The Making of Anna Hazare
April 12, 2011
 tags: Anna Hazare <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/anna-hazare/>, Anti-corruption
movement <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/anti-corruption-movement/>,
caste<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/caste/>,
Ralegan Siddhi <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/ralegan-siddhi/>,
untouchability<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/untouchability/>
by mukulsharma

[*This piece is based on my extensive field work **on Anna Hazare and his
movement in Ralegan Sidhi over some years and is also a part of my
forthcoming book **Green and Saffron: Hindu Nationalism and Indian
Environmental Politics**. MS*]

The anti-corruption movement, spearheaded by Anna Hazare, and the passage of
the Lokpal Bill have generated unprecedented interest amongst a wide
spectrum of society about the ideas, politics and organisations of civil
society in general, and Anna Hazare in particular. Hazare’s anti-corruption
crusade merits attention not only for its importance in ensuring a
corruption-free society, but also due to its multifaceted nature. Hazare’s
politics however has to be seen in a larger framework and in a wider
historical context. Howsoever laudable the goals of anti-corruption movement
in India today, the movement is not beyond the categories of gender, caste,
authority, democracy, nationalism and ultra-nationalism. *Far from
transcending them, the movement is transforming and being transformed by the
implicit deployment of such categories*. I wish to place Hazare in the
larger context of his environmental journeys, where the elusive but crucial
element is one of authority that is exercised due to a large degree of
consent and conservatism. Yet, almost all accounts on him, largely
celebratory in nature, do not examine the ideology and politics of his
works. These are crucial not only to critically assess the present and the
future of our anti-corruption movements, but also to interrogate certain
brands of civil society activisms and environmentalisms.The rural
environmental works by Anna Hazare in Ralegan Sidhi village in Maharashtra
have been hailed widely, which are fed by, and feed into, certain dominant
political cultures of the state. Though developmental and environmental
works form the core of his ideological structures, they include other
important issues. A belief system of force and punishment, liberal use of
Hindu religious symbols, strict rules and codes, evocation of nationalism
and ultra-nationalism, ‘pure’ morality and caste hierarchies, with a
marginalisation of women, Muslims and Dalits, form the core of his village
regeneration. The basis for the authority of Anna comes from a belief
system, where the people following him consider it their natural duty to
obey, and the exercising person thinks it a natural right to rule. Thus a
former village *sarpanch* of the region states: ‘Whatever Anna says, we do.
The whole village follows his words. Anna’s orders work like the army.’ For
another villager, ‘Annajee is like God.’* *The absolute recognition of an
authority locally works in several internalised ways.

In the process of social transformation, Anna believes that advice,
persuasion or counselling do not always work and occasionally force has to
be applied. Force can be applied in many forms, physical and social, and
often the simple persistent fear of its application regulates society. Force
gives a safe and solid grounding to socially accepted values. It is not only
Anna Hazare who proposes flogging and fear as essential parts of a green
village; it has its wide audience in the village.

In an environmentally sound Ralegan Sidhi, religious symbols are core
vehicles for transformation and imposition. Its embodiment in certain
places/people legitimises them. The command-obedience relationship also gets
its rationale from the belief that a God or a temple is ‘supreme’ and any
decision taken in front of them must be obeyed. According to Hazare, Lord
Rama set an ideal before every citizen of how to conduct everyday life by
his own example. There is need for Lord Shri Krishna to reincarnate and save
the country.

It is not only environmental rules, but also rules governing the entire
socio-political life of people that make an authority acceptable. Those who
make these rules and those who obey them are legitimate; others
illegitimate/illegal. Anna Hazare is deeply concerned with rules and norms
with a definite model:

“The daily routine enforced in the army such as getting up early in the
morning, jogging and physical training thereafter, cleanliness of body,
clothing, living quarters and the neighbourhood etc. led to development of a
disciplined life, benefits of which I am availing of even today. The habit
of giving due respect and regard to the seniors by age, post, or competence
was inculcated in us…. This has helped me in conducting the village
development work at Ralegan Siddhi according to the rules and regulations
decided by us by common consent.”

Others reciprocate this language. Villagers normally say that their village
works like an army. As a commandant, Anna orders and we follow. Army
discipline is the ideal. The path of rural development here depends in a
large measure on many other ‘dos’ and ‘don’ts’. No shop in Ralegan can sell
*bidis* or cigarettes. Film songs and movies are not allowed. Only religious
films, like Sant Tuka Ram, Sant Gyaneshwar can be screened. Only religious
songs are allowed on loudspeakers at the time of marriages. It is emphasised
in the village that the villagers themselves decided not to sell *bidis* in
their shops; they themselves do not watch films or listen to film songs.
However, the language of acquiescence can be highly *brahaminical* and
hegemonic.

Anna Hazare wants to build India into a strong, powerful nation. Narratives
of war, army and enemy remain the core references in much of the discourse
on nation and rural development. Here, expressions like ‘national
regeneration’, ‘wholesome crop of national glory through comprehensive rural
development’ are coupled with others like ‘We have to hold the nation.
Otherwise, Pakistan will grab it. That is why we consciously send our sons
to the army.’

The concept of morality and subsequent codes/behaviours/practices based on
it are important elements in the notion of development. Anna’s concern with
the moral is couched in his discourse of the nation that exercise control
over the private and the public, the personal and the political. For school
children there is moral education and practice, comprising physical
training, body building, patriotism, obedience, *samskars* and Hindu
culture. Doing *surya namaskar* and chanting *Om* is regular for the
students. For women, it is stressed that they should certainly look after
the household but they must also participate in activities intended to help
their community and country. It is stated, ‘Woman is the Universal Mother,
The Great Mother. Many such Great Mothers have given birth to Great Sons —
Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, Swami Vivekananda for instance.’ She is also a
symbol of purity, sublime as well as innate strength. It is significant that
much of the problematisation of morality of children, youth and village is
done in the context of influence of western, modern culture. ‘Western
lifestyle’, ‘modern development’ and ‘invasion of western culture’
invariably emerge as repeated expressions, signifying the collapse of
morality in modern India.

In Ralegan, there are a few Mahars, Chamars, Matangs, Nhavi, Bharhadi and
Sutars. Since the beginning of his work, Anna has been particularly
emphasising the removal of untouchability and discrimination on caste basis
meted out to people, who are popularly referred to as *Harijans* here. The
concept of ‘village as a joint family’, or all inhabitants of the village as
‘almighty God’, has prompted the villagers to pay attention to the problems
of *Harijans*. The integration of Dalits into an ideal village has two
components in Ralegan. One is to assume that they were always there to
perform some duties and necessary services and that their usefulness
justifies their existence in the present. The other component is hegemonic,
designed to get Dalits into a brahaminical fold. It is not only manifested
in the way food or dress habits are propagated; it is prevalent in several
other forms.

**

In spite of the apparent diversities that characterise the various elements
that make up Anna Hazare, there is an underlying thread of unity in his
ideological positioning. Not only is this authority deeply rooted in the
dominant socio-political tradition of the region; it is often blind to many
basic and universal issues of rights, democracy and justice. Personal moral
authority, while contributing in harnessing water and other natural and
human resources for the betterment of economic conditions of the villagers,
simultaneously also raises significant questions about its relationship to
the making of a democratic, critical community, free from burdens of force,
punishment, coercion, obligation, patronage, charity and piety. The present
movement led by him too reflects some of these elements. Placing Hazare in a
larger context posits in front of us several such questions.

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