*Anna Hazare’s New Plans: Implications for Democracy?***

*YoginderSikand*

* *

*Much toalmost everyone else’s relief, Anna Hazare has finally called off
his fast. However, he has nowannounced that his struggle for the Jan Lokpal
was just a precursor to more campaigns which he soon plans to launch,
including to changethe country’s electoral laws and education system. What
drastic changes in these sectors he proposes remain to be seen, but they
would obviously be entirely in keeping with the man’s overall political
philosophy. Little has been written about that philosophy, however, although
sections of the Indian media have been aggressively promoting Mr. Hazare as
the next MK Gandhi, and even as the ‘voice of India’. ***

*Probably the best way to understand AnnaHazare’s political vision is
through an examination of his experiments in seeking to transform own home
village of Ralegan Siddhi in Maharashtra. Some months ago, the noted
activist Mukul Sharma penned a detailed article in the popular web-magazine
kafila.org wherein he described in detail Mr. Hazare’s methods and approach
to village development. The article was based on Sharma’s years of field
research in Hazare’s ‘model village’. ***

Although Sharma concedes that under Mr. Hazare’s leadership the village has
witnessed considerable economic developmentand has done wonders in
protecting the environment, he notes that this was made possible through a
system of moral enforcement that is deeply authoritarian—some would even
call it dictatorial. Though Hazare was able to use his charismatic
authorityto bring about noticeable economic and environmental changes, his
methods and approach appear deeply problematic from the point of view of
democracy, liberty and equality. Sharma notes that Anna Hazare ‘holds
absolute power and command in his village’. And that power, he explains,
does not hesitate to employ ‘coercion and possibly suppression’, if moral
suasion does not suffice, in order to have its objectives fulfilled.

Hazare, Sharma writes, likens this power to a mother who is (supposedly)
entitled to slap her child, for his own good, when he makes a mistake, and
whose right to do so is unquestionable. Thus, force is seen as‘an integral
part of an environmentally sound and socially harmonious society.’ In
Ralegan Siddhi, Anna Hazare, so Sharma tells us, has resorted to such force
for what are widely perceived as noble purposes. Sharma speaks about
villagers consuming liquor being tied to a pole in front of the village
temple and flogged; of a Dalit denizen of the village being scolded by Anna
Hazareand apologizing to him for installing a dish antenna in his house and
watching cable television; and of others being forced to adopt family
planning. Yet, the principle itself is deeply problematic, for others can
easily use it as a cover-up for a fascist dictatorship that arrogates to
itself the right to choose what is good for others. For the historically
oppressed castes, Sharma notes, this forced acquiescence ‘can be highly
Brahminical and hegemonic’. Thus, Anna and his men drove—Sharma here speaks
of ‘constant hammering’—the Dalits of the village to give up
non-vegetarianism, which they castigated as ‘dirty’.

Sharma further elaborates on the political philosophy that characterises the
relationship between Anna Hazare, as the arch-typical village patriarch, and
the denizens of Ralegan Siddhi, his devoted followers. This relationship is
based, Sharma says, on a belief system where the latter ‘consider it their
natural duty to obey, and the exercising person thinks it a natural right to
rule.’ Needless to say, this conduces to hero-worship and blind following,
for whatever the leader says. Needless to say,a fascist would find this
logic eminently suitable.

Military metaphors are deployed to characterise this relationship between
what can be regarded as a benevolent dictator and the masses. Sharma quotes
a former village *sarpanch* as declaring: ‘Whatever Anna says, we do. The
whole village follows his words. Anna’s orders work like the army.’ Others
go so far as to elevate Anna Hazare to divine-status, whose every word is
thought to be absolute and binding, and in the face of which no dissent can
be conceived. Thus, Sharma quotes another denizen of Hazare’s village as
saying, ‘Anna-jee is like God. Whatever work he will assign, I will fulfill.
Anna-jee has become my nature, my habit. He is my heart.’”

Fascist paternalism is based on the notion of the infallible leader, who is
attributed with supposedly divine or infinitely superior wisdom and
foresight and is thought to know the best for his people. Accordingly, his
word is the unquestionable law. ‘Unity’ under the ‘benevolent, all-powerful’
leaderis constantly stressed, even through the use of force, if necessary.
Everyone must unite and commit themselves to implement the leader’s will,
for this is said to be for their own good. ‘Unity’, compelled and privileged
in this way, brooks no dissent. Uncanny shades of this are clearly evident
in Sharma’s description of the Ralegan Siddhi experiment, where he notes the
enormous stress on‘a common will, an all-pervasive concept of unity’, which
‘can be created through logic and/or coercion.’

A crucial political implication of this stress on village ‘unity’ under
Hazare’s leadership is the dismissal of the worth of electoral democracy,
through which competing interest groups and factions jostle with each other
for power. Thus, Sharma notes, in most of the villages under Anna
Hazare’s-inspiredprogramme, ‘elections are not welcomed.’ There have been no
elections to the *gram panchayat* in Ralegan Siddhi since the last 24 years.
No elections have been held in cooperative societies as well. Instead, the
representatives are nominated. Hazare defends this on the grounds that
elections ‘bring party politics and divide the people’. ‘Anna Hazare’,
Sharma notes,‘takes every possible opportunity to sharply question electoral
and party politics […]There is no space for formal structures of democracy
here. In the village, there is no poster or pamphlet allowed during the
state/national elections. No direct election campaigning can take place.’
Political parties are not allowedto set up their units in the village.

Given this obvious visceral hostility to party politics and electoral
democracy that are seen to undermine the so-called ‘unity’ of the
village,and the preference, instead, for nominating leaders through supposed
consensus, the implications for democracy, particularly as far as the
religious minorities and the historically oppressed castes are concerned, of
the campaign that Hazare has now threatened to unleash at the all-India
level for changes in the electoral laws urgently deserve detailed attention.


Themythical and romantic conception of the ‘unity’ of the village that
Hazare repeatedly invokes clearly ignores and probably deliberately seeks to
paper over internal caste-class contradictions. This has important
implications for the subaltern clases/castes, whose voices for justice and
equality can easily be critiqued as threatening to fracture this presumed
‘unity’. The logic of such ‘unity’ can easily be coopted to justify
Brahminism and continued ‘upper’ caste hegemony—which explains, to a large
extent, why Hindutva forces have begun backing Anna Hazare in a big way and,
on the other hand, why Dalit groups have clearly denounced his movement.

That the political philosophy of Anna Hazareclosely resonates with the
overall anti-democratic Hindutva ethos owes, in part, to the Brahminical
world-view that they share. Thus, Sharma notes the centrality of Brahminical
Hindu beliefs and institutions in Anna Hazare’s overall project.Hazare began
his village development work along with the rebuilding of the village
temple, which has been at the centre of his activities. The renovation of
the dilapidated village temple in his village ‘proved the best way’ for Anna
Hazare to achieve a‘sense of collective identity’, Sharma writes. This ‘gave
people an emotional unity, a sense of oneness, of an inner self with
God.’Decisions taken at the temple, where village meetings were held, were
‘believed to have the sanction of God’.

The image of Ram, key Brahminical icon, appears central to Anna Hazare’s
political vision, just as it is in the Hindutva imagination, indicating much
shared ground. ‘According to Hazare’, so Sharma writes,‘Lord Rama set an
ideal before every citizen of how to conduct everyday life by his own
example.’ Hazare also considers it ‘possible to reincarnate a familiar,
earthy God by a legitimate authority.’ Can such a God-like ruler at all
tolerate any sort of dissent? The punishment that Shambukh the Shudra saint
had to face in Ram Rajya for daring to dissent against Brahminism by
engaging in deep meditation or *tapas*and thereby transporting himself to *
devalok*, the realm of the gods, was to be beheaded by none other than Ram
himself, so Valmiki authoritatively tells us.

Anna Hazare’s authoritarian political vision thus has crucial implications
for the Dalits and other oppressed castes, who are increasingly seeking to
fashion electoral democracy into a potent tool to resist centuries’-old
Savarna Hindu hegemony and to win, in however limited and flawed manner it
may be, their rights. The enormous stress that is placed on ‘unity’ (whether
at the village or national level) in Anna Hazare’s discourse can easily be
deployed as a means to denounce and crush Dalit dissent or struggles against
caste Hindu domination—in the name of upholding ‘unity’. Anna Hazare himself
might not do this, but who is to stop others, inspired by his political
vision, from doing so?

The denigration of electoral democracy, and, in its place, the glorification
of the benevolent leader as divinely-inspired hero, and the imposition of
social ‘reform’, reflecting Brahminical norms, all of which Sharma observes
are central to Anna Hazare’spolitical project, have a crucial bearingon the
struggles of Dalits and other oppressed communities for social justice. It
is true that, as Sharma points out, in Ralegan Siddhi Anna Hazare has been
decrying untouchability and that ‘there have been several efforts on his
part to do away with the ban on Harijans’ entry into the temple and to allow
them to take water from the same well’ (We are not, however, told if these
efforts have succeeded).Hazare has also made it a point to involve the
Dalits of the village in committees formed to run the village affairs and to
take part in several village functions and festivals. In many economic
programmes, they have been chosen to be the first beneficiaries.

Yet, Sharma notes, despite Hazare’s efforts to soften the rigours of caste
in Ralegan Siddhi,its impoverished Dalits continue to remain heavily
marginalized. Sharma revealingly quotes a landless Dalit inhabitant of the
village as saying:

“We do not call Ralegan Siddhi a village. We call it a family in which
Anna-jee is the headman and we are the people who provide service to the
family. Here Hindus mean Marathas only. We Chamars and Mahars are never
called Hindus. How can we claim that everybody is equal here? People who
have land or jobs in the military have a different level of development.
There is a lot of difference between them and me.”

Sharma refers another Dalit from the village, who was injured in police
firing in the course of an agitation but who was taken care of by Anna ‘like
a mother.’ He and other members of his caste, Sharma says,‘are now free from
the clutches of moneylenders and he is a devotee of Anna.’ Yet, even this
man remarks:

‘We have food, clothing and house now. But that is all. There is nothing
more to it than that. Shoes are for feet and will always be placed there. We
will never be able to go ahead beyond this point. The village ethos is like
this.’

Yet another Dalit denizen of this supposed model village, a landless
labourer, relates:

‘I was poor before and am poor now. We were starving in the past and the
situation has not changed for me. I cannot even afford the education of my
children. I cannot even open my mouth. Whatever is said in this village, it
has to be followed.’

Anna’s reformism thus clearly has its limits as far as the Dalits are
concerned. Reforms to mitigate the brutality of life for Dalits in village
India may be acceptable to an extent, but not such as might threaten the
‘unity’ of the village or the hegemony of the dominant castes. This, it
would readily appear, is distinctly at odds with the Ambedkarite approach to
Dalit empowerment. Not surprisingly, therefore, Sharma finds that in Ralegan
Siddhi, the Dalits are ‘largely still tied to their traditionally given
status and occupation. Simultaneously, possession of land, utilisation of
water, labour relations and wages, and other forms of power exist and work
against the Dalits. Notions of Dalits being “dirty” still prevail. And the
village republic works in such a way that broader values and codes assigned
within it are never challenged.’

That this is the case in Hazare’s ‘model village’ is hardly surprising,
because, following Gandhi, Mr. Hazare himself seems to believe that the
caste system isin itself unproblematic. Thus, he declares:

“It was Mahatma Gandhi’s vision that every village should have one Chamar,
one Sunar, oneKumhar and so on. They should all do their work according to
their role and occupation, and in this way, a village will be
self-dependent. This is what we are practising in Ralegan Siddhi.’


*

Anna Hazare has, so the newspapers say, announced plans for a new mass
movement—this time for changes in the country’s education system and
electoral laws, although the media has not highlighted what exactly these
would entail. But, clearly, given the critical implications of his overall
world-view for electoral democracy, secularism, social justice and Dalit
empowerment, not everyone will be enthusiastic about the changes he dreams
of imposing on the rest of the country.

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