Desecrating Memory: The Paramakudi Police Shootings

*By V. Geetha *

26 September, 2011
*Countercurrents.org *

Several amongst us might have heard of the horrific shootings that took
place at Paramakudi and Madurai on September 11. Officially seven people
died when police opened fire on dalits who had gathered to pay their
respects to Immanuel Sekaran, a dalit leader who was brutally killed in 1957
in circumstances that pointed to the complicity of dominant caste thevars in
carrying out this murder. (The thevars are an important constituent of the
‘Mukkulathor' complex of castes that includes the kallars and the maravars.)
Subsequently, U Muthuramalinga Thevar, Forward Bloc leader was arrested in
connection with Sekaran's death – he stood trail and was released two years
later, because the case against him was not established and proved. (Thevar
was proud of his anti-communism and his Hinduism; he claimed, patriotism and
theistic belief constituted his very vision, they were the ‘eyes' through
which he saw the world.)

But before all that happened, a great many other deaths took place –
following Sekaran's death, widespread riots happened across the region (in
and around Mudukkalthur in Ramanathapuram district in the south east of
Tamil Nadu), and tragically both thevars and dalits were killed in large
numbers. Dalit homes were destroyed, their crops set on fire, their families
humiliated, entire villages burnt down, a church where dalits had taken
refuge was stormed by thevar mobs and two men killed. Several thevars were
killed too, as dalits retaliated, and many more died in police firing. These
events laid the basis for a volatile political atmosphere, which continues
to persist in the region, and one in which the thevars have lost no chance
to let the dalits know their ‘place'; dalits for their part have continued
to resist, often amidst tremendous odds.

Sekaran's murder happened on the heel of widespread competitive political
anger and discontent in the region, triggered it would seem, by a
by-election which saw a thevar candidate returned to the Tamil Nadu
Assembly. It was rumoured then, and continues to be repeated to this day
that Sekaran, along with members of the Nadar community were Congress
supporters, whereas Muthuramalinga Thevar whose candidate had won the
by-election was a Forward Bloc man, and opposed to the Congress in Tamil
Nadu, especially its leader, K Kamaraj. Political passions, we are made to
believe, ran high and peace meetings, held in anticipation of further and
greater violence in the wake of the elections were scuttled by the
recalcitrance of all parties concerned. In the event, widespread violence
was unleashed, and the rest is now history.

What is often conveniently forgotten in such reasoning is the persistence of
the most atrocious forms of untouchability in the region since the 1930s,
and which has not retreated with time and has in fact reinvented itself in
the face of dalit resistance. What is also forgotten is the social capital
that thevars have assiduously built up – through their presence in cinema,
in local administration, in political parties – and which is often used to
buttress their claims to social status, long denied to them in the order of
things in Tamil Nadu, and which they now covet and make their own through
the willful denigration and humiliation of dalits. Though, historically they
have, for several periods of time, themselves been outside the pale of the
caste order (the Southern kallars were counted amongst the criminal tribes
by the British), that memory is not significant in their recall of times
past. Their ideologues appear to want to do two things: view the
kallar-maravar-thevar complex as authentic Tamilians, committed to the land
and its faith; and see themselves as the ‘original' rulers of the land.
Arguing that their communities served as guards of the frontier to the
imperial Cholas, and of the seas for the Pandyas, these ideologues
constantly reaffirm a proud past of which they claim to be forbears. This
pride, in that perverse manner rendered routine by varnadharma, requires
them to treat dalits with contempt, in keeping with the logic of graded
inequality.

Dalits to this day continue to bear the brunt of that wretched pride.

II

Immanuel Sekaran has since been memorialized in song and legend and has
emerged as a pivotal memory to mobilize dalits into acts of resistance. Over
time, the occasion of his death has come to be celebrated as a solemn event
– and ironically as it were, it precedes the celebrations that happen in
October every year to honour the memory of Muthuramalinga Thevar and which
are usually observed in triumphant hauteur by the members of his community,
with able support from political leaders from across the ideological
spectrum.

Ever since the AIAMK under MGR and later on under the present Chief Minister
J Jayalalitha have chosen to patronize the Thevars (and the other sub-castes
that are linked to them, including the kallars and the maravars), community
leaders in the southern districts have reaffirmed their caste authority and
hegemony by taunting, insulting and inflicting violence on dalits who dare
to defy their diktats. Political support in fact has earned them an impunity
that is explained away in terms of their so-called ‘primeval' will to acts
of violent anger. It is not surprising that they are troubled by the memory
of Immanuel Sekaran, his martyrdom, since it has persisted as a defiant
symbol of dalit militancy.

In this latest instance of violence, which saw police shoot at a gathering
of dalits at a major junction in the town of Paramakudi , as they sought to
make their way to pay tribute to Sekaran's memory, it is evident that the
firing was entirely unprovoked. Several sets of fact-finding reports are
currently circulating in the Tamil public sphere, all of which make it clear
that there was nothing to suggest that the dalits who had come together to
keep vigil with Sekaran's memory were causing a law-and-order problem.
Chandra Bose, a senior dalit leader in the region who was present in
Paramakudi in fact attempted to counsel the police into not doing anything
rash, but all his imprecations were ignored, and simultaneously, as it were,
the police resorted to lathi charging *and *shooting – this fact has been
fudged by the police who claim that they shot at the gathering only when all
other attempts to quell the crowd had failed. Further teargas was not used,
and the mechanism for using it remained untouched.

The police also have argued that their officers shot in self-defence,
because the crowd of dalits had resorted to stone-throwing. Again, on the
evidence of Chandra Bose and others who have spoken to various fact-finding
teams, it appears that the stone-throwing started *after *the shooting and
not before.

Further, just at the very moment when the police opened fire in Paramkudi,
police in Madurai city shot at a modest gathering of less than 100 people.
In addition, it is claimed by dalit leaders in and around Paramkudi, two
young men were singled out by the police and either killed in custody or
shot point-blank.

The police story has other aspects to it which do not bear scrutiny: they
have argued that they were anticipating a major law-and-order crisis with
the impending arrival of John Pandian, a fiery dalit leader, known to
provoke his hearers into angry action, and so had to stop him from
proceeding towards Sekaran's memorial – hearing the news of him being
apprehended by the police, his supporters, we are told gave into rowdy
action, and the police had to resort to firing to protect themselves. A very
thin excuse, it would appear, since John Pandian had been granted police
permission to go to the memorial and it would not have taken much on their
part to render his visit ‘safe'.

So, why did the police shoot? There appears to be a malevolent ritualism to
the shootings, their timing (on the very day that Sekaran was killed), that
they were not provoked, that they were not preceded by warnings… and that
they happened in the same month as the original riots of 1957. Further, the
shootings happened in the wake of the death of Palanivel, a 16 year-old
dalit youth who was murdered because he had allegedly sought to defame
Muthuramalinga Thevar through a piece of wall writing that offended the
thevars. Those who spoke to his family members in his native village have
pointed out the very modest circumstances of his family, their fear of the
thevars, and the sheer incongruity of the young man attempting something
that for sure would have brought him to disaster and death. It has long been
observed that the dalits in villages close to Mudukkalathur are extremely
vulnerable to attack and they are least likely to indulge in lone acts of
opposition.

To return to the question of the shootings: Angry progressives have noted
that this is sheer police brutality; that there was not even the excuse of
caste tensions (a claim that is falsified by the role played by the
‘Aapanaattu Maravar Sangam'a group that is local to the region and avidly
involved in settling issues of dominance). Others have argued that the state
government has been taken aback by the unexpected show of solidarity cutting
across castes and faiths that has mobilized hundreds of young Tamils to
protest the death penalty awarded to Santhan, Murugan and Perarivalan,
accused in the murder of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and have
resorted to this vile measure to scuttle Tamil unity. What is of course not
addressed here is that this unity which is achieved in the heat of struggles
to do with pan-Tamil causes such as this one, or to do with language and
opposition to Brahmin-bania authority, comes regularly unstuck when it comes
to caste.

So, to understand the logic of the firings, we need to look elsewhere: at
the manner in which the police continue to be wooed and pampered by both the
DMK and the AIDMK; at the impunity they enjoy as custodians of ‘law and
order' which gives them power and legitimacy to consistently place
themselves outside civic and public scrutiny; at the ‘right' they have
arrogated to themselves to use firearms speedily and without thought; at the
unregenerate casteism that is present pervasively in the force; at the
cultural affirmation they have received through flattering and feared media
representations (a character in a Tamil soap, a ‘good' cop went by the name
of ‘Encounter Dorai'); at the histories of service of the police officers
who were involved in the firing, which reveal a thoroughly anti-people
attitude on their part, made evident on other occasions.

More particular is the clout enjoyed by the leaders of the thevar community
with the ruling party, and which has decided to use it to ‘settle' the
question of dalit defiance in the south eastern districts. It is extremely
telling that Jayalalitha was dismissive of the deaths that happened, did not
deign to refer to the desecration of a commemorative event observed in
honour of a dalit leader and that she would not allow even a glimmer of
doubt to be cast on the police.

We must also look at the history of governance under the AIADMK – especially
the last two times J Jayalalitha was in office. She is unabashedly elitist,
an aspect of her personality that is fudged because she plays the benevolent
‘mother' to her large group of non-Brahmin and dalit supporters, and happily
and successfully infantilises their politics. She has made no secret of the
support she has consistently extended to Narendra Modi. She has shown
herself to be easily instrumental and cynical in the manner she treats
public causes, supporting them now, dismissive of them another time, all
with an eye to immediate political gain. Of course, many of these ways of
being would apply to the political class as a whole, including her arch-foe,
the DMK, but there is a shade of political evil that she covets, which has
to do with her ability to shut up people. In this latest instance, not one
of the fact-finding reports, even when released to well organized press
meets have found their way to the dailies. (The only report that gained some
media attention was the one given out by the Dalit Panthers, but this was
only because the press conference was addressed by Ram Vilas Paswan, and it
seemed alright to let him speak.) The Tamil weeklies which gloat over every
minor political event until they can render it sensational have shut up
after making initial noises about the Paramkudi firings.

It is this ability to reach out to the undemocratic core that lies at the
heart of every violently beating democratic heart that renders Jayalalitha a
politician that is more than ordinarily corrupt and cynical. It is as if she
allows many of us to be unabashed about our founded and cruel disinterest in
the politics of caste and caste based injustice. Not only the public, but
this time around, the district administration too has been drawn into this
evil politics of silence and denial.

Sadly, the vibrant Tamil nationalist public voices that have created a new
civic space around the issue of protesting the death penalty are all too
eager to be conspiratorial about the Paramakudi events, and not entirely
willing to consider the caste question as it emerges and re-emerges in all
that we do, or don't do. The Dalit Panthers, the CPI (M) and the CPI have,
to an extent, insisted on bringing the policemen to book, but even before
the dead were cold in their grave, the two communist parties were engaged in
parleys with the AIADMK on the matter of local elections. It is another
matter that they, a least the CPI (M) finally have decided to go it alone in
the local polls, but tragically this is not on account of Paramakudi.
*V. Geetha* is a writer, translator, social historian and activist. She has
been active in the Indian women’s movement since 1988, and has written
widely, both in Tamil and English, on gender, popular culture, caste, and
politics of Tamil Nadu.
*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
 It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*

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