ML Update
A CPI(ML) Weekly News MagazineVol. 20 | No. 38 | 12-18 Sep 2017
The Martyrdom of Gauri Lankesh Shall Not Be in Vain
Fearless
journalist and activist Gauri Lankesh was assassinated in Bengaluru on 5
September evening when she was about to enter her home in
Rajarajeshwari Nagar after finishing her engagements for the day. As
editor of the widely read Kannada weekly Gauri Lankesh Patrike, Gauri
was a powerful voice against communal hate, caste oppression and all
kinds of injustice. She was a tireless campaigner for social justice and
human rights. On the day she was killed, she had earlier attended an
anti-communal convention. Her last editorial was against the phenomenon
of fake news and its systematic use by the Sangh brigade to sharpen
communal polarisation and prejudice and mislead the public.
The
manner in which Gauri Lankesh was killed bears close resemblance to the
assassinations of well known rationalists and scholars Narendra
Dabholkar, Govind Pansare and MM Kalburgi in the recent past. The
investigation in these previous cases has pointed to the involvement of
one Sanatan Sanstha, a Goa-based Hindu supremacist group; most of the
key suspects are still absconding.
In
the case of Gauri Lankesh, even as the news of her assassination
stunned the whole country, the Sangh-BJP troll army began an obscene
celebration in social media. Even I&B minister Ravishankar Prasad
had to face the wrath of these elements for criticising this social
media celebration. And now even as the Karnataka unit of the BJP has
sent a legal notice to eminent historian and writer Ramchandra Guha for
mentioning the possible involvement of the Sangh brigade in this
assassination, Karnataka BJP MLA Jeevaraj has said that had Gauri not
been vocal against the RSS she would have been alive today!
Gauri
was quite alive to this danger. BJP MP from Dharwad, Prahlad Joshi and
his personal secretary Umesh Dushi had slapped defamation cases against
her in connection with some stories published in her journal in 2008 and
in November 2016, she had been convicted by the Judicial Magistrate of
Hubbali in north Karnataka. She had challenged this conviction in the
higher courts. The BJP had sought to use this case to try and silence
her, and even use this example to intimidate journalists across the
country. Gauri had carried on undeterred. She knew that the murder of
Kalburgi was also a message for her. Speaking to the website Newslaundry
in November 2016, she had observed that ‘in Karnataka today, we are
living in such times that the Hindutva brigade welcomes the killings (as
in the case of Dr M M Kalburgi) and celebrates the deaths (as in the
case of Dr U R Ananthamurthy) of those who oppose their ideology, their
political party. I was referring to such people because, let me assure
you, they are keen to somehow shut me up too.’
Gauri
was also involved in a running battle with the forces of bigotry and
caste oppression. She would passionately invoke the egalitarian
inspiration of Vasavanna and Ambedkar, and boldly resist the Sangh
Parivar's design to appropriate these icons and subvert their legacies.
Prof. Kancha Illaiah has described Gauri as the modern Akkamahadevi of
Karnataka after the renowned 12th century female poet of the Veerashaiva
Bhakti movement famous for her Vachana poems. With her multifarious
activism and fearless journalism, Gauri Lankesh will go down as a great
martyr who has laid down her life for the cause of freedom and
democracy, social justice and communal harmony.
While
saluting the ever inspiring legacy of Gauri Lankesh, we must see to it
that her martyrdom becomes a decisive blow to the fascist design and
offensive of the Sangh-BJP establishment which is celebrating her
killing. Like communal riots and lynch mob violence, the culture of
killing ideological opponents has been integral to the Sangh's history.
It is instructive to remember at this juncture how the Sangh's journey
had begun in independent India with the assassination of Gandhi. At that
juncture the Home Minister of the day, Sardar Patel had held the RSS
and the Hindu Mahasabha squarely responsible for the creation of the
atmosphere in which the ghastly tragedy of Gandhi assassination could
take place. Consequently, the RSS was banned.
Seventy
years later, the crucial issue once again is to address and transform
the environment in which the serial killings are taking place. In a
different political climate, the RSS and its affiliates would have been
banned, but today with the BJP in power the RSS enjoys utter impunity.
The battle to bring the killers of Gauri Lankesh to book and to confront
those who have emboldened them is therefore much more difficult today.
Despite this, there are encouraging signs that the Indian people are
determined to defeat the fascist threat and defend democracy, ranging
from the powerful protests across the country in response to Gauri
Lankesh’s murder to the recent emphatic verdict delivered by the JNU
students against the Modi government's war on JNU and higher education.
To consolidate and extend this resistance to fascism is the urgent task
now facing all progressive forces in India.
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