freedom movement | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Fri, 07 Feb 2025 05:27:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png freedom movement | SabrangIndia 32 32 Attempts to Undermine Gandhi’s Contribution to Freedom Movement: Musings on Gandhi’s Martyrdom Day https://sabrangindia.in/attempts-to-undermine-gandhis-contribution-to-freedom-movement-musings-on-gandhis-martyrdom-day/ Fri, 07 Feb 2025 05:27:04 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=40025 Eric Hobswam famously stated that History is as important to (sectarianism) Nationalism as poppy is to an opium addict. The right wing is surging with great speed; its ideologues keep a matching pace to construct the history which suits their political agenda of exclusion of some and glorification of their past. In this direction medieval […]

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Eric Hobswam famously stated that History is as important to (sectarianism) Nationalism as poppy is to an opium addict. The right wing is surging with great speed; its ideologues keep a matching pace to construct the history which suits their political agenda of exclusion of some and glorification of their past. In this direction medieval Indian history was the major one to be mauled by showing particularly that the medieval period of Indian history was an era of Islamic Imperialism and by projecting the Muslim Kings in bad light, which helped them create hate against today’s Muslims.

Even ancient Indian history, a golden period for them, was manipulated to show the Aryans, their ancestors were the indigenous people of this land. Coming to the freedom movement they first focused on Nehru, the colossus who articulated and practiced secularism in India. He was aware that practicing secularism in India is not easy as large sections of Indian society are in the grip of blind religiosity. He was the one to see the threat of majortarian (Hindu) communalism and equated it to fascism. He said minority communalism was at worst separatist. His mentor Gandhi, though murdered by the one who was trained by RSS and was working for Hindu Mahasabha, could not be demonized easily. Gandhi’s place in the global arena and in the heart of Indian people was at its peak.

Now as the communal right wing feels it is on firm feet, its ideologues are beginning the exercise of over projecting some of his shortcomings and undermining his contribution to freedom. This 30th January 2025 as the nation was paying tributes to the father of the nation many portals were relaying videos to propagate that Gandhi’s was just one of the efforts in India getting freedom. In various podcasts and social media channels they are propagating that Gandhi’s efforts had just a marginal effect on the British leaving India.

From the last few years glorification of Godse in the form of Twitter storms for ‘Mahatma Godse Amar Rahen’ (Long Live Godse) have been witnessed painfully. Ilk of Poonam Prasun Pandey have been enacting shooting of Gandhi’s effigy and then blood dripping from it have been a common site. Observing national mourning on 30th January by siren being sounded at 11 AM on 30 January for two-minute silence has been muted. This year the Maharashtra state circular on two-minute silence at 11 AM, did not mention even the name of Gandhi.

As we observed the Gandhi Martyrdom Day on this 30th January many of these irritants flashed to our minds. He was given the honorific Mahatma by none other than Guru Ravindra Nath Tagore. It is propagated that Gandhi-Congress ignored Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. The fact is that Bose and Congress had some differences on strategy but the core agenda of freedom from British rule remained the same. It was Netaji who addressed Gandhi as ‘father of the Nation’. He also named one of his battalions of Azad Hind Fauz (Free India Army) as Gandhi battalion. It was Gandhi-Congress who fought the cases of prisoners of Fauz by forming a committee with top lawyers like Bhulabhai Desai, Kailashnath Katju and Jawaharlal Nehru.

Also, the propaganda that Gandhi did not do anything to save Bhagat Singh’s hanging is being instilled into the social common sense. They hide the fact that it was Gandhi who wrote to Lord Irwin to cancel Bhagat Singh’s hanging. Irwin showed his inability to accept this request as all British officers in Punjab had threatened to resign if Gandhi’s request was accepted. Most interestingly Bhagat Singh requests his father Kishan Singh to support ‘General’ of the Freedom movement (Gandhi), which his father did by working for Congress.

The attempt to undermine Gandhi comes in the form of nit-picking the three major movements which Gandhi launched. The non-cooperation movement of 1920 which was the first real attempt to involve the average people in the struggle against British, as per them was ineffective as it was withdrawn due to the Chauri Chaura incident, where the crowd had burnt to the police station killing many policemen. Also, they allege that Gandhi’s support for Khilafat was demoralizing, as it related to supporting the restoration of the Ottoman Empire in Turkey. Let’s remember it was this move which brought in Muslims in large numbers into the vortex of popular anti-British struggle. Also, Mappila (Moplah) rebellion is supposed to have been an aggressive move by Muslims against Hindus. The fact is this rebellion was a rebellion of poor Muslim farmers against Janmis (Landlords, who were mostly Hindus), and the British authorities were protecting the interests of landlords.

As far as Civil disobedience of 1930 the counter is that it just led to Gandhi–Irwin Pact. This pact was a major step in furtherance of the pressure by Indian freedom Struggle. The accusation is that the Salt March did not lead to abolition of the salt tax which it aimed at. The fact is people could produce salt after this, its illegality was lifted.

As far as the 1942 ‘Do or Die’, ‘British Quit India’, it is true that as Gandhi and the major leaders of Congress were arrested; the movement did take a violent turn. The point is, it created a huge awareness about getting freedom from the British, it came as a culmination of the long process of creating mass consciousness which began picking up after the 1920’s Non-Cooperation movement.

There is no denial that revolutionaries, Bhagat Singh and his likes, Subhash Bose’s Azad Hind Fauz and revolt of Naval ratings, were valuable add-ons to the whole process of rising consciousness among people towards longing for freedom and cementing the bonds of Indian-ness. Gandhi’s contribution is monumental as it created the fraternity, Indian-ness among the people. As Surendranath Bannerjee very aptly described it as “India: nation in the making”.

These were twin aspects of the freedom movement. One was to struggle against the British and two to ‘build a Nation: India’ through this. Gandhi understood that bringing people together is the core of the process of getting freedom. A Recent flourishing attempt by Right wing communalists totally ignores the process of people, masses waking up and constituting India, as a nation. This was the greatest endeavours for which Gandhi is really the ‘Father of the Nation’.


Also Read:

Between Hope and Despair: 75 Years of Indian Republic

When did India Get Independence?

Is Narayan Guru Part of Sanatan Dharma?

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Where are Science and Development After 75 Years of the Indian Republic? https://sabrangindia.in/where-are-science-and-development-after-75-years-indian-republic/ Mon, 15 Aug 2022 04:50:53 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2022/08/15/where-are-science-and-development-after-75-years-indian-republic/ A scientific vision of development for all Indians informed the quest for independence. The present regime deploys superstition and politics based on fear to aid just a select few.

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CSIR

A scientific vision—conceived to encompass the social and the natural sciences—was profoundly a part of the Indian national movement. India’s struggle for independence was not simply to free itself from British rule. It was also to build a nation that would deliver development to its people. Independence would be bitter indeed if it did not lift people out of the abject poverty into which two centuries of colonial rule sank them. This idea united different sections of the independence movement, from left leaders to Nehru, Ambedkar and Bose. They knew India needed to advance in science and technology to develop its productive forces.

The leaders of the independence movement also knew science could not be borrowed or bought. And without developing science and technology capabilities, neither industry nor agriculture could develop. Our freedom fighters understood a newly-independent nation must adopt a scientific outlook on nature and society to develop. It would help people shed the shackles of superstition—beliefs that look back rather than ahead. Looking back to a mythical golden age when India had mastered flight with the pushpaka rath, nuclear weapons with the brahmastra, or genetic engineering, would impede the creation of a new India.

A scientific temper, or a scientific outlook towards nature and society, is how we develop productive knowledge for a new future. Accepting our past would allow us to understand our actual achievements, whether in mathematics, astronomy, medicine or metallurgy, not the mythical ones emerging from the Dinanath Batra school of false history.

State planning, science and the public sector

Our national movement leaders took on two complementary tasks: planning for all Indians and fashioning a state that would develop all its resources, including human resources. The Planning Commission and its precursor, the Congress Planning Committee, took on both roles. Subhas Chandra Bose, as Congress president, set up the Planning Committee in 1938, which he asked Nehru to head. Both drew inspiration from the Soviet planned development experiments following the 1917 October Revolution. 

After independence, the Planning Commission propelled the vision of the Planning Committee to overcome the British legacy, the double burden of poverty and inequality. The national movement saw planning and the public sector as necessities, not just to regenerate industry and agriculture but redistribute the benefits of development to all sections. Its leaders wanted to develop productive forces using scientific knowledge and looked to education that advances scientific capabilities as the nation’s most significant resource.

Therefore, developing scientific and technological capabilities was a priority for the Indian state. It built the Central Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) laboratories, the five Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI) and numerous scientific institutions. The University Grants Commission was greatly expanded to cover all universities in the First Five Year Plan. Indian capital, technocrats and industrialists, formulated the Bombay Plan, including such as JRD Tata and GD Birla, who shared the Congress leadership’s view that India needed infrastructure to develop and only the state could develop it on the scale required. Successive Five-Year plans embodied this vision.

The goal was not just to develop factories and machines but the knowledge embedded in the machines. Independent India set a goal of self-reliance or ‘Made in India’ to develop technologies. Insistence on transferring all technology to the Indian entity in any foreign partnership backed the policy. Transferring knowledge was as important as importing plants and machinery. Universities and other scientific institutions were central to India’s development plan for indigenous science and technology.

The colonial powers might have transferred political power to newly-independent countries but did not want to share technology or scientific knowledge. They believed countries like India—a part of the periphery—should confine themselves to agriculture and raw material production, leaving industrial goods to the “metropolitan” centre to produce. As a part of this policy, Western nations and/or manufacturers denied technology transfers related to manufacturing steel, turbines, boilers, pharmaceuticals, oil exploration, etc. Only when India successfully negotiated with the Soviet Union and other East European countries for technology and manufacturing plants did Western companies reluctantly agree to participate in India’s industrial development.

The Indian electricity sector, its oil and natural gas, steel and coal, atomic energy, and space sectors all emerged from this vision. If India is the world’s largest supplier of generic drugs, it is the result of CSIR laboratories (and changes to the Patents Act, 1970). The Ambanis and Mittals owe their origin to ONGC, Indian Oil, and Steel Authority of India Ltd.

India could also have become a major supplier of power plants to the world market. Unfortunately, India opened its market to western and Chinese players during the Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh governments, which aborted the possibility. BHEL, the leading power plant supplier, is now a far weaker international player than leading Chinese and South Korean companies.

The post-independence foreign policy view of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) was to align with imperialist capitalist powers and not support national liberation movements. To the RSS, non-alignment and planning were two sides of the same evil socialist coin. Instead, they argued for a “holy” alliance of Christians—read ex-colonial powers and the United States—the Jews (read Zionist Israel) and Hindus on one side, against the “unholy” communists and Muslims. 

Unmaking the scientific vision

In stark contrast to what we built after independence, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has wound up the Planning Commission and replaced it with a powerless Niti Aayog with only an advisory role. It is increasingly handing higher education over to private, even foreign, universities and appointing people who lack any understanding of science or technology to run advanced institutions. It has handed over major public sector enterprises to private hands or invited foreign capital in without having to transfer technology.

The difference between Atmanirbhar Bharat and self-reliance is how they view the economy. For the Modi government, all that matters is production takes place in India. Self-reliance meant not only that the final production is local, but both knowledge and equipment required for production are indigenised. The Modi government does not recognise that people and knowledge are essential in technology development today.

Today, among the top six companies in the world by market capitalisation, five are digital monopolies. Take Apple Inc., the biggest company in the world in terms of market cap. It does not own a single factory. How does it do this? It owns the designs, software and Apple brand. Apple gets about $300 for each iPhone it sells, while Foxconn, the company that manufactures the phone, gets only about $8. This is the nature of the knowledge economy. It is not where you produce but the knowledge you have that determines winners and losers in today’s global economy. Inviting Foxconn to set shop in India adds much less to the economy than the government acknowledges. Developing people is key to the future of a country. That is why nationalism that defines itself through land and not people belongs in the past.

Unsurprisingly, despite Modi’s Make in India hype, India’s year-on-year GDP growth has been slowing significantly. Even after the second wave of Covid-19 ended, India’s estimated 2022 GDP was only 1.5% above the 2019 figure, making a mockery of claims that it will soon become a five trillion dollar economy.

For the RSS-BJP, having the “right” ideology is much more important than developing knowledge. The BJP’s contempt for knowledge might appear dangerous only to the social sciences. The way it has destroyed the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) may just be the most visible instance of its destructive approach. But this government and its plants for universities are not limited to attacking just the social sciences. Or JNU. Their attack is on knowledge itself. In institution after institution, people with no vision and little learning have been given powerful positions. It seems knowledge is secondary to the BJP. What matters is that universities indoctrinate students with the RSS-BJP ideology. 

In contrast to the decades following independence, a continuous assault on education and research institutions—and reason and science—defines the present moment. Myths and madness are masquerading as science and history, alongside flying chariots and interplanetary travel, genetics in the Mahabharata, and falsification of evolution. Or it is being superseded by the “much superior” theory of dasaavatar, as Andhra University Vice-Chancellor G Nageshwar Rao said in the 2019 edition of the Indian Science Congress. The objective today is a “nationalist” India based on religious identity. That is why its adherents need to demolish reason and history. It wants a majoritarian India, where minorities would have very few rights, an India where reason must surrender to myths old and new and where wealth and caste mean merit.

The RSS bitterly opposed planned development and the public sector and regarded them as unholy “socialism”. They wanted India left entirely to market forces and unfettered entry to global capital. The only role the state should play is to help Indian capital negotiate with foreign capital. In other words, crony capitalism is in action today. It is an invitation to global capital to exploit India’s cheap labour while getting tax breaks and subsidies, including virtually free land. It is why Modi has replaced the Planning Commission with a toothless think tank it calls Niti Aayog. It is why he is dismantling the public sector, selling it to friendly capitalists, and inviting foreign capital under the Make in India slogan. It is a journey of betrayal, from self-reliance to just Reliance!

In Hindutva’s exclusionary view of nationalism, the land is the nation. And it is the land that is pure: Savarkar’s punya-bhumi and pitru-bhumi. That is why Modi—quoting Deendayal Upadhyaya on his birth centenary in September 2016, said Muslims have to be ‘purified’ (parishkar) to be fully Indian. And yet, presumably, global capital becomes fully Indian just by coming to India!

The attacks against minorities and certain castes and communities are not aberrations. They are fundamental to how the RSS, the BJP and their front organisations think. These attacks are on the fundamental values enshrined in our Constitution, including economic democracy. The attacks are taking place when India has become as unequal as it was under the British. Or we have gone, as the French economist Thomas Piketty calls it, from British Raj to Billionaire Raj. India added forty new billionaires during the pandemic, while the income of 84% of households fell. India now has two billionaires, Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani, among the top ten richest men in the world, and the largest increase in global poverty anywhere in the world in the same period was also in India.

Courtesy: Newsclick

 

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The Sardar Patel statue is part of an attempt to manufacture a respectable genealogy for the RSS https://sabrangindia.in/sardar-patel-statue-part-attempt-manufacture-respectable-genealogy-rss/ Fri, 27 Jan 2017 11:03:42 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/01/27/sardar-patel-statue-part-attempt-manufacture-respectable-genealogy-rss/ The BJP leadership is very keen to claim a role in the freedom struggle.   Soon after Narendra Modi became prime minister, construction began on a colossal statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, India’s first deputy prime minister, on an inland island called Sadhu Bet facing the Narmada Dam near Vadodara in Gujarat. Planned at a […]

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The BJP leadership is very keen to claim a role in the freedom struggle.

Sardar patel
 

Soon after Narendra Modi became prime minister, construction began on a colossal statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, India’s first deputy prime minister, on an inland island called Sadhu Bet facing the Narmada Dam near Vadodara in Gujarat. Planned at a cost of about Rs 3,000 crores and to stand 182 meters tall, this Chinese-made bronze statue, when completed, will be the tallest in the world. There is no doubt that this statue will become a major place of political worship like Rajghat and the Indira Gandhi memorial in New Delhi. But beyond tourist commerce there is another reason driving this project. It is to give the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh a genealogy it does not have.

Manufactured genealogy is a recurring feature of our history. Pre-Islamic invaders from Central Asia like the Hepthalites (White Huns) and Ahir Gatae from the region extending from Bactria in Central Asia to present-day Xinjiang in China conquered a good part of northern India and established kingdoms. The greatest of these invaders was Kanishka, whose realm stretched from Turfan in the Tarim Basin in Xinjiang to Pataliputra (present-day Patna) on the Gangetic plain. Kanishka was of Turkestani origin. These new rulers, some of whom were Buddhists, were quickly absorbed into Hindu society and were made Agnikula Rajputs (family of the fire god), others got more extravagant genealogies deriving from the sun and moon, hence the Suryavanshi and Chandravanshi Rajputs. In this manner the integrity of the Brahminical varna system – that classifies society into four sections based on occupation – was preserved.

The Brahmin-dominated Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s government in Maharashtra has embarked on building another gigantic statue, this one of the Maratha King Shivaji. This is not without some irony as the varna of the Marathas is even now a contested issue, with some arguing that they are part of the Kshatriya (warrior) varna, and others that they have Kunbi peasant origins. This issue was the subject of antagonism between the Brahmins and Marathas, dating back to the time of Shivaji.

When it was time for Shivaji’s coronation in 1674, the Brahmins of Poona baulked, stating that the Bhonsles – Shivaji’s family – were not Kshatriyas. Legend has it that a Brahmin priest from Banaras, Gaga Bhatta, on receiving a generous payment, performed the ceremony. Shivaji’s genealogy now showed that the Bhonsles were a branch of the highly-respected Sisodias of Mewar, Kshatriyas of the purest Rajput clan. Whatever might have been his caste antecedents, Shivaji undoubtedly was one of India’s greatest kings. His achievements did not need a manufactured genealogy.
 

RSS and the freedom struggle

The ultra nationalist RSS is still in search of a genealogy that will connect it to the nationalist movement that won India its freedom.

The truth is that the contemporary writings and speeches of its leaders have a very different story to tell. These leaders showed little enthusiasm for the anti-British struggle. Though the founder of the RSS, KB Hedgewar had an early association with the Congress and other nationalist movements like Bhagat Singh and Chandrashekhar Azad’s Hindustan Republican Association, he left it all behind to found the RSS.

He also stopped his followers from the nationalist path. MD Deoras, the third sarsanghchalak (supreme leader) of the RSS, wrote approvingly of how “Dr Hedgewar saved him and others from the path of Bhagat Singh and his comrades.”

With the death of Hedgewar in 1940, the RSS lost all interest in freedom. Its new leader MS Golwalkar drew inspiration from Adolf Hitler’s ideology of race purity. Paradoxically Golwalkar also admired Jews for “maintaining their religion, culture and language”.

Golwalkar’s focus was on religion, racial purity and exclusion. Freedom was to be left to lesser mortals like Gandhiji and his Congress. He wanted the RSS to be involved only in “routine work”.

In the words of Golwalkar:
 

“There is another reason for the need of always remaining involved in routine work. There is some unrest in the mind due to the situation developing in the country from time to time. There was such unrest in 1942. Before that there was the movement in 1930-31. At that time many other people had gone to Doctorji [Hedgewar]. This ‘delegation’ requested Doctorji that this movement [Congress] will give independence and Sangh should not lag behind. At that time, when a gentleman told Doctorji that he was ready to go to jail, Doctorji said: ‘Definitely go. But who will take care of your family then?’ That gentlemen told: ‘I have sufficiently arranged resources not only to run the family expenses for two years but also to pay fines according to the requirements.’ Then Doctorji said to him: ‘If you have fully arranged for the resources then come out to work for the Sangh for two years.’”
 

Golwalkar’s point was crystal clear. Dharam (religion) came before dharma (duty).
 

The Patel project

The BJP leadership is very keen to project the RSS as a component of the freedom struggle. The BJP finds it embarrassing that the RSS – to which the top leadership as well as the overwhelming majority of the cadre of the BJP belong – was not a part of the freedom movement. The RSS lacks the courage to categorically state that it did not participate in the freedom struggle because its ideology prevented it from doing so.

There is the well-known concocted story of how the RSS tried to lionise Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s role in the 1942 Quit India movement. This ended in a huge embarrassment when it was discovered that Vajpayee actually made a confessional statement disassociating himself from the protest event at his hometown Bateshwar.

In the confession he wrote:
 

“Ten or twelve persons were in the forest office. I was at a distance of 100 yards. I did not render any assistance in demolishing the government building. Thereafter, we went to our respective homes.”
 

Hence the RSS is trying to attach themselves the legacy of Vallabhbhai Patel, to get a leg into the nationalist movement. They forget that it was Sardar Patel who had banned the RSS in 1948 after learning that its workers were distributing sweets to celebrate the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi

In the run up to the 2014 general elections Narendra Modi displayed his lack of knowledge of history, or willingness to distort it, by saying that the Congress Party wanted Patel to be the first prime minister. The fact is that Jawaharlal Nehru became the president of the Congress in 1946 after Maulana Azad was dissuaded from offering himself on the basis of the system of rotation that the Congress informally followed. Patel was never in the run. Given Nehru’s overwhelming popularity, even if Patel contested, Nehru would have defeated him.
Both LK Advani and Modi have tried to project that there was a fissure between Nehru and Patel. The BJP leaders seem to be confused between dissent and dissidence. Dissent is a genuine difference of opinion, and there were many between Nehru and Patel, as should be between two independent-minded individuals. Dissidence is a result of competing ambitions.

On this Patel was clear. He wrote:
 

“It was, therefore, in the fitness of things that in the twilight preceding the dawn of independence he (Nehru) should have been our leading light, and that when India was faced with crises after crises, following the achievement of our freedom, he should have been the upholder of our faith and the leader of our legions.”
 

Patel added:
 

“Contrary to the impression created by some interested persons and eagerly accepted in credulous circles, we have worked together as lifelong friends and colleagues, adjusting ourselves to each other’s advice as only those who have confidence in each other can.”
 

Now the RSS is trying to make Sardar Patel its own by attempting to give itself a lineage deriving from Sardar Patel – the colossal statue is intended to rewrite the Sangh’s history. But the saffron body will only end up as a parvenu, wanting in patriotism when it mattered most.
But Modi won’t know all this. History is not his forte, or else he would not think that Alexander died on the West bank of the Ganga!

Courtesy: Scroll.in
 

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