By Vidya Bhushan Rawat for Twocircles.net
S. Chandra Mohan’s poetry reflects the brilliance of his thought process and the rebel inside him. The sheer diversity and variety of issues that he took up shows his concern for human values which transcends the boundaries of nation state, caste, class, gender and religion. In true sense only a humanist could do so.
I had the privilege of close association with legendary Mulk Raj Anand, whose first novel ‘Untouchable’ with an introduction from E M Forster created ripples internationally and exposed the hidden caste hatred including the issue of manual scavenging prevalent in our society, even when I was just a village boy from Uttarakhand as he would pronounce, where I was fortunate to have met many laureate of Indian writings who took up the issue of the marginalized but very few coming from the communities.
During the Mandal’s war in 1990, we saw English language media was used as a tool to spread hatred against the Dalits and marginalized. They were mocked and there were absolutely negligible numbers of writers who could pose a counter cultural question to the Brahmanically corrupted intellectual elite which looked secular in their mask yet uncomfortable to the core question of social justice but in the Mandal two, we saw the Dalit OBC students were writing their own blogs, had learnt to use social media strongly and numerous websites and journals emerged to counter the ‘merit’ propaganda unleashed by the ‘devotees’ of corporate culture in India who never ever saw ‘wrong’ in the corrupt practices by these in
educational institutions in the name of ‘donation’.
In the following ten years after Mandal, we saw counter narratives taking bigger shapes. Alternative media grew with web portals like “countercurrents.org” providing space to the forces struggling against all forms of exploitation including Brahmanical cultural subjugation and capitalist onslaught on socialism and state’s accountability.
Magazines like ‘Forward Press’ energized debates on Bahujan literature and enlightened us with stunning Bahujan cultural discourse with number of emerging young writers. With growing new young writers challenging the popular Brahmanical discourse the contempt and assault on them is also visible throughout the country. But, the Rohith Vemulas in our universities have refused to play Eklavya today and therefore consciously proving that Ambedkarism and legacy of Dalit Bahujan consciousness, which refused to be part of Brahmanical structure has finally arrived.
‘Forward Press’ initiated this debate as what is Bahujan literature and last few years they have brought wonderful collectors editions. There are various definitions for literature. One, which raises your consciousness, while for many, it must come from those who suffer and are historically exploited, neglected, subjugated socially and culturally. True, those who suffer will definitely provide a different insight than those who sympathise with their cause and are standing with them yet both are necessary.
For me the Dalit Bahujan literature cannot just be autobiographical sketches as each one of us has a different narratives but also posing ideological questions that have emerged from the heroic work of Phule Ambedkar and Periyar apart from the great humanist legacy of Raidas, Kabir, Nanak, Tukaram, Namdev, Ayyankali, Ayothidas, Narayan guru and many others who not just fought against injustice but provided a much better and humane alternative to Brahmanical caste based ‘graded inequality’ as described by Baba Saheb Ambedkar where dominant castes have always suppressed the others. We must desist from compartmentalization and regimentation of diverse Dalit Bahujan’s thoughts, which are multicultural and multi lingual. If we try to create a monolith of it, the beauty of it would be lost.
Hence it is important to have narratives of diverse communities who built our society. A Dalit narrative cannot be just urbanized ‘educated’ construct but also the story of a Dom in Varanasi’s ghats or Mushahars fighting for their battle or Nats, Kalandars, Kushwahas, Rajbhars, Kols, Tharus, Balmikis (and they too have diversity among themselves), Kanjars, Sansis, Banzaras, and so many others who are not known in popular discourse and are out of bound from the ‘writers circle’.
The Dalit Bahujan popular discourse must challenge the ‘meritorious’ Brahmanical discourse from an alternative path and not through becoming part of that discourse which attempt to create a monolith of everything under artificial construct of ‘Hinduism’ simply because they have similarities in certain things. As research have shown there were over 300 versions of Ramayanas and each different than the popular one of Tulsi Das’s ‘Ram Charit Manas’ which imposed a patriarchal Rama on all other version and was further popularized by Ramanand Sagar’s magnum opus Ramayana on Doordarshan. The counter narratives of the Dalit Bahujan discourse are as diverse as Ramayana or Mahabharata.
There are thoughts influenced by Ambedkar-Periyar’s ideological construct, which demolish the Brahmanical myths woven around negative and pathological characteristics of Asuras or Rakshasas and talked of a modern secular society based on rational humanist principles of French or Russian revolutions. But one has to understand that it was not merely ideological constructs of the legends that shape Bahujan-Dalit literature as various communities celebrate different festivals in diverse ways. So, every festival in India has a counter perspective but the Brahmanical mainstream in India actually suppressed these narratives and placed the upper caste Brahmanical narrative as the sole identity of cultural India.
As I mentioned young dynamic youths of the Dalit Bahujan communities are challenging the Brahmanical hegemonic narratives today. Not only are they getting empowered by the strong thoughts of Dr Ambedkar, Phule and Periyar but are taking inspirations from their friends too who have been supporting and participating in the global resistance movement against culture of monopoly and private control over the public resources.
Chandra Mohan represents a well defined modern poet who wants to stand with all forms of discrimination and has got a language which many will definitely envy. Moreover, Chandra Mohan’s brilliance in poetry has surpassed any one that I have come across so far in terms of variety of issues that he takes up. He has not just spoken against caste violence and untouchability but subject likes gay rights, Soni Sori, Irom Sharmila, Mujaffarnagar, unfair globalization have come under his scrutiny resulting some of the finest poetry of our time that touch the inner chord of your heart.
The whole country shouted loud for Nirbhaya and the ‘establishment’ responded with a ‘Nirbhaya Act’ but news of rape and murder of Dalit or tribal girls do not prick our conscience. There is no protest; no dharnas for the safety and security of the Aadivasi girls are victim of highhandedness of our security agencies in Bastar. His poem, ‘Rape of a tribal girl’ exposes the duplicity of our sensitivities and the farce that our ‘intellectuals’ and ‘media’ play.
‘No newspaper carried a headline or a photo feature,
No youth were roused to protests,
No city’s life came to a standstill,
No furore in the parliament,
No nation’s conscience was haunted,
No Prime Minister addressed the nation,
No TV channel discussions,
No police officials were transferred or suspended,
No candlelight marches,
No billion women rising,
A tribal girl was raped and murdered!’
The pain of migration result in loss of identity and a majority of those migrate to cities are Dalit Bahujans like the blacks of Africa. One has to just feel how Chandra Mohan explain it beautifully in his poem, ‘ Black Migratory’
‘Birds Migratory birds
most of them have dark feathers
sing mostly Bhojpuri, Bengali, Odiya
fly towards floating clouds
lives lost in transit’.
Chandra Mohan is not short of words. He possesses an extraordinary quality of weaving his narratives and ideas in shortest yet impressive ways. As a poet his worldview is as wider as possible and modern in the absolute term of Ambedkar’s vision of enlightened India and therefore he questions the traditions and wrongs happening in the name of traditions. We need to counter the Brahmanical narrative through questioning them and demolish the myths woven around them. Therefore, issues of Khap Panchayats and killings of innocent lovers in the name of traditions and morality come under sharp attack in his verses.
‘Moral Police ‘
when lover couple
hid in a hood of a tree
they chanced upon love letters
some of them half burned
some of them centuries old
along with a picture of Shoorpanaka
sans her nose, ears and breasts!
Capitalism and religious fanaticism or theocracy work together and compliment each others. In India capitalism has come handy for Brahmanism to push its agenda to suck our resources and subjugate the Dalit Bahujan-aadivasis further and that comes for an excellent narrative in his poetry, ‘A Neo-liberal Miscarriage’
‘Every drill driven into the earth
for oil punctures
holes into her womb
gangrenes of depletion
mushrooming clouds of subatomic fury
a miscarriage of neo-liberal development’
Chandra Mohan has rightly termed Dalit literature as the literature of resistance and biggest movement world over and he is placing both Dalit and Bahujan literature together. Today, the Bahujans too are questioning the history and historical wrongs.
Ambedkarite scholar Rohith Vemula’s institutional murder agitated all the right thinking persons in India particularly those hailing from Dalit Bahujan communities. The incident actually exposed the Brahmanical structure inside our campuses and how those who questions and want to live an independent life, live with their own understanding face obstacles at every level. Chandra Mohan deserve fullest applauds for this wonderful narration of students suicides inside our campuses in his poem, ‘Killing the Shambookas’.
‘Jim Crow segregated hostel rooms,
Ceiling fans bear a strange fruit,
Blood on books and blood on papers,
A black body swinging in mute silence,
Strange fruit hanging from tridents’
As Bahujan magazines such as ‘Forward Press’ find it difficult to sustain in the absence of solid financial and advertisement backing, the movement it has launched for a counter Bahujan perspective will continue in the greater interest of society. Chandra Mohan reflect the coming of the Ambedkarite age of articulate young Indians who will not only throw open challenge to the Brahmanical literature and their falsified constructs but will go far ahead of them in terms of quality and sincerity of the issue. One of my dear Ambedkarite friends late N.G.Uke had a favorite quote about the quality of an Ambedkarite, ‘ We have to be better than ‘their’ (Brahmanical’s) best’. I think this age has finally arrived with the remarkable verses of Chandra Mohan which will not just questions the wrong done to them or to any one else but also participate in all the international movement for human rights,
human values, social justice and equality.
The modern Dalit Bahujan literature need not just be ‘reactionary’ but provide alternatives of a better world and respond to the crisis of our time and Chandra Mohan’s verses are doing that impressively. There is pain for closure of ‘Forward Press’ which gave new ideas to Bahujan literature and empowered young Bahujan talents into writing and resisting the popular Brahmanical myths yet there is happiness when we see hundreds of youngsters coming up, challenging and resisting at all the levels including social media.
And this will keep the movement growing as the whole Dalit Bahujan age has arrived as the new young are taking up social media and firing through their blogs, alternative platforms and it is they who will continue to carry the torch of resistance and revolution. It is here the success of the movement. We hope these young minds will continue to revolutionise the web-world and more importantly bring voices from diverse communities, hitherto unknown to us and keep the flame of change going. Chandra Mohan’s poetry reflects that positive change among the youths of Dalit Bahujan communities which is definitely a great hope for future.