http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/newsdesk/2013/02/the-nandy-affair-in-india.html



THE NANDY AFFAIR
POSTED BY BASHARAT PEER



On January 26th, I was in the writers’ lounge at the Diggi Palace Hotel, in
Jaipur, where the city’s annual literary festival was being held, and was
in a leisurely conversation with fellow writers. Suddenly, a group of
police officers barged in. A gruff man in a traditional kurta pajama,
wearing a black cap and a shawl, was leading them. I began to hear the name
of Ashis Nandy being repeated. Ashis Nandy is one of India’s foremost
intellectuals, a clinical psychologist and sociologist who has produced
some of the most original and important works of scholarship in independent
India in his forty or more years in public life. He is also a prolific
writer of essays and newspaper columns and a feisty public speaker.

“How could Ashis Nandy call us the most corrupt in India?” the politician
in the black cap shouted at the growing crowd of festival organizers and
writers. A few hours earlier, Nandy had been on a panel discussion called
“The Republic of Ideas” with Urvashi Butalia, a writer and publisher; Tarun
Tejpal, a magazine editor and novelist; and a few others. The conversation
had turned to the endemic corruption in India. Nandy, a small, bespectacled
seventy-five-year-old man with a balding head, a wispy beard, and a ready
laugh, had, as usual, an unorthodox take on corruption, “I do wish there
remains some degree of corruption in India because I would also suggest
that it humanizes our society.”

Nandy spoke about lower-caste politicians, and argued that because they
have only recently gained access to the spoils of power, they didn’t yet
have the sophisticated social networks that allow India’s upper-caste élite
to hide their corruption. Indicating his fellow panelist Richard Sorabji,
an Oxford scholar, Nandy said, “If I do a good turn to Richard Sorabji, he
can return the favor by accommodating my nephew at Oxford; if it were in
the United States, it would be a substantial fellowship.” He mentioned
Mayawati, a Dalit (formerly called Untouchable) politician who is president
of Bahujan Samaj Party, the largest lower-caste political party, and was
the chief minister of Utter Pradesh until last year. Like a vast number of
Indian politicians, she has faced charges of corruption (which have since
been dismissed). “If she has to oblige somebody or have somebody in the
family absorb the money, she will probably have to take the bribe of having
a hundred petrol pumps, and that is very conspicuous, very corrupt indeed.
Our corruption doesn’t look that corrupt, their’s does.”



Tejpal, the magazine editor from Delhi, followed Nandy’s thought and
described corruption in India being a class equalizer, as the only chance
for the people on the “wrong side of the tracks” to make it in a highly
stratified and unequal society. Nandy responded, “It will be a very
undignified and—how should I put it—almost vulgar statement on my part. It
is a fact that most of the corrupt come from the O.B.C.s and the scheduled
caste and now increasingly the scheduled tribes. And as long as this is the
case, the Indian republic will survive.” Dalits, the former Untouchables,
and others on the lowest rung of the Hindu caste system are described as
Scheduled Castes in Indian legalese; India’s poor and marginalized tribal
communities are known as Scheduled Tribes. The Indian Constitution
initially guaranteed affirmative action for these two groups, but over the
years other castes on the lower and middle rungs of the caste ladder have
been included—often after political agitations—as “Other Backward Castes”
(O.B.C.s).

A populist television journalist, who was also on the panel, promptly
called Nandy’s remarks a casteist slur and demanded an apology. Within
moments, Nandy’s remark about most corrupt Indians being from traditionally
oppressed and marginalized lower castes and tribes was tweeted without its
context. Television channels and wire services ran the headline:
“SC/ST/OBCs most corrupt: Ashis Nandy.” His words divorced of the
complexity of his argument and their context spread quickly—an allegation
against a multitude, provoking anger and offense.

And that was what brought Kirori Lal Meena, a lower-caste member of
Parliament with a formidable constituency in the state of Rajasthan, to the
writers’ lounge at Diggi Palace. Meena’s supporters were already agitating
outside the festival gates. Meena sat cross-legged on a bench, his hands
interlocked and his body language stiff and unrelenting. He demanded that
Nandy be produced. He was accompanied by police officers, who took seats
around him, their faces tense. The festival organizers moved about
frantically, speaking to Meena in polite, supplicating voices, urging some
sort of reconciliation. He seemed keen on legal action against Nandy.

Tejpal, the co-panelist, joined in and began describing Nandy’s career.
Nandy had for decades supported and written about equal citizenship for the
religious minorities, the lower castes, and the poor in India—even putting
himself at risk.

In one of the gravest moments of crisis in Indian polity, after the mass
sectarian violence in the state of Gujarat, in 2002, when more than a
thousand Muslims including pregnant women and children were killed by
extremist Hindu mobs—with the alleged complicity of the government led by
Hindu nationalist chief minister Narendra Modi (who is now positioning
himself as a candidate for Prime Minister and the future leader of
India)—Nandy wrote an essay describing Modi as a “classic, clinical case of
a fascist,” with “clear paranoid and obsessive personality traits.” The
essay appeared in one of India’s much respected intellectual forums,
Seminar magazine.

Six years later, after Modi was reëlected in Gujarat, Nandy published an
article in the Times of India commenting on the dire state of civil
liberties and institutionalized prejudice against minorities in Gujarat.
Article Nineteen of the Indian Constitution guarantees free speech, but it
is a right limited by five exceptions: the interests of the sovereignty and
integrity of India; the security of the state; friendly relations with
foreign states; public order, decency or morality; and in relation to
contempt of court, defamation, or incitement to an offense. All these can
be interpreted rather broadly, and potentially encompass almost any
critical writing, political statement, or cultural expression. In this
case, Modi’s police registered a criminal case against Nandy, charging him
with promoting communal disharmony—making assertions prejudicial to
national integration.

Nandy fought the case for several years and Indian intellectuals and
liberal journalists rallied behind him. “ The case against me in Gujarat
has not been closed, but the Supreme Court of India stayed my arrest,”
Nandy told me.

His history and biography failed to check the anger at the Diggi Palace.
Meena refused to relent; his hands continued their dismissive, unrelenting
interlock.

A few minutes later, Nandy appeared. He was sombre. He faced Meena and
spoke slowly, explaining his comments, insisting that his remarks weren’t a
casteist slur. Namita Gokhale, a co-director of the festival, appeared with
a tea-tray, offering the first cup to the enraged politician.

Meena seemed to demand a written explanation. Nandy began to write. One of
the sheets of paper was torn as he wrote. He copied his explanation onto
another sheet. I stood by his shoulder, watching him slowly pen his words.
Nandy repeated his earlier arguments about the entrenched social networks
of the élites facilitating their corruption and added,

But when Dalits, tribals and the O.B.C.s are corrupt, it looks very corrupt
indeed.
However, this second corruption equalizes. It gives them access to their
entitlements. And so, as long as this equation persists, I have hope for
the Republic.

I hope this will be the end of the matter. I am sorry if some have
misunderstood me. Though there was no reason to do so. As should be clear
from this statement, there was neither any intention nor any attempt to
hurt any community. If anyone is genuinely hurt, even if through
misunderstanding, I am sorry about that, too.

When Meena left the lounge, television crews had been waiting for him; he
was unyielding as he faced the cameras. In a few hours, news came that
Mayawati, the former Uttar Pradesh chief minister, had demanded Nandy’s
arrest for his remarks. Nandy’s family sought to get him back home to
Delhi. A few policemen and the organizers took him out of the festival
venue through a back door. The embattled, aging scholar walked briskly
through the crowds as the sun set on Jaipur. He stepped into a car and
drove six hours through the night to Delhi.

Politicians from all communities in India are among the first to take
offense, partly with an eye on political profit and increased visibility.
And yet one of the foremost Dalit intellectuals, Kancha Ilaiah, who teaches
at a university in Hyderabad, was in Jaipur. Ilaiah’s best-known book, “Why
I am Not a Hindu?”—a searing critique of the Hindu caste system—is required
reading on the subject. Several years back, attempts were made to censor
Ilaiah’s essays on caste by the authorities of his university. A letter
from the registrar of his university directed him to write “within the
canons of conduct of our profession” and accused him of “accentuated social
tensions” through his writing. It was the Indian equivalent of Princeton
trying to stop Cornel West from writing about race.

Ilaiah, the polemicist, is a slight, soft-spoken man with wisps of grey
hair. At Jaipur, he wore a navy-blue suit, rimless glasses, and carried a
bag full of books. Ilaiah was troubled by Nandy’s statement but opposed
calls for his arrest. “His statement was not intended to hurt, but it is an
assertion that encompasses the ethical life of eight-hundred million
people. Are our laborers corrupt? Are our tribals who live and toil in the
forests corrupt? Nobody ever said that the slaves were corrupt,” Ilaiah
told me. “Ashis Nandy intended to support the cause of an oppressed people
but he deployed the wrong concept and made an incorrect assertion. It is a
very emotive issue. You are calling a people corrupt, a people whose life
in this country is harsh.” It was not as if their marginalization was
entirely in the past: “Even at a conference like this, not even one per
cent of the participants are from Dalit or other lower-caste communities.”

The Jaipur police proceeded to register a criminal case against Nandy and
sought the video recording of the discussion to check if the scholar’s
comments constituted an offense under the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes
Act of India. (The law is aimed at preventing untouchability, which
includes denial of access to certain places to an S.C. or S.T. person;
preventing him or her from getting water from any spring, reservoir or any
other source; or making a comment in order to insult or intimidate with
intent to humiliate a S.C. or S.T. person in any place within public view.)
The police also ordered the organizers of the literary festival not to
leave the city until they were questioned by the police about, among other
things, whether they had breached the terms of an undertaking they had
signed to “not hurt the sentiments of any community or religion during the
literary festival.” A court order helped them return home after two days,
but the police summoned Nandy to appear in Jaipur for a probe against his
remarks.

The undertaking the organizers had signed was a condition that the
Rajasthan government had imposed after opposition from Muslim groups and
death threats forced Salman Rushdie to cancel his visit to the festival
last year. (David Remnick wrote about it at the time.) Even before the
Nandy affair, there was a certain jitteriness around open speech,
nationalism, and religion at the festival. India’s most powerful Hindu
supremacist group, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or National Volunteers
Association, had issued a warning that the participation of Pakistani
authors was “not in the country’s interests at the moment.”

Younger officials of the R.S.S.’s political wing and India’s opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party threatened to stop Pakistani authors from entering
the venue. Like their brethren on the Hindu right, a little-known Islamist
group called for banning from the festival four writers—Jeet Thayil, Hari
Kunzru, Amitava Kumar, and Ruchir Joshi—who had read extracts from
Rushdie’s novel “The Satanic Verses” during the previous festival.

The threats seemed mere bluster when I first arrived in Jaipur, although
visitors entered the venue through metal detectors, and scores of policemen
and private-security men were present at the gates. Diggi Palace’s lawns
held a boisterous crowd of writers and readers, a cacophony of voices
debating the global economy, religious landscapes in India, and arguing
about the Jewish novel. I saw the Pakistani novelist Nadeem Aslam signing
copies of his new novel, “The Blind Man’s Garden.” Aslam was excited about
the end papers: “Aren’t they gorgeous?” A little later, I saw the Indian
novelist Jeet Thayil, one of the authors that the Islamic fringe tried to
ban (and whose novel “Narcopolis” was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize
last year). He had been assigned a policeman who followed him throughout
the festival. “He has been with me at all my talks and at all the parties,”
Thayil said. “After we attended several talks, he was bored and asked, ‘Is
this what you do? You talk all day about books?’ Yes, I said. He was quiet
after that, but his amusement and disbelief at our vocation was evident.”
Thayil went on to read a section from his novel where the word “cunt” and
its variations appeared several times. Four charges of obscenity were filed
against him at a Jaipur police station.

My own panel had been, appropriately enough, about censorship. In it, I’d
dwelled on the image of a tall, gangly man with a luxurious mustache in an
ill-fitting leather jacket and baggy trousers, walking about the newspaper
offices in Srinagar, the main city in the Indian-controlled Kashmir, a
decade ago. I was a novice reporter travelling between sites of atrocity,
visiting the drab offices of pro-India or pro-Kashmiri independence
politicians for press conferences. The man always stood in a corner,
listening intently, scribbling intensely. Occasionally, I would bump into
him and he would ask about my family, or bring up an event he had missed.
“I had to take my son to a hospital. Please tell me what was said? Who
asked the questions?” It could feel like a fellow reporter seeking help,
but I had learned by then about his vocation: he was the policeman whose
job was to report on the press. The colder, faceless sign of surveillance
and censorship was a faint noise, a crackle over the phone, a slight echo
of your own voice that reminded one of the policemen listening to our
words. The regime of censorship in conflict zones like Kashmir extended to
unknown callers making intimidating threats to writers and journalists--and
in the worst cases, assassinations.

But Kashmir has for decades been a state of exception, a gray zone where
democratic imperatives are subservient. Recently, the Indian government has
been showing greater intolerance of dissent and critique beyond the
borderlands, too. Apart from censorship and surveillance by the government,
an insidious trend of political, ethnic, and religious groups threatening
artists, writers, and scholars with violence and legal action has been
gathering strength across India.

In September, Aseem Trivedi, a Mumbai-based cartoonist, who mocked
politicians facing a litany of corruption charges by redrawing the seal of
India—replacing the lions with wolves—was arrested on charges of sedition
in Mumbai. After intense criticism by the courts and civil society, the
charges were dropped and Trivedi was released.

On November 18th, Mumbai was shut down following the death of its most
powerful and controversial Hindu politician, Bal Thackeray—a divisive
figure who, as the leader of Shiv Sena party, had a record of inciting
xenophobic and sectarian violence. Fears of violence by his grieving
party-members kept vehicles off the roads and shops closed. A
twenty-one-year-old woman in a Mumbai suburb remarked critically on
Thackeray’s death on her Facebook page, “People like Thackeray are born and
die daily and one should not observe a ‘bandh’ [shutdown] for that.” A
friend of hers liked the comment. The police arrested both girls and
charged them under a section of India’s Information Technology Act, which
governs cyber offenses. The girls were eventually released on bail after
appearing in a local court<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-20390084>
.



Shiv Sena, the political party that Thackeray headed till his death, and
whose members lobbied for the arrests of the two Mumbai girls, has, in
fact, performed the role of a vigilante censor in India. The great painter
Maqbool Fida Husain, known as the Picasso of India, was in his nineties
when he became the target of the Hindu right for a series of nude paintings
of Hindu goddesses that he had made in the nineteen-seventies. His
exhibitions were vandalized, his house attacked, and criminal cases were
filed against him.



Threatened with arrest <http://ushome.rediff.com/news/2006/feb/07nude.htm>,
Husain had to leave India and live in exile in London and Dubai, before he
accepted citizenship in Qatar in 2010. “He kept calling us from London,
from New York, pleading that he must absolutely come back to India, ‘not
die in a foreign land,’” his friend N. Ram, the publisher of *The Hindu*
newspaper wrote
<http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article2091413.ece> after
Husain’s death in June, 2011, in a London hospital.

And just a few weeks back, Muslim groups in the southern Indian state of
Tamil Nadu protested against a thriller that they believed depicted Muslims
as terrorists; the release of the movie was delayed by a local court. It
was about these stifling trends that my colleagues and I spoke.

By Wednesday morning, another case has been registered against
Nandy<http://www.indianexpress.com/news/jaipur-police-issues-notice-to-ashis-nandy-over-antidalit-remarks/1066232/>
 under the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe Act in Jodhpur, Rajasthan.
Fearing arrest, Nandy appealed to the Supreme Court of India, which has the
authority to stop his arrest and quash the case against him. On Friday,
Justice Altamas Kabir, the Chief Justice of India, along with two other
judges, heard his appeal. Nandy’s lawyer invoked free
speech<http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/supreme-court-stays-arrest-of-ashis-nandy/article4368462.ece?homepage=true>,
but the judges reprimanded him: “Tell your client he has no license to make
such comments.”

The court said it would reserve judgment until seeing the government’s
response to the motions. “In the meantime, the petitioner will not be
arrested in FIR filed in connection with the statement made by him at the
JLF, on January 26,” the Court ordered—so Nandy would not have to wait in
jail. After the decision, the scholar spoke to the press, expressing his
gratitude to the court. Nandy added, “I will have to be careful now.”

*Photograph by Ramesh Sharma/India Today Group/Getty.*



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Peace Is Doable

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