). Specifically, Clifford 
tracks processes of “decolonization, globalization, and indigenous becoming” as 
they “construct, reinforce, and trouble each other,” focusing on the past few 
decades (p. 8). At the center of Returns is a willingness to understand history 
as contingent and open-ended, not only as a refutation of past meta-narratives 
but also as a way to take seriously an “indigenous longue durée,” or the idea 
that disruptions of colonization, settler-colonialism, and modernity can be 
seen as brief moments in much longer histories that are passing on the way to 
more hopeful futures (p. 42).

Returns is composed of a series of essays that can be read separately or 
together as a single volume. Part 1 is general and theoretical in scope, 
introducing the author’s concerns and establishing the book’s analytical 
framework. Its first essay argues that “indigenous people have emerged from 
history’s blind spot” and need to be taken seriously as “visible actors in 
local, national, and global arenas” (p. 13). Indeed, throughout the world, 
indigenous people have come to challenge the hegemony of both the nation-state 
and transnational capitalist networks by asserting their presence in global 
culture and politics, through a diverse set of forums that range from local 
arts and cultural festivals to the United Nations. The old narratives make no 
sense when viewing the Zapatista movement in Mexico, Native Hawaiian struggles 
for sovereignty, or the success of Indian gaming in the United States. Calling 
for a “historically and politically attuned ethnographic realism” as a model of 
scholarship, Clifford primarily uses three analytical tools (p. 36). 
“Articulation” refers to how indigenous peoples assemble an identity made up of 
a broad range of elements grounded in their influences, encounters, and 
experiences over time, such as Native Alaskan communities incorporating the 
trappings and worldview of Russian Orthodoxy. Closely related is “translation,” 
where indigenous peoples remake their social, cultural, and political 
influences into something new, like the Zapatistas adapting Marxism to their 
claims for autonomy. Indigenous identities are put on display through 
“performance,” or staged heritage displays, cultural tourism, and other forums 
where indigenous peoples make themselves understandable to their audiences, 
often with political, economic, or cultural goals in mind. Clifford illustrates 
these concepts to various degrees in two essays adapted from talks on Native 
studies in the Pacific World and the limits and possibilities of diaspora 
studies for indigenous people.

A single chapter makes up part 2, focusing on the case of Ishi, the California 
Native man whose life and various ways that he has been understood over time 
illustrate the tensions between contrasting historical narratives, legacies of 
colonial violence, the relationship of anthropology to both settler-colonialism 
and indigenous resurgence, and the possibilities for healing and 
reconciliation. Originally Ishi was framed as “the last California Indian” by 
University of California, Berkeley, anthropologist Alfred L. Kroeber, employing 
a literary and historical trope common throughout the late nineteenth and 
twentieth centuries. Ishi’s story was reshaped to fit changing historical 
circumstances as early as the 1960s, when Kroeber’s widow, Theodora, wrote, 
Ishi in Two Worlds (1961), which invoked ideas about genocide and romanticized 
indigenous worldviews for a liberal audience, even as it accepted the 
“inevitability” of indigenous disappearance. In the 1990s, revelations emerged 
over the preservation of Ishi’s brain in the Smithsonian Institute, leading to 
a repatriation movement, intertribal conflicts, re-internment, and some level 
of healing, as Ishi’s life and legacy were revisited by Native Californians. 
Ishi’s new visibility coincided uncomfortably with the centennial anniversary 
of Berkeley’s Anthropology Department, forcing it to reassess the legacies of 
“salvage anthropology” and the department’s influence on both Ishi’s life and 
the larger experiences of California’s Native peoples. Most recently Ishi’s 
story gained worldwide exposure (though significantly veiled and adapted to the 
genre of science fiction) in the form of the blockbuster film Avatar, based on 
a novella by Ursula K. Le Guin, a best-selling author and the Kroebers’ 
daughter. For Clifford, “The different retellings of Ishi’s story question 
all-or-nothing outcomes, the inevitabilities that govern so much thinking about 
Westernization, or modernization, or a triumphant American history” (p. 189). 
It speaks to contingency, multiplicity, and the “open-endedness” of historical 
narratives, all of which have been highlighted more broadly by the resurgence 
of Native people around the world.

The final section of the book applies many of the author’s concerns to his 
fieldwork on Native cultural renewal in Alaska. A first essay, again adapted 
from a symposium presentation, thinks about whether Alaska can fit into an 
indigenous “reimagining” of the Pacific Ocean that centers its many Native 
communities rather than relegating them to the margins of empire. The next 
chapter more closely examines a Native heritage exhibition and heritage 
activity in southwestern Alaska that came about through collaborations between 
diverse interests that included academics and Native people. It concludes that 
such projects are important yet do not erase longstanding inequalities and that 
struggles by indigenous people for cultural authority continue. A last essay 
centers on the revival of mask making among Alutiiq people on Kodiak Island and 
its role in a broader heritage renewal and identity making throughout Alaska 
that responds to the violent histories of colonization and capitalist 
expansion. Once considered a lost or dying art, Alutiiq masks made in heritage 
workshops and exhibited at the Alutiiq Museum and Archaeological Repository are 
now an example of a “rearticulated tradition,” in that they have come to serve 
different purposes in the contemporary era as part of the project of cultural 
renewal.

Throughout the book, Clifford is hesitant to subscribe to either utopian or 
dystopian visions and generally is suspicious of polarities, whether he is 
analyzing indigenous experience or projecting conditions into the future. Yet 
the tone of the book remains optimistic and full of possibilities for 
indigenous people who now live in “a world system that can no longer be 
spatialized into stable cores and peripheries, that is susceptible to deep 
crises and profound reconfigurations,” so as to open up new spaces for those 
once thought destined to disappear (p. 211). Referring to an indigenous 
formulation of the recent past as a “bad storm,” Clifford writes that he has 
“tried to take seriously [this] view of historical possibility, not just as a 
story of indigenous survival, but as a way of living in modernity, and a way 
through to something else.” He continues, “How could such a vision be 
realistic, in a world of industrializing nation-states and global capitalism? 
Returns has offered not so much an answer as a deepening of the question” (p. 
315). Indeed, Clifford’s remarkable ability to make larger sense of the world 
around him without being reductive gives scholars language and ways of thinking 
about the sweeping changes in indigeneity over the past few decades, laying the 
foundation for new narratives that elevate indigenous people to prominent roles 
in modern, global affairs.

=========================================
21. FROM OCCUPYING BANKS TO CITY HALL: MEET BARCELONA’S NEW MAYOR ADA COLAU
=========================================
(Democracy Now, 5 June 2015)

A longtime anti-eviction activist has just been elected mayor of Barcelona, 
becoming the city’s first female mayor. Ada Colau co-founded the anti-eviction 
group Platform for People Affected by Mortgages and was an active member of the 
Indignados, or 15-M Movement. Colau has vowed to fine banks with empty homes on 
their books, stop evictions, expand public housing, set a minimum monthly wage 
of $670, force utility companies to lower prices, and slash the mayoral salary. 
Colau enjoyed support from the Podemos party, which grew out of the indignados 
movement that began occupying squares in Spain four years ago. Ada Colau joins 
us to discuss her victory.

AMY GOODMAN: We are broadcasting from Stanford University in California. But we 
end today’s show in Spain, where a longtime anti-eviction activist has just 
been elected mayor of Barcelona, becoming the city’s first female mayor. Ada 
Colau co-founded the anti-eviction group, Platform for People Affected by 
Mortgages, and was an active member of the Indignados, or 15-M Movement, the 
protest movement that inspired Occupy Wall Street. Ada Colau has vowed to fine 
banks with empty homes on their books, stop evictions, expand public housing, 
set a minimum monthly wage of $670 per month, force utility companies to lower 
prices, and slash the mayoral salary.Colau enjoyed support from the Podemos 
Party, which grew out of the Indignados movement that began occupying squares 
in Spain four years ago. She’s been arrested repeatedly for her protests. I 
spoke to Ada Colau last week. I began by asking if she was surprised by her 
victory.

ADA COLAU: [translated] Thank you very much, it’s a pleasure.

AMY GOODMAN: Were you surprised by your victory?

ADA COLAU: [translated] In reality, partly yes, and partly no. It was a victory 
that was accomplished in a very short amount of time, it was a candidacy that 
was supported and driven by the citizens, with very scarce resources, and with 
very little money we achieved victory in the elections of such an important 
city, as Barcelona. But partly it was not surprising because there is a strong 
citizen movement, and a strong desire for change. We have serious political 
problems here in Barcelona, and in the entire country, and so there was a need 
for change which you could see in the streets.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about what those problems are?

ADA COLAU: [translated] There are problems related to the economic crisis, but 
this economic crisis is a consequence of a political crisis, of a profound 
democratic crisis. We have had a form of government where the political elites 
had a cozy relationship with the economic elites who have ruined the economy of 
the country, and the ultimate representation of this was the behavior of the 
financial institutions, of the banks. They have defrauded thousands and 
thousands of citizens, with abusive mortgages. They have evicted thousands of 
families and they have ruined the country’s economy. And this has happened 
because of the cozy relationship between the political and economical elites. 
In the face of this situation, where there have been losses of billions of 
Euros, that have caused social cutbacks in as basic as health care and 
education, it’s caused, for example, in a city that’s rich like Barcelona, a 
city where there is a lot of money and a lot of resources, the inequality has 
shot up. That means that there are people that are getting more and more rich, 
at the same time that there are more poor people than ever. So the middle class 
is disappearing.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, two years ago you testified at a Spanish parliamentary 
hearing on Spain’s foreclosure crisis. On the panel, you spoke right after a 
representative of Spain’s banking industry. You famously turned to the banker 
and said, "This man is a criminal and should be treated like one."

ADA COLAU: [translated] We’ve been negotiating with banks, with the public 
administration, with the courts and therefore we know exactly what we’re 
talking about. And this leads me to question the voices of supposed experts who 
precisely are the ones being given too much credit, pardon the pun, such as the 
representatives of financial institutions. We just had an example, I would say 
at the very least it was paradoxical, to use an understatement, if not outright 
cynical, for the representative of financial institutions who just spoke 
telling us that the Spanish legislation was great. To say that, when people are 
taking their own lives because of this criminal law, I assure you, I assure you 
that I did not thrown my shoe at this man because I believed it was important 
to be here now to tell you what I’m telling you. But this man is a criminal! 
And you should treat him as such! He is not an expert. The representatives of 
financial institutions have caused this problem. They are the very same people 
who caused the problem which has ruined the whole economy of this country and 
you are treating these people as experts

AMY GOODMAN: That’s Ada Colau. Who is now the Mayor-elect of Barcelona, Spain. 
The speech made lawmakers’ jaws drop. And you got a reprimand from the 
Parliament, but your speech endeared you to millions of Spaniards. Can you talk 
about that moment that you decided to speak out and did you have any regrets?

ADA COLAU: [translated] The reality is that I went to speak in front of the 
parliament after many years of housing rights activism, and working closely 
with the thousands of families that were affected by the mortgage fraud which 
the banks had committed and by the evictions that came after that. The 
evictions and the interest rates have literally destroyed the lives of 
thousands of families. To destroy their lives means they’ve caused depression, 
diseases, even suicides.

The only thing I did was describe what I knew, and what I had been living on 
the front lines for many years. When I encountered this banker who denied the 
reality and said that there were no problems in Spain, when there were 
thousands of families in a dire situation, the least I could do was to denounce 
these lies and talk to them about what the reality was. I think what surprised 
people more and what generated a media phenomenon after this appearance in the 
parliament was that someone was telling the truth at the Parliament because, 
sadly, this was something that hadn’t happened in a long time.

In Spain you have the paradox that while the corrupt politicians see the 
statute of limitations for their crimes lapse and they make off without going 
to jail, the families who got into debt for something as basic as accessing 
housing become indebted forever, because it is impossible to forgive this debt. 
So, in the face of this barbarity what happened is that hundred of thousands of 
hard-working families that just wanted was to have a normal life, suddenly lose 
their jobs, they lose their house, and they become indebted for life, and 
becoming indebted means economic and civil death. This leads to people 
committing suicide, to diseases, to broken families, and the positive aspect of 
this was the birth of an exemplary citizen movement, which has succeeded in 
stopping thousands of evictions. That forced the banks to negotiate. And it 
showed that if our institutions did not resolve this problem it was because our 
institutions were accomplices in this fraud.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, you have broken through so many ceilings as the first 
woman Mayor of Barcelona, together with the new Mayor of Madrid. In your 
victory speech, you talked about a democratic revolution all over the south of 
Europe. Can you start there? What do you mean?

ADA COLAU: [translated] What is happening in Spain and in Barcelona is not an 
isolated event, rather there is a crisis in the way we do politics, there is a 
political elites which has become corrupt and have ended up as accomplices of a 
financial power which only thinks to speculate and to make money even at the 
expense of rising inequality and the impoverishment of the majority of the 
citizenship. Fortunately, there has been a citizen reaction, here and in other 
parts of the Mediterranean, for example in Greece, to confront the neoliberal 
economic policies, which are not only a problem in Spain but in Europe and 
around the world. We see very clearly that the city councils are key to 
confronting this way of making policy, meaning, that is where the everyday 
policies are made and where we can prove there is another way to govern, more 
inclusive, working together with the citizens, more than just asking them to 
vote every four years, and that you can fight against corruption, and you can 
have transparent institutions. So we think the city governments are key for 
democratic revolution, to begin governing, with the people, in a new way, but 
on the other hand we are very aware that the real change must be global, that 
one city alone cannot solve all the problems we are facing, many of which are 
global because today the economy does not have borders, that big capital, and 
the markets move freely around the world, unlike people.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, what would a public banking system look like?

ADA COLAU: [translated] I think, in the financial world there has been a 
problem of absolute misrule. You cannot leave something as important as 
economic policy and money which has a social function, in the hands of 
speculation and private interests. Here there has been a democratic deficit and 
a lack of global, collective and democratic control over money and the economic 
system in general. So, we have to take back that democratic control, and that 
doesn’t meant that all the banks have to be public, it can be implemented in 
different ways. What we need are laws that make private banks comply with the 
law, because now in Spain we have a banking system that breaks the law 
systematically and nothing happens.

For us, the citizens, they don’t forgive anything, they make us pay all our 
debts, they make us pay all our taxes, they make us pay each small traffic 
ticket, they don’t forgive anything. But the big banks on the other hand, which 
have lied, defrauded and destroyed thousands of families are forgiven for, for 
example, breaking the European consumer protection regulations. So, this is 
unacceptable. The first thing we need is governments that serve their citizens, 
not the private interests, and that enforce the law. We are talking about 
something as basic as enforcing the existing law. The first thing we need is to 
force the financial power to comply with the law and to obey the democratic 
powers, something that is not happening now. It’s also true that it would 
definitely be good if this private, financial power, is complemented by some 
form form of public bank that offsets and guarantees that there is financing 
for what is in the public interest, because if not, what happens is the private 
financial system has the power to decide what is funded and what is not funded.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, one of the most tweeted photos in Spain these days 
shows riot police hauling you away. The image is from July 2013 when you are 
trying to occupy a Barcelona bank that was foreclosing on homes. The caption 
added by Twitter users reads, "Welcome new mayor." Can you talk about that 
moment that you were being dragged away?

ADA COLAU: [translated] There were many similar moments in past years, because 
when we have unjust laws, like the ones we have now in Spain, one has to 
massively disobey these unjust laws to protect human rights. Here the right to 
housing is being infringed upon and that’s why thousands of citizens, in a 
peaceful manner, we have had to practice civil disobedience to defend human 
rights. In this sense, this action was one of the many that have been performed 
in this country, and not by me, but by many other people who have been 
defending the human rights of all of the others. Throughout human history, it 
has happened this way. In order to defend rights and to win rights, many times 
it has been necessary to disobey unjust laws. Of course, now, as future mayor 
of Barcelona, I hope the police are going to be at the service of human rights, 
and not of the banks.

AMY GOODMAN: In the United States there’s Occupy. You were part of the 
Indignados. Talk about the different protests, from anti-war to anti-corporate 
globalization, that have shaped you.

ADA COLAU: [translated] In reality there has been a continuity in the past 15 
years at least. In the early 2000s, late 1990s when they began the 
anti-globalization movement, Seattle, there a wide cycle of protests began, 
that continues to the present day. During this time there has been the 
anti-globalization movement, the international anti-war movement, there’s been 
the Indignados, there’s been many fights for housing rights, for peace. And all 
these mobilizations, not only here but also on the global level, have had many 
things in common. First, the global dimension, the awareness that there are 
political and economic problems that have a global dimension, so we need to 
work as a network. Because there is a single global and economic reality and 
it’s essential to work in alliances.

Also, the necessity for a real democracy, the awareness that even if we have 
formally democratic institutions, we have the sense that the decisions are not 
being made in parliament, but by the boards of directors or by international 
institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank, which are profoundly 
anti-democratic, and which the citizens do not control, and that they also make 
decisions against their own people, generating misery around the world.

This awareness that we have a kidnapped democracy has lead to the rise of many 
grassroots mobilizations, propel from the bottom, from the citizens, that saw 
the formal democracy is not enough, that we need to find new ways of democratic 
participation where everyone can have a place, and contribute what every person 
has to contribute.

So, I think all the mobilizations that have happened in the past 15 years, that 
have also increasingly used the new technologies, Internet, the social medias, 
that has find new forms of direct communication, innovative. In some way we are 
seeing an update of the democracy, an update of the forms of political 
participation that have had many different expressions in different global 
movements but there is maybe a nexus that unite them all.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, you are the first woman Mayor of Barcelona, Spain, 
you’re a woman, you’re activist. Also a female activist is now going to be the 
Madrid Mayor. Talk about the significance of this.

ADA COLAU: [translated] Without a doubt it is important because half of the 
population are women, is completely illogical that after 40 years of formal 
democracy I should be the first woman mayor. This is not normal because we, the 
women, built this city and we are crucial actors of it, but it is not reflected 
in the political representation, in the places where the political decisions 
are made. Clearly, we live in a sexist society, this in not an exclusive 
problem of Barcelona or Spain, it is a global problem, but we are seeing now 
are signs of a change, as a result of many fight to conquer our rights, from 
many women who went before us, and now we take this testimony, and we keep 
moving forward.

It is clear that women are overrepresented in the care sector and household 
environment, and the time has come for women to achieve more representation in 
the decisions places of the political and economic power. But, in addition, I 
think we have much to contribute and that we can learn a lot from the feminist 
struggle, and that in this moment of change we can contribute by feminising 
politics, and for this we need not only to put more women in the 
decision-making places, but also transform the values in politics and to prove 
that cooperation is more efficient and more satisfactory than competitiveness, 
and that collective social policy making is better that individualism. I think 
this are the collective values we can contribute to feminize politics, and with 
this no only women will win, men and women will win.

AMY GOODMAN: What do think your victory means for Podemos possibly winning and 
in the national level later this year?

ADA COLAU: [translated] I think a political change is happening, a change in 
the ways of making politics, again, not only in Spain, across the south of 
Europe, and we hope in all Europe. What happened in Spain is a democratic 
revolution. The citizens have been empowered, and have taken the floor. That’s 
why I think the main actor here is not any political name, it is not “Barcelona 
en Comú”, it is not “Podemos”, it is not Ada Colau, it is not Pablo Iglesias, 
the main actors here are the citizens, the people who have decided to take back 
the institutions to recover the control of policy making, to give to the people 
the power to make the decisions, in this grassroot movement of democratic 
revolution there are differents political parties, differing names which must 
be a tool in this process of empowerment and democratic revolution. This is why 
Podemos, Pablo Iglesias, Ada Colau, and some other parties that are emerging 
are just tools at the service of this broad citizen’s process that has decided 
to take back the institutions for the people.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, finally, what will be your first act in office as the 
new Mayor of Barcelona?

ADA COLAU: [translated] Well, we already elaborate an emergency action plan 
that have 30 measures perfectly viable, ambitious but perfectly viable, for the 
first months in office. This emergency action plan consist of three main 
measures: first to create jobs and fight against job insecurity, another is to 
guarantee the basic rights, and the other is to fight against corruption, make 
a city council more transparent and end with the privileges, for example: low 
the salaries of the public officers, of the elected officers, eliminate the 
expenses and the official cars, things that can seem simples, but are very 
symbolic because they send a message of an end of impunity, of an end of a 
political class distant to the reality of the citizens. So, end with this 
privileges is something that we can do immediately, is only a matter of 
political will. Without a doubt one of the first decisions as mayor will be to 
convene publicly to all the banks who works in the city to sit them around a 
table of dialogue in order to stop the evictions, and to demand that the empty 
dwellings they have in the city to be available for rent, as social rental 
(social housing) for the families that need it.

AMY GOODMAN: Ada Colau, thank you very much for joining us, and congratulations 
as the first woman Mayor of Barcelona, Spain. Thank you.

ADA COLAU: [translated] Thank you very much.

AMY GOODMAN: Barcelona Mayor-elect, Ada Colau. We will be posting the original 
interview in Spanish on our website, democracynow.org. 

=========================================
22. PUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENT: THE SOUTH AFRICAN GANDHI BY ASHWIN DESAI AND 
GOOLAM VAHED
=========================================
The South African Gandhi
Stretcher-Bearer of Empire
Ashwin Desai and Goolam Vahed
SERIES: South Asia in Motion

Stanford University Press
Available in September
352 pp. from $24.95

Cloth ISBN: 9780804796088
Paper ISBN: 9780804797177

In the pantheon of freedom fighters, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi has pride of 
place. His fame and influence extend far beyond India and are nowhere more 
significant than in South Africa. "India gave us a Mohandas, we gave them a 
Mahatma," goes a popular South African refrain. Contemporary South African 
leaders, including Mandela, have consistently lauded him as being part of the 
epic battle to defeat the racist white regime.

The South African Gandhi focuses on Gandhi's first leadership experiences and 
the complicated man they reveal—a man who actually supported the British 
Empire. Ashwin Desai and Goolem Vahed unveil a man who, throughout his stay on 
African soil, stayed true to Empire while showing a disdain for Africans. For 
Gandhi, whites and Indians were bonded by an Aryan bloodline that had no place 
for the African. Gandhi's racism was matched by his class prejudice towards the 
Indian indentured. He persistently claimed that they were ignorant and needed 
his leadership, and he wrote their resistances and compromises in surviving a 
brutal labor regime out of history. The South African Gandhi writes the 
indentured and working class back into history.

The authors show that Gandhi never missed an opportunity to show his loyalty to 
Empire, with a particular penchant for war as a means to do so. He served as an 
Empire stretcher-bearer in the Boer War while the British occupied South 
Africa, he demanded guns in the aftermath of the Bhambatha Rebellion, and he 
toured the villages of India during the First World War as recruiter for the 
Imperial army. This meticulously researched book punctures the dominant 
narrative of Gandhi and uncovers an ambiguous figure whose time on African soil 
was marked by a desire to seek the integration of Indians, minus many basic 
rights, into the white body politic while simultaneously excluding Africans 
from his moral compass and political ideals.

About the author

Ashwin Desai is Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of 
Johannesburg.

Goolam Vahed is Associate Professor in the History, Society, and Social Change 
Cluster of the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

"The South African Gandhi finally offers a real and convincing account of 
Indian life and politics in South Africa, and Gandhi's changing place within 
it. Its critique of the sanctimonious and nationalistic historiography around 
Gandhi allows the authors to recover a Gandhi beyond moralism."
—Faisal Devji, University of Oxford

=========================================
23. Sins of the Three Pashas
Edward Luttwak
=========================================
(London Review of Books - Vol. 37 No. 11 · 4 June 2015
pages 6-8) 

‘They Can Live in the Desert but Nowhere Else’: A History of the Armenian 
Genocide by Ronald Grigor Suny
    Princeton, 520 pp, £24.95, March, ISBN 978 0 691 14730 7

You are invited to read this free book review from the London Review of Books. 
Subscribe now to access every article from every fortnightly issue of the 
London Review of Books, including the entire LRB archive of over 13,500 essays 
and reviews.

Turkey is a country small in neither size nor population, yet its rulers have 
the privilege of being ignored most of the time, no doubt because its language 
is remarkably little known, considering that for all its Arabic and Persian 
accretions it’s a most useful entry to the Oghuz Turkic tongues spoken from 
Moldova to China. This privilege was in evidence when Pope Francis chose in 
April to define the Armenian deportations, kidnappings, rapes and massacres 
that started in 1915 as a genocide. The Turkish government prefers fine 
terminological distinctions: what the pope, every Armenian and a great many 
others call a genocide should more properly be described as a First World War 
event involving mass killings (one of many such, down to the present day) and 
deportations (a wartime necessity given Armenian complicity in Russia’s 
invasion of North-east Anatolia); but in any case it was an unfortunate event 
that happened a long time ago, and an exception in Turkey’s fine tradition of 
tolerance. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu went on the offensive in the 
Washington Post: ‘I am addressing the pope: those who escaped from the Catholic 
inquisition in Spain [Sephardic Jews] found peace in our just order in Istanbul 
and İzmir. We are ready to discuss historical issues, but we will not let 
people insult our nation through history.’

To pause on the effrontery of citing benevolence to 15th-century Jews at a time 
when his party and its leader, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, continually 
denigrate today’s Jews (he blames ‘the Saturday People’ for Turkey’s high 
interest rates, and explains modern history as the product of the Üst Akil, the 
global conspiracy of you-know-who) would be to miss the point entirely: the 
persecution of the Armenians didn’t start in 1915, and wasn’t a First World War 
event as per the official Turkish line – there had been massacres of Armenians 
before then, notably in 1894-96, leaving some fifty thousand orphans. And, more 
important, the persecution didn’t end with the First World War, but continues 
to this day. Its current form, aside from occasional non-state violence such as 
the 2007 murder of Hrant Dink, founding editor of the bilingual magazine Agos 
(dedicated to reconciliation), is Turkey’s artfully drafted legislation on 
non-profit trusts and foundations. The lack of a good law on foundations wasn’t 
one of the Ottoman Empire’s shortcomings; its simple and efficacious Vakf law 
long persisted unchanged in the successor states including decidedly non-Muslim 
Greece and Israel (Agudat Ottomani). But the new Turkish state needed something 
more modern – the text after all was in an Ottoman Turkish that was both 
Persianised and written in Arabic script – and laws were duly enacted. One such 
law of 1967 (number 743, or 4721 in the current code), which amended Article 
101 of the Turkish civil code, defines foundations in the usual way: charity 
groups that have the status of a legal entity formed by real persons or legal 
entities dedicating their private property and rights for public use etc. But 
then it adds: ‘Formation of a foundation contrary to the characteristics of the 
republic defined by the constitution, constitutional rules, laws, ethics, 
national integrity and national interest, or with the aim of supporting a 
distinctive race or community, is restricted’ [emphasis added] – which actually 
means that it is forbidden, because there are no provisions for exceptions.

That still left in place pre-existing foundations, allowing a dwindling number 
of Armenian and Greek churches as well as synagogues and schools to keep going, 
but in 1974 new legislation determined that non-Muslim trusts couldn’t own 
property that hadn’t been registered under their name in 1936. With that, some 
1400 churches, schools, residential buildings, hospitals, summer camps, 
cemeteries and orphanages were deemed illegal and seized by the state, unless a 
‘former owner’ could claim them. In 1986, under European pressure (at a time 
when Turkey’s accession to the EU was still treated as a realistic if long-term 
possibility), the laws that denied Armenian rights over ‘abandoned’ properties 
were abrogated. But any possibility of recovery was circumvented by a 29 June 
2001 order by the land registry authority which effectively transferred all 
remaining ‘abandoned’ properties to the government. What’s more, no information 
regarding property titles may be disclosed, so claimants can’t even begin to 
avail themselves of the nominal restoration of 1986. Such seemingly technical 
administrative measures have sufficed to prevent the opening of any new church 
(Armenian or otherwise), synagogue or non-Muslim school since the foundation of 
the Turkish Republic in 1923.

Today’s Islamist rulers are doing everything possible to obliterate Mustafa 
Kemal’s firmly secular Turkey – they are building mosques in universities where 
even headscarves were disallowed until very recently, and the official 
centennial documentary of his victorious Gallipoli campaign featured a 
fervently praying Erdoğan as well as re-enactors mouthing Islamic invocations 
while Kemal himself only flashed by as a silent image – but there’s one aspect 
of Kemalist Turkey that meets with their fullest approval: its uncompromising 
nationalism, which, though secular per se happens to define a ‘Turk’ as a 
Muslim Turk, treating all non-Muslim Turks as half citizens, with full 
obligations but few rights, and no chance of achieving political office. 
Kemal’s secularism, though commendable in its focus on the emancipation of 
women (Istanbul’s Sabiha Gökçen airport is named for his adopted daughter, who 
became a combat pilot in 1936) was not transitive: serenely non-believing 
himself, he strove to liberate the Turks from the lethargy of Islam, but didn’t 
proceed logically to accept non-Muslims as equals.

Turkey’s current leaders often abrogate or subvert remnants of Kemalist rule 
with the aim of fully Islamising the country, but carefully preserve others to 
pursue the same aim. So in spite of repeated promises to Obama and all and 
sundry, they refuse to allow the reopening of the country’s only Greek Orthodox 
seminary at Halki (closed in 1971 when the Turkish constitution of 1961 was 
properly interpreted: Article 132 specified that only the Turkish Armed Forces 
and police are allowed to open private colleges). With this, the Orthodox 
Church established in Constantinople in 330, whose patriarch is still the 
primus inter pares of all Greek Orthodox patriarchs, can survive only 
precariously, because another Kemalist survival prohibits the importation of 
foreign priests.
NYU Press - Plucked - Rebecca M. Herzig

Turkey was still fully Kemalist when the Armenians fell victim in a 
catastrophic way to its non-transitive secularism 27 years after the ‘First 
World War events’ began, and two decades after the widespread if merely 
incidental killings of surviving Armenians in the course of the 1919-22 Turkish 
war against the invading Greeks: on 11 November 1942 the Turkish parliament 
enacted a one-off wealth tax (Law 4305 in its admirably systematic civil code) 
on all fixed assets, land, buildings, commercial establishments and industrial 
enterprises. That tax was by no means unreasonable in itself: it was conceived 
when money was urgently needed to fund Turkey’s military forces in a dangerous 
phase of the Second World War, when the implicit British guarantee of its 
security had seemingly been invalidated by Germany’s spectacular advances 
across Russia and North Africa, which left Turkey as the potential prey of 
closing pincers. (As it happened, by the time the tax was enacted, El Alamein 
and Stalingrad had intervened.)

But the way the tax was actually levied was savagely, destructively 
discriminatory. Wealthy Muslims were to pay a rate of 4.94 per cent of assessed 
value, which was nominally the agricultural rate (poorer Muslims paid nothing); 
Greeks were to pay a 156 per cent rate, which was evidently meant to immiserate 
them; Jews were levied a 179 per cent rate; but to make it perfectly clear that 
they were at the very bottom of the pile, the Armenian rate was set at 232 per 
cent. In the event of underpayment or non-payment, the law prescribed the 
confiscation of all related and non-related wealth attributable to any and all 
family members, and detention for forced labour. The ensuing events were best 
described by one of the officials in charge, Mehmet Faik Ökte, whose 
unvarnished and sincerely contrite account, Varlık Vergisi Faciası, was 
published in 1951: a mere 15 days were allowed for payment once the notice had 
been issued to a taxpayer; those who had marketable valuables tried to auction 
them, or sell them to Muslim shopkeepers; they offered them in street markets, 
or simply laid them out on their front steps; private homes and any other 
buildings were sold to anyone who would buy them for whatever they would offer 
before the deadline of the 15th day (many a Dutch auction was conducted as the 
days went by); entire businesses or inventories were sold to Muslim competitors 
for whatever they were willing to pay, thereby largely destroying the remaining 
non-Muslim merchant class (the wealth of today’s few rich non-Muslims postdates 
the tax).

Poor non-Muslims, servants, craftsmen and even beggars were also taxed on 
mostly imaginary wealth, and thus sent straight to work camps. The then immense 
sum of 324 million liras (equivalent to more than $4 billion in 2015) was 
collected in 15 days of frantic discounting of bonds, loans and deposits, 
panicked selling and rapacious buying, followed by the removal of those who 
hadn’t paid enough, including the old and the sick, to forced labour in open 
fields, where there were uncounted deaths of Armenians, Greeks and Jews – no 
Muslim is known to have been detained. Non-Muslim youths whose families could 
no longer afford to feed them left their confessional or private schools to 
seek any work that paid them enough to survive; women and girls became servants 
in Muslim households, waitresses or inmates of Istanbul’s brothels. There were 
of course many suicides. When emigration became possible with the end of the 
war, many of the newly impoverished Greeks went to Greece, many Jews left for 
Israel after 14 May 1948, and the Armenians started on long quests for 
immigration visas. The wealth tax irreversibly changed Istanbul’s demography 
and society, though the diminished Greek community was attacked once more, in 
the 6-7 September 1955 pogrom in which mobs destroyed 73 churches, two 
monasteries and 26 schools, along with some five thousand homes and shops, 17 
per cent of which were actually Armenian-owned (a synagogue was destroyed too), 
in accordance with the hadith that all unbelievers are one nation.

*

I have long believed that the very best introduction to the genocide question 
is Franz Werfel’s novel Die Vierzig Tage des Musa Dagh (‘The Forty Days of Musa 
Dagh’), that being the coastal mountain on which some 4500 Armenians 
successfully resisted vast numbers of soldiers, gendarmes and would-be looters 
until they were evacuated by French warships. Musa Dagh is also the site of 
Turkey’s single remaining Armenian village, Vak’if, resettled in 1918 when the 
area was under French rule. Werfel’s characters are his own, but the book 
starts with very well-documented accounts of the motives and methods of the 
three protagonists, the ‘Three Pashas’: Enver Pasha, the Ottoman war minister 
and ‘god of war’ who called for extermination and who would die in 1922 
fighting the Russians for pan-Turkism; Talaat Pasha, the minister of the 
interior after whom many Turkish streets are now named, whose telegrams 
triggered the deportations in place after place and who was assassinated by an 
Armenian in Berlin in 1921; and Djemal Pasha, high military commander and mayor 
of Istanbul, where it all began with the mass arrests and executions of 
Armenian leaders on 23-24 April 1915. I realise, however, that an author whom I 
greatly admired at the age of 12, and whose final play became Me and the 
Colonel starring Danny Kaye, may not appear entirely authoritative to everyone, 
even though he had full access to the best diplomatic documentation 
(Germany’s), and was meticulous enough in his research to satisfy that 
insatiable perfectionist Alma Mahler.

Werfel’s novel provides a vital clue to the reason there was such especial 
vehemence against the Armenians. Its wealthy hero, Gabriel Bragadian, has 
returned from Paris to his native village of Yoghonoluk and slides into his 
dead father’s role as informal leader of his own and the neighbouring Armenian 
villages; he isn’t a separatist or sectarian but a loyal, indeed patriotic 
citizen of the Ottoman Empire, which has recently been reformed by the Young 
Turks. In 1908 their revolution allowed the emergence of political parties, 
instituted elections and ordained a new pluralist order whereby non-Muslim 
subjects were elevated into full citizens, who might serve in the armed forces 
as officers of any rank, and aim for high political office. Werfel’s Bagradian 
joins the army and serves bravely as an artillery officer in the 1912 Balkan 
War, as many Armenians may have done in reality: quite a few young non-Muslims 
believed in the Young Turks promise, including David Ben-Gurion, who went to 
Istanbul University to study law in 1912, envisaging a future as a community 
leader-cum-loyal official; in 1914 he personally raised a militia of forty Jews 
to serve the empire. For many in the Young Turks movement the response of the 
fictional Bragadian and the real Ben-Gurion was gratifying evidence that the 
best and brightest non-Muslims would pull their weight in the much needed 
modernisation of the newly constitutional empire.

But for others, especially for the leaders of the Committee of Union and 
Progress, which started out as a secret society, became a political party and 
ended up as the empire’s ruling junta, the Bragadians and Ben-Gurions were a 
sinister threat precisely because of their patriotism. The non-Muslims were 
minorities but not insignificant ones, with Armenians and Greeks numbering in 
the millions; they loomed large in towns and cities, even outnumbering Muslims 
in a few places, such as Edirne (Adrianople). More important, their exemption 
from the lethargy of madrassa and mosque gave them advantages over the Muslims 
in both energy levels and skills. Having long dominated commerce, they might – 
once emancipated by the Young Turks – come to dominate army and state.
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The Three Pashas cited the danger that Armenian revolutionaries and separatists 
would assist a Russian invasion of eastern Anatolia, but it was the patriots 
they really feared, just as after 1492 it was not the crypto Jews in hiding 
that the Spanish elites feared but the ‘new Christians’, who were quickly 
rising in society and even in the church. The Greeks had their own state in 
which to pursue their political ambitions, the Assyrians were too few to matter 
and the Jews were even fewer, so it was the Bragadians alone who were a 
political threat. Kemal’s eventual remedy would be to try to take the Islam out 
of the Turk to make him more competitive, but by then the Three Pashas had done 
their best to eliminate the Armenian competitors.

In Werfel’s novel, Bagradian is concerned when he isn’t mobilised, given that 
the empire had joined the Central Powers in war in November 1914. He goes to 
the district capital to find out why, overhears officials, including the 
provincial governor, discussing Armenians in sinister fashion, and is finally 
warned of the imminent danger by an old Muslim family friend. It’s the sort of 
conversation that many had, as Ronald Grigor Suny’s carefully researched 
history of the massacres shows. He quotes a credible third-party account of 
what ensued when an elected Armenian member of parliament, Vartkes Serengülian, 
went to see his erstwhile friend Talaat Pasha to ask about the rumours that 
Armenian leaders would soon be arrested. The reply was a tirade: ‘Now it is our 
turn … This is politics … This is our turn, and, now it is we who are strong. 
We are going to do what is necessary in the interests of Türklük [Turkishness].’

When the Young Turks summoned both Muslims and non-Muslims, both Turks and 
non-Turks to serve and strengthen the empire that was to be their common home, 
nothing had been said about Türklük. But in its name, Greeks, Assyrians, Jews 
and any other non-Turks would soon revert to subject status in a secular 
version of Islamic dhimmitude that did not exempt Arab Muslims or Kurds (at 
that point the empire still had vast Arabian, Levantine and Mesopotamian 
territories). The Armenians, who had their own villages and some towns, as well 
as their own nationalist organisations, and also potential allies in the 
invading Russians in north-east Anatolia, were marked for deportation along 
with Zionist colonists. But there was a vast difference: the Zionist colonists 
were allowed to prepare themselves before being sent by train to Syrian cities 
without immediate harm; the Armenians expelled from Bitlis, 
Iskenderun-Alexandretta, Adana, Aleppo, Diyarbakir, Hadjin, Sis, Sivas, Urfa, 
Van, Zeytun and elsewhere even before 24 April, were marched out without 
supplies or any provision for shelter, suffering extreme hardship and deadly 
violence from the start. Evidently Talaat’s feelings of friendship towards 
Vartkes weren’t extinguished: he reportedly told him to ‘Go. Leave now, don’t 
wait even a minute.’ By then Talaat had already sent out orders to decapitate 
the Armenian secular leadership in Istanbul by arresting some 250 doctors, 
lawyers, journalists, writers and assorted others, including members of 
Armenian nationalist organisations as well as of the entirely legal, indeed 
quasi-official, Armenian National Assembly, headed by Boghos Nubar, son of a 
three-time prime minister of Egypt. Of those arrested, almost all were soon 
executed.

Those first arrests started on the night of 23 April 1915 and were completed 
the next day, when Talaat sent out his deadliest telegrams: one instructed the 
Ottoman Army High Command to disarm any Armenians in uniform anywhere in the 
empire, and send them to forced labour; and to arrest any local members of any 
Armenian organisation, and seize their institutions. Another was the warrant 
for a much vaster catastrophe: Talaat changed the destination of the mass 
deportations from central Anatolia, where survival was possible, to the far 
deserts of Syria, notably Der Zor, to give it its dreaded Armenian name (Deir 
ez-Zor in Arabic), some 1500 kilometres from Istanbul, and the site of a fine 
memorial church blown up last September by Islamic State. It was by a series of 
individual miracles that after many if not most of the able-bodied men were 
separated early on for deadly forced labour or simply execution, tens of 
thousands of women, children and elderly survivors arrived at Deir ez-Zor. 
There, they were killed en masse along the banks of the Euphrates; many times 
their number had already been murdered or died of thirst, hunger, cold and 
sickness at the hands of their escorting soldiers and gendarmes, the miserably 
paid, miserably clothed Zaptiehs. The Zaptiehs scarcely tried to protect the 
endless processions from the Turks, Kurds and Arabs who came in improvised 
hunting parties to rob, kill, rape and abduct boys and girls for a day, night, 
week or for ever. Even now, a century later, Armenian descendants emerge here 
and there to reclaim their identity in such places as Diyarbakir, the ancient 
city of Amida on the Tigris river, and in Dersim, now Tunceli province, where 
the population, mostly identified as Kurdish or Zazaki, may be of Armenian 
origin in large part; not coincidentally, the inhabitants are mostly of the 
Alevi Bektashi faith, the world’s largest ignored religion (it has at least ten 
million adherents), nominally a version of Shia Islam that strongly enjoins 
toleration, so that they were more likely to save deportees than to kill them.

*

Pope Francis’s condemnation of the events of April 1915 was only the first of 
many in this centenary year. On a visit to Yerevan, Vladimir Putin made a 
speech deploring the Armenian genocide. The Turkish Foreign Ministry went on 
the offensive: ‘Taking into account the mass atrocities and exiles in Caucasus, 
in Central Asia and Eastern Europe committed by Russia for a century; 
collective punishment methods such as Holodomor [the Ukraine famine of 1932-33] 
as well as inhumane practices especially against Turkish and Muslim people in 
Russia’s own history, we consider that Russia is best suited to know what 
exactly “genocide” and its legal dimension are.’ Coming from a once smoothly 
professional Foreign Ministry, this wildly aggressive and entirely pointless 
reaction reflects the influence of Erdoğan on Turkish officialdom. In Austria, 
six parliamentary parties recognised the massacre as a genocide though the 
country’s official stance hasn’t changed; Turkey’s response was to withdraw its 
ambassador with the warning that relations between Austria and Turkey had been 
damaged permanently. Given that the Turks have traditionally held Germany and 
the Germans in high regard, it’s remarkable that President Joachim Gauck’s use 
of the word genocide triggered another unrestrained response by the Foreign 
Ministry: it called his remarks ‘baseless allegations directed towards Turkish 
identity, history and society … President Gauck does not have the right to 
attribute to the Turkish people a crime which they have not committed.’ The 
anger of Turkish officials has even spilled over against the European 
Parliament, notwithstanding Turkey’s quest for accession. ‘Turkey ignores all 
such resolutions as null and void,’ Erdoğan said. ‘Whatever decision the 
European Parliament takes on the Armenian genocide claims, it will go in one 
ear and out the other.’ Davutoğlu called the resolution ‘a reflection of 
Europe’s racism … where are those aboriginal people? Where are the Native 
Americans? Where are the tribes of Africa? How were they wiped out from 
history?’
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But the most telling response to the international denunciations was the 
threatened conversion into a mosque of Justinian’s massive and majestic former 
cathedral, Hagia Sophia, now the country’s most visited museum, thereby 
punishing the Orthodox worldwide for the pope’s statement on the Armenians, 
most of whom are neither Catholic nor Greek Orthodox (their church is 
miaphysite rather than Chalcedonian). The threats came not from wild-eyed imams 
preaching in back streets but from authoritative voices, including Mefail 
Hızlı, mufti of Ankara: ‘Frankly, I believe that the pope’s remarks will only 
accelerate the process for Hagia Sophia to be reopened for [Muslim] worship.’ 
Politicians, including Bülent Arınç, a deputy prime minister, have been 
pressing for the conversion for some time: ‘We look at this forlorn Hagia 
Sophia and pray to Allah that the days when it smiles on us are near.’

One small irony in Erdoğan’s sensitivity about the term ‘genocide’ being 
deployed against the Turks is that he himself has used the word lightly, 
accusing the Chinese of genocide for their repression of the Muslim Uighurs and 
the Israelis of systematic genocide of the Palestinians. (He rejects 
International Criminal Court charges against Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir 
because ‘no Muslim could perpetrate a genocide.’) But a larger irony about the 
Turkish denial of the Armenian genocide is that it is possible to justify it. 
Their denial is tainted by gross underestimates of the numbers killed – there 
is no valid reason to dispute the canonical numbering of the dead at a million 
and a half – but the genocide accusation is nonetheless legitimately 
disputable. The list of highly distinguished scholars who deny that what took 
place was a genocide as legally defined include Bernard Lewis, Stanford Shaw, 
David Fromkin, Justin McCarthy, Guenther Lewy, Norman Stone, Michael Gunter, 
Andrew Mango, Roderic Davison, Edward Erickson and Steven Katz, and although 
all of them have had dealings with Turkish academic institutions, none is 
likely to have bent his opinion to suit material interests. They are joined in 
their denial by the British and US governments, each of which has presented its 
arguments in full legal detail within the terms of the Convention on the 
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, based on the reasoning and 
advocacy of Rafael Lemkin, a Lithuanian-born Jewish lawyer who practised in 
Poland before reaching the United States, where he introduced the word 
‘genocide’ in his seminal work Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of 
Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress, published in 1944. 
Formally adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1948, the Genocide Convention 
came into effect in 1951, forming the basis for a new criterion in the law of 
nations. Lemkin cited the Armenian case as central in his book; at that point 
the full scope of the Shoah was not yet fully manifest.

The argument of Lewis and the rest, as of the governments that hold out 
(Obama’s way out is to use the untranslated Armenian term Meds Yeghern, ‘great 
calamity’), is best parsed by lawyers, but its essence is that the Turkish 
authorities wanted to kill a great many Armenians but were not fully 
exterminationist. For Hitler’s Germany, by contrast, the killing of all Jews 
everywhere was an overriding priority: it devoted scarce manpower and scarcer 
resources to the task (every rail wagon that carried Jews to the camps had an 
opportunity cost); it used much political capital in failed attempts to extract 
the thousand or so Finnish Jews, and the remaining Jews of Romania after its 
formerly mass-murdering government changed its mind; and it even engaged in 
high-risk military operations to get just a few more, for example sending very 
scarce shipping to Rhodes, a long voyage exposed to British air attack, in 
order to collect its 1600 Jews on 31 July 1944, just weeks before the final 
German evacuation of Greece.

Evidently the aim was to kill all Jews everywhere at almost any cost. The 
Turks, by contrast, had no interest in killing Armenians outside their empire, 
and didn’t try to kill them all even within it, not deporting all Armenians 
from all towns (a hundred thousand were left in Bolis, their name for 
Istanbul), and not trying to kill all those they deported; Patriarch Zaven I 
Der Yeghiayan of Constantinople, for example, was allowed to plead for his 
congregants on repeated occasions before being deported to Mosul in 1916 
without injury, whence he returned to his native Baghdad. In other words, the 
Turkish authorities under the Three Pashas certainly engaged in mass murder on 
a colossal scale, they certainly wanted to destroy the Armenians politically 
and they certainly destroyed many communities, whose survivors became exiles 
worldwide, but because they didn’t try to exterminate all Armenians, it wasn’t 
genocide.

Personally, I enlisted long ago with Gabriel Bragadian, and considering 
subsequent facts up to the present, notably the cruelty with which the wealth 
taxation law was imposed on surviving Armenians, I find today’s official 
Turkish position (‘there were killings on both sides’) downright absurd, though 
too sinister to be laughable. As for the Genocide Convention, I spit on it, 
given all the difference it has made to the fate of the Cambodians, Rwandan 
Tutsis, Sarajevo Bosnians and indeed every beleaguered ex-Yugoslav population.


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South Asia Citizens Wire
Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
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