Jai Angrezi Devi Maiyya Ki
 Can the enshrinement of English as a goddess help Dalits overcome their
hardships? Good question.
by S. Anand
http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/nation/jai-angrezi-devi-maiyya-ki

*Rule of Peshwa is gone / Mother English has come. / In such a dismal time
of ours/ Come Mother English, this is your hour. / It is all for the good of
the poor / Manu’s dead at English Mother’s door. / Knowledge is poor man’s
refuge and shade / It’s akin to comfort mother-made. *—from *Mother English*,
Savitribai Phule, 1854

On 30 April, Bankagaon in Lakhimpuri Khiri district, Uttar Pradesh,
witnessed a *shilanyas* (foundation laying) that was radically different
from the one witnessed in Ayodhya in 1989. The Nalanda Public School, a
modest private initiative in the village, played host to a ceremony where
the foundation for the first ever temple to ‘Dalit Goddess English’ was
laid. The Chief Priest was a suit-clad Chandra Bhan Prasad, who describes
himself as a ‘self-trained anthropologist and social psychologist’; and the
mantra chanted was ‘A-B-C-D…’

After a few crisp speeches—in Hindi—emphasising the need for English among
Dalits and other oppressed groups, a 30-inch bronze idol was installed, and
a song composed by teachers of Nalanda soared over the din made by a noisy
generator (electricity is scarce in UP): London* sey chalkar aayi, yeh
Angrezi Devi Maiyya/ *Computer*-wali Maiyya, hai Angrezi Devi Maiyya/ Hum
sabki devi maiyya, jan-jan ki Devi Maiyya …* (She hails from London, this
Goddess English/ She reigns over computers, she’s everybody’s goddess).

Dalit Goddess English (DGE), sculpted by artist Shanti Swaroop Baudh, is
modelled on the Statue of Liberty, with a pen in her raised right hand,
books in her left. She sports a floppy hat and is perched atop a computer.
Compared with heavy-bosomed Hindu goddesses, DGE has almost no sign of
breasts.

The genesis of this new goddess lay in an unlikely birthday party for Thomas
Babington Macaulay on 25 October 2004 hosted in Delhi by Prasad,
author of *Dalit-Phobhia:
Why Do They Hate Us?* Macaulay, villain of the nationalist movement who both
the RSS and Left love to hate, was first crowned an icon by Prasad and his
friends in 2000 when they issued a list of ‘Dalit Icons of the Millennium’.
Macaulay got to rub shoulders with Ambedkar, Phule and Vasco da Gama. Many
self-sure radicals, liberals and secularists were aghast.

To understand this, and in order to not dismiss Prasad’s gesture as
performative excess with a subtext of hyperbole and comic irony, one must
unlearn Brahmanic versions of history that pass as ‘nationalist’, and see
why Dalits and Shudras (OBCs) did not historically have an adversarial
approach to British presence or the values embedded in their modernity
project.

PANDEY VS PHULE

Three years before Mangal Pandey triggered off a mostly upper caste mutiny
against the East India Company’s forces, more for offence caused to caste
and religious purity at the prospect of sinking one’s teeth into a bullet
greased with cow’s and pig’s fat, Savitribai Phule (1831–1897) wrote a poem
called ‘*Mother English*’. She was lucky to be married to Jyotirao Phule
(1827–1890), the Aristotle of Shudras and Atishudras, a neglected radical
thinker who offered a spirited critique of Brahmanic nationalism’s rather
convenient anti-British posturing. Unlike reformers of his time, Phule,
despite an enforced child marriage to nine-year-old Savitri, educated his
wife, opened schools and wells for Dalits, adopted an abandoned child of a
Brahmin child widow, started an orphanage for similar Brahmin orphans, and
made his wife a teacher at a school for Dalit girls. Savitribai was an equal
partner in Phule’s Satyashodak Samaj when she wrote her poem.

Phule, who was exposed to English education and was inspired by Thomas
Paine’s *Rights of Man*, thought it more useful to engage the British in
dialogue on issues of justice and equality than Dwijas (‘twice borns’) who
believed in their natural superiority and an innate lowliness of Dalits.
Phule saw the relationship between Dwijas and Shudra-Atishudras as one
between the coloniser and colonised, and felt the enslavement of Shudras was
worse than ‘negro slavery’.

Meanwhile, in the Madras Presidency, where *The Hindu* was founded in 1878
to defend the right of ‘natives’ to be appointed as judges, Dalit-run
newspapers took a contrarian view. *Tamilan*, edited by Panditar Iyothee
Thass, in a 1908 news item titled ‘Power of District Magistrate for
Indians’, argued that such positions should not be given to Brahmins: ‘If we
give the power of District Magistrate to these people, they will employ the
people of their caste and cheat common Hindus. Those who call themselves
‘higher caste’… regard even the British as inferior to them. They don’t have
intellectual, physical, economic or even numerical strength. They have only
the strength that comes from calling themselves people of high caste.’

In this tradition, Periyar EV Ramaswamy in the South (who mourned 15 August
1947 as a ‘dark day’ that Brahmin-Bania forces wrested power) and BR
Ambedkar, too, preferred to negotiate with the British than seek their
outright ouster. On the question of English, in 1953, addressing students of
a college he founded in Aurangabad, Ambedkar said: “I do not believe any
other language in India, including Hindi, can be used instead of English in
schools and colleges.”

It is this legacy that Chandra Bhan Prasad draws upon and unleashes a
contrapuntal symbolic challenge to Mayawati’s statue obsession. After two
years of commemorating Macaulay’s birthday at his residence in Delhi, in
2006 Prasad decided to bestow DGE with a form. First, a colour poster was
unveiled. On 25 October 2009, the bronze statue emerged at a party in India
International Centre, the intellectual hub of the capital. “Once you sculpt
a figure of a goddess, you need a temple for her,” says Prasad, explaining
what led him to the *shilanyas*. “Even when they say they are not Hindus,
the religious practices of Dalits overlap a lot with popular Hinduism. Even
where Dalits converted to Buddhism, it’s mostly the men who visit the Buddha
Vihara and contemplate an abstract religion devoid of ritual. The womenfolk
easily seek comfort in popular goddesses. They need birth or marriage
rituals. Besides, in a family, it is important to convince the mother of the
empowerment that English will ensure her children. This is best conveyed
once English becomes a Dalit goddess.”

In Bankagaon, there are no government schools that offer education up to
Class 12 in a 10-km radius. A few boys do manage to trudge the extra mile,
but girls are not sent, especially not Dalit girls. The Nalanda School came
up as a private initiative of Amar Chand Jauhar, who charges Rs 550 annual
fees and provides schooling up to ‘inter’. Says Shiva Shankar Lal Nigam,
principal of Nalanada, “We are supposed to teach English here from Class 6.
But few of us know how to even speak it. I have an MA in English from MJP
Rohilkhand University in Bareilly, but cannot speak even a sentence in
English.” In such a setting, won’t practical English teaching do a better
job than a temple for DGE on a budget of Rs 5 lakh?

‘A SECULAR DEVI’

“An event like this attended by a thousand villagers will create a buzz in
and around the village. I am an atheist who has had to concoct a secular
Devi out of English so that people get animated by the pursuit of English.
By next year, we’ll also ensure that special English teachers are recruited
by the school. The point is to first get Dalits to aspire to English,” says
Prasad, sipping Teacher’s Scotch over tandoori chicken in Shahjahanpur later
that night. The local invitation for the Bankagaon event, a Hindi leaflet
distributed through the village, serves an ominous warning: ‘In 20 years
from now, without English you won’t find employment even as a *chaprasi* or
a driver… the temple for Dalit Goddess, English, will help inspire you to
learn English.’

In its sixth year now, the English project has hit the dusty road, moving on
from the shock-and-awe administered in Delhi, where Prasad gleefully extends
an annual invite to “gym-goers, organic-food eaters, late-night daters,
cattle-class enthusiasts, also fatalists, naysayers and Luddites.”
(Naysayers are apparently those who give their dogs English names, speak to
them in English, and yet want Dalits to preserve local *bhashas*.) At his
Macaulay parties, guests ranging from political psychologist Ashis Nandy,
social historian Gail Omvedt, and the British High Commissioner, to the
president of the Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry are asked to
chew on the full text of Macaulay’s infamous 1835 ‘minute’, and DGE posters
are sampled with mutton, chicken, fish and good booze. Nandy is a regular;
though vehemently opposed to Prasad’s views, he says he is taken in by the
very audacity of the idea.

Prasad argues that few people have read more than a couple of oft-cited
lines from the minute: ‘A single shelf of a good European library is worth
the whole native literature of India and Arabia’, or ‘We must at present do
our best to form a class who may be interpreters between us and the millions
whom we govern; a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour, but English
in taste, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect.’ These lines, Prasad
says, have been repeatedly quoted out of context to demonise Macaulay, who
was actually waging a battle with Orientalists who indulged the teaching of
Sanskrit and Arabic—elite languages to which the oppressed had no access.
Once you resist balking at Macaulay’s shocking belief in the ‘intrinsic
superiority of Western literature’, a reading of the minute makes it clear
that Macaulay was also fighting *maulvis* and *pandits* and sought to curb
the Company’s spending on Sanskrit colleges and *madrassas*: ‘What we spend
on the Arabic and Sanscrit colleges is not merely a dead loss to the cause
of truth; it is bounty-money paid to raise up champions of error.’

Prasad’s lament is that while Marxists, themselves ‘Macaulay’s children’,
portray the British Lord (who also oversaw the Indian Penal Code) as an
enslaver who sought to replace all native languages with English, they don’t
tell you that he also argued: ‘The worst of all systems was surely that of
having a mild code for the Brahmins, who sprang from the head of the
Creator, while there was a severe code for the Sudras, who sprang from his
feet. India has suffered enough already from the distinction of castes.’

Marcus Wood, Professor of English at University of Sussex and author of
three books on slavery who witnessed the Bankagaon event, is not too
convinced: “The Prasadian construction of Macaulay as an advocate for the
democratisation of English as a revolutionary agent for social levelling in
India came as a massive shock to me.”

What seems to have missed Prasad is that the English that is sought and
taught today—an instrumental American Business English, a tool of
capitalism—is not the English that Macaulay, with his fondness for Milton,
espoused in the 19th century. Wood thinks the way the link with the British
Empire is prioritised in the DGE movement may not only be dangerous, but
dubious; however, “The sheer energy generated around this phenomenon on the
ground, in that Dalit village, gave me pause for irrational thought.”

In Bankagaon, a DGE temple will come up by 25 October. But just as my
sceptical mind tells me the worship of Lakshmi does not yield wealth, mere
worship of English Maiyya won’t make one speak the language; nor will it
make up for the exclusion of Dalits from elite centres of learning.

*Anand is a Delhi-based publisher of *Navayana

-- 
Ranjit

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