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Subject: [India Thinkers Net]A Fair Unfair to Books - March12, 2004



Mainstream [India]
vol. XLII, no. 10, 28 February 2004



A Fair Unfair to Books

Books have been in the news recently, for no fault of theirs. First
came the attack by the Sambhaji Brigade on the Bhandarkar Oriental
Research Institute of Pune, ostensibly over the "denigration" of
Shivaji by a historian who was only setting out the different ways in
which people have looked at that historical hero. Naturally, those whom
he had thanked for having helped him were bad people who therefore
became targets. Then rewards were announced, in Mumbai and in Kolkata,
for blackening the faces of the writers Salman Rushdie and Taslima
Nasreen, respectively. Hordes of avid bibliophiles everywhere, incensed
beyond endurance by bad books.

Finally came the World Book Fair which began in Delhi on 14 February
2004, organised as usual by the National Book Trust. It began,
according to the report published in the *Hindu* the next day, "amid
[the] chanting of Vedic mantras [and the] rendition of Saraswati
Vandana". This is, as we know, how public events commence all over
the globe, so the use of the word "World" in relation to this
book fair was entirely justified.

It was only to be expected that the speakers at all the major functions
in the book fair should be associated with the Sangh Parivar, which,
through the BJP-led coalition at the Centre, controls the National Book
Trust. This year, though, there was a change in the usual arrangements:
individual publishers who wished to hold book release functions or
"meet the author" events were required to obtain the prior
permission of the fair's organisers. The Chairman of the NBT, B.K.
Sharma, said that this was not aimed at censorship but represented
sound management and was meant to prevent possible disorder. It was only
"unavoidable circumstances" which kept the organisers from
allotting space for the release of Taslima Nasreen's book
*Dwikhandita*, at which the writer herself was to have been present.
None but the organisers of such a large event can understand the
immense problems involved, the great responsibility that weighs on their
shoulders.

A book represents, in now unfashionable terms, "superstructure"
or "ideology". It may contain the truth, as those who follow
"religions of the book" believe their particular books to
represent, or it may contain lies. With obvious exceptions, the reader
is free to evaluate a book. What is important is that in every modern
society, books are a symbol of the freedom of expression that is
guaranteed to every member of such a society. In our own country's
Constitution, this freedom is set out in Article 19 (1) (a); although
specific exceptions are listed which keep it from being absolute.

Maharashtra, ruled by a Congress-led coalition, banned James Laine's
book on Shivaji; and West Bengal, ruled by the CPI(M), banned Taslima
Nasreen's book. In both cases, the stated reason was that the books
hurt the "sentiments" of some people and were therefore potential
causes of trouble. Thus "law and order" were given primacy over
freedom of expression. It does not speak well for either state's
government that it considered itself unable to tackle the law and order
problems which *may* have arisen, choosing instead the easy way out -
simply banning the books.

We do not know if it occurred to the two administrations that they had
in the process trampled over a fundamental right granted by the
Constitution, the upholding of which was their duty. One is led here to
think of other administrations, those which included people who had
shaped the Constitution. Did they ban the writings of Golwalkar and
Savarkar, all of which not only caused but were *intended* to cause
hurt to the sentiments of millions of Indians and which recommended the
denial to these Indians even of ordinary citizens' rights? Of course
they did not. Perhaps some secretly agreed with the maniacs while
others saw no harm in letting the ranters rant on. Whichever way we
choose to look at it, freedom of expression was not denied even to
those who spouted poison.

One is led here to think also of what many stalwarts of the Sangh
Parivar have been permitted to say, without let or hindrance, in their
writing, in their public speeches, and in audio and video cassettes.
The likes of Narendra Modi, Pravin Togadia and Ashok Singhal, and, in a
comparatively restrained though no less obvious way, Deputy Prime
Minister Lal Kishenchand Advani himself, have freely painted India's
Muslims as Pakistani agents, as Pakistanis, and as terrorists, not to
speak of several references involving what is more directly called
obscenity. Of the many provisions in the Indian Penal Code which
prescribe punishments for such acts, I shall mention only those which
pertain to public tranquillity (chap. VII), religion (chap. XV) and
criminal intimidation (chap. XXII). Today's leaders are not governed
by those very laws which they are pledged to uphold: nor, of course,
are their "kin".

Literally silencing opponents is one use to which political power has
been put. The other side of the coin is the spreading of one's own
vicious ideas, their imposition on the nation, most particularly on its
children. Both run counter to the law of the land, but why should those
people bother who have political power in their grasp and who never
made much of the law of the land anyway? Their own agenda is primary,
and they use the laws only when they can be used against others:
otherwise they bend them or ignore them entirely. The law is only a
tool: it has nothing to do with natural justice or with principles.

Political power and the law can be misused to impose on people books
that are packed full of lies. Further, people can be compelled to
believe what these books contain because books which contain
alternative view-points can be made unavailable, again misusing the same
set of laws. Modern societies are liberal in that they grant great
freedom to their citizens as individuals, imposing restrictions only
when the exercise of this freedom impinges on the freedoms of other
citizens. Books, especially those that are used in school education,
are perhaps the finest example of how India, in the last decade or so,
has been sought to be taken back from liberal modernity to a mediaeval
suppression of individual freedoms, in large part through the obnoxious
and cynical promotion of superstition.

Anil Sadgopal, Arjun Dev, Bipan Chandra, D.N. Jha, Irfan Habib, Nalini
Taneja, Romila Thapar and Teesta Setalvad are some of the people who
have written, with cogent arguments and extensive documentation, about
the Sangh Parivar's organised effort to give a particular slant to
text books meant for school children. The preponderance of historians
is explained by the fact that it is chiefly our land's history which
the Sangh Parivar has sought to re-write, in such a way that it might
"prove" the ancient and eternal superiority of its ahistorical
and sociologically nonsensical construct of "Hindu" culture and
civilisation - a superiority which it says was marred by the coming
(always as invaders, naturally, for there could have been no simple
traders among them) of evil people who followed other faiths. To regain
that superiority non-Hindus must be disenfranchised, suppressed, thrown
out - or simply annihilated.

My fear is that the World Book Fair of 2004 may mark the co-option of
the National Book Trust, in the way in which the National Council of
Educational Research and Training was long ago co-opted, into the
service of the Sangh Parivar. If this happens, not just school books
but *all* books will sing the glories of Hindutva; and there will be
nothing else to read.

I saw recently a book which documents how, in Iran after the Islamic
Revolution, many banned books - not just Nabokov's *Lolita* but
also, strangely, the works of Jane Austen - were read in secret by girls
and young women with the encouragement of their brave teacher. Maybe
the time is not far when I shall have to hide when I read Tolstoy or
Hemingway - or Charlie Brown.

----------------------------------------------------------
Courtesy:Harsh Kapoor/SACW
www.sacw.net






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