Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Self-rule by Adivasis could end Maoism

Adivasis make 99% of the Maoist movement, and most of them are fighting to save their forest, land and dignity

- Shubhransh­u Choudhary is a former BBC journalist The views expressed are personal

Around 15 years ago when I started visiting the Maoists in forests of Chhattisga­rh, to write a book, the Maoist middle rung leaders would tell me that implementi­ng Adivasi self rule can be the logical culminatio­n of their movement. Of course, the Maoist top leadership maintained their official line that capitalism will collapse under its own weight within 50 years and that will be the time to try out the experiment­s being carried out in the forests of Chhattisga­rh. But what happens to the Adivasis who are fighting with you?

The Maoist movement was on ascent in those days, when thanks to the disastrous Salwa Judum, hundreds of Adivasis joined the Maoist ranks to make it a bottom-heavy movement. Today all those middle rung leaders have reached retirement age which means the adivasi cadres will not have any effective leadership soon.

Almost all the adivasi Maoists are Gondi speakers. Most of them cannot speak any other language. The top Adivasi Maoist leader in Chhattisga­rh is Venkatesh (not real name). He heads the South Bastar division. He decided to join the Maoists after a forest guard slapped his brother for cutting a tree in the forest.

There are no Adivasis in the Maoist Central Committee though they constitute majority of the fighting force. Few urban faces joined the Maoist party after 1990s. Most of the Adivasis who make up 99% of the movement today are uneducated and are fighting to save their forest, land and dignity. Though they parrot some lines about Maoism but what they are actually fighting for can be gained if we can implement the Constituti­on. For example, rules have not been framed for an act called PESA specially written for Adivasi areas even after 20 years of it being passed in Parliament.

Can Maoists lead the Adivasis to ensure that the laws made for them are implemente­d? If they give up their guns, there is a real possibilit­y that government may sit across the table with them for talks and give them an Adivasi autonomous council in Central India. We have quite a few examples from North East India where such experiment­s have been tried with a degree of success.

The Maoists came to Chhattisga­rh to hide. They had felt that the revolution will take root places like Bengal, Bihar and Telangana and that the Adivasis did not have political consciousn­ess. Thanks to political lessons from the Maoists now we see movements like Patthalgud­i in Bastar. Maybe they can transform this newly-acquired political consciousn­ess into Adivasi self-rule, a form of genuine democracy which can deliver rights to a majority of them in the future. Worry not over what is not. That is what our gurus tell us as a matter of routine advice. Generally, what happens is that we keep on worrying about things that may never happen. This happens because of our poor understand­ing of ourselves and the outer world that keeps us puzzling all the time.

Let us face the reality and try to convince ourselves that any kind of worrying is like breeding diseases. Therefore, wisdom lies in understand­ing that worrying today

 ?? AP ?? Thanks to the disastrous Salwa Judum, hundreds of Adivasis joined the Maoist ranks to make it a bottomheav­y movement, in Chhattisga­rh
AP Thanks to the disastrous Salwa Judum, hundreds of Adivasis joined the Maoist ranks to make it a bottomheav­y movement, in Chhattisga­rh
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