*We are all Mukto-mona*

*The Challenge of Unreason in South Asia*

*-subhash gatade*



 ‘Our aim is to build a society which will not be bound by the dictates of
arbitrary authority, comfortable superstition, stifling tradition, or
suffocating orthodoxy but would rather be based on reason, compassion,
humanity, equality and science’.

- Avijit Roy



"Dr Dabholkar who was fighting against superstition was assasinated because
he was a rationalist. All such people who have embarked upon a path of
reason and rationalism, propagated these ideas, had to make tremendous
sacrifices. Dr Dabholkar was not the first and would not be the last person
who sacrificed himself on the altar of rationalism. This unending struggle
between rationalism and irrationalism is going on since ages and it is for
you to decide whether it needs change or not."

- Comrade Pansare



Words, ideas scare fundoos rather fundamentalists of every kind, every
colour and every stripe.

The mere possibility that a free mind can question, challenge and
ultimately upturn the 'ultimate truth’ the faithful  have received through
their 'holy books' rather unnerves them and they react in the only way they
are familiar with. Resort to machetes to take on ideas or use meat cleavers
to deal with unchained minds, quoting sanction from the same 'books of
wisdom'.

Close on the heels of one such silencing of voices of reason, sanity,
justice, progress on the streets of Kolhapur (India) - assassination of 82
year old Communist leader Com Govind Pansare by Hindutva zealots - has come
the news about similar killing of 42 year old Avijit Roy, by machete
wielding Islamist militants on the streets of Dhaka (Bangladesh), when the
prominent Bangladeshi-American blogger, a author, an advocate of free
expression, scientific ideas and secularism, was coming out of the Ekushe
book fair along with his wife Rafida Ahmed Bonna. She was also badly
wounded in her attempt to shield Avijit from attackers and is now admitted
to ICU.

Apparently there was nothing common between Comrade Pansare and Avijit,
while Com Pansare had been active with the Communist movement since his
young days in various capacities and wrote in Marathi lambasting the
Communal and casteist forces and was equally at ease in leading people's
movement against toll tax and participating vigorously in anti-superstition
campaigns, whereas Avijit happened to be a software engineer by profession,
who had started the  bilingual website 'Mukto mona' (Free Mind) in 2000
which was very popular among free-thinkers, rationalists, skeptics and
humanists and was also in the forefront of coordinating international
protests against government censorship and imprisonment of bloggers back
home.

It is a different matter that both shared equal antipathy towards religious
extremism of every kind and had taken upon themselves the task of
combatting it in every possible way at tremendous risk to their own selves.
Threats were part of their lives, not some time ago one such zealot had
even threatened Com Pansare with a warning that '*Tumcha Dabholkar karu' *(
You will face consequences like Dabholkar) in a unsigned letter, reminding
him of the assassination of a great fighter for rationalism in July 2013
and Avijit also continued to face similar threats regularly through emails
and on facebook. It is now history none of them decided to tone down their
attacks against obscurantism, closing of minds and what Avijit use to say
'virus of faith'.

It is worth emphasising that both of them also shared passion for words.

Com Pansare wielded pen like a sword and wrote articles, booklets, books in
Marathi to sensitise people around and awaken them from deep slumber. Many
of his books have gone into multiple editions but his most popular
monograph is '*Shivaji Kon Hota* ?' (Who was Shivaji) - which has sold more
than one lakh copies and has been translated in few other languages as
well. In this booklet, Com Pansare had tried to counter the appropriation
of medieval era King Shivaji's by Hindutva Supremacist forces who projected
his image of a 'Hindu King' opposed to Muslims. Pansare with painstaking
research threw light on his policies and administration and provided
documentary proof that he had many Muslims in top positions of his army and
one of his close comrade in his escape from Aurangjeb's custody was Madari
Mehtar and thus tried to present a very balanced picture of his
contributions. In an ambience dominated by the likes of RSS and Shiv Sena,
his little monograph captured imagination of the ordinary people and acted
as a 'weapon' in the hands of individuals, formations who were fighting for
an inclusive polity. Challenging communal elements from both the
communities he emphasised that it is high time that people recognise their
composite heritage and build solidarities cutting across caste, communities.

At one place in the book he writes :

Today Muslims are being attacked by raising Shivaji's name and similarly
Dalits are also under attack by those who hail Shivaji's name ... All those
people who oppose reservation also hail Shivaji's name but forget that
Shivaji even adopted a policy of giving jobs to Dalits . One discovers
today that riots are taking place between Hindus and Muslims hailing
Shivaji's name. These fanatics of religions should be told that Shivaji was
never a fanatic. He was a believer but he did not hate Muslims, in fact,
had many Muslims in top positions in his army

Avijit was a also a prolific writer and had penned down a dozen books,
mostly about science, philosophy and materialism. His last books *Obisshahser
Dorshon* (The Philosophy of Disbelief) and *Biswasher Virus* (The Virus of
Faith), were well received around the world. In the Virus of Faith his main
argument is that "faith-based terrorism will wreak havoc on society in
epidemic proportions". In his last article in Free Enquiry he said

"To me, religious extremism is like a highly contagious virus. My own
recent experiences in this regard verify the horrific reality that such
religious extremism is a virus of faith.".

While they were rather alone when their assasins came but thousands of
people from all walks of life had gathered to pay their last respects to
them to give them a final farewell. While a sea of humanity had gathered in
Kolhapur to see Com Pansare's last remains and giving him final 'Red
Salute' Avijit's final journey was equally moving. The coffin of Avijit was
placed on a platform erected at the base of Dhaka University’s Aparajeyo
Bangla, the symbolic architecture built in memory of the Bangladesh Freedom
Fighters of 1971. Keeping in with his wish, Avijit’s body was handed over
to Dhaka Medical College Hospital for medical research.

2.

The symbolism at the time of bidding a final farewell to Avijit was not
lost on people.

It just reminded that it is rather a continuation of the struggle started
during the 1971 liberation war between two ideas of Bangladesh's ( then
East Pakistan) future - a struggle between religion as basis of nationhood
as opposed to secularism and democracy as the road ahead for its future. It
is now history how the forces mainly belonging to Jamaat-e-Islami, who
yearned to hinge then East Pakistan's destiny to Pakistan had collaborated
with the Pakistani army and had engaged in untold crimes against humanity.
While they lost the battle then but they never say quits and the battle
continues in very many ways still.

Merely two years back Bangladesh witnessed what is popularly known as
'Shahbagh Movement' - demanding severe punishment to the war criminals - a
mass upsurge which from its inception had borne the seal of secularism and
tolerance, and was opposed to fundamentalist politics. The Islamists who
had been put on the defensive then had tried to turn the tables on the
seculars by eliminating another blogger Ahmad Rajib Haider, claiming that
he was an atheist. In fact, Rajib Haider who was part of the bloggers group
which had spearheaded this movement. A month before the attack on Haider,
blogger Asif Mohiuddin was also attacked outside his house by four youths
from the Ansarullah Bengali Team. Asif survived the attack. Another blogger
& online activist named Sunnyur Rahman, popularly known as 'Nastik Nobi'
(Atheist Prophet) in the blog community, was also stabbed on 7 March 2013.

Anyone who has been closely following developments in Bangladesh knows that
these are no stray examples. According to newspaper reports Islamists were
found to be responsible for the killing of at least 15 people, including
progressive teachers and bloggers, committed in the last decade. But
justice seems much too far. (
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2015/mar/01/justice-eludes-victims-militant-attacks
)

Incidentally attack on Avijit had close resemblance to attack on the
legendary Bangla writer Humayun Azad who was similarly attacked just
outside the Ekushe book fair exactly 11 years ago by Islamist militants.
(27 th Feb 2004) He was fatally wounded in the attack but could be. He
later died in Germany under mysterious circumstances (August 2004) where he
had gone to do research on Heinrich Heine, a great German poet of 19 th
century.

As an aside it need be mentioned that Azad, who had penned down seventy
books, had experimented in several genres of writing, He was simultaneously
a poet, a novelist, a critic, a linguist, a political analyst, an essayist,
and also an author of quite a few books for children. His book *Naari *(woman)
is considered the 'first comprehensive feminist book in Bengali' which was
critical of  the patriarchal and male-chauvinistic attitude of religion
towards women, created such a furore that it was banned, which had to be
ultimately lifted following a legal battle that Azad won in the Courts.

Azad had been fearing for his life ever since excerpts of his novel, *Pak
Sar Jamin Sad Bad* (Pakistan's national anthem; Blessed be the Sacred Land)
was first published in *The Daily Ittefaq*'s Eid supplement in 2003. In
this particular novel he had tried to expose the politics and ideology of
Islamic fundamentalists of Bangladesh. Regular contributor to *Mukto mona*
Humayun Azad had even written to the website regarding the threats he had
been receiving from Islamists.

The Ittefaq published a novel by me named *Pak Sar Jamin Saad Baad *in its
Eid issue in December 3. It deals with the condition of Bangladesh for the
last two years. Now the (religious) fundamentalists are bringing out
regular processions against me, demanding exemplary punishment.

Humayun Azad, Salman Tasser, Ahmad Rajib Haider, Dr Dabholkar, Com Pansare
and now Avijit Roy.

Thanks to religious fervour and growth of extremism of every kind in this
part of South Asia, where forces of darkness seem to be on the ascendance,
it may just create a feeling that we have reached a dead end as we are
losing people one by one who were 'a beacon of hope and light in these
dreadful times'. Should we then say that whatever 'little hope we saw in
the horizon will it wither away?’

We have no other option than to remain eternal optimist with a sincere hope
that their 'mettle will be passed onto new generation.'

Perhaps it would be opportune here to end this brief note with 'words of
bereavement from Mukto-mona's advisory board' (possibly drafted by Avijit
only) on the demise of Prof Azad himself. It had silently resolved : Our
passionate fight against bigotry, religious fanaticism and communalism will
continue and we shall overcome the obstacle.'

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