Understanding Keralam: The Tragedy of Radical Scholarship
Understanding Keralam: The Tragedy of Radical Scholarship
Understanding Keralam: The Tragedy of Radical Scholarship
PAUI SWEEZY
Kiyoshi Okonogi
ond Robert Weissmon
U NDERSTANDING KERALAfVI
K.T. Rom Mohon
MONOPOLY CAPITAL
AFTER TWENTY.FIVE YEARS
Poul M. Sweezy
UN DERSTAN DING KERALAM:
THE TRAGEDY OF RADICAT SCHOTARSHIP
Party, and so on. There is also the Muslim League, which seeks
to defend religious minority interests. Significantly gaining in
strength, butwith much less following than the major political
parties in the state, is Bharatheeya Janata Party (BJP), which
is unashamedly Hindu fascist. Within Keralam, the party bases
itself upon the support of immigrant merchant communities
from western India and Tamil Nadu, a section of high<aste
Hindu bureaucrats and professionals, and educated, unem-
ployed young people. In recent years BJP has made inroads
into other sections such as workers, peasants, and the lower
middle class.
Save for BJP-which has the diabolic aim of building a
totally Hindu India upon the corpses of people of minority
religions (like Sikhs and Muslims), and of "untouchable"
Hindus-for all parties listed above, politics means electoral
politics. There are two electoral fronts in Keralam: Left Dem-
ocratic Front (LDF) led by the CPM and United Democratic
Front (UDF) led by Congress (I). Each front has its sprinkling
of smaller parties. As the needs of political opportunism
dictate, CPM and Congress (I) seek or reject the assistance of
these parties. Likewise, the minor parties shift their loyalties
according to their narrow interests. Both of these fronts play
the same cards (including appeasement of religious-commu-
nalist forces) and dirty tricks to win the electoral game.
It was mentioned that the major political parties of
Keralam draw their ranks mostly from the same social sections.
Partly on account of this, and also because of the generally
high level of democratic consciousness among the people,
both of the fronts are forced to produce electoral manifestoes
that are substantially the same. Invariably, the manifestoes
contain such promises as extension of workers'welfare mea-
sures to more sectors, increases in pensions for agricultural
workers and peasants, fixing of minimum wages, increase in
the unemployment dole, and higher pay and bonuses for
government employees. Moreover, resolving unemployment
and curbing inflation are the main planks of both manifes-
toes. In fact, operating under the constraints of India's
26 MONTHLY REVIEW / OECEMBER I99I
pseudofedefsl system, the fronts cannot advance anything
substantive, even if they wish to.
Once a front, whichever it may be, wins the elections and
assumes office, most of the promises are forgotten. The case
of "employment for ten Lakhs of people every year,'-ft1s
promise held out by LDF during the 1987 elections to the State
Legislative Assembly-is most revealing. (Lakh is the Indian
wordfor 100,000.) Within ashorttime ofassumingoffice, LDF
spokesmen were to make a correction: the promiied employ-
ment was over a period of five years. Later it was "clarified,,
that the offer was for ten Lakh days of employment, provided
the Center offered sufficient assistance. And still some time
later, the front would wash is hands completely, saying that
it was a case of a printer's devil in the manifesto! A few of tne
promises are kept, but mostly on paper. Minimum-wage leg-
islation in Keralam very well illustrates this. In spite of tni
legislation, even in the cooperative sector of the coir yarn
spinning industry, minimum wages are not paid; likewise, in
the private sector of beadi-making. There aie stock explana-
tions advanced by each front for the nonfunctioning of its
government. While LDF would attribute it to the Center,s
neglect of the state, UDF would hold noncooperation from
CPM-led trade unions and lumpen violence ofCpVt cadre as
reasons for nonfunctioning. The majority of the voters in
Keralam are now verywell aware of the fact that the difference
between the two fronts is quite thin; hence each front gains
the opportunity to come to power at one time or the other,
the margin ofvotes the successful front ges being usuallyvery
narrow. In the 1982 state elections, the UDF had a margin of
a mere 0.99 percent of the total valid vore; in 19g7, LDF won
by a narrow edge of 1.32 percent of the vote.*
Aftelvord
It is not true that the Keralam story has been blacked out
bl t: bourgeois -.$u: On the conrrary, internationat ageri_
cies like the United Nations, compradoi researchers in India
UNDERSTANDING KERALAM 3I
Mo*r*vRnvmw's
ToroTo
Buor*
Med with Workers' Party leaders
ard grass-roots organizers.
Explore the Amazon by boat.
Visit Rio de Janeiro,
56o Paulo and gaucho country.
March 22 - April4,1992
For more information contaet
Sarah Lampitt at Monthly Review (212) 691-2555