Thursday 17 July 2014

Recasting Caste – Utopian and Scientific

Recasting Caste – Utopian and Scientific
(Suresh Srivastava)
I normally do not involve myself in any discussion on the proposition of convergence of class and caste, and am apprehensive whether any fruitful result can be achieved by identifying caste as class, because the discussants are normally petty bourgeois pseudo left intellectuals, who are not trained to think dialectically, hence there are arguments only and no discussions. But after reading the article written by Mr Asit Das, titled THE REAL WORLD OF CASTE IN INDIA, as a prefatory to Mr Hira Singh’s RECASTING CASTE, and circulated on a group of socially conscious young intellectuals, I could not restrain myself from intervening. Need of the time is to provide socially conscious young intellectuals every opportunity to help them develop a dialectical reasoning and scientific outlook so that some of them could play the historical role of torch bearer for emancipation of the human society. And nothing could be more effective than to juxtapose dialectical and metaphysical interpretations about any phenomena exposing inherent contradiction in the metaphysical analysis.
Ever since Marx and Engels enunciated the theory of dialectical and historical materialism, and on the basis of that theory suggested a revolutionary praxis for the working class, in the form of ‘Manifesto of the Communist Party’, multipronged attack by bourgeois intellectuals was unleashed against the theory. When bourgeois intellectuals failed in their frontal attack to contain the spread of Marxist ideas among the working masses all over the world, they chose to sabotage the theory from within, by obfuscating the core content of the Marxist theory, importing numerous metaphysical concepts, in the name of developing Marxism in line with ever developing society.
In last 175 years, plethoric documentation has been churned out by middle class left intellectuals, in the name of development of Marxism with reference to the modern and post modern stages of development. About any social phenomenon, first they choose an interpretation at will, and then to justify the veracity of their conclusions, conveniently gather some data and some quotations from Marx, and configure an analysis in a metaphysical manner to claim their interpretation to be dialectical. In the preface to his famous pamphlet ‘Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism’, Lenin categorically warned against this revisionist trend. He writes ‘In view of the extreme complexity of the phenomena of social life it is always possible to select any number of examples or separate data to prove any proposition.’
With their petty bourgeois consciousness, self-proclaimed Marxists fail to distinguish between dialectical approach and metaphysical approach, and feed the young minds with their utopian concepts in the name of scientific concept of socialism. In his preface to ‘Anti-Duhring’, Engels writes ‘And finally, to me there could be no question of building the laws of dialectics into nature, but of discovering them in it and evolving them from it’. Pseudo-Marxists, unable to comprehend the philosophical aspect of Marxian dialectics, fail to understand that the whole world of political, social and religious ideas of any class is a superstructure built on the infrastructure of material production relations between various classes, and which may appear to be completely unrelated with its foundation.     
Those leftists who propagate the idea that Marxist understanding of caste and Ambedkarite understanding of caste are convergent or that the caste shall be annihilated with class, have not been able to get themselves rid of their petty-bourgeois consciousness. Again in the above pamphlet, Lenin writes ‘For they are the real agents of the bourgeoisie in the working class movement, the labour lieutenants of the capitalist class, real vehicles of reformism and chauvinism. …….. Unless the economic roots of this phenomenon are understood and its political and social significance is appreciated, not a step can be taken toward the solution of the practical problem of the communist movement and of the impending social revolution.’
If one has understood philosophical aspect of Marxism - which most of the leftists either do not understand or consider unimportant – one will be clear, that caste system is an ideological manifestation of, division of labour in the process of material production and relations of production, and hence question of caste cannot be solved in a predominantly feudal society but will fizzle out as division of labour fizzles out with the growth of capitalist mode of production.
Marx had identified that division of labour was based on the development of individual skills and on an individual providing specific kind of skilled labour power in the production of one particular kind of product. But production of one particular kind of goods was not confined to an individual or a family, in some areas like India, a whole community was producing one kind of product which is the basis of development of caste system in India. Even today a cast is identified by the kind of work the community has been doing.
Marx had further identified that ‘Upon the different forms of property, upon the social conditions of existence, rises an entire superstructure of distinct and peculiarly formed sentiments, illusions, modes of thought, and views of life. The entire class creates and forms them out of its material foundations and out of the corresponding social relations.’ (Marx, XVIII Brumaire). Thus caste system developed on the material foundation of division of labour, but took the form of religion and social stratification with un-touchability. Caste system, like religion is an integral part of feudalism and continues even during the development of capitalism.
Marx did not deal with the subject of caste because he had realised that the cause of human woes is the private appropriation of surplus value produced by collective labour and he focused on finding how exploitation of man by man can be annihilated. Different classes and identities will be having their own specific problems at different stages of historical development, which will have to be dealt specifically by people of that particular era, but emancipation of human race as a whole will occur only when surplus produced collectively, is appropriated collectively.
Metaphysical view of Indian left is to assume that, in India, caste is synonymous to class because both have a common foundation in division of labour and hence class struggle and caste struggle are coterminous, and since annihilation of class is possible only with annihilation of capitalism, hence annihilation of cast is also possible with annihilation of capitalism only.
Dialectical view is that division of labour leads to production of commodities and division of society into classes. Within the domain of production workmen were divided between classes on the basis of skill, but, while in class structure individual workman is identified by the skill he acquires and becomes member of a class, in caste structure an individual is part of a caste, which is identified by the particular trade it follows, and the individual acquires the same skill. Because in caste structure division of labour was linked to birth, over a time, concept of caste became part of ideological consciousness of the particular class and integrated with religion.
In a feudal socio-economic formation castes and classes are synonymous because working masses are divided into various classes on the basis of skill. But with development of capitalist mode of production, machines take over the skill of the craftsmen and all workmen become simple wage labourer, and workmen hitherto divided into various classes converge into one class, proletariat and so will converge all castes into one oppressed class.
At social level there could be various oppressed groups e.g. ethnic groups, religious minorities, women and children, refugees etc., and at social level different groups may have to fight different battles, but at economic level there are only two classes, oppressed or oppressor, and at political level there has to be a united fight by all the oppressed people. Any identity politics will weaken the proletarian class struggle, and hence communists may be part of all social movements but shall not be in the forefront of social movements. Their task is to bring in political awareness among the masses through their participation in these social movements.
With due apologies to Mr Asit Das and Mr Hira Singh, I have to take up this ungrateful task of identifying the content in Mr Asit Das’ article which obfuscates Marxism, and appeal to the young intellectuals not to identify ideas with individuals, and rather dwell upon the idea forgetting the author, to guard against subjective understanding of the subject matter. I shall reproduce some of the phrases from the article which, in my opinion are contrary to Marxist thought, and leave it to the young readers’ reasoning.   
·                     The annihilation of caste is intrinsically related with the abolition of class rule in India.
·                     Identification of India with caste and reduction of caste to its religious essence is a product of the colonial process of essentialization.
·                     Hence, caste is very much an important component of Indian politics, and it is a reality which no sensible Marxist can afford to overlook.
·                     Communists should be in the forefront in the fight against caste, gender, racial, national and ethnic oppressions. One need not miss the wood for the tree. In the light of above arguments, Hira Singh’s book “Recasting Caste” is a serious Marxist intervention in the contemporary caste debates. 
·                     In India, in the era of Mandal and Kamandal politics, caste has assumed an overwhelming importance both in politics and in the Academia.(The result of XVI Lok Sabha elections shows that caste has not assumed an overwhelming importance in politics, rather it is waning. In Academia, yes of course, because it suits the existing system.) 
·                     Delineate a strategy for a classless and casteless society.
·                     The question whether caste is infrastructure or superstructure is redundant.
·                     It is here that the Marxist and Ambedkarite project of ‘annihilation of castes’ converge.
·                     And it is here that the political project of Ambedkarites and the political left converges.
While fighting against revisionism in Russuian communist movement, in 1902, Lenin wrote his famous pamphlet ‘What is to be done’ and in the preface he writes, ‘But the confusion and vacillation which constitute the distinguishing feature of an entire period in the history …….. [may be read as history of 90 years of Indian communist movement]; ………. also acquires significance, for we can make no progress until we have completely put an end to this period.’
I hope Indian Marxist will pay heed to Lenin’s teachings.

Suresh Srivastava
15 July, 2014
                
          

    
   

Monday 3 February 2014

LGBT – A Good Case, Badly Presented

LGBT – A Good Case, Badly Presented
Suresh Srivastava

The efforts of a small section of middle class intellectuals and thirteen of their NGOs, to get social approval, through legal intervention for certain sexual preferences, hitherto considered immoral by a substantial section of the society, has come to a naught. These middle class intellectuals claiming to be progressive socially, showed political naivety by failing to appreciate the wisdom and power of the Parliament as the representative of the Indian people. Instead of getting the grievances of the LGBT community, regarding the actions of law enforcing agencies under section 377 of IPC, in the matter of sexual preferences of lesbians, gays, bi-sexuals and transgenders, redressed by Parliament through their elected representatives, they preferred to challenge the constitutional validity of the section 377, alleging it to be discriminatory, encroaching upon the fundamental rights of a minority group, inter alia gays, to have consensual sex in private. This construes that, in the opinion of the petitioners, not only the founding fathers of our constitution, but also the subsequent framers of the law, our Parliament, and the interpreters of the law, our Supreme Court have failed in their duty by not repealing it or by not striking it down as unconstitutional for sixty five years.
Petty bourgeois intellectuals are always in a hurry and adamant in implementing their utopian ideas. They want everything to be delivered, the way they want, by some genie as soon as they wish. The petition which was dismissed by the order of the apex court dated 11 December 2013, met its fait accompli, the day petition was originally filed before the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi in 2001 seeking it's indulgence to declare the section 377 as violative of the constitutional rights of individuals having consensual sex in private.
Let us examine if right thinking people could have foreseen twelve years ago, the fate of the petition, and what the way forward is now.
Before going into the facts of the present case, let us examine some fundamental aspects of development in the inclusive democratic political system of our nation which is a federated structure of complex societies of diverse nationalities, languages, religions, cultures and modes of productions e.g. feudal, capitalist, tribal and even slavery in terms of bonded labour, which gives rise to heterogeneous groups, with diverse interests, some time conflicting, coexisting together.
Our constitution gives responsibility to the elected representatives to legislate through Parliament and State Assemblies for ensuring honourable living and development for the citizens, individually and collectively, keeping proper balance between mutual rights and obligations and to oversee the functioning of the government. The Supreme Court has been assigned the responsibility and authority of judicial review to ensure that the legislature enacts laws in accordance with the letter and spirit of the constitution and the government acts in accordance with the laws enacted by legislature. At the time of independence and adoption of the new constitution, to ensure smooth transition from the previous regime to the new regime, all the laws in force during the old regime were adopted with a provision to amend or repeal them as the needs of the society would develop. The right to amend or repeal any existing law is vested in the legislature and not in the judiciary. The judiciary is given the right to interpret the law in consonance with the developing needs of the society.
Our nascent democracy in sixty years has developed into a strong vibrant democracy because of perfect understanding between legislature, executive and judiciary for mutual respect for their respective responsibilities and authorities. Society is an entity ever developing; economically, politically and culturally and so are developing aspirations of individuals. Old values give way to new values. With this, new conflicts and clash of interests between different groups or sections of the society also emerge. Our legislature has been amending or repealing provisions in existing laws and enacting new laws, and the judiciary has been interpreting old and new laws to meet the needs of the changing times keeping the sanctity of the objects enshrined in our constitution. Because of conflicting interests between different sections of the society, it is not always possible to satisfy every section entirely, but in general the nation as a whole feels satisfied with the role played by our judiciary, may be less satisfied with the role played by our legislature, in strengthening our democracy. Petty bourgeois intellectuals, who lead every struggle for a social change, because of myopic vision, focus on short term interests of a segment of the society and are not able to appreciate that an integrated and flexible approach might be able to satisfy a wider section.
In the light of above general observations, let us examine the petition.
In the petition it is prayed that Section 377 IPC may be declared as constitutionally invalid insofar as it affects private sexual acts between consenting adults or in the alternative to read down Section 377 IPC to exclude consenting same-sex sexual acts between adults.
Section 377 IPC is contained in Chapter XVI of the IPC titled “Of Offences Affecting the Human Body”.  Within this Chapter Section 377 IPC is categorised under the sub-chapter titled “Of Unnatural Offences” and reads as follows:
“377. Unnatural Offences - Whoever voluntarily has carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal, shall be punished with imprisonment for life, or with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine.
Explanation - Penetration is sufficient to constitute the carnal intercourse necessary to the offence described in this section."
From the contents of section 377 it is clear that the petitioners are having in mind only MSM (Men who have sex with men) or gays when they are asking for exclusion of consenting 'same-sex sexual acts'. Further, use of term 'sexual orientation' in their arguments regarding Article 15 of the constitution shows that they consider gays different from normal man.
Presence of words 'voluntarily' and 'penetration' in Section 377, excepts minors and lesbians from its ambit, but it covers all adult males, females and eunuchs. Effectively, the petitioners chose to fight, out of LGBT community, only for gays, leaving out all normal males, females and eunuchs at the mercy of the archaic law.
The petition was ill conceived on two counts. It was assumed that gays are a different community just because they are homosexual and homosexuality is considered by the society a sexual act against the order of nature. Secondly it tried to project that section 377 is directed against gays only and hence is discriminatory. It is obvious that the petition was doomed to be rejected by the apex court on both the accounts. Once it is accepted that the consensual sex between gays, who according to material on record are a very small fraction of the society, is not a normal practice for all other male members of the society or in other words is against the order of nature, the plea that it is being done in private can not absolve the perpetrator from penalty. Since the law is applicable to all citizens, normal males, females and eunuchs, equally, the argument that it is discriminatory against gay community does not hold ground.
Social activists with their petty bourgeois mentality and identity politics, try to find faults with entire political system and undermine the wisdom and sacrifice of a whole life of our founding fathers, who put in place the finest constitution that could be conceived, for the new nation. They try to set things right in an arbitrary manner through mass protests and judicial activism. In this case also, instead of choosing the correct but torturous path of educating people about such a complex issue and convincing the people's representatives to bring about the desired change in the law through Parliament, they wished the judiciary will step into the domain of legislature and wishfully thought to get, through a petition, what they ought to have got through a democratic process. Their misconceived approach was destined to result into miscarriage. The Hon'ble Supreme Court has rightly observed, "In fact a constitutional duty has been cast upon this Court to test the laws of the land on the touchstone of the Constitution and provide appropriate remedy if and when called upon to do so. Seen in this light the power of judicial review over legislations is plenary. However, keeping in mind the importance of separation of powers and out of a sense of deference to the value of democracy that parliamentary acts embody, self restraint has been exercised by the judiciary when dealing with challenges to the constitutionality of laws."
In last few decades, attitudes and preferences, legally and socially, about sexual activities have undergone a sea change. In the eyes of law the idea of normal sex has transformed from being sex-for-procreation only to sex-not-for-procreation also. Socially it is being accepted that sex is for recreation and procreation is incidental to it. People exposed to modern technologies and modes of production are having views about sexual activities which are more liberal than those of people who are still working with primitive modes of production.
Development of science in the area of human behaviour has played a great role in convincing people that sexual interaction between same sex persons exists in animal world also, and hence is natural for humans also. “According to current scientific and professional understanding, however, the core feelings and attractions that form the basis for adult sexual orientation typically emerge between middle childhood and early adolescence.  Moreover, these patterns of sexual attraction generally arise without any prior sexual experience.” (American Psychiatric Association). Everyone is aware that as children, irrespective of sex, grow, they enjoy sexual gratification by stimulating each other's genitalia and it is quite natural. And as children grow into adults, if they are left on their own, they will experiment all kinds of sexual acts and develop their individual sexual preferences in a perfectly natural way. And culmination of sexual stimulation into ejaculation or orgasm is also a natural consequence. Hence new generation is getting used to accept that, sexual intercourse between same sex partners or non-penal-vaginal intercourse is not against the order of nature.
The petitioners are better advised to pray to the apex court to 'read down' Section 377 IPC to clarify that 'carnal intercourse' between consensual same gender partners shall not be 'against the order of nature'. Hon'ble Supreme Court has already shown the way forward. 'Another significant canon of determination of constitutionality is that the Courts would be reluctant to declare a law invalid or ultra vires on account of unconstitutionality. The Courts would accept an interpretation, which would be in favour of constitutionality rather than the one which would render the law unconstitutional. Declaring the law unconstitutional is one of the last resorts taken by the Courts. The Courts would preferably put into service the principle of 'reading down' or 'reading into' the provision to make it effective, workable and ensure the attainment of the object of the Act. These are the principles which clearly emerge from the consistent view taken by this Court in its various pronouncements including the recent judgment in Namit Sharma v. Union of India'
Socially conscious intellectuals, who want to be real actors in making of the history through social movements, must remember Marx's teaching, "Theory also becomes a material force as soon as it has gripped the masses. Theory is capable of gripping the masses as soon as it demonstrates ad hominem (fallacy), and it demonstrates ad hominem as soon as it becomes radical. To be radical is to grasp the root of the matter."

Suresh Srivastava
03 February 2014
9810128813

(Author is the president of the Society for SCIENCE)

Friday 17 January 2014

Lessons from AAP Phenomenon


Lessons from AAP Phenomenon

What are the lessons to be learnt from the election results in five states and the rise of AAP as a potential alternative to Congress and BJP? Everyone will analyse the events and draw his or her conclusions depending upon one’s mindset and attitude. A dialectical approach will be different from a metaphysical approach. While analyzing sequence of events on a short term basis, taking into account only aspirations and actions of prominent individuals or common individuals in general as the sole actors and overlooking the role and significance of underlying class consciousness of groups and organizations, is a metaphysical approach. On the other hand taking an integrated view of any event as an epoch in the continuous historical process of development of human society and considering both aspirations and consciousness of individuals as well as that of their class, the motive force for their individual as well as collective actions, is dialectical approach.
With metaphysical approach, by conveniently choosing facts and data, any conclusion can be drawn. Since bourgeois analysts do not vouch for dialectical materialism, this article will limit its critical examination to the conclusions drawn by the leading communist party CPM, representative of left movement in India, for whom Marxism and hence dialectical materialism is supposed to be the guiding theory.

Marxism identifies human society or any organization as an organic entity having life and consciousness of its own and not as a simple conglomeration of individuals as bourgeois thinkers consider it to be. Engels elaborated, ‘This further development did not reach its conclusion when man finally became distinct from the monkey, but, on the whole, continued to make powerful progress, ............. owing to a new element which came into play with the appearance of fully-fledged man, viz. society. (The Part Played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Man, Dialectics of Nature). Society is not a biological formation like a human being, but is a socio- economic formation having consciousness and other characteristics of life. Humans and society have been growing side by side ever since the origin of society, ‘The production of life, both of one's own in labour and of fresh life in procreation, now appears as a double relationship: on the one hand as a natural, and on the other as a social relationship’ as Marx noted in German Ideology. Bourgeois thinkers consider history as a sequence of isolated events resulting from the actions and ideas of certain individuals, while Marxism takes a dialectical materialistic view of history, which is historical materialism. Engels in his letter to J. Bloch explains this in the following words, ‘According to the materialist conception of history, the ultimately determining element in history is the production and reproduction of real life.’
Marx in XVIII Brumaire wrote, “Upon the different forms of property, upon the social conditions of existence, rises an entire superstructure of distinct and peculiarly formed sentiments, illusions, modes of thought, and views of life. The entire class creates and forms them out of its material foundations and out of the corresponding social relations.” Therefore, while analysing respective political activities of various classes, to overlook material foundation of these classes, particularly their social position in relation to the production and distribution of material goods, shall be a grave error. Any attempt to understand and draw lessons from any political activity and historical event, without considering the relative position of various classes in the economy, will lead to erroneous outcome. Every class acts according to its class consciousness and in the absence of clear understanding of the form and content of class consciousness and their dialectical relationship, one can’t understand and draw correct lessons from historical events. Marxism identifies the sentiments, illusions, modes of thought and views of life as the ideological-social-social-consciousness – ‘the form’ of social consciousness – and the forms of property and social conditions of existence as the material-social-consciousness – ‘the content’ of social consciousness. Lenin had rightly summarised that ‘economics is the base and politics the concentrated expression of economics.
Engels points out, ‘LABOUR is the source of all wealth, the economists assert. It is this next to nature, which supplies it with the material that it converts into wealth.’ (The Part Played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Man, Dialectics of Nature). Human labour power transforms material provided by the nature with the help of tools. Ever since society came into existence all production is social and not individual. With ever increasing social and individual knowledge, men started producing surplus, more than what was necessary to rejuvenate the labour power exhausted during production. Disproportionate distribution of surplus cleaved society into two classes, the producer-consumer and the appropriator of surplus. With the development of the productive forces and the productivity and with the division of labour, different interests in the sharing of social production gave rise to conflicting interests in different forms and hitherto classless, the society was transformed into class-society with different classes having different relationship to the social product in the form of property.
On the basis of private ownership of the three components of production process – the object of labour, the instruments of labour and the labour power – Marx identified three different modes of production; slave, feudal and capitalist. While economic growth was necessitating integration of smaller societies into larger societies, lust for appropriation of the surplus was sharpening irreconcilable contradiction between the classes. ‘But in order that these antagonisms, classes with conflicting economic interests, shall not consume themselves and society in fruitless struggle, a power, apparently standing above society, has become necessary to moderate the conflict and keep it within the bounds of “order”; and this power, arisen out of society, but placing itself above it and increasingly alienating itself from it, is the state.’ writes Engels and also ‘As the state arose from the need to keep class antagonisms in check, but also arose in the thick of the fight between the classes, it is normally the state of the most powerful, economically ruling class, which by its means becomes also the politically ruling class’. History of cleaved human society is the history of class struggle for the control of the means of production and surplus produced, through the control of the state machinery.
Marx noted in his letter to P. Annanikov, “...... the petty bourgeoisie will be an integral part of all the impending social revolutions” and “In an advanced society and because of his situation, a petty bourgeois becomes a socialist on the one hand, and economist on the other, i.e. he is dazzled by the magnificence of the upper middle classes and feels compassion for the sufferings of the people”. Only this dialectical materialist approach can lead to the correct analysis and understanding of the nature of various social movements and the role of various sections in each one of them and to draw correct lessons from the recent happenings we need to understand the role played by the bourgeoisie at different stages of development during last one hundred years.
Since the beginning of last century, Indian freedom struggle apparently was a fight of native people against the foreign rulers, but in reality it was a class struggle between well entrenched feudal and emerging nationalist bourgeois classes. On the feudal side were the landlords and comprador bourgeoisie in the form of trading partners of English bourgeoisie and on the other side was emerging nationalist bourgeoisie supported by the peasants and workers. As time passed, with industrialisation and national and international historical developments, comprador bourgeoisie switched side and took control of the freedom movement.
The conflict of interest between petty bourgeoisie and feudal has existed since the beginning of the independence movement but it became significant at the end of the first quarter of the last century when big bourgeoisie switched sides and took control of independence movement. In the new situation petty bourgeoisie was also divided into two sections. One went along with the big bourgeoisie, putting struggle for political independence in the focus with the demand of Purn Swaraj and pushing workers struggle for economic emancipation on the backburner, and the other proceeded to usher in socialist (utopian) revolution in the footsteps of Soviet Revolution. First section became integral part of Indian National Congress and the other, besotted with the success of Bolshevik movement constituted the Indian Communist Party. A communist party is supposed to be the vanguard of proletarian struggle for emancipation of humankind, and is capable of successfully leading the peasants and workers in their struggle because it is armed with the most revolutionary scientific world outlook i.e. Marxism. But during one hundred years of communist movement in India, the working class movement seems to have been going on a roller coaster ride and at present seems to be at the lowest ebb so much so that AAP is being perceived, even by the CPI and CPM, as the alternative to Congress and BJP led alliances, which the communist parties were being perceived till now. "In the assembly polls, the AAP has become a viable alternative to the Congress and the BJP. We have to watch and see the party's (AAP) political programmes, policies and plans before supporting it," Prakash Karat told reporters during the CPI-M's Central Committee (CC) meeting in Tripura in December 2013. This compels one to critically analyse, whether the proletariat is still not enlightened enough to lead the peasants and workers for a qualitative transformation or the self styled Indian communist parties are really not equipped with the revolutionary scientific world outlook known as Marxism and hence are not capable of guiding the working class movement correctly. 
After independence, bourgeoisie which embarked on development of capitalism in India, in its competition against foreign capital was able to garner support of working class using the nationalist sentiment, and developed an alliance with feudal to share the natural resources. At the time of independence, India’s level of industrial development was very low as compared to that of the developed nations, and so were the expectations of the people also. Since the imperialist loot was put to an end, the three classes, feudal, bourgeois and capitalist, living off the surplus produced by the peasants and workers, could live in harmony because they could get their share in accordance with their aspirations. Hence, Indian National Congress which started as the representative of national bourgeoisie and peasants and workers, after independence started protecting interests of Indian Capitalism, against external capitalism, taking along feudal and petty bourgeoisie. Initial years after independence saw unbridled growth of Indian capitalism reaching its highest stage – imperialism.
History of the third quarter of the century, after independence, is the history of development of Indian capitalism to have full control of Indian sub-continent and then to its highest stage of imperialism. Once Indian capital was fully integrated with foreign capital, it did not require any trade barriers by the state as it required during the third quarter of the century and the government gradually removed all barriers for free movement of money and material in line with the global market demands. Last quarter of the century is the history of this transition.
Also to meet its global requirements, it started encroaching into the domain of feudalism to control natural resources and to recruit unprecedented army of wage earners from amongst the peasantry and the artisan. New situation brought to the fore the conflict of interests among different classes. True to its character petty bourgeoisie joined hands with feudal lords in latter’s conflict with the capitalist. Different classes started organising their own political parties for the control of the state machinery in line with their economic interests. This brought into the arena regional political parties based on cast, language, religion and other localised issues and their ‘identity politics.’
History since the beginning of the twenty first century is the history of the struggle between Indian capitalism in league with the global capitalism on one side and on the other side feudalism supported by petty bourgeoisie, true to its class character. At national level Congress with its ideology of laissez-faire represents the economic interests of capitalism and BJP with its ideology of ‘old is gold’ and ‘small is beautiful’ represents the interest of feudalism and petty bourgeoisie. All regional parties move on the fringes of these two national parties. The peasantry and the working class is left in the lurch at crossroads confused and stupefied by the presence of umpteen numbers of self styled communist outfits and their assurances of respective brands of socialism.  
Lessons to be learnt from the emergence of AA Party led by Arvind Kejriwal and the overwhelming support it is getting will depend upon the answers to the two fundamental questions. First is, why the communist parties, the parties of the proletariat have failed to lead the peasants and workers to pose an alternative to Congress and BJP and the second is, will the AAP movement lead to some qualitative change in the direction of emancipation of the exploited classes or will it fizzle out like the earlier movements led by J.P. and V.P. Singh. Answers to these questions will show the way forward.
To delve into the first question let us summarise the role of the CPI or subsequently of all its offshoots. During the independence movement CPI was fighting against British Imperialism but refused to form a joint front with the Congress calling it to be in league with British Imperialism but after Germany attacked USSR during WW-II, CPI started supporting British calling the war to be one against fascism. After independence CPI started supporting Congress policies in the name of Nehruvian Socialism, while in fact the policies were to strengthen Indian capitalism by protecting it against world capitalism. Later when Indian Capitalism started integrating with world capitalism and Congress turned its policies against feudal and petty bourgeois interests, CPI and CPM went against congress and supported JP movement which was a petty bourgeois movement in league with feudal interests. At the beginning of the 21st century, in the XIII Lok Sabha when BJP gained upper hand against Congress, the Left Front led by CPM switched sides and started supporting Congress in the name of fight against communalism. In the XIV Lok Sabha Congress came back to power with the support of the Left Front and embarked upon its strategic alliance with international capital. When the government signed Agreement 123, Left Front had no option but to withdraw support from Congress. Before elections to the XV Lok Sabha, CPI led by CPM tried to persuade all other local parties to join hands as a third front against Congress and BJP both. But by now they had completely lost their credibility. They were not taken as reliable partners who were apt to switch sides at first convenience. Peasants and workers lost faith in them as their representatives and were seen like any other regional petty bourgeois party so much so that they were dumped at the hustings and the masses voted for representatives of various other political parties.       
This is the history about which Engels had warned in his famous book ‘The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State’, in which he had very aptly defined true character of a bourgeois state under representative democracy.  ‘And lastly the possessing class rules directly by means of universal suffrage. As long as the oppressed class – in our case, therefore, the proletariat – is not yet ripe for its self-liberation, so long will it, in its majority, recognize the existing order of society as the only possible one and remain politically the tail of the capitalist class, its extreme left wing. But in the measure in which it matures towards its self-emancipation, in the same measure it constitutes itself as its own party and votes for its own representatives, not those of the capitalists.’ The results of all elections at the centre or in the states clearly show that the representatives of bourgeois and feudal classes are being voted by the oppressed classes and that the oppressed classes are not enlightened enough.
But more important is to find the reason why Communist parties have failed to enlighten the masses, while it is the foremost and most important task for leading working class successfully in its struggle. If we pay attention to warnings by Lenin and Mao, the picture becomes quite clear. While in exile and fighting against revisionism, on Marx’s 90th birth anniversary, Lenin had warned, ‘Whoever does not understand the inevitable inner dialectics of parliamentarism and bourgeois democracy—which leads to an even sharper decision of the argument by mass violence than formerly—will never be able on the basis of this parliamentarism to conduct propaganda and agitation consistent in principle, really preparing the working-class masses for victorious participation in such “arguments”. And Mao in his famous pamphlet, ‘On New Democracy’ had warned about the character of bourgeoisie. “When confronted by a formidable enemy, they united with the workers and peasants against him, but when the workers and peasants awakened, they turned round to unite with the enemy against the workers and peasants. This is a general rule applicable to the bourgeoisie everywhere in the world.” In the light of the observations of Engels, Lenin and Mao, the history of 90 years of communist movement in India lays bare the fact that the communist parties are deeply infested by petty bourgeois consciousness and have been behaving like petty bourgeois parties since the very inception.  
The Communist party of India was organised by few Indian bourgeois intellectuals in Tashkent in 1920 just after the success of Bolshevik revolution. Lenin, while working on his programme for building Bolshevik Party, in his famous pamphlet ‘What is to be done’ had noted, ‘Those who have the slightest acquaintance with the actual state of our movement cannot but see that the wide spread of Marxism was accompanied by a certain lowering of the theoretical level. Quite a number of people with very little, and even a total lack of theoretical training joined the movement because of its practical significance and its practical successes.’ Subsequent history of a century of the communist movement in India shows that the founders of CPI did not have proper understanding of Marxism and the party started with a bourgeois-consciousness and not proletarian-consciousness and is still continuing with the same trend. Vacillating attitude at various crucial stages of the movement and subsequent fragmentation of the communist party into number of communist parties is a testimony to the bourgeois outlook of various communist outfits in India and the reason for their failure to recognise the contradictions between various classes during independence movement, after independence or after opening up of the economy.
One should not be surprised that masses do not identify various communist parties differently than other petty bourgeois regional parties. In their struggle for freedom from exploitation, during last half a century, working class has been voting for parties of feudal and capitalist classes. As usual they are following intellectuals from petty bourgeois class who have failed to educate proletariat about scientific socialism. Lenin had explained that socialism does not come into the proletarian consciousness from within, it has to be brought in from outside by the intellectuals from the bourgeois class. The Utopian Socialism was brought in by the intellectuals from the petty bourgeois class and so will have to be the Scientific Socialism. The masses have refused to choose CPI or CPM and instead have been falling for leaders like J.P., V.P. Singh and now for Arvind Kejriwal and will continue to do so till Scientific Socialism is not imbibed into proletarian consciousness.
Now first question having been answered, the answer to the second question is straight forward. The AAP movement, in the absence of a scientific ideology, will fail as a cohesive political party and will disintegrate, sooner than later, as it happened with J.P. and V.P. movements.
So what are the lessons to be learnt and what is the way forward.
In ‘What is to be done’ Lenin wrote, ‘Class political consciousness can be brought to the workers only from without, that is, only from outside the economic struggle, from outside the sphere of relations between workers and employers’ and ‘Without a sense of theory among the workers, this scientific socialism would never have entered their flesh and blood as much as is the case.’ These are the lessons to be learnt by those who claim to be vanguard of proletarian movement in India. Unfortunately all communist parties seem to be in a hurry for a socialist revolution and are not prepared to devote time to educate themselves and the workers about the theory. They quote Marx’s comment in ‘Theses on Feuerbach’ that ‘The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change it’ and also an extract from his letter on The Gotha Programme, AEvery step of real movement is more important than a dozen programmes.@ to ward off the criticism of their opportunism. Condemning such revisionists, Lenin clarifies, ‘To repeat these words in a period of theoretical disorder, is like wishing mourners at a funeral many happy returns of the day. Moreover, these words of Marx are taken from his letter on the Gotha Programme, in which he sharply condemns eclecticism in the formulation of principles. If you must unite, Marx wrote to the party leaders, then enter into agreements to satisfy the practical aims of the movement, but do not allow any bargaining over principles, do not make theoretical Aconcessions@. This was Marx=s idea, and yet there are people among us who seek-in his name to belittle the significance of theory.’ Lenin further warned emphasizing the importance of the theoretical struggle, ‘Without revolutionary theory there can be no revolutionary movement. This idea cannot be insisted upon too strongly at a time when the fashionable preaching of opportunism goes hand in hand with an infatuation for the narrowest forms of practical activity.’
And what is opportunism. Opportunism is revisionism in practice, revisionism of left or right. Lenin in his valuable pamphlet ‘Marxism and Revisionism’ has very rightly defined revisionism in the following words, ‘ “The movement is everything, the ultimate aim is nothing"—this catch-phrase of Bernstein’s expresses the substance of revisionism better than many long disquisitions. To determine its conduct from case to case, to adapt itself to the events of the day and to the chopping and changing of petty politics, to forget the primary interests of the proletariat and the basic features of the whole capitalist system, of all capitalist evolution, to sacrifice these primary interests for the real or assumed advantages of the moment—such is the policy of revisionism.’ And the whole history of left movement - from CPI to Maoists - and the latest statement of General Secretary of CPM testifies this.  
And the way forward is same which was shown by Lenin a century ago. ‘…., but the confusion and vacillation which constitute the distinguishing feature of an entire period in the history of Russian Social-Democracy [read Indian communist movement]; ………….., also acquires significance, for we can make no progress until we have completely put an end to this period.       

Suresh Srivastava
9810128813
15 January, 2014