Right Wing Politics and attacks on Academic Freedom and Democratic Rights
Professor
Sugata Marjit has written an article in the Times of India, attacking
students' participation in politics. Having started with a disclaimer
that since the issue is sub-judice it would not be right to comment
about the specifics of the Jadavpur case, he goes on to make ample
innuendos, and while the article heading talks about banning gheraos,
in fact goes much further to demand: “first strategy will be to ban
politics among the teachers, officials and non-teaching staff with
exemplary punishment in case of violation”. (ToI, Sept. 27, 2014).
Professor Marjit has been quite well
known as a right wing scholar, a supporter of all the standard
neo-liberal positions, and given his stature (former Director, CSSSC,
editor of academic journals, a wikipedia article on him which is
basically his publication list), one of the more well known academic
faces of the current Trinamul Congress regime in West Bengal. Having
served as a chair of the State Higher Education Council, and having
been in the search committee that created a short list of names for
the next Vice Chancellor of Jadavpur University, his involvement with
West Bengal's academic politics is extensive. It is therefore
interesting that this consummate politician wants a ban on politics –
obviously because it is politics of the wrong kind. And is it not
interesting, too, that while Marjit writes in sophisticated
languages, the Trina Mul Chhatra Paridhad has actually demanded a ban
on the Jadavpur University Teachers Association? Is it also not
interesting that the JU administration has been issuing orders (later
described as appeals) that appear as first steps in the direction of
a show cause notice to the President and Secretary of the Jadavpur
University Teachers' Association?
So it is necessary to go beyond the
perfunctory disclaimers and read Professor Marjit's essay as an
“intellectual” component of a multi-pronged war on democratic
rights. With the subtlety of a rampaging hippo, the article is titled
Gherao a criminal act, it should be banned. Professor Supriya
Chaudhuri has responded to it in her own way. I differ from her in
some respects. Professor Chaudhuri has begun by looking at the
significant academic achievements of Jadavpur University, and wants
her readers to understand that all this is under attack. I too have
had a long association with this University (student 1976-1981,
working at my PhD from 1982, a teacher since 1984 with experience of
teaching in the Departments of History and Comparative Literature as
well as the School of Women's Studies) and therefore feel proud of
how JU students, scholars and faculty have achieved excellence. But I
believe that the response to attacks on democratic rights must focus
on the wider communities, and not on special cases. Marjit attacks
JU, at times in a vicious and utterly unproved manner. But he uses
the current JU agitation to launch an attack on academic freedom and
democracy itself. The #hokkolorob movement has generated support and
solidarity from across West Bengal, because people in educational
institutions across the state have been under attack.
I would like to draw attention to the
ease and complete lack of rationality of any kind other than
rightwing politics that enables Professor Marjit to move from gherao
as a specific weapon of struggle to the right to political agitation
itself. I doubt people would think it an ad hominem if I reported
that back in 1978, long before our learned doctor had picked up his
degrees and obtained the position of Chairperson of the State Higher
Education Council that he held for some time under the current
dispensation, he had been a Chhatra Parishad candidate at Presidency
College, where he was defeated by Supriyo Chatterjee contesting for
the post of Union Secretary. So I submit that the antipathy to
democracy has roots in the reality that open advocacy of far right
elitist politics does not garner adequate support. But one would
also be keen to know, whether it was in an introspective and
autobiographical mode that Marjit wrote: “students are naturally
vulnerable to political and under-the-table manipulations”.
Marjit goes on to make the following
propositions:
a. Student politics is akin to herd
behaviour.
b. JU students are substance abusers.
c. Teachers get paid by the government
and therefore they must be banned from doing politics.
Substance Abusers as Agitators?
To take up the complete manufacture
first – the issue of JU being a hotbed of substance abuse. I would
advise all students (and indeed have always advised them), that when
making sweeping claims, one needs to document one's assertions.
Marjit simply says, “It is also well-known that various academic
spots and surely the JU campus have become a hotbed of drug addicts”.
Had someone made a similar accusation about, say, the West Bengal
cabinet, they would have faced a lawsuit. So why should Marjit not
face the same? How may cases of substance abuse have been registered
against JU students over the last five years? By using terms like
“well-known” and “surely”, Marjit gives an impression of
confidence, when the truth is, he has absolutely no hard data. One is
tempted to digress and re-tell a story about economists one heard
many years back – an ancient box that could not be opened, was
found in an Indus Valley site. The archaeologist talked about its
dating, the art historian about the skills that had gone into its
making, while the economist commented – assume the box is open.
Marjit makes a slanderous comment, and urges us (not openly, but by
implication) to look at his status, printed beneath the article, and
assume that whatever he is saying must be true. In the last 38 years,
I have seen some students who take alcohol, many more who smoke, some
who use other substance – in JU, in Presidency, in St. Xaviers'
College, in Scottish Church College where I taught for a while, as
well as in other sections of the population. I have never found that
it is monopolised by one institution, location, age, or any other
category. Surely Marjit could have provided us with the data base.
His failure to do so is evidence that he is presenting his readers
with what may be called a falsifiction (fiction, uttered as if it is
reality). And even if JU had indeed been haunted by substance
abusers, can he show any logical link between that and the agitation?
Suppose we found that in Stockholm the incidence of storks and the
incidence of births had a correlation of almost 1. would he agree,
without looking at anything else, that babies in Stockholm are
delivered by storks?
Democracy, and the Right to
Political Space
So we move on to the more substantial
issue – democracy and the right to politics. Marjit is effectively
pushing a line that people have only one political right – to
periodically take part in elections. Once a government is put in
place, all political rights pass to it. This was also the argument of
Partha Chatterjee, the Education Minister, who said that students
cannot choose who will be the Vice Chancellor. The students were of
course not demanding the right to select the VC. They had been
demanding the right to assert that someone who sees students as
slaves to be roughed up cannot be a VC. Behind this lies extremely
divergent conceptions of democracy.
Democracy was created in ancient Greece
– in the city-state of Athens. It had major limitations – slaves
(of both the sexes) and all women, were deprived of political, and
even most civil rights. But what was significant about ancient
democracy was that those who were considered citizens did not simply cast their votes
and push off to watch the tragedies of Aeschylus being performed. Law
making, execution of decisions, and judicial functions, all saw a
wide range of public participation. Laws could only be passed by the
Popular Assembly, which met at least 40 days in a year, with a quorum
of 6000. Drafts of laws could be proposed by anyone at Assembly
meetings, or at meetings of the Boule or Council of 500 by members of
the Council. Trials were heard by dikasteries (the dikasts were both
judge and jury) of between 200 and 1000 persons. All this was in a
place where the size of the citizen population was 30,000 or perhaps
a little more. Right-wing historians and philosophers, ever since
Plato, have condemned this democracy. And they too have talked about
herd mentality. Yet it must be understood that this democracy, once
created by a revolution (508), was strong enough to survive for
nearly two centuries, till an immensely more powerful Macedon
defeated Athens. It is the student movement, which started in late
August, took on mass dimensions from the second week of September,
and has been based on sustained democratic general body meetings
since then, that exemplifies real democratic practices as well as an
understanding of what democracy means in theory. The movement has
received support from students outside Jadavpur, and in an absolutely
correct widening, the students have insisted that such so-called
outsiders must be allowed their voices.
In modern times, liberalism resisted
democracy. John Locke was absolutely clear on this issue – only
those who owned property, those who did not sell their labour power,
were to be considered politically fully authorised. Even so, they
were to create the government. Thereafter unless government violated
its pact with the propertied, it alone acted. When votes had to be
given to the poor, as in the USA after independence, democracy was
radically redefined, so that casting one's vote periodically seemed
to be the be-all and end-all. It is this, highly watered down
“democracy” that Marjit or Chatterjee favour. What the JU
students movement has shown is something that major social upheavals
over the last few centuries have repeatedly done – namely, breaking
the barriers between the representers and the represented, creating
new structures of democracy. There have been mass meetings, called
General Body meetings – GBs by the separate faculty, GBs of the
entire student community of JU, and yes, conventions that have
allowed the so-called bohiragotos to come and speak as well.
Gheraos
Before going on to Marjit's strictures
about teachers, I would also like to address the question of gherao.
All political battles are, at one level, attempts by opposed or
differing groups to gather power, use power. It would certainly be
more humane if one could exchange opinions and take decisions. But if
one ignores the facts in the name of not discussing a sub-judice
matter, and then makes sweeping comments about criminal actions and
the need to ban them, then one is also playing politics – of a
dirty kind.
So let us again recapitulate some
events. A young woman alleged she had been sexually harassed. She
went to the Vice Chancellor to complain. According to her version,
the University response was tardy. She also claimed improper
behaviour by certain members of the Internal complaints Committee.
These were matters that the University administration, led by the VC,
should have sorted out very quickly. When a student agitation began
to form, they were alternately ignored and threatened. Marjit sweeps
the events under the carpet with a misleading comment about how a
mob mentality led students to demand that the same person should
lodge a complaint, investigate, and punish the “guilty”. The use
of the quotation marks round the word 'guilty' suggests Marjit opines
there was no sexual harassment at all.
Then, a month ago, on the night of
16-17 September, the gherao did develop. There have been dozens of
gheraos. Without looking at the specific context in which a gherao
has developed, without looking at the demands, a how far students had
attempted sincere negotiations and other forms of agitations, to
simply make a sweeping comment that gheraos are criminal actions show
that one is taking a formal stance,but hardly one that investigates
social realities. For about 150 hours before this, students had been
on a peaceful sit-in. There had been ample opportunity to call them
in and negotiate. Has the VC produced even the merest shred of
evidence that he tried to do so?
During my brief stint as a member of
the JU EC, I was among the EC members once gherao-ed – by the TMCP.
The then VC, Souvik Bhattacharyya, took the position that he was
willing to talk with anyone who was his student, regardless of party
colour, or even regardless of whether they were official leaders of
the Union, but he would not talk with Professor Shonku. The gherao
petered out with no further consequence and no further agitation,
because it had no significant base among the students. The current
agitation is going on even after one month, and despite the vacation
in between. I do not believe that any agitation should begin with a
gherao. Nor do I believe that even if there is a mass support, a
gherao, for any demand, is necessarily right. Yes, there can be mob
violence. But that is why it is necessary to look at what the JU
students were demanding and how they were behaving. They were
demanding, for example, a reconstitution of the ICC. If their
specific demand was wrong, one could have explained to them where
they were wrong in law, and sought to come to an agreement. They
were demanding prompt action from the University. If today there is
some police action, why did it require a march by anything between
50,000 to 1,00,000 people on the streets of Kolkata and a province,
country and world-wide solidarity action before the police finally did something, whatever ? Anyone reading Avishek De
Biswas' article in Ebela, or the FETSU's very first statement on
Facebook, would have known that students took quite a careful
position. FETSU, for example, wanted proper investigation. By quoting
truncated passages, one newspaper has even managed to portray the
FETSU as pro-sexual harassment. So when students did come out in a
gherao this time, it was after exploring other avenues over a long
period of time and meeting with total opposition from the VC.
Ban all Campus Politics?
So why are we
supposed to ban all politics? Marjit provides no rational (or even
irrational) argument about why student politics should be banned. He
makes sounds about how herd mentality is the cause of wars, riots and
economic crises. Oh really? I will come back to this. But why does he
want the ban?
Here
is the passage from Marjit: “Academic institutions are only
for academic activities. First strategy will be to ban politics among
the teachers, officials and non-teaching staff with exemplary
punishment in case of violation.
They accept public money and must not indulge in political activities on the campus. Students are not public servants, but to make sure that the willing students are allowed to attend lectures and those inside or outside the campus who physically and through campaign prevent such action must be apprehended and prosecuted. "Gherao" by any group must be identified as a criminal act. These are necessary steps to make ourselves civilized and care for public money and society at large. This wish list is so politically incorrect that it must be pursued at all costs”.
They accept public money and must not indulge in political activities on the campus. Students are not public servants, but to make sure that the willing students are allowed to attend lectures and those inside or outside the campus who physically and through campaign prevent such action must be apprehended and prosecuted. "Gherao" by any group must be identified as a criminal act. These are necessary steps to make ourselves civilized and care for public money and society at large. This wish list is so politically incorrect that it must be pursued at all costs”.
Note the construction of sentences. He
calls for a ban on all politics by paid employees. Now, what is
politics? If we are talking about parties, historically, universities
have provided freedom of thought and expression, and all party
viewpoints have been expressed. So is it because Marjit's party is
totally marginalised, despite the thunderings of so many Vice
Chancellors, that ban is now seen as necessary? Second, while
governments pay the money for our salaries, we are not defined as
public servants. Third, of course, is so what even if we were? It is
a hang over of the colonial era, when people who drew salaries from
the colonial government were not allowed to express themselves
politically. We are given a set of instructions here, not any
argument about WHY they are necessary.
Academic spaces are for academic work,
says the professor. So what does academic work mean? Would we teach
Socrates, or the French Revolution to the students, and tell them,
but do understand, all this is purely hypothetical. You may not
question received wisdom like Socrates, for that would be politics.
You may not demand equal rights, for that would be politics.
Leaving such things aside, for I
suspect that anyone capable of writing the passage I have quoted will
not have the capacity to understand the interconnections I am trying
to make, let me move down to concrete issues. The academic excellence
of institutions depend on autonomy of teachers, scholars, and
students. Ever since the TMC government started passing new
University Acts and the like, these have been curtailed in a number
of ways. In the very specific case of Jadavpur University, the JUTA
is engaged in compiling a White Paper, showing how the current VC has
harmed the academic work in JU by unwarranted interference, some
using the law, some going beyond what the law permits. By the
strictures of Marjit, such an act of JUTA is politics, not academics,
and so we will perhaps see one more missive from the Registrar to the
President and Secretary of JUTA.
Then there is the sentence about
students. I quote it again. “Students are not public servants, but
to make sure that the willing students are allowed to attend lectures
and those inside or outside the campus who physically and through
campaign prevent such action must be apprehended and prosecuted”.
Willing students – yes? Who are they?
Where are the willing students who were prevented? If Marjit, writing
on 27 September, had even one concrete case, he would have documented
it. The absence of documentation is evidence that all talk about
stopping willing students is a bunch of lies.
Moreover, Marjit wants action not only
against those who physically prevent “willing students” but also
those who campaign. In other words, any poster, calling for a
complete strike, can be treated as proof, and the person writing, or
putting up the poster, can be punished – including if such persons
were acting outside the campus. With such rapidity and skilled (!!)
writing does our professor move from the campus to the entire
province. Even Mussolini would have found little to quibble with
Marjitian democracy after this.
A few more comments on herds and
history:
I want to remark briefly on the
ig-nobel award winning discovery of professor Marjit. He tells his
readers, “there has been considerable research on this topic”
[herd behaviour]. We learn that herd behaviour is the root cause of
“riot, financial crisis, war”. Oh, wow!!. Where are the
citations?
Having taught History, including histories of wars,
revolutions, crises, between 1982 and 2009, I never came across these
researches, and would have benefited. There have been massive studies
on the causes of wars, both fundamental causes and immediate ones,
and “herd behaviour” figures in marginally. Personally, I have
taught Thucydides for a quarter cetury, along with commentators on
Thucydides, and did not find this explanation figuring. Among other
examples, one can talk of William Mulligan's 2010 book on The
Origins of the First World War, which looks at historiographic
debates. Ernest Mandel's book, The Meaning of the Second World
War, presents a wide-ranging summary. The same author wrote The
Second Slump, dealing with the crisis of 1974. One could read,
agree, disagree, argue, with them. But one would not find the simple
explanation that herd behaviour was at the base.
So the claims of
scholarship through the author identification at the bottom of
Marjit's essay only serve to assist the presentation of false claims
to buttress ultra-reactionary conclusions. And yes, we know all too
well the means by which they can be pursued. Students are being
called a herd, so that mass action, the exemplary democratic means
employed, can be portrayed as manipulations by alleged outsiders,
supposed party interests. This must be known for what it is – a
deep right wing attack on democracy.
Comments
violation of so-called order.
We should question the question -- the claim, why students are to be an oblised, no-question, 'parua' only...I think somehow we make ourselves a supporter of that view facing the argument of 'marjitian' argument. We must call student to 'question all' question the system with all anomalousness.
It is actually a question of ..who will control the academic spaces? academicians or the lekys of the government,here is the question. It is my firsthand reaction.