[S Anand is a co-founder, along with Ravikumar in 2003, and
understandably now the mainstay of the publishing house Navayana
dedicated to bringing out anti-caste literature.
That's evidently a laudable mission.

In recent times, it brought out a fresh edition of Dr. Ambedkar's
iconic publication, Annihilation of Caste, annotated by Anand and with
a long introduction by Arundhati Roy.

This edition became quite controversial
A primary cause was Roy's malicious tirade against Gandhi using Dr.
Ambedkar just as a prop - a sort of springboard.
In this context, one may refer to 'Independence and Social Justice:
The Ambedkar-Gandhi Debate' by Rajmohan Gandhi at
<http://www.epw.in/perspectives/independence-and-social-justice.html>,
<http://www.rajmohangandhi.com/sites/default/files/Independence%20and%20Social%20Justice%20-%20Jan%202015.pdf>
(for an earlier and longer version) and another article on the same
issue by Nishikant Kolge at
<http://www.academia.edu/8867274/The_Politician_A_Response_to_Arundhati_Roy_s_The_Doctor_and_The_Saint>.

As regards the article reproduced below, let us pay attention to just
four (representative)  points to have an idea of the author's
intellectual integrity and credibility.

I. Under the section, 'The struggle to publish', Anand claims: "Nehru
[on being approached for state support for the book, The Buddha and
His Dhamma (or The Buddha and His Gospel?)] also offered Ambedkar some
gratuitous business advice: "I might suggest that your books might be
on sale in Delhi and elsewhere at the time of Buddha Jayanti
celebrations when many people may come from abroad. It might find a
good sale then.""
It is followed up with the following comment by the author: "The Prime
Minister was asking his former Law Minister, the man who oversaw the
drafting of the Indian Constitution, to set up a stall and hawk his
own books. It is for such arrogance, too, that Nehru is much loved by
India's court historians."]
Forget about court historians, one is really flummoxed how the (rather
commonsense) suggestion, gratuitous or not, that Buddha Jayanti
celebrations will be opportune occasions to sell the subject book (on
Buddha) amounts to advising that the author himself sets up stalls and
hawks his book in person.

II. Somewhat in similar vein: "On reading this book [i.e,
'Annihilation of Caste'], Gandhi began a "review" in his journal
Harijan thus: "He has priced it at 8 annas, I would suggest a
reduction to 2 annas or at least 4 annas." Gandhi seemed to have no
issue with the fact that primary membership to the Congress party also
cost four annas."
One is again puzzled why the suggestion that the book be priced lower,
presumably to ensure much wider readership, is found so objectionable.

III. "It is not surprising that Ambedkar's posthumous publications
easily outstrip the works he could manage to publish in his own
lifetime. Among these are Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Ancient
India, Philosophy of Hinduism, and Riddles in Hinduism. When ***the
last-mentioned work was published, the Shiv Sena protested and the
Maharashtra government banned the work in 1988*** [emphasis added]."
The fact is that this book was never *banned*. The publication by the
Government of Maharashtra, to be sold at subsidised price, was
*temporarily* stalled, and perhaps copies were withdrawn for a while.
(Ref.: 
<http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/dr-b.r.-ambedkar-writings-stir-a-hornet-nest-in-maharashtra/1/337860.html>.)

IV. "It is another shame that Ambedkar was kept out of the committee
to observe the 2500th birth anniversary of the Buddha."
The wikipedia provides that two different dates of birth of Buddha are
in currency: c. 563 BCE or c. 480 BCE. (See:
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gautama_Buddha>.)
Another version provides that it was 623 BCE. (See:
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_of_Gautama_Buddha>.)
***Accordingly, 2500 years of Buddha's birth should be celebrated
either around 1937 or 2020, or 1877.***
So, evidently the question arises when was it celebrated, when was the
committee formed, by whom it was formed and who were its members?
And, what is the source?
Apparently, in 1956 2500 years of Buddha's Mahaparinirvan (i.e. death)
was celebrated. (See:
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sixth_Buddhist_council>.)
But then death is definitely way different from birth.]

http://scroll.in/article/727548/may-15-it-was-79-years-ago-today-that-ambedkars-annihilation-of-caste-was-published

CASTE QUESTION
May 15: It was 79 years ago today that Ambedkar's 'Annihilation Of
Caste' was published
S. Anand  · May 15, 2015 · 08:30 am

The book was priced at 8 annas. Gandhi wanted the price reduced to 4
annas, or even 2 annas.

It was on May 15, 1936, exactly 79 years ago to this day, that B.R.
Ambedkar published Annihilation of Caste: a text that affirmed
humanity and negated caste. Priced at 8 annas, Ambedkar printed 1,500
copies of the text of his speech at his own expense.

This was meant to be the presidential address at the annual conference
of the Jat-Pat Todak Mandal (Forum for the Break-up of Caste) in
Lahore. The Mandal, considered a "radical" faction of the Hindu
reformist Arya Samaj, was founded in 1922 by mostly Hindus of
privileged castes. Its annual conferences had previously been
addressed by members of society whose names bore the entitlement of
caste and privilege: Swami Shraddhanand, Motilal Nehru, Bhai
Parmanand, Rameshwari Nehru, Sri Ramananda Chatterjee, Sri Satyananda
Stokes and such. No Dalit had been invited till then.

What would Ambedkar end up saying?

In 1936, having invited Ambedkar, the Mandal's leaders were unsure of
what he would say. After all, in October 1935, at the Yeola Depressed
Classes Conference, he had declared: "I had the misfortune of being
born with the stigma of an Untouchable. However, it is not my fault;
but I will not die a Hindu, for this is in my power." The nation was
in a tizzy. Ambedkar had effectively declared a spiritual war on
Hinduism, disgusted as he was with the man Hindus had come to revere
as a Mahatma - Mohandas Gandhi.

And so the Mandal asked for Ambedkar's address in advance, and
predictably it found many portions of the text objectionable. Har
Bhagwan, one of the Mandal's men, wrote to Ambedkar on 22 April 1936:
"You have also unnecessarily attacked the morality and reasonableness
of the Vedas and other religious books of the Hindus..." They suggested
he drop all references to "Veda". More importantly, Ambedkar had said,
in passing: "This would probably be my last address to a Hindu
audience."

As it turned out, Ambedkar had more or less anticipated such a
conservative response from a group that was posing as a radical one.
In the very opening of his speech, he had written:

I am sure they will be asked many questions for having selected me as
the president. The Mandal will be asked to explain as to why it has
imported a man from Bombay to preside over a function which is held in
Lahore. I believe the Mandal could easily have found someone better
qualified than myself to preside on the occasion. I have criticised
the Hindus. I have questioned the authority of the Mahatma whom they
revere. They hate me.



Ambedkar wrote back to Har Bhagwan without mincing words:

...I would not alter a comma, that I would not allow any censorship over
my address, and that you would have to accept the address as it came
from me. I also told you that the responsibility for the views
expressed in the address was entirely mine, and if they were not liked
by the conference I would not mind at all if the conference passed a
resolution condemning them.



The speech was never given

Ambedkar's speech was denied the audience it was meant for. When he
published the speech at his own expense, he chose to make public his
entire correspondence with the Mandal, thus offering a prehistory of
the speech in the very first edition. He perhaps had hoped to shame
the Mandal and Hindus who pretended to be reformers.

On reading this book, Gandhi began a "review" in his journal Harijan
thus: "He has priced it at 8 annas, I would suggest a reduction to 2
annas or at least 4 annas." Gandhi seemed to have no issue with the
fact that primary membership to the Congress party also cost four
annas.

AoC was soon reprinted (1937), and translated into six languages. The
rest is history. And today, it is worth reflecting a little more on
this history.

The struggle to publish



In his own lifetime, it was a struggle for Ambedkar to publish his
writings. Though his usual publisher Thacker and Co. in Bombay
published many of the books, it was difficult to raise money for works
no-one seemed keen to publish. For instance, he did not have the
resources to print The Buddha and His Dhamma, what may have been his
last book. The story behind this, which I had recalled on another
occasion, is still worth recounting.

On September 14, 1956, exactly a month before he embraced Buddhism
with half-a-million followers in Nagpur, he wrote a heart-breaking
letter to Prime Minister Nehru from his 26, Alipore Road residence in
Delhi. Enclosing two copies of the comprehensive Table of Contents of
his mnemonic opus, The Buddha and His Dhamma, Ambedkar swallowed his
pride and sought Nehru's help in the publication of a book he had
worked on for five years:

The cost of printing is very heavy and will come to about Rs 20,000.
This is beyond my capacity, and I am, therefore, canvassing help from
all quarters. I wonder if the Government of India could purchase 500
copies for distribution among the various libraries and among the many
scholars whom it is inviting during the course of this year for the
celebration of Buddha's 2,500 years' anniversary.



Nehru replied to Ambedkar the next day, saying that the sum set aside
for publications related to Buddha Jayanti had been exhausted, and
that he should approach Radhakrishnan, chairman of the commemorative
committee.

It is another shame that Ambedkar was kept out of the committee to
observe the 2500th birth anniversary of the Buddha. Nehru also offered
Ambedkar some gratuitous business advice: "I might suggest that your
books might be on sale in Delhi and elsewhere at the time of Buddha
Jayanti celebrations when many people may come from abroad. It might
find a good sale then."

The Prime Minister was asking his former Law Minister, the man who
oversaw the drafting of the Indian Constitution, to set up a stall and
hawk his own books. It is for such arrogance, too, that Nehru is much
loved by India's court historians. Radhakrishnan is said to have
informed Ambedkar on phone about his inability to help him.

Posthumous sales

[Ramesh Shinde, collector of Ambedkariana, with the first edition of
the The Buddha and His Dhamma.]


It is not surprising that Ambedkar's posthumous publications easily
outstrip the works he could manage to publish in his own lifetime.
Among these are Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Ancient India,
Philosophy of Hinduism, and Riddles in Hinduism. When the
last-mentioned work was published, the Shiv Sena protested and the
Maharashtra government banned the work in 1988.

In all subsequent editions of Volume 4 of the Babasaheb Ambedkar:
Writings and Speeches series, the Maharashtra government, which claims
proprietorial rights over all Ambedkar's works, carries this caveat:
"Government does not concur with the views expressed in the chapter."
The chapter in question is titled The Riddle of Rama and Krishna. To
this day, the Maharashtra government damns its own publication while
damning Ambedkar.

In such circumstances, how have Ambedkar's writings been kept alive?
Several Dalit writers and scholars, and Ambedkarite publishers in
small towns and cities of India, many of whom have, with no resources
other than passion and political will, strived to make public the
writings of Ambedkar after his death in 1956. Among them two are
worthy of special mention: Lahori Ram Balley and the late Bhagwan Das.

Balley established Bheem Patrika Publications in Jullundar, and since
1958 he has been publishing Ambedkar's works well before the Dalit
movement in Maharashtra coaxed the state government into doing so.
Balley's efforts were documented in Outlook newsmagazine a few years
ago:

[Balley]  has joined every single campaign directed at getting more
access to Ambedkar's writings for people. He counts among his
achievements the rescue and publication of scores of his speeches and
writings, many previously unpublished, that were locked in six trunks
and in the custody of the Bombay High Court for almost two decades
after his [Ambedkar's] death. "We appealed to the courts and to
Ambedkar's warring children to let us have access to those precious
papers which had begun to deteriorate. The All India Samata Sainik
Dal, founded by Ambedkar in 1927, had launched a movement to get his
unpublished writings published and as a member of the Dal, I joined
the effort. The Maharashtra government eventually published the
manuscripts in 1979," he [Balley] says. But by then Bheem Patrika
Publications had already brought out several translations of
Ambedkar's classic essay, Annihilation of Caste, based on his
undelivered speech for the annual conference of Jat Pat Todak Mandal
of Lahore in 1936. (Ambedkar's family filed a case against him for
doing this.)



Bhagwan Das was another man who made it his life's mission to take the
writings and message of Ambedkar to a wider public. Das had worked
with Ambedkar as a research assistant in the last years before
Ambedkar passed away. He was among the few people I met who had known
Ambedkar personally. At Navayana, I published his memoir, In Pursuit
of Ambedkar (which comes with an hour-long documentary feature on
DVD), and the first of four volumes of his pioneering series, Thus
Spoke Ambedkar.

When we remember this day in history, we must also remember those who
kept this history alive for us.



S. Anand annotated the critical edition of Annihilation of Caste,
featuring an introduction by Arundhati Roy, published in 2014.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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