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India: Art student targeted by Hindu right and Gujarat authorities
By Arun Kumar
28 May 2007
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All those who care for and defend artistic freedom and basic
democratic rights should condemn the attack that the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) and its Hindu supremacist allies have mounted,
with the support of the Gujarat authorities, against Maharaja
Sayajirao University (MSU) fine arts student Chandramohan Srilamantula
and the acting dean of the MSUs fine arts faculty, Shivaji
Panikkar.
On the afternoon of May 9, Niraj Jain, an advocate and BJP
activist, led a gang of Hindu supremacist thugs from the Vishwa
Hindu Parishad (VHP or World Hindu Council) in invading the MSU
fine arts faculty, manhandling Chandramohan, and tearing down
paintings and art installations exhibited in the annual appraisal
show for final-year students. The Hindu supremacists also hurled
abuse at faculty and students.
The Gujarat state authorities were complicit in this attack.
The police at the Sayajiganj police station were informed by the
Hindu supremacists of their plans to invade the university, but
the authorities did nothing to stop them. So confident were Jain
and his associates that they could trespass onto the university,
attack Chandramohan and vandalize his work with impunity, they
brought local press photographers with them.
When the police did arrive, just minutes after the attack,
it was the 23-year-old Chandramohan, a previous winner of the
prestigious Lalit Kala National Akademi award, not his fascist
victimizers, whom they arrested!
Chandramohan was subsequently charged with hurting the
religious sentiments of Hindus and Christians in the district
under sections 295 A and 153 B of the Indian Penal Code on the
grounds that his nude depictions of the mythical Hindu god Shiva
Linga, Goddess Durga, and Jesus Christ offended religious sensibilities.
Chandramohan was released on 5,000 rupees bail (about $US100),
a not inconsiderable sum for a student, almost a week after his
arrest and only after his prosecution had provoked a national
outcry.
The highest levels of the MSU administration have solidarized
themselves with the Hindu rightist thugs. MSU Vice-Chancellor
Manoj Soni refused to condemn the attack, let alone press charges
against Jain. He then suspended Dean Panikkar for defying an administration
order that he publicly apologize for allowing Chandramohan to
display his works.
Panikkars spirited defence of Chandramohan made him the
target of death threats from the Bajrang Dal (the VHPs youth
wing) and he was forced into hiding. In an interview with Frontline,
Panikkar said, This ... is about the larger issue of freedom
and autonomy of academic institutions. We cannot allow them to
be taken over.
The university authorities did nothing to support the
student who was jailed. They remained silent, even when students
and faculty were protesting. I could resign and leave, but what
will happen to the institution?
Turning reality on its head, the police and university authorities
have accused Chandramohan of threatening the secular atmosphere.
In truth it is the Gujarats BJP government and its accomplices
in the police and judiciary who have created a communally toxic
environment in the state by stoking Hindu supremacism and victimizing
the states Muslim minority.
MSU is located in Vadadora, a city that in recent years has
repeatedly been convulsed by communal violence. Vadadora was home
to the Best Bakery, whose torching came to exemplify both the
2002 anti-Muslim pogrom in Gujarata pogrom that was incited
by the states BJP chief minister, Narendra Modiand
the subsequent failure of Indias police and judicial authorities
to successfully prosecute those known to have committed horrific
acts of communal violence.
Last year there was further violence in Vadadora after authorities
pulled down a 300-year-old mosque that they claimed was blocking
development plans.
Artistic expression under attack
Much of the best art provokes, and in so doing, frequently
offends. No less than other forms of cultural expression and scientific
inquiry, art can only flourish if those engaging in it are given
unfettered freedom to explore their ideas. Defenders of artistic
freedom and democracy have thus always opposed attempts by the
state and self-appointed moral guardians to censor art.
It should be noted, however, that the claims that Chandramohans
paintings were offending the public are even more threadbare and
contrived than usual in that his works were not hung in a public
gallery or exhibition, but rather were part of an appraisal show
whose intended audience were the student and instructors of the
MSU fine art faculty.
Jain admitted as much, when he told reporters, Someone
told us about the paintings, and I thought it was unacceptable
to have such things on display.
The attack on Chandramohan Srilamantula and Shivaji Panikkar
has been widely condemned by artists, filmmakers, and writers
across India and there have been many well-attended protest meetings
and rallies.
I think everyone has had enough, said MSU graduate
and painter Chintan Upadhyaya. Rather than let fear set
in, artists have realized that we have to take a stand.
Of course, continued Upadhyaya, they can
get away with it in Gujarat because of what Gujarat is today.
It is a law unto itself. Maybe they will not do it in Mumbai now.
But if they get away with it so easily here, it will be Mumbai
or Delhi next. We cannot sit back and let this continue.
Artists and works of art have repeatedly been the target of
Gujarats BJP government and their Hindu supremacist supporters.
Notorious cases include the vandalizing of the Ahmadbad gallery
of M.F. Hussain, arguably Indias best-known artist, and
the preventing of the screening in Gujarat of the films Parzania
and Fana. The former film riled the Hindu right because
it depicted the BJP state government and its role in the 2002
pogrom unfavorably, the latter because it starred Aamir Khan,
a Muslim actor who has criticized the Narmada dam project.
The attack on artists and intellectual freedom is by no means
restricted to the state of Gujarat or to the BJP, however.
To appease the Hindu right, Maharashtras Congress-Nationalist
Congress Party (NCP) coalition government banned historian James
Laines book Shivaji: Hindu King in Islamic India and
sought to have him arrested.
In response to petitions from concerned members
of the publici.e., Hindu rightists and fundamentalists of
various faithsIndias lower courts have initiated tens
of thousands of cases against artists and writers for offending
public morals and/or religious sentiments.
Recently three criminal cases were filed against a popular
Indian actress Shilpa Shetty and Hollywood actor Richard Gere
for a kissing incident during an AIDS telethon.
In an editorial May 16, the liberal daily the Hindu
said The Chandramohan incidentwhich follows the M.F.
Hussain and Shilpa Shetty controversiespoints to a rising
tide of intolerance and fanaticism. Conceding that the lower
courts have been complicit in the assault on artistic freedom,
it concluded by urging the public to look to the higher
judiciary for the protection of artistic freedom and the freedom
of expression guaranteed in the Constitution.
But time and again in recent years, the Supreme Court has issued
judgments running roughshod over the right to dissentincluding
forbidding public comment on the controversy over the demolition
of the French ship the Clemenceauand restricting workers
rights.
The Stalinist Communist Party of India (Marxist) has condemned
the attack on Chandramohan Srilamantula and Shivaji Panikkar.
At the same time, it is continuing to justify its parliamentary
support for the national Congress Party-led United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) government, on the grounds that it constitutes
a secular bulwark against the BJP, even as the government
implements the neo-liberal agenda of big business.
The Congress Party has a decades-long record of adapting to,
and conniving with the, Hindu right, going back at least to the
1947 communal partition of India, and has worked closely with
Gujarats blood-soaked BJP regime.
Although Congress-led governments, including the current UPA
coalition, have frequently made use of the presidents
rule provisions of the constitution for brazen political
motives, it has refused to sack the Gujarat government despite
its evident complicity in mass murder.
There are three reasons for this. First, Congress fears the
response of the Hindu right. Second, because it has spearheaded
neo-liberal reform, the Gujarat government has strong backing
from the same big business elite that constitutes the Congress
principal social base. (Indeed in 2005, the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation,
which is closely connected to the Congress Party and especially
Sonia Gandhi, honored Narendra Modi for leading Indias best-governed
state.) Last but not least, there is much sympathy in the Gujarat
Congress for Modis Muslim-baiting and Gujarati-chauvinist
politics.
Things in the neighboring state of Maharashtra are little different.
Soon after the Congress-NCP state government responded to a series
of violent Hindu supremacist protests against the historian Laine
by banning his book, it welcomed into the cabinet Narayan Rane.
Previously Rane had been the chief minister of the state for the
Shiv Sena (literally Shivajis Army), a Hindu supremacist
ally of the BJP.
The struggle in defence of artistic freedom and against communalism
will not be won by appealing to the state institutions and parties
of the Indias bourgeoisieparties and institutions
that defend a social order in which the vestiges of feudalism
and casteism are overlain by ruthless capitalist oppression. Rather
the defence of democratic rights and an expansion of democracy
will only prove possible through the development of a genuine
egalitarian and anti-capitalist movement based on Indias
toilers and the international working class.
See Also:
Voters in Indias most populous state
spurn traditional parties
[16 May 2007]
Indias Hindu-chauvinist
BJP attempts to incite communal riots ahead of pivotal state election
[18 April 2007]
India: Five years after 2002
Gujarat pogrom
While the victims languish, the perpetrators go unpunished
[10 April 2007]
India: Gujarat Congress
party lines up with BJPs campaign against actor Aamir Khan
[1 July 2007]
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