The Right to Dissent
**

*(The year 2011 will be celebrated worldwide as the centenary of the great
poet of Southasia, Faiz Ahmed Faiz.Himal's forthcoming January 2011 issue
will carry cover features on Faiz and his poetry. Over the year, we will
also be posting fresh material on our website www.himalmag.com.)*

[image: alt]Over the course of human history, intellectuals and artists have
helped broaden the scope of citizenship and the nebulous contours of citizen
rights. Southasia is no exception. Despite its colonial past and internal
fault-lines, it can boast of extraordinary individuals who have stood up
against tyranny and reaffirmed the innate strength of the human spirit.

A tradition of resistance by artists and intellectuals that was built up in
colonial times continues to thrive in the Subcontinent. Arundhati Roy in
India remains undeterred despite being charged with sedition or ‘the attempt
to excite disaffection towards the Government established by law in India’,
a penal provision defined by the British colonial government in 1860. Her
ability, and that of many others like her, to speak the truth to power and
populism, reconfirms that humanism remains above notions of narrow
nationalism. Roy’s latest act of criticising rights abuses in Jammu and
Kashmir has landed her in trouble with the guardians of patriotism, who have
vociferously demonised her and trashed her worldview. Conversely, more and
more people have also spoken in Roy’s favour, thereby weakening linear
jingoistic narratives which rely on ultranationalist worldviews.

Asma Jahangir’s track record on human rights and fearlessness gives
Pakistanis hope. She has unswervingly challenged military and civilian
dictators alike, undeterred by the consequences of speaking out against
autocrats. Her activism has not only saved minorities and women from brutal
customary punishments and a coercive state apparatus, but consistently
pushed for reaffirming the rule of law.

In Burma, Aung San Suu Kyi has finally been freed after her dignified but
determined refusal to submit to the military junta. Her defiance is
legendary and will continue to inspire democrats in her country and
elsewhere. The indomitable will of these women continues the glorious
traditions of Southasia: to uphold the truth and resist until victory is in
sight.

In Sri Lanka, where freedom of expression is increasingly under threat,
individuals have stood up fearlessly against the abuse of power. Some, like
Lasantha Wickramatunga, editor of the Sunday Leader, have paid with their
lives. It is never too late for those in other parts of the Subcontinent to
look towards Bangladesh and remember the hundreds of intellectuals rounded
up and executed outside Dhaka during the Liberation War in 1971. One
momentous day of massacres, 14 December, is still observed as ‘Shaheed
Buddhijibi Divas’ in Bangladesh, to honour the martyred intellectuals.
President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives spent the better part of the 1990s
as a prisoner of conscience for his anti-establishment views which he did
not hesitate to make public through newspaper articles. In Nepal, civil
rights activists of indomitable spirit have stayed the course for freedom to
fell the Rana regime in 1950; to survive through three decades of the
monarchist Panchayat till 1990; and to battle political violence, resurgent
autocracy and never-ending anarchy since.

[image: alt]

On 24 December this year, Christmas Eve, in India, human-rights activist Dr
Binayak Sen, who has worked as a doctor among the adivasis of Chhattisgarh
for many long years, has been sentenced to life imprisonment. His case
reminds us that repression and authoritarianism oftentimes come clothed in
the garb of democracy and the rule of law. Sen was first arrested four years
ago on flimsy charges; the real agenda was clearly to silence one of the
best-known and vocal champions of the rights of poor adivasis in the state
of Chhattisgarh, and thus demonstrate the consequences of speaking up. He
was imprisoned for over two years before he was granted bail by the Supreme
Court. The sentence of life imprisonment just announced, based as it is on
politically motivated charges, is a travesty and needs to be reversed. The
Indian state’s persecution of Sen and countless other activists like him who
have continued to speak up for the rights of the poor and marginalised, is
unacceptable in any truly democratic and just society, and will not succeed
in silencing those who dare stand up for the truth.

Faiz Ahmed Faiz’s hundredth birth anniversary will be celebrated this year
across Southasia and the globe. His poetry of resistance, with its vigorous
challenge to authoritarianism, is as relevant today as when it flowed from
his pen several decades ago. Revered for having stood up to exploitation,
injustice and state coercion, Faiz’s legacy lives on as scores of writers
and artists in Pakistan and India continue to struggle for an equitable,
plural and tolerant society. Not surprisingly, Faiz was imprisoned and
declared persona non grata by the Pakistani state, in the vain hope that
incarceration would still his sharp verse. But that only sharpened it;
through the ages, dissent has only been fuelled by censorship and clampdown,
and the human spirit has triumphed.

Besides the state, artists face dangers and threats from a new creed: the
extremists and bigots who have made intolerance a political enterprise.
Taslima Nasreen lives in exile, threatened by reactionaries in Bangladesh;
and M F Husain, one of the greatest living Indian painters has in effect
been banished for exercising his right to interpret his homeland and its
deities. Intellectuals and mediapersons in Pakistan have been attacked and
remain under perennial threat from extremist forces within the country.
Burmese artists continue to be forced into exile, but they are not silenced.
These artists have not allowed their creativity to ebb, for that would be a
victory for those who seek to silence them. In many places, as in Nepal
where King Gyanendra sought to impose autocracy, or in Pakistan where Pervez
Musharraf was ascendant, Faiz comes back to life.

Postcolonial Southasia is grappling with multiple challenges and Faiz
remains a torch-bearer for those striving for freedom of expression. The
civil liberties enjoyed today by millions have only been achieved through
decades-long struggles waged by public intellectuals, fearless activists and
artists. Marking the centenary of Faiz, Himal celebrates this legacy of
Southasia’s fight for freedom.

It is vital for the continued health of our societies to nurture freedom of
expression and the right to dissent. There will always be courageous
individuals who dream fearlessly and dare to speak. To quote Faiz’s eloquent
lines from ‘Bol’,

*Bol, ye thhoda waqt bahut hai
Jism-o zabaan ki maut se pehle
Bol ke sach zinda hai ab tak
Bol, jo kuch kehna hai, keh le.*

*Speak, this brief hour is long enough
Before the death of body and tongue
Speak, ’cause the truth is not dead yet,
Speak, speak, whatever you must speak*

To learn more about Binayak Sen, visit www.binayaksen.net.

http://himalmag.com/component/content/article/3529-the-right-to-dissent.html

-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
*"Nobody is giving up violence. Neither the state nor the Maoists are giving
up violence. I am interested in furthering my cause, which is the cause of
peace with justice.- DR BINAYAK SEN *
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