https://scroll.in/article/828526/my-lecture-was-anti-rss-and-anti-hindutva-therefore-i-hold-it-was-in-fact-utterly-patriotic

OPINION

'My lecture was anti-RSS and anti-Hindutva. Therefore, I hold it was
in fact utterly patriotic...'
'...because a more anti-national organisation than the RSS does not
exist,' says the JNU professor against whom a police complaint has
been filed in Jodhpur.

Image credit:  Himal Southasian’s ‘right-side-up’ map

Yesterday · 07:30 pm
Updated 12 hours ago

Nivedita Menon

This is what Himal Southasian says about their ‘right-side-up’ map:

“This map of Southasia may seem upside down to some, but that is
because we are programmed to think of north as top of page. This
rotation is an attempt by the editors of Himal to reconceptualise
‘regionalism’ in a way that the focus is on the people rather than the
nation-states. This requires nothing less than turning our minds
downside-up.”

Turn your eyes away, gentle reader. You have already become
anti-national by viewing this image.

More on this in a minute. First some background.

On February 3, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, the student
organisation affiliated to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, called a
bandh in Jai Narain Vyas University, Jodhpur, forcibly stopping
classes and demanding suspension of the organisers of a conference and
police action against them, as well as against me.

Police complaints have now been lodged, and perhaps First Information
Reports, we hear.

The charge? The conference, and my lecture in particular, was
anti-national. Not one of these ABVP students attended the event, nor
is there yet a video recording available to my knowledge, largely
because the ABVP also gathered in intimidatingly large numbers outside
the shop that had conducted the recording, and the owner shut up the
shop and fled. The entire drama and some sensationalist and outright
false stories in the local Hindi press are based entirely on the
testimony of one person, NK Chaturvedi, retired professor from the
History department at Jai Narain Vyas University, who attended just
one session, mine.

At the end of my lecture, he informed me that he had seen me on
YouTube and had come to see for himself how anti-national I am. But
more on that exchange later. The point is that the blatantly false
media coverage and the frenzy whipped up in Jai Narain Vyas University
is based entirely on the testimony of this one person who on his own
admission, had come to measure me against the standards of his own
deshbhakti. He did not attend a single other session.

On February 1 and 2, 2017, The English Department organised a
conference titled “History Reconstrued through Literature: Nation,
Identity, Culture”. Among the speakers were the Chairperson of Indian
Council of Historical Research Sudarshan Rao, Congress party’s Sandeep
Dikshit and scholar Himanshu Roy who replaced the original invitee,
Seshadri Chari of the RSS when he declined due to ill health. Apart
from these there were several academics and practitioners from
universities and institutions in Delhi, Gujarat and Rajasthan – among
them, Ameena Kazi Ansari and Rizwan Kaiser from Jamia Milia Delhi,
Avdhesh Kumar Singh from Indira Gandhi National Open University,
Ashutosh Mohan from Guru Gobind Singh University, Balaji Raghunathan
from Central University of Gujarat, Gauhar Raza, scientist and
film-maker, Aishwarya Bhati, Supreme Court advocate.

Evidently, the key organiser, Rajshree Ranawat, faculty member in the
department, had ensured that the widest possible range of political
and scholarly views were represented. There were also presentations by
young research scholars and younger faculty on their areas of
research, ranging from George Orwell in the era of Trump, to
Palestinian poet Mahmud Darwesh and the writing of Shashi Deshpande.

A scholarly, stimulating academic event, to a room of about hundred
students, male and female, undergraduate and research scholars, an
event marked by debate and sometimes sharp disagreements among
panelists, and challenging questions from students to speakers. It was
a wildly successful conference, and on any other planet but the RSS
griha, the Conference Director Rajshree Ranawat and her colleague Vinu
George would have been congratulated and felicitated by their
university, the local press would have reported the conference in
glowing terms.

Now here are the two “news” stories that were published yesterday, the
only reportage on the event.

Dainik Navjyoti
Dainik Navjyoti
Dainik Bhaskar
Dainik Bhaskar
Please note that the picture of me is from an event held years ago in
Delhi. Why is this relevant? Because not a single photograph from the
actual event is available with these “reporters”.

Why? Because not one of them attended the event.

I will not reproduce my entire lecture (delivered in English) from my
lecture notes here, I will simply pick up the distortions and outright
lies in these reports.

1. I did not at this event, ever make the statement “India is
illegally occupying Kashmir,” as one of the headlines claims.
When Rajshree Ranawat was introducing me, she began by saying that
this is the scholar who became well known for her statement during the
Jawaharlal Nehru University nationalism lectures, and then she quoted
verbatim what I had said in JNU a year ago, including the phrase
above. She said this scholar was hounded by the media on the basis of
a decontextualised clip from the JNU lecture, which included this
statement.

During my lecture at Jai Narain Vyas University on February 2 this
year, what I said about Kashmir and the North-East was the following.

As young students, you should read for yourself and find out the
history of how Kashmir and the states of the North East were brought
into India, and ask yourself why these places have to be retained in
India through the massive presence of armed forces.

This took about five minutes, while one of the reports says I spoke
for 45 minutes on Kashmir.

I could well have spoken for the entire duration of the approximately
hour long lecture on Kashmir, that is my constitutional right. But as
it happens, I did not.

My point is that the headline distorts what happened in that room. Did
I make that statement? Yes, at a lecture delivered a year ago, quoted
by the person introducing me. What did I say at this lecture? Isn’t
that the point? I am a serious scholar and academic, I don’t simply go
around repeating the same things everywhere. This lecture had a
different focus, and I said different kinds of things.

My views on Kashmir and India are available in writing, in Hindi in
which the lecture was delivered, in the volume of the JNU lecture
series that has now been published – What the Nation really Needs to
Know (Harper Collins 2017).


2. Did I show the map of India “ulta”?
Guilty as charged.

I showed the picture that is at the top of this post, and asked the
students in the audience to ask themselves why it appears upside down.
Because after all, we all know the earth is round, and nothing is
upside down or right side up. There was delighted and surprised
laughter from the young people who suddenly understood what I was
saying. This was in the context of my critique of the Hindutvavaadi
and RSS notion of nationalism, which sees the nation as a body, the
body of the mother. This implies that the nation pre-exists the
people, and so if some group wants to leave the nation, it can only be
seen as amputation or dismemberment. But in fact, the people pre-exist
the nation, they have lived on this earth for millennia, and it is
they who decide in what sorts of organisations to live. The
nation-state as a form is only about 300 years old, and nation-states
are both dissolving as in Europe, and being reasserted in other
places, including India.

Himal Southasian’s ‘right-side-up’ map.
Himal Southasian’s ‘right-side-up’ map.
I said the RSS Bharat Mata can be easily transposed on to the map of
India we are familiar with, with Kashmir as the head, Bengal and
Gujarat as the arms and so on, but if we turn the map the other way
round, which is still an accurate depiction of the region, suddenly
you can see that the nation is not a natural unchanging object, but
something constructed by people.

For the information of the astoundingly ignorant RSS and its storm
troopers, the ABVP – the map of India is not the flag of India, and
there is no way in which you can show a map “upside down”!

3. Did I say that soldiers join the army for a livelihood and not
because of patriotism?
Partially true.

I did say they join the army for a livelihood. I did not at any point
question their patriotism.

I said that sons of poor families join the armed forces to feed their
families, and that they are treated badly. I referred to the picture
of the rotten food men at the border are served, that BSF Constable
Tej Bahadur Yadav had posted on social media, and how he was being
harassed and attacked by the state. Meanwhile his actual charges are
not being addressed at all. This is the treatment actually meted out
to soldiers, while the hypocritical celebration of our brave soldiers
at the border is continually used by RSS and its hordes, to attack
those of us who are critical of this corporate driven, Islamophobic,
manuvaadi and misogynist regime.

RSS Bharat Mata
RSS Bharat Mata
4. Did I say that the RSS Bharat Mata does not ever hold the national
flag, the tiranga in her hand?
Oh yes, I did.

(One report says I asked why does the RSS Bharat Mata hold the tiranga
in her hand! I am speechless at this kind of motivated ignorance,
stupidity and malice.)

I did also counterpose the RSS Bharat Mata – apparently savarna, fair
skinned, laden with ornaments, holding always the RSS bhagwa jhanda
never the tiranga; with artist Lal Ratnakar’s Bharat Mata, the proud
adivasi/dalit/mazdoor woman, dark skinned, holding her work tools,
standing before a buffalo, with the tiranga behind her.

Artist Lal Ratnakar’s Bharat Mata
Artist Lal Ratnakar’s Bharat Mata
Did I say this image is a better representation of Bharat Mata? Yes I did.

5. Did I attack Hindutva?
Yes I did.

I differentiated between Hinduism and Hindutva or Hindutvavaad.
Hinduism is a heterogeneous set of religious practices, that have
cultural roots and deep meaning, which I respect as I do all religious
practices. Hindutvavaad or Hindutva is a political ideology that
claims only Hindus have the right to be citizens of this country. I
said that most Hindus do not accept Hindutva as an ideology. That
Hindutva is violent and masculinist, and paradoxically, tries to fill
Hindus with anxiety and fear about Muslim domination, Muslim men and
so on, rather than making Hindus as the majority in this country feel
confident enough to live peacefully with other religious communities.

Hindutvavaadis and RSS keep trying to conflate the two. I said this is wrong.

I also said Hinduism is deeply marked by caste discrimination, and
excludes and discriminates violently against Dalits, and to that
extent Hinduism is to be criticised as well. That Savarkar in fact was
opposed to caste discrimination but modern day Hindutvavaadis don’t
read him or respect his views.

The audience in the room agreed with me, as was evident by their
applause every time I replied to a challenge from Chaturvedi.

I closed my lecture by stating that I believe that the majority of the
young people of this country oppose Hindtuvavaadi politcs and the
politics of hate of the RSS. And they applauded enthusiastically,
every single one of them.

It is these students who will fight Hindutva and defeat it. Chaturvedi
could see that. He knows the end of the RSS is near.

That is why he started off this process. That is why he called up
Rajshree after the news reports appeared, and she had started being
hounded by her university, and gloated – “Ab madam, kaise lag raha
hai?” (How do you feel now, Madam?)

“Bahut badhiya“, she replied. “Aap ne hamein surkhiyon mein laga diya,
heroine bana diya. Shukriya.” (Great! You have put me in the
headlines, made me a heroine. Thanks)

Don’t think people like Rajshree Ranawat are so easily intimidated, Chaturvedi!

My lecture was anti-RSS and anti-Hindutva. Therefore, I hold it was in
fact utterly patriotic, because a more anti-national organisation than
the RSS does not exist.

A version of this article first appeared on Kafila under the title On
RSS ignorance, the “upside down map” of India, and on being
“anti-national “ and is reproduced here with permission.


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