People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 41 October 13, 2013 |
AIDWA Launches Haunted by Fire IT was
an
extremely memorable and significant occasion, graced by
AIDWA patron Mythily
Sivaraman, whose book entitled Haunted by
Fire – Essays on Caste, Class, Exploitation and
Emancipation was released
on September 30, 2013 at the India International Centre
in A
former
CITU activist and AIDWA national vice-president, Mythily
Sivaraman was the
embodiment of the
relentless spirit of a
comrade whose life has been inseparable from the
struggle for workers’ rights
and women’s equality. The book brings together a
substantial part of her
writings over a period of two decades, especially the
developments in Tamilnadu
during the 1960s, and the 1970s, put together
assiduously by her daughter K
Kalpana, along with V Geetha, and published by Leftword.
AIDWA general secretary,
while welcoming the gathering, pointed out the crucial
role that Mythily had
played in combining activism with theoretical
understanding, an approach that
helped to link up the issues of caste, class, and gender
exploitation effectively.
The
writings are multilayered, and Mythily’s
contribution has influenced the growth of AIDWA and the
Left women’s movement
in Tamilnadu to engage with multiple oppressions, she
said. She committed AIDWA
to the task of bringing out more such publications, to
do justice to the scale
and diversity of Mythily’s work. CPI(M)
Polit
Bureau member, Brinda Karat released the book, and paid
rich tribute to Mythily
for being a constant source of inspiration for women to
be part of the organised
Left movement in The
launch of
the book was accompanied by a panel discussion on
Mythily’s work and life, and
her influence on Left politics and the women’s movement
in By
meticulously
documenting and preserving every scrap of paper that
contained information on
the Left movement in Excerpts
from
a film on Mythily were also screened on the occasion. Haunted
By Fire The
book draws
its name from the Kilvenmani massacre of 1968, when 44
dalit landless peasants
were burned to death by their landlords in one of the
most atrocious crimes in
independent