Tuesday 11 February 2020

వినరా... నాజర్‌ గాథను నేడూ!

వినరా... నాజర్‌ గాథను నేడూ!
Feb 07, 2020, 04:24 IST
Shek Nazar Shatha Jayanthi - Sakshi
సందర్భం

‘నేనయ్యా నాజర్‌ను, లోపలకు పోనివ్వండి’ మేఘం ఉరిమినట్లుగా విన్పించింది గుంటూరు శ్రీ వేంక టేశ్వర విజ్ఞాన మందిరంలో 1990 ఏప్రిల్‌లో ఒక సాయంత్రం. సినీ సంగీత దర్శకుడు చక్రవర్తికి సన్మానం. హాలంతా కిక్కిరిసింది. బయటా గాంధీ పార్కులోనూ నిలుచున్న జనం ప్రసంగాలను వింటున్నారు. హాలులో ప్రెస్‌కు కేటాయించిన మొదటి వరుసలో కూర్చున్నాను. ఆ సందర్భంలో ‘నేనయ్యా నాజర్‌ను’... నాజర్‌ ఇంకా జీవించే ఉన్నారా? విస్మయం! మాచర్ల చెన్న కేశుని గుడిలో 1968 ప్రాంతంలో పల్నాటి కథను  చెబుతూ వేదికను, ప్రేక్షకుల హృదయాలను ఊపేసిన నాజర్‌ మనసులో మెదిలారు. ఆ నాజరే.  సన్మానం అందుకుంటోన్న ^è క్రవర్తి, పరుగు పరుగున వేదిక దిగారు. బయట ప్రవేశ   ద్వారం వరకూ వెళ్లి, కాపలాదారులు అడ్డగించిన నాజర్‌ను గౌరవంగా వేదికపైకి తీసుకు వచ్చారు. తన తండ్రి బసవయ్య కోరిక మేరకు, తనకూ, తన తల్లికి పొన్నెకల్లులో హార్మోనియం నేర్పిన గురువు నాజర్‌ అని ప్రేక్షకులకు చెప్పారు. గురువుకి శాలువా కప్పారు.


ఆ మరుసటి ఉదయం నాజర్‌ ఇంటికి వెళ్లాను. తన బతుకు కథను చెప్పమని కోరాను. ‘ఒక పూట తెమిలేదా అబ్బాయి’ అన్నారు. రోజూ వస్తానన్నాను.  దాదాపు రెండు వారాలు. రోజూ ఉదయం ఏడు, ఎనిమిది గంటలకు వెళ్లే వాడిని. శ్రీమతి నాజర్‌ తొలుత సేమ్యా పాయసం, వచ్చేపుడు పెద్ద ‘ఇత్తడి గళాసు’ నిండా మజ్జిగ ఇచ్చేవారు. నాజర్‌కు కళా కారులకు సహజమైన అలవాట్లు లేవు. ఆంధ్రభూమిలో ఆయ నపై ప్రచురితమైన సవివర వ్యాసాలు చదివిన ఎందరో ప్రము ఖులు ఫోన్‌ చేయడం వలన తెలి సింది, నాజర్‌ ఇంకా జీవించే ఉన్నారా అనే సందేహం నాకు మాత్రమే కలిగినది కాదని! చదువరులను శ్రీశ్రీ వలె, పామరులను అంతకు మించి ప్రభా వితం చేసిన బుర్రకథా పితామహుడు నాజర్‌ను వామపక్షాలు ఎందుకు విస్మరించాయి? వివిధ సందర్భాలలో ఎందుకు ఆహ్వానించలేదు? అవలోకన చేయవలసిన అంశం.

నాజర్‌కు నాటకాలంటే ఆసక్తి. ఎనిమిదో ఏటనుండే వేషాలు కట్టారు. ‘పగలు రేత్తిరి’ నాట కాల వారి వెంటే. పెద రావూరుకు చెందిన రామక్రిష్ణ శాస్త్రి నెలకు మూడు రూపా యలిచ్చి నాజర్‌కు తెనాలిలో డ్యాన్స్‌ నేర్పించారు. నరసరావు పేటలోని క్షురకుడు మురుగుల సీతారామయ్య ఖర్చులు ఇప్పించి నాజర్‌కు సంగీతం నేర్పించారు. పేటలో, తాడికొండ బోగం అమ్మాయి పాటలు పాడించుకుని అన్నం పెట్టేది. విద్య నేర్చుకుని నాజర్‌ పొన్నెకల్లు చేరాడు. ఈ నేపథ్యంలో, 1943లో ఉమ్మడి కమ్యూనిస్ట్‌ పార్టీ తాళ్ళూరులో నిర్వహించిన పాటల పోటీలో నాజర్‌ ప్రథమ బహుమతి పొందారు. ఆ సందర్భంలో రెంటపాడుకు చెందిన రామకోటి పరిచయమయ్యారు. కథకుడిగా బుర్రకథను చెప్పే రామకోటి, తనకంటే గొప్పగాత్రం ఉందని భావించి, తగిన మెళకువలను నేర్పి నాజర్‌ను కథకుడిగా చేశాడు. నాజర్‌ కథకుడు. హాస్యగాడు రామకోటి. వంత కర్నాటి.‘నాజర్‌ దళం’  లక్షలాది సామాన్య జనం కమ్యూనిస్ట్‌ పార్టీని ఆలింగనం చేసు కునేలా చేసింది. ప్రజానాట్యమండలిలో తొలి తరం కళాకారుడైన నాజర్‌ స్వయంగా బుర్రకథలను రాసుకునేవారు. పాటలు రాసేవారు. కట్టేవారు. పాడేవారు. ఆ వాగ్గేయుని ప్రభావం గద్దర్, వంగపండు, నేటి గోరటి వెంకన్న వరకూ ప్రసరిస్తోంది.

కమ్యూనిస్ట్‌ పార్టీలకు మాత్రం నాజర్‌ ఆత్మఘోష సోక లేదు. ప్రజానాట్య మండలి 1949లో రద్దయింది. పార్టీ కథలు చెప్పుకుని బతకమ న్నది. కొన్నాళ్లకు ఉమ్మడి పార్టీ నాయ కులు పార్టీ వేదిక లపై కథ చెప్పాలన్నారు. బయటవారు నాజర్‌ కథకు 300 రూపా యలు ఇచ్చే రోజులు. ‘దళం’ రాకపోకల ఖర్చు కోసం పార్టీ నుంచి  రూ. 100  తీసుకునేవారు. కథలో భాగంగా çకుల వాస్తవికతలను చెప్పేవారు. అది పెడధోరణిగా భావించి నాజర్‌ సేవలు అవసరం లేదంది పార్టీ. సీపీఎం సైతం చాలు చాలన్నది. ‘అవును నిజం, నీవన్నది’ అంటూ ఆ తరువాత తరిమెల, దేవులపల్లిలు నాజర్‌ను ఆహ్వానించారు. ధర్మరాజు వంటి వ్యసనపరులు, భీముని వంటి తిండిపోతులు, నకుల సహదేవుల వంటి అర్భకులను, అర్జునుని వంటి వీరులను ఒక్కతాటిపై నడిపి, రాజ్యా ధికారంలోకి తెచ్చేందుకు పార్టీలోని మేధోన్నతులు కృష్ణు్ణనిలా దోహదపడాలన్న నాజర్‌ వైఖరి ఎం.ఎల్‌లకు నచ్చలేదు. విరసానిక్కూడా. మావో సాక్షిగా చివరి శ్వాస వరకూ నాజర్‌ మార్క్సిజాన్నే నమ్మారు! నాజర్‌ ఉదహరించే ఇతిహాసాలను అభ్యుదయవాదులు విస్మరించారు. ఆ ఖాళీలో దేశంలో మతవాదులు చొరబడ్డారు. వామపక్షవాదులు కులభావనను గుర్తించలేదు. ఆ శూన్యంలో అణగారిన కులాల అభ్యున్నతికి పాటుపడతామనే విశ్వాసాన్ని కలిగించిన పార్టీలు రాష్ట్రాలలో అధికారంలోకి వచ్చాయి. ఆ దిశగా అడుగులు వేయడమూ చూస్తున్నాం. ఏదిఏమైనా, ప్రజలే చరిత్ర నిర్మాతలు కదా!

పున్నా కృష్ణమూర్తి
(ప్రముఖ బుర్రకథా పితామహుడు షేక్‌ నాజర్‌
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Friday 7 February 2020

Iqbal Bano, the subcontinent's beloved ghazal singer,

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Iqbal Bano, the subcontinent's beloved ghazal singer, born in India and trained in the Dilli Gharana by the legendary Ustad Chand Khan, . In the hearts of all who knew and loved her music is the memory of that day: when, in protest against the jailing of the subcontinent's foremost left poet Faiz Ahmad Faiz by Pakistan's dictator General Zia-ul Haq, she sang Faiz's immortal song "Hum Dekhenge" (We shall witness) at a Lahore stadium full of 50,000 people, wearing a black sari in defiance of Zia's ban on the sari. As her liquid voice reached the crescendo -- declaring "Certainly we, too, shall witness that day ... When these high mountains/Of tyranny and oppression turn to fluff and evaporate/And we oppressed/Beneath our feet will this earth shiver, shake and beat/And heads of rulers will be struck/With crackling lightening and thunder roars/When crowns will be flung in the air — and thrones will be overturned ...," people joined with slogans of "Inquilab Zindabad" (Long live revolution!) ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;LYRICS;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Hum dekhenge Lazim hai ke hum bhi dekhenge Woh din ke jis ka waada hai Jo loh-e-azl pe likha hai Hum dekhenge Jab zulm-o-sitam ke koh-e-garaan Rui ki tarah ud jayenge Hum mehkumoon ke paun tale Yeh dharti dhad dhad dhadkagi Aur ehl-e-hukum ke sar upar Jab bijli kad kad kadkegi Hum dekhenge Jab arz-e-khuda ke Kabe se Sab but uthwaye jayenge Hum ahl-e-safa mardood-e-haram Masnad pe bithaye jayenge Sab taaj uchale jayenge Sab takht giraye jayenga Bas naam rahega Allah ka Jo ghayab bhi hai hazir bhi Jo nazir bhi hai manzar bhi Uthega nalhaq ka naara Jomain bhi hoon aur tum bhi ho Aur raaj karegi khalq-e-khuda Jo main bhi hoon aur tum bhi ho Hum dekhenge Lazim hai ke hum bhi dekhenge Hum dekhenge

Thursday 6 February 2020

Ehsanullah Ehsan, responsible for shooting Malala in 2012, escapes from prison in Pakistan

Ehsanullah Ehsan, responsible for shooting Malala in 2012, escapes from prison in Pakistan
PTIISLAMABAD, FEBRUARY 07, 2020 12:03 IST
UPDATED: FEBRUARY 07, 2020 12:56 IST
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This December 10, 2014 file photo shows Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai.
This December 10, 2014 file photo shows Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai.   | Photo Credit: AP

It would be a big blow to Pakistan and its campaign to eradicate the remnants of Taliban if the clip is proved to be authentic.
Ehsanullah Ehsan, the former Pakistan Taliban spokesman who was responsible for the shooting of Malala Yousafzai in 2012 and carrying out the deadly Peshawar Army school terror attack in 2014, has escaped from prison, according to a audio clip released by him.

In the audio clip, which surfaced on social media on Thursday, Ehsan said that he escaped the confinement of Pakistani security agencies on January 11, claiming Pakistani forces failed to keep their promises made to him during his surrender in 2017.

“With the help of God, I succeeded to escape on January 11, 2020 from the confinement of the security forces,” he is heard saying in the clip.


It would be a big blow to Pakistan and its campaign to eradicate the remnants of Taliban if the clip is proved to be authentic.


Without revealing his current location, Ehsan said that he would make a detailed statement about the days of his confinement in the coming days as well as about his future plans.

Ms. Yousafzai, 22, the youngest Nobel Peace prize winner, was shot by a gunman for campaigning for female education in 2012 in Pakistan’s Swat Valley.

Ehsan was also involved in the one of the most gruesome attacks on children anywhere in the world when 8-10 suicide attackers wearing paramilitary Frontier Corps uniforms on December 16, 2014 entered the Peshawar’s Army Public School and went from classroom-to-classroom shooting indiscriminately, killing 149 people including 132 students.

Ehsan in the audio clip said that he surrendered to the Pakistani security agencies on February 5, 2017 under an agreement but the forces failed to keep their promise made before the surrender.

“I followed the agreement for about three years. But these shrewd security institutions put me in prison along with my children in violation of the agreement, he said, adding that he finally decided to flee from the forces.

The authenticity of the audio and veracity of the Ehsan’s claim was not verified by the security forces or the Pakistan government.

Opposition to the partition of India

Opposition to the partition of India
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Map of British India (1893)

Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan of the Khudai Khidmatgars and Mohandas Gandhi of the Indian National Congress both strongly opposed the partition of India.
Opposition to the partition of India was widespread in British India in the 20th century and it continues to remain a contentious issue in South Asian politics. Most individuals of the Hindu and Sikh faiths were opposed to the partition of India (and its underlying two-nation theory),[1] as were many Muslims in that country (these were represented by the All India Azad Muslim Conference).[2][3]

Pashtun politician Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan of the Khudai Khidmatgar viewed the proposal to partition India as un-Islamic and "contrary to the history of Muslims in the subcontinent, who had for over a millenium considered India their homeland."[4] Mahatma Gandhi opined that "Hindus and Muslims were sons of the same soil of India; they were brothers who therefore must strive to keep India free and united."[5]

Muslims of the Deobandi school of thought "criticized the idea of Pakistan as being the conspiracy of the colonial government to prevent the emergence of a strong united India" and helped to organize the Azad Muslim Conference to condemn the partition of India.[6] They also argued that the economic development of Muslims would be hurt if India was partitioned,[6] seeing the idea of partition as one that was designed to keep Muslims backward.[7] They also expected "Muslim-majority provinces in united India to be more effective than the rulers of independent Pakistan in helping the Muslim minorities living in Hindu-majority areas."[6] Deobandis pointed to the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah, which was made between the Muslims and Qureysh of Mecca, that "promoted mutual interaction between the two communities thus allowing more opportunities for Muslims to preach their religion to Qureysh through peaceful tabligh."[6] Deobandi scholar Sayyid Husain Ahmad Madani argued for a united India in his book Muttahida Qaumiyat Aur Islam (Composite Nationalism and Islam), promulgating the idea that different religions do not constitute different nationalities and that the proposition for a partition of India was not justifiable, religiously.[8]

Khaksar Movement leader Allama Mashriqi opposed the partition of India because he felt that if Muslims and Hindus had largely lived peacefully together in India for centuries, they could also do so in a free and united India.[9] Mashriqi saw the two-nation theory as a plot of the British to maintain control of the region more easily, if India was divided into two countries that were pitted against one another.[9] He reasoned that a division of India along religious lines would breed fundamentalism and extremism on both sides of the border.[9] Mashriqi thought that "Muslim majority areas were already under Muslim rule, so if any Muslims wanted to move to these areas, they were free to do so without having to divide the country."[9] To him, separatist leaders "were power hungry and misleading Muslims in order to bolster their own power by serving the British agenda."[9]

The Deccan Herald, in an article titled The tragedy of Partition, argued that:[10]

The Muslim and the non-Muslim population lived together since centuries on the Indian soil, peacefully and harmoniously, without any major conflict. It was clear that if ever a separate Muslim nation-state was formed, it could not possibly contain all or even most, Indian Muslims. And there would inevitably be many non-Muslims in it. No amount of social engineering could separate India’s Muslims from non-Muslims. It was simply not possible. The Indian Muslims did not have a common culture or speak one major language. A Punjabi Muslim had very little in common with a Muslim in Bengal or in Malabar, except, of course, religion. There was no single language that could be called a Muslim language. For centuries, Indian Muslims shared the language and culture of the region along with non-Muslims. The second claim, that Indian Muslims were fundamentally different from non-Muslims, was even more absurd. Syncretism had been an important feature of Indian culture since early times. Culture and language were generally based on region, more than religion. And so a Bengali Muslim had much more in common with a Bengali Hindu than with a Punjabi Muslim. Considerable cultural diversity existed within Muslims and multiple connections existed between Muslims and non-Muslims. It was simply not possible to draw a dividing line, either of territory or of culture, between India’s Muslims and non-Muslims.[10]

After it occurred, critics of the partition of India point to the displacement of fifteen million people, the murder of more than one million people, and the rape of 75,000 women to demonstrate the view that it was a mistake.[11]


Contents
1 Organisations and prominent individuals opposing the partition of India
1.1 Political parties
1.2 Politicians
1.3 Writers
1.4 Religious organizations
2 Indian Reunification proposals
3 See also
4 References
5 External links
Organisations and prominent individuals opposing the partition of India
Political parties

First Session of All-India Jamhur Muslim League, which was established by Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi to support a united India (1940).
All India Azad Muslim Conference[12]
All-India Jamhur Muslim League[13]
All India Momin Conference[12]
All India Muslim Majlis[14]
All India Shia Political Conference[12]
Anjuman-i-Watan Baluchistan[12]
Indian National Congress[15]
Jamaat-e-Islami
Jamiat Ahl-i-Hadis[12]
Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind[16]
Khaksar Movement[17][18]
Khudai Khidmatgar[19]
Krishak Praja Party[12]
Majlis-e-Ahrar-ul-Islam[20]
Sind United Party[3]
Unionist Party (Punjab)[21]
Politicians
Abul Kalam Azad[22]
Abdul Matlib Mazumdar[23]
Abdul Samad Khan Achakzai[14]
Allah Bakhsh Soomro[3]
Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed[24]
Altaf Hussain[25][26]
Fazl-i-Hussain[27]
Inayatullah Khan Mashriqi[28][17]
Kanaiyalal Maneklal Munshi[29]
Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan[19]
Khan Abdul Jabbar Khan[30]
Khwaja Abdul Majid[31]
Khwaja Atiqullah[32]
Maghfoor Ahmad Ajazi[13]
Mahatma Gandhi[33]
Malik Khizar Hayat Tiwana[27][34]
Maulana Abul Kalam Azad[35]
Maulana Attaullah Shah Bukhari
Markandey Katju[36]
Maulana Sayyid Husain Ahmad Madani[37]
Maulana Abul Ala Maududi
Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari[14]
Rafi Ahmed Kidwai[24]
Shaukatullah Shah Ansari[14]
Sheikh Abdullah[24]
Shibli Nomani[14]
Sikandar Hayat Khan[27][38]
Ubaidullah Sindhi[39]
Writers
Saadat Hasan Manto strongly opposed the partition of India, which he saw as an "overwhelming tragedy" and "maddeningly senseless".[40][41] The literature he is remembered for is largely about the partition of India.[40]

Religious organizations
Darul Uloom Deoband[42]
Indian Reunification proposals
Main article: Indian reunification
Further information: Indo-Pak Confederation proposals
In The Nation, Kashmiri Indian politician Markandey Katju has advocated the reunification of India with Pakistan under a secular government.[43] He stated that the cause of the partition was the divide and rule policy of Britain, which was implemented to spread communal hatred after Britain saw that Hindus and Muslims worked together to agitate against their colonial rule in India.[43] Katju serves as the chairman of the Indian Reunification Association (IRA), which seeks to campaign for this cause.[44][45]

Pakistani historian Nasim Yousaf, the grandson of Allama Mashriqi, has also championed Indian Reunification and presented the idea at the New York Conference on Asian Studies on 9 October 2009 at Cornell University; Yousaf stated that the partition of India itself was a result of the British interests and their divide and rule policy that sought to create another buffer state between the Soviet Union and India to prevent the spread of Communism, as well the fact that a "division of the people and territory would prevent a united India from emerging as a world power and keep the two nations dependent on pivotal powers."[46] Yousaf cited former Indian National Congress president Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, who wrote in the same vein:[46]

If a united India had become free...there was little chance that Britain could retain her position in the economic and industrial life of India. The partition of India, in which the Moslem majority provinces formed a separate and independent state, would, on the other hand, give Britain a foothold in India. A state dominated by the Moslem League would offer a permanent sphere of influence to the British. This was also bound to influence the attitude of India. With a British base in Pakistan, India would have to pay far greater attention to British interests than she might otherwise do. ... The partition of India would materially alter the situation in favour of the British.[46]

Yousaf holds that "Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the President of the All-India Muslim League and later founder of Pakistan, had been misleading the Muslim community in order to go down in history as the saviour of the Muslim cause and to become founder and first Governor General of Pakistan."[46] Allama Mashriqi, a nationalist Muslim, thus saw Jinnah as "becoming a tool in British hands for his political career."[46] Besides the pro-separatist Muslim League, Islamic leadership in British India rejected the notion of partitioning the country, exemplified by the fact that most Muslims in the heartland of the subcontinent remained where they were, rather than migrating to newly created state of Pakistan.[46] India and Pakistan are currently allocating a significant amount of their budget into military spending—money that could be spent in economic and social development.[46] Poverty, homelessness, illiteracy, terrorism and a lack of medical facilities, in Yousaf's eyes, would not be plaguing an undivided India as it would be more advantaged "economically, politically, and socially."[46] Yousaf has stated that Indians and Pakistanis speak a common lingua franca, Hindi-Urdu, "wear the same dress, eat the same food, enjoy the same music and movies, and communicate in the same style and on a similar wavelength".[46] He argues that uniting would be a challenge, though not impossible, citing the fall of the Berlin Wall and the consequent German Reunification as an example.[46]

Wednesday 5 February 2020

Prominent Pakistani rights activist Manzoor Pashteen arrested

Prominent Pakistani rights activist Manzoor Pashteen arrested
Pashteen, leader of Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement, was taken into custody in northwestern city of Peshawar.

by Asad Hashim
27 Jan 2020
Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement, founded by Pashteen, has faced increasing restrictions in recent months [Al Jazeera]
Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement, founded by Pashteen, has faced increasing restrictions in recent months [Al Jazeera]
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Islamabad, Pakistan - Pakistani police say they have arrested prominent rights activist Manzoor Pashteen, the leader of the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM), which is known for its strident criticism of the country's powerful military for alleged enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings.

Pashteen was arrested late on Sunday from the Shaheen Town area of the northwestern city of Peshawar, police official Nabibul Khan told Al Jazeera.

More:
Pakistan military warns Pashtun rights group its 'time is up'
Manzoor Pashteen: The voice of Pashtuns for many in Pakistan
The PTM in Pakistan: Another Bangladesh in the making?
"He was required in a case by the police from Dera Ismail Khan city police station, so we [arrested him]," said Khan.

According to the police report, he was arrested on sedition charges.

As the PTM rose to prominence through nationwide rallies, police routinely filed cases alleging Pashteen and other PTM leaders committed sedition in their speeches.

However, it is the first time Pashteen has been arrested in such a case.

Mohsin Dawar, a PTM leader and member of parliament, confirmed the arrest to Al Jazeera.

"This is our punishment for demanding our rights in a peaceful [and] democratic manner," Dawar said in a Twitter post on Monday. "But Manzoor's arrest will only strengthen our resolve."

Pashteen, in his 20s, and a small group of other young activists who had been displaced by the Pakistani military's war against the Taliban in their native South Waziristan, founded the PTM in Dera Ismail Khan, located about 250km south of Peshawar.

They shot to national prominence in 2017 when the group championed the cause of Naqeebullah Mehsud, the victim of an extrajudicial killing by a notorious Pakistani counterterrorism police officer.

Since then, Pashteen has led rallies of thousands across the country, demanding justice for other victims of enforced disappearances, extrajudicial killings and alleged torture while in security forces' custody.

His group has also demanded that the Pakistani military clear the country's northwestern tribal districts - the site of the war against the Pakistan Taliban since 2007 - of all land mines and other unexploded ordnance.

'Funded by foreign intelligence services'
The group has long been in the crosshairs of Pakistan's military, which has directly ruled the country for roughly half of its 73-year history and still holds control over security and foreign policy.

Coverage of PTM rallies and Pashteen's statements is regularly censored across Pakistani news media.

In April, the military warned the PTM that its "time is up", accusing the group of being funded by foreign intelligence services. PTM denies the charges and has invited the military to make its evidence of any such funding public.

A month later, a PTM rally clashed with security forces at a checkpoint in the northwestern district of North Waziristan. Soldiers fired into the crowd, killing at least three people, rights activists say.

Police registered a terrorism case against Dawar, the member of parliament, who was leading the rally and spent days in hiding following the violence.

He was eventually arrested, alongside fellow PTM leader and Member of Parliament Ali Wazir, and held for three months before being released on bail for lack of evidence against them.

Asad Hashim is Al Jazeera's digital correspondent in Pakistan. He tweets @AsadHashim

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

Manzoor Pashteen, the young activist who challenged Pakistan's military over human rights abuses, is arrested

Manzoor Pashteen, the young activist who challenged Pakistan's military over human rights abuses, is arrested
Pashteen leads the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement
Posted 3 February 2020 8:36 GMT

Manzoor Pashteen. Image by Qurratulain Zaman, used with permission.”

On January 27, 2020, Manzoor Ahmad Pashteen, the young human rights activist from South Waziristan, Pakistan who dared to challenge the country's military over its human rights record, was arrested for alleged conspiracy and sedition.

According to a police complaint lodged against him on January 21, Pashteen is accused of using threatening and derogatory language against the state during a public gathering on January 18.

The Pakistan Penal Code states that certain sedition charges can carry a possible life sentence.

Who is Manzoor Pashteen?
The son of a primary school teacher, 25-year-old Pashteen has been highlighting the plight of the Pashtun people — also known as Pathans — an ethnic group residing mostly in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Thirty million Pashtuns, representing 15 percent of Pakistan's total population, are disadvantaged, and anti-Pashtun sentiment prevails in both countries. In the past decade, there have been reports of systematic abuse and enforced disappearances of the Pashtun people by the Pakistani army.

Read more: The Pashtun Long March Asks for Justice After Years of Ethnic Targeting
Pashteen leads the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM), a social movement for Pashtun human rights. Based in the provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, Pashteen founded the group in 2014. Over the past few years, its members have been facing legal harassment for speaking out for the rights of the Pashtun people, and for calling for justice when it comes to violations against the community.

In May 2019, for example, local members of parliament Mohsin Dawar and Ali Wazir were arrested in North Waziristan on allegations that their supporters had attacked a Pakistan Army check post in North Waziristan’s Kharqamar. They are currently out on bail.

Media coverage of the movement and its activities also faces restrictions; in fact, local television channels avoid covering the movement altogether. In February 2019, Pashteen's interview with The New York Times (NYT), which called for an end to the enforced disappearances and extra-judicial murders of ethnic Pashtuns by security officials was forced to be censored by the military in Pakistan. The NYT's local edition in Pakistan dropped the article and the column with his interview appeared blank:


Niazbeen Malang
@niazbeen31
Welcome to pakistan
Land of censorship

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4:41 PM - Feb 12, 2019
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In May 2018, Global Voices reported how digital outlets that covered the movement experienced disruptions to their websites.

Read more: Media censorship surrounds the Pashtun rights movement in Pakistan
Mohsin Dawar, member of the National Assembly of Pakistan and one of the leaders of the Pashtoon Tahafuz Movement, tweeted:


Mohsin Dawar

@mjdawar
Last night Manzoor Pashteen was arrested in Tehkaal, Peshawar. This is our punishment for demanding our rights in a peaceful & democratic manner. But Manzoor's arrest will only strengthen our resolve. We demand the immediate release of Manzoor Pashteen.#ReleaseManzoorPashteen

8,151
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“These arrests are not going to put us down,” Dawar told Global Voices in a phone interview. “This is a sign for recognition of our demands of justice, peace and equality.”

Crackdown on political activists
The Pashtoon Tahafuz Movement called a press conference and a peaceful protest to highlight Manzoor's case, as well as the plight of nine others who were arrested with him. However, on January 28, during a demonstration against Pashteen's arrest, Dawar, along with 22 other peaceful protestors, were dragged into police vans and arrested. Dawar was released the following day and the rest of them were sent to Adiala Jail in judicial custody. A first information report (FIR) was lodged against them accusing of different crimes as per the Pakistan Penal Code including “assault on public servants”, “defaming army” and “obstructing public servants from discharging duties” and they were denied bail.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan issued a statement:

There is no indication that the protestors resorted to violence at any point, although video footage shows several of them being manhandled by the police. HRCP believes that these actions were unconstitutional and have violated citizens’ right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. The arbitrary use of the charge of sedition under an archaic law to curb political dissent – that has in no way incited hatred or violence – indicates how little regard the state has for its citizens’ civil and political liberties.

Journalist Fahad Desmukh tweeted:


Fahad Desmukh
@desmukh
1. Manzoor Pashteen spoke against extrajudicial killings & disappearances --> Manzoor was arrested

2. @AmmarRashidT and 22 others protested in Islamabad against Manzoor's arrest --> they were arrested

3. @MohsinAbdali4 protested against their arrest --> he was disappeared https://twitter.com/aimaMK/status/1222709888591241216 …

Aima Khosa
@aimaMK
This is @MohsinAbdali4's speech from the demonstration for the release of activists arrested from Islamabad. #ReleaseMohsinAbdali

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Social media users shared independent videos in which police could be seen dragging women activists. Political activist Tooba Syed tweeted one such video:


Tooba Syed ☭ #ReleaseIslamabadProtesters
@Tooba_Sd
In this video @IsmatShahjahan & Nawfil Saleemi are being dragged by police.Nawfil Saleemi can be heard saying “chooraiN mujhe yeh peaceful protest hai” Lifelong political worker Ismat Shahjahan being shoved in the ground.Shameful #ReleaseIslamabadProtestors #ReleaseNawfalSaleemi

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Professor of political science Aasim Sajjad Akhtar tweeted his support for the 22 protestors still in custody:


Aasim Sajjad Akhtar
@AasimSajjadA
Crime?
1.Creative/critical minds
2.Struggle for oppressed ethnic-nations, women & religious minorities
3.Friends of poor
4.Agnst war, ecol destruction & profit-based economy#FreeAmmarRashid#FreeNawfalSaleemi#FreeSaifullahNasar#FreeShahRukneAlam#ReleaseIslamabadProtesters

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Secretary of the Awami Workers Party Maria H Malik also tweeted:


Maria H. Malik ☭
@marriyamalik1
Jaqueline Berumen, wife of @AmmarRashidT talking about Ammar's politics.
The moment where Isa yells "I'M MISSING MY PAPA, ACTUALLY!" is just so beautiful it breaks my heart.

Shame on this state for torturing families like this!#ReleaseAmmarRashid#ReleaseIslamabadProtesters

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Twitter blocking and suspending accounts
To survive as an organic, grassroots movement, the PTH depends on social media to spread information, but activists say they are facing ‘suspension’ and ‘legal threats’ from Twitter, a popular social networking site.

Widespread reporting of Twitter accounts is a tactic used by pro-government trolls to silence PTM supporters or anyone else speaking out against human rights abuses in the country.

Ziyad Faisal, editor of The Friday Times, tweeted:


Ziyad F.I.
@Ziyad_F
Twitter suspended accounts of a number of critical voices from Pakistan.
So far 2 journalists that I'm aware of - & now at least 1 intellectual.
They are locked out of their accounts for 12 hrs.
This coincides with a countrywide crackdown on civil liberties & critical voices

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Maria H. Malik tweeted about her own experience:


Maria H. Malik ☭
@marriyamalik1
My account was locked for 12 hours because of "questionable tweets". I come back to Twitter and find more stories of abductions and arrests. Where is everyone who was elected to run this state and look after its people? Is this a joke? @sherryrehman  @ShireenMazari1 @ImranKhanPTI

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In 2018, Pakistani authorities threatened to ban Twitter, alleging that the platform had not responded to their requests to block certain ‘offensive’ material. In 2019, Twitter sent notices to a number of Pakistani journalists and human rights activists, informing them that their content was allegedly in violation of Pakistani law.

Creative Commons License
A small portrait of Qurratulain (Annie) Zaman
Written by
Qurratulain (Annie) Zaman

కాబూల్‌లో పాక్‌కు వ్యతిరేకంగా వెల్లువెత్తిన నిరసన

కాబూల్‌లో పాక్‌కు వ్యతిరేకంగా వెల్లువెత్తిన నిరసన
06-02-2020 07:47:10

కాబూల్ (ఆఫ్ఘనిస్థాన్):ఆఫ్ఘనిస్థాన్ దేశంతోపాటు జమ్మూకశ్మీర్ అంతర్గత వ్యవహారాల్లో పాకిస్థాన్ జోక్యాన్ని నిరసిస్తూ ఆఫ్ఘనిస్థాన్ దేశంలోని కాబూల్ నగరంలోని పాక్ రాయబార కార్యాలయం ముందు ఇస్లామాబాద్‌కు వ్యతిరేకంగా ఆఫ్ఘనిస్థాన్ వాసులు నిరసన తెలిపారు. ‘పాకిస్థాన్ డౌన్ డౌన్’, పాకిస్థాన్ శత్రువు అంటూ ప్ల కార్డులు చేతబట్టి ఆఫ్ఘాన్ వాసులు ఆందోళన జరిపారు. పెషావర్ నగరంలో గత నెల ఫస్టూన్ తహఫూజ్ ఉద్యమ నేత మంజూర్ ఫస్టీన్ తోపాతటు అతని 9 మంది అనుచరులను అరెస్టు చేసి 14 రోజుల జుడిషీయల్ రిమాండుకు పంపించడాన్ని నిరసిస్తూ అతన్ని వెంటనే జైలు నుంచి విడుదల చేయాలని ఆఫ్ఘనిస్థాన్ ఆందోళనకారులు డిమాండు చేశారు.

It's Kejriwal Vs The Might Of WhatsApp University

Every second election story begins with a conversation with a cab driver. So does mine. This one is about an Uber driver, who gave me a ride yesterday. Let's call him Ramesh. He comes from Pratapgarh in UP but lives in Delhi in a rented room with his wife and young son. Ramesh voted for AAP in 2015, and has volunteered for the party once in a while. Even in 2019, when more than half of Delhi voted for Narendra Modi, Ramesh chose to back Arvind Kejriwal.
This time, however, Ramesh will vote for the BJP. He says he changed his mind just a couple of weeks ago. Ramesh's change of heart might not tell us anything about an electoral trend in Delhi. What interests me is his reason for switching his vote - how 'knowledge' is constructed through the peculiar institution that is popularly called WhatsApp University. It is also about how these apparently random 'forwards' and memes coalesce to produce a weltanschauung. This world-view is a composite of an imagined past, a constructed present and an aspirational future. And it has immense electoral effects.
"Kejriwal ji bahut acche aadmi hain, aur unhone Dilli ke liye bahut kucch kiya bhi hai. Lekin jis tareeke se unhone Shaheen Bagh ke in hijabi auraton ka saath diya hai, mujhe AAP se sakt nafrat ho gayee hai", said Ramesh vehemently, glancing at me in the rear view mirror. But why does he believe that Shaheen Bagh is an AAP-sponsored protest? "Saara news par aa chuka hai. WhatsApp par viral bhi hai. Yeh log 500-500 rupaye mein dharne par baithe hain. Paisa Aam Admi Party de rahi hai. Aur saath mein din-raat biryani." He was clearly referring to this viral video which was debunked by Alt News, the fake news-busting site.
His second complaint was about the massive traffic jams the Shaheen Bagh sit-in is supposedly causing. Mind you, he himself hadn't ever been caught in any of them, but, once again, he had seen videos on WhatsApp. "Sau se zyaada mareez toh sirf ambulance mein phans kar mar gaye hain," he said. It reminded me of a tweet by a Hindi news channel reporter, which made a similar assertion. Clearly, this piece of fake data had gone viral.
These are isolated fragments of information. They require a framework of ideas to attach themselves to and create a coherent whole. WhatsApp University has played a massive and perhaps decisive role in constructing this whole. And Ramesh, who is an extremely smart and articulate individual, has become an avid exponent of this vision.
"India was enslaved for centuries well before the British came to India. The Mughals came a thousand years ago (sic) and turned us into their ghulam. You are educated, you must know more than me about how they crushed Indians. After that the British enslaved us. Chalo, Angrezon ne to kuchh accha bhi kiya. Lekin uske baad Congress aayi. 70 saalon tak raaj kiya. Desh ke liye kya kiya?" It was clearly a rhetorical question. He had the answers.
"Aaj Modi ji ke aane ke baad, har gaanv mein bijli hai, har ghar mein shauchalay hai, har grihini ke paas gas cylinder hai." He had learnt on WhatsApp that the Modi and Yogi governments have ensured that every single home in Uttar Pradesh has 24-hour electricity. If the Modi government is doing so well, then what made him vote for AAP in 2019? He was disappointed with the Modi government's performance when it came to dhandha and naukri. But, now he knows better. "Iss par Kanpur University ke bahut bade professor hain, unka message WhatsApp par viral hai. Aap ko bhi bhej doonga." The message, allegedly by a Kanpur academic, argues that the Modi government is trying to treat a cancer caused by 70 years of misrule. When a cancer is treated, the patient suffers a lot. Even after the cancer is cured, the patient suffers for another six months. After that, he stands up with renewed energy and vigour.
"Agar Modi ji 70 saal pahle Bharat ke shaasak bante, to aaj hum Cheen se aage nikal chuke hotey," he told me. He was convinced that India was treated with disdain till Modi became PM. Now, other than our 'enemies' such as Pakistan & China, every other country treats India at par with 'England-Amrika'.
Ramesh repeated the popular notion that the PM has no reason to be corrupt because he has no family, no one to leave his wealth to. Kejriwal is also incorruptible, he said. But he has a family, I pointed out, which stumped him for a while. "Kejriwal ji mein ab khot yeh ho gaya hai, ki woh Mughalon ki chaal chal rahe hain. Gaddaron ka saath de rahe hain." He spouted standard WhatsApp fare that Muslims fought and got a separate country in 1947. "Unko phir wahin jaana chaahiye. Hamare desh mein kyon baithe hain? Aur agar yahin rahna hai to phir apna hijab biryani unhein chhodna padega."
Note the constitutive elements of this discourse. The idea of being enslaved and humiliated by Mughals - a short form used for 'Muslim invaders'. A soft-corner for the British despite colonialism, because they defeated the Mughals. A belief that Congress did nothing for 70 years and that India sprang into development on May 16, 2014. The idea of a cancer-ridden body-politic that needs painful chemotherapy before it can rise up again.
Underlying all this, is the idea of an eternal 'us' - Hindus who have always belonged to this nation. There is a corresponding concept of 'them' - Muslims who never believed in India. Finally, the powerful idea that 'our' natural national identity is that of Hindus. So, if Muslims want to stay here, they have to give up their religious 'markers' and their cultural practices. Anything else is gaddari
It is a discursive space that is authorized and authenticated by some section of national mainstream media. It is then exaggerated, contorted and embellished with fake 'data' and false historical 'facts' and disseminated through WhatsApp. Once these messages and memes go viral, they become 'trends' that mainstream media reacts to and engages with. And, once again, WhatsApp University adds masala and spreads it further.
It's a continuous, vicious cycle of information, opinion, 'news' and 'facts' much of which is either entirely fake or of dubious provenance. It is a beast that is constantly fed by organised producers of fake news and propaganda. This is the base upon which all politics is being fought today.
As Ramesh shows, this discourse informs voters across the key political divide in Delhi - whether one is an AAP or a BJP voter. This new way of knowing India, its politics and history, has skewed the balance heavily towards the right. Any event can be used to drum up support at a short notice and engineer massive electoral swings.
Arvind Kejriwal knows this which is why he was so keen to distance himself from the anti-CAA protests. That is why he is so anxious to tell Delhi that he can recite the Hanuman Chalisa. It is an acknowledgement that thanks to WhatsApp University, every battle will now be fought in the arena constructed by the BJP. 
(Aunindyo Chakravarty was Senior Managing Editor of NDTV's Hindi and Business news channels.)
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the personal opinions of the author. The facts and opinions appearing in the article do not reflect the views of NDTV and NDTV does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.

Academic Anand Teltumbde arrested from Mumbai airport

Bhima Koregaon: Academic Anand Teltumbde arrested from Mumbai airport
The SC had on January 14 refused to quash the charges against Teltumbde but granted him protection from arrest until February 11 to seek anticipatory bail.
Bhima Koregaon: Academic Anand Teltumbde arrested from Mumbai airport
Ambedkar Study Centre, NLSIU via YouTube
The Pune Police arrested writer and academic Anand Teltumbde from the Mumbai airport at 3.30 am on Saturday in connection with the violence that broke out last year in Bhima Koregaon near Pune, ANI reported.

The arrest came a day after a court in Pune rejected the activist’s anticipatory bail application. Inspector Indulkar from Pune, who was at the airport to take Teltumbde into custody, told advocate Pradeep Mandhyan that he was being arrested as his bail was rejected.

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The Supreme Court had on January 14 granted Teltumbde protection from arrest for four weeks and allowed him to approach the competent authority for regular or pre-arrest bail. The protection was set to expire on February 11. Teltumbde’s counsel had said they would file an appeal in the Bombay High Court but he was arrested before he could approach the High Court.

Assistant Commissioner of Police Shivaji Pawar confirmed the arrest and said that he will be produced in a special court later in the day, according to The Indian Express.

Additional Sessions Judge Kishor Vadane, while rejecting the bail petition on Friday, said investigators had collected enough evidence against the activist. “In my view, there is sufficient material collected by the investigating officer to show the involvement of the present accused in the alleged commission of the offence,” the judge added. Observing that the investigation was at a crucial stage, the court had said the “custodial interrogation of the accused is necessary”.

The case
Five activists – Shoma Sen, Surendra Gadling, Mahesh Raut, Rona Wilson and Sudhir Dhawale – were arrested by the Pune Police in June and five more – Gautam Navlakha, Arun Ferreira, Vernon Gonsalves, Sudha Bharadwaj and Varavara Rao – were arrested in August. They were accused of being involved in an event that preceded the violence between Dalits and Marathas at Bhima Koregaon. The five activists arrested in August were subsequently placed under house arrest. Teltumbde and activist Stan Swamy’s homes and offices were searched.

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The arrested activists are accused of masterminding the violence and of having links with the banned Communist Party of India (Maoist).

After the Supreme Court rejected Teltumbde’s appeal to quash the FIR on January 14, he wrote an open letter to the public, asking for support. A group of Ambedkarite organisations, alumni of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, and the All India Forum For Right To Education have extended support to the activist and demanded the withdrawal of charges against him.

Kejriwal hits out at BJP, asks who is your chief minister face

Delhi Elections 2020 LIVE Updates: Kejriwal hits out at BJP, asks who is your chief minister face
Delhi Elections 2020 LIVE Updates: Congress leaders Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra are expected to address public rallies in the National capital later in the day. 
By: Express Web Desk | New Delhi |
Updated: February 5, 2020 1:29:13 pm



Vote keeping welfare of your family in mind: Arvind Kejriwal to opposition party supporters

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal.  (File)
Delhi Assembly Elections 2020:  Challenging Union Home Minister Amit Shah for a face-off,  Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal hit out at the BJP asking about their Chief Ministerial candidate. Addressing a press conference, he also blamed the BJP for “using” the Delhi police and staging a “political stunt,” ahead of polls. He also said that if Kapil Baisala (the shooter) has links with AAP, he must be given “stringent” punishment.

Meanwhile, with only four days left for the polls, campaigning for the Delhi Assembly elections has intensified. Union Home Minister and BJP leader Amit Shah will hold rallies Kondli, Trilokpuri, Krishna Nagar and Gandhi Nagar on Wednesday. Congress leaders Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra are also expected to address public rallies in the National capital later in the day.

On Tuesday, in his second rally in the city, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the national capital needs a government that will give direction and not resorts to blame game. “People of Delhi say the country has changed, now it is time for Delhi’s transformation.”

After BJP and Congress, the Aam Admi Party (AAP) launched its manifesto, a slim seven-page document that promises to uphold the preamble to the Indian Constitution, alongside a list of guarantees and proposals, some new and some old.

Campaigning for the polls will conclude on February 6. The elections for Delhi Assembly’s 70 seats will be held on February 8. The results will be declared on February 11

Bidar Police Question School Children for Fourth Time on 'Seditious' Play on CAA


Bidar Police Question School Children for Fourth Time on 'Seditious' Play on CAA

Like before, they were asked who wrote the play, who helped them rehearse, who taught them the lines, etc.

Bidar Police Question School Children for Fourth Time on 'Seditious' Play on CAA
Police questioning students at Shaheen School. Photo: Special arrangement

The Wire Staff
The Wire Staff
COMMUNALISMEDUCATIONGOVERNMENTRIGHTS
23 HOURS AGO
New Delhi: Policemen in Karnataka’s Bidar questioned students at Shaheen School for the fourth time on Monday about a play they preformed, which the government has decided is ‘seditious’. Two people have been arrested in the case:  Fareeda, the in-charge of the school’s primary section, and Nagma, the mother of a Class 6 student.

According to The Hindu, four plainclothes policemen and two members of the Child Welfare Commission arrived at the school around 10:30 am on Monday, and began questioning the staff. Deputy Superintendent of Police Basaveshwara Hira joined them at about 12:30 pm, at which point students were also questioned.

Questioning lasted for two hours, the report says, and not all of the seven students who were questioned were in the play. Like before, they were asked who wrote the play, who helped them rehearse, who taught them the lines, etc.

“I cannot understand why the police are repeatedly subjecting the children of 9 to 12 age group to mental torture. The harassment will affect them in the long run. The police don’t understand if we tell them,” Tauseef Madikeri, CEO of Shaheen Group of Institutions, told the newspaper.

“The students are scared,” a school official told Indian Express. According to them, no other adult is being allowed into the room while children are questioned.


Students from economically weaker sections of society study at Shaheen Schools, and they are often given fee waivers and scholarships.

The police arrested Najumunissa, whose daughter is in Class 6, because another student said that she had written the play. She is a single mother, and her daughter is being looked after by her landlady because of Najumunissa’s arrest, according to the Indian Express.

As The Wire has reported before, teachers of the Shaheen Group of Institutions had decided to engage with its students and parents and help them dispel misunderstandings around the recently passed law.

Children were asked to read up on the CAA, the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the National Population Register (NPR) and bring out their own artistic presentations on the topic before an audience on January 21.

Also read: NIA Questions IIT Guwahati Professor Involved in Anti-CAA Protests

It was one particular line from a play performed on that day that has led to the sedition charges. Najumunissa’s daughter said in the play that if someone came asking for her documents, she would hit them with a slipper.

The complainant, Nilesh Rakshala, accused school management and students’ parents for using their children “to further their agenda against Prime Minister Narendra Modi”.

In the play, a clip of which is in The Wire’s possession, the children are heard mouthing some satirical lines in Hindi and speaking about the poor who would be the worst affected because of the law. One child, a class 6 student, is then heard saying, “Where will I get my papers from. If I am asked for it, I would beat the person with my slippers.”


It is noteworthy that no one utters a word against the prime minister or any individual at all. The FIR, however, claims that the child had targeted the prime minister and made use of “foul language” against him.

“I don’t understand how this is seditious,” one parents told the Indian Express. What is anti-national in 9-10-year-olds talking of the CAA?”

'I Could Not Be Hindu' - Bhanwar Meghwanshi

'I Could Not Be Hindu' 
Is a Unique Testimony to the Sangh's' Casteism

book by Bhanwar Meghwanshi and Review by Christophe Jaffrelot

Christophe Jaffrelot reviews Bhanwar Meghwanshi's book tracing his trajectory from an RSS member to an Ambedkarite.

Review: 'I Could Not Be Hindu' Is a Unique Testimony to the Sangh's' Casteism
The RSS has never explicitly denounced the caste system but attempted to reform it in order to preserve its basic structure. Photo: PTI

03/FEB/2020
This book is unique in many ways. First, it is written by a former RSS member who has become a radical critique of the organisation and who explains why in detail. Till date, few ex-swayamsevaks had narrated what had been their experience in the Sangh and presented the reasons why they had left it. I know only three other such testimonies. The oldest one was published by Secular democracy in 1970, the most recent one came out almost two decades later and – probably – sometimes in between Ram Lall Dhooria published I was a Swayamsevak an undated text. Few people leave RSS and when they do, they do not necessarily write their memoirs.

Second, this book has been written by a Dalit, Bhanwar Meghwanshi, who enlightens the reader about the situation of the Scheduled Castes within the Sangh parivar and in today’s Indian society at large. In this preface, I will focus on this second dimension of the book which makes it most valuable.

The RSS and Dalits – Dalits in the RSS

Created by Maharashtrian brahmins, the RSS has gradually tried to attract Hindus from all kinds of caste backgrounds in order to be the “Hindu Rashtra in miniature” its founder, K.B. Hedgewar longed for. The shakhas were supposed to welcome youngsters from all social origins, including Dalits, and that was one of the reasons why it was so important that all the participants should wear the same uniform, in order to erase socio-economic distinctions.

In fact, the RSS was partly a reaction to the rise of Dalit politics under the aegis of Ambedkar whose first anti-caste mobilisations (including the Mahad satyagraha and temple entry movements) also took place in what is today Maharashtra. For the RSS, to include members of the Depressed Classes (as the Scheduled Castes were known in the 1920s), was a good way to defuse anti-Brahminism and to maintain social hierarchies.


Watch | A Dalit Who Quit and Fought RSS: Interview With Bhanwar Meghwanshi

Indeed, the RSS has never explicitly denounced the caste system but attempted to reform it in order to preserve its basic structure. In 1939, for instance, in We or our nationhood defined, M.S Golwalkar, who was to take over from Hedgewar the year after, considered that it was “none of the so called drawbacks of the Hindu social order, which prevents us from regaining our ancient glory”. Deendayal Upadhyaya defended the original varna vyavastha even more explicitly, in Integral Humanism, a text that is still considered as its ideological charter by the Sangh parivar. He wrote in 1965:

In our concept of four castes, they are thought of as an analogous to the different limbs of Virat-Purusha […] These limbs are not only complementary to one another, but even further, there is individuality, unity. There is a complete identity of interest, identity of belonging. […] If this idea is not kept alive, the castes instead of being complementary can produce conflict. But then this is distortion.


Bhanwar Meghwanshi
I Could Not Be Hindu: The Story of a Dalit in the RSS
Navayana, 2020

The resilience of caste in the RSS is evident from the lucid and poignant testimony of Bhanwar Meghwanshi. He tells us that, like so many other Swayamsevaks, he joined the RSS at a very young age, mostly to exercise and play traditional games. But he was gradually presented the history and the culture of his society in a manner which made him proud of being a Hindu and angry because of the decline of the sons of the (sacred) soil of Hindustan – which was largely attributed by his teachers to the “Muslim invasions”.

These “gurus” were pracharaks who were almost venerated by the young swayamsevaks, including Bhanwar because of their dedication to the sacred Cause of Hinduism. They carried with them the prestige traditionally attached to asceticism:

In my time the district pracharak was an extremely principled man, Shiv-ji bhaisahab, who maintained strict discipline and lived a life of simplicity and frugality. He possessed only two sets of kurta–pyjama, and a small cloth bag. He slept on the ground, ate modestly, and was extremely punctual. He had no personal life, and spent most of his time touring the region. Always dressed in white, he lived austerely. Unlike the pracharaks of today, he did not get involved in politics, business and other such crooked schemes. Most pracharaks of the town were like Shiv-ji bhaisahab. Of course, at the time I had boundless respect for RSS pracharaks.

Bhanwar Meghwanshi’s ethnographic account is very revealing of the RSS’s modus operandum. On one hand, its pracharaks, because of their life style, attract support from all quarters, including the local notables (mostly traders); on the other hand, they related actively to others – virtually every body, including Dalits: pracharaks are not only always touring their constituency, but they visit the homes of the swayamsevaks and other sympathisers. To be directly in touch with the largest number of people, to maintain close relations, to enquire about their family and their personal problems is clearly part of the RSS’s modus operandum.

Also read: The Two Faces of Hindutva’s Dalit Agenda

Dalits and low caste Hindus particularly appreciate this attitude because they are usually ostracised. Not only are they segregated topographically in some neighbourhood, but upper caste people are not supposed to meet them – even less to share meals with them. The willingness of pracharaks to interact with Dalits was especially well received by those who pursued a strategy of sanskritisation consisting in emulating the brahmins instead of being proud of their Dalit identity – and fighting the upper castes. In the shakha, low caste swayamsevaks were shown forms of respect they were not used to, as evident from Bhanwar Meghwanshi’s description of the branch of the RSS that had developed in his village:

We came from all castes, even those who considered people of my kind to be beneath them and wouldn’t even talk to us properly. But here we all addressed one another as ‘ji’. From plain Bhanwar I too became Bhanwar-ji, well on my way to becoming Bhanwar-ji bhaisahab.

File Photo of rank-and-file RSS Karsevaks. Credit: Reuters/Files
Representative image of RSS members. Photo: Reuters/Files

In Bhanwar Meghwanshi’s village, low caste people joined the RSS in large numbers: “Of the fifty or so children who attended the shakha in my village, most were OBCs—Kumhar, Jat, Gurjar, Mali and so on. From among Dalits, there were Bunkars and Dholis, and also a couple of Bhil Adivasis. They came because of the sanskritisation process mentioned above and because of the games they played in the shakha, but they remained for ideological reasons too as, gradually, they learnt that their culture was threatened by others, primarily by Muslims and Christians.

Bhanwar Meghwanshi recalls that while in the Sangh he “heard a lot about weapons being stored in the basements of mosques” and that getting rid of the Babri Masjid was like “a second battle for independence”. Bhanwar Meghwanshi took part in the Ramjanmabhoomi movement in the early 1990s with a great sense of pride, as if to defend this symbol of Hinduism promoted his self-esteem. He was part of the first attempt at building the Ram temple, in the context of the Rath Yatra in October 1990. Then, he was “exhilarated”, chanting “To die for Ram-ji is such an honour…”. He and his Rajasthani comrades in arms were taught “how to evade the police” and were “told that implements to destroy the structure – hoes, spades, crowbars – would be provided by locals at Ayodhya” – a clear indication of the premeditated nature of the operation.

He discovered on this occasion, in Ajmer station itself, that the cadres of the RSS were not supposed to indulge in such work:

As the train started to slide out of the station, all the important functionaries slid out of the train […] I saw how one by one, the big folk, the industrialists, the sangh pracharaks, the leaders of VHP and BJP, all excused themselves. Having wished us well, they went back to their homes. Only people like me remained—impassioned Dalits, Adivasis, other young people from the lower castes, and a few sadhus and sants. To take charge of us, some lower-order functionaries tried to put us at ease, don’t worry, these people have other contingents to see off and then they’ll follow us directly to Ayodhya. They were never to come. They were sensible people and went back to their homes. I understood that sensible people always use us, we who are driven by passion; they push us into battle and return to their safe little coops. In this lies their greatness; maybe greatness is just another word for cunning.


Also read: When Rebel Swayamsevaks Took on ABVP and Were Attacked

However, Bhanwar Meghwanshi did not draw any conclusion from this episode but went to Ayodhya as a disciplined foot-soldier. He did not listen to his father, a Congress activist who had become sarpanch of his village and who explained to him that RSS needed Dalits primarily to fight against Muslims physically, something upper caste preferred not to do. Bhanwar Meghwanshi reacted to these words by putting up two stickers on the front door of the family house: “Garv se kaho hum Hindu hain” (Say it with pride, we are Hindu)  and “Bade bhagya se hum Hindu hain” (We are blessed to be Hindu).

But he realised that some RSS members were more Hindu than others soon after. While he had been appointed vistarak, he expressed the desire to become pracharak. The district pracharak discouraged him because of his caste background which would have made his job complicated. Soon after Bhanwar Meghwanshi fully realised the resilience of caste in the RSS on another occasion: while he had prepared food for Sangh parivar members who were touring his district, they refused to come to his home for eating; instead they took the food with them in order to save time and, they said, feed the village where they going next – but they threw it out on the road. Bhanwar Meghwanshi was shocked:

How can the Sangh do this to me? They don’t believe in untouchability, in caste discrimination, they believe all Hindus to be one, they talk of a united Hindu society, and then this kind of hypocrisy?

This episode echoes the moment when the little Ambedkar and his siblings, on their way to their father’s place of work, had to drive the cart themselves because the tongawala believed in caste stigma. Ambedkar became even more aware of his untouchability as the children were not admitted in any dhaba on the way and had to drink muddy water from a stream. This milestone is also similar to the one Gandhi experienced in South Africa when he was expelled from a coach reserved to white people. Bhanwar Meghwanshi’s sense of belonging changed immediately: “For the first time in my life that day, I stepped aside from my Hindu identity and started seeing the world like a person from a lower caste”. Note that by “becoming” untouchable, Bhanwar ceases to be Hindu – as the title of the book itself reconfirm -, as if this religion was associated only to upper castes.


B.R Ambedkar. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

His new identity opened new horizons and went on par with a new mission that has resulted, among other things, in the present book:

“I decided not only to make a clean break with the Sangh, but that I would widely publicise their casteist behaviour towards me. It would be my life’s work now to expose the reality of this dishonest Hindu Rashtra and Hindutva. I resolved to tear the veil of fake harmony from the face of the Sangh and its family of institutions and expose their real face in public”.

Also read: The Hinduisation of Ambedkarism

Becoming Ambedkarite – waking up to humanism

The subsequent trajectory of Bhanwar Meghwanshi is a fascinating one. First, he had to cope with huge psychological problems, revealing of the challenges that Dalits face in many parts of India, especially when they feel betrayed and rejected by the rest of society – and Bhanwar Meghwanshi had been both by RSS. He tried to commit suicide, but was saved and the next steps he followed took him to Ambedkarism, through his quest for humanity.

First, he made a point to encounter the Others par excellence, the Muslims, who “turned out to be people like [him]”, “just as patriotic as us”. Remembering the attitude of the RSS cadres vis-à-vis Muslims and Dalits, he comes to the same conclusion as his father (without acknowledging it though): “They only want to use us to attack the Muslims, otherwise we did not matter at all”.

Then, like Ambedkar, he considered that “to convert out of Hinduism” was the best option. The fact – emphasised by Ambedkar long ago – that Hinduism and caste (even untouchability) could not be separated became obvious for Bhanwar Meghwanshi on two occasions. First, he had access to a confidential letter of the RSS exhorting upper caste members of the organisation “to make the caste system of Hindu society even stronger. It was only because of this caste system, the letter said, that Hindu society had survived. If not for the caste system, everyone would have become Muslim or Christian”.

Secondly, Bhanwar Meghwanshi was horrified by the way a VHP leader, Acharya Giriraj Kishor, justified the fact that Dalits had been burnt alive in Haryana on the suspicion of cow slaughter. Kishor, according to Meghwanshi, had said that “the life of one cow is more valuable than the lives of fiver Dalits”.  When he tried to leave Hinduism, Bhanwar Meghwanshi was attracted by Jesus Christ, like so many other Dalits, but he resented the way Christianity, like any other religion, tried “to expand its followers and control the world”.

Also read: ‘History Was Accelerated in the Wake of BJP’s 2019 Victory’: The Wire Interviews Christophe Jaffrelot

Finally, he read Ambedkar. The chapter called “Towards Ambedkarism” is short but fascinating. It shows that what Bhanwar Meghwanshi had learned about Ambedkar when he was in the RSS was a completely adulterated version of the man:


I had read about Babasaheb Ambedkar here and there in Sangh publications like Panchjanya, Pathey Kan, Rashtra Dharma and Jahnavi, from which I learnt that Babasaheb was a great nationalist, and had contributed to writing the Constitution of India. That he had wanted to make Sanskrit the national language and the saffron flag the national flag. That despite every temptation, he had not converted to Islam or Christianity but to Buddhism, which was part of Hinduism. And that he was opposed to the continuation of Article 370 in Kashmir, which gave the state a special status.

Now I was reading Ambedkar himself, and found that his views on everything were the exact opposite of what the Sangh claimed. It was the first time I was reading him directly, not as presented by the Sangh. I was dumbstruck. The first book I read, Riddles in Hinduism, blew my mind. After that I found everything I could that Babasaheb had written. I learnt about the many bitter circumstances that arose in his life, with which he had to deal. Annihilation of Caste gave me a clear understanding of how Brahmanism was responsible for the establishment of the hateful system of caste hierarchy and discrimination. I came to recognise the true nature of the RSS. How, through their claim of samrasata or harmony, they were subverting the possibility of equality, justice and social transformation. And what the politics was, behind naming Dalits as neglected (vanchit) and Adivasis as forest dwellers (vanvasi), denying us our own identity.

Subsequently, Bhanwar Meghwanshi read Kabir, Periyar and Phule, suggesting that the corpus of Dalit literature has consolidated itself in the course of time and offer now a comprehensive new sense of direction for those who search a human identity. Finally, he was attracted by the last true ambedkarite organisation, BAMCEF—the All India Backward (SC, ST, and OBC) and Minority Communities Employees Federation -, that had been founded by Kanshi Ram after he himself discovered Ambedkar’s books in Maharashtra.


Bhanwar Meghwanshi. Photo: Facebook

As many other ambedkarites, Bhanwar Meghwanshi is struck by the lack of political and social consciousness of the OBCs who lay themselves to the fallacy of sanskritisation and indulge in untouchability:  “The tragedy of the Backward Castes is that they consider themselves pure Hindus and, under the sway of Hindutva, are at the forefront of committing atrocities against Dalits.”

But Bhanwar Meghwanshi has to admit that many Dalits have also been won over by the Hindutva movement, especially in the context of communal violence. Visiting Gujarat after the 2002 pogrom, he realised that “Much of the violence had been conducted by Dalits and Adivasis” because, in the case of the former, “Dalits attempt to prove themselves pure Hindus by taking a leading part in riots and violence against Muslims”.

Also read: BJP’s Rise Has Meant a Shrinking Number of Muslim Lawmakers in India

To continue his fight against Hindutva and to emancipate himself from the caste system, Bhanwar Meghwanshi created his own organisations and publications, before getting closer to secular movements, like the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan – which, at that time was advocating the need for a Right to Information Act.

His fight is a difficult one. Like all those who have decided to defend Ambedkar’s trilogy, Equality, Liberty and Fraternity, he has been subjected to all kinds of pressure and intimidation: “Members of my family faced life-threatening physical attacks, false cases were slapped on me, cooked up complaints led to probes. The police, CID, CBI, IB, all carried out multiple investigations. These forms of extreme harassment carry on till today”, he says in the conclusion of the book. But the last words of the book suggest that he remains fully determined:

“Nevertheless I will speak, I will write, and I will always stand up, speak out, and fight the battle against injustice, oppression, exploitation and inequality.

Inquilab zindabad—Long live the revolution! “


This remarkable book by a remarkable man teaches the reader a life lesson, as it is as moving as informative.

Christophe Jaffrelot is Senior Research Fellow at CERI-Sciences Po/CNRS, Paris.