Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

RIPE FOR A NEW LEFT

The Left has always drawn its members from student unions. But is the Left still ‘cool’ on campus or has the rise of the Right changed that? A report

- Paramita Ghosh paramitagh­osh@hindustant­imes.com Inputs: K Sandeep Kumar/Allahabad, Pawan Dixit/Varanasi, Ramesh Babu/ Thiruvanan­thapuram, Prabhjit Singh/Mohali

ABVP PUTS NATION FIRST. THE LEFT SAYS PEOPLE FIRST. WE BELIEVE STUDENTS HAVE DUTIES AND RESPONSIBI­LITIES TO THE NATION. NEXT ELECTION, THE CHATRA YUVA SANGHARSH SAMITI, THE STUDENT WING OF THE AAP, WILL HIT THE AISA MORE. THEIR CADRE-BASE IS THE SAME. AISA, AAP, WANT THE FREEDOM OF KASHMIR. WE WILL NOT ALLOW IT. ROHIT CHAHAL (in blue), ABVP, national executive council member THE THEN CPI(M) GOVERNMENT’S DECISION IN WEST BENGAL TO OPEN FIRE ON FARMERS AGITATING TO SAVE THEIR LAND IN NANDIGRAM PROVED TO BE THE LAST STRAW. IT HAD AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON THE VALUE OF LEFTISM ON CAMPUSES. AJEET MADHESIA, AISA, BHU WHEN I LOOK AROUND, THE LEFT’S STILL THE MOST PROGRESSIV­E FORCE. THERE’S A VACUUM BUT ITS INFLUENCE WILL REMAIN. FOR THE STUDENT UNION, I, HOWEVER, VOTE FOR THE INDEPENDEN­T CONSOLIDAT­ION. THERE’S NO POWER-PLAY HERE. SUTANUKA BHATTACHAR­JEE, Independen­t Consolidat­ion, Presidency College, Kolkata

On the first of May, around 200 workers of JNU, frustrated by job insecurity, put some people in a spot. To the contractor­s, they said ‘To hell with contractua­lisation; you can keep our jobs’. To party leftists, who came to shut them up for raising slogans hours too early for the evening’s May Day parade, they gave an earful. Left-wing students, who no longer belong to an organisati­on, however, backed their stand. The campus belongs to all, they said. “Should the Left appear militant and mobilise workers and students only during elections?” they asked. What does this little May Day incident reveal about the state of leftism on India’s campuses when it’s viewed against the backdrop of the elevation of Sitaram Yechury to the post of general secretary of India’s largest left party? That it is a spent force? That it has the potential to take a new turn? That the BJP’s student’s wing, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), has the numbers, therefore it is winning? Or that caste-based student groups dominate in the states where their mother-parties are in power, and on those campuses, both, the Left and the Right have influence, but neither is winning?

This story goes back at least 10 years, when the Students’ Federation of India (SFI), the student wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), and the All India Students’ Associatio­n (AISA), the student front of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist)-Liberation, had just begun their war games to appear as the campus radical without noticing the shifts on ground.

Martand Pragalbh, a student from Patna, joined AISA in 2006, the year he joined JNU, Delhi. In Kolkata, research scholar Sourav Ghosh, joined Jadavpur University (JU)’s SFI unit in 2007. Within a year, Sourav, criticised for the “elitist act” of joining a placement-cell rally, had been witness to state repression unleashed on JU students, and the Nandigram-Singur fiasco. In the absence of his party’s engagement with his core issues as a student, and the precarity that comes with it in these times, he left the SFI; like many others. He is now with the Forum for Arts Students, a multi-ideologica­l student formation without any party affiliatio­n.

Sourav’s JU mate and SFI activist Srijan Bhattachar­jee, however, points to the “literacy rate of 99.4% like Bradman’s average…and record rice production in 2011 under the Left Front”. But Sourav seems unlikely to return to his old organisati­on on these counts.

By mid-2000, the AISA, more than the ABVP, began to emerge as the SFI’s opposition on north Indian campuses, mainly JNU. Doing the commonsens­ical ‘anti-violence’ critique of Maoists, and slamming the SFI for the ills of the post-Nandigram CPI(M), AISA saw a proliferat­ion of castebased and splinter leftist groups on north Indian campuses — an offshoot of the ban on student elections by the Lyngdoh Commission — even while it was on the ascendant. In 2008-10, the organisati­on went to Delhi High Court to remove obstacles in the path of OBC reservatio­n in JNU. It also started using caste identity and the politics of representa­tion to make space for Dalits, women and Muslims in the different school panels on campus. In Allahabad University — AISA was first founded there in 1990 — it would “talk against caste politics, but not exactly shy away from caste-based campaignin­g to get votes,” admits Vishwa Deepak, a longtime AISA supporter. This embarrasse­d its own workers much like the SFI in West Bengal without even the SFI’s excuse of being the student appendage of a party (CPI-M) gone bad holding state power.

It is these confusions and contradict­ions that have withered the Left parties more. That’s in addition, of course, to the gravitatio­n of Indian society towards the Right. After the Babri Masjid demolition in the Nineties, and the sustained campaign by the RSS on cultural fronts culminated in the 2014 polls that saw, for the first time, a BJP-majority government in power at the Centre, the BJP’s student wing has grown stronger. As Banaras Hindu University (BHU) AISA activist Ajeet Kumar Madhesia says: “Jo dikhta hai, woh campus mein bikta hai (The one who is visible, sells).”

In BHU, a socialist bastion till the Nineties, the ABVP now has 5,500 members, the AISA has 1,200, the Congress’ National Students’ Union of India (NSUI) 1,000, and the Samajwadi Chattra Sabha, the student wing of the Samajwadi Party, around 200. It’s only in Kerala that the CPI(M) still has a strong presence and controls more than 60% of students’ union bodies. Kerala has more than 13 lakh SFI members — a figure that might owe much to the party’s ‘mid-term corrective­s’. These include involving SFI students with the larger community by making them work after college hours in areas like palliative care and organic farming under the aegis of local panchayats. However, the party’s reach does not extend to the state’s proliferat­ing private colleges. SFI state secretary TP Bineesh blames the private college students’ “apolitical­ity” for their lack of participat­ion.

They might not be a force in Kerala but in the north, the nature of the educationa­l institutio­n hasn’t hobbled the BJP’s student wing. “The ABVP has a presence even in colleges where there are no elections. We put nation first,” says Rohit Chahal, national executive council member, ABVP, articulati­ng his organisati­on’s agenda.

TALKING BACK

Things have been growing progressiv­ely difficult for Left student unions since the 1990s when the Soviet Union split, the Eastern bloc collapsed, Tiananmen was crushed and the party began to take a beating nationally. Fast forward to the 2000s: at home, the CPI(M)-led Left Front lost West Bengal after more than three decades in power; in the Opposition, what land or factory question could it possibly take up after Nandigram? In 2011, its ideologica­l bankruptcy was exposed when, after its rout by the Trinamool Congress, many SFI units — Bidhannaga­r College’s SFI is one of them — became TMC overnight. The options before it were to break new ground or revive the party by consolidat­ing in places where it once held sway.

Caste became, at least for the AISA (now the more visibly radical force minus the taint of governance), the ground for organisati­on and party-building. In Punjabi University, Patiala, for instance, the Punjab Students’ Union, the students’ wing of the CPI(ML)-New Democracy, raises demands such as the implementa­tion of scholarshi­p schemes for poor Dalit students. The AISA, however, began to feel destabilis­ed by the form and culture of the UGBM (University General Body Meeting) that suddenly captured the imaginatio­n of students in the mid-2000s. At these GBMs, students, who were unwilling to abandon leftist politics, began to urge their organisati­on to go beyond ‘fixing’ the system’s problems with representa­tion (of women, Dalits, religious and sexual minorities) and challenge the structure of social division itself. “The Left, if it wants to make its radicalism relevant, must comprehend what it has until now been largely confused about. It must realise that caste, religion, gender and sexuality are various forms through which the system perpetu- ates its one single logic of class division,” says Pratyush Chandra, a Left analyst and former CPI student leader of JNU.

NEW PATH

Students seem to want to move away from a top-down structure of unions and decide the digits of politics that arise organicall­y from the everyday concerns of students. “On campuses, we need to think of the student as an academic worker and envisage the questions of his life and livelihood as a political ground for changing the systems, rather than just use those questions to mobilise students for building party-like organisati­ons,” says Martand Pragalbh who recently quit AISA on these questions. “For that we need to figure out how all the different divisions (of hostel/ discipline­s/teacher-student hierarchy) on campus hold the potential for generating struggles to radically alter the system. That is what Left students’ politics must be now,” he adds. A growing number of students seem to be in search of a new path. The ‘Hok Kolorob’ (Let’s Clamour) movement started by JU students in 2014 to protest the apathy of the university administra­tion to a case of molestatio­n has pointed to the possibilit­ies for independen­t politics on campus. More than one lakh people marched in the city to its call last September. It would seem that in states with a Left tradition, the framework for ‘independen­ce’ is still leftorient­ed. The Independen­t Consolidat­ion (IC), the leading force in the student politics of Presidency College (now University) also has a leftwing orientatio­n. “The IC is ideologica­lly left but not pro-CPIM or pro-Left Front government,” clarifies Deborshi Chakrabort­y, exconvenor, IC. “Arab Spring, Occupy, Hok Kolorob signify a new wave of student-youth movements distinct from doctrinair­e Marxism or the co-opted Left”.

It is this space that Prasenjit Bose, former head of the research cell of the CPI(M) and ex-SFI leader is trying to consolidat­e. He resigned from the party in 2012 protesting the Party’s political “deviations” and his Left collective mobilises youth and raises issues left unaddresse­d by the party Left. Bose attributes the SFI’s decline from the mid-2000s to the “erosion of the independen­t character of the SFI.”

The recent six-party Left coalition, which has the CPI(M) and CPI(ML)Liberation as part of a national alliance, says Bose, is an attempt to co-opt the left critiques of the CPI(M) and silence them. What this means for the student cadres in the SFI and the AISA, is uncertain. The AISA, say students, is poised to be the “new SFI”. But what of the various independen­t, “post-party” initiative­s being produced by continual dissension­s in the rank and file of the party Left? Will that be India’s new Left? Time will tell.

 ?? PHOTOS: JASJEET PLAHA, SUBHANKAR
CHAKRABORT­Y/HT ?? (Above) ■ Student elections in JNU, Delhi; (below) the Hok Kolorab movement started by Jadavpur University students in 2014 has opened up the space for ‘movementba­sed’ politics in other campuses
PHOTOS: JASJEET PLAHA, SUBHANKAR CHAKRABORT­Y/HT (Above) ■ Student elections in JNU, Delhi; (below) the Hok Kolorab movement started by Jadavpur University students in 2014 has opened up the space for ‘movementba­sed’ politics in other campuses
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SUSHIL KUMAR/HT PHOTO
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SAMIR JANA/HT PHOTO
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