Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

A tribal uprising that’s cast in stone

Using tradition, certain people are trying to create unrest among the aadivasis of Jharkhand

- SHASHI SHEKHAR Shashi Shekhar is editorinch­ief Hindustan n letters@hindustant­imes.com

At a time when there is a lot of hue and cry over separatism in Kashmir, an inscriptio­n on a large stone slab in Jharkhand’s Kochang Village reads: “The lease agreement to run a nontribal government by a foreign Central government ended in 1960.”

“Voter identity cards and Aadhaar cards are anti-tribal documents.”

“The tribal people are not common people or citizens but owners of the Indian state.”

“According to the Constituti­on of India, the gram sabha is supreme, not the mandate (elections).”

From the times of the Raj, the aadivasi people have been writing on slabs and calling the practice Pathalgadi. It is a tradition that has been used on occasions such as weddings, births, social boycotts or for demarcatin­g territory. But these days under its guise, a new controvers­y is being stirred up.

Earlier this month, on June 3, in Jharkhand’s Khunti district, in the presence of hundreds of aadivasis, the foundation was laid for the headquarte­rs of the ‘all-aadivasi government’. On this occasion, announceme­nts were also made about the setting up of the department­s of defence, education and health. The adivasis were informed that the gram sabha would soon launch schools, colleges and universiti­es. Not just this, a Bank of Gram Sabha was also inaugurate­d.

Clearly, a set of people doesn’t want that the aadivasis to benefit from the services of institutio­ns founded and nurtured by the government. They don’t want that modern medicine makes a foray in these areas, since it would endanger their exorcising practices. Not just this, through the setting up of the bank, they are making an attempt to stop the money of the aadivasi people from reaching the banking process. How about the department of defence? What would that do? It is a direct challenge to India’s sovereignt­y.

What are these people trying to achieve? If you want an answer to this, first get to know their leader. Katasvan, a village in Gujarat’s Tapi district, is the seat of Kunwar Kesri Singh. The gentleman goes by the name of AC Kunwar Singh. The supporters of Pathalgadi address him as Dada saheb and Pathalgadi­s till now have been governed by his diktats. Singh only believes in non-judicial law and natural law. By now you would have understood in which direction the office-bearers of this movement are guiding the aadivasis towards. If you dismiss this movement as just a local disturbanc­e, you are mistaken. Under the fifth schedule of the Constituti­on that Dada saheb and his followers keep referring to, a number of special provisions were made for large swathes of tribal areas. These provisions are implemente­d in 10 states. This includes 13 districts of Jharkhand in their entirety and partially in three districts .

The question is why the Pathalgadi was organised at Khunti’s Udburu Villege on June 3? The organisers claim it is the actual birth date of Lord Birsa and November 15 is just government propaganda. Incidental­ly, let me mention that Operation Blue Star in 1984 also began on June 3. The Indian Army hadn’t been compelled to launch such a big operation against its own people before that. The provocatio­n action was that in the name of religion, a group led by Jarnail Singh Bhindranwa­le had taken over the Harminder Saheb.

It was the height of the bloody militancy in Punjab but it had taken years of conspiraci­es to turn this into something so detrimenta­l to the nation. How potent and effective extremism riding on religion had become was something the world got an idea about with the murder of Nirankari Baba Gurbachan Singh on April 24, 1980. At that point, it was clear that Bhindranwa­le was bent upon positionin­g himself as someone bigger than the government and the Constituti­on. If he had been stopped in his tracks, Operation Blue Star could have been averted. But history doesn’t have any place for words like whether or if.

Needless to say, certain aadivasi areas of the country witness periodic bursts of bloodletti­ng. Maoism has ruled here for a long time. So, the light of the 21st century couldn’t reach the aadivasi people. Intelligen­ce agencies suspect that the tribals are being misled in the name of tradition. This could be the handiwork of a foreign agencies and the Maoists. The manner in which this so-called revolution is being fanned, gives rise to the apprehensi­on that has been designed to spread like forest fire.

The states concerned should understand that this isn’t the time for popular sloganeeri­ng but to try and find social and political solutions to the crisis.

 ?? HINDUSTAN TIMES ?? A pathalgadi plaque at a village in Jharkhand’s Khunti district
HINDUSTAN TIMES A pathalgadi plaque at a village in Jharkhand’s Khunti district
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