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Other Lands
Have Dreams:
From
Baghdad to Pekin Prison
by KATHY KELLY
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Today's Stories
August 6-8, 2005
Alexander Cockburn
How the British Destroyed India
August
5, 2005
Bill Christison
New NIE Report on Iran's Nukes
will Not Deter US's Posture of Extreme Aggressiveness
Paul
Craig Roberts
Kelo: a Supreme Assault on Personal
Liberty
Alexander
Cockburn
The Taj Mahal as Kitsch; the Editor
and the Water-Walking Guru
August
4, 2005
Tom Barry
Inside Bush's "World Democracy
Movement"
Lila
Rajiva
John Bolton's New Internationalism
Greg
Moses
Bush Teaches Intelligent Design in
Prison
Alexander
Cockburn
Indian Journal: Why Indian Farmers
Kill Themselves
August
3, 2005
Alexander
Cockburn
Broken Arrows and Iran: a B-52 Pilot
Remembers
Paul
Craig Roberts
The Kelo Calamity: Money, Power and
Eminent Domaine
William
A. Cook
Innocent Victims: From Hiroshima to Lower Manhattan
Dave
Zirin
Bush's Texas Rangers: a Crackhouse for Juiced Players?
Dave
Lindorff
Court Packing and Worker Rights
José
Pertierra
Why Hamdi Isaac Yes and Posada
Carriles No?
August
2, 2005
Ramzi
Kysia
Disengagement and Diaspora: High Walls
and Razor Wire in the Hebron
William
A. Cook
Words Without Meaning: Torturing Bodies
and Language
Paul
Craig Roberts
When Armageddon Gets No Press
Mike
Whitney
Chertoff's Preemptive Crackdown: 600 Arrests, Only 76 Charged
Ron
Jacobs
Be a Hero: Demand That Johnny Come
Home
Norman
Madarsz
Before the Stun Gun: Jean Charles de Menezes, RIP
Tim
Wise
The Faulty Logic of "Terrorist"
Profiling

August
1, 2005
Virginia
Rodino
Why Bono and Geldof Got It Wrong:
War and Global Poverty are Linked
Diana
Barahona
Return to Venezuela: Land Reform
and Neighborhood Doctors
Joshua
Frank
Gitmo's Kangaroo Courts: First Torture Them, Then Rig Their Trials
Mike
Whitney
The Consolidation of Powers: Rubber Stamp Roberts
Norm
Dixon
The Worst Terror Attacks in History
Norman
Solomon
Operation Withdrawal Scam
James
Petras
The Corruption of Lula's Regime

July
30 / 31, 2005
Alexander
Cockburn
Lost Nuclear Warheads Now in Iran?
JoAnn
Wypijewski
Scenes and Silver Linings from Labor's
Crack-Up: a Special Report from Chicago
Sheldon
Rampton
War is Fun as Hell: the Video Games
Recruiters Play
Jack
Z. Bratich
Fingerprints of Power: a Summer of Double Super Secrecy
Greg
Moses
How to Cool Your Heels in Texas When It's Late July Across the
World
Jordan
Green
From Woolworth to Wal-Mart: Economics and the Race Divide in
a Southern City
Patrick
Cockburn
Getting Out of Iraq: 5,000 US Troops Have Gone AWOL
Brian
Cloughley
The Bush-Cheney Fixation on Iran
Justin
Taylor
Harry Potter and the War on Terror
Saul
Landau
Enhancements for the Imperial Life: Fashionism Takes Command!
John
Walsh
Dems Field Another Pro-War Candidate: Meet Hack the Hawk
Joshua
Frank
Color-Coded Justice: John Roberts's Racial Hang Up
Ron
Jacobs
Who Needs Feminism? We Have Condi Rice!
Fred
Gardner
The Ethan and Gavin Show
John
Chuckman
Friedman on Terrorism: the Dumbest Story Ever Written
Liaquat
Ali Khan
Lessons City Bombers Need to Learn from Newton and Donne
Remi
Kanazi
Annexing Justice in Palestine
Naveen
Jaganathan
The Gurgaon Riots Rock India
Richard
Heinberg
Where is the Hirsch Peak Oil Report?
Max
Watts
Francis Ona, the Napoleon of Mekamui
Ben
Tripp
Write Your Own Editorial!
Poets'
Basement
Whalen & Engel, Landau, Albert and Krieger

July
29, 2005
Cockburn
/ St. Clair
Who's the Real Martyr? Judy Miller or Jim DeFede?
P.
Sainath
The Class War in Gurgaon
Niranjan
Ramakrishnan
How the West Was Lost: CAFTA
and the Disassembling of America
Dave
Lindorff
Marvelous Marvin Bush
J.L.
Chestnut, Jr.
America's Racist Inventory: Oppression
Breeds Violence
Pat
Williams
Giving Away the Last Best Place
Norman
Solomon
In Praise of Kevin Benderman: a Moral
Leader of the Nation Goes to Prison
Sen.
Russ Feingold
The Bad News About the Energy Bill

July
28, 2005
Paul
Craig Roberts
Departing Iraq
William
S. Lind
The Duke of Alba and George W. Bush
Gilad
Atzmon
Blair the Camera Man
Joshua
Frank
Passing CAFTA: Blame the Democrats
Lila
Rajiva
Vision Mumbai Submerged
Amina
Mire
Pigmentation and Empire: the Emerging
Skin-Whitening Industry
Website
of the Day
Gateway to Underground News
July
27, 2005
Roger
Morris
The Source Beyond Rove: Condoleezza
Rice at the Center of the Plame Scandal
Gary
Leupp
Is Iran Being Set Up?
Paul
Craig Roberts
US Falling Behind Across the Board
Jackie
Corr
Class War on the Ruby River: the Billionaire with His Foot in
His Mouth
Mike
Whitney
The Coming End of the Housing Bubble
Dave
Zirin
Why Lance Armstrong Must Break with Bush
Christopher
Bradley
Why I Have Trouble Reading the News
Norman
Solomon
Thomas Friedman, Liberal Sadist?
Website
of the Day
Stormin' Norman
July
26, 2005
Suren
Pillay
The Enemy Within: When the "Other"
is One of "Us"
JoAnn
Wypijewski
Fission and Fizzle in Chicago: SEIU and
Teamsters Quit the AFL
Patrick
Cockburn
Iraq: the Unwinnable War
David
Anderson
When the Greatest Outrage is the Lack of Outrage: NYC's Subway
Searches
Joshua
Frank
Hillary Clinton: Outflanking Bush from the Right
Lenni
Brenner
Biography as Wish-Fulfillment: Jefferson, Hitchens and Atheism
David
Swanson
Nuking Native Land
Nuking Native Land
|
Weekend
Edition
August 6 - 8, 2005
Travels
with Sainath, Being an Indian Diary, of Third of Three Parts
The Rise
and Fall of Chandrababu Naidu, Western Poster Boy; Parrots that
Read Tarot; a Brothel in Mumbai; How the British Destroyed India
By ALEXANDER
COCKBURN
April
4
Sainath
tells me he’s had difficulty sleeping since he covered the
suicides in Andhra Pradesh from the late 90s on. All told, he’s
visited 300 families in which a suicide has occurred.
How did it all begin? From the early 90s forward, zero investment
and a collapse of credit ravaged Indian agriculture. The landless
poor saw working days crash as a result. Crippling rises in the
costs of seed, fertilizer, utilities, pesticide and water crushed
small farms. New user fees sent health costs soaring, and such
costs have become a huge component of rural family debt. Newly
commercialized education destroyed the hopes of hundreds of thousands
of women, as families, given the narrowed options, favored sons
over daughters. Farm kids simply dropped out.
Ruin
metastasized. Sainath showed me an 8x10 picture he’d made
of a woman, Aruna, positioning a photograph of her husband Bangaru
Ramachari among the implements he made for farmers, getting payment
in kind. Amid the slump he’d no customers for two years.
He’d died of hunger, too proud to admit, in his last week
before he collapsed, that he’d not eaten for five days.
The shift from food crops to cash crops, backed by the World Bank,
produced another harvest of disaster. New entrepreneurs replacing
old government-run networks sold bad seeds that would not germinate.
“The suicides”, Sainath says, “are a symptom
of vast agrarian distress. For every farmer who has committed
suicide there are thousands more facing the same huge crisis who
have not taken their lives. In fact, we will never know how many
suicides there have been, since there are so many ways of not
counting them. We do know that in seven or eight states since
’97 and ’98 and most particularly since 2000 farmers
have taken their lives by the thousand. In the single district
of Anantapur, in the state of Andhra Pradesh, so beloved by the
neoliberals because of its “reforms”, over 3,000 farmers
have taken their lives between 1997/98 and 2003.
Increasingly,
from 1999-2000 Sainath and some vigilant local journalists noticed
a mismatch between what they were seeing in the fields and the
official data. Narasimha Reddy, who works for the biggest Telugu
newspaper, Eenadu (with a circulation of around one million),
started writing about this gap. The government stats were saying
that suicides due to “distress” were no more than
54 statewide in 2000. This was strange because when Narasimha
and Sainath went to villages to investigate suicides they’d
routinely find six or seven. That rattled them. Then they started
looking more closely at the death statistics, and they found out
what the bureaucrats were doing, first as conspiracy, then out
of habit.
Now,
the overwhelming method of suicide was by drinking pesticide dumped
on farmers by the government. The journalists found that the police
had listed these as “suicides due to stomach ache”.
Sometimes they said that the pain of the stomach ache “had
prompted the victims to take pesticide”.
Other
methods of concealment included counting a death as suicide, but
not a “distress” suicide. Or as an “accident”.
Or as a death due to natural causes or accident. Many of those
killing themselves were women running small farms in the absence
of husbands who were looking for work elsewhere, or who had taken
their own lives. But because these women rarely owned the land
themselves, they weren’t classified as farmers, so their
suicides were not counted as farm-related.
Then
there’s the stigma of suicide. Many families don’t
want it, and that’s a big factor in suppressing the numbers.
Again, legally speaking, post mortems are free, but to prove that
a relative committed suicide the police extort money from family
members to pay for the autopsy. Officials undercount suicides
among dalits and landless laborers or among migrant farmers who’ve
given up, gone to a town and – severed from their social
setting –- killed themselves.
While
these farmers were being driven to suicide by the thousand in
Andhra Pradesh, Chandrababu Naidu, the state’s chief minister,
was being iconized in the western press as the apex posterboy
for neoliberal “reform”. The Wall Street Journal hailed
him as “a model for fellow state leaders”. Time crowned
him “South Asian of the year”. Bill Gates called on
Naidu. So did Bill Clinton. So did Paul O’Neill. John Wolfenson,
president of the World Bank, tossed him loan upon loan.
The
press projected onto Naidu all their fantasies of what a neoliberal
modernizer should be, building an IT-based economy in “Cyberabad”.
Oppression of women? Naidu’s fixed that, crowed The Financial
Times: “In a country where lower caste women are locked
out of decision-making, the government of Andhra Pradesh is sponsoring
a social revolution…. Women now dominate the village square”.
Indeed,
World Bank officials clapped their hands as Naidu kicked aside
the panchayats – democratically elected village councils
– and announced he was empowering women in new local organizations.
What could be wrong with that? Plenty. The new outfits usually
turned out to be small coteries with the right connections, which
got Naidu’s patronage and which filched or wasted the money
while the genuinely democratic panchayats were sidelined and starved
of funding. The collapse of democracy – that is, the framework
for collective action to combat disaster – in the countryside
contributed to the terrible harvest of death.
On
December 27, 2002, Keith Bradsher of the New York Times issued
a worshipful resume of Naidu’s assets and achievements,
selecting for particular mention the asset that Bradsher deemed
vital to Naidu’s political grip on Andhra Pradesh. “Naidu
and his allies”, Bradsher breathlessly confided to the NYT’s
readers, “speak Telugu, a language spoken only in this state
and by a few people in two adjacent states”. What Bradsher
was saying was that Naidu spoke the same language as the other
70 million inhabitants of Andhra Pradesh. It was as though someone
ascribed Tony Blair’s political successes in the United
Kingdom to his command of English.
Apart
from Naidu’s wondrous fluency in his native tongue, Bradsher
fixed upon other achievements likely to excite an American business
readership: “Mr. Naidu”, he excitedly confides, “
has succeeded in raising electricity prices here by 70 percent”
and “has enacted a law requiring union leaders to be workers
from the factory or office they represent… Andhra Pradesh
has also relaxed some of the restrictions on laying off workers”.
In
the spring of 2004 the Naidu balloon exploded with a gigantic
thunderclap. The Indian poor entered his field of vision decisively,
even as they shattered the expectations of almost every national
political pundit. Rarely has a posterboy been more humiliatingly
peeled from the billboards and tossed in the gutter. Naidu’s
elected coalition plummeted from 202 seats to a quarter of that
number.
The
verdict, from landless poor to farmers to rural women to the denizens
of Cyberabad, was well nigh unanimous: the Naidu model had been
a disaster for Andhra Pradesh, as statistics had been inexorably
recording even during his glory years. Economic growth was abysmal
and other vital statistics equally wretched. The 5,000 suicides
remain the prime epitaph for a politician hailed in the West more
than any other Indian as the harbinger of neoliberal triumph.
Only the Argentinean collapse was as brutal a rebuff to elite
opinion.
April 5
My
big evening in Calicut, sponsored by the extremely militant Bank
Clerks’ Union. There’s a full house, I’m glad
to say, with Muslim clerics front row right, Hindu fundamentalists,
secularist leftists, Christians of various stripes. Kerala is
a third Muslim, a third Hindu and a third Christian the latter
faith being brought to the Malabar coast in 60 AD by Thomas the
Doubting Apostle, no doubt plaguing the navigator with anxious
questions.
The
meeting is chaired by the local member of the federal parliament,
Veerendrakumar, an energetic man in his sixties who also controls
Mathrubhumi. I let fly for an hour on the topic of the war in
Iraq. It seems to go down well. Sainath speaks too, reminding
the audience that back in 1916, when the British invaded Mesopotamia,
their force was mostly Indian soldiers, most of whom were captured
by the Turks and died in forced labor building railroads.
April
6
We
drive north back to Wyanad, back to St. George’s Battery
for a last night, winding our way up to 3,000 feet in the Western
Ghats, then the next day with Sudhi at the wheel of the Ambassador
we set off north again into the state of Karnataka, north east
through Mysore to Bangalore, hailed by the Friedmans of this world
as India’s prime rendezvous with the future, where the cyber-coolies
toil night and day in the huge call centers.
The
Hindu’s classifieds tell the story: “Call Center Placement
based US/UK, req’d for Chennai and Blr, Sal up to Rs 1800/m,
age 17 to 29.) Any degree, walkin”. “ACDA of Chennai
wants to hire Part-time faculty to teach Accent Neutralisation
and American Accent.”
Later in The Hindu) come the matrimonial classifieds. “Hindu
Parkaakulam, Moopanaar/Udayar 23/167, B.A. Fine Arts, doing M.A.
MASSCOMM, goodlooking, wheatish complexion, girl from well-to-do
family in business seeks well settled groom in business. Early
marriage. Send horoscope/photo.” And on down the packed
columns to “Karkatha Pillai 30/MCA/employed in TNEB seeks
employed guy of same caste”. These were all from the Tamil
section, with others allocated to Marathi, Bengali and “Cosmopolitan”
where we find “K--, 33/155/fair MNC innocent divorcee. Brahmin
35-38 preferably Hyd/Abroad without encumbrances”, plus
an e-address @yahoo and a box address at The Hindu in Chennai.
Sainath
says such references to innocence – frequent in the matrimonial
classifieds – are intended to convey the fact that the advertiser
is still a virgin. Since some of the male matrimonials also mention
innocence in divorce I’d assumed this meant simply that
the advertiser was claiming to be the injured party.
In
this edition of The Hindu there are five pages of such classified
like “Karkatha Vellala B. Tech. 27/175, software engineer,
Wikpro Bangalore at present Belgium, parents seek proposals from
Diploma/Degree holders fair-looking vegetarian of upper middle
class willing to go abroad, send biodata with horoscope”.
Who wants to end up with a mismatch in the zodiac?
These
matrimonial ads, seeking wives as well as husbands, from men,
aren’t on the fringe of the national culture, but in its
dead center, as is the poor situation of Indian women overall.
Most Indian marriages are arranged, from poor up to wealthy families.
Of course there are love marriages and these days some Indian
women find a way out of parental pressure to marry, via prolonged
stints of education abroad in the U.S., UK or Australia.
I
passed an ad on a wall for “parrot readings 25 R”.
I thought this was a misprint for Tarot, but no. Apparently the
parrot’s handler lays out the Tarot pack, the parrot takes
a sideways squint at the customer, and then does a power point
presentation with his beak. Maybe Sainath was pulling my leg but
the sign definitely did say parrot, and I’ve known some
pretty smart parrots in my time.
Bangalore
may be the modern face of India, but it’s paralyzed by traffic.
Nothing moves. International businesses are having to relocate
into the hinterland. There is, so our host Ashwin Mahesh tells
us genially, no central traffic authority. Ashwin, ex-NASA researcher,
educated at UW, then with a stint at NASA’s Goddard Center
under his belt, returned to India to run a fine, public interest
website, indiatogether. From the 16th floor of South Tower, where
he and his wife live, we are well situated to review the grid-locked
traffic. Ashwin has already modeled some ideas for traffic relief
which are under consideration.
April
7
Chennai.
Here I am on the coast of Coromandel. At last a city with the
feel and pace of an older time. We go to the guesthouse of the
Asian College of Journalism. I give a talk to the students. Then
off to terrific Chettinad restaurant, though in my order I foolishly
include curried partridge, which is disappointing as all partridges
have been for the 34 years since I ate a good one, braised in
whiskey and cream. I drive around with Ashwin, who’s come
from Bangalore to visit his parents. We drive through the Theosophy
Canter, the sanctuary of Annie Besant, also of a banyan of international
repute, though now dying. Then we pace about on what is officially
classified as the third longest beach in the world. There aren’t
many women, and no one in bathing dress.
The great tsunami of last Christmas washed in over this beach
and about 3/4ths of a km inland, with a total of 40 lives or so
lost in all of Chennai.
April
8
We
go down to a heritage center south of Chennai called Dakshina
Chitra, which is really good, with excellent reconstructions of
vernacular Indian architecture of an earlier time in Kerala and
Tamil Nadu. Looking at the wooden buildings reminds me of how
much Indian architecture of the past fifty years is truly awful.
I
distinguish architecture here from landscape. Indian landscapes,
whether rural or urban are certainly what one might call “thick”,
just as most American landscapes are “thin”. In India,
from a foot in front of one’s nose to the horizon, there
are infinite medleys of planes and perspectives. There is no thin
air, no emptiness. There’s the street life, the endless
small shop displays and signage, the billboards above, the animals,
the stalls, the cars and busses overtaking each other at 60 miles
an hour.
The overall effect is endlessly inspiriting, with palette after
palette of tumultuous greens, blues, yellows, pinks and reds deployed
on saris, racks of clothes, aging advertisements. Someone who
is tired of an Indian streetscape or country road is truly tired
of life. But the architecture itself is mostly drab cinderblock.
The moving spirit of Dakshina Chitra, an American woman called
Deborah Thiagarajan (she is married to a Chettinad businessman),
puts it very well in her essay on domestic architecture in Tamil
Nadu (in an excellent little book, Traditional and Vernacular
Architecture, published by the Madras Craft Foundation):
“By
the early 1950s the whole urban architecture scene had changed.
Trained Indian architects were beginning to emerge on the scene.
In the expanding cities there was no looking back to any form
or more traditional Indian architecture or to the culturally more
dynamic forms of public architecture such as the so-called Indo
Saracenic architecture of Madras that flowered in public spaces
in the last part of the nineteenth century.
“The
introduction of cement into India in approximately 1933, coupled
with the increased availability of steel, unleashed a new aesthetic
and range of architectural use. Lime began to be phased out and
practically died out in the cities by the 1950s. The new material
was a craze, but not one which was used well. There was a total
confusion among Indian architects and they produced a full generation
of faceless, characterless architecture in the 1960s, 70s and
early 80s.
“Indian
architects and the Indian schools of architecture in the South
failed the public. The quote by a famous civil servant, Gurusaday
Dutt, from Bengal at the turn of the century says it all: ‘The
education that Calcutta University imparted in those days taught
me to consider every old value or form in the country as a product
of barbarism or superstition’.”
Most
Indian domestic interiors that I saw were not uplifting, indeed
often tasteless, and seemed to have very little connection to
the richness of India’s older architectural past. Indeed
the new Hindu temples, erupting with high-relief polychrome processions
of gods, humans and beasts were a joy after the etiolated modernism
that passes for cutting edge design. Sainath disagrees strongly.
Every new temple to him means another advance of Hindu ultra-nationalism,
religious intolerance, the persistence of caste. “But Sainath”,
I argue, “in a couple of centuries these Hindu temples will
look wonderful, even to your eyes”. But he’ll have
none of it and sternly lead me off to the admittedly wonderful
eighth-century monolithic temples south of Madras at Mahabalipuram.
April
10
I
give a talk at the Asian College of Journaliskm on the war in
Iraq. There’s a fine turnout and many questions. N. Ram,
the editor in chief of The Hindu, which sponsored the event, is
unable to attend, with the rather good excuse that he was meeting
the Chinese prime minister, Wen Jibao, touring Bangalore and Chennai
that week.
The
Hindu, circulation a million plus, and now Sainath’s home
port, maintains decent standards and reminds me somewhat of the
London Times thirty years ago, when a salvo from the editorial
page could alter the contours of a whole political battlefield.
Ram invites Sainath and me to drop by his house in Chennai the
next day, and we do so. When we arrive, his charming wife said
that he cannot be with us for a few minutes because he is finishing
his editorial on China-Indian relations.
She
says this with a tinge of gravity, of reverence for the solemn
rite of editorial composition that takes me back to the distant
years in the 60s when the presses at The London Times would be
held while the editor in chief, William Haley, wrestled unrighteousness
to the ground in the “first leader”, as the prime
editorial was called in England in those days. These days editorials
count for nothing in the U.S. Few read them except for press secretaries
and lobbyists. They have no weight.
In
due course Ram emerges from his editorial labors, looking weighty,
and treats us to an interesting disquisition, which I correctly
assess to be the burden of his impending editorial, on the evolution
of Chinese-Indian relations since the late 40s. Then he shifts
to a description of his shock when he was attending the reunion
of his class of 68 of the Columbia Journalism School last year
and at a meeting to discuss the burning issues of the day he heard
not a word of condemnation of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, so Ram
rose to his feet and denounced it himself. He said there were
several hisses from other J School grads. It was bracing to find
a newspaper editor – probably India’s premier editor
- in terms of political clout – talking like that; bracing
too to hear later that in his younger days Ram endorsed a strike
at The Hindu and was promptly exiled from The Hindu’s premises
by his father, then the newspaper’s boss.
April
11
Back
to Mumbai. Sainath’s friend Sudarshan invites me to APNE-AAP,
a foundation he runs, in Kamathipura, Mumbai’s red light
district along the Falkland Road. The Foundation has some rooms
in an old school, and these are now filled with cheerful kids.
The idea is to give children of prostitutes a chance to get out
of the life, get some education, get a chance. It’s the
dearest dream of the prostitutes, many of whom haven’t much
hope of living past 35, taken off by AIDS or TB. The woman working
at the drop-in house get the prostitutes ration cards, take them
to hospital, run savings accounts – over 200 when I was
there – for them where they can squirrel away ten rupees
(25 cents) or so a day for their kids.
Without
such help the prostitutes get turned away by hospitals and kindred
bureaucracies. Already there are 150 kids who’ve graduated,
and 65 currently in attendance. Only one graduate has gone into
her mother’s line of business. I like the atmosphere, mercifully
free of social worker sanctimony. APNE-AAP’s staff, Manju
Vyas, Preethi, Diplai and Bimbla, are all in good spirits and
very impressive.
We
walk over to a huge old brothel built by the British a hundred
years ago for their garrison. Back then the prostitutes were Tibetan
or Japanese. These days they’re from Nepal or Bangladesh.
The middlemen procuring the girls from their parents get 20,000
rupees or more from the madams. The rooms in the brothel are about
10 foot by 10 foot, with two tiers of beds and families of four
or five cooking and chatting. When a customer shows up and forks
over his 50 rupees they presumably stand outside. The girls greet
us in friendly style and some of them covertly slide over their
ten rupees to the AAPNE-AAP women, out of sight of husband, or
pimp, or madam. It costs residents 50 rupees a day to rent a bed.
Five rupees buy you a bucket of water. Electricity costs 150 rupees
a month.
After
an hour or so I bid them adieu and go off to the Royal Yacht Club
to read for an hour or two before Sainath and his wife Sonia throw
me a farewell dinner. Three weeks earlier Sainath has give me
Rajani Palme Dutt’s India Today, in a revised edition put
out in 1970, not long before Dutt died. The first edition had
been commissioned by Victor Gollancz, of Left Book Club fame,
who was so terrified of being charged with sedition that he forced
Palme Dutt to blue pencil many passages, including excision of
all references to revolution, including the phrase “industrial
revolution”.
In
his years on the Daily Worker, my father knew Palme Dutt well
when the latter was the prime theoretician and intellectual commissar
of the British Communist Party. If you skip the predictable boilerplate
and ideological postures to be expected of a CP high-up in the
1940s, India Today is an absorbing history and a corrective to
any nostalgia for the days or the Raj, or to the current nonsense
about its benign role purveyed by such choristers of Empire as
Niall Ferguson.
In
an early chapter Palme Dutt cites admiring travelers such as Tavernier,
traveling around India in the seventeenth century, remarking that
“even in the smallest villages rice, flour, butter, milk,
beans and other vegetables, sugar and other sweetmeats, dry and
liquid, can be procured in abundance”. Many travelers at
the time extolled Bengal as marvelous in the abundance of its
resources, the advanced nature of its crafts. By the 1920s, after
nearly two centuries of British rule, India was a byword for the
vast abyss of its all-pervading poverty. “The average Indian
income”, wrote two economists in 1924, “is just enough
either to feed two men in every three of the population, or give
them all two in place of every three meals they need, on condition
they all consent to go naked, liver out of doors all the year
round, have no amusement or recreation, and want nothing else
but food, and that the lowest, the coarsest, the least nutritious”.
The
British devastation of India was initially achieved by the simple
means of taxing it into destitution. In the last year of the last
Indian ruler of Bengal, in 1764-5, the land revenue realized was
817,000 pounds sterling. Within a few years of British rule the
population had shrunk by one-third through famine, in which ten
million perished in 1770 and a third of the country into “a
jungle inhabited by wild beasts”. Nonetheless, by 1771-2
the Bengal revenues had risen to 2,341,000 pounds sterling. As
Warren Hastings reported to the Court of the Directors of the
East India Company in 1772 with bracing frankness,
“Notwithstanding
the loss of at least one-third of the inhabitants of the province,
and the consequent decrease of the cultivation, the net collections
of the year 1771 exceeded even those of 1768… It was naturally
to be expected that the diminution of the revenue should have
kept an equal pace with the other consequences of so great a calamity.
That it did not was owing to its being violently kept up to its
former standard”.
The
British destroyed the old manufacturing towns and the economy
of the villages. In Palme Dutt’s words, “The millions
of ruined artisans and craftsmen, spinners, weavers, potters,
smelters, smiths, alike from the towns and the villages, had no
alternative save to crowd into agriculture”... India was
“forced to the status of agricultural colony of British
manufacturing capitalism”, whose ideologues then invoked
Malthus to explain India’s degraded condition.
The
Gateway to India, outside my window, slowly became a silhouette
in the twilight, as homeless families settled down in its shadow
for the night. I put Palme Dutt’s book down and prepared
to leave for Sainath and Sonia’s apartment.
As
we wait for friends to arrive, Sainath reminds me of the bit in
Tacitus’ Annals where he describes how condemned people
were recruited to serve as candles at Nero’s parties: “they
were doomed to the flames and burnt, to serve as nightly illumination
when daylight had expired. Nero offered his gardens for the spectacle”.
“What sort of sensibility”, Sainath broods, “did
it require to pop another fig in your mouth as one more human
being went up in flames?”
And
by the same token, Sainath asks what sort of indifference has
it required for India’s rich – and the very rich in
India are the among the richest on the planet – to disport
while millions starved not far off, and thousands of peasants
killed themselves, some of them less than 50 miles from Mumbai
where much of India’s wealth is concentrated, and where
“theme weddings” costing millions have been the rage.
Last year an Indian steel billionaire, Lakshmi Mittal, and his
wife Usha promised their daughter Vanisha a spectacular wedding.
They cashed the promise by renting Vaux le Vicomte and Versailles
in France for the nuptials. The six-day long wedding bash cost
over $80 million and was attended by more than 1,200 guests including
leading Indian industrialists and celebrities from the Bollywood
film scene.
Just
as interesting, I remark to Sainath, as the festivities and excesses
of the rich is the mindset of the policy makers, the intellectual
formulators of neoliberal policies that they know well will cause
terrible suffering. What processes of self-exculpation insulate
them from a policy (say, planned shrinkage of India’s small
farmers by 40 per cent) and the execution of that policy, inflicting
- terrible privations and early death on millions.
When
I got back to the U.S., I picked up in a second hand bookstore
in Olympia, Washington, a history of the neoliberal antecedent
to what has been happening in India and much of the Third World
these last thirty years, as recorded in J.L. and Barbara Hammond’s
books The Village Labourer, and The Town Labourer, originally
published in 1911 and 1917 respectively, the first set dedicated
to Gilbert Murray. I got them in beautiful little Guild paperback
editions published in the late 1940s. I’d often seen them
cited by E.P. Thompson and others, but never read them. They’re
marvelous histories, giving clear and vivid accounts of how “enclosures”
actually worked and the horrors they caused in eighteenth and
nineteenth-century England. A local aristocrat, reeling under
his gambling debts, simply sent in a petition to Parliament that
the lands he had in mind (say, three or four villages all previously
held under the common field system) simply become his. His request
was duly reviewed by his cronies, including his creditors, and
through it sailed. Though later the petition had to be put up
on the church door, initially the first the villagers might hear
about it was when their new landlord apprised them of what they
had lost and he had gained.
Then
the Hammonds trace the evictions, the repressions, and ultimately
transportation to Australia. “The nightmare that punishment
was growing gentle and attractive to the poor came to haunt the
mind of the governing class. It was founded on the belief that
as human wretchedness was increasing, there was a sort of law
of Malthus, by which human endurance tended to outgrow the resources
of repression”.
Transportation
to Australia wasn’t enough. The poor might see that as relief.
The hell of transportation had to be augmented by the penal settlements
(reduplicated in the Andamans, where the British sent Indian nationalists,
mostly to certain death).
"And
this system”, the Hammonds wrote, “was not the invention
of some Nero or Caligula; it was the system imposed by men of
gentle and refined manners, who talked to each other in the language
of Virgil and Lucan, liberty and justice, who admired the sensibility
of Euripides and Plutarch, who put down the abominations of the
Slave Trade, and allowed Clive and Warren Hastings to be indicted
at the bar of public opinion; and it was imposed by them from
the belief that as the poor were becoming poorer, only a system
of punishment that was becoming more brutal could deter them from
crime”.The English peasantry was destroyed. Thanks to the
Great Revolution the French peasantry survived. The Indian peasantry
survives too. Sainath once wrote a little series of five marvelous
vignettes of leaders of five rural rebellions against the British.
As he emphasizes, the Indian rebellions were above all rural,
starting with the great rebellions of May 1857.
India
became independent on August 15, 1947, after nearly two centuries
of colonial rule. There was not a day the villages were quiet
in that period. What the Brits call 'The Sepoy Mutiny' of 1857,
was actually the greatest agrarian uprising the world had seen,
at least until China got into the act.
The
uprising of 1857 came when the villages exploded. The 'sepoy'
(a British corruption of the Indian sipahi or soldier) was simply
a peasant in uniform, who could not but reflect the mood of his
village. For instance, in the province of Oudh, where there was
great anger at the new land revenue system imposed by the British,
almost every agricultural family had a representative in the army.
When
the rural masses rose in millions, the business elite of Bombay
and Calcutta held prayers – for the success of the British
in quelling the rebellion! This is not to say that there was no
revolt in the cities. Just that the explosion was from the villages
and towns and that the elites – just as they are today –
are on the wrong side. The big difference a city-based Gandhi
made to the freedom struggle was bringing the rural masses into
the organized political process on the scale he did. With that,
Gandhi converted the Congress from a tea party into a political
party. The entry of the millions of rural Indians is what made
the difference.
“Through these decades”, as Sainath says, “the
rural poor have kept democracy alive in India. They go out and
change governments. The backbone has always been rural”.
And
it still is.
Since
the early to mid-70s the bandwagon of neoliberalism has been rolling
along. I think we’re due a history of the whole disastrous
arc since 1973 till today . The 1970s saw capital’s victorious
counterattack on plans for a new world economic order and more
equitable commodity pricing. By the end of the decade, the crucial
UN agencies such as UNCTAD were well on their way to the sidelines.
As the postwar boom peaked and began to subside capital began
to inflict upon the planet’s face the new arrangements,
amid whose baneful consequence millions today endure or sink beneath
their weight. Public assets were seized and looted in the name
of “liberalization” and “reform”, internal
markets taken by storm, economies devastated by free trade.
Out
there in the real world of poor farmers on the lip of ruin, the
neoliberal model imposed by the World Bank and by infatuated “reformers”
across the world over the past twenty years has failed decisively,
just as it has across so much of Latin America and the Third World.
Let us dare to hope that across the next generation we will welcome
a gathering counterattack on neoliberalism and a new path, along
which scouting parties and bold detachments are already on the
march.
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