*Reading Phule - Now No More Silences!*

*subhash gatade*



“Lack of education lead to lack of wisdom,

Which leads to lack of morals,

Which leads to lack  of progress,

Which leads to lack of money,

Which leads to the oppression of the lower classes,

See what state of the society one lack of education can cause!”

·         *Jyotiba Phule*



*..Most people do not realize that society can practise tyranny and
oppression against an individual in a far greater degree than a Government
can. The means and scope that are open to society for oppression are more
extensive than those that are open to Government; also they are far more
effective. What punishment in the penal code is comparable in its magnitude
and its severity to excommunication? Who has greater courage—the Social
Reformer who challenges society and invites upon himself excommunication or
the political prisoner who challenges Government and incurs sentence of a
few months or a few years imprisonment?.. *

(*Ranade, Gandhi and Jinnah*, Address delivered by Dr Ambedkar on the 101
st birthday celebration of M G Ranade, 18 th January, 1943)





*Introduction*

Understanding or rereading a historical figure - whose life and times have
impacted generations of scholars and activists - who has been subjected to
praise as well scrutiny by best brains of our times becomes a challenging
task.  One gets a feeling that whatever has to be said has already been
said and perhaps there is not much novelty left. An added challenge becomes
when you are face to face with scholars/activists who could be considered
experts on the issue having done more detailed and through work on the
subject.

Today when I begin my presentation I find myself in a similar quandary.

Would it be repetition of what the earlier scholar just spoke or a glimpse
of what the coming activist is going to present? And to avoid the possible
monotony of any such ensuing discussion - where all of us would be
doing '*kadam
tal*' (a lexicon used in NCC parades) around similar arguments and similar
insights and would be lamenting in similar voices, I have decided to flag
of few queries which have been bothering my mind since quite some time. It
is possible that it would be considered rather blasphemous to raise such
questions or they are so mundane that participants can just exchange smiles
about their content. Anyway, whatever might be the outcome I would like to
raise them with a sincere hope that they would possibly generate a
conversation?

1.

1848 happens to be a year of historic importance for the exploited and
oppressed of the world, as it was the year when Karl Marx and Frederick
Engels - young German revolutionaries - published 'The Communist
Manifesto’. Its’ call to 'Workers of the World' to Unite as they had
'nothing but chains to loose but a 'World to Win' still reverberates around
the world.

For all those radicals, revolutionaries - individuals, formations,
organisations - who yearn for a fundamental social transformation in this
part of the earth, 1848 has an added significance. It was this year when
another young man -Jyotiba Phule along with his wife Savitribai and a
family friend/fellow traveller Fatima Sheikh - opened the first school for
the socially discriminated and historically despised 'untouchable'
community's girls in Pune. And things were never the same for the
*Shudras-Atishudras
*and Women.

Today when we look back at the more than four decade journey of this young
man, who was given the honorific 'Mahatma' in the presence of thousands of
people, a few years before he breathed his last, (1890) we are amazed to
learn the expanse of his vision and the tremendous innovativeness and
creativity which was exhibited in his actions. Miles ahead of his own
contemporaries - who had the courage to raise his finger at the pressing
problems of his time and had no qualms in attacking internal asymmetries of
our society and no illusion about the 'great traditions' - one finds that
there was no hiatus between what he spoke and he practised in personal as
well as social-political life.

Apart from teaching his wife Savitribai - who later became a close comrade
of the work he had initiated and later metamorphosed into a writer as well
as an independent activist - which was rarity in those days or opening
doors of his own house for those considered lowly among the low or coming
to the defence of the scholar-activist Pandita Rambai, when she embraced
Christianity, about her right to convert when she had to face conservative
onslaught rather singlehandedly, one comes across many instances in his
life, which are worth emulating in today's times as well.

And in fact when moments came, he had the courage to question, challenge
wrong understanding of his own colleagues which was exhibited in his
devastating critique of another comrade Bhalerao (when he attacked the
important monograph by Tarabai Shinde - a product of the Satyashodhak
movement herself- titled 'Stree-Pusush Tulana' as it raised questions of
gender equality and patriarchal oppression  in her own style) or the manner
in which he went ahead with the publication of 'Cultivators Chord'
independently when his colleague in the movement another legendary figure
Lokhande -who was a pioneer in building the first union of workers in
Bombay named 'Bombay Millhands Association - and others found it too
radical to be given space in the organisation's organ after two
installments.

Modern India, cannot be imagined without the 'path breaking contributions'
of Phule and other social reformers/ revolutionaries who came after him,
who fought against heavy odds to convince the people around about
challenging existing social practices and questioning old mode of thinking
and exposing millennial old oppressions which had religious sanctions as
well and encouraging them to look beyond.

In his introduction to ‘Selected Writings of Jotirao Phule’ G.P Deshpande
tells us

‘Phule’s canvas was broad, his sweep majestic. He identified and theorised
the most important questions of his time – religion, Varna System,
ritualism, language, literature, British rule, mythology, gender question,
conditions of production in agriculture, the lot of peasantry etc….Was
Phule then a social reformer ? The answer will be ‘no’. A social reformer
is a liberal humanist.Phule was more of a revolutionary. He had a complete
system of ideas, and was amongst the early thinkers to have identified, in
a manner of speaking, classes in Indian society. He analysed the dvaivarnik
structure of Indian society, and identified the shudratishudras as the
leading agency of a social revolution.’ (Page 20, Leftword)

2.

It has been exactly 125 years that Mahatma Jyotiba Phule died. (28 th
November 1890).

If one goes by the mainstream media one learns that barring some stray
programmes not many celebrations/programmes were held to commemorate his
memory. Was it unintentional or inadvertent or part of fatigue being
experienced by people active with transformatory movements?

And on part of the state should it be interpreted as rather a crude
manifestation of identity politics when great leaders - especially
belonging to the oppressed communities - have also been 'reduced' to the
status of 'Heroes' of their respective castes/communities. And in such an
'identity loaded ambience' perhaps Phule - who was born into numerically
not very strong Mali (gardner) caste, did not have much chance to be
'remembered' by the wider populace. Or should it be considered part of
deliberate silencing of all such voices whose agenda is found to be
inconvenient or subversive by the ruling classes ?

Anyway, the apparent amnesia around his name does not reduce the importance
of the path breaking work he did. It was an interesting coincidence that it
was around the same time that the august parliament of the country was
holding a special two day session focussing on 'Constitution day' and
acknowledging the seminal role played by Dr Ambedkar in its making. History
bears witness to the fact that Dr Ambedkar had called Phule the 'Greatest
Shudra' and openly admitted that Buddha, Kabir and Phule was the
triumvirate which was source of his inspiration. People who are always in
search of silver lining can also say that thus the august parliament was
indirectly appreciating the historic contribution made by Jyotiba Phule as
well.

Silence around Phule and yearlong celebrations around Ambedkar can be
considered part of the same coin, a tactics which the ruling elite use with
ease.

Whether you celebrate Ambedkar or maintain a silence about Phule, one thing
can be easily discerned that the ruling classes are neither bothered about
the real concerns of Phule, Ambedkar or other social revolutionaries.
Perhaps they do not want people to remember that both Phule and Ambedkar
had raised destabilising questions about nation, nationalism, culture and
challenged 'tremendous fascination among the elite of their times about our
great civilisation'. One of their key posers which still rings true which
focuses on our caste ridden society - based on privileges for a few and
disabilities for the broader masses - and the near impossibility of the
emergence of 'a nation' from amongst its midst.

The ruling elite is more keen to carve out a 'suitable' Ambedkar or a
'convenient' Phule to further its agenda. Especially the present ruling
dispensation at the centre led by the BJP - part of the broader Hindutva
family - seems to be too eager to lay claim over his legacy and they want
people to forget the fact that when Ambedkar was alive they had been in the
forefront to oppose him on every count. 1

Any student of politics of the oppressed would vouch that it is rather a
bane of most of the leaders of the exploited and oppressed who can no more
be ignored by the dominant forces. In fact, we have been witness to a
similar process which unfolded itself in USA where a very sanitised image
of Martin Luther King, has been made popular. Instead of King who opposed
Vietnam War, looked at capitalism as source of all evils, who equally
struggled for workers’ rights, we have before us an image of King which
seems more amenable to the ruling classes there.

There is an interesting commonality how ruling classes try to
coopt/appropriate images of leaders of the oppressed. It is a three step
process: First, they try to ignore them ; second, when this tactics fails
they grudgingly acknowledge them ; third, they try to carve out a
'suitable' revolutionary for their own 'use'. They are adept at what a
scholar describes as a deliberate process of ‘mythologising the (great)
wo/men and marginalising their meanings.’

3.

It is really easy to blame the cunning of the ruling classes for this state
of affairs - which in fact can create lot of heat but does not throw any
light on the matter and which is always true - most difficult part of the
whole exercise is one, how we - who claim to be the radical inheritors of
their legacy - let it happen and secondly, whether there are any elements
in the world view of these greats themselves which have made their
'appropriation easier'.

It is possible that few amongst us would 'appreciate' the fact that the
powers that be talk about these greats, organise celebrations around them,
are keen to publish their collected works or even ready to make them part
of curriculum.  It may also give them satisfaction that they claim to be
walking in their footsteps or fulfilling their dreams but one should be
wary of all such claims and also look at the hiatus between what they claim
and what is the actual situation on the ground.

Should not this question really bother us that the official incorporation
of these greats could be easily done or today these revolutionaries of a
different kind who could be part of our arsenal in our fight against
inequality and discriminations, hierarchies of various kinds today seem to
be 'sitting cosily' with our adversaries.

Coming back to the original focus, question remains why and how the radical
agenda of Phule which had a very broad canvas could not be taken further,
with the same vigour, zeal and focus and how it metamorphosed first into
non-Brahmin movement and later was submerged easily into 'nationalist'
movement.

Dr Ambedkar offers an explanation while discussing Justice M G Ranade - who
was a contemporary of Phule.

The decline of Social Reform was quite natural. The odium of Social Reform
was too great. The appeal of political power too alluring. The result was
that social reform found fewer and fewer adherents. In course of time the
platform of the Social Reform Conference was deserted, and men flocked to
the Indian National Congress. The politicians triumphed over the Social
Reformers. I am sure that nobody will now allow that their triumph was a
matter for pride. It is certainly a matter of sorrow. Ranade may not have
been altogether on the winning side, but he was not on the wrong side and
certainly never on the side of the wrong as some of his opponents were.
(Ranade, Gandhi and Jinnah, Address delivered on the 101 st birthday
celebration of M G Ranade, 18 th January, 1943,
http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/
pritchett/00ambedkar/ txt_ambedkar_ranade.html)

While it seems apt in case of Justice Ranade, one definitely needs to go
further deep to understand the later metamorphosis of the Phulevian
movement.

4.

History bears witness to the fact that Jawalkar, (1902-1932) a leading
champion of the non-Brahmin movement - who was no less a radical - had
called Gandhi a 'Satyashodhak'  when the non-Brahmin movement decided to
'merge' itself with the national movement.

Was it just part of political expediency or did he really believe that
Gandhi who called himself a *sanatani* (orthodox) Hindu and firmly believed
in *Varnashram Dharma* was really taking forward Phule's mission.And this
despite the fact that by the time this stream had joined the Congress it
was very much clear that it was careful enough to sideline all those issues
pertaining to the internal asymmetries of Indian society, scuttle all such
attempts which challenge them, - which were the 'key concerns of
Satyashodhak movement under the grand slogan of fighting Britishers.2  In
fact, Phule had rather prophesised this state of affairs when he had raised
very important questions about the nature of Congress which was founded in
1885.

There cannot be a 'nation' worth the name until and unless all the people
of the land of King Bali - such as Shudras and Ati-shudras, Bhils (tribals)
and fishermen etc, become truly educated, and are able to think
independently for themselves and are uniformly unified and emotionally
integrated. If a tiny section of the population like the upstart Aryan
Brahmins alone were to found the 'National Congress' who will take any
notice of it ? (Phule, Collected Works, ed. Patil, vol II : 29)

A critical look at Gandhi is important because it was this period only when
mixing of religion with politics gained a new legitimacy, despite his
avowed respect for all religions. Under his leadership only task of
reforming Hinduism was brushed aside and Ambedkar, a consistent modernist
and a relentless critic of Hinduism, was pushed to the wall.

Looking back it becomes clear the side-lining of voices of internal reform
in Indian society had started during Phule's time itself.

In its early stirrings, Lokmanya Tilak, who happened to be a key leader of
the Congress movement then, had vehemently led the Conservative reaction
against all those concerns for which Phule stood for. It is widely known
how it was because of Tilak's insistence ( or we should say threat that the
Pandal holding Social Conference would be burnt down) the tradition of
holding Social Conference after Congress Conference- which was initiated by
the likes of Ranade etc. was discontinued. His opposition to the Sharda Act
is also known where he opposed any British intervention in deciding the age
at which girl can be married.

To say the least, it is rather baffling that the other face of Tilak's work
- where he firmly opposed spread of education among girls, where he opposed
moves by social reformers/revolutionaries which challenged age old
traditions/customs of Indian society or where he exhibited clearcut
Brahminical bias has not received the attention which it has deserved.

In a voluminous work titled 'Foundations of Tilak's Nationalism' ( Parimala
Rao, Orient Blackswan, 2010) the author - who has based her work mainly on
'The Mahratta' the newspaper brought out by Tilak - raises many important
questions, which exhibit a great hiatus between his image and reality. Two
of the questions which she raises in the Introductory chapter 'Encountering
the Myth' are worth quoting here :

Why did Tilak's 25 year long anti-peasant struggle fail to enter the pages
of history while his token no-tax campaign in ryotwari areas has been
extolled ? Why is his 40 yearlong effort to stop women and non-Brahmin from
receiving education is pushed under the carpet ?'

In fact, Tilak's ideological opposition to Phule went to the extent that
the newspapers which he brought out then - namely 'Kesari' and 'Mahratta' -
did not even publish a news about his death. (1990). He even preferred to
gloss over the fact that when young Tilak and Agarkar were jailed for the
first time, it was Phule only who had organised a public felicitation
programme for both of them when they were released (1881).

Ranging from the left on the one hand to the other end of the spectrum,
Tilak's image as a 'militant' face of the nationalist movement as opposed
to the 'moderates' has been glorified but neither his ideas and actions
which clearly present an anti-dalit, anti-women and anti-Muslim bias and a
voice which is consistently against social reform has ever come under
scanner. 3

5.

Coming back to the on-going debate a very valid question at this juncture
could be why does one want to 'excavate' old history ? It can be said that
let bygones be bygones.

The fact is that many questions regarding one of the most tumultuous period
in India's history still linger on and we are yet to reach any definitive
conclusion about them.

For example, one is always amazed by the pioneering work which broke new
grounds on the road to emancipation for the broad masses of the country -
done by the social revolutionaries - in this part of Western India, but
always baffled by the simultaneous/ staggered emergence of
reactionary/status quoist movements which also became a 'light house of a
different kind' to the rightwingers elsewhere.

As an aside one may note that the leading ideologue of the Islamist Right
Maududi also had his beginning in this region only whose influence extends
to the wider Muslim world. Maulana Maududi, is reverred by a broad spectrum
of Islamists for the world over, who founded Jamaat-e-Islami, was born in
Aurangabad and had his initial forays into social-political life here only.
As rightly said Abul Ala Maududi is to 'Political Islam' what Karl Marx was
to Communism?

Perhaps this query regarding not so silent emergence of social
revolutionary and social reactionary trends from the same part of Western
India can be further probed if we revisit this period.

We need to revisit not only to scrutinise the image of Lokmanya and how
skilfully the grand agenda of social transformation put forward by Phule
was side-lined and to understand the resistance to social change
encountered by Phule, but also need to revisit the period of nationalist
movement post-Tilak also which could not make a radical rupture with the
overwhelming Hindu discourse - despite the fact that two of its senior most
leaders, Gandhi as well as Nehru were die hard seculars.

Revisiting Tilak is important to know the genesis of Hindutva Right today
because under the name of opposing the Britishers he inadvertently or so
helped strengthen status quoist forces in Indian society and helped further
a very regressive social agenda. In fact his imaginary vis-a-vis Hindu
Nation or his mobilising Hindu constituency through organisation of
festivals or his extolling Manusmriti in 'Gita Rahsya' - his critique of
Bhagwad Geetha which he penned down during his prison days - or section of
Hindu Rights taking inspiration from him has largely remained unaddressed.

While the triumvirate of Savarkar, Hedgewar and Golwalkar is rightly
pointed out for their 'leading role' in Hindutva politics we should not
forget two things, one, 'pioneers' of Hindutva claimed Tilak's legacy as
well. The likes of Dr Munje, who was one of the founders of RSS and a key
leader of Hindu Mahasabha, was considered a staunch Tilakite and
dissociated himself from the Congress after the death of Tilak as he was
not convinced about the idea of Secularism in Gandhi and supposedly
abhorred his politics of non-violence.

An added complexity about the unfolding situation is the wide acceptance of
an illusion packaged as truth which veers around what people call '*Purogami
*Maharashtra'- Progressive Maharashtra.

You mention assassination of activists, scholars - who were working within
the bounds of constitution, you mention ascendance of Hindutva rightwingers
in all their ferocity today or their growing 'normalisation' in the
society, you mention rise in Dalit atrocities or the growing legitimacy of
caste councils and all such talk can bounce back upon you by calling them
aberrations and the 'great tradition of Phule-Ambekdar' would be invoked to
blunt your argument, (Perhaps it can be reminded here that Com Govind
Pansare, who was assasinated by *Sanatan Sanstha *terrorists had rightly
called upon people to come out of this illusion.)

6.

Looking back is important also to revisit the controversy which is often
raked up to denigrate Phule's contribution which veers around his approach
towards British rule. And disturbingly, traditional left which upholds Karl
Marx's dialectical assessment of the British rule where he talks about its
'crimes' as well as its 'causing a social revolution', 4 also seems to
follow the same track.

A representative sample of left's criticism of Phule can be had from G P
Deshpande's introduction to 'Selected Works of Jotirao Phule' ( we should
not forget how in the same Introduction GPD praises Phule in glowing terms,
a glimpse of it can be seen in section 1) which is basically a masterly
translation of Phule's selected writings in English. GPD writes

[P]hule did not see imperialism dialectically. He did not see that the
British ruling classes were not kind to the lower classes in Britain. The
British legal system, in which he had invested his faith, was no less
exploitative and unjust when it had to deal with the British peasantry and
the working class. His enthusiasm for British rule made him skeptical of
even the shudraatishudra uprisings against British rule in his own time,
for instance the uprising led by Umaji Naik. It also prevented him from
seeing the material basis of what he would brand as 'Brahman'
nationalism....Phule did not see, for instance, the significance of Vasudev
Phadke, a brahman, working with the ramoshis. The result was that Phule and
his comrades and followers ended up taking softer and softer positions on
British imperialism and ultimately lost ground to the nationalist movement.

(Ed. G.P. Deshpande, Selected Writings of Jotirao Phule, Leftword, 2002,
Page 19)

Perhaps a more nuanced understanding of Phule's more than four decade old
social-political journey - which should include his exposure of the British
government's policies from time to time or his assessment of the Congress
Party's then brand of nationalism or his envisioning an alternate
conception of nationalism - is in order to put things in proper
perspective.

And before coming to discuss Phule, it is also important to comprehend what
Marx meant by 'social revolution' in India. Could it be limited merely to
what he called '..[b]rutal interference of the British tax-gatherer and the
British soldier, as to the working of English steam and English free
trade."  (Karl Marx,, The British Rule in India, First published: in the
New-York Daily Tribune, June 25, 1853,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1853/06/25.htm) or something
deeper. Marx was definitely explicit regarding these changes:

"All the civil wars, invasions, revolutions, conquests, famines, strangely
complex, rapid, and destructive as the successive action in Hindostan may
appear, did not go deeper than its surface. England has broken down the
entire framework of Indian society, without any symptoms of reconstitution
yet appearing. This loss of his old world, with no gain of a new one,
imparts a particular kind of melancholy to the present misery of the
Hindoo, and separates Hindostan, ruled by Britain, from all its ancient
traditions, and from the whole of its past history. .....

 ..We must not forget that these little communities were contaminated by
distinctions of caste and by slavery, that they subjugated man to external
circumstances instead of elevating man the sovereign of circumstances, that
they transformed a self-developing social state into never changing natural
destiny, and thus brought about a brutalizing worship of nature, exhibiting
its degradation in the fact that man, the sovereign of nature, fell down on
his knees in adoration of Kanuman, the monkey, and Sabbala, the cow."

The impact of the British rule on the Indian society could be better
understood if one takes a look at the then existing society. In his speech
'Ranade,, Gandhi and Jinnah' Dr Ambekdar has described the situation
present then when Ranade - a contemporary of Phule - came on the scene.

"Is there any society in the world which has unapproachable,,
unshadowables, and unseeables? Is there any society which has got a
population of Criminal Tribes? Is there a society in which there exist
today primitive people, who live in jungles, who do not know even to clothe
themselves? How many do they count in numbers? Is it a matter of hundreds,
is it a matter of thousands? I wish they numbered a paltry few. The tragedy
is that they have to be counted in millions, millions of Untouchables,
millions of Criminal Tribes, millions of Primitive Tribes!! One wonders
whether the Hindu civilization is civilization, or infamy.5

The rule by the Peshawas which essentially practised Manusmriti was more
vicious especially for all those who did not belong to the Chitpavan
Brahman caste ( the caste to which Peshawa belonged). Forget right to
education or right to wear clothes according to one's own choice, it even
prohibited rest from using the greeting 'Namaskar'. The lowly of the low
then - namely 'untouchables' - had to carry an earthen pot in their neck so
that their spit does not spoil the street, their entry to the city was
limited to few hours only as it was feared that their shadow may fall on
the Brahmins and it can 'pollute' them.

In such a background colonialism was not simply change from one set of
rulers to others, it involved a move from one kind of society to a
qualitatively different one. Colonial rule definitely meant strengthening
mechanisms of colonial exploitation but it did try to superimpose minimum
capitalist relations on the old order. The prevalent social norms
subordinated individual to the institution of caste. The daily life of the
Hindus was regulated by the religious texts. Colonialism  prepared the
ground to 'break asunder' these relations.  It was under this regime that
India encountered Modernity for the first time albeit attempts were on to
curb/limit its spread in very many ways.

The differential experience of the change in rule vis-a-vis Brahmins and
the rest could be easily understood. And it was not for nothing that Phule
'welcomed' the defeat of the Peshawas in the war of 1857 (variously
described as 'war of independence' or 'sepoy mutiny' etc) and said that if
Britishers would have lost 'Peshawa rule would have returned'. The issue of
millenia old social-cultural oppression and denial of basic civic rights to
a large section of people had finally truimphed over the issue of gaining
of political rights by 'outsiders'. For the lowly among the low what was
the difference in material as well as social life if you were oppressed
under an 'insider' called Peshawa which denied them every sort of human
right and an 'outsider' called the British, which for its own reasons
granted limited civil rights to them.

As an aside one may note how for the Brahmin elite viewed end of Peshawa
rule (1 st January,1818) in the final battle with Britishers at Koregaon
and ushered us it into colonial regime, but how the same event was
interpreted entirely differently by the *Atishudras*. Battle of Koregaon
has a deep significance to Mahars and other Dalits in India, who remember
it every January 1 as a mark of their triumph against the dehumanising rule
of the Peshwas and as the first step in their on-going struggle against
caste-based oppression. When Dr Ambedkar was alive he use to visit Koregaon
(very near to Pune) yearly on 1 st January to remember the heroic role
played by dalit soldiers. It is said that on New Year's Day in 1818, about
500 soldiers of the East India Company's Bombay Native Infantry regiment
led by Colonel FF Staunton waded across the Bhima river and, at Bhima
Koregaon, routed a superior force of 25,000 well-equipped soldiers of the
Peshwa.(
http://scroll.in/article/801298/why-lakhs-of-people-celebrate-the-british-victory-over-the-maratha-peshwas-every-new-year
)

Another important point which normally gets missed is how Phule 'looked' at
nation and nationalism or how he thought about transfer of
power.


If in the worldview of the traditional elite, which was the fulcrum around
which nascent emergence of 'nationalism' could be traced, it basically
meant 'transfer of power' in their hands, for Phule

.[']nation was a democratic society. The birth of a nation required the
growth of a civil society, the celebration of citizenship, and the
beginning of the process of empowerment of the marginalised.'

(Debrahmanising History, Braj Ranjan Mani, P 289, Manohar, Delhi)

Phule was wary of the basic postulates of these nascent nationalists which
talked of reviving ancient glory or merits of the classical caste system
and envisaged a future which would replicate similar social system where
everybody will faithfully adhere to their respective caste duty.

In 'Shetkaryacha Asusd' (Cultivators Whipchord) he writes :

..If the Brahmans really wish to unite the people of this country and take
the nation ahead, then first they must drown their cruel religion, which is
customary amongst both the victors ( Brahmans) and the vanquished (
shudras), and they publicly and clearly, must cease using any artifice in
their relationship with the shudras, who have been demeaned by that
religion, and trample on inequality and the Vedanta opinion, and till a
true unity is established, there will be no progress in this country.
(Selected Writings of Phule, Leftword, 2002, P 178)

His forthrightness in criticising the Congress and emphasising his radical
social agenda was no exception. When Justice Ranade invited him for the
plenary session of the Conference of Marathi authors in 1885, he not only
expressed his inability but also underlined that he sees no point in
participating in such Conferences as they would not benefit downtrodden
masses. (Selected Writings of Phule, Leftword, 2002, P 200-1)

7.

All great revolutionaries of yesteryears are judged on the anvil of time.

It is part of the on-going evaluation, summation of work of earlier
revolutionaries, movements .

Buddha - the great social revolutionary - and Anand, his very close
comrade, popularly known as his disiple, present perhaps one of the
earliest examples in written history, when Buddha's exclusion of women from
*Viharas* became a talking point. It was only because of Anand's insistence
that they were included and we were saved from critical references about
position of women in Buddha's thinking.

Kabir, the radical Saint, who with his uncompromising attack on religious
hypocrisies of his times, still inspires young generations, but it does not
overshadow his negative opinion about women.

We very well know how the Jacobins - which formed part of the revolutionary
political movement that had been the most famous political club of the
French Revolution - were/are strongly criticised for their patriarchal
views.

And thus whether we like it or not neither Phule, nor Marx, not even Bhagat
Singh or Ambedkar can save themselves from scrutiny by later day followers,
critiques.

If the left movement in the country which has made tremendous sacrifices
for the benefit of the people, can be (rightly) criticised for its failure
to integrate the social, cultural question in its overall vision of
transformation - which has proved to be an important reason for its
stagnation, the ambiguity of the later day *social revolutionary* camp
vis-a-vis state power and search for its origins should also be considered
part of this ongoing process of review and reflection.

8.

The times in which we are passing through are challenging ones.

Times when unbridled forces of neoliberalism coupled with forces of
Communal fascism are playing havoc with the lives of the people.

Times when all such forces who are fighting for equity, democracy,
secularism are finding themselves on the defensive.

And in such an ambience Phule's teachings - his words and actions - the way
he looked at challenges in his own times, definitely provide a window of
opportunity.

As GPD states, Phule was a 'system builder' and he understood the then
existing situation in a 'dwaivarnik' fashion, a binary in his own words. Is
it possible for us to fashion a 'new binary' of our times.

Phule's social- cultural work, - which has been rightly termed as 'Cultural
Revolt in a Colonial Society' - which anticipates not only the work of the
Rightwing - may be the Hindutva or the Islamist types - but the work
undertaken during anti-colonial struggles, is another important arena worth
emulation.

Interestingly this Phulevian agenda which was later taken forward by
Ambedkar and other social revolutionaries has largely been
dropped/forgotten by people/formations claiming allegiance to their legacy
and it has been swiftly taken over by the right. It has been well
documented how forces like RSS/Jamaat-e-Islami or other status quoist or
reactionary organisations have been very clear about their ‘exclucivist’
agenda which they tried to bolster through intervention in culture in a
startegic manner. 6

Phule's critique of religion and caste and his daring to stand apart and
get counted, his approach towards question of gender, his interest in
agriculture, education, his proposal to the British government for
prohibition, his flair in writing literature, there are many many aspects
of his life and struggles, which need further study and contemplation and
perhaps emulation.

9.

The manner in which the later day social revolutionary movement developed
and the way left responded then to it has created rather an unusual
situation which can be said to be typical to India. Another manifestation
of what scholars term as 'Indian Exceptionalism'.

Instead of a convergence of Phule-Ambedkarian movement with the left on
broader agenda of social transformation - which involves attack not only on
Capitalism but Brahminism/ Mullahism, Patriarchy and related issues of
deprivation and hierarchy - we witness there being posited as being in
adversarial relation.

Yes, there was definitely a time during the anti-colonial struggle that a
possibility existed that both these streams would come together ( e;g
Jawalkar, who was one of the key figures who helped revive Phule's project
of emancipation albeit in a different form, had a very positive opinion
about the developments in the then Socialist Russia , even Ambedkar had
talked of 'fighting Brahminism and Capitalism together) but the left's
intrasigence and adamance and mechanical understanding of Marxism became a
stumbling block in the path of emergence of broader alliance.

And looking at the hiatus which has developed between both the streams, the
ruling classes have also tried to widen the chasm, so what we witness is
that a section of those claiming to be carrying forward the legacy of
Phule-Ambedkar getting cosy with formations, forces which are essentially
communal, Brahminical and have no qualms in keeping themselves aloof from
any alliance with various streams of the left.

This growing chasm needs to be bridged if the radical agenda of social
revolutionary movement has to reach its fruition and the left has to fight
its growing irrelvance, marginalisation in Indian polity.

Situation as it exists before us today is such that neither the stream(s)
owning allegiance to Marx seem to be on the ascendance nor those formations
who are keen to take forward the agenda of social revolutionaries are
gaining new grounds and the combined onslaught of neoliberalism and
communal fascism - which is inimical to voices of democracy, secularism,
equity, harmony - has created new grounds for their coming together.

As mentioned in the beginning young Marx - who with his Communist Manifesto
(1848) - became a voice of the exploited and the oppressed the world over-
died in 1883 whereas Young Jyotiba - who started with the first public
intervention by opening a school for Shudra-Atishudra girls way back in
1848 - died in 1890.

Today, more than 125 years after their demise, when a real possibility
exists for the coming together of both these streams, question arises
whether they will be able to take benefit of it or not ?



(*Revised and expanded presentation made at a two day National Seminar on
‘Reading Jotirao Phule : In and For Our Times’, 11-12 December 2015,
Phule-Ambedkar Chair, University of Mumbai*)



*Notes :*

*1.      **Brief Chronology of Phule's life*

1827 - Born in Pune

1834-38 Primary Education

1840 - Marriage to Savitribai

1841-47 - Secondary Education

1848 – established first school anywhere in India for Shudratishudra girls
alongwith his wife Savitribai

1851 – another school for girls of all castes

1855 – evening school for working people

1856- attempt on his life for his ‘divisive’ activities

1860 – started campaign for widow remarriage

1863 – started a home for widows

Organised a barber’s strike to protest tonsuring of widow’s head

1868 – drinking water tank in own house thrown open to ‘untouchables’

1 st June 1873 – publication of ‘Gulamgiri’ (Slavery) his best known work

24 th Sep 1873 – Satyashodhak Samaj ( Society of the Seekers of Truth)
established

1876-1882 – nominated member of Pune Municipal Council

1882- Vociferously defended Tarabai Shinde (‘the first feminist
theoretician’ according to Susie Tharu) when her book ‘Stree Purush Tulana’
evoked near hysterical reaction

11 May 1888 – a big public meeting conferred on him the title Mahatma

1889 – Publication of Sarvajanik Satya Dharma, his last book

28 Nov 1890 – Died in Pune



*2.      ** Few details about Fatima Sheikh *

When Savitribai and Mahatam Phule started the first school for girls in
Pune, they were hard pressed to find teachers. Savitribai took the role of
Principal and Fatima Sheikh her classmate took the role of teacher. Little
is known about Fatima Sheikh except that she taught in this school. One can
assume that she endured similar humiliation and abuse as Savitribai as they
made the trip to school and home.

Savitribai and Jyotirao continued to teach despite the humiliation heaped
on them. The community then ostracised them and drove them out of their
home. At this crucial time, Fatima Sheikh and her brother Usman provided
them not just shelter but also a space to run their school in their house. (
http://indianexpress.com/article/lifestyle/books/the-subaltern-speak/)



*References*

*1.*

*It has been well documented how RSS as well as Hindu Mahasabha opposed
making of a Constitution of the independent nation and proposed that Manu
Smriti can even serve the same purpose. And when the newly indepdent nation
thought of enacting Hindu Code Bill, to give rights to Hindu women for the
first time in written history, under the stewardship of Dr Ambedkar, they
in alliance with orthodox elements in the Congress opposed it and held
violent demonstrations against the move.*

*2.*

*Was it because there was a gap between Phule's own worldview and social
base of the movement he led, or was it because of the strong Conservative
reaction to this cultural revolt from the dominant castes.*

*Here it is important to remember that the economically dominant Maratha
community, was rather keen to accept Kshatriya status, rather than being
identified with the ritualistically lower caste groups and ignored Phule's
opposition to Sanskritisation. ( O'Hanlon, Caste, Conflict and Ideology,
Page 276). It is well known how affluent Maratha Sardars had kept
themselves aloof from Phule's movement and some affluent Marathas like Bhau
Rangari actually assisted Tilak to undermine Phule's polemic. ( Raminder
Kaur, Performative Politics and the Culture of Hinduism, New Delhi :
Permanent Black, 2003, pp 38-40) A marker of the changed times after death
of Phule was an incident where dalits - Mahars, Chambhars and Dhors - were
barred from a meeting in Bhavani Peth, on grounds of untouchability. (
Parimala Rao, Foundations of Tilak's Nationalism, Page 14) *

*3.*

*Opposing the anti-landlord legislation, Tilak stated :'Just as the
government has no right to rob the sowcar and distribute his wealth among
the poor, in the same way the government has no right to deprive the khot
of his rightful income and distribute the money to the peasant. This is a
question of rights and not of humanity.' ( Sumit Sarkar, Modern India
1885-1947, Delhi, Macmillan, 1983, Page 69)*

*4.*

*England, it is true, in causing a social revolution in Hindostan, was
actuated only by the vilest interests, and was stupid in her manner of
enforcing them. But that is not the question. The question is, can mankind
fulfill its destiny without a fundamental revolution in the social state of
Asia? If not, whatever may have been the crimes of England she was the
unconscious tool of history in bringing about that revolution.*

*(Karl Marx, “The British Rule in India,” New York Daily Tribune, 25 June
1853)*

*5.*

*This is about the ideal. Turn now to the state of things as it existed
when Ranade came on the scene. It is impossible to realize now the state of
degradation they had reached when the British came on the scene, and with
which the reformers like Ranade were faced. Let me begin with the condition
of the intellectual class. The rearing and guiding of a civilization must
depend upon its intellectual class—upon the lead given by the Brahmins.
Under the old Hindu Law the Brahmin enjoyed the benefit of the clergy and
could not be hanged even if he was guilty of murder, and the East India
Company allowed him the privilege till 1817...*

*The Brahmin systematically preyed on society and profiteered in religion.
The Puranas and Shastras which lie manufactured in tons are a treasure
trove of sharp practices which the Brahmins employed to befool, beguile and
swindle the common mass of poor, illiterate, and superstitious Hindus. ..*

*..Brahmins had started making claims for a right to deflower the women of
non-Brahmins. The practice prevailed in the family of the Zamorin of
Calicut, and among the Vallabhachari sect of Vaishnavas. What depths of
degradation the Brahmins had fallen to! If, as the Bible says, the salt has
lost its flavour, wherewith shall it be salted? No wonder the Hindu Society
had its moral bonds loosened to a dangerous point. The East India Company
had in 1819 to pass a Regulation (VII of 1819) to put a stop to this moral
degeneracy. The preamble to the Regulation says that women were employed
wholesale to entice and take away the wives or female children for purposes
of prostitution, and it was common practice among husbands and fathers to
desert their families and children. Public conscience there was none, and
in the absence of conscience it was futile to expect moral indignation
against the social wrongs. Indeed the Brahmins were engaged in defending
every wrong for the simple reason that they lived on them. They defended
Untouchability which condemned millions to the lot of the helot. They
defended caste, they defended female child marriage and they defended
enforced widowhood—the two great props of the Caste system. They defended
the burning of widows, and they defended the social system of graded
inequality with its rule of hypergamy which led the Rajputs to kill in
their thousands the daughters that were born to them. What shames! What
wrongs! Can such a Society show its face before civilized nations? Can such
a society hope to survive? Such were the questions which Ranade asked. He
concluded that on only one condition it could be saved—namely, rigorous
social reform."*

*(http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00ambedkar/txt_ambedkar_ranade.html
<http://www.columbia.edu/itc/mealac/pritchett/00ambedkar/txt_ambedkar_ranade.html>)*



*6.*

*They tried to enhance their ‘religious viewpoint’ by institutionalising it
through n number of affiliated organisations. May it be the formation of
schools or hospitals or organisations catering to diverse sections of
society they tried to fashion society in their own image. It is not for
nothing that RSS describes itself not as ‘organisation in society’ but
‘organisation of society’. (Samaj me Sangathan nahin, Samaj ka Sangathan)
Prof K N Pannikar writes that RSS’s educational work started in the 40s
itself and today they have 70,000 schools – from Ekal Vidyalayas to
Saraswati Shishu Mandir – spread all over the country. These activities
have helped them ‘in transforming the cultural consciousness of the people
from the secular to the religious’ (P 169,History as a Site of Struggle,
Three Essays Collective) According to him*

* ‘This is qualitatively different effort from that of the secular forces
who mainly focus on cultural intervention, the impact of which is limited
and transient. The difference between cultural intervention and
intervention in culture distinguishes the cultural engagement of the
communal and the secular and their relative success’. (do)*

__________

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