Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Devasiri has provided probably the best answer to various critics of the agitation campaign of the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) of which he is the President. His interview in the Lankadeep of October 2, 2012, Devasiri covers much ground and puts the record straight regarding FUTA’s alleged NGO-funds-dependency as well as claims that FUTA was the pawn of political groups with agenda that had little to do with the main thrust of demands.
He has claimed that FUTA, contrary to claims made by various
Government spokespersons, has no interest in overthrowing the Government. Indeed, he was quoted in the ‘Rivira’ as being
more interested in ‘changing the people’ or rather appointing ‘a new people’.
On the other hand, Devasiri is old enough, educated enough
and has enough political savvy to understand that agitators don’t always
control the script. True, various
attempts by politicians of various parties to make (small) capital of the
political moment were effectively stymied by FUTA organizers.
There is no getting around the fact that the front seats at
the end-o-march rally were occupied by politicians of a political party that
held ‘privatization’ as an article of faith.
That should not take away too much gloss from what was clearly a very
well organized event where political maturity prevailed over the general slip
towards lumpenization that one has come to expect.
We are not talking here about demand-fairness, or the intellectual
weight and moral worth of the same. We
are talking specifically about a demonstration of political position and
related objections. The claims about a ‘sinister
hand’ amount to unadulterated rubbish, although one would not rule out people
sniffing for possible takings of a kind more pernicious than the easily visible
clinging-to-straw exercise of the UNP.
If there were, they were excluded from script-writing. Even poor Comrade Bahu was unceremoniously
hoofed out of the stage.
There was, however, a rather disconcerting ‘end note’ to the
above interview. Devasiri, when questioned
‘what next?’, ominously said, ‘If the government decides on coercion, that would be a big step; if that
happens they will be discredited (emphasis ours)’.
‘Big step’? For
whom? The FUTA struggle? Devasiri follows that ‘conclusion’ with the
equally ominous, ‘We do not know what could happen beyond that’. Devasiri is no baby. He lived through 88-89. His fascination with things political is well
known. He is not only a historian but a
keen student of politics as well. He has
read not only Marx, but Antonio Gramsci too.
He knows the old theories about the ideological state apparatus giving
way to the coercive and under what kind of conditions. He cannot be ‘innocent’ and ‘not-knowing’
about ‘what could happen beyond that’.
Technically he is on safe ground. He could say ‘big’ means ‘important’ or ‘significant’,
which is true. On the other hand, as a
person who is not insensitive to nuance in statement and/or silent, Devasiri
would have been quick to point out (if that statement was made by a political ‘other’,
for example) that the ‘big thing’ is something anticipated or even
desired.
It is not very different to the Inter University Student
Federation and their kind of political engagement where a ‘death’ is desired in
order to keep things moving. A couple of
years ago, a key mover in that organization told me, privately, that it would
be good if the government pushed them (the JVP – he made no secret of his party
loyalties, although in public the IUSF vociferously claimed ‘independence’ from
all political parties) into the jungle.
We would like to be generous to Devasiri, if not for
anything, because it is hard under the circumstances to be generous to the
Government, even if it’s certainly not an either-or situation. We would like to think that Devasiri, knowing
well the inevitable outcome of such a ‘big step’; around 60,000 dead and the
system (which, as much as politicians, denies) stronger by another round; would
do his best not to push things towards that tragedy. He might even tell himself that in a way that
is what can in the end keep the system going.
If we get that ‘big step’ and we get a replay of say 88-89
who gets discredited will only be of academic interest. Historians like Devasiri will no doubt write
all about it. There will be a lot of
discarded placards to clean up. Among
them a problematic but certainly appealing one-numeral slogan cum crowd-puller:
6%.
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