Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Solidarity Statement









The solidarity statement with Thirumavalavan, Meena Kandasamy and Samya has now been signed by over 200 students, activists and academics, including Gail Omvedt, Kancha Ilaiah, Jairus Banaji, Nivedita Menon, Prabhu Mohapatra, M.S.S. Pandian, Ravikumar, Sharmila Rege and Aditya Nigam, among many others. If you haven't done so already, do sign the statement online at http://kafila.org/2011/06/17/locking-up-gods-within-caste/

You can also reply to this email with your name and designation to be added to the list of signatories.

The solidarity statement is due to be released to the press shortly and your support will help make a stronger case against attempts to suppress freedom of expression and dalit assertion. The statement with the updated list of signatories follows:

We call for all those who support democracy and free speech to express solidarity with Thirumavalavan, Meena Kandasamy and Samya (now Stree-Samya).Kathavarayan and Madurai Veeran are among the gods who are acknowledged to be Dalit and are worshipped by many castes. Clearly, in the oral history of the people, the gods have castes and these castes are not determined by who worships them.

The twin brothers Ponnar Shankar inhabit the realm between hero and deity. They have been fictionalised, recreated for the silver screen, and are worshipped across communities. Their origin myth remains contested territory - it is variously read as symbolic of the conflict between agriculturists/warriors and hunters, as part of founding tale of the land-owning agriculturist Kongu Vellala Gounder sub-caste and, in a textbook example of how Hindutva functions, have recently been claimed as reincarnations of the Pandavas. Like other deities of the people, they are firmly located in a historical imagination among a society of human beings, and not in a mythos of gods.

In a footnote in Uproot Hindutva: The Fiery Voice of the Liberation Panthers by Thirumavalavan, Meena Kandasamy describes Ponnar Shankar as Dalit. M Loganathan, an advocate from Nanje Goundanpudur and Students Wing Convenor of the Kongu Nadu Munnetra Kazhagam (KMK), has been quoted in news reports as saying that there is evidence proving that Ponnar and Shankar are Kongu Vellala Gounders and claiming that depicting them as Dalits will lead to caste tension.

Dragging cultural contestations into the legal domain threatens the various, creative ways in which people innovate cultural practices and the equally creative ways in which research tries to make sense of them. Criminalising cultural expression and innovation is an attempt to freeze culture.

Locking up gods within castes is a tactic used by dominant castes to maintain status quo. This is an open threat against dalit belief, expression and right to self-determination. Like the repeated physical atrocities against Dalits, attempts to suppress their cultural and intellectual autonomy and self-assertion are part of a wider onslaught on democracy. This case is part of the drive to reconstruct India as a religious and cultural monolith, which it has never been.

The litigant had earlier complained that the film based on the Ponnar Shankar story, scripted by M. Karunanidhi, is misrepresenting deities but had contented himself with writing a letter to the censor board then. It is the leader of the Viduthalai Chiruthaigal, a well-known Dalit poet and translator and a publishing house that have been singled out for filing a case.

We are secretly pleased that a footnote* is believed to have such power. Academics in our ranks are even now rejoicing at the thought of how they may change the world, one footnote at a time. But, mostly, we are offended.

We are offended that a deity being named dalit can even be called an offensive act. We are offended at how legal backing is available for openly-casteist harassment. We are offended at news reports that present this case as a quaint little example of caste quibbling, without pointing to the long history of violence, without pointing to the continued conspiracy to maintain the status quo and culture of violence that this case is an outcome of.

Our histories are deeply marked by caste. We seek to emancipate our present by reclaiming these histories for the marginalised.

Re-writing history from the perspective of the marginalised is necessary and vital for the self-determination of dalit communities. Now, such an effort is being criminalised. This is a threat to democracy and the pluralist ethos. This is an offence against free speech. We stand in solidarity with Thirumavalavan, Meena Kandasamy and Samya, in support of the subaltern perspective and assertion they stand for.

*Here are some inflammatory footnotes about violence against Dalits:Dalits have been denied temple entry, forced to work with hazardous material, treated as bonded labour and attacked for attempting to buy their way out of their bondage (subhead: Dalit Family Attacked over Land, September 2002).In Kalapatti village, sustained violence against dalits, has lead to many of them to fleeing their homes. "On 16 May 2004, a Dalit settlement in the village of Kalapatti in Tamil Nadu was attacked by upper-caste members (Country Reports 2004 28 Feb. 2005; UN 23 Feb. 2005; DHRM n.d.; Frontline 19 June – 2 July 2004). According to the sources, approximately 100 houses were burnt down by a group of 200 people and Dalits trying to escape were assaulted, including reports of sexual assault of women (Country Reports 2004 28 Feb. 2005; UN 23 Feb. 2005; DHRM n.d.; Frontline 19 June – 2 July 2004)," notes the UN Refugee Agency website.

Signed
Jairus Banaji, Chittibabu Padavala, R. Kalaiarasu, Swathi Vadlamudi, Kuffir Nalgundwar, Malarvizhi Jayanth, Ajith Kumar A.S., Anu Ramdas, Anoop Kumar, Divya Trivedi, Karthikeyan Damodaran, Jaya Shobaneshwari, Satish Poduval, Khalid Anis Ansari, Afsar Mohammed, Divya Rajagopal, Bobby Kunhu, Jenny Rowena, Anil Tharayath Varghese, Sanil Zenbuddha, Smitha Patil, Sudeep Ben Aadil Almitra - Kozhikode, Sanjeev Sreedharan, Salim T.K., Rupesh Kumar, Manohar Kumar, Nabina Das, Afthab Ellath, Sruthi Herbert, Anand Navayana - Publisher - Navayana Publishing, Murali Shanmugavelan, Thenmozhi Soundararajan, Vinay Sreenivasa, Anitha Ranjani Sampath, Rhoda Alex, Karthik Navayan, Poovi Gothai, Vikram Benny, Sushanta Sarkar, Kumar Varma Kayanikorothu - Andhra University, Rajashekhar Geddada, Thiben Ram - France, Sanam Roohi Reddy, Kiritkumar Pravasi, Prasheel Anand, Peggy Trawick, Shiva Shankar, Sujatha Surepally, Chellapandi - IHRE District Coordinator - Palani, Ponnuchamy, Arumugam, Ravichandran Bathran, D. Ravikumar, Jebamalai Raja, Benjamin P Kaila - Los Angeles - Friends for Education International, Gills John, Leena Manimekalai, Poovannan Ganapathy, Reny Ayline, Sadique Pk Mampad, Rama Hansraj, Chandraiah Gopani, Prabhu Mohapatra - Department of History - Delhi University, Nivedita Menon - JNU, Pramada Menon, Rajkumar Hans - History - MSU - Baroda, Janaki Srinivasan - Panjab University, Aniket Alam, Aditya Nigam, Sudarshan Papanna, Chinnaiyan Lakshmanan, Smriti Suman - Department of Political Science - Delhi University, Baskar, Yasser, K Sanjay Kumar, Abdul Khadar M., Shruti Sareen, Balaji Kulasekaran, Jay Sullivan - USA, Md. Ali - Correspondent - TwoCircles.net, Ravi Shankar, James Chang, Akshay Sharma - National University of Juridical Sciences - Calcutta, Kenneth Jackson - USA, Abhirami Sriram - Editor - Orient Blackswan, Karthika Naïr - France, Vinay Bhat, Nishanth, Munusamy Ganapathy, Prashant Tandon - Delhi, Sneha Krishnan, Bhargavi - Student, Rahul P.S., Inasu, Muraleedharan Raghavan, Mathi, Karthikeya Sivasenapathy - Tiruppur, Joe, Deepti Nair - Sub-editor - New Indian Express, Venkatesa Pandian, Nathaniel Roberts - Research Fellow - Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity - Germany, Ramakrishna Bhargav N. - Research Scholar - Department of Communication - University of Hyderabad, Vidya Bhushan Rawat, Sharmila Rege, Nikhila Henry, Deepesh C., Aniruddha Dutta, Anant Maringanti, Sukumar Muralidharan, Leonard - Hyderabad University, Ausaf, Sreekanth Bolloju, Hany Babu, Gopikanta Ghosh, Gouri Patwardhan - Filmmaker, Subaguna Rajan, T. Sundara Vardhan, Abhiyan Humane - UW-Madison, Geeta Charusivam - Activist - Chennai, Raju Naran, Ranjith Kumar, J. Devika, Uma Chakravarti, Ashley Tellis, Anushiya Ramaswamy, Dr. Tharakeshwar V.B. - Associate Professor & Head - Department of Translation Studies - School of Interdisciplinary Studies - The English and Foreign Languages University - Hyderabad, C.S.Lakshmi (Ambai), Ivy Hansdak - Asst Professor - Dept of English - Jamia Millia Islamia - New Delhi, Kotesh Devulapally - Research Fellow - EFL University - Hyderabad, Ramesh Aroli - Assistant Professor - Dept of Journalism - Kamala Nehru College - University of Delhi, Harsh Mander, Govind Krishnan, Premjish - MPhil Visual Studies - School of Arts and Aesthetics - JNU, Sruti Bala, Dr. Nikhila H. - Head and Associate Professor - Department of Film Studies and Visual Communication - The English and Foreign Languages University, Chandrashekhar Aijoor, Aparna Eswaran - Research Scholar - CIPOD - JNU, Raghvendra .H.K, Selva, Dilip Gaikwad, Bhimrao Kuchekar, Arumugam, Nirmala M N - Research Scholar - EFLU, Amartya Kanjilal, Ketaki Chowkhani, Sanju Jyo, Akshi Singh, Rahamath Tarikere - Professor - Dept. of Literature Studies - Kannada University - Hampi, `Sufi' MP Prakash Nagara - Hospet, Sravanthi Kollu, Nataraj Honnavalli, Gee Ameena Suleiman - Bangalore, Darshana Sreedhar - Research Scholar - CSSSC, Sowmya Dechamma C.C. - University of Hyderabad, Govindarajan.G - Asst Engineer - IOCL, M.S.S. Pandian - JNU, Anushiya Ramaswamy, Kaveri Rajaraman Indira, Vijay Boratti - Assistant professor in English - University Evening College - University of Mysore, Kancha Ilaiah, Paramjit S. - Judge, Anandhi S. - MIDS - Chennai, Arumbhu, Mohan Rao - JNU, Saptarshi Mandal - Legal Researcher - Delhi, Philip Vinod Peacock - Associate Professor - Bishop’s College, Revd. Dr. Keith Hebden, Arunesh Maiyar, Simona Sawhney - University of Minnesota, Gail Omvedt - Chair Professor - Dr. Ambedkar Chair on Social Change and Development - IGNOU, Aruna Gnanadason, Joshua Isaac, Bantu Krishnarao - Srikakulam - Andhra Pradesh, Nitika Ladda, Ramdas - PUCL - Karnataka

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