Saturday, 20 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS Chief Minister Bhagwant Maan strongly rebuked the central government in an election rally at Hoshiarpur Punjab Has To Unite Against The Tyranny Of BJP : Amarinder Singh Raja Warring JKNC hold workers meeting at Samba Chief Secretary T.V.S.N Prasad directs prompt crop damage survey and speedy lifting of grain stocks from Mandis Gurjit Singh Aujla started the election campaign by paying obeisance at Gurudwara Baba Chhajjoji Government is wasting wheat for personal gain Atal Dulloo throws open 2-day multi-speciality medical camp at SDH Jagti School of Liberal & Creative Arts at LPU lifted Championship trophy of 12th Cultural Fest ‘One India-2024’ Health Minister Punjab inaugurates Aryans Pharmacy Conference Department of Applied Sciences, CGC Landran organises workshop Lokayukta presents Annual Report to Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla 118 year old Dharamveer of Palwal district is the oldest voter in the state Take proper permission for vehicles in road shows- DEO Sakshi Sawhney, CP and MC Commissioner Ludhiana DC Sakshi Sawhney, CP and MC Commissioner felicitate toppers of class 10 CM Bhagwant Mann in Fatehgarh Sahib: Regardless how long and dark the night is, the sun of truth always shines, in 2022 the people chose the light of truth Despite Heavy Rainfall and Storm, Bhagwant Mann Remains Committed to Address Gathering in Sri Fatehgarh Sahib Gurjit Singh Aujla arrived to congratulate the Muslim brotherhood on Jumma Namaz Fortis Healthcare Launches 80-bedded Multi-Speciality Tertiary Care Hospital at Nagarbhavi, Bangalore Understanding Fatty Liver Disease: Causes, Complications, and Lifestyle Changes Harnessing the Power of Karting for Productivity and Mental Health Boost to BJP as representatives of 40 sports organisations extend support to Sanjay Tandon

 

Tactical alliance or forced co-existence? India's tribals and the Maoists

Title: An Unfinished Revolution - A Hostage Crisis, Adivasi Resistance and the Naxal Movement; Author: Kishalay Bhattacharjee; Publisher: Pan Macmillan India: Pages: 240; Price: Rs 399

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

08 Nov 2017

Maoist rebels were described as India's biggest security challenge (before radical Islamist terror supplanted them), having violently taken control of large stretches of the tribal-dominated heartland. The ultra-left insurgents, however, portray themselves as guardians of long-neglected and/or much-exploited tribals. While both stands have their supporters, the binary construct ignores the opinion of the tribals themselves. "I was absorbed by the utter deprivation of a people whose own history of resistance was conveniently appropriated by the Naxals (Maoists). These people had lost the ability to speak for themselves and, if they did, it was seen as dissent that needed to be crushed by both sides wielding guns," says journalist Kishlay Bhattacharjee.And it is this key, but mostly overlooked issue he seeks to examine in this book. But apart from the current plight of the hapless Adivasis, who are damned if they do and damned if they don't by the simple fact of just being where they are, he also goes into their own lively past of resisting the state and its demands and restrictions.But this book has more too, for Bhattacharjee happens to wear many hats.It has his own memories of growing up in the 1970s and 1980s with Bengali literature which had quite a bit of focus on the Naxalbari Movement. Then, in his profession, he dealt with people in "conflict zones" and as internal security chair at the Institute of Defence Studies and Analyses, he had, in 2011, sought to carry out field research on the state response to the Maoist insurgency.Then Bhattacharjee had first-hand experience of meeting and discussing politics with a top Maoist leader -- after a gruelling night walk through the jungle -- when he was covering the abduction of two Italians in Odisha in 2012.All these go to make this book a compelling melange of "part reportage, part personalised ethnography and part memoir". It arose from the idea that if the hostage crisis, told from multiple viewpoints across the spectrum, is inserted into the larger picture of the Maoist movement, "it could perhaps provide an on-the-ground understanding of 'tribal militancy' and the Maoist 'revolution' which is still 'unfinished'".He draws your interest right from the beginning with the starkly evocative description of a contest of wills, over a board game, between captive and captor, that could come from the pen of an accomplished literary figure.This gives way to an equally atmospheric account of him and other media colleagues ensconced in a small, back-of-beyond Odisha town of Daringbari in March 2012 as they await some developments in the kidnapping of Italian tourist Claudio Colangelo and Odisha-based Italian tour-guide Paolo Borusco from the state's Kandhamal area.This is quite gripping in in its own way, and insightful too, as Bhattacharjee here sketches the boredom and rivalry of the journalists and the eventful and exacting march to meet the Maoists. But the highpoint is the discussion with their rather genial and well-informed leader -- though not identified, it is Sabyasachi Panda -- who is forceful but cogent in his arguments, ready to admit mistakes, and candidly realistic about their struggle's shortcomings.The subsequent two parts provide a unique look into the whole hostage crisis, through the perspective of the victim -- Colangelo, who has his own set of discussions with his captor -- and that of his anxious family members back in Rome, as recounted by his son's girlfriend.

nd finally, Bhattacharjee combines anthropology, history and politics to great effect in sketching the tribals' life, society and travails in the modern age -- both in colonial times and in free India. In a bid to understand how and when the Adivasis' fate combined with the Maoists, he travels to Naxalbari itself where he meets the son of the late Charu Mazumdar, and the last remaining participants of the 1967 turmoil/revolution.A postscript by retired diplomat-turned-NHRC member Satybrata Pal presents his view on the Adivasi-Maoist relations and what it means for both of them in the future.A well-researched and well-reasoned work where the respondents are allowed to speak in their own voice and has some surprising facts and conclusions, the book is a necessary read for anyone concerned about the balance between rights, development, security and the environment.

 

Tags: BOOK

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD