Goodbye, apolitical fundamentalism

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14 November 2007. The streets of Calcutta reverberated with the sound of the protesting footsteps of 60,000 ordinary citizens. The mammoth rally was organised to condemn the violence that had been unleashed by the state government on the peasantry of Singur and Nandigram. West Bengal's civil society, lulled into slumber by 30 years of Left Front rule, finally appeared to be waking up. At the colourful mahamichchil (great rally), with lips sealed with black bands and wearing badges crying Shame!, the citizens of Calcutta stood up for the assailed victims of Singur and Nandigram – a direct reflection of this re-awakened conscience.

The poets-litterateurs-artists-playwrights-filmmakers and intellectuals began voicing their protests, one by one. Many of them gave up comfortable, relatively laid back lives after three long decades to come out onto the streets. Many others, who till now had stayed far away from rallies and meetings, agitations or political debates, became active in the civil-society movement, expressing solidarity with the fighting farmers. Overnight, various platforms sprouted, all of which took place without a political party or bloc lending a hand, and unsupported by any political ideology. This citizens' uprising appeared spontaneous, bypassing the winding alleys of party politics.

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Himal Southasian
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