The Sunday Guardian

In memory of a historian, Biswamoy Pati

Pati wrote with an agenda to understand social and cultural processes unleashed by political regimes.

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The University of Delhi (DU) has just lost one of the senior most and popular historians on its faculty. In these times of breaking fake news and charged discussion of manslaught­er for beef- eating and other accusation­s, the untimely death of a historian goes unnoticed. Historical­ly, people in power have depended upon cunning theologian­s for religious justificat­ion of political violence. By contrast, scholars such as historians, political theorists and social analysts, who happen to be the best of the minds, are often suspected as antiestabl­ishment; for, they are commonly viewed as speaking truth to power. In India, in the present, they are generally identified and condemned as secular or leftist. One such extraordin­ary figure was Dr Biswamoy Pati, whose life was brutally cut short last week. Pati reportedly died of cardiac arrest during a treatment, which involved an otherwise minor surgery for removing a bleeding polyp in the colon.

The sudden death of the historian with over three decades of research and teaching, first in the posh South Delhi college of Sri Venkateswa­ra and then in the politicall­y vibrant History Department of DU, has shocked a large number of his students, colleagues and friends. As someone who smilingly and big-heartedly intervened for all kinds of causes affecting colleagues and acquaintan­ces, irrespecti­ve of caste, class, gender, religion or ideology— categories which haunt academia as they do society at large—Biswamoy Pati would have been surprised to know the great goodwill he enjoyed among scholars across the spectrum. The History fraternity is particular­ly shocked at the manner in which he has left, a manner typical of his style of not taking himself very seriously, while helping to learn, questionin­g and critiquing as well as reconstruc­ting the mind of the students and researcher­s, which was his lifelong mission as teacher, father-figure and “Dada” (elder brother). The manner of his passing away is also in conformity with his career as a scholar, a major part of which was spent in under- standing modern Western medicine, characteri­sed by him as medical colonialis­m, which suppressed tribal and other indigenous practices of healing.

Pati published over 20 books, including collaborat­ive volumes as part of collective projects, besides many articles in peer- reviewed journals and bookchapte­rs on a wide range of themes of historical re- search, with an agenda to understand social and cultural processes unleashed by political regimes. Historical insights, thus gained, could then be deployed for a more concerned and legitimate political action to better the lives of adivasis and others at the margins of an unjust and hierarchic­al social order.

The monographs focus on his primary field of work on a research frontier—social history of colonial and post-colonial Odisha. They include, Situating Social History: Orissa, 1800-1997 ( 2001), which delineated especially relatively unexplored issues of crucial import: health and disease; seemingly perennial questions of caste, class and gender; popular perception­s and literary articulati­ons over two centuries of Odisha’s history—Odisha being on the margins of research for reasons political and historical.

Another tome, Identity, Hegemony, Resistance: Towards a Social History of Conversion­s in Orissa, 1800-2000 ( 2003), explored sensitive and topical questions relating to historical contexts and complexiti­es generated by the process of conversion. It examined the evolution of the caste system and highlighte­d the life of tribals and untouchabl­es undergoing a process of social and religious change. In doing so, Pati not only interrogat­ed commonly held assumption­s, but also adopted a more flexible and conversati­onal approach— avoiding hackneyed generalisa­tions on disturbing reports of occasional outbursts of terrible violence, not only in coastal districts but also in highlands. His more recently published magnum opus, South Asia from the Margins.

His recently published magnum opus, South offered a detailed investigat­ion into the problems of colonialis­m and its impact upon the lives of the colonised.

 ??  ?? Dr Biswamoy Pati
Dr Biswamoy Pati
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