People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 02 January 10, 2003 |
Ways of Resisting: Zulmaton Ke Daur Mein
LIKE
every
New
Year
since
1990,
artists,
cultural
workers,
other
intellectuals
and
social
and
political
activists
congregated
at
Safdar
Hashmi
Marg,
Mandi
House
in
the
national
capital
again
on
this
New
Year
day
to
remember
martyr
Safdar
Hashmi,
and
renew
their
resolve
to
continue
his
tradition
of
struggle.
The
programmes
organised
on
January
1
this
year
were
the
peak
of
a
month-long
series
of
programmes
organised
by
the
Safdar
Hashmi
Memorial
Trust
(SAHMAT)
to
document
the
cultural
resistance
to
the
developments
from
Ayodhya
to
Gujarat.
This
series
of
programmes
was
meant
to
underscore
the
threat
being
posed
by
communal
forces
and
also
the
resistance
put
to
them
in
the
last
ten
years
since
the
Babri
demolition.
The
underlining
of
the
cultural
resistance
to
communalism
started
at
2.00
p
m,
with
Vidya
Shah
singing
Sufi-Bhakti
poetry.
Singing
the
creations
of
Sufi
poets
in
Punjabi,
Madan
Gopal
Singh
then
took
up
the
thread.
This
was
in
accordance
with
the
way
the
SAHMAT
has
been
bringing
to
light
the
immense
utility
of
the
Sufi-Bhakti
poetry,
a
glorious
part
of
our
heritage,
in
fighting
the
threats
to
our
national
unity
and
syncretic
culture.
It
will
be
recalled
that
SAHMAT
had
organised
a
powerful
programme
of
Sufi-Bhakti
poetry,
under
the
title
Anhad
Garaje
(a
phrase
taken
from
a
poem
by
Kabir
Saheb)
in
the
immediate
aftermath
of
Babri
demolition.
To
this
year’s
programme
a
special
invitee
was
Ghulam
Hussain
Khan
from
Mumbai;
he
belongs
to
the
school
(gharana)
of
Ustad
Faiyaz
Ahmed
Khan
who
is
known
as
Aftab-e-Mausiqi
(the
sun
of
music).
It
will
be
noted
that
during
the
state-sponsored
carnage
in
Gujarat
in
2002,
a
violent
saffron
crowd
had
also
destroyed
the
tomb
of
Ustad
Faiyaz
Ahmed
Khan
in
Baroda.
Naturally,
on
this
occasion,
Ghulam
Hussain
Khan
also
presented
several
musical
compositions
from
the
repertoire
of
the
great
Ustan
Faiyaz.
Renowned
Dhrupad
singer
Ustad
Wasifuddin
Dagar,
one
of
the
best
representatives
of
the
composite
heritage
of
Indian
classical
music,
once
again
sang
after
a
gap
of
ten
years,
in
memory
of
martyr
Safdar
Hashmi.
Shubha
Mudgal,
who
has
been
associated
for
long
with
the
SAHMAT’s
New
Year
programmes,
presented
a
poem
by
Wali
Gujarati,
especially
set
to
music
for
the
occasion.
During
the
Gujarat
carnage
last
year,
the
saffron
crowds
not
only
demolished
beyond
all
recognition
the
tomb
of
this
eminent
17th
century
Urdu
poet;
they
even
constructed
a
road
there
overnight.
Shubha
Mudgal
also
presented
a
lyric
by
popular
Hindi
poet
Gopal
Das
Neeraj
as
well
as
some
pieces
by
late
Faiz
Ahmed
Faiz,
one
of
the
eminent
Urdu
poets
of
protest.
In
her
mono-acting,
known
theatre
figure
Vidya
Rao
targetted
the
Goa
musings
of
prime
minister
Vajpayee.
Her
mono-acting
presentations
in
the
last
few
years
appear
to
be
the
links
in
a
series
of
satirical
performances.
The
all-embracing
nature
of
the
SAHMAT’s
concept
of
cultural
resistance
was
also
underlined
by
a
song
presented
by
Usha
Uthup,
well
known
Indian
pop
singer,
with
which
the
programmes
on
this
New
Year
concluded.
She
had
especially
arrived
in
Delhi
this
year
to
pay
homage
to
martyr
Safdar
and
register
her
participation
in
the
cultural
resistance
to
communalism.
Uthup
not
only
sang
some
songs
on
peace
and
harmony;
her
voice
also
inspired
the
audience
to
rise
up
and
sing
in
unison
with
her.
During
the
month-long
programme
which
commenced
on
December
4,
three
symposia
were
held
in
which
Professor
K
N
Panikkar
(vice
chancellor
Sri
Sankaracharya
University
of
Sanskrit),
Professor
Ashok
Vajpayee
(former
vice
chancellor,
Mahatma
Gandhi
Hindi
University),
famous
lyricist
Javed
Akhtar,
Professors
Irfan
Habib,
Prabhat
Patnaik,
Romila
Thapar,
T
Jayaraman
and
Sudhir
Chandra,
Ela
Gandhi
(a
member
of
parliament
in
South
Africa
and
grand
daughter
of
Mahatma
Gandhi)
participated.
These
symposia
were
held
at
Jawaharlal
Nehru
University,
Constitution
Club
and
Delhi
University.
During
this
month
the
following
books
were
also
released:
1)
Saffronised
and
Substandard,
a
critique
of
the
new
NCERT
textbooks.
The
book
was
released
by
Ela
Gandhi.
2)
Das
Baras,
a
collection
of
Hindi
poetry
during
the
last
ten
years,
edited
by
Asad
Zaidi.
This
two-volume
collection
has
500
poems
by
110
poets.
The
book
was
released
by
Krishna
Sobti.
3)
Drawing
the
Battle
Lines,
a
book
of
cartoons
that
contains
works
by
R
K
Laxman
(The
Times
of
India),
Unny
(Indian
Express),
Keshav
(The
Hindu),
Surendra
(The
Hindu),
Ajit
Ninan
(India
Today),
Ponappa
(The
Times
of
India,
Bangalore),
Yesudasan
(Malayalam
Manorma),
Govind
(Rashtriya
Sahara),
Irfan
Khan
(freelance),
Rajendra
(Dainik
Hindustan),
Sudhir
Tailang
(Hindustan
Times),
Salam
(The
Econimic
Times),
Shekhar
Gurera
(Panjab
Kesri),
Sorit
(Pioneer),
Paresh
Nath
(National
Herald),
Manoj
Chopra
(freelance),
Chandran
(Theekathir),
Veera
(Theekathir),
Sudhi
(Deshabhimani),
Gangadhar
(Prajashakti)
and
Venkatesh
(Prajashakti).
The
book
is
dedicated
to
the
memory
of
Abu
Abraham
and
contains
probably
his
last
cartoon.
The
book
was
released
by
Ashok
Vajpayee.
4)
The
Republic
Besmirched,
A
book
containing
press
reports,
commentaries
and
editorials
after
the
Babri
demolition
on
December
6,
1992.
The
book,
having
tremendous
archival
value,
has
been
edited
by
Anand
K
Sahay.
The
book
was
released
by
Professor
Ajit
Singh,
eminent
development
economist
teaching
in
Cambridge.
5)
Communalism,
Civil
Society
and
the
State:
Reflections
on
a
Decade
of
Turbulence,
a
book
containing
articles
by
16
scholars
and
edited
by
Professor
K
N
Panikkar
and
Sukumar
Muralidharan.
The
scholars
who
have
contributed
include:
Aijaz
Ahmad,
Javeed
Alam,
Neera
Chandhoke,
Sudhir
Chandra,
Rajeev
Dhavan,
Irfan
Habib,
Mushirul
Hasan,
Zoya
Hasan,
Manjari
Katju,
Sukumar
Muralidharan,
K
N
Panikkar,
Prabhat
Patnaik,
Utsa
Patnaik,
A
Raghuramaraju,
Kumkum
Sangari
and
Romila
Thapar.
A
historic
exhibition,
Ways
of
Resisting,
was
mounted
at
Rabindra
Bhawan
Galleries
from
December
23,
2002
to
January
2,
2003.
Many
of
the
works
assembled
in
the
project
are
part
of
political
activism
since
the
1990s
by
artists
who
have
worked
with
collectives
to
confront
the
forces
of
regression.
Several
other
works
arise
from
the
longer-term
agenda
of
individual
artists
to
develop
a
critical
language
that
reflects
and
critiques
the
historical
situation:
the
distortion
of
democratic
and
secular
values,
and
the
parodying
of
these
values
by
the
rightwing
ruling
coalition.
There
were
multimedia
installations
and
sculptures
that
presented,
in
material
terms
and
through
spatial
encounters,
political
allegories
to
understand
the
unfolding
present.
The
artists
were
Rumanna
Hussain,
Nalini
Malani,
N
N
Rimzon,
Navjot
Altaf,
Sheba
Chhachhi,
Jehangir
Jani,
Pushpamala
N,
Walter
d’Souza,
Probir
Gupta,
Enas
M
J,
Vir
Munshi,
Tejal
Shah
and
Vivan
Sundaram.
There
were
works
by
painters
who
questioned
the
easy
appropriation
of
the
Indian
tradition
and
of
the
national
legacy
of
modern
India
by
the
distorting
ideology
of
Hindutva.
These
artists,
who
reclaimed
an
iconography
that
speaks
about
a
plural
and
syncretic
culture,
included
Akbar
Padamsee,
Ghulam
Mohammed
Sheikh,
Nilima
Sheikh,
Surendran
Nair,
Atul
Dodiya
and
Arpana
Caur.
This
was
complemented
by
the
work
of
painters
who
speak
in
an
urban
vocabulary
about
violence
and
its
aftermath,
about
people
and
their
struggles.
These
included
Altaf,
Sudhir
Patwardhan,
Suranjan
Basu,
Jitish
Kallat,
Nataraj
Sharma,
Gargi
Raina,
Savi
Savarkar,
Riyas
Komu
and
Indersalim.
The
exhibition
included
a
selection
of
photographs
in
a
range
of
genres
---
from
reportage
to
documentary
to
narrative.
The
photographers
were
Pablo
Bartholomew,
Prashant
Panjiar,
Ram
Rahman
and
Parthiv
Shah.
A
selection
of
press
photographs
from
Mumbai
riots
was
also
on
show.
There
was
also
a
section
of
texts
and
video
recordings
that
document
the
modes
of
opposition
devised
by
artists’
groups
in
the
public
domain.
These
included
the
work
of
SAHMAT,
Open
Circle
(Mumbai),
Voices
against
Violence
(Baroda)
and
Visthar
(Bangalore).
Along
with
these,
there
was
also
a
continuous
screening
of
video
documentaries
and
thematised
narratives
about
the
consequences
of
an
ideological
mindset
that
valorises
(male)
aggression
and
justifies
violence
against
the
already
marginalised
groups
and
communities
in
society.
Videos
from
the
following
documentary
makers
were
screened:
Madhushree
Dutta,
Media
Storm,
Ruchira
Gupta,
Gopal
Menon,
Anand
Patwardhan,
Gauhar
Raza,
Saba
Devan
&
Rahul
Roy,
Teesta
Seetalvad,
Lalit
Vachani,
Suma
Jossan
and
Virendra
Saini.
The
exhibition
was
curated
by
Vivan
Sundaram.
Popular
films
Naseem
(director:
Saeed
Mirza),
Fiza
(director:
Khalid
Mahmood)
and
Zakhm
(director:
Mahesh
Bhatt)
were
also
screened.
Mahesh
Bhatt
also
participated
in
a
discussion
with
the
audience
on
December
19.
During
this
month,
Players,
a
theatre
group
from
Kirorimal
College,
presented
two
street
corner
plays
---
Main
Sachcha
Deshbhakt
Nahin?
(Me
not
a
true
patriot?)
and
Khade
Hain
Lathi
Taane
(They
are
standing
with
their
lathis
raised).
Two
full-length
plays
were
presented
at
the
Sri
Ram
Centre
theatre
to
packed
audiences.
One
of
these
was
Dost..…
Chokkas
Ahin
Nagar
Vastun
Hatun
(There
was
once
a
city
here,
friend),
a
play
in
Gujarati
by
Fade-in
Theatres,
directed
and
written
by
Soumya
Joshi.
The
other
play
was
Tum
Saadat
Hasan
Manto
Ho
(You
are
Saadat
Hasan
Manto!)
by
Prayog.
Directed
by
M
K
Raina,
the
play
depicted
how
communalism
is
destructive
of
entire
culture.
It
was
based
on
five
Urdu
stories
by
Saadat
Hasan
Manto,
who
in
his
short
stories
adeptly
picturised
the
horrors
of
India’s
partition
in
those
very
days.
Another
play,
Antigone
in
Hindi,
was
staged
at
Max
Mueller
Bhawan
on
January
4
to
mark
the
conclusion
of
the
programme.
It
was
directed
by
Anuradha
Kapur.
Presented
by
theatre
group
Vivadi
of
Delhi,
the
play
was
a
Hindi
adaptation
of
a
Brecht
play
that
used
an
ancient
Greek
fable
to
send
an
anti-war,
humanist
message
across.
Significantly,
the
Hindi
adaptation
aimed
at
linking
the
plot
with
the
anti-communal
struggle,
which
we
cannot
escape
from.
The
play
beautifully
and
effectively
combined
the
art
of
theatre
with
the
medium
of
video;
the
latter
was
used
to
present
the
images
of
Gujarat
massacre
and
violence
as
the
background
of
its
presentation.
Through
this
method
the
play
interpreted
the
original
play’s
message
of
the
futility
of
a
war
as
the
futility
and
all-destructive
nature
of
communalism.
It
was
thus
a
fitting
finale
to
the
one-month
long
programme
of
SAHMAT.