People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXIII
No.
50
December
13, 2009
|
AIAWU Condoles Com Dhanpat Rai
Nahar
THE
All India Agricultural Workers� Union (AIAWU) dips its banner in homage
to one
of the country�s most steadfast fighters for the rights of agricultural
workers
and dalits, Comrade Dhanpat Rai Nahar, who left us on 11 November 2009,
at the
age of 90. His lifelong commitment to the cause of the most oppressed
and
exploited will always be remembered.
Born
in 1919 in a dalit family of Shankar village, in Jalandhar, Punjab,
he committed himself to being educated. First he passed the Matric
examination from
the government school in Nakodar in 1933 and then passed the
Intermediate from DAV
College
in Jalandhar in 1938. While still a student in school, he led a
successful
agitation to end the two-pot system (one for caste Hindus and the other
for
dalits). He then left for Singapore
where he joined as a Second Lieutenant in the British Army and in 1943,
he
joined the INA, in whose Manipur campaign he took part. He was captured
and
imprisoned, being released in 1948, when he came to Punjab
and joined the CPI and was its state council member till 1964. He then
became a
state committee member of CPI(M) and remained
so till 2004 and later remained as an
invitee till his demise. In all, he spent nearly two decades in jail in
various
struggles of the national movement, the communist party and the mass
movements
of agricultural labour, notably the land rights movement of Punjab from
1969-1980, which ensured land rights to small farmers on 50,000 acres
of land.
He
was a founder general secretary of the BKMU in Punjab,
with Master Hari Singh and Darshan Singh Jhabal as his companions from
its
formation in 1953. Later, when AIAWU was founded he became its
president in Punjab. At the all India
level, he was joint secretary
of AIAWU from its first conference of 1982 to its third conference in
1992,
when he became its vice president, which he remained till 2003. Even
when he
was unable to work actively, he came to address the delegates of the
sixth
conference of the union at Nawashahr, Punjab
in 2007, inspiring them to struggle relentlessly for national
sovereignty,
rights of agricultural labourers and to end the caste system. We will
miss his valuable
presence.
The
AIAWU pledges to carry forward the mission he left unfinished. The union conveys its condolences to his
comrades and family members.