People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 02 January 10, 2003 |
IT
IS
just
the
beginning
of
the
New
Year,
but
one
can
see,
very
literally,
the
basic
divisions
of
society
on
people’s
faces.
There
are
those
who
have
partied,
celebrated,
and
are
busy
making
further
‘plans’
for
the
goodies
to
be
bought
this
year;
of
places
to
go,
gifts
to
give,
holidays
to
take,
and
a
general
well
being
about
them,
that
all
is
well
and
roaring;
and
if
it
isn’t
for
others
they
don’t
know
it.
On
other
faces
anxiety
and
apprehension
are
writ
large.
The
year
has
ended
disastrously
and
is
beginning
threateningly;
what
else
is
in
store
for
them?
A
divide
between
the
beautiful
people
who
make
it
to
the
third
pages
and
others
who
live
out
their
lives
in
a
humdrum
fashion,
and
on
the
other
end
of
the
spectrum
those
others
who
have
no
time
for
cognizance
of
such
niceties
as
new
year
because
they
are
too
busy
making
two
ends
meet
was
always
there;
and
we
are
not
talking
about
that
this
year.
This
year
somehow
rings
more
ominous--despite
brave
attempts
by
some
NGOs
that
‘this
December
6
is
ours’,
or
that
India-the
real
one
is
ours!
Never
was
a
new
year
ushered
in
by
such
indifference
for
the
plight
of
millions
on
the
part
of
the
middle
classes
in
this
country.
This
is
in
fact
true
of
the
entire
south
Asian
region.
Never
before
were
those
other
millions
so
much
out
of
any
calculations
in
their
scheme
of
things.
It
could
not
have
happened
otherwise
in
the
era
of
globalisation
and
all
that
it
entails.
It
could
not
have
been
otherwise
under
the
rule
of
the
BJP,
presiding
over
a
monster
conglomeration
of
fascist
outfits
even
as
it
is
led
by
them.
A
relentless
attack
throughout
our
region
on
people’s
livelihoods
and
on
those
not
belonging
to
the
charmed
religion
has
created
anxieties
that
are
qualitatively
different
this
year.
For
the
first
time
people
as
communities
are
not
sure
whether
they
will
live
out
the
next
year;
others
whether
their
bellies
will
stand
by
them
through
drought
and
overflowing
grain
godowns
outside
their
reach.
Never
did
people
expect
less
out
of
others,
feel
so
lonely
about
having
to
fend
for
their
own
selves.
These
ten
years
have
hardened
hearts
on
one
side
and
filled
others
with
despair,
and
both
states
of
mind
and
being
have
everything
to
do
with
the
fascist
hysteria
that
this
last
year
has
seen.
Togadia
and
his
ilk
coolly
pronounce
a
death
sentence
for
all
those
who
stand
in
their
way.
It
is
publicised
on
the
front
pages
of
all
dailies
so
that
it
is
not
missed,
and
they
get
away
with
it.
"All
Hindutva
opponents
will
get
the
death
sentence
and
we
will
leave
it
to
the
people
to
carry
this
out,''
he
says,
chillingly
cool.
"The
Muslims
here
will
enjoy
the
same
place
or
status
as
Hindus
enjoy
in
Pakistan,
maybe
even
slightly
better
status.”
And
as
for
Pakistan,
the
VHP
was
in
favour
of
"dismembering''
it,
reminding
everyone
that
"fundamentalism
and
extremism
cannot
be
finished
till
Pakistan
is
dismembered.''
(Report,
Neena
Vyas,
The
Hindu,
December
18,
2002).
Narendra
Modi,
the
chief
architect
of
a
genocide,
wins
approval
of
the
Naidus
and
the
Mamata
Banerjees
and
the
Chautalas
bound
to
him
by
common
ties
of
privatisation
and
agricultural
policies
that
spell
disaster
for
India’s
poor
across
religions.
Those
who
care
for
the
country
and
its
people
are
branded
anti-national,
even
as
the
real
enemies
of
the
nation
draw
out
their
knives
for
a
projected
final
kill.
The
prime
minister
in
his
New
Year
speech,
having
made
his
fuzzy
and
mandatory
references
to
diversities,
asserts
the
Hindutva
as
a
way
of
life
for
India,
calls
on
Indians
to
celebrate
their
Indianness
which
again
he
equates
with
Hindutva,
and
in
his
own
way
endorses
Togadia’s
threat
of
mob
‘justice’
by
suggesting
“Shouldn’t
our
society
come
down
heavily
against
those
who
commit
atrocities
against
women,
dalits,
adivasis,
and
other
weaker
sections?”
What
does
he
intend
to
do
about
it
in
the
coming
year
we
would
like
to
ask
him,
and
also
how
does
it
always
happen
that
Muslims
and
Christians
get
left
out
when
he
decides
to
express
concern
over
things
as
they
are.
What
he
certainly
does
not
forget
is
to
remind
us
he
would
“like
our
people
to
reduce
their
dependence
on
the
government
for
everything….
Shouldn’t
citizens
initiate
a
drive
for
water
conservation,
energy
conservation,
and
conservation
of
our
precious
cultural
heritage?”
He
is
telling
the
people
of
this
country
squarely
they
better
fend
for
themselves;
the
State
has
no
responsibility
towards
them,
in
ensuring
them
a
share
in
the
nation’s
resources
or
in
protecting
their
lives
if
they
are
on
their
own
unable
to
withstand
the
attacks
on
their
lives
and
cultural
heritage/expression.
The
BJP
rule
has
let
loose
a
kind
of
violence
and
despair
that
expresses
itself
in
callousness
and
indifference
as
much
as
in
social
Darwinism.
The
‘haves’
today
have
more
than
ever,
the
‘have-nots
less
than
ever
before.
To
quote
Aijaz
Ahmed:
“While
farmers
commit
suicide
for
want
of
food,
the
speculators
and
money
bags
pick
up
the
privatised
public
assets
for
a
song”.
The
dominant
visual
in
one’s
mind’s
eye
as
the
New
Year
begins
is
perhaps
that
of
the
description
in
Gujarat
of
the
full
discos
and
people
dancing
to
blaring
music
even
as
lakhs
were
at
their
wits
end,
in
another
part
of
a
city,
trying
to
save
and
salvage
their
lives.
The
only
ones
celebrating
are
those
jiska
ka
koi
kuch
nahi
bigarh
sakta
(who
cannot
be
touched
or
harmed
come
what
may),
who
will
revel
in
plenty
even
when
there
is
drought,
who
know
they
are
safe
in
their
homes
with
their
household
intact
even
as
fascists
lead
mobs
in
the
name
of
a
“Mahabharata”,
because
they
are
considered
the
Pandavas
whatever
happens.
It
is
sad
that
so
many
people
still
think
that
fascism
is
something
out
there,
in
some
distance,
that
it
will
not
include
them
in
its
toll
even
if
it
comes.
This
New
Year’s
resolve
for
us
can
only
be
to
somehow
break
this
complacency,
as
much
as
to
stand
by
those
who
have
already
become
victims
of
the
BJP’s
rule.