http://www.countercurrents.org/ranjan290216.htm


*Bahujan Discourse Puts JNU In The Crosshairs*

*By Pramod Ranjan*

29 February, 2016
*Forwardpress.in*
<https://www.forwardpress.in/2016/02/bahujan-discourse-puts-jnu-in-the-crosshairs/>

*I*t is essential to find out how this university, created in 1966 by a
special Act of Parliament, became a leftist bastion. The answer lies in its
unique reservation system. In this university, from the very outset,
aspirants from backward districts, women and other weaker sections were
given preference in enrolment. Kashmiri migrants and wards and widows of
defence personnel killed in action also get preference (see box). The
nature of the questions in the admission tests of the university is such
that only the ability to answer multiple-choice questions related to one’s
discipline is not enough to see one through. Only those students who have,
apart from command over their own subject, analytical skills and reasoning
power get admission here. The undergraduate courses of foreign languages
are an exception in this regard. But even here, once they have a bachelor’s
degree, they can join an MA or an MPhil course only if they have the
aforementioned skills. Thus, for years, JNU has been home to the finest and
most fertile minds from economically and socially deprived sections of
society. And when they analyze the hows and whys of their socio-economic
background, they get drawn to Marxism.

This fully residential university, spread over 1000 acres and nestled in
the lush green Aravalli Range, never attracted the elite class. The hostels
serve plain food and residents drink from jugs – instead of glasses.
Estimates suggest that at least 70 per cent students of the university come
from either poor or lower-middle-class families. Though the Left always
dominated the students’ politics in the university, till 2006, students
from economically weak but socially higher classes ruled the roost here.
That was DSCN6675because they outnumbered all other groups. The number of
Dalit and Tribal students was capped by the 22.5 per cent reservation for
them, although OBC students have been given preference in enrolments since
1995, the credit for which goes to the agitation launched by the renowned
students’ leader Chandrashekhar (1964-1997) (Samajik Kranti Ke Sutradhar,
Ashok Kumar Sinha, Shabda Prakashan, Patna, 2012).

Even then, the percentage of students from socially deprived communities,
including OBCs, in the university never exceeded 28-29 per cent. In 2006,
the government announced reservations for OBCs in institutions of higher
learning and that drew these classes towards JNU. The fact that all
students of the university get scholarships was an added attraction. As
Abhay Kumar pointed out in his article “Assertion of Dalitbahujan discourse
in JNU”, published in the August 2015 issue of FORWARD Press, “According to
the Annual Report 2013-14, out of the 7,677 JNU students, there were 3,648
Dalitbahujan students (1,058 SCs + 632 STs + 1948 OBCs). Simply put, the
percentage of non-upper-caste students today is roughly around 50 per cent.
If one includes other deprived social groups, minorities and women, the
upper castes and classes are a minuscule minority. As a result, during the
last three years (from 2012-14), JNUSU presidents have been from the
marginalized sections of society – V. Lenin Kumar (2012, SFI-JNU or DSF),
an OBC from Tamil Nadu; Akbar Chawdhary (2013, AISA), a Muslim from UP; and
Ashutosh Kumar (2014, AISA), a Yadav from Bihar.”

In 2012, OBC students were elected to all the four posts of JNUSU (See “Jai
Joti, Jai Bheem, Jai JNU”, FORWARD Press, October 2012). The winners in the
2015 students’ union elections also reflect the same trend: President
Kanhaiya Kumar, AISF (Bhumihar, Hindu upper caste); Vice-President Shehla
Rashid, AISA (Muslim); General Secretary Rama Naga, AISA (Dalit); and Joint
Secretary Saurabh Kumar, ABVP (OBC). It may be mentioned here that it was
after a gap of 14 years that an ABVP candidate emerged victorious in the
JNUSU elections. But his victory had a lot to do with his OBC roots as
well. As the videos of his speech reveal, the current students’ union
president Kanhaiya Kumar, who has been arrested on charges of sedition, is
not only a brilliant speaker but also his speeches are a beautiful amalgam
of Phule-Ambedkarism and Marxism. JNU students say that his powerful
oratory was a major contributor to his victory in the elections.

After the enrolments last year, the percentage of students in JNU from SC,
ST and OBC has gone up to 55. A large number of Muslims are enrolled in
Arabic, Persian and other language courses in JNU. Data on them is not
available. But if, along with them, the number of Ashraf Muslims and other
minorities is added, it can be safely presumed that at least 70 per cent of
the students in the university are non-Dwij. Note that the number of OBC
students in JNU has gone from 288 in 2006 to 2434 in 2015, ie a tenfold
increase in nine years. The number of women students has also gone up
substantially (see chart).

NEW SLOGANS, NEW GRAFFITI, NEW DISCOURSES

This change in the social texture of the students not only changed the
composition of the students’ union but also the dominant discourse on the
campus. Though leading students’ organizations continued to hold the flag
of Marxism aloft, their slogans started changing. The graffiti started
changing. Instead of Marx, Lenin and Mao, the slogans increasingly started
quoting Birsa, Phule and Ambedkar. Portraits of Bahujan heroes who took on
Manuvad and casteism started adorning the walls – so much so that it became
impossible for any students’ organization to survive on the JNU campus
without sporting these symbols. And the change was not limited to slogans
and graffiti; the topics of research also underwent a sea change. The
students from the deprived sections brought with them life experiences and
thinking processes that were, hitherto, alien to the Indian academic world.
They gave a new momentum, a new energy to research in the humanities. The
“Left” had taken a new turn – a turn that took it away from the discourses
that interested the upper classes. The radical Left has always been present
here. Discussions on Naxalism, Maoism and freedom to Kashmir have been
fairly common. The number of big and small functions and meetings on these
and related issues to date must easily be in the thousands.

The Mahishasur and food-freedom movements were the manifestations of the
new discourses that were replacing the old ones here. They drew nationwide
attention. The traditional Left either looked the other way or made it
clear that it would stand by the freedom of expression and would not oppose
these voices coming from the deprived sections. This was, in a sense, the
coming-together of Left and Bahujan ideologies or, at the very least, the
two camps agreeing on a common minimum programme.

*SANGH ON THE BACKFOOT*

The RSS calls itself a cultural organization and is perpetually busy in
protecting and preserving the brahmanical culture. The young Bahujan
intellectuals were dealing blow after fatal blow to the brahmanical
culture, and this won them the approval of the Left in JNU. The
amalgamation of the thoughts of Phule, Ambedkar, Periyar and Narayan Guru
on the one hand and Marx, Lenin and Mao on the other threw up compelling
arguments and incontrovertible facts. This, in turn, started influencing
the students. A flummoxed Sangh did not know how to counter this assault.
The deprived sections posed a stiff challenge – the stiffest in independent
India – to the brahmanical culture, which the Sangh was trying to protect
in the name of the Hindu religion, and behind it was the intellectual
prowess of the JNU Bahujan research scholars. They were now capable of
presenting their views in keeping with the highest academic standards.

The Sangh, so far, has been using issues like cow slaughter to further its
ends. It understands quite well the meaning of the proverb “Give a dog a
bad name and hang him”. Like in Europe in the Middle Ages, and in some
Middle East countries today, the weapon of blasphemy has been used to
silence the opposition. Whosoever did or said anything that was unpalatable
to the Sangh was promptly accused of blasphemy and declared anti-religion
and an atheist. This won the Sangh the support of the masses. But this
time, things did not go the Sangh’s way. From within the Hindu religion –
which was the mainstay of Sangh’s politics – rose dissenting voices that
proclaimed that they would not worship the goddess who massacred Tribals,
Backwards and Dalits. The proponents of the Mahishashur movement in JNU
were saying, “You may have presented our heroes as villains in your
scriptures but we will dig them out from non-brahmanical texts and
re-anoint them. The Asur tribe of Jharkhand – which, along with the
Santhals, Bhils, Gonds, etc, has been declared a primitive tribe by the
Government of India – has been worshipping Mahishasur as its ancestor for
thousands of years. There are innumerable totems associated with the Asur
tradition in other Dalitbahujan castes. Celebrating Mahishasur’s murder was
improper. This country has been worshipping women for thousands of years –
primarily due to the influence of the Tribal and Bahujan traditions – but
Brahminism had distorted the tradition of worshipping women and portrayed
them as violent and anti-women. The celebrations of Durga Puja in its
present form began just 260 years ago, when after the Battle of Plassey in
1757, Nawab Krishnadev of Calcutta organized the first Durga Puja in honour
of Lord Clive. Thus, this festival is not only very new but it is also
anti-Muslim and pro-imperialism by implication.”

These young intellectuals thus gave an entirely new meaning to Durga Puja,
a festival that was used by the Sangh to brand the original inhabitants of
India as demons and villains. Similarly, beef and pork, which were used to
engineer many a communal riot, were made a food-freedom issue by the Hindu
and Muslim students of JNU. Their arguments regarding pork and beef
festivals started reaching the wider society through the media. They told
the middle-class Hindus and Muslims, who were unaware of the ground
reality: “Beef and pork had always been the staple food of the Hindu Dalits
and were the biggest source of protein for the poorer sections of society.
Beef and pork are widely consumed in most parts of the northeast. Since
students from all over the country studied in JNU, food-related taboos put
them under psychological pressure to hide their food preferences.”

The Sangh, this time around, chose sedition instead of blasphemy as the
ammunition for its assault. It replaced God with the nation and declared
sinful any attempt to question what the nation does or to argue about it.
And punishing the sinner, of course, was the sacred duty of every citizen.
The BJP, which had demanded that temples of Saraswati be established in all
educational institutions, is now ruling the country. On 18 February, the
Government of India, referring to “seditious activities” on the JNU campus,
issued an order for the national flag to be hoisted on a 207-foot high pole
in every university, beginning with JNU. Needless to say, if this goes
ahead unopposed, it would be difficult to oppose the installation of an
idol of Bharat Mata near the flag. In the post-Independence brahmanical
myths, the tiger-riding Durga and the tiger-riding Bharat Mata are all but
the same. These symbols have deep significance as far as cultural
domination is concerned. We should not forget that cultural domination is
the foundation of economic, social and political domination. Hoisting the
national flag is a matter of pride for all Indians but the circumstances in
which the government has issued this order and its motive deserve
condemnation.

*BAHUJAN MOVEMENTS AT JNU*

If we closely study the recent string of incidents in JNU while keeping
their background in mind, we will realize that the Bahujan-Left unity had
set alarm bells ringing in the RSS camp. To grasp this better, we will have
to revisit the first Mahishasur Martyrdom Day, organized by the All India
Backward Students’ Forum (AIBSF) in JNU in October 2011 and the Food
Freedom movement initiated by the New Materialists in September 2012. As
evident from their names, the All India Backward Students’ Forum, which
observed the Mahishasur Martyrdom Day, is officially an organization of OBC
students and the New Materialists, which made food freedom an issue, is
also related to the now-forgotten, philosophical Lokayat tradition of the
Bahujans. The New Materialists was led by OBC and Dalit students who were
advocates of scientific materialism.

Some had begun referring to the Food Freedom movement as the Beef-Pork
Festival. The Delhi High Court banned the holding of the event. The
Rashtriya Gorakshini Sena took the organizers to court and activists of the
VHP and other outfits of the Sangh Parivar called on the then
vice-chancellor and demanded tough action against them. After this meeting,
the VC suspended the leader of the New Materialists, an OBC, and issued
show-cause notices to three others (See “JNU bows before Hindutvavadis”,
FORWARD Press, October 2012)

The organizers had planned to serve beef and pork, along with dishes from
different states, to interested students in an open ground on the campus. A
similar event was earlier held in the Osmania University in Hyderabad and
both the groups of student organizers had the ideological backing of Prof
Kancha Iliah, who is greatly respected by Bahujan students.

The reactions of RSS and its auxiliary organizations to Mahishasur and Food
Freedom movements, as published in different newspapers and magazines in
2011-12, indicate that initially, these organizations could not comprehend
what exactly was happening.

The movement for food freedom lost steam after the Delhi High Court order
but the Mahishasur Day celebrations became an annual affair after 2011. It
also spread to other parts of the country. In 2013, it was celebrated at
around 100 places including cities, towns and university campuses. By 2015,
this number had crossed the 350 mark. In May 2014, the BJP, the political
wing of the RSS, formed its government at the Centre. The Sangh identified
FORWARD Press as being responsible for giving momentum to Mahishasur Day
celebrations and decided to target the magazine. In October 2015, some
people associated with Hindutva organizations lodged a complaint against
the magazine with the police. Reports published in various newspapers
quoted police sources to say that the raid on the magazine’s office was
conducted at the directive of the union home ministry. In this period,
while The Hindu, Indian Express, Deccan Herald, Jansatta, etc presented all
the related facts and gave due prominence to the explanation by FORWARD
Press that it had nothing to do with the holding of the event in JNU, the
RSS’ Panchjanya and Organizer and rightist newspapers such as The Pioneer
and Dainik Jagran continued spreading disinformation about FORWARD Press.

*PANCHJANYA 2015*

The real assault on Bahujan discourses followed. In its issue dated 8
November 2015, Panchjanya, the Hindi organ of the Sangh, carried a
sensational and provocative cover story titled “JNU: Darar ka gadh” (JNU:
Den of Divisiveness). That is not all. The weekly took pains to inform
media organizations about the cover story and requested them to take
notice. In the first week of November 2015, this cover story of Panchjanya
grabbed the headlines on TV channels. The Panchjanya story revealed, for
the first time, that the real target of the Sangh was the growing
Left-Bahujan proximity in JNU.

Later, in this article, we will examine the contents of the Panchjanya
cover story and compare them with the intelligence report that was sent to
the Home Ministry after the so-called seditious slogans were raised on the
campus. This will make it clear that the Sangh and the police were speaking
in the same language and that the “sedition” charge was a part of the
Sangh’s conspiracy. The Sangh wanted to use it as an excuse to crush
Bahujan discourses.

*PANCHJANYA AND GOVERNMENT SPIES*

As we had hinted at the beginning of this article, the recent events in JNU
were not triggered by the so-called anti-national slogans alone. Their real
objective was to target Muslims and give a bad name to those Hindu Bahujans
who are resisting the brahmanical culture.

First, let us see what Panchjanya said in its cover story JNU: Darar Ka
Gadh in the issue dated 8 November 2015:

“JNU is the only institution where talking of nationalism is a sin. It is
called a bastion of the leftists. Distorting Indian culture and presenting
it in conjunction with wrong facts is fairly common here. For instance,
when the entire country worships Ma Durga, neo-leftist students and
professors celebrate Mahishasur Day there. They demand that the army should
be withdrawn from the terrorism-infested Kashmir … Those who celebrate
Mahishasur Day say that they are backward and deprived and representatives
of forest dwellers and claim that Mahishasur was the hero-god of the
backwards, the deprived and the forest-dwellers.”

Referring to the changing nature of JNU, Panchjanya says, “Till some time
ago, the leftists used a different set of policies and tools to break the
nation and society. With time, their strategy has changed. They have
changed their faces; they have changed the arena of their ideological
battle. Now, they do not parrot the formulations of Lenin. Now they talk of
secularism, human rights and rights of minorities, women and the deprived
sections of society to implement their agenda. The lush crops grown on this
poison can be seen everywhere in the university. The walls on JNU campus
are full of slogans, pamphlets and posters. Most of these slogans and
posters are aimed at fracturing Indian culture, civilization and society
and the country itself.” Panchjanya blames the discourses initiated by the
FORWARD Press for the changes in the slogans, posters, etc and condemns the
magazine under the subhead “Forward Press ka vishwavidhyalaya connection”.
It says, “They are using a new word, Bahujan, to describe deprived sections
and forest dwellers together…a couple of years back, at a programme in JNU,
Kancha Iliah, who was an assistant professor in Osmania University and
Professors A.K. Ramakrishnan and S.N. Malakar of the University, in their
speeches, spewed venom against the upper-caste Hindus.” Besides Panchjanya
and Organizer, the organs of the RSS, newspapers like The Pioneer and
Dainik Jagran and rightist websites like Niti Central, Central Right India
and India Facts are also quite upset with the concept of “Bahujan”. Among
other things, this concept is being opposed because SC, ST and OBC are
Constitutional terms for these classes. They say that the floating of the
concept of Bahujan – which includes all people of these classes as well as
those Dwijs who are opposed to the caste system – is a foreign conspiracy
against the Hindus. The leftist stream of JNU is turning towards this
concept of “Bahujan”.

It was for this reason that Panchjanya, in its cover story, described JNU
as an institution which is “breaking the nation”, where “innocent Hindu
youth are lured after being fed wrong facts about the Varna system, which
is an integral part of Hindu society” and where “venom is spewed against
the Savarnas” and impliedly urged the Savarnas and its government to launch
a campaign against the institution. It is not without reason that a portion
of this story has been carried in the name of Ravindra Kumar Baseda, a
former student of JNU. Baseda was one of the people who had lodged the
complaint with the police against the observance of Mahishasur Day in JNU
in 2014. In the complaint, it was stated that the observance of this day
would “exacerbate tensions between the Brahmins and the OBCs”.

A box accompanying the story, which had an aggressive layout, titled “JNU
Leela”, listed the “nefarious activities” on JNU campus.

*JNU LEELA*

>> The valiant soldiers who fought in the Kargil battle were humiliated in
a mushaira in the university and India-bashing was supported.

>> The killing of 72 jawans by the Naxals in Bastar in 2010 was celebrated.

>> In the name of food freedom, a row was kicked up over serving beef.

>> Slogans demanding freedom for J&K and northeastern states were openly
raised

>> The hanging of Afzal Guru was mourned and a protest march taken out.

>> With the support of Forward Press, programmes were organized to insult
Hindu gods and to execute the conspiracy of the missionaries to break
society.

As we shall see ahead, the charges levelled by Panchjanya in November 2015,
surprisingly, became part of an intelligence report filed in February 2016.
The Panchjanya article and the report of the intelligence department have
uncanny similarities. Their tone is the same, basic content is the same,
charges are the same and both smack of a conspiracy to associate students’
organizations of Bahujan ideology with extremist leftist organizations. The
only difference is that of language. While the language of Panchjanya has a
literary touch, that of the intelligence report is dry government-speak.

*DELHI POLICE SITUATION REPORT*

On 9 February 2016, after the so-called seditious sloganeering in JNU, the
Delhi Police, on the basis of the report of its intelligence wing,
submitted a report to the Government of India. This report was leaked to
the media by “sources in the Home Ministry” on the basis of which,
Firstpost, The Hindu, The Indian Express, The Times of India, The Telegraph
and other newspapers and TV channels ran stories on the “celebration of
Mahishasur Day in JNU during Navratri” and on the “demand to serve beef in
JNU mess”. Barring BJP-supporter Zee News and few other channels and
newspapers, most of the media outlets took a dig at the government for
treating these events as “seditious”. But even they were unaware of the
facts and could not grasp the issue in its entirety.

Let us see what this four-page report of the intelligence wing of the Delhi
police titled “Situation report regarding the incident at Jawahar Lal Nehru
University on 09.02.16” says. The first two pages of the report are devoted
to the incident of 9 February. The two remaining pages are about the
“earlier incidents” in JNU, including “celebrations of Mahishasur Day
during Navratri in 2014” and the “demand that beef be served in the hostel
mess”. The question that arises is: Why did the police report talk in
detail about the older incidents, which had nothing whatsoever to do with
the so-called seditious sloganeering? And why was this report made
available to media in haste? And how is it that two days before the release
of the report to the media, on 15 February, newspapers carried a statement
of BJP MP Yogi Adityanath in which he branded “observance of Mahishasur
Day” and “holding beef party” as acts of sedition and demanded that JNU be
shut down.

See the first two pages of the report, which talks about the “sedition”.
The report, which was sent to the Union Home Ministry, says: “It is
important to mention here that Y&S section of Special Branch always keeps
an eye on the activities of students, student organizations, youths and
people who have a stake at JNU.”

The report says, “[a]round 5 pm, DSU students led by their president Umar
Khalid, convenor, DSU began to gather near Sabarmati Dhaba. Around 80/100
DSU and Left students were present at the venue.” It also claims that “The
Left-supported student groups were shouting ‘Bharat ki Barbadi tak jang
rahegi jang rahegi’, ‘Kashmir ki Ajadi tak Jang Rahegi, Jung rahegi’,
‘India Go Back’ ‘Pakistan Zindabad’, ‘Kitne Afzal maroge, ghar ghar se
Afzal niklega’.

“In the meantime 30/40 activists from ABVP reached there under the
leadership of Sh. Sourav Kumar Sharma, Joint Secretary, JNUSU. They were
shouting slogans against DSU and shouting Bharat Mata Ki Jai.” Note that
while the references to leaders of other organizations don’t have the
respectful “Shri”, it has been used with the name of Saurabh Kumar Sharma,
president of the RSS’ student wing ABVP.”

The report adds, “At 7:30pm the activists of DSU & ABVP started their march
from Sabarmati Dhaba to Ganga Dhaba. They raised slogans against each
other. At 8:30 PM the activists of DSU & ABVP dispersed from there
peacefully.” Demonstrations and sloganeering demanding the right to
self-determination for the people of Kashmir are common on JNU campus and
after such events, the students invariably disperse peacefully. Then, why
did the sleuths take this particular event so seriously?

The report says, “At present, ABVP [is] alleging that the activists of DSU
and other left supporting student organizations are indulged in
anti-national activities. They want action against such students who are
into such anti national activities.”

This is broadly the content of the first two pages of the report.

*SANGH’S FINGERPRINTS ON POLICE REPORT*

The next two pages have been appended to the report without any apparent
reason. It says, “On 06.10.2015, ACP, Y&S/SB visited JNU and had a meeting
with the then VC of JNU . During this meeting discussions were held on
various subjects including CCTV surveillance in JNU campus to avoid any
untoward incident. It was discussed that often some student groups raise
slogans and participate in protests inside JNU campus. Many a time such
slogans/protests have anti-national colour. It is reflected through
objectionable posters which are prepared mostly through computers and
affixed at hostel/JNU campus. Sometimes such posters are found to be
hurting patriotic/religious feelings of the society. It was also discussed
that the objectionable/anti-national activities of members of Democratic
Students’ Union (DSU) have to be curbed by JNU authorities with the help of
police.”

What is significant is that an ACP of the Special Branch met the JNU
vice-chancellor on 6 October 2015. The Mahishasur Martyrdom Day is observed
on Sharad Purnima, which fell on 26 October last year. It is clear that the
proposal to install CCTV cameras on the university premises was made in
view of this event. Note how “patriotic/religious feelings” and
“objectionable/anti-national” have been used as synonyms. Even if we do not
dwell on whether the sentiments of only the protectors of brahmanical
culture are “hurt” or whether anything which they dislike becomes
“objectionable”, the question that remains is whether observance of
Mahishasur Day by the deprived sections is “sedition”. It is noteworthy
that later, on 24, 25 and 26 February, in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha
respectively, the government attacked the Mahishasur movement and linked it
to seditious activities on the basis of the fabricated charges in this
report.

The report shrewdly attributes the event to DSU, even when it is well known
that All India Backward Students’ Forum, the Phule-Ambedkarite organization
of Bahujan students, was the organizer of this event. Furthermore, it says:
“There are so many Left-supported student unions active in JNU. Most of
them are non-reactive and mild in nature. They often raise slogans/protest
on different national as well as local issues but their gathering remains
very low. But two hidden students groups i.e. 1) DSU and 2) DSF have been
found volatile and reactive. However, they are less than 10 in number.
Sometimes they prepare nude and objectionable posters of deities on their
computer and affix it on wall to hurt the religious feelings of the
society. Their activities in the past are:

1) They mourned the death of Afzal Guru.

2) They celebrated killing of CRPF Jawans in Dantewara, Chattisgardh in
2010.

3) They worshipped ‘Mahisasur’ [sic] in place of Goddess Durga during
September 14 ‘Navrata’ festival last year.

4) They invited Kashmiri separatist leader Gilani for meeting. But JNU
authority imposed ban on their such moves.

5) They asked for beef in hostel mess.”

Isn’t this list of charges in the police report a rough translation of the
‘JNU Leela” published in Panchjanya. The report also says that these groups
put up pictures of gods and goddesses in the nude on walls. No such thing
has ever happened in JNU. The posters put up by the All India Backward
Students’ Forum in 2011 were a reproduction of an article written by Prem
Kumar Mani titled “Who are Bahujans really worshipping?”, published in
FORWARD Press. It only mentioned that Mahishasur came from the Bahujan
community. It did not make any objectionable comment about any god or
goddess. The police report, as part of a well-planned conspiracy, says,
“They worshipped ‘Mahisasur’ in place of Goddess Durga during September 14
‘Navrata’ festival last year.” The fact is that Mahishasur Day is
celebrated in JNU and all over the country on Sharad Purnima, five days
after Dussehra, whereas Navratri is celebrated before Dussehra. In 2014,
Mahishasur Day was celebrated on 9 October and Navratri from 25 September
to 3 October. The Mahishasur Day celebrations in JNU in 2014 were much
talked about due to the registration of a case against FORWARD Press.
Almost all newspapers and channels had carried news about it. The police
record also mentions the date of celebrations, 9 October. Then, would it be
wrong to presume that the lie of “Mahishasur Day celebrations during
Navratri” was peddled only to incite people?

Similarly, the claim that a students’ organization had demanded that beef
should be served in hostel mess is a white lie. The New Materialists had
planned to hold Beef-Pork Festival for a couple of hours on an open ground
and not in the mess. Here too, very shrewdly, ‘pork’ has been dropped from
“beef-pork” so that the event can be given a religious colour. Instead of
upholding the Constitutional secularism, the police report seeks to fan
Hindu communalism by linking these two events with DSU and DSF. DSU is
associated with the CPI (Maoist), which has been banned by the Government
of India. The police and government are trying to link Bahujan youths with
organizations that are on the radar of security agencies even when they are
ideologically disparate, so that they lose popular support and can be
subjected to police atrocities.

Anyway, these are not the final truths vis-à-vis a nexus of government,
police and a section of the media trying to prove that JNU is a centre of
“sedition”. But one thing is certain. The reverberations of the tumult in
the dominant classes due to the entry of Bahujan youths in the portals of
institutions of higher learning will continue to be felt in the years to
come. Truth, equality and justice will ultimately win — no matter how long
it takes.

*SPECIAL RESERVATION SYSTEM*

>> Points are awarded to students writing the entrance exam in JNU if they
hail from scheduled backward districts. For this purpose, a list of
districts identified by the JNU on the basis of Census 2011 has been given
in the prospectus. The districts are divided into two categories. The
students who are residents of the districts in category 1and 2 are given 5
and 3 points respectively. Candidates who have passed their qualifying
examination through a distance education programme are also awarded 5 or 3
points, as the case may be.

>> Kashmiri migrants are awarded 5 points if they present any documentary
evidence or a certificate issued by the competent authority to prove their
status.

>> Candidates from the following defence categories are eligible for 5
special points:

1. Widows/wards of defence personnel killed in action;

2. Wards of serving personnel and ex-servicemen disabled in action;

3. Widows/wards of defence personnel who died in peacetime with death
attributable to military service; and

4. Wards of defence personnel disabled in peacetime with disability
attributable to military service.

5. All female candidates are awarded 5 special points. (No candidate is
given more than 10 special points.)

*Note: *These points are given in addition to the reservations granted to
SC, ST, OBC and physically challenged students by the government. For
example, if an OBC student comes from a scheduled district, besides
benefiting from the 27 per cent reservation, he will also get five
additional points, which will not be given to an OBC student hailing from a
city.

*Pramod Ranjan* is consulting editor, Forward Press

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