Call to Remove Statue of Manu from Rajasthan High Court Campus; Story of Women who blackened the statue

Martin Macwan and Sukanya Shantha

Shri. Ashok Gehlot                                                     Smt. Sonia Gandhi

Honorable Chief Minister                                          President

Rajasthan                                                                    Indian National Congress

Dear Smt. Gandhi and Shri. Gehlot

In 2020, we will be celebrating 73 years of Independence, as freedom from the slavery of the British.

In 2020 we will be also celebrating 70 years of the Indian Constitution which liberated India from the slavery of the Caste system and Untouchability.

In 2020 we will be also celebrating 93 years of the day, 25th December, 1927,  when Dr. Ambedkar had burnt Manusmriti, a law which justified and upheld impure status of Dalits and the Women. The resolution to burn Manusmriti was moved by Sahastrabuddhe, a Hindu Brahmin.

You would agree that the presence of Manu’s statue erected by non-State actors standing tall in 2020 in the compound of Rajasthan High Court is a shame for India and Rajasthan in particular. The Statue of Manu  is also an insult to Indian Constitution and Dalits. The statue weakens the call of Dr. Ambedkar to annihilate Caste for India to grow as a Nation.

Your Party, Indian National Congress, is dedicated to the values of secularism, democracy and removal of Untouchability. Along with bitterness of Poona pact that engaged Gandhi as the head of Congress and Dr. Ambedkar on the issue of separate electorate for Dalits, the two great men had one thing in common; reject in totality the practice of Untouchability.

Presence of Statue of Manu in a public place is justification and glorification of the Varnavyavastha. While we hoist the National flag twice in a year to remind ourselves of ills of slavery and the constitution that guarantee the citizens the dignity, the statue of Manu stands unmoved each day.

The Statue of Manu is an insult to the Indian Constitution because the State Government and the Rajasthan High Court allowed its construction and installation on March 3, 1989 after 42 years of Independence. The Rajasthan high Court has not been able to resolve the matter for 31 years.

This open letter is to request you to take measures to ensure that the Statue of Manu is removed from the public place in your State. This should have been done long time ago taking into the consideration the fact that all the Judges of Rajasthan High Court had resolved to the effect. We request you to do the following:

  1. Pass a resolution in Congress Party, both Nationally and in Rajasthan before 15th August 2020, to remove the Statue of Manu from Rajasthan High Court campus or any public place before 25th December 2020 and install Statue of Dr. Ambedkar on the venue.
  2. Bring a resolution in Rajasthan State Assembly to remove the Statue of Manu.
  3. Announce the date of removing the Statue of Manu and installation of Dr. Ambedkar Statue.

If you are unable to resolve within the Congress Party to remove the statue of Manu before 15th August 2020, we will call for an agitation to remove the Statue of Manu. Through this open letter, we are collecting the signatures of the people from all strata of society who are wedded to the values enshrined in Indian Constitution to join the campaign.

Martin Macwan

Navsarjan Trust

(Martin Macwan is a Dalit Rights activist. He founded the grassroots Dalit organisation Navsarjan Trust in Gujarat in 1989 to empower Dalits.)

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As Symbols of Discrimination Fall Worldwide, Meet the Women Who Blackened Manu’s Statue

Sukanya Shantha

On August 10, 2018, a group of men, mostly Brahmins, had gathered at Parliament Street in Delhi and shouted slogans against Dr B.R. Ambedkar. Their organisations, the Youth Equality Foundation (Azad Sena) and Arakshan Virodhi Party, which have a history of casteist, anti-reservation agitation, had decided to display their hatred towards Ambedkar and the reservation policy by publicly burning a copy of the Constitution of India. The entire act was recorded and circulated across different social media platforms.

Over 1,250 kilometres away, in Aurangabad district of Maharashtra, a 40-year-old Dalit woman, Kantabai Ahire, watched this horror unfold. The sight of the constitution being burnt had left her deeply disturbed and she decided to publicly mark her protest. Ahire, a district president of one of the factions of the Republican Party of India called ‘RPI-Kharat’, led by political activist Sachin Kharat, decided that the only way to counter this was to attack the very source of this “abhorrent act”.

Elaborate planning followed for nearly two months, and on October 8, Ahire, along with party workers, 42-year-old Sheela Pawar and 33-year-old Mohammad Abdul Shaikh Dawood, travelled to the Jaipur bench of the Rajasthan high court. The original plan was to protest right in front of the statue of Manu and submit a memorandum to the court registrar demanding the removal of the statue. Manu, a mythical figure, is believed to be the author of the Manusmriti and its laws on maintaining caste and gender hierarchy.

But when they reached the court, the women decided to change their plan.

Both women, draped in sarees, climbed up the statue of Manu and smeared black paint over it. Dawood, befuddled, stood there in awe of their sheer audacity.

Their act of protest landed the two women in prison for over two weeks. Dawood, who had somehow managed to escape from the site, was arrested a few days later. Eventually, all three were released on bail. The case has since dragged on.

Ahire and Pawar’s act of defacing Manu’s statue was an extraordinary one in India, but this style of protest has many commonalities with the way anti-racism and anti-police brutality protests have erupted from time to time in different parts of the world. In December 2018, contending that Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was racist in his attitude towards Africans, students of the University of Ghana removed his statue from their campus.

More recently, following the killing of 46-year-old African-American man George Floyd by white policeman Derek Chauvin in Minneapolis in the US, the statues of several Confederate leaders that symbolise the racist legacy of the country have been blackened or taken down. Similar protests are building up in other countries in the UK and Europe, where statues of slave traders and leaders who represent the brutal history of colonialism are being taken down.

Happy that the oppressed stand united’

Back in India, sitting in her humble, one-room house in the Shambhu Nagar slum of Aurangabad, Ahire, says that globally, the oppressed have always found a way to build solidarity. “My heart is gladdened to see the oppressed stand united and respond to their oppressors so strongly and in such clear terms,” she says. Ahire has been closely following the news about the anti-racism protests in the US and different parts of the world.

A staunch Ambedkarite, Ahire lives with her daily-wager husband and a teenage daughter. Their family has been struggling to make ends meet but that has not deterred her from being actively involved in social issues.

Pawar too has had it difficult. A landless woman from the Banjara denotified tribe, she has been doing odd jobs, toiling on the farms of upper caste persons or at construction sites for her survival. Even a mobile phone is a luxury, they say. This reporter was able to speak to them over the phone only after Gunratna Sonawane, an Aurangabad-based student rights and anti-caste activist, was able to locate them and arranged an interview.

While Ahire studied until Class XII, Pawar is unlettered. Both say that their life experiences and grassroots activism have taught them about Ambedkar and his anti-caste legacy.

Ahire is Pawar’s senior in political activism and the two have worked in sync for many years, participating in several protests and countering the Hindutva agenda of the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) in Aurangabad district.

In 2017, when former Union minister and BJP MP Anantkumar Hegde had criticised the term “secularism” and said the word should be dropped from the preamble of the constitution, the duo along with other activists of the RPI-Kharat group had protested and attacked the BJP and RSS’s offices in Aurangabad.

Now as social media buzzes with updates from the protests in the US and the felling of statues of Confederate leaders, Ahire recalls her experience of travelling to the Rajasthan high court. “It was a strange feeling. We knew our protest would have been ignored if we simply stood there. We also knew, if not for us, those men (who burnt the copy of the constitution in Delhi) would have gone unchallenged. So we took that plunge,” Ahire says. “It is Manu’s kaayda (law) that caste Hindus, primarily the Brahmins and savarnas, continue to follow to date. With that simple act, we had managed to smear that very belief black,” Pawar adds.

If it was the burning of the constitution in Delhi that they were protesting, then why did they choose Rajasthan as their site of protest? “Hindu mythology believes that Manu was the author of Manusmriti and he had lawfully sanctioned the degradation of humanity on the basis of caste and gender. He had laid down regressive laws for the shudras, and the ati-shudras and women. That fictitious figure still gets legitimacy in contemporary India. And what is most shocking is [his statue] is installed in the high court’s premises,” Ahire answers. More so, Ahire says, they were only following “Dr Ambedkar’s principles”.

On December 25, 1927, during the historical campaign for the right to access to water from the Chawdar tank in Nashik, Maharashtra, Ambedkar had organised a “conference for untouchables”. At the conference, he had burnt a copy of the Manusmriti as a sign of revolt against Brahminism. Since then, every year, several anti-caste groups celebrate the day as ‘Manusmriti Dahan Divas’ and burn copies of the book.

Inside the Rajasthan high court premises, in the garden area, however, stands a 10-feet tall statue of Manu. The statue, built in 1989 by the Rajasthan Judicial Officers Association and funded by the Lions Club, has been a major cause of discontent for years. For three decades, anti-caste activists have criticised the installation and have questioned the judiciary for allowing the presence of a mythical figure who authored laws that run contrary to the constitution inside the court premises.

A brave protest

Even so, the duo’s protest was brave. This act of daubing a powerful symbol of Hinduism had riled many Brahmins in the legal fraternity of Rajasthan. The women were gheraoed and overpowered by a mob of caste Hindu, male lawyers. In a video that went viral, the lawyers could be heard asking why they blackened the statue. When the women replied that Manu denoted Brahminism, some men promptly announced their own Brahmin caste identities and asked the women if they would blacken their faces too.

Over the past three decades, several anti-caste groups have criticised both the Rajasthan state government and the judiciary for being “Brahminical” by allowing an icon of casteism to remain in the court premises.

As soon as the statue was set up in 1989, a huge agitation was sparked in the state. Due to objections raised in the full court meeting of the Rajasthan high court, it was decided that the statue would be relocated, away from the court. But this order was challenged by Jaipur-based VHP leader Acharya Dharmendra.

The case has time and again been brought before the court’s bar association and on August 13, 2015, the matter was taken up in the high court after a period of 25 years. Several anti-caste organisations have intervened in the matter. Each time the lawyers tried to argue the matter from an anti-caste perspective, a mob of Brahmin lawyers has protested and heckled them in the court. A division bench of Chief Justice Sunil Ambwani, Ajit Singh and V.S. Siradhana, hearing the matter then, had issued notices to the Centre and state government, impleading them as respondents to the petition. The matter has since been pending before the high court.

There is no evidence to back the claim that Manu ever really existed. But caste Hindus believe that Manu had authored the Manusmriti, also known as ‘laws of Manu’, which laid down regressive laws for shudras, ati- shudras and women. These smritis – believed to have been composed somewhere between 200 BCE and 1000 CE – sanctioned different rules and punishments on the basis of caste. Many, like these two women, have argued that to have a symbol of something so inherently unequal in the high court’s premises is inherently against the principles of justice and equality.

Nearly two years after the incident, the women continue to face criminal charges. When the case was registered, several anti-caste groups and human rights lawyers had come forward to help them. But the duo had to raise funds for their release from jail and for subsequent court hearings. “When we were arrested, the BJP ruled both Rajasthan and Maharashtra. Now in both states, they have been replaced by the Congress. We hope the present state dispensations are considerate and will drop the charges against us,” Ahire says.

(Sukanya Shantha is a journalist. Article courtesy: The Wire.)

Janata Weekly does not necessarily adhere to all of the views conveyed in articles republished by it. Our goal is to share a variety of democratic socialist perspectives that we think our readers will find interesting or useful. —Eds.

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