People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No.
35 August 28, 2011 |
My
Association with Comrade Pandhe
Mohd Amin
I WAS in
Kolkata when,
hardly a few hours after reaching there, I got the news that Comrade M
K Pandhe
had expired in the night before. I therefore immediately rushed back to
My
association with
Comrade Pandhe spanned over half a century or more --- since the days
we were
working together in the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) --- and
we came
still closer after the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) was formed
in 1970,
at its foundation conference in Kolkata. As its office was then
established in
GUIDING
THE
MOVEMENT
The CITU’s
founder
president, late Comrade B T Ranadive, was also based there at that time
and he
as well as late Comrade P Ramamurthi, our founder general secretary,
used to
guide our activities with a lot of intimacy. Yet it is quite safe to
say that
after these two leading comrades, Comrade Pandhe’s was the biggest role
in
guiding the CITU and bringing it to the present stage where its
membership has
crossed the 50 lakh mark.
An important
point in this
regard is that here was a comrade whose interest was not confined to
any one
area or two of our economy. In fact, he took a keen interest in
promotion of
trade unions and their struggles in several sectors, and most notably
among the
coal, steel, electricity, shipping and road transport workers. As I was
looking
after our federation among the road transport workers, the frequency
and intimacy
of our interaction further grew even after the CITU shifted its head
office to
I was elected
the general
secretary of the CITU at its conference in 2007, of which he was the
president,
and then I again came into regular face to face contact with him, after
a gap
of some three decades. Now, at the CITU secretariat meetings, he,
myself and
other leading comrades began to meet almost on a daily basis, consult
each
other and divide work among ourselves. All through this process, I felt
that
his behaviour not only with me but with all the members of the CITU
secretariat
was quite intimate. My intimacy with him continued even after we both
were
relieved of our responsibilities by the 2010 conference of the CITU.
While running
from one
part of the country to another, Comrade Pandhe also guided the party’s
subcommittee on trade unions and all the trade union fractions
concerned with
various sectors of our economy.
The big thing
about
Comrade Pandhe was that he did not sit idle for a single day and
engaged every
moment of his life in taking the trade union movement forward. He in
fact
remained active till the last evening of his life. Equally significant
was the
fact that he retained his sharp memory till his demise and the overripe
age of
86 could not make a dent into it.
INTERNATIONALIST
PAR
EXCELLENCE
It was in
1984 that
Comrade BTR asked Comrade Pandhe, me and M M Lawrence to go to
However,
Comrade Pandhe’s
interest in the trade union movement outside
I must also
recall here
that we were part of the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) and
during our
AITUC days we both had been taking part in its activities, but that our
relationship with the WFTU got ruptured after we formed the CITU.
However, it
was at Comrade Pandhe’s initiative that the CITU got affiliated to the
WFTU
this very year, after decades of mutual alienation. This was quite
natural for
a man who, all through his life, strove for forging and continually
strengthening the unity of the working class at the national as well as
international level. How can we forget that, insofar as
It is such a
comrade whose
loss now we have to bear with a heavy heart. On this occasion, I convey
my
condolences to his wife, son and other kins.