Maya magic may not help CPI-M to stem Dalit desertions
BY BRP BHASKAR
http://keralaletter.blogspot.com/2008/11/maya-magic-may-not-help-cpi-m-to-stem.html

WHAT prompted the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) to align
with Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP)
was the Samajwadi Party's (SP) going to the aid of the Congress-led
government at the Centre, virtually nullifying the effect of its
withdrawal of support.

Since both the SP and the BSP are non-entities in Kerala politics, the
switch of allies at national level made little difference to the State
party. But there was reason for hope that Mayawati's clout among the
State's Dalits may help stem the party's growing alienation from the
community.

Caste and religious groups have been active political payers in Kerala
even before independence. In 1946 the undivided CPI-M sent selected
senior leaders into their respective caste organisations with a view
to extending its mass base among the respective groups. The strategy
paid dividends at the highest and lowest levels.
EMS Namboodiripad became president of the Yogakshema Sabha and many
younger members of the Namboodiri community followed him into the
party.

The Congress, on assuming power in the erstwhile Travancore state in
1948, accommodated the leaders of the Nair Service Society, the Sree
Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam of the Ezhavas and Pulaya Mahasabha
of the largest of the Dalit groups in its ranks. Yet the party was
able to cut deep into the backward Ezhava and Dalit community on the
strength of the appeal of its ideology.

It is now on record that shortly before the elections of 1957, the
CPI-M leadership sent emissaries to NSS chief Mannath Padmanabhan
seeking the Nair community's support. His response to the request was
positive, and the party rode to power for the first time.

Ironically, Mannath Padmanabhan later became a major rallying point of
the so-called liberation movement, which led to the Communist
government's ouster and gave new life to the dying political ambitions
of communal organisations.

The short-lived Communist government yielded a big benefit to the
Dalits, most of whom were landless farm workers, constantly living
under the threat of eviction by landlords. Its very first legislative
enactment put an end to evictions, removing a threat under which they
had lived for generations.

The Dalits remained grateful to the Communist movement. However, some
who had placed implicit faith in the CPI-M have started questioning
the sincerity of its leadership's approach to their problems.

What brought about the change in mood is the burning land issue. On
reassessing the Communist government's land reform, many scholars have
pointed out that it was not the revolutionary measure it was made out
to be. Abolition of landlordism, which was its biggest achievement,
benefited the tenants. It did not benefit the Dalits, who were only
farm workers.

Dalit intellectuals are in the forefront of a campaign that exposes
the weakness of the land reform. They have argued that the Dalits were
betrayed while implementing the party's "land to the tiller"
programme.

Land having become a scarce commodity in the State, its apportionment
has become a major issue. A powerful mafia is on the prowl grabbing
land to build industrial estates, commercial complexes and luxury
apartments. Adivasis and Dalits are engaged in agitations demanding
allotment of sufficient land for each landless family to make a living
through farming.

Since the LDF came to power two and a half years ago, Industries
Minister Elamaram Kareem, who belongs to the CPI-M has been vigorously
championing the cause of the industrial land grabbers. So far as the
landless are concerned, the government has shown no inclination to
concede anything more than a housing plot.

Recognising that Dalits and Adivasis have been moving away from the
party, the State leadership recently decided on a strategy to check
desertions.
Breaking with past practice, it organised meetings of these groups in
a bid to tighten the grip on these sections.

The agitation which landless people have been conducting at Chengara
demanding agricultural land has proved to be an acid test for the
CPI-M. As the agitation entered the second year the party organised a
blockade of the area by mobilizing estate workers, to deny any kind of
succour reaching the squatters.

Many squatters have fallen ill due to lack of nutrition. The district
administration deputed a medical team to the estate. The musclemen
enforcing the blockade did not allow the government doctors to go in.
Last week Health Minister PK Sreemathi the told the media that the
cabinet had decided not to send doctors to the estate to attend to the
sick.

For Mayawati's magic to work, Kerala's Dalits must be ready to
overlook their own experience, which seems unlikely. –Gulf Today,
November 3, 2008.

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