An author's final cry against Hindutva

[email protected] (Vaibhav Sharma, International New York Times)
July 28, 2016

author
Bengaluru, Jul 28: URA examined the rival ideas that shaped modern India: plural nationalism and majoritarian nationalism

The last months of U R Ananthamurthy's life were tumultuous. One of India's foremost novelists and political commentators, Ananthamurthy, who died in August 2014 at 81, had threatened to leave the country if Narendra Modi, then leading the nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), won the Lok Sabha elections.

Ananthamurthy's remarks drew vitriol, abuse and death threats from Modi's supporters, and he remained under round-the-clock police protection for months. In June, a political tract Ananthamurthy wrote during the final stage of his life, the parting shot of a writer who devoted substantial time to warning of the dangers of Hindu nationalism, was published to widespread acclaim.

More than two years after Modi's election as prime minister, even as many continue to fear that India's founding values of secularism and diversity are under threat, Ananthamurthy's voice has served as an urgent reminder of the perils of majoritarianism and hypernationalism.

The tract, “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj,” an excoriating critique of Modi and Hindu nationalism in India, was completed between Modi's election in May 2014 and Ananthamurthy's death.

A novella-length tract, in the manner of Ta-Nehisi Coates' “Between the World and Me,” the book takes the form of a conversation with the nation.

“I feel an urgent need to talk to myself,” Ananthamurthy writes in the book as he reflects on a country he says he barely recognised, “both because of the nationwide humiliation that came my way when I rejected Modi and because of Modi's overwhelming victory that left me astounded.”

Ananthamurthy was a literary colossus in Karnataka, a state greater in size and population than England. His 1965 novel, “Samskara,” written in Kannada, about a Hindu society stifled by caste and tradition, is widely considered to be one of the landmarks of 20th-century Indian literature.

(In “India: A Wounded Civilisation,” V S Naipaul hailed “Samskara” and described Ananthamurthy as “a serious literary man,” a generous compliment from Naipaul, who tends to be parsimonious in his praise of fellow writers.)

Drawing on a formidable range of intellectual references, from Dostoyevsky to the epics of Hindu mythology, Ananthamurthy's “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj” examines the two rival ideas that have shaped modern India: the plural nationalism originating from the struggle against British colonialism, led by Mohandas K Gandhi; and the muscular, majoritarian nationalism favoured by Modi and his supporters.

Ananthamurthy compares the key texts of these dominant political strains: Gandhi's “Hind Swaraj,” a riposte to British colonialism completed in 10 days, during a ship journey in 1909, and published a year later; and “Hindutva,” the 1923 founding text of Hindu nationalism, written by Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, a right-wing activist imprisoned by the British for his role in India's freedom movement.

“He felt the choice was really between these two ideologies,” Vivek Shanbhag, a prominent novelist and Ananthamurthy's son-in-law, said of Ananthamurthy. “He was saying that it's time that we, as a nation, stop now and take a look before we blindly move forward.”

Shanbhag, who worked as a translator on the book, said Ananthamurthy could never forgive Modi for the 2002 riots in Gujarat, which killed more than a thousand, most of them Muslims. Modi was chief minister of the state at the time, and many consider him culpable. “He said a person like this cannot be the prime minister,” Shanbhag added.

Aakar Patel, a prominent columnist who writes for Mint, a national daily news publication headquartered in New Delhi, said “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj” was the best book on the subject of Hindu nationalism, since Modi's election as prime minister.

“Steeped in our traditions, Ananthamurthy captures the reality as nobody else can,” Patel wrote in Mint. “It is the distilled effort of a lifetime spent in absorbing, reading, writing and observing.”

In many ways, Ananthamurthy turned out to be prophetic, including about his own death. “If Modi becomes the prime minister, it will be a big shock to me,” Ananthamurthy had told a television channel, soon after he made his threats to leave the country. “I won't live.”

Unlike more measured critics of Modi, who saw his rise through a contemporary social and political context, Ananthamurthy, with his novelist's temperament, mounted his criticism in ethical, psychological and civilisational terms.

“People like Modi,” Ananthamurthy writes, “live in a gumbaz, a dome that echoes what they say to themselves over and over again.”

Climate of hostility

Modi's election as prime minister has been followed by, as many feared, a climate of hostility toward minorities and renewed assaults on civil society and free expression.

Last fall, a year after Ananthamurthy's death, dozens of writers returned their awards from the Sahitya Akademi, to protest what they considered a rising tide of intolerance and majoritarianism gripping the country.

One incident, in particular, sparked this collective revolt of writers: the killing of M M Kalburgi, a noted rationalist scholar whose criticism of traditional religious practices had earned him the wrath of Hindu nationalists. (Kalburgi was shot dead in his home in Dharwad, in Karnataka, on August 30 last year.)

Like Ananthamurthy, Kalburgi was part of a robust tradition of Indian-language writers serving on the front lines of social and political battles.

“A Kannada or Bengali writer has a connection to his people, his culture, his society, which an English writer simply does not,” Ramachandra Guha, a historian and one of India's best-known public intellectuals, said in an interview. “Most Indian-English writers who are acclaimed abroad have no impact on society.”

Ananthamurthy's death caused a wave of grief across Karnataka, a state of more than 60 million people. Tens of thousands of people lined up in Bengaluru to pay homage.

Officially, Modi offered condolences, but right-wing groups affiliated with his BJP greeted the news of Ananthamurthy's death with raucous celebrations, setting off fireworks at the demise of a foe.

Though Hindu nationalists hounded Ananthamurthy, especially during the last months of his life, their response to “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj” has been one of unusual silence.

Patel, the columnist, said he was not surprised by the muted reaction. “What passes for the ideological right doesn't have any investment here,” he said. “They don't care about knowledge and learning. They care about prejudices, anger, certitude and emotion.”

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May 17,2024

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Hubballi, May 17: Karnataka Police have arrested the killer, Vishwa, also known as Girish, in the sensational Anjali Ambigera murder case, police said on Friday.

Preliminary investigations reveal that Vishwa was a habitual thief who exploited innocent young women. The accused is also a drunkard and was caught while attempting to commit theft. He was also part of a gang which stole bikes.

The accused targeted gullible young women, enacting a drama of love and playing the emotional card to forcefully extort gold, silver, and cash from them. When Anjali did not agree to any of his attempts to rob her and outrightly rejected his offer to go with him to Mysuru city, he brutally killed her.

The police had formed two teams to hunt down the killer. One of the teams was searching in the south Karnataka region, and another team, which launched a hunt in Davanagere, nabbed him. The accused was arrested by the police on Thursday.

The police could not catch him sooner as the killer did not carry a mobile phone and did not use his phone for 15 days, before murdering Anjali. The jurisdictional Bendigeri Police were aware of the killer's history, but even after the complaint by the girl’s family, they showed "utter negligence".

The 24-year-old Vishwa entered Anjali Ambigera's (20) residence at 5.30 A.M. on Wednesday and stabbed the young woman multiple times before she could react. Vishwa dragged Anjali Ambigera all over the house, kicking and stabbing her. Later, he pushed her into the kitchen where he stabbed her repeatedly.

Despite efforts by Anjali’s grandmother and two sisters to stop the attacker, he killed her and managed to flee. The incident occurred in the Veerapura Oni area within the jurisdiction of the Bendigeri Police Station.

Vishwa had been blackmailing Anjali and pressurising her to accompany him to Mysuru without informing her parents. The incident which took place close on the heels of MCA student Neha Hiremath’s brutal murder by the jilted lover has raised concern over the safety of women all across the state.

The BJP had demanded the resignation of Home Minister G. Parameshwara while the Congress leaders have also demanded that the Hubballi-Dharwad Police Commissioner Renuka Sukumar should be transferred for failing to sensitise the police force regarding issues of women’s safety.

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News Network
May 6,2024

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Bengaluru: The Congress and BJP will lock horns on the electoral battleground again in less than a fortnight in Karnataka, as the stage is set for the second phase of elections in the 14 remaining Lok Sabha seats on Tuesday.

It is going to be a straight fight between the ruling Congress and BJP in Parliamentary segments in the northern districts. The JD(S) is not contesting in these seats and is supporting its National Democratic Alliance (NDA) partner -- the BJP.

The state has a total of 28 Lok Sabha constituencies. The first phase of polling in 14 seats in most of the southern and coastal districts was held on April 26.

A total of 227 candidates -- 206 men and 21 women -- are in the fray for the second phase.

More than 2.59 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise in 28,269 polling stations where voting will take place between 7 am to 6 pm.

The segments where elections will be held on Tuesday are: Chikkodi, Belgaum, Bagalkot, Bijapur, Gulbarga, Raichur, Bidar, Koppal, Bellary, Haveri, Dharwad, Uttara Kannada, Davangere and Shimoga.

In the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, BJP had swept all these 14 seats, defeating Congress and JD(S), which were in alliance and ruling the state then.

Having scored a thumping victory in the Assembly elections last year, the Congress now appears determined to put up a strong show.

Karnataka is the most important state for the BJP in south India as it's only here that it has held power in the past.

Speaking to PTI, Karnataka Chief Electoral Officer Manoj Kumar Meena said adequate security arrangements have been made for Tuesday's polling.

"Around 1.45 lakh polling officials have been deployed across the 14 constituencies. In addition, 35,000 civil police personnel, 65 companies of Central Paramilitary forces and armed police of other states will be deployed for the polling day," he said.

Besides this, 4,000 micro-observers will also be on duty and 17,000 polling stations will be covered by webcasting, he added.

Davangere has the maximum number of 30 candidates, followed by 23 in Shimoga and Raichur has the least number - eight.

Former Chief Ministers Basavaraj Bommai (Haveri) and Jagadish Shettar (Balgaum), Union Ministers Pralhad Joshi (Dharwad) and Bhagwanth Khuba (Bidar) -- all from BJP; Congress' Geetha Shivrajkumar (Shimoga) -- wife of actor Shivrajkumar and daughter of former CM S Bangarappa and AICC President Mallikarjun Kharge's son-in-law Radhakrishna Doddamani (Gulbarga), are among the prominent names in the fray.

Also in the contest are MP and veteran BJP leader B S Yediyurappa's son B Y Raghavendra, suspended party leader and former Deputy CM K S Eshwarappa -- both from Shimoga, former Speaker Vishweshwar Hegde Kageri and ex-Minister B Sreeramulu of BJP from Uttara Kannada and Bellary respectively and retired IAS officer G Kumar Naik of Congress from Raichur.

Stakes are high for several Ministers in this phase with their children in fray.

Sons of Ministers Laxmi Hebbalkar and Eshwar Khandre - Mrinal Ravindra Hebbalkar and Sagar Khandre - are contesting from Belgaum and Bidar respectively, while daughters of Ministers Satish Jarkiholi and Shivanand Patil -Priyanka Jarkiholi and Samyukta Patil- are in contention in Chikkodi and Bagalkot respectively.

Prabha Mallikarjun, wife of Minister S S Mallikarjun and daughter-in-law of veteran Congress leader Shamanur Shivashankarappa, is in the fray from Davangere.

The Congress' performance in the elections, especially in the second phase which covers almost all Lingayat-dominated districts, is crucial, as the party did not win one of them in 2019, and to also check whether the grand old party has managed to retain the support of a section of Lingayats -- considered as the BJP's core vote-base -- which seemed to have somewhat shifted towards it in the 2023 Assembly polls.

The Lok Sabha election is being seen as a big test of sorts for Congress state unit chief D K Shivakumar, who has made no secret of his ambition to become chief minister, amid speculations of change in guard mid-way of the Assembly term. The stakes are also high for Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, as victory in this election is seen as key to strengthening his hands, analysts say.

It is also seen as a kind of a "litmus test" for state BJP president B Y Vijayendra, who has the onerous task of helping the party retain its supremacy in the Lok Sabha polls, by regaining its traditional Lingayat vote-base.

Ensuring a BJP sweep is paramount for the son of veteran leader B S Yediyurappa, to consolidate his position and silence critics who have questioned his selection to the post, overlooking seniors and seasoned hands.

The ruling Congress is mostly banking on the implementation of its populist five guarantee schemes while the BJP seems to be leveraging the "Modi factor" to the hilt.

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May 5,2024

Karwar, May 5: What commenced as a mere exchange of words between spouses swiftly transmuted into a calamitous ordeal, resulting in the heartbreaking loss of their innocent offspring. The heart-wrenching incident unfolded in the serene confines of Halamaddy village in the picturesque expanse of Dandeli, nestled within the idyllic expanse of Uttara Kannada district.

In the throes of a fervent dispute with her spouse, the aggrieved wife, succumbing to an overwhelming surge of emotions, callously propelled their tender six-year-old progeny into the somber depths of a nearby canal, thereafter alerting the local populace to her grievous act.

Promptly apprised of the distressing occurrence by concerned bystanders, the authorities were swiftly summoned to the scene to confront the harrowing aftermath.

Responding to the distress call, the diligent officers of Dandeli rural police swiftly converged upon the site where the innocent child had been cast into the unforgiving waters of the canal, subsequently effecting the retrieval of the child's lifeless form. 

Regrettably, it was discerned that a portion of the child's remains had been tragically claimed by the lurking jaws of a predatory crocodile.

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