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The Republic of Ram Briksh Yadav

THE violence at Mathura has outraged people. But more than anger, there is bewilderment. It is difficult for people to accept that right in the heart of a town like Mathura, part of the mainland, there existed and flourished a liberated zone.

The Republic of Ram Briksh Yadav

Policemen carry a colleague injured during clashes with members of a sect said to be illegally living at Jawahar Bagh Park, Mathura. PTI



Apoorvanand

THE violence at Mathura has outraged people. But more than anger, there is bewilderment. It is difficult for people to accept that right in the heart of a town like Mathura, part of the mainland, there existed and flourished a liberated zone. Liberated zones in our imagination are created only by Naxalites or Maoists in the jungles of Chhattisgarh or Jharkhand. And they are inspired by alien ideologies like Marxism or Maoism. This makes it easy for us to label them as anti-nationals, conspirators who are out to dismember our nation. They have collaborators hiding in palces like the JNU, masquerading as students and teachers.

  People and political parties are upset that government parallel to the one they form through the “legitimate” process of elections was running the show at Jawahar Bagh for more than two years. Some news reports have described it as a “free nation”. The government agencies are treating them as squatters who had illegally occupied a public property called the Jawahar Bagh.

It is also metaphorical that a park named after Nehru was occupied by members of what is being called a “Bose Cult.” The members of this cult believed that the Nehruvian Indian nation was a falsehood which needed to be undone, using the ideas of Subhas Chandra Bose.  It is said that their leader, Ram Briksh Yadav was also a follower of the “Jai Gurudev” cult, a Baba of repute of yesteryear. He led nearly 3,000 people, from different parts of Uttar Pradesh and other states to Mathura and camped at Jawahar Bagh. He distributed plots to the people on which they built houses, a school used to operate there, armed training was imparted to the young and old. The “Bose-Gurudev nation” also  had its own economic structure. There was a police force and an army which used to protect the "nation." For all pratical puposes, this was the base camp from where they wanted to spread further. That there was support outside this fortress is evident from the fact that the "nation" used to get regular supply of foodgrain and other necessities from places not only in UP but also Madhya Pradesh. For the inhabitants of Jawahar Bagh, the idea of this nation was so real and serious that they were ready to die for it. It was interesting to see that most of the media described the clash between them and the Indian police as a battle. 

More than 29 people have died. Two senior police officers had to sacrifice their lives to assert the sovereignty of India over Jawahar Bagh. We are yet to see them decorated as martyrs. Jawans of our armed forces are immediately called martyrs when they die in Chhattisgarh or Jharkhand or Jammu and Kashmir. It would be too much to confer martyrdom on the functionaries of the state who are merely engaged in the eviction of illegal squatters.

The whole incident, had it not been so bloody, looks amusing. There is a something quixotic about it. The foolhardiness or audacity of the "citizens" of this "Bose-Gurudev" nation beats one's imagination. Did they seriously believe that they could beat back the might of the Indian State? Hypothetically speaking, if the idea of the "Bose-Gurudev" nationhood could capture the imagination of 3,000 people, what prevents it from bringing three lakh or three million people under its spell?  

What is it that upsets us in the whole episode? Is it the bloodshed? Or is it the fact of illegal occupation of a public land? Was not it not done recently  in the capital of India, on the bed of Yamuna against the orders of an institution which sought to assert the sovereignty of the nation against a Godman like Jai Gurudev? Is it the profile of the following of the living Godman something to do with the sheepishness of the organs of the Indian State before the Godman, who openly challenged the might of the State by declaring that even after being declared illegal, he would carry on with the congregation? The police and the Army was employed to facilitate the illegality and the Prime Minister of the country blessed the illegality.

We also read, and again with outrage, that the SP government was toying with the idea of giving the park to the cult on lease for 99 years. Why should it go against the UP government when we have instances like granting of acres of land in the heart of the protected ridge of Delhi to Asaram Bapu by a government led by the BJP by the orders of the then Home Minister LK Advani, or more recently to  Baba Ramdev by the BJP government of Chhattisgarh? What makes Sri Sri or Asaram Bapu or Ramdev more deserving than Ram Briksh Yadav? What public good these worthies serve which Ram Briksh was incapable of doing?

Be it the three-day event at the Yamuna or the ashrams of these gurus, it is not the will of the Indian State which is supreme there. It is their own security, their own little armies under the rule of these gurus which are in command.

It cannot be that we did not like the name of a person like Bose being turned into a stupid cult. For, this is what we have witnessed in these last seven decades. A cult around Bose, the myth of  his immortality has been cultivated very carefully to compete with and delegitimise the idea of a Nehruvian India. It is a militarist notion of a nation which has been propagated by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and its associates, the BJP being part of them. We have seen that it is quite possible to mobilise masses around this militant idea.

We find the idea of people following a half-educated man like Ram Briksh Yadav very funny. Has it occurred to us that we have willingly elected  an organisation as our ruler which believes that the first organ transplant was done by god Shiva and we had  a fully developed science of aeronautics in times of Lord Rama? 

The fact of armed training at Jawahar Bagh is also being seen as unacceptable. We witness and many of us participate in the armed training camps run by the RSS and its allies. We are not only not offended by that but find the whole act patriotic. We conveniently ignore the fact that along with arms these people are also being trained into an idea of a nation which seeks to replace, if not overthrow the current idea of India, as enshrined in its Constitution. There may be people willing to be fooled by “the-Constitution-as-my-sacred-book”  proclamation of their leader but his  following knows in its heart that a true nation is only one which has complete Hindu supremacy.

In the aftermath of the bloodshed at Jawahar Bagh of Mathura, we need to remember that Ram Briksh Yadav may be dead and his “nation” vanquished but the “Gurudev-Bose” notion of Indian nationhood is very much alive in many other forms and with our active participation in promoting it.

The writer is a Professor of Hindi at Delhi University.

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