*Before I Speak of the Stars ..*

*Ravi Sinha*


Let me speak first of Rohith Chakravarthi Vemula. I never met him. I wish I
had, although that would have made me hardly any worthier of speaking about
him. Had I met him, I would have come to know that I shared with him a
passion for science, nature and stars. I would like to think that he would
have found in me, despite my being from another generation, a
comrade-in-arms and a fellow campaigner for a better world. Perhaps I would
have also recognized a few of the scars left over from a childhood spent in
poverty. But, there, the similarities would have ended.

We were born in the same country but at two different locations in the
social universe. Distances separating these locations are not traversable –
reason enough for this universe to collapse. Instead collapsed this
remarkable young man who longed to be “treated as a mind” – “a glorious
thing made up of stardust” – and who did not wish to be “reduced to his
immediate identity and nearest possibility…to a vote…to a number…to a
thing”. He was crushed under the weight of a millennial civilization. His
end was precipitated by the malignant political forces ready to use state
power to banish all reason and every shred of freedom from modern
institutions and public sphere. He may have chosen the mode and the time of
his death but it was an instance of a death foretold. In choosing death he
has challenged the powers-that-be in a manner and with a force that no
demons of deception, no army of liars and no battery of ministers can
defend against.

Had I met him I would have come to know him as a young man so rare for his
courage of conviction – someone who championed unpopular causes far beyond
the ones arising out of his own sufferings. But I could not have fathomed
the depths of his soul tormenting over the meaning of “love, pain, life,
death.” Had I met him I would have recognized that he was a leader – a
valiant fighter for justice and for a better world. But I could not have
guessed nor understood that one day he would write, “My birth is my fatal
accident”. Had I met him I would have met an aspiring writer – “A writer of
science, like Carl Sagan” – as he put it. But I could not have anticipated
that the sole letter he would ever write would be a suicide note. And, I
could not have grasped its historic import – the fact that this short note
would be a powerful indictment of an entire civilization.

Can I speak of him – I asked myself. How can I speak of him? What can I say
about him? Reading his suicide note for the umpteenth time I came to the
conclusion that I would, instead, speak of the stars. That is a tribute I
can rightfully pay to him. Many would speak of his struggle and many more
should. Many will be inspired by his courage and commitment and I hope this
number surpasses millions. But there was something in him that added
further glory and enormous depth to what he was fighting for. This
‘something’ is akin to a deeper ‘spirituality’ accessible only to rational
minds and nobler souls. It is completely inaccessible to the vulgar
religious kind. I do not know whether Rohith was an atheist, but he
possessed that deeper spirituality worthy of an atheist. It is not common
that one reads in the suicide note of a political activist and a worldly
fighter something like this, “I don’t believe in after-death stories,
ghosts or spirits. If there is anything at all I believe, I believe that I
can travel to the stars. And know about the other worlds.”

I had nearly forgotten about the stars until Rohith reminded me of them in
this most unexpected manner. The last research paper I published as a
professional physicist happened to be about stars – a special kind of stars
called quasars that live at the edge of universe close to the birth of time
and generate more energy and luminosity than a billion Suns put together.
This was years before Rohith was born. Soon after that paper I bid adieu to
physics as a career and became a full time activist in the left movement of
which I was already a part. But I still needed my ‘spiritual corner’.
Keeping informed about developments in theoretical physics and brooding
privately about the laws of nature became a secret hide-out to which I
could occasionally retreat. It had a therapeutic value – a much needed
respite from the rigors of an activist life which I could afford without
stepping out of that environment.

I do not intend to spring an autobiographical turn and bask in the
reflected glory of Rohith Vemula. I am laboring to decipher the secret
message hidden in the blinding light produced by the death of an unknown
star. I suspect the roots of Rohith’s interest in science, nature and stars
lay deeper than his curious mind. I suspect it was also his ‘spiritual
corner’. And he needed it far more desperately than I ever did.

I am part of a once-glorious movement that presently appears lost in a
rather dark valley of historical time. A mighty river has splintered into
uncountable rivulets flowing feebly and separately through a rising
sandbank. I am troubled by the sight of small men pretending to walk tall
on wooden legs of dogma and populism. I am troubled by the sight of
glorious warriors of yesteryears – warriors against feudalism and
colonialism, against monarchs and dictators – being turned into gladiators
in the coliseum of capitalism. I am troubled by shallow polemics and deep
animosities that afflict the movement from within and grievously pained by
internecine conflicts and fratricidal impulses. I have watched them at play
from too close quarters. I need my occasional retreat into the ‘spiritual
corner’.

All this must have troubled Rohith too. He too was part of the same
movement. But he must have been troubled by much more and must have
suffered a far greater pain. Having been born at the social location that
he was, he carried a far greater burden – the oppressive weight of an
entire civilization. But the pain was greater for a different reason. He
had joined a movement that promised emancipation from all forms of
oppression and injustice, unreason and bondage. He would have thought that
he was part of a brotherhood not only inspired by ideals of egalitarianism
and rationality but also embodying those ideals even if imperfectly.
Instead he was confronted by members of that brotherhood who were regular
specimens of the homo hierarchicus. Not only they hadn’t forgotten their
own castes, they wouldn’t let Rohith forget his either. In anger and in
pain, he walked out of that stream. He made a transition fromLal Salaam to
Jai Bheem. It is a sad commentary on the present state of the movement that
these two slogans, which are forms of greeting as well, are considered
incompatible if not outright adversarial.

Had I met Rohith, he would have, perhaps, refused to talk to me. Or,
perhaps, he would have argued with me with his characteristic political
energy and intellectual power that I now read about. Irrespective of how my
views are taken by a mainstream leftist, I am, after all, a regular member
of that stream, even if with some oddities and angularities. He was not
going to agree with what he would have, perhaps, considered a piece of the
past he had left behind. Had he chosen to argue though, I would have argued
with him in the manner I believe comrades-in-arms should reason with each
other, especially when they are passing through a difficult phase in their
long journey together.

Trying to make sense of reality is not always a mode of justifying it.
Rohith gives me the impression that he was grappling with deeper issues and
profound challenges not easily captured in the struggles of the day,
necessary as these daily struggles are. He had walked out of one stream,
but that does not mean he had found an exact resonance and a perfect peace
in the folds of another. His deeper quest seemed stuck in an endless
expanse of shallow waters. There were thousand battles to fight, but none
of those appeared to strike at the heart of the monster. Center of the dark
universe continued to hold unperturbed and things that made this universe
refused to fall apart.

I would have agreed with Rohith’s critique of the conduct and the dogmatism
of his erstwhile comrades. But I would have reasoned with him to strive
harder to see why even the lighted paths turn treacherous in a dark
universe. New paths cannot be charted by walking over to another stream.
Similar tragedies have played out on that side. There too a mighty river
has splintered and lost its way into a rising sandbank. The trials and
tribulations, and frustrations, of the legendary heroes of that stream are
as well known. Inheritors of a great movement and fighters for a great
cause have been harnessed into the chariots of the enemy. Of course, Rohith
knew all that. But I would have reasoned with him nevertheless.

Preachy as I may sound, I would not have preached to Rohith. No one can
really preach to minds and souls like his. He would have sensed that we
were confronted with similar enigmas and caught in the same labyrinth of
time. We were both faced with a world that did not make sense. It is a
world where enemies of the people do not have to work too hard to be
accepted by the same people as their leaders – as prophets who would
deliver them from misery, poverty and misfortune; where inciting riots and
organizing genocides opens doors to seats of power in this much admired
democracy; where those who executed these diabolical designs yesterday are
today’s visionary statesmen and compassionate leaders; where so-called
captains of industry who were supposed to deliver modernity to a hidebound
society have no compunction in financing bigotry and medieval barbarism if
that brings in a servile government ready to add quick trillions to their
formidable fortunes; where Harvard dons and Columbia professors are all too
ready to work as backroom boys for these newly minted statesmen even as
businessmen babas and rapist sadhus are thrown in as key ingredients in
this medieval alchemy of a modern democracy.

Puzzles do not end there. Emancipatory movements of all kinds find it
difficult to gain even a small number of new adherents. Deeper politics is
more likely to run aground than float. Shallow politics and populist
crusaders, on the other hand, have a field day. There are new prophets in
shining armor promising to make revolution by rooting out corruption. If
that does not happen, they would settle down to the business of reducing
politics to bijli, paani, sadak. They would jump from one cause to another,
engage in cheap gimmicks, emerge as new dictators, and still they would
maintain their status as objects of popular fascination and postmodernist
admiration.

The newly minted statesmen that I earlier talked about and these new
crusaders are birds of the same feather. One should not be fooled by their
mutual sparring, even if they end up giving bloody noses to each other.
They draw their sustenance from the same well. Shallowness and cacophony
are the staple conditions under which they thrive.

Consider the fact that the new statesmen are promising to build a great
nation by reaping the “demographic dividend”, by exporting labour to
graying rich nations, by doing the chores of those who have money to get it
done by others. This is no prescription for building a great nation or a
great civilization. But such plans are being lapped up by a generation that
thinks technology is science, missile-men are great scientists, men who
amass wealth by trafficking in skilled humans are great visionaries who
have ready solutions to the nation’s problems, being educated means being
skilled, and culture means breaking coconut and praying to the deity before
launching the satellite. The irony is that this India cannot imagine its
own greatness without referring to others. A century ago it proclaimed its
greatness through the vacuous speeches its god-men gave to troubled souls
and confused minds in the west. Now it dreams of a new greatness by
providing daily services to nations that are wealthy and aging.

Had I met Rohith, I would have asked him about his reading of our times. I
would have asked him – what do we expect from one another? Should we join
the bandwagon? Are immediate successes and instant mass following the
appropriate criteria on which the values as well as the functionaries of an
emancipatory movement ought to be judged? Has the world come to this pass
solely because leftists made the mistakes they made?

As I read him, I am convinced that he would not have taken these as
rhetorical or hostile questions. These were his questions too and, perhaps,
he was grappling with them far more intensely and desperately than I ever
have. I could have talked with him of many things. Of course, I would have
talked with him of Karl Marx, Jyotiba Phule, Bhagat Singh, and Ambedkar.
But I would also have talked with him of Buddha, Ashok, Akbar and Nehru. I
would have reasoned with him that in claiming the positive heritage in the
great civilizational struggle one cannot go by the same criteria that one
adopts in the political struggle of the day. I would have talked with him
of Ghalib, Tagore, Faiz, Gurajada, Sri Sri and Muktibodh. I would have
talked with him of Darwin, Einstein, Bohr, Dirac, Witten and our own Ashoke
Sen. And, of course, I would have talked with him of the cosmos and the
stars.

I cannot obviously talk to Rohith now about the stars. So, I will give
these lectures in his memory. There are far more knowledgeable people than
me who can talk about the cosmos and the stars. India has great physicists
working right here in India and adding to the frontiers of knowledge. India
knows very little about them. They would have been the worthy speakers. But
these are troubled times. I would not wish to drag them into something that
could become controversial despite being a noble and politically innocent
endeavor. Every noble endeavor becomes controversial in these troubled
times.

I promised to speak about the stars, which I will do to any audience that
is willing to listen. But I wanted these words to stand in front of what I
have to say about the stars.

January 23, 2016

**********
*Ravi Sinha is an activist-scholar and a leading member of New Socialist
Initiative (NSI) who has been associated with the left movement for nearly
four decades.*

*(**http://nsi-delhi.blogspot.in/2016/01/before-i-speak-of-stars.html#more
<http://nsi-delhi.blogspot.in/2016/01/before-i-speak-of-stars.html#more>)*
Posted by New Socialist Initiative Delhi Chapter at 2:40 PM
<http://nsi-delhi.blogspot.in/2016/01/before-i-speak-of-stars.html>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to