*KHAIRLANJI* A Strange and Bitter Crop

By Anand Teltumbde

*HoloCaste 1* Demy Octavo, 210 pages, Rs 190 ISBN: 978-81-89059-15-6

"Anand Teltumbde's analysis of the public, ritualistic massacre of a
dalit family in 21st century India exposes the gangrenous heart of our
society. It contextualizes the massacre and describes the manner in
which the social, political and state machinery, the police, the mass
media and the judiciary all collude to first create the climate for
such bestiality, and then cover it up. This is not a book about the
last days of relic feudalism, but a book about what modernity means in
India. It discusses one of the most important issues in contemporary
India." - *ARUNDHATI ROY*

In Khairlanji, on 29 September 2006, 44-year-old Surekha Bhotmange and
her daughter Priyanka Bhotmange were stripped, paraded naked, and
raped repeatedly. Surekha's sons Roshan and Sudhir were lynched. The
entire village was involved. The Bhotmanges were dalit. The Bhotmanges
have been forgotten. After all, two dalits are murdered every day in
India. *ANAND TELTUMBDE* reconstructs one of post-independence India's
worst caste atrocities and tells us how and why Khairlanjis are always
around us.

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In the Khairlanji massacre, the sessions judge<http://www.hindu.com/
2008/09/16/stories/2008091660241100.htm>in a Bhandara court did not
find any expression of 'caste hatred' and hence did not think it
necessary to invoke provisions of the Prevention of Atrocities Act,
1989 <http://www.hrw.org/reports/1999/india/India994-16.htm>. Nor did
he find any evidence of rape. To understand why this is not
surprising, to understand how in most crimes committed against dalits
the prosecution and the judges do not find it necessary to invoke the
PoA Act, to know what really happened in Khairlanji, for a chronicle
of the state repression that was unleashed on the protesting dalits in
the aftermath of Khairlanji, and to know why Khairlanjis have been
happening and shall continue to recur in India, read the first title
in Navayana's new HoloCaste series.* *

*HoloCaste *

'The right of life and death was one of sovereignty's basic
attributes,' said Foucault. 'The right of life and death is always
exercised in an unbalanced way: the balance is always tipped in favour
of death.' In post-independence India, the authority of caste found a
new ally - the state and its police. The state admits to the murder of
two dalits every day, a crime against a dalit every eighteen minutes.
Atrocities pile up, forming a landscape of tears, blood and ashes. It
could be said this is not genocide. It could be argued this is not a
holocaust. What is it then, this slow, everyday ritual of murder?
Unreported, easily forgotten. What should we call a holocaust in
instalments - a 'Holocaste'? This series from Navayana chronicles
dalit massacres that go almost unnoticed in the world's largest
democracy. Each title in the Holocaste series will locate each
specific massacre in its socio-historical context.

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