[<<Somewhere in this action-reaction cycle, selectively amplified by the
political class and sections of the media, it is easy to confuse the
chronology of events. The violence did not begin on January 2. Enraged
Dalits did not start the violence in Maharashtra’s cities, though the
random acts of vandalism and muscle-flexing during the state-wide bandh on
Wednesday have cost them the high moral ground there. It was they who faced
the initial violence around Bhima Koregaon on January 1 and the attacks
were rooted in a specific socio-historical context.
Every January 1, Dalits, mainly Mahars, congregate at Bhima Koregaon to pay
respects at the Vjiay Stambh, or victory memorial, there. It is an article
of faith for them. On this day in 1818, a few hundred Mahar soldiers in the
British Army are said to have managed to inflict damage and force a retreat
from Koregaon of the forces of the Peshwas, a regime infamous for its
brutal oppression of the lower castes. The term often used in these parts
for that event is “Peshwai gadhli”: the Peshwa regime has been buried. In
1927, BR Ambedkar paid tribute here to Mahar soldiers on New Year’s Day,
and the practice has continued every year since.>>

https://scroll.in/article/863644/underlying-maharashtras-dalit-protests-a-tangle-of-old-caste-struggles-and-new-hindutva-assertion

Underlying Maharashtra’s Dalit protests, a tangle of old caste struggles
and new Hindutva assertion
Can Chief Minister Fadnavis rein in his ideological colleagues to stop
polarisation in the state?

Underlying Maharashtra’s Dalit protests, a tangle of old caste struggles
and new Hindutva assertion
Puneet Paranjpe/AFP

6 hours ago

Smruti Koppikar

In less than 24 hours after January 1, Maharashtra’s Bhima Koregaon was
transformed from a quiet village of historical significance mainly for
Dalits into a national hashtag for all the wrong reasons. A momentous
celebration by Dalits here had been turned into a conflagration claiming
the life of Rahul Phatangale (28), injuring several people and leaving
around 40 vehicles gutted.

Its embers then touched major cities across Maharashtra including Mumbai,
pitted caste groups against each other and threatened to widen the rips in
the state’s social fabric. By Tuesday evening, the police in Pimpri, on the
outskirts of Pune, had registered cases against two men with strong
right-wing links, Manohar alias Sambhaji Bhide “Guruji” (85) who leads the
Shiv Prathisthan and Milind Ekbote (60) who heads the radical Hindu outfit
Samasta Hindu Aghadi.

The Bhima Koregaon incident is the product of many entangled threads:
consolidation among Dalits, competitive leadership among their leaders, the
larger association between Dalits and Marathas, historical events and their
symbolism in present times, the re-assertion of Dalit identity and
mainstreaming of their history, the rise of competitive right-wing forces,
and political mobilisation ahead of the 2019 national elections.

Somewhere in this action-reaction cycle, selectively amplified by the
political class and sections of the media, it is easy to confuse the
chronology of events. The violence did not begin on January 2. Enraged
Dalits did not start the violence in Maharashtra’s cities, though the
random acts of vandalism and muscle-flexing during the state-wide bandh on
Wednesday have cost them the high moral ground there. It was they who faced
the initial violence around Bhima Koregaon on January 1 and the attacks
were rooted in a specific socio-historical context.

Every January 1, Dalits, mainly Mahars, congregate at Bhima Koregaon to pay
respects at the Vjiay Stambh, or victory memorial, there. It is an article
of faith for them. On this day in 1818, a few hundred Mahar soldiers in the
British Army are said to have managed to inflict damage and force a retreat
from Koregaon of the forces of the Peshwas, a regime infamous for its
brutal oppression of the lower castes. The term often used in these parts
for that event is “Peshwai gadhli”: the Peshwa regime has been buried. In
1927, BR Ambedkar paid tribute here to Mahar soldiers on New Year’s Day,
and the practice has continued every year since.

On the 200th anniversary of the battle this year, several lakh Dalits were
expected at Bhima-Koregaon. In fact, the celebrations began a day earlier
with an event called the Elgar Parishad in Pune’s legendary Shaniwarwada,
the seat of the erstwhile Peshwa empire. The organisers, the Bhima Koregaon
Shourya Divas Abhiyan, invited Dalit activist-turned-MLA from Gujarat
Jignesh Mevani, Radhika Vemula (whose son Rohith Vemula became a national
figure after his suicide in 2016), and Delhi-based student leader Umar
Khalid to participate.

The Victory Pillar at Bhima Koregaon. Credit: Mridula Chari.

The Dalits’ dare
The very idea of Dalits taking over Shaniwarwada, if only for a few hours,
was an affront to the descendants of the Peshwas and assorted Brahmin
groups. Udaysinh Peshwa and the Akhil Bharatiya Brahmin Mahasangh, among
others, urged the Pune police to deny permission for the event. They
disputed the historical account that the British Army had won the battle of
Bhima Koregaon and asserted that it was not proper to celebrate the British
victory over an Indian force. The labelling of the Parishad and
Bhima-Koregaon commemoration as “anti-national” began right here.
Eventually, permission was given, but with several caveats.

At the event, Mevani who had been elected to the Gujarat Assembly last
month as an independent MLA, warned the Bharatiya Janata Party government
at the Centre, “If you think of changing the Constitution and the
democratic set-up of India, we too have the power to safeguard it.” He went
on to describe the BJP as “neo-Peshwai”. Thousands gathered there – Dalits,
left-leaning, progressive and Ambedkarite groups – cheered this.

As the dawn of 2018 broke, Dalits and others made their way to Bhima
Koregaon. Lakhs saluted the memorial. Along the route to and from Koregaon,
they encountered violent attacks by groups of people carrying saffron
flags, throwing stones and setting vehicles aflame. Clashes followed. Angry
Dalit groups across Maharashtra protested this by blocking roads in cities
and Mumbai’s suburban railway, arm-twisting shops to shut down, and
damaging public property.

Prakash Ambedkar, Ambedkar’s grandson and leader of the Dalit party Bharip
Bahujan Mahasangh, attributed the outrage to deep angst against the
Devendra Fadnavis government for allowing violent right-wing groups social
space. However, by the evening of January 2, the counter-violence by Dalit
groups had become the popular narrative; the violence against them the
previous day hardly found a mention. The selectivity was so brazen that
even after cases were registered against Bhide “Guruji” and Ekbote,
sections of media absurdly blamed Mevani and Khalid for it.

Caste equations
At the heart of the Bhima Koregaon story is the age-old power struggle
between the Brahmins and the Marathas. This fault-line gets further
complicated with the Dalits, primarily Mahars, joining forces with the
Marathas against their common caste enemy.

The rise of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh ideology culminating, as it
were, in the handsome victory of the BJP in the state Assembly election of
2014 and having a RSS-trained Brahmin, Devendra Fadnavis, lead the
government has meant that the socially-politically powerful Marathas felt
marginalised. Over the past three years, Maratha leaders, mainly in the
Congress and Nationalist Congress Party – the latter often ridiculed as a
Maratha-only party – have emphasised the “Brahminical nature” of the
government.

Out of the arena of electoral politics, Maratha youth formed an enviable
network across the state and have organised a series of Maratha Kranti
Morchas across the state over the past two years. Each demonstration drew
lakhs of Maratha men, women and youth, and took the state by storm. They
were ostensibly aimed at putting pressure on the Fadnavis government to
bring the rapists-murderers of a young girl in Kopardi to justice. She was
a Maratha and the accused, Dalits. But the morchas also highlighted other
issues such as the state’s agrarian crisis and the Maratha demand for
reservations in educational institutions and government jobs.

The anti-government sentiment in the morchas was but a thin veil for
anti-Brahminism. Of course, Shivaji had mainly selected Brahmins for his
cabinet, but it was equally true that Brahmin priests had declined to
perform his coronation, owing to his lower caste. The Brahmin Peshwas, when
they had control of the Maratha empire, treated Marathas with disdain and
Mahars with barbaric cruelty, according to historical accounts.

A Maratha rally in Mumbai in August, 2017. Credit: PTI.

Complicated differences
Marathas and Dalits have not always been on the same side of the
socio-political line in the state. They have had differences of opinion,
different political strategies. The situation has not been helped by a
spate of brutal murders of Dalit youth in the last few years in western
Maharashtra, mainly Ahmednagar, in which the accused were Marathas.

The last few years have seen a resurgence among Dalit groups across online
platforms which breathed new life into their campaigns as well as on the
ground where young leaders emerged. The government’s ban on beef gave some
a cause to rally around. The decision of the once-fiery Dalit mass leader
Ramdas Athavale to align with the BJP helped consolidate others. It isn’t
that differences have melted, as Prakash Ambedkar said, but there is now a
common cause. In this resurgence, there has been much reclaiming of Dalit
history and symbols.

Despite their differences, many Maratha and Dalit groups have come to at
least two realisations: first, that if they join forces politically, they
stand a chance to counter the BJP’s election juggernaut, as was the case in
Gujarat last month; second, the majoritarian Hindu-nationalist re-shaping
of society or the Golwalkar-Savarkar doctrine can be countered by renewing
the inclusive Phule-Shahu-Ambedkar ideology.

Significantly, Dalit leader Prakash Ambedkar and leaders of the Sambhaji
Brigade, a Maratha organisation, jointly instructed their members to eschew
violence on January 2. When sections of the media portrayed the Bhima
Koregaon violence as being a case of Maratha-versus-Dalit, Ambedkar ruled
this out. “If there was any tension, the 200th anniversary of the
Bhima-Koregaon battle would not have taken place,” he said. “The January
1st programme was organised by the Sambhaji Brigade too.”

With Mevani now in the equation, it is clear that the alignment of forces
is in preparation for state Assembly elections over the next year as well
as the 2019 general elections. Hardcore Ambedkarites see Mevani as a
Left-leaning ideologue “mixing Ambedkar with Marx”, as one of them
complained. Veteran Dalit leaders are nervous about his popularity.
Besides, Mevani has a lot to learn about Dalit politics in Maharashtra. But
all said, the Bhima Koregaon story has catapulted him to centre-stage
already.

The right-wing as fringe?
The saffron flags held aloft by the attackers on Dalits on January 1, and
the cases against Bhide “Guruji” and Ekbote have turned the spotlight
firmly on the violent agenda of right-wing groups.

To call them fringe is inaccurate. They are central to the unfolding of the
Hindutva ideology. Bhide “Guruji” gave up his career as a physicist and
former professor at Pune University to become a full-time worker of the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. But he was also enamoured by Shivaji. He set
up the Shiv Prathisthan in the late 1980s.

He is known to enjoy the loyalty of thousands of RSS workers across the
Satara-Sangli-Kolhapur belt. During an election rally in Sangli district in
October 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said of him: “Bhide Guruji
did not invite me here. I came here on his orders.”

Ekbote, a former BJP corporator in Pune, derives his fame as a result of
his Gou-Raksha Abhiyan organisation and “cow protection work”, which
received a fillip in 2015. He has at least 12 police registered cases
against him, including rioting with a deadly weapon and provoking breach of
peace.

Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil, Opposition leader in the state Assembly and a
Congressman, said that it was not enough to register cases against these
groups. “They threaten social cohesion and peace, they should be finished,”
he said, demanding that these organisations are banned.

On Tuesday, Maharashtra Chief Minister Fadvanis ordered a judicial inquiry
into the Bhima Koregaon violence. It’s anybody’s guess if he can – or wants
to – rein in his ideological colleagues and halt the polarisation in
Maharashtra.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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