Hindustan Times (Patiala)

We need to forge an alliance of the oppressed

The works of Ambedkar, Du Bois and Fanon reflect the common story of marginalis­ation across communitie­s

- SURAJ YENGDE Suraj Yengde is a WEB Du Bois nonresiden­t fellow, Hutchins Center and associate, department of African and African American Studies, Harvard University The views expressed are personal

The phenomenon of oppression has to be understood within the political categories of black and white, dominant and oppressed castes. To understand how race and caste operate in historical terms, one must look to the west, east and to the south, to the United States, to India and to Africa. This will help us contextual­ise the interrelat­ed experience­s of the marginalis­ed.

American sociologis­t and civil rights activist, WEB Du Bois, declared that the problem of the 20th century was colour. In India, BR Ambedkar brought the discussion of caste into mainstream discourse and dedicated his life to the annihilati­on of the structures of the caste system. West Indian philosophe­r, Frantz Fanon, articulate­d the paradigm of the oppressed in a world dominated by the white race.

In 1943 and 1944, Du Bois wrote in his col- umn in The New York Amsterdam News that “the greatest color problem in the world is that of India”. “Remember that we American Negroes are the bound colony of the United States just as India is of England.” This creates a parallel between the African American experience within the US and the Indian experience within colonised India, thus raising the possibilit­y of solidarity building between these two communitie­s, both of which face similar types of oppression. What Du Bois misses in his generalise­d and romanticis­ed categorisa­tion of the Indian experience as a colony of England, is the way in which the Dalit community is further reduced to the colonial subjectivi­ty of a casteist society in which the Brahmins dominate.

Du Bois’ gaze towards the east suggests that he sought to show the interrelat­ion of suffering using the examples of the experience­s of black Americans and the Indian struggle. As a result of this relation, Du Bois received a somewhat unexpected response from the nationalis­t, Lala Lajpat Rai. Rai reduced Du Bois’ argument to the HinduMusli­m binary, interpreti­ng it through a Gandhian and Brahminica­l lens, which rejects British rule only to re-establish Brahminica­l hegemony over the untouchabl­es of India. Rai, Du Bois’ primary link to India, was not the internatio­nalist that Du Bois wanted him to be, argues literary scholar Dohra Ahmad.

By providing a nonconform­ist interventi­on to the Indian colonial problem, Ambedkar predicted the post-colonial and postcaste situation. Looking at the traditiona­l caste bourgeoisi­e, Ambedkar debunked the dominant narratives about colonial slavery. Furthermor­e, he exposed the caste hierarchy, in which reverence to the Brahminica­l religion was the priority, second only to the colonial state.

Fanon posited that the aggressive project of delegitimi­sing the values of the colonised community was to reduce the native’s values to “absolute evil”. Fanon’s reservatio­ns about appropriat­ing Marxism and applying it to an African context were largely to do with the fact that Marxism ignores the importance of race, even class. Fanon writes: “In the colonies, the economic substructu­re is also a superstruc­ture. The cause is the consequenc­e; you are rich because you are white, you are white because you are rich. This is why Marxist analysis should always be slightly stretched every time we have to deal with the colonial problem.”

This argument was extended by Ambedkar in his thesis on Marx. Post-Ambedkarit­e thought follows Fanonesque sentiments, demanding that Brahmin/caste Hindu Marxism stretch Western European dialectica­l materialis­m in order to be relevant to the native caste situation in India.

If Du Bois, Ambedkar, and Fanon have to be thought of as movement-based actors who unified the global struggles for social justice, then the teleologie­s (the purpose for the emergence) of these figures need to be explained with empirical arguments. The reason the three people become more relevant to our contempora­ry times suggests that we still hold age-old discrimina­tions like caste, race, gender and sexuality close to our hearts and we are constantly on a mission to develop new models of suppressio­n — neoliberal­ism, market fundamenta­lism, cultural commodific­ation, misreprese­ntation. Du Bois, Ambedkar and Fanon challenge the universal hegemonic pretension­s of culture and civilisati­on. These ideals need to be collective­ly examined so as to forge a radical alliance of the oppressed.

 ?? SAKIB ALI/HT ?? A protest against the removal of a statue of BR Ambedkar from the court complex, Ghaziabad, UP, January 2
SAKIB ALI/HT A protest against the removal of a statue of BR Ambedkar from the court complex, Ghaziabad, UP, January 2
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