Friday, April 1, 2011

[ZESTCaste] Academics bat for freedom of expression

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Academics-bat-for-freedom-of-expression/Article1-679938.aspx

Academics bat for freedom of expression
Vikas Pathak, Hindustan Times
New Delhi , April 01, 2011

Is over-sensitivity about our national leaders compatible with the
freedom of expression guaranteed by the Constitution? Gujarat's ban on
Joseph Lelyveld's book suggesting Mahatma Gandhi as bisexual is just
the latest among a host of bans and criticisms of publications going
against the popular imag
e of our heroes and icons.

Law Minister Veerappa Moily reportedly went as far to suggest a
legislation to make disrespect for the Mahatma punishable, but
retracted on Thursday by saying that there was no need for a ban or a
law.

"It is better for writers to self-regulate. I don't think any changes
to existing laws are required at the moment. It will not serve any
purpose," Moily said.

The larger question, however, remains: does public outcry prevent
further knowledge production relating to our icons, which in the long
run can prevent us from knowing them more intimately.

"The freedom to criticise on the basis of evidence must be there. The
space available for such discussion must be maintained," veteran
historian KN Panikkar told HT.

Asked about the desirability of a law to make the Mahatma's 'insult'
illegal, he added, "It is a highly deplorable idea. Even acceptance of
such an idea is anti-intellectual and anti-freedom of expression."

Badri Narayan, an Allahabad-based scholar of the Dalit movement, says,
"Facts are always explored. If you stop doing that, writings will
become hagiographical. There are legitimate Dalit critiques of Mahatma
Gandhi. There must always be scope for intellectual inquiry."

The idea: it is through critiques and counter-critiques that we get to
know our heroes better, and also from fresh perspectives.

The Ambedkariite Dalit movement has looked at Gandhi critically,
lambasting his fast unto death to prevent separate electorates for
Dalits in 1932 and painting Gandhi's term for Dalits, Harijan, as
patronizing. And this critique is central to its ideological
framework.

Revolutionaries contemporary to him had been skeptical about Gandhi's
non-violence, and Marxists often painted him as an impediment to
revolution by the masses. The Hindu Right painted him as 'pro-Muslim',
and he has also been questioned from a feminist perspective. Last but
not the least, Gandhi embarked on radical self-criticism in his
promptness to lay open his personal life to public scrutiny.

Perhaps, it is this Gandhian legacy that is under threat.


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