The era of stalinism was a huge set back to marxian socialist state . It was a 
threat to the generosity in marx's ideology which he got from christianity. The 
right to live is a basic human right and marxist party cannot exist by denying 
this .        
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


--- On Tue, 19/6/12, Sukla Sen <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Sukla Sen <[email protected]>
Subject: [GreenYouth] De-Stalinise Marxism: Patnaik
To: "IHRO" <[email protected]>, "issueonline" 
<[email protected]>, [email protected], 
[email protected], "Janshakti" <[email protected]>, 
"Indian" <[email protected]>, "indiathinkersnet" 
<[email protected]>, "bahujan" <[email protected]>, 
"mahajanapada" <[email protected]>, "Moderates Google's Group.210811 
joined on invitation.." <[email protected]>, 
[email protected]
Date: Tuesday, 19 June, 2012, 10:12 PM


http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-kerala/article3541359.ece 



THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, June 18, 2012

De-Stalinise Marxism: PatnaikSPECIAL CORRESPONDENT 



Economist and the former Vice-Chairman of the State Planning Board Prabhat 
Patnaik has said that “the developments in Kerala over the last several days 
have been a source of great pain and anguish” for him and called for 
interventions against the twin threats of “hegemonised bourgeois liberalism” 
and “feudal Stalinism” preying the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) in 
Kerala and elsewhere.
Prof. Patnaik has, in an e-mail response to criticism about his participation 
in a seminar to be organised by the Chintha Ravindran Foundation to commemorate 
the late film-maker and writer ‘Chintha' Ravindran, given his association with 
the CPI(M), which is facing serious allegations following the murder of 
Revolutionary Marxist Party (RMP) leader T.P. Chandrasekharan, said what the 
developments in Kerala posed for him were not just moral but also existential. 
Prof. Patnaik, who was replying to the criticism from K.T. Ram Mohan, associate 
professor at the School of Social Sciences, Mahatma Gandhi University, that 
Prof. Patnaik's participation in the programme scheduled to be held in 
Kozhikode in the first week of July would amount to legitimising the “murderous 
party,” said that he was looking forward to the seminar as an occasion “to 
critique the feudal-Stalinist trend that one encounters in Kerala, and also 
elsewhere.”
“I have been with the party for 37 years, having joined it at the start of the 
Emergency. My father had been a freedom-fighter and an early Communist (he was 
a founder of the Communist Party in Orissa in 1936). Having seen in my 
childhood the enormous sacrifices the Communists made, and the dedication to 
the cause of the working people that they had, it had always been my ambition 
to join the party which was finally realised in 1975. For this very reason, 
however, the developments in Kerala over the last several days have been a 
source of great pain and anguish for me. The problems they pose for me are not 
just moral but also existential.”
“I see Communism in India today as being threatened in two ways: either being 
hegemonised by bourgeois liberalism, or as falling prey to a feudal-Stalinism. 
What is common to both these trends is an implicit lack of conviction about 
socialism, an implicit subscription to the neo-liberal ‘development' agenda, 
and an implicit denial of scope for people's empowerment. Succumbing to either 
or both these threats would be disastrous and totally against the interests of 
the people. If socialism is to be brought back on the agenda, then an 
alternative de-Stalinised Marxism has to be practiced. I saw the seminar as 
such an occasion because I knew that it would be attended by intellectuals 
seriously interested in Marxism. I do not often get an opportunity to interact 
with such a group.”
A reflection of trends
When contacted for his permission for reproduction of his mail message in 
print, Prof. Patnaik, a member of the CPI(M) since 1975, told The Hindu from 
New Delhi that “anybody who is serious about the future of the party and the 
country would want to see the democratic traditions of the party strengthened.”
His observations should be seen in the general context of Kerala.
“Kerala is a feudal society, fundamentally. The trends in the party are not 
exclusive to it, but a reflection of the trends in Kerala society,” Prof. 
Patnaik said.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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