'Jallikattu protests’
People locked
horns with the Establishment!
It might not be an exaggeration to
just say that Tamil Nadu politics is facing unprecedented political crises
at-least in the recent times!
With a gross mishandling in the
clearing up of the massive oil spill near the shores of Marina and Ennore and
the brutal murder of a dalit (oppressed caste) girl Nandhini - the Tamil Nadu state
of affairs is in appalling decay! However it just touched a new low, as the
staged power handover to the late Jayalalithaa's aide and the AIADMK general
secretary V.K. Sasikala amidst a lot of discontent, particularly with the
controversies reminiscent of a palace coup. With the resigned Chief Minister
O.Panneerselvam now claiming that he was forced to quit by Sasikala did create
a serious dent in the remains of hope, amongst the people about the
institutions of the establishment! At
the moment there is a mounting contempt and disgust brewing everywhere! At the
same time there is a sense of unease amongst the top governing layers as they
don’t want the masses to erupt as they did with the ‘Jallikattu Protests’!
Therefore
it is important to clearly understand the dynamics of that important event to
obtain the perspectives of Tamil Nadu politics in general and for the times to
come!
Days before many activists, students
and political parties have gathered from Chennai and across Tamil Nadu in
Alanganallur demanding to conduct Jallikattu - a traditional bull sport
famously played in Alanganallur, a panchayat town in Madurai district and also in other parts of Tamil Nadu. But the
epicentre dramatically shifted to Chennai Marina beach. And what happened
afterwards is a massive display of defiance! A revolt however meager in its
political and ideological maturity nonetheless overflowed with strong emotions
and determination, and most importantly politicised almost an entire state in
the landmass called India!
The huge demonstrations against the Jallikattu ban and the
subsequent heavy repression of the protesters, the fishing communities and
slums nearby Marina have shown the extent of upheaval in Tamil Nadu politics.
Despite being organisationally and politically uncoordinated the week long
‘Jallikattu protests’ were largely peaceful, displaying a sense of solidarity
from many layers of the society with a huge participation and support from the
middle class, with an enthusiastic presence of families and children making
this a unique chapter in the recent course of Tamil Nadu politics. With the
spontaneous gathering and flow of people, a heavy influence of the social
network sites - the Chennai Marina beach protests in many ways resembles a
local version of the ‘occupy movement’ which grabbed the global headlines post
the late 2000's global financial crisis.
But now after the evacuation and the dispersal of the
protesters with a very violent state repression, those fantastic days of
protests remains still a yearning amongst everyone who till now are intimidated
and found helpless against the establishment.
A contentious
tradition!
Jallikattu, as it is popularly called is a bull sport of its
kind; it is also known as bull embracing, bull taming, etc. The common format
of this sport involves a person to hold on to the hump of the bull that's been
released from the 'vadi vasal' (an entry gate of a closed space) for around 30
seconds to cover a distance of about 15 ft. The players are supposed to tackle
a raging bull with bare hands and sharp reflexes. Even without delving more
into the literary heritage and the cultural roots of Jallikattu - one can
easily see the bond between the communities to their sporting traditions and
how Jallikattu being played only in relatively few parts of Tamil Nadu has now
almost leveraged itself to be a symbol of the 'Tamil culture'! However looking
back much before these huge sway of popular support against the ban on
Jallikattu, there was to some extent mixed opinions among activists, political
organisations and the larger public. This embodied not just subjective
preferences but the clash of values and views among the layers of people
reflecting the objective conditions based on their societies and
their stages of development!
Even before few years the opinions were sharply divided on
the issue of Jallikattu. Those born and brought up in the city,
particularly the affluent sections were not able to really empathise the rural
or the agrarian values. The sport of the farm and the agrarian population
had to come in terms with the growing sentiments of the urban elites on animal
rights and also the personal safety of the players.
Prior to the Supreme Court enforced regulations
the ruggedness of the sport and the inadequate safety measures for both
the animal and the player did concern a substantial lot of people.
Also the Supreme Court suggested reforms in the game did improve the
safety standards of the sport and also pressed the importance of ethical
practices in dealing with the bull.
The general assertion is that the reforms and
standardisation of Jallikattu did improve the conduct of the sport and to an
extent ensured protection to the bull as well as the life of the participant by
mandatory veterinary services, ambulances stationing near the arena,
disqualification of the participants on hurting the bull, supervision of
authorities and representatives of the local administration and the animal
welfare board, etc. Despite these gradual developments in the centuries
old sport and the seeming adherence of the local communities to the rules and
regulations that's been introduced - the animal welfare groups continue the
pursuit to ban Jallikattu. There were court orders banning Jallikattu and the
state government facing popular pressure from pro-Jallikattu activists was
forced to act upon their constituencies interests! Hence along with appeal
process the Tamil Nadu government enacted a state law (Tamil Nadu Regulation of
Jallikattu Act No 27 of 2009).
At the same time the campaigns by the strong animal welfare
lobbying groups like People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) did find
an echo amongst celebrities and influential sections and to an extent with
their appeal, the Ministry of Environment and Forests in 2011 in the purview of
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act (PCA) restricted bulls from the list
of performing animals. This effectively illegalised all the forms of bull sport
across India. Through the PCA constitutional platform, the Animal Welfare Board
of India, PETA and other animal rights activists groups contested in Supreme
Court and with the verdict from the highest judicial forum, the Jallikattu
along with all the other bull sports were banned all together and the Tamil
Nadu Regulation of Jallikattu Act was annulled in 2014.
The dynamics of the conflicting sentiments of the animal
rights activists groups and the supporters of Jallikattu have seen a remarkable
shift as the pro-Jallikattu campaigners were able to gather the public opinion
towards their side of arguments. The discourse over the importance of
Jallikattu as an incentive for the communities to retain the native breeds of
bull like Kangayam - an excellent draught breed that is sustainable with the
affordable maintenance of already deprived peasants, to affirm the right to
cultural and traditional identity, etc. captured the interest and imagination of wider layers,
especially the youth.
At the same time the animal rights activists were pointing
out the Court’s finding and expert opinions such as the inherent cruelty over
the bulls possibly perpetrated in Jallikattu and the likely impact of lifting
its ban - in other parts of India. Evidently as the protests were gathering
momentum in Tamil Nadu similar demands were gathering pace against the ban of
the traditional bull sports across India like Kambala (buffalo racing) in
Karnataka, bullock cart racing in Maharashtra, etc.
However it’s important to critically explore the vital
issues of animal rights. Animal rights and welfare activism has its roots from
a genuine rage against the industrial practices of slaughtering and denial of
the dignity of the lives of the animals. Instead of targeting corporate
practices of brutalities manifested over animals by the big businesses
including horse racing, these elite ‘so-called’ animal rights organizations are
targeting the practices of sections of the ordinary people. There is no denial
of the roughness and crudity that’s been often witnessed on the bulls
participating in Jallikattu. While it's absolutely true that as the
society progress it's important to do away with the regressive traditions and
unethical practices but to just apply that bluntly and impose it on isolated
issues like Jallikattu could be counterproductive. It is also important to
understand that the objectives of animal welfare are essentially linked to the
struggle for a better society which will ensure the needs of the people, pledge
a decent society to ensure the welfare of all living organisms and the
protection of our environment and nature.
The Jallikattu debate also illustrated the rifts stemming
from the existing social contradictions and evidently the elitist
intellectuals, activists and even some political entities were critical
about the barbaric, male chauvinistic, dangerously adventurist aspects of
this sport. However, amongst the left and the progressive groups, the area of
chasm was the casteist, and the feudal traditions of Jallikattu. The oppressive
feudal reigns did spectacle Jallikattu to impose the hegemony of the powerful
landlords over the toilers but at the same time the sporting field may be the
only opportunity for the oppressed to challenge the feudal chief; but a lot of
people amongst the dalit communities were excluded from participating!
The zamindars and the feudal
lords are no more but landlordism does exist; the disparity between the landed
and the land less does exist and also exists the caste oppression of the
dalits. The 1997 Justice Mohan commission reported that the Jallikattu often
precipitate the clashes between the backward castes and the dalits. Amongst the
left, progressive as well as dalit organisations some did stay away from the
pro-Jallikattu campaigns. Nonetheless the growing popular support against the
ban on Jallikattu, particularly from the students and the youth – did
galavanise political organisations to intervene. However those organisations
who did speak against the ban, mostly sidelined the issue of caste oppression,
and the legacy of systematic exclusion of dalits in this sport.
Despite all this, it's very important not to burden and ward
off the young and fresh layers who are actively campaigning against the
Jallikattu ban with the feudal or casteist legacy and at the same time we need
to intervene with our demands to take up that issue of casteism, and the
marginalisation of the oppressed from the sport which is now claiming a
pan-Tamil identity. As it is the duty of Marxists to take a stand against the
relegation of the caste and the class contradictions, and it's important
particularly during a mass upsurge of this nature where a sense of popular
unity among the people is consciously forged by the establishment forces. A
real unity and equality among the masses can only be assured by thoroughly
addressing those contradictions.
We put forward the following demands to actively intervene
and politicise the layers involved in this campaign against the ban on Jallikattu:
-
Reform the Jallikattu sport to address the
concern of the genuine animal rights activists, to ensure safety to the
participants and others, and to outlaw any discriminatory practices. We also
support the demand for the state government instead of the influential local
private entities to conduct Jallikattu.
-
Right to basic agrarian support and the right
of the farmers over cattle ownership.
-
Adequate support to participate in Jallikattu
including the support to maintain Jallikattu bulls.
-
Prioritising the issue of landlessness
amongst the dalits and the oppressed communities and initiating a program of
radical land reforms.
-
While it is understandable that the immediate
issue here is the ban on Jallikattu, a lot of people particularly the youth are
disillusioned against the intervention of big businesses in their society. The
plight of the farmers, the real threat of losing the native cattle breeds,
crops and the soil fertility, the crushing burden of the World Trade
Organisation’s policies impacting the sustainability of agriculture, the lack
of material support for agriculture, the growing levels of exploitation of
ordinary in every other sectors, etc., are all real threat which could only be
challenged by a political philosophy that will addresses the needs of the
people, and the society.
By the early weeks of January the Jallikattu issue was
storming the news headlines, however it turned out to be a massive resentment.
Marina occupied:
In the past few years for every January, despite all those
issues in a crises ridden society like Tamil Nadu – Jallikattu remains the hot
topic. Particularly as issues like Jallikattu is tolerated by the establishment
and it’s always a trouble-free, seasonal sensation for the TRP frenzy media
channels. However with this time around the ferment has reached its point.
Back in Jan 2016 the Supreme Court ruling issued an interim
stay on the Modi led central government’s hasty and opportunistic gazette
notification of removing bulls form the
list of performing animals thereby allowing Jallikattu during the Pongal
festival.
This year just a week before the Pongal festival - on the 8th
January, hundreds of young people and students, turned up in Marina beach
demanding the Supreme Court to lift the ban on Jallikattu. There were also
student protests in other areas in Chennai. Sensing the mood, the then Tamil
Nadu Chief Minister O.Panneerselvam and the ruling ADMK’s party general
secretary and the recently appointed Chief Minister V.K. Sasikala’s carried out
the rituals of requesting Prime Minister
Modi to pass an ordinance amending the PCA Act to enable the conduct of
Jallikattu but the central government did not comply. Meanwhile the Supreme
Court rejected the plea to pass the judgment on the Jallikattu before Pongal
which effectively means the conduct of the sport remains banned. This set off a
stray of protests across Tamil Nadu and particularly in Alanganallur with the
students and young people across the state poured in to express their
overwhelming dissent over the ban on Jallikattu. Political parties and Tamil
movie celebrities joined the agitation.
Thousands of protesters remained in all day long in Alanganallur’s
'Vaadi vaasal'-the Jallikattu arena. Despite the threat of lathi charge and
repeated orders from the police to leave, the protesters refused to leave and
around 200 people were arrested on 17th Jan, early morning after the
night-long protests.
On the 17th Jan students and youth gathered in
Marina beach in support of those who are arrested in Alanganallur, with a
spirited show of solidarity! The protesters gathered strength as more and more
people turned up spontaneously. The gadget and the social media generation
networked and swelled up one of the popular sea front in the world. More
people, IT workers and volunteer groups joined the protesters. Suddenly with an
unexpected turn of events the Chennai Marina beach was occupied by the
protesters and this along with the next few days took the entire establishment
by surprise.
There were also spontaneous protests erupted across the
state in Coimbatore, Salem, Erode, Nagercoil, Trichy, Pondycherry, etc. As
things were going out of hand the Tamil Nadu State government pushed the
central government for an ordinance to conduct Jallikattu but the Centre
in-turn directed the state government to issue an ordinance. The draft
ordinance was also cleared by the centre without any changes. The protesters
were refused to give up without a concrete solution to lift the ban on
Jallikattu thus putting the entire administration on its toes!
Support was pouring in for the protesters from all
directions. The protesters remained in the beach, some were going to work and
joining the protests after their shifts, significant number of women and even
families participated. Lakhs and lakhs of people turned up but the crowd was in
control. Volunteers distributed food, water, snacks and even blankets for those
who slept through the night. All the news media were carrying out live
telecasts of the protests and in the trains, buses, and even in the Chennai
city road traffic there were slogans and enthusiasm in support of Jallikattu,
from those who apparently never played this sport in their life time! State
wide general strike was called by the unions affiliated to the left parties and
the opposition party DMK.
Doctors, lawyers, IT workers did strike in solidarity with
the protests. The farmers’ joint action council expressed their support to the
protest and the small traders closed their shutters in solidarity. As the
protests got intensified and the demonstrators sought permanent solution the
state government issued the ordinance and it was cleared by the central
ministry and the Chief Minister assured to pass the ordinance as a state law in
the legislative assembly at the earliest.
Despite all those assurances by the state and the central
government the protesters remained critical as their demand to amend the PCA
act by the central government was not yet met, and the risk of state government
issued ordinance to be challenged again in the court persists. At one stage
thousands of protestors assembled and refused to let Panneerselvam to
inaugurate the Jallikattu event in Alanganallur and in Kovilpatti.
The protests were largely peaceful, disciplined and well
networked however it evidently lacked leadership and a structure. It was much
decentralised and there was no sufficient coordination to determine the
direction of the struggle. The slogans and the chant were mostly targeting
Modi, Panneerselvam, Sasikala, Subramaniam Swamy, PETA, etc. However there were
serious voices amongst the protesters expressing the sorry state of the
farmers, slogans against corporate businesses, calls to ban pepsi and coke,
against the Indian state curtailing the democratic rights of Tamils, etc.
Nevertheless with the lack of a decisive body the protests were split off as
numerous groups and some were misled by the celebrities and single issue
campaigners who sided with the government’s proposal and never really shared
the determination or the fighting spirit among the protesters.
As the government was able to influence this section of the
people particularly the celebrities and the pro-Jallikattu organisations that
were from the start are careful to direct the focus of the entire upsurge to
the issue of Jallikattu. To an extent this caused confusion among the
protesters and some of them did leave the protest but the determined sections
refused to budge. With no intentions to yield anymore to the demands of the
protesters beyond the ordinance brought in by the state government and with
just few days for the Republic day, with the state ceremonies need to be
conducted in the Marina the government forces rushed the protesters to leave
during the early hours on 23rd Jan. The police rejected the requests
of the protesters demanding more time to discuss and to obtain legal advice
over the state issued ordinance. The state police started the process of
forcefully evicting the people who campaigned peacefully and those who resisted
the eviction was severely beaten and lathi charged.
The crises of the
establishment:
This week long protests and occupation of Marina did raise
serious question about the role of state behind these upsurges! There are
seasonal politicians and elements in the left framing their perspectives from
conspiracies rather than the concrete material conditions thus portraying the
state as a principal operator behind these mass outbursts. The arguments to
exaggerate the role of state repression as an overwhelming factor against the
spontaneous rising of the people are only going to undermine the
anti-establishment mood out there. In an oppressive regime the state as an
institution is an instrument of repression of the ordinary people but at the
same time the state got to stabilise itself in accordance with the balance of
forces. In other words the state has to let off the steam of mass upheaval
through some outlets! But to portray the hundreds and thousands of students and
millions of supporters as puppets with the state performing the act behind the
screen is just a poor plotline!
'Particularly Tamil Nadu is politically volatile and the
government machinery, the police and intelligence have toughened up during the
2008 and 2013 protests against the Sri Lankan civil war, the war crimes against
the Tamils in Sri Lanka and the 2011 anti Kudankulam nuclear power plant
protests. Those protests and the ensued disillusionment with the growing levels
of unemployment, poverty, and income inequality as direct consequences of
neo-liberal policies and financial recession have produced solid conditions for
the growing discontent amongst the people. It is not at all surprising to see a
lot of students; unemployed graduates are clearly in rage with this capitalist
system and the corrupt political outfits!'
There was a clear disregard amongst the demonstrators over
Modi and the central government as the impact of demonetisation which took its
toll on all layers of the ordinary people and the alarming rate of the farmers’
suicide in Tamil Nadu and particularly in the Cauvery delta region. Days before
the Jallikattu issue took off it was the appalling increase in the farmers’
suicide over the crop failure due to a severe drought the administrative
mismanagement of the government and the lack of water from Cauvery. There was a
wide spread resentment amongst the people in Tamil Nadu with the Cauvery water
sharing debacle with the Karnataka where the Supreme court’s directives were
consciously ignored by the Karnataka state government with government in the
centre turning a blind eye towards it. This sparked off a lot of agitations and
protests across Tamil Nadu, furthering the cause of Tamil Nationalism.
Throughout the political time line of Tamil Nadu there was
always an element of high handed approach of the central government over the regional
interests of Tamil Nadu back in the days of anti-Hindi imposition agitations
and the strong regional sentiments has its legacy rooted in the Dravidian
movement led by Periyar.
These dynamics were seriously assaulted with the present BJP
government of Modi in the centre and with its authoritarian way of infringing
the regional interests with a pan Hindutva nationalist agenda there is a
continuing array of attacks over the cultural and the traditional sentiments of
the Tamil people. With a string of measures like the New Education Policy,
enforcement of NEET exams, etc., the government in centre is enforcing its
hegemony over the regional interests. Also after the death of the former Chief
Minister Jayalalithaa and with the controversies around it there is a sense of
powerlessness to uphold regional interests. And when the traditional Tamil
festival Pongal was only given a restricted holiday instead of a compulsory
holiday it sparked of a huge uproar amidst the Jallikattu issue, and even
though this was the case for around the last 15 years[i], and it’s becoming a
controversy now, indicate the growing feeling towards the Tamil identity and
the increasing bitterness against the centre.
At the same time these eventful political upsurge over the
Jallikattu indicates the utter failure of the establishment parties. The
protest movement boycotted the intervention of the political parties - shows
the distrust and the disillusionment among the youth over the mainstream
parties. It’s unfortunate that even the 'so called' communist parties are not
looked upon as an alternative and in fact they were considered as partners in
crime with those corrupt political parties who were their previous coalition
partners.
At the same time the students and the youth could have
made use of the political experiences of activists and non sectarian left and
progressive organisations that are in solidarity with the protests and have so
far acted upon in the interests of ordinary people. This would have helped the
fresh forces of the protests with the much needed political strategies and
experience. With a structured organisational committee and a political
leadership reflecting the anti establishment aspirations of the protester, this huge group of young people could have
consolidated a state wide strong students and youth movement that could have
played a determined role in the present political vacuum.
The Crackdown:
After the forced evacuation of the Marina beach protesters a
massive state crackdown is going on in Chennai targeting the ordinary people
particularly the fishing communities and the people in the slums nearby Marina
who actually safeguarded the protesters against the onslaught! The police
forces are vandalising the personal properties of the people. With the mobile
phone camera videos it's been splattered all over the social network showing
the police apparently pelting stones over the protesters, setting fire on the
autos, dwellings, etc. The entire fish market was totally destroyed and many in
the nearby fishing communities including women and children were brutally
beaten up and the men were detained. These are not just police excess but a
conscious exertion by the state to spread terror with intent to shun off any
future protests of this nature.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has issued
notices to the state police including the Chennai police Commissioner and yet
the state is brutally tightening their grips! Even a higher police
authority advised the parents to check on the possible influence of radical
left groups and progressive activists by going through their mobile phone
contacts as they would probably using the prefix 'thozhar' a traditional
Tamil expression for Comrade! There are reports with the teaching staffs and
faculties been warned by the college management to be watchful of the students
for any unusual activities! All this could lead to an assault to the existing
democratic space no matter however little already it is!
Section 144 was imposed in Marina prohibiting all meetings,
assemblies, demonstration, etc., in and around Marina.
A step in right
direction:
There were criticisms made against those scores of young
people for not rallying for far important issues than
Jallikattu! Nevertheless this ban on Jallikattu and the subsequent events
flowed from it are just that one high friction which sparked off the youth and
the students who then rallied the aspirations of the wider society. On the
other hand, the movement is propelled by the conditions of this rotten society
and these conditions will remain to trigger huge struggles in the next period!
This massive demonstration in Marina, flooded with the
protesting youngsters is changing the disposition of Tamil Nadu politics. There
are a lot of senseless controversies going on all over about this. But we got
to look into this very fact - that a lot of young people are challenging the
governments of the state and the central, and this by itself is a step ahead
than what it is used to be!
This upsurge amongst the students and young people are not triggered by a single issue and neither will their consciousness be limited to narrow confines.
This upsurge amongst the students and young people are not triggered by a single issue and neither will their consciousness be limited to narrow confines.
These eventful few weeks in practice provided an enormous
material for the youth and students to understand political struggle. For many
it was a firsthand experience of state violence and its character. However the
lesson that's been learned in this practical process of defying the
establishment is here to stay and radicalise this young generation to be a
fighting force against the failed system!
It was nevertheless a fantastic learning experience for our
comrades in Chennai. We will strive to work with the combative layers of young
people who have gathered a lot of political understanding in those few days.
Our determined forces of the New Socialist Alternative will continue to build a
democratic socialist platform of the students’ activists and campaigners who
are reflecting the interests of the ordinary people, socialists, and working
class forces to stand up against this decay of capitalist system!
Sajith Attepuram
Podhuvudamai Iyakkam
9094746003

