Patrice Riemens on Fri, 8 Mar 2002 20:19:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Statement of solidarity with Arundhati Roy by students of Delhi University |
----- Forwarded message from bonojit hussain <bonozyt@yahoo.co.in> ----- From: bonojit hussain <bonozyt@yahoo.co.in> To: reader-list@sarai.net Subject: [Reader-list] statement Date: Fri, 8 Mar 2002 15:03:14 +0000 (GMT) ‘FEELING COMPELLED TO DO THE BEST WE COULD ……….’ Statement in solidarity with the NBA and Arundhati Roy From student friends, Delhi University March is the month when exam ‘terror’ begins to grip students at Delhi University Despite that some of us have felt compelled to do the best we could to stand by the NBA and Arundhati Roy over the last couple of days. We have done this because (1) we have had a fairly continuous association with the valley, its beauty, its people and their 15 years old struggle (2) we have felt that the NBA, Arundhati Roy, the PUDR and others including all of us have the right to critique and rigorously scrutinise any judgment of the Supreme Court (3) we have felt that nit-picking aside, none of these critiques, including Arundhati’s, can be seriously considered abusive or contemptuous of the Supreme Court. For these reasons we felt that if Arundhati Roy were to be convicted on March 6th for contempt of court--as she indeed was in an unabashedly gendered judgment-- the conviction would be on flimsy grounds, frightening people from speaking out their minds rather than upholding the dignity of the court. Arundhati’s conviction, would try to silence her, the NBA and all those people’s movements fighting for creating a better, more humane tomorrow. Her conviction, in a way, would be ours as well. But there is more that brought us out on to the streets as volunteers and supporters, this time. Over the last few years, but especially since the happenings of September 11th and December 13th,we as students have felt walls coming up all around us, fear driving us into our homes and class rooms. State encouraged paranoia about terrorism and war with Pakistan, the sustained onslaught on the very meaning of education, attempts at enacting new laws such as POTO, and efforts to politically disarm labour in the name of ‘labour reforms’, have all been aimed at creating a submissive, uncritical population which would be too scared to challenge authority and power, making it easier for the state to push through its own economically unfettering and socially irresponsible agenda. The climax came with Godhra and the carnage of Muslims that followed all over Gujarat. This was no riot. It was straightforward Genocide. As human beings we had to say NO now, but we also felt that tomorrow we could be attacked for simply saying NO. The ABVP did, infact, carry out an unprecedented attack on our campus on March 1st last week. Gujarat for us has been the final straw. Exams or no exams we knew we had to stand by Arundhati and the NBA because if we didn’t fight now to protect our right to speak, tomorrow there may not be any dreamers left. And our dreams we hold really close to our hearts. So we came out to be with Arundhati and the NBA and we hope we will continue to have the courage and stamina to carry on in battle. ----- End forwarded message ----- cfm: yrs truly, former student and GoI bursary, DSE/DU _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold