After bagging the Booker for The God of Small Things in 1997, Arundhati Roy made a life-altering decision: “to postpone reading Don DeLillo’s big book” about nuclear and bodily waste in order to make time for “reports on drainage”. This was a swipe at Mahatma Gandhi, a curmudgeonly champion and later a begrudging reformer of the caste system, who could do no better than deride the American writer Katherine Mayo’s criticisms of casteism and misogyny in Mother India as a “drain inspector’s report”. Roy has the obverse habit of mind: bring on the drain inspectors’ reports.
One suspects she has still not got around to plodding through DeLillo’s Underworld. What a shame, you might say, but rest assured that in her case, it was a sensible choice. For the past 30 years or so, perhaps more so than any other denizen of her class, Roy has ventriloquised the rage of the rabble. What’s more, hers has been an admirably dependable dissidence, all the more welcome in a landscape where liberals such as the columnists Ashutosh Varshney and Pratap Bhanu Mehta turn coat at the drop of a hat; both have since returned to their original anti-Hindu nationalist positions, the latter only after he was hoisted with his own petard when Hindu nationalists forced his resignation from Ashoka University. Roy, by contrast, has been a paragon of clarity, nothing short of a national treasure. ¡No pasarán! has been her motto, and it has largely served her well.
Until now. Smarting from his recent humbling at the polls, India’s Hindu nationalist ruler Narendra Modi has decided to lash out at his long-standing critics. Roy, it seems, is enemy number one. A speech she made in 2010 has been strenuously unearthed, on the strength of which she has been charged under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act, which permits detention without trial. Accordingly, Delhi’s top mandarin has given the city police the green light to prosecute Roy. Will she be arrested? We don’t know yet. What is clear, though, is that the celebrations by liberals following the election have been premature. So long as Modi is in power, his reduced majority notwithstanding, the war on free speech and religious minorities will continue.
Roy’s small-minded critics can tar her with the brush of “anti-Indian” sentiment all they like, but, as she has time and again made clear, it is a higher nationalism that she tenaciously answers to. Indeed, there can be no greater act of patriotism than to point to the enormities in one’s own land. Lesser mortals, of course, would much prefer to sweep injustices under the carpet.
Roy’s cardinal sin, it appears, was to argue that “Kashmir has never been an integral part of India”, a self-evident truth to any right-thinking person. A third of the majority-Muslim region is, in fact, directly administered by Pakistan. As for the part that falls in India, it has alternated between military, presidential, and scarcely democratic rule; in other words, Kashmiris have been denied the free and fair representation accorded to their brethren in the Hindi belt. To all intents and purposes, Delhi’s rulers have treated the place as an internal colony, subjecting its people to the strappado, pellet guns, internet blackouts, and — until 2019 — even different laws. But in stating the obvious, Roy has been consigned by both of India’s main parties, the press and the bien-pensant bourgeoisie to that circle of hell reserved — in her words — for “hysterical, lying, anti-national harridans”.
Her critical perspective, one surmises, owes to her intellectual formation. Born in Shillong in India’s forested and tribal northeastern enclave — a world away from the Hindi heartland — Roy perforce could not partake in the democratic self-congratulation of the country’s ruling class. This was a land — in nationalist lexicon — infested with insurgencies. The governance of these areas was for long given over to Delhi’s emissaries, typically paramilitary outfits operating a shoot-on-sight policy.
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SubscribeSo, Arundhati Roy supports a violent insurrection against the government of the Indian state of Kerala? She does not like the communists in charge of Kerala, but also does not like consumerism or growth? In the meantime, Modi wants to throw her in jail for saying Kashmir isn’t properly Indian (or words to that effect)? Do I have that all right? She sounds a bit like an Indian version of an Islington liberal Corbyn supporter.
Honestly, I feel like there is maybe an interesting character profile to be done, but this article is terribly disorganized and rather assuming I know more about Roy and Indian domestic politics than I do.
You have got it right!
Here is an interesting fact. Not opinion, fact
The Kashmiri muslims whose “independence” she supports , exterminated the Hindu minority who were the original inhabitants of the region. Not some “radicals” or “terrorists”, ordinary muslims who were neighbours of those Hindus
Hundreds of thousands of those Hindus, vanished within the space of weeks, completely genocided to oblivion as a community. If lucky, then they ended up impoverished, penniless in a camp far from what was their home for centuries. If not, well….
Note that Roy, or her fellow intellectuals, don’t seem to have much to say about what has happened to Hindus and other minorities, or to women’s rights,in every single part of pre 1947 British India, without exception, where muslims happened to be in a majority.
So, just be glad you Westerners are not the only one’s blessed with “liberals”.
Anil is so predictable in his rants and raves against the Indian people and nation, that he really needs to form his Oxford version of the Monster Raving Loony Party( expat chapter). He can spew his lies, agit-prop etc from such a forum.
Apologies to the real MRLP who I am sure are more decent than this venomous Tamanny Haller of the Marxist globalist groves of academe.
His fundamental desire is to contrive any charges against the present Prime Minister, ignoring the fact that the charges against Roy are from 2010, when his Congress buddies ruled the roost. Also the legal system in India is not of his favourite Maoist version but an independent judiciary in the best traditions of Western institutions( in fact a lot inspired by the American Constitution)
But UH- at this pace of featuring an absolute disaster of a columnist on India, I am really not wasting precious foreign exchange in renewing my subscription.
Last but not least- I am curious about Anil’s CCP links-given his great overall admiration for Maoism in India. Of course his proximity to Communist party of India boss is well known.
I’m not impressed by “i’m going to take my ball home” reactions. Those of us who aren’t familiar with Indian politics find counter-arguments from those who are to be useful. Would you rather Anil’s viewpoint went unchallenged?
It is rather futile to try and counter arguments such as “it is safer to be a cow than it is to be a woman” in a country like India where it’s muslims who have demanded backward religious laws that are horrible for women, such as “triple talaq” and these same “liberals” find nothing to criticise about it
And just as White people who died in large numbers to end slavery are tired of the endless “racism” rhetoric, Hindus are just fed up.
Hindus gave sanctuary and freedom to every faith – Parsis, Jain’s, Sikhs, Buddhist, even Jews when they were persecuted virtually everywhere. And this is in stark contrast to how these minorities were treated, where the “other” religion was in a majority.
I think we would rather just take our ball home at this point.
Like LL I also look for your contributions on Indian politics about which I know nothing.
If this author was trying to praise Roy he failed. My impression of her is entirely in line with John Murray’s
Comments to both of you held back by UH.
Critiquing your own country, supposedly a democratic and free one, is not “ranting and raving” about the nation. India is a fascinating country ,but its caste system resembles 1500 year old series of Jim Crow laws, only worse, sanctified by religion and supported by many so-called Indian nationalists.
It’s kind of strange, isn’t it that charges from 2010 are now being unearthed 14 years later to prosecute (persecute would be more like it) Arundhati Roy. She may be inconsistent and have many flaws – but she’s absolutely right about Kashmir, which has a very different historical tradition, a largely Muslim population and doesn’t even form part of the Indian subcontinent.
Maybe you should educate yourself on the plight of Kashmiri Pandits and how Kashmir was violently Islamised.
The agenda of someone who questions whether Kashmir is even a part of India betray his leanings.
I have countered this author several times. I suggest you look up these to get the drift.
To summate in short, Anil represents a global Marxist identitarian cabal of opinion formers, who strangely finds a place on Unherd, which I had thought was not the Guardian or the rest of the legacy media. His views echo a specific political formation which is hard left, neo-Marxist and against any form of Westphalian nation- state formations which are opposed to splintering societies and polities on the basis of fractured and fragmented identities.
It is not possible to summarize a very complex phenomenon called Indian politics in just a paragraph or two especially as many here are not familiar with either Indian history or its complicated political-cultural landscape. If you wish to see parallels, the closest I can suggest is to France, and the rise of the RN. Perhaps Italy to some extent.
Else feel free to engage with me elsewhere if you have further specific queries, as I have indicated on my previous ripostes to Anil’s UH contributions.
( This is not posting as a response for whatever peculiar reason- Lancashire Lad and Martin)
I admire your energetic ripostes- but don’t always empathise with your rebuttals
“Anil represents a global Marxist identitarian cabal of opinion formers”. This formulation hardly indicates that you are some neutral, balanced observer. It seems to be just name calling rather than arguing with anything that she specifically says. Someone who identifies as a Marxist might in any case be making a particular point which has justification. But in any she explicitly says that she is not a Marxist, although she has sympathised with insurrection Maoist groups (not hidden). Do you have any evidence that Roy is trying to destroy India as a state, rather than having strong views on how its governance could be improved, especially for the poor? Couldn’t you quite as easily argue that Modi, in terms of appealing only to one section of India society, is the person using division as a main political weapon?
In your own terms, India isn’t a nation state simply speaking. France has a much more homogenous population as though with many recent immigrants, and in no way resembles India’s complexity. You talk about fractured identity – it’s extraordinary that you don’t recognise to recognise the immense complexity of your own country and the needs to recognise the rights of all groups within it, not just Hindu nationalists. (The whole concept of “Hindu nationalism” – or even Hinduism itself as a separate coherent religion with some kind of doctrine – is a reaction to Western rule and ideas in any case, just as much as Marxism is).
Mr Fisher, start by reading some history on India. Percival Spear is not a bad starting point or R.C Mazumdar. Your comments above on caste show you to be staggeringly ignorant. Obviously you have not read Rajni Kothari, heard of the Mandal movement or followed the trends of Indian politics since 1989. You seem to be trapped in some kind of Raj sunset groove of 1947 if that is what you know about India. Perhaps you don’t even know that PM Modi is himself from the lower castes or that President Murmu and President Kovind before that are from the Scheduled Tribes and Castes community respectively ( both were appointed under BJP governments).
Kindly refrain from misquoting me. I merely stated that there are trends in France and French politics resembling Indian politics of today. I presume you know that France has a huge Islamic immigrant population from its former colonies. In that sense India which underwent Islamic conquest for almost 1000 years is similar in having a community which has allegiances elsewhere in sizeable presence.
Anyone who uses tropes like ” Hindu nationalism” misunderstands both present and past Indian history. Frankly you show your true colours when you deny Hinduism is even a coherent religion. What are you? Sunni ideologue? ISI bot? Or Corbyn script writer? Shameful comments.
As regards Arundhati Roy, your ignorance again is staggering. There is lots of writing out there to show where her sympathies lie. But to you and your ilk, it won’t be seen as you choose to live in denial of the realities.
It is strange, is it not Sayantani G, that many of those in the ‘West’ who sneer at the caste system (who was it who said that it was no system at all or rather many systems mixed together?) have not noticed that their own societies are fast becoming caste based (One strong marker of caste being a strong preoccupation on what one is NOT).
The caste division in the ‘West’ is breaking between the credentialled and the deplorables. What else can Trump Derangement Syndrome be but a pure example of caste hatred?
Those who sneer are usually those with stereotypical notions of retaining their domination long after their sell by date.
TDS is very similar to MDS( Modi Derangement Syndrome) and it is no great surprise that to a great extent the symptoms of both are exhibited by the same kind…
Roy could read Biochemical Engineering at University College, london and design sewage treatment systems. A Consultant Surgeon said to me ” Clean water had done more to improve peoples health than all the medicine in the World”.
Move on, Pratinav. The world has moved on. You have begun to sound like a record stuck in a groove.
Vijay Kant, do you curate a collection great Hindustani music on youtube? Or have I confused you with someone else?
Sorry, wrong number!
Excellent piece, Pratinav. Thank you for a fascinating and critical evaluation of Arundhati Roy.
It is disappointing to see so many disapproving comments from Indians. I don’t know if they live in India or are NRIs. At any rate, they seem to think anything that does not read like a Soviet government press release, extolling the motherland’s latest achievement, as treasonable. This is silly and self-defeating.
No country is perfect. It’s only by debating its imperfections openly that positive, and occasionally painful, progress can be made.
Use those Soviet adjectives on yourself instead of demonizing Indians. Of course there are imperfections in India, but we don’t need charlatans who want to Balkanise India like Anil or Arundhati Roy , funded from abroad by Soros Inc with agendas and axes to grind, to wade in.
I am sure you have enough problems in the UK to worry about, so reserve your missionary zeal for those issues.