---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Madhuresh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: May 29, 2007 1:36 PM
Subject: Fwd: people's messenger passed away
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], aryakrishnan ramakrishnan <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: himanshu upadhyaya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: May 29, 2007 1:03 PM
Subject: people's messenger passed away
To: anil tharayath <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED], Arun
Kumar < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>, India Together Editors <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, leo saldanha < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Madhuresh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Manicandan G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Manshi Asher < [EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Sanjay Barbora <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Saurabh Bhattacharjee
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, Sejuti Sarkar De <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Suneetha Eluri <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

It's a shattering message: People's messenger is gone

It shocks you and shatters you down when the first message, as you set down
to start your working day tells you that Sanjay Sangvai, a people's
messenger, author of River and Life: a historical narration of people's
struggle in the Narmada valley, is no more. He passed away at 7 am on May 29
th, 2007 while undergoing treatment at the Nature Life Hospital at Kochi run
by Joseph Vadakkanchery.

Sanjaybhai, a frail bodied person with an unflinching commitment to be with
people's struggle, was a people's messenger who penned numerous Press
Releases and articles in English, Hindi and Marathi, and spread the news of
ups and downs of struggles to a larger world. In two decades long struggle,
there were also moments when he gripped pen to write obituaries on his
comrades - Shobha Wagh from Domkhedi, Bhaijibhai from Canal affected village
in Undva, Kiritbhai Bhatt of PUCL, Baroda - and he wrote them pouring his
heart out. I can't control my tears at the idea of having to type an
obituary on him.

In the two decades long struggle, I had known and interacted with him for
last five years, years when "one after another illnesses kept paying
visits", as he put it while chatting a few months ago. I had met him first
time on January 26 th, 2002 - the day when Mumbai Samachar reported Narendra
Modi announcing in Rajkot about Gujarat's efforts to lobby with PM to raise
the Narmada dam height from 95 to 100 metres before monsoon - travelling
with him in local train to a hurriedly organised press conference by NBA.
Last time when he appeared online, I pasted a news clip that said Narmada
Control Authority meeting was scheduled on May 3 rd. "were they meeting to
decide to raise the dam height from 121 to 138 meters?" he asked wearily. He
also talked about the Marathi book he was working on and I queried him on
the need to bring out third revised edition of River and Life. He said, he
wished, but "one after other illnesses kept paying me visits".

He was a source of inspiration, was always connected with people's
struggles, and didn't let his ill health affect activism. Although trained
as a media professional, after a short stint with teaching career - when he
worked as a lecturer at the University of Pune - and as a journalist with
mainstream Marathi daily, he immersed himself into Narmada Bachao Andolan as
a full time activist in 1989. He wrote extensively in English, Hindi and
Marathi on issues and political processes of Narmada and other such people's
struggles. I don't exactly know whether he wrote in Gujarati, but every time
we met, he used to speak in Gujarati while recalling *the aborted discourse
over Narmada in Gujarat and narrating anecdotes*.

For last couple of years, he was closely observing the struggles against
Special Economic Zones, land acquisitions and related injustices through his
association with NCAS, Pune

His book River and Life starts by depicting tribals, peasants and activists
celebrating the new year with mixed feelings of hope, anxiety, apprehension
and will to fight in Nimgavhan, a submergence village on banks of Narmada in
Maharashtra; even as in the cities the rich and mighty went dizzy on the
night of December 31, 1999. Eight years later, when someone sent him an
e-mail wishing sunlight, joy and prosperity on the last eve of 2006, he
replied; "Thanks for the best wishes. But for many people the year started
with the deprivation, displacement and destrution  - be it in Narmda,
Singur, Delhi or any number of things. It is good that we all want sunshine
and prosperity etc. And surely, it is we who would get that.

Sorry for the melancholy inevitable -

I sing the same song,

cutting each time

nearer to the aching heart."

Himanshu Upadhyaya

-- 

****************************
CACIM - Critical Action : Centre in Movement
A-3, Defence Colony, New Delhi 110 024
Ph : +91 4155 1521 / 2433 2451 (O)
Mobile : + 91 98 1890 5316
e-mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED] / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web : www.cacim.net / www.openspaceforum.net

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