Bookshops are afraid to stock James Laine's Shivaj i: Hindu King in Islamic
India, even after the Supreme Court struck down the Maharashtra government's
ban on it. Film-maker Anand Patwardhan, one of three petitioners who
challenged the ban, speaks to Jyoti Punwani :

What prompted you to challenge the ban?

Ambedkar gave us a Constitution. It is up to us to protect its spirit.
Whether it is Ambedkar's Riddles in Hinduism or works by Taslima Nasreen, we
must not allow bullies to dictate what we read. I would oppose a ban even on
books i abhor, like those by Golwalkar and Godse. The real inspiration and
the legal hard work, however, came from human rights lawyer P A Sebastian.
We have won many court battles against the censorship of my documentaries.
In each case, the courts upheld my right to freedom of expression and the
public's right to information. Naturally when we heard about a book banned
under pressure from right-wing groups, we intervened.

Shivaji is revered in Maharashtra. Didn't you anticipate an adverse
reaction?

Bankrupt caste politics led to the ban. An academic book on Shivaji would
have remained largely unnoticed. But our politicians have many economic
crimes to hide and identity politics is a convenient public diversion. An
emotive rumour that Laine had questioned Shivaji's paternity spread, since
no one had actually read the book. A research institute was attacked,
historical manuscripts destroyed, then the publishers were attacked and
books burned. The government, dominated by the same caste forces that
rampaged in the street, banned the book.

Those opposing the judgement have made it a Maratha Vs Brahmin issue.

No one reads the book so the entire opposition to it is based on hearsay.
Incidentally, all the petitioners come from different castes, Dalit,
Maratha, Brahmin, though each of us categorically rejects the caste system.
In fact, the claim that Laine's book is a "Brahmin" conspiracy against the
"Maratha" Shivaji is so hollow, it could not be articulated even by those
who fought for a ban in court. They could only argue that it would cause
enmity between those who admire Shivaji and those who don't.

When the court asked "Who does not admire Shivaji?" there was no answer. The
attempt to reduce Shivaji's greatness to his paternity reveals a desire for
sacrosanct bloodlines (Vaunsha and Kula). The very concept of "purity" comes
from patriarchal upper castes that had to establish their long lineage to
mythical forefathers. So some Marathas proudly claim "Shahannau Kula" (96
forefathers) and some Brahmins maintain immaculate family trees.

Laine himself has no caste axe to grind. He compares texts written in
Shivaji's lifetime where the Brahmin Ramdas is hardly mentioned, with those
written in the Brahminical Peshwa period where Ramdas gains prominence as
Shivaji's guru, to texts inspired by the Varkari movement, those written by
Mahatma Phule, by the British, each with their distinct motivations. He
paints a complex picture of 17th century Maharashtra where cross-religious
alliances were the norm.

This complexity is anathema to those who want to use Shivaji as a symbol of
Hindutva or who appropriate him as a caste hero. This is not only an
injustice to Shivaji, but also to historical and scientific enquiry. Laine's
anatomy of a legend is not the last word on Shivaji. Nor must it be a word
that is forbidden.




http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/opinion/edit-page/Bankrupt-caste-politics-led-to-ban-on-Shivaji-book/articleshow/6233551.cms

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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