November 01, 2015
Array

Artists Express Concern Over Alarming Rise of Intolerance

The following is the statement issued by Artists Alert: 2015, on October 27, 2015 THE artist community of India stands in firm solidarity with the actions of our writers who have relinquished awards and positions, and spoken up in protest against the alarming rise of intolerance in the country. We condemn and mourn the murders of MM Kalburgi, Narendra Dabholkar and Govind Pansare, rationalists and free thinkers whose voices have been silenced by rightwing dogmatists but whose ‘presence’ must ignite our resistance to the conditions of hate being generated around us. We will never forget the battle we fought for our pre-eminent artist MF Husain who was hounded out of the country and died in exile. We remember the rightwing invasion and dismantling of freedoms in one of the country’s best known art schools in Baroda. We witness the present government’s appointment of grossly unqualified persons to the FTII Society and its disregard of the ongoing strike by the students of this leading institute. We see a writer like Perumal Murugan being intimidated into declaring his death as a writer, a matter of dire shame in any society. While the prime minister of the country has been conspicuously reticent in his response to the recent events, the reactions of BJP ministers in his government reveal their ignorance and prejudice. Mahesh Sharma, minister of state for culture, has made abhorrent comments about mob lynching and murder. His remarks suggesting that writers should stop writing to prove their point are alarming – empowered as he is to take policy decisions in the domain of culture. Arun Jaitley, minister of finance, information & broadcasting, has mocked the actions of our respected writers as a manufactured ‘paper rebellion’. He asks for scrutiny of the political and ideological affiliations of those who are protesting. To these and other such provocations, there is a clear answer: while the actual affiliations of the protesting writers and artists, scholars and journalists may be many and varied, their individual and collective voices are gaining cumulative strength. It is this that the ruling party will have to reckon with: the protestors’ declared disaffiliation from a government that encourages marauding outfits to enforce a series of regressive commands in this culturally diverse country. The scale of social violence and fatal assaults on ordinary citizens (as in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh; Udhampur, Jammu and Kashmir; Faridabad, Haryana) is escalating. The contemptuous comments about the religious minorities and dalits made by those within the government confirm that there is little difference between the RSS-BJP mainstream and supposed ‘fringe’ elements. The perfunctory warnings and regrets issued by ruling party ideologues – to defend the agendas of ‘development’ and ‘governance’ advanced by Mr Narendra Modi – are merely expedient. The Sangh Parivar and its Hindutva forces operating through their goon brigades form the support base of this government; they are all complicit in the attempts to impose conformity of thought, belief and practice. The ideology of the ruling party has revealed its contempt for creative and intellectual work; bigotry and censorship will only grow. As in the past, we must challenge the divisive forces through varied forms of appeal and protest, articulation and refusal. Our demand can be nothing less than that the entire range of constitutional rights and freedoms of the citizens of this country – freedom of expression and speech, right to dissent and exert difference in life choices including culture and religion – be ensured. A government that does not tolerate difference, that does not safeguard the lives and interests of its marginalised and vulnerable citizens, loses its legitimacy in a democratic polity. We are facing this situation now, already. Representative names from among the signatories to the protest statement include: KG Subramanyan, artist, Baroda Krishen Khanna, artist, Delhi Arpita Singh, artist, Delhi Anjolie Ela Menon, artist, Delhi Gulammohammed Sheikh, artist, Baroda Anish Kapoor, artist, London Vivan Sundaram, artist, Delhi V Vishwanadhan,artist, Paris/Chennai Jatin Das, artist, Delhi Jyotindra Jain, art historian, Delhi Balan Nambiar, artist, Bangalore Geeta Kapur, art critic, Delhi Nalini Malani, artist, Mumbai Sudhir Patwardhan,artist, Mumbai Sadanand Menon, photographer, critic, Chennai Ram Rahman, photographer, Delhi R Sivakumar, art historian, Shantiniketan Pushpamala N, artist, Bangalore Vasudha Thozhur, artist, Delhi Sheela Gowda, artist, Bangalore Atul Dodiya, artist, Mumbai Anita Dube, artist, Delhi Ranjit Hoskote, art critic, Mumbai Subodh Gupta, artist, Delhi Jahangir Jani, artist, Mumbai Shireen Gandhi, gallerist, Mumbai Kirtana Thangavelu, art historian, Hyderabad