People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 23 June 09, 2013 |
AIKS
Organises
Adivasi Mass Marriage in Surgana
J P
Gavit
Hemant
Waghere
ON May 21,
2013,
thousands of people attended
the mass marriage
ceremony of 825 adivasi couples at Alangun village in
Surgana tehsil of Nashik
district. This remarkably enthusiastic function was
organised by the Surgana
tehsil unit of All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS), in
association with the CPI(M)-led
Adarsh Samata Shikshan Prasarak Mandal, an educational
institution that runs
several schools and hostels for adivasi children in Nashik
district.
The
chief guest at this function was CPI(M) Polit Bureau member
Brinda Karat. The
other two guests of honour were AIKS state working president
Rajaram Ozare, who
is the sitting CPI(M) MLA from the Dahanu (ST) seat in Thane
district, and
AIDWA state president Mariam Dhawale – both of them state
secretariat members
of the CPI(M). Among the main organisers of the mass
marriage function were AIKS
state president, CPI(M) state secretariat member and former
MLA J P Gavit, AIKS state general
secretary Kisan Gujar and AIKS state council
members Hemant Waghere and
Irfan Shaikh – all three being state
committee members of the CPI(M) – and many others.
While
addressing the huge public meeting of several thousand
people who had come to
witness the mass marriage ceremony and to bless the newly
wed couples, Brinda
Karat congratulated the AIKS for starting and continuing the
tradition of
holding this remarkable function for the last three decades,
which saved lakhs
of rupees of wedding expenses for the poor adivasi people.
She referred to the
positive aspects of adivasi culture and said that these
should be defended
against the attacks of neo-liberalism and communalism. For
instance, there is
no dowry system among adivasis, and women enjoy a better
status in tribals than
in most other communities.
Among
those who also addressed the large meeting were Rajaram
Ozare, MLA, Mariam
Dhawale, J P Gavit,
Kisan Gujar,
Hemant Waghere and Irfan
Shaikh.
A LONG HELD
&
RICH
TRADITION
The
AIKS in Nashik district began the tradition of holding mass
adivasi marriages
32 years ago in 1981, under the leadership of veteran leader
Narendra Malusare
and with the efforts of adivasi activists of Surgana tehsil
– Rama Mahale, K K
Pawar, J P Gavit and
Hari Mahale.
Surgana tehsil has a 98 per
cent adivasi
population. Adjoining
Due
to dire poverty, the age-old custom here was that, instead
of an expensive
marriage ceremony, a simple engagement ceremony called ‘pen’ used to be performed, after which the
bride used to go and
live at her in-laws’ place. Later on, if the economic
situation improved, a
wedding would be organised. But due to poverty, thousands of
poor couples used
to spend their entire life together without any marriage
ceremony being ever
performed. However, such couples and their offspring were
socially looked down
upon and had to face humiliation within the adivasi
community.
Taking
all this into account, the AIKS organised the first mass
marriage ceremony of
32 adivasi couples at Rakshasbhuvan village in Surgana
tehsil in 1981. The
chief guest at this function was the then commissioner for
adivasi development,
Sadashivrao Tinaikar, an IAS officer renowned for his
uprightness. The expenses
for the lunch and the mandap
were
carried out through contributions collected by the AIKS from
the people of the
village. The AIKS collected additional funds and presented
the newly wed
couples with utensils and other such necessities. Over 1000
people attended
this first ever mass marriage ceremony in Surgana tehsil and
Nashik district.
The
success of this small function gave a boost to such social
efforts. The next
year, in 1982, a mass marriage ceremony of 351 adivasi
couples was performed at
Alangun village in the same tehsil. The chief guests at this
function were the
renowned Marathi poet and playwright Kusumagraj (who later
won the Jnanpith
Award), CPI(M) Central Committee member Ahilya Rangnekar and
AIKS state general
secretary Narendra Malusare. After that, mass weddings were
regularly organised
in several villages and became very popular. In 1995, 1276
couples were married
in another huge function.
SETTING
AN
EXAMPLE
In
2002, with the then CPI(M) state secretary Prabhakar
Sanzgiri and Suman
Sanzgiri as chief guests, another similar function was held.
In this function,
both the son and daughter of J P Gavit got married.
That was, indeed, one of the specialities of this movement
– that many CPI(M)
and AIKS leaders and their children themselves got married
in the mass marriage
functions. Other leaders who got married in this way were
Hemant Waghere,
Savliram Pawar, Ramji Gavit, Ananda Chavan and so
on.
On May 20,
2005, a
mass wedding of 501 adivasi
couples was held at
Alangun. The two chief guests at this function were the
then chief minister of
The
CPI(M) and the AIKS have also taken the lead in various
other fields in Surgana
tehsil. For instance, they initiated the novel doorstep
ration scheme which is
now being implemented in 123 out of 291 revenue villages in
the tehsil. This
scheme has controlled the large-scale corruption in the
public distribution
system (PDS) and has succeeded in reaching foodgrains
regularly to the people.
In the old age pension scheme, Surgana tehsil has taken the
lead in
Maharashtra, with over 14,000 old women and men getting a
regular pension of Rs
500 per month, which amounts to nearly Rs five crore per
year. So far as the
Forest Rights Act is concerned, out of the 12,000-odd land
claims made by adivasis,
over 7,300 claims have been accepted by the state government
and a statewide
AIKS struggle is going on for the rest. (See report in People’s
Democracy,
May 6-12, 2013 and in Loklahar, May 20-26, 2013.)
As
a result of all this work, in 2012, the CPI(M) won all the
three Zilla Parishad
seats and five of the six Panchayat Samiti seats in Surgana
tehsil, and also
several Gram Panchayats. The party has been winning the
Surgana Panchayat Samiti
for over 25 years, a record that is surpassed only by the
Talasari Panchayat
Samiti in Thane district, which the party has been winning
continuously for the
last 50 years. The party lost the state assembly seat here
in 2009 after
winning it six times earlier, mainly due to the
delimitation of
constituencies and the unprincipled gang-up of
all political forces – secular and communal – against the
CPI(M). In the year
2013, the AIKS has completed a membership of 35,000-odd in
Surgana tehsil
alone, out of the total 75,000-odd membership in Nashik
district and the
2,00,000-odd membership in the state. This has set a new
record for any tehsil
in