*Hated, Humiliated, Butchered*

*By Mahasweta Devi*

12 October, 2007
*Tehelka.com<http://www.tehelka.com/story_main34.asp?filename=cr201007HATED.asp>
*


*T*en persons were lynched last month in Vaishali, Bihar. They belonged to
the denotified "Nat" community. I do not know how far the readers of this
magazine are acquainted with the denotified communities of India. I will try
to write, in brief, about what drew me to these people long ago in the
1970s. At the time, I was interested in tribals and I knew that the Lodhas
of Medinipur were often engaged in theft and robbery at the behest of the
rural middle-class. The Lodhas (also known as Lubhdhaks, or hunters) were
forest tribals. Often the target of beatings, eviction and lynching, they
were known as "born criminals" — a label which gained legal sanction during
colonial rule when the British passed the abominable Criminal Tribes Act in
1871. Under it, many nomadic communities ended up being branded as
criminals. There were three such tribes in West Bengal: the Lodhas of
Medinipur, the Kheria-Sabars of Purulia and the Dhekaros of Birbhum. I have
fought against the stigma that was attached to these people for years now,
but to little avail. West Bengal has been under CPM-dominated Left Front
rule for the last 30 years, but neither it nor the Central government did
anything to redress the grievances of these so called "criminal tribes",
except to announce in 1952 that by no longer being notified as criminal
tribes, they had become denotified.

In 1998, Budhan Sabar of Purulia was brutally killed by the police. Up until
that year, I did not personally know about the all-India ex-criminal tribe
situation. When Dr GN Devy [who has worked extensively with tribals in
Gujarat] came to Medinipur Vidyasagar University with his friends to meet
me, I was too cut-up about this and other atrocities, and failed to
understand them. Then I went to Baroda at Devy's request to give a talk on
tribals. I was speaking at the Verrier Elwyn Memorial Lecture, organised
each year by Bhasha, an organisation promoting tribal language, culture and
literature.

In 1998, I was too involved with Budhan's death and the case we, on behalf
of the Paschim Banga Kheria Sabar Kalian Samiti, had filed in the Calcutta
High Court. My talk in Baroda was on the denotified tribals. I had asked the
audience, "Who will work not for tribals alone, but for our denotified
tribals as well?" That night Devy, Laxman Gaikwad (the Sahitya Akademi award
winner for his Uchalya), Gandhi scholar Tridip Suhrud (translator of
Chandulal Dalal's biography of Harilal Gandhi), rural development researcher
Ajoy Dandekar and others including myself talked and talked. Out of that
animated discussion was born Budhan, the Denotified and Nomadic Tribes
Rights Action Group newsletter.

I do not now have the very first issue of Budhan at hand, but in it we
published a comprehensive list of all the tribes. Among them are the Nats.

Did Bihar participate in our later conventions? I can't recall. But I know
very well, from my past experiences, how mob lynching takes place.

I also recall scores of instances where Lodhas and Kherias from Purulia were
forced to rob and plunder. As it says in one of the articles written for
Budhan, "…these tribes are forced to engage in criminal activities by the
police and receivers of stolen goods". Laxman Gaikwad, who belongs to the
Pardhi tribe, bears testimony to this. I know of it because I have been
working with the denotified tribes of West Bengal for the last 20 years.
Budhan itself was started in 1998. This is October 2007.

THE REPORTS that came from Vaishali after the September lynchings said that
10 Nats had been beaten to death by a mob because they were a band of
thieves. How come no investigation has been done so far into the killing of
these 10 men? Where did these Nats live? What was their profession? What
explanation does the police in Vaishali have to offer? How does the chief
minister of Bihar explain this mob lynching? Why did the Bihar Police not
take any action? Are the Nats born criminals? Does the Bihar administration
know that we have been fighting the cruel and unfair labelling of the
denotified tribes for years and have regularly reported each atrocity
against them to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)? At our behest,
the then chairperson of the NHRC, Justice JS Verma, had invited the chief
secretaries from all states that had denotified tribes. But today there is
no point reminiscing about my past. Ultimately, on January 14, 2006, GN
Devy, Udaynarain Singh of Mysore and I went to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
and gave him a letter, praying to have something concrete done for the
denotified tribes of India. That "something" was done. A special commission
was formed under Balkrishna Renke of Maharashtra. He was to suggest what
remedial steps should be taken to improve the lives of the denotified
tribes.

As far as I know, Renke is still preparing his report.

The killing of the 10 Nats in Bihar is to me the same as the killings of the
Lodhas and the Sabars in in West Bengal. Between 1977 and '79, in the very
first years of CPM-led Left Front rule, about 37 Lodhas were butchered in
Medinipur. Many Kheri-Sabars continued to be killed for belonging to a
"criminal tribe" until the Budhan Sabar case of 1998.

All inquiries into all these cases invariably conclude with the words: "Due
to the inefficiency of the police…"

And that will be the end of the matter. Perhaps West Bengal will not see any
more Lodhas and Kheria-Sabars being killed, but in their daily lives, they
will continue to be humiliated for being born Lodhas and Kheria-Sabars. Only
the other day, a Lodha boy I know of, a graduate, got a job in a village
school. The school authorities deman - ded a bribe of Rs 1,70,000 from him.
The boy could not meet their demands. The school authorities came to the
class where he was teaching and called him a "born criminal". There are so
many good laws made, but they are implemented so rarely.

Were the media, whether Hindi or English, to search out stories about the
Nats and other denotified tribes of Bihar, this is what they would find:
that the denotified tribes of India are people who live below the poverty
line, that starvation is a regular fact of life for them, and that they are
thus easy to recruit for such members of society as wish to use them.
Poverty, hunger, landlessness, no education, no job prospects — these are
everyday realities for the Nats, just as they are for the majority of
India's people.

Being branded a "denotified tribe" makes these communities easy targets.
Dalits, caste Hindus, Muslims, everyone who feels like it can kill them.
When will the state government start doing something to ensure that the Nats
do not have to live in fear of being lynched any more?

*Mahasweta Devi* is an eminent Indian writer. She works among tribals.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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