Is India on
a Totalitarian Path? Arundhati Roy on Corporatism,
Nationalism and World’s Largest Vote
By Democracy Now!
"This new election is going to be [about] who the
corporates choose," Roy says, "[about] who is not
going to blink about deploying the Indian army
against the poorest people in this country, and
pushing them out to give over those lands, those
rivers, those mountains, to the major mining
corporations."
Roy won the Booker Prize in 1997 for her novel, "The
God of Small Things." Her other books include "An
Ordinary Person’s Guide to Empire" and "Field Notes
on Democracy: Listening to Grasshoppers."
AMY
GOODMAN:
Voting has begun in India in the largest election
the world has ever seen. About 815 million Indians
are eligible to vote over the next five weeks. The
number of voters in India is more than
two-and-a-half times the entire population of the
United States. The election will take place in nine
phases at over 900,000 polling stations across
India. Results will be known on May 16th.
Pre-election polls indicate Narendra Modi will
likely become India’s next prime minister. Modi is
the leader of the BJP, a
Hindu nationalist party. He serves—he served as the
chief minister of Gujarat, where one of India’s
worst anti-Muslim riots occurred in 2002 that left
at least a thousand people dead. After the
bloodshed, the U.S. State Department revoked Modi’s
visa, saying it could not grant a visa to any
foreign government official who, quote, "was
responsible for or directly carried out, at any
time, particularly severe violations of religious
freedom." Modi has never apologized for or explained
his actions at the time of the riots.
Modi’s main
challenger to become prime minister is Rahul Gandhi
of the ruling Congress party. Gandhi is heir to the
Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that’s governed India for much
of its post-independence history.
Several
smaller regional parties and the new anti-corruption
Common Man Party are also in the running. If no
single party wins a clear majority, the smaller
parties could play a crucial role in forming a
coalition government.
Well, today
we spend the hour with one of India’s most famous
authors and one of its fiercest critics, Arundhati
Roy. In 1997, Roy won the Booker Prize for her
novel, The God of Small Things. Since then,
she has focused on nonfiction. Her books include
An Ordinary Person’s Guide to Empire, Field
Notes on Democracy: Listening to Grasshoppers
and Walking with the Comrades. Her latest
book is titled Capitalism: A Ghost Story.
Nermeen Shaikh and I recently sat down with
Arundhati Roy when she was in New York. We began by
asking about her new book and the changes that have
taken place in India since it opened its economy in
the early ’90s.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
What we’re always told is that, you know,
there’s going to be a trickle-down revolution.
You know, that kind of opening up of the economy
that happened in the early '90s was going to
lead to an inflow of foreign capital, and
eventually the poor would benefit. So, you know,
being a novelist, I started out by standing
outside this 27-story building that belonged to
Mukesh Ambani, with its ballrooms and its six
floors of parking and 900 servants and helipads
and so on. And it had this 27-story-high
vertical lawn, and bits of the grass had sort of
fallen off in squares. And so, I said, "Well,
trickle down hasn't worked, but gush up has,"
because after the opening up of the economy, we
are in a situation where, you know, 100 of
India’s wealthiest people own—their combined
wealth is 25 percent of the
GDP, whereas more than 80 percent of its
population lives on less than half a dollar a
day. And the levels of malnutrition, the levels
of hunger, the amount of food intake, all
these—all these, you know, while India is shown
as a quickly growing economy, though, of course,
that has slowed down now dramatically, but at
its peak, what happened was that this new—these
new economic policies created a big middle
class, which, given the population of India,
gave the impression of—it was a universe of its
own, with, you know, the ability to consume cars
and air conditioners and mobile phones and all
of that. And that huge middle class came at a
cost of a much larger underclass, which was just
away from the arc lights, you know, which
wasn’t—which wasn’t even being looked at,
millions of people being displaced, pushed off
their lands either by big development project or
just by land which had ceased to be productive.
You had—I mean, we have had 250,000 farmers
committing suicide, which, if you even try to
talk about, let’s say, on the Indian television
channels, you actually get insulted, you know,
because it—
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
I mean, that’s an extraordinary figure. It’s a
quarter of a million farmers who have killed
themselves.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yeah, and let me say that that figure doesn’t
include the fact that, you know, if it’s a woman
who kills herself, she’s not considered a
farmer, or now they’ll start saying, "Oh, it
wasn’t suicide. Oh, it was depression. It was
this. It was that." You know?
AMY
GOODMAN:
But why are they killing themselves?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Because they are caught in a debt trap, you
know, because what happens is that the
entire—the entire face of agriculture has
changed. So people start growing cash crops, you
know, crops which are market-friendly, which
need a lot of input. You know, they need
pesticides. They need borewells. They need all
kinds of chemicals. And then the crop fails, or
the cost of the—that they get for their product
doesn’t match the amount of money they have to
put into it. And also you have situations like
in the Punjab, where—which was called the "rice
bowl of India." Punjab never used to grow rice
earlier, but now—
AMY
GOODMAN:
In the north of India.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yes, in the north. And it’s supposed to be
India’s richest agricultural state. But there
you have so many farmer suicides now, land going
saline. The, you know, people, ironically, the
way they commit suicide is by drinking the
pesticide, you know, which they need to—and
apart from the fact that the debt, the illness
that is being caused by all of this, in Punjab,
you have a train called the Cancer Express, you
know, where people just coming in droves to be
treated for illness and—you know, and—
AMY
GOODMAN:
And the train is called the Cancer Express?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yes, it’s called the Cancer Express. And—
AMY
GOODMAN:
Because of the pesticide that they’re exposed
to?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yeah, and they are. And this is the richest
state in India, you know—I mean agriculturally
the richest. And there’s a crisis there—never
mind in places like, you know, towards the west,
Maharashtra and Vidarbha, where, you know,
farmers are killing themselves almost every day.
AMY
GOODMAN:
I was wondering if you could read from
Capitalism: A Ghost Story.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
So, "In India, the 300 million of us who belong
to the new, post-IMF
'reforms' middle class—the market—live side by
side with the spirits of the nether world, the
poltergeists of dead rivers, dry wells, bald
mountains and denuded forests; the ghosts of
250,000 debt-ridden farmers who have killed
themselves, and the 800 million who have been
impoverished and dispossessed to make way for
us. And who survive on less than half a dollar,
which is 20 Indian rupees, a day.
“Mukesh
Ambani is personally worth $20 billion. He holds
a majority controlling share in Reliance
Industries Limited (RIL),
a company with a market capitalization of $47
billion and global business interests that
include petrochemicals, oil, natural gas,
polyester fibre, Special Economic Zones, fresh
food retail, high schools, life sciences
research and stem cell storage services.
RIL recently bought 95
per cent shares in Infotel, a TV consortium that
controls 27 TV news and entertainment channels
in almost every regional language.
“RIL
is one of a handful of corporations that run
India. Some of the others are the Tatas,
Jindals, Vedanta, Mittals, Infosys, Essar. Their
race for growth has spilled across Europe,
Central Asia, Africa and Latin America. Their
nets are cast wide; they are visible and
invisible, over-ground as well as underground.
The Tatas, for example, run more than 100
companies in 80 countries. They are one of
India’s oldest and largest private sector power
companies. They own mines, gas fields, steel
plants, telephone, cable TV and broadband
networks, and they run whole townships. They
manufacture cars and trucks, and own the Taj
Hotel chain, Jaguar, Land Rover, Daewoo, Tetley
Tea, a publishing company, a chain of
bookstores, a major brand of iodized salt and
the cosmetics giant Lakme—which I think they’ve
sold now. Their advertising tagline could easily
be: You Can’t Live Without Us.
"According to the rules of the Gush-Up Gospel,
the more you have, the more you can have."
AMY
GOODMAN:
Arundhati Roy, reading from her new book,
Capitalism: A Ghost Story. We’ll be back with
her in a minute.
[break]
AMY
GOODMAN:
This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org,
The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman,
as we continue our conversation with the
world-renowned author Arundhati Roy. Voting has just
begun in India in the largest election the world has
ever seen. About 815 million Indians are eligible to
vote over the next five weeks. The number of
eligible voters in India is larger than the total
population of the United States and European Union
combined. Arundhati Roy won the Booker Prize in 1997
for her novel, The God of Small Things. Her
latest book is called Capitalism: A Love Story
[sic]. Democracy Now!'s —
Capitalism: A Ghost Story. Democracy Now!'s
Nermeen Shaikh and I talked to Arundhati Roy about
the changes in India she describes in her latest
book and the implications for the elections.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
So, I’m talking about how, when you have this
kind of control over all business, over the
media, over its essential infrastructure,
electricity generation, information, everything,
then you just field your, you know, pet
politicians. And right now, for example, what’s
happening in India is that one of the reasons
that is being attributed to the slowdown of the
economy is the fact that there is a tremendous
resistance to all of this from the people on the
ground, from the people who are being displaced,
from the—and in the forests, it’s the Maoist
guerrillas; in the villages, it’s all kinds of
people’s movements—all of whom are of course
being called Maoist. And now, there is a—you
see, these economic policies—these new economic
policies cannot be implemented unless—except
with state—with coercive state violence. So you
have a situation where the forests are full of
paramilitary just burning villages, you know,
pushing people out of their homes, trying to
clear the land for mining companies to whom the
government has signed, you know, hundreds of
memorandums of understanding. Outside the
forests, too, this is happening. So there is a
kind of war which, of course, always existed in
India. There hasn’t been a year when the Indian
army hasn’t been deployed against its own
people. I mean, I’ll talk about that later—
AMY
GOODMAN:
Since when?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Since independence, since 1947, you know? But
now the plan is to deploy them. Now it’s the
paramilitary. But this new election is going to
be who is the person that the corporates choose,
who is not going to blink about putting the
Indian—about deploying the Indian army against
the poorest people in this country, you know,
and pushing them out to give over those lands,
those rivers, those mountains, to the major
mining corporations. So this is what we are
being prepared for now—the air force, the army,
going in into the heart of India now.
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
Before we go to the elections, could you—one of
the operations, the military operations, you
talk about is Operation Green Hunt.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yeah.
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
Could you explain what that is, when it started,
and who it targets?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Well, Operation Green Hunt, basically—you know,
in 2004, the current government signed a series
of memorandums of understanding with a number of
mining corporations and infrastructure
development companies to build dams, to do
mining, to build roads, to move India into the
space where, as the home minister at the time
said, he wanted 75 percent of India’s population
to live in cities, which is, you know,
moving—social engineering, really, moving 500
million people or so out of their homes. And so,
then they came up against this very, very
militant resistance from the ground. As I said,
in the forests, there were armed Maoist
guerrillas; outside the forest, there are
militant, you know, some call themselves
Gandhians, all kinds. There’s a whole diversity
of resistance but, although strategically they
had different ways of dealing with it, were all
fighting the same thing. So then, in the state
of Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Jharkhand, which are
where there are huge indigenous populations—
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
In central India.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
In central India—the first thing the government
did was to—very similar to what happened in
places like Peru and Colombia, you know, they
started to arm a section of the indigenous
population and create a vigilante army. It was
called the Salwa Judum in Chhattisgarh. The
Salwa Judum, along with local paramilitary, went
in and started decimating villages, like they
basically chased some 300,000 people out of the
forests, and some 600 villages were emptied. And
then the people began to fight back. And really,
this whole Salwa Judum experiment failed, at
which point they announced Operation Green Hunt,
where there was this official declaration of
war.
And
there was so much propaganda in the media. As I
explain to you now, the media is owned by the
corporations who have vested interests. So there
was this—you know, the prime minister came out
and said, "They are the greatest internal
security threat." And, you know, there was this
kind of conflation between the Maoists with
their ski caps and, you know, the
Lashkar-e-Taiba and all these people who are
threatening the idea of India.
What
the government wasn’t prepared for was the
fightback, not just from the people in the
forest, but even from a range of activists, a
range of people who were outraged by this. And,
you know, they passed these laws which meant
that anybody could be called a Maoist and, you
know, a threat to security. And thousands—even
today, there are thousands of people in jail
under sedition, under the Unlawful Activities
Prevention Act and so on. And—but that was
Operation Green Hunt. But that, too, ran
aground, because it’s very difficult terrain
and—you know, so now the idea is to deploy the
army. And now the corporations feel that this
past government hadn’t—didn’t have the nerve to
send out the army, that it blinked. And so—
AMY
GOODMAN:
This is the Congress party.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
The Congress party and its allies. So now all
the big corporations are backing the chief—the
three-times chief minister of the state of
Gujarat, the western state of Gujarat, who has
proved his mettle, you know, by being an
extremely hard and cold-blooded chief minister,
who is now—I mean, he is, of course, best known
for having presided over a pogrom against
Muslims in Gujarat.
AMY
GOODMAN:
So talk about who Modi is—I mean, this moves us
into the election of April; it’s going to be the
largest election in the world—who the contenders
are, who this man is who could well become the
head of India, who the United States has not
granted a visa to in years because of what
you’re describing.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Well, who is Narendra Modi? I think he’s, you
know, changing his—changing his idea of who he
himself is, you know, because he started out as
a kind of activist in this self-proclaimed
fascist organization called the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh, the RSS,
which was founded in 1925, who the heroes of the
RSS were Mussolini and
Hitler. Even today, you know, their—the bible of
the RSS was written by
a man called Golwalkar, you know, who says the
Muslims of India are like the Jews of Germany.
And so, they have a very clear idea of India as
a Hindu nation, very much like the Hindu version
of Pakistan.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Where, you’re saying, the Muslims should be
eradicated.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Where they should be either made to live as, I
think, second-class citizens and—
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
Or they should move to Pakistan.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yeah, or they should move to Pakistan. Or if
they don’t behave themselves, they should just
be killed, you know? So, this is a very old—you
know, Modi didn’t invent it. But he was—he and
even the former BJP
prime minister, Vajpayee, the former home
minister, Advani—all of these are members of the
RSS. The
RSS is an organization
which has 40,000 or 50,000 units across India,
extremely—I mean, they were at one point banned
because a former member of the
RSS killed Gandhi. But
now—you know, now they are of course not a
banned organization, and they work—
AMY
GOODMAN:
Killed Mahatma Gandhi.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yeah, assassinated him. But that—but, so, Modi
started out as a worker for the
RSS. He, of course,
came into great prominence in 2002, when he was
already the chief minister of Gujarat but had
been losing local municipal elections. And this
was at the time when the BJP
had run this big campaign in—they had demolished
the Babri Masjid, this old 14th century mosque,
in 1992. But they were now saying, "We want to
build a big Hindu temple in that place." And a
group of pilgrims who were returning from the
site where this temple was supposed to be built,
the train in which they were traveling, the
compartment was set on fire, and 58 Hindu
pilgrims were burned. Nobody knows, even today,
who set that compartment on fire and how it
happened. But, of course, it was immediately,
you know, blamed on Muslims. And then there
followed an unbelievable pogrom in Gujarat,
where more than a thousand people were lynched,
were burned alive. Women were raped. Their
abdomens were slit open. Their fetuses were
taken out and so on. And not only that—
AMY
GOODMAN:
These were Muslims.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
These were Muslims, by these Hindu mobs. And it
became very clear that they had lists, they had
support. The police were, you know, on side of
the mobs. And, you know, 100,000 Muslims were
driven from their homes. And this happened in
2002, this was 12 years ago. And subsequently,
they have been—you know, the killers themselves
have come on TV and boasted about their killing,
come on—in sting operations. But the more they
boasted, the more it became—I mean, for people
who thought other people would be outraged, in
fact it worked as election propaganda for Modi.
And
even now, though he took off his sort of saffron
turban and his red tikka and then put on a sharp
suit and became the development chief minister,
and yet, you know, when—recently, when he was
interviewed by Reuters and asked whether he
regretted what happened in 2002, he more or less
said, "You know, I mean, even if I were driving
a car and I drove over a puppy, I would feel
bad," you know? But he very expressly has
refused to take any responsibility or regret
what happened.
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
But that’s one of the extraordinary things that
you describe in the book, is that following
liberalization and the growth of this enormous
middle class, 300 million, there was a
simultaneous shift, gradual shift, to a more
right-wing, exclusive, intolerant conception of
India as a Hindu state. So, simultaneously, this
class embraces neoliberalism, the neoliberalism
in India, and also a more conservative Hindu
ideology. So can you explain how those two go
together, and how in fact, along with what you
said now about Modi, how that might play out in
this election?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
You know, whenever I speak in India, I say that
in the late '80s what the government did was
they opened two locks. One was the lock of the
free—of the market. The Indian market was not a
free market, not an open market; it was a
regulated market. They opened the lock of the
markets. And they opened the lock of the Babri
Masjid, which for years had been a disputed
site, you know, and they opened it. And both
those locks—the opening of both those locks
eventually led to two kinds of totalitarianisms.
One—and they both led to two kinds of
manufactured terrorisms. You know, so the lock
of the open market led to what are now being
described as the Maoist terrorist, which
includes all of us, you know, all of us. Anybody
who's speaking against this kind of economic
totalitarianism is a Maoist, whether you are a
Maoist or not. And the other, you know, the
Islamist terrorist. So, what happens is that
both the Congress party and the
BJP has different
prioritizations for which terrorist is on the
top of the list, you know? But what happens is
that whoever wins the elections, they always
have an excuse to continue to militarize.
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
So the two main parties who are contesting this
election are Congress, which is the ruling party
now, and the BJP, the
Bharatiya Janata Party, of which Narendra Modi
is the head. And you’ve said that the only
difference between them is that one does by day
what the other does by night, so as far as these
policies are concerned, you can see no
difference, irrespective of who wins.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Yeah, well, you know, when it comes down to the
wire, I agree with what I’ve said. And yet, you
know, there is something to be said for
hypocrisy, you know, for doing things by night,
because there’s a little bit of tentativeness
there; there isn’t this sureness of, you know,
"We want the Hindu nation, and we want the rule
of the corporations," and so on. But, yes, I
mean, what happens is that everybody knows. It’s
like whoever is in power gets 60 percent of the
cut, and whoever is not in power gets 40
percent. That’s how the corporates work. You
know, they have enough money to pay the
government and the opposition. And all these
institutions of democracy have been hollowed
out, and their shells have been placed back, and
we continue this sort of charade in some ways.
AMY
GOODMAN:
Indian writer Arundhati Roy, author of the new book,
Capitalism: A Ghost Story. India is in the
midst of the largest election in world history.
We’ll be back with Arundhati Roy in a minute.
[break]
AMY
GOODMAN:
This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org,
The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman.
Together with Nermeen Shaikh, we sat down with the
world-renowned author Arundhati Roy when she came to
the United States last week. Arundhati Roy won the
Booker Prize in 1997 for her novel The God of
Small Things. She begins with a reading from
her new book, Capitalism: A Ghost Story.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
"Which of us sinners was going to cast the first
stone? Not me, who lives off royalties from
corporate publishing houses. We all watch Tata
Sky, we surf the net with Tata Photon, we ride
in Tata taxis, we stay in Tata Hotels, sip our
Tata tea in Tata bone china and stir it with
teaspoons made of Tata Steel. We buy Tata books
in Tata bookshops. We eat Tata salt. We are
under siege.
"If the
sledgehammer of moral purity is to be the
criterion for stone-throwing, then the only
people who qualify are those who have been
silenced already. Those who live outside the
system; the outlaws in the forests or those
whose protests are never covered by the press,
or the well-behaved dispossessed, who go from
tribunal to tribunal, bearing witness and giving
testimony."
But
this—you know, I’m talking about this because,
as I said, you know, for the poor, India has the
army and the paramilitary and the air force and
the displacement and the police and the
concentration camps. But what are you going to
do to the rest? And there, I talk about the
exquisite art of corporate philanthropy, you
know, and how these very mining corporations and
the people who are involved in, really, the
pillaging of not just the poor, but of the
mountains, of the rivers, of everything, are
now—have now turned their attention to the arts,
you know? So, apart from the fact that, of
course, they own the TV channels and they fund
all of that, they, for example, fund the Jaipur
Literary Festival—Literature Festival, where the
biggest writers in the world come, and they
discuss free speech, and the logo is shining out
there behind you. But you don’t hear about the
fact that in the forest the bodies are piling
up, you know? The public hearings where people
have the right to ask these corporations what is
being done to their environment, to their homes,
they are just silenced. They are not allowed to
speak. There are collusions between these
companies and the police, the Salwa Judum, which
I was talking about earlier.
And,
you know, the whole—the whole way in which
capitalism works is not just as simple as we
seem—as it seems to be. We don’t even understand
the long-term game, you know? And, of course,
America is where it began, in some ways, with
foundations like the Rockefeller and the Ford
and the Carnegie. And what was—what was their
idea? You know? How did it start? It was—now it
seems like part of your daily life, like
Coca-Cola or coffee or something, but in fact it
was a very conceptual leap of the business
imagination, when a small percentage of the
massive profits of these steel magnates and so
on went into the forming of these foundations,
which then began to control public policy. You
know, they really were the people who gave the
seed money for the U.N., for the
CIA, for the Foreign
Relations Council. And how did they then—when
U.S. capitalism started to move outwards, to
look for resources outwards, what roles did the
Rockefeller and Ford and all these play? You
know, how did—for example, the Ford Foundation
was very, very crucial in the imagining of a
society like America which lived on credit, you
know? And that idea has now been imported to
places like Bangladesh, India, in the form of
microcredit, in the form of—and that, too, has
led to a lot of distress, to a lot of killing,
this kind of microcapitalism.
AMY
GOODMAN:
These corporate foundations you talk about, how
are they evidenced in India?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Which ones? You mean—
AMY
GOODMAN:
Like the Ford, the Carnegie, the Rockefeller.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Rockefeller. Well, you know, I mean, in this,
I’ve talked about the role not just in India,
but even in the U.S. For example, how do they
even—how do they deal with things like political
people’s movements? How did they fragment the
civil rights movement? I’ll just read you a part
about what happened with the civil rights
movement.
“Having
worked out how to manage governments, political
parties, elections, courts, the media and
liberal opinion, the neoliberal establishment
faced one more challenge: how to deal with the
growing unrest, the threat of ’people’s power.’
How do you domesticate it? How do you turn
protesters into pets? How do you vacuum up
people’s fury and redirect it into a blind
alley?
“Here
too, foundations and their allied organizations
have a long and illustrious history. A revealing
example is their role in defusing and
deradicalizing the Black Civil Rights movement
in the United States in the 1960s and the
successful transformation of Black Power into
Black Capitalism.
“The
Rockefeller Foundation, in keeping with J.D.
Rockefeller’s ideals, had worked closely with
Martin Luther King Sr. (father of Martin Luther
King Jr). But his influence waned with the rise
of the more militant organizations—the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
and the Black Panthers. The Ford and Rockefeller
Foundations moved in. In 1970, they donated $15
million to 'moderate' black organizations,
giving people grants, fellowships, scholarships,
job training programs for dropouts and seed
money for black-owned businesses. Repression,
infighting and the honey trap of funding led to
the gradual atrophying of the radical black
organizations.
"Martin
Luther King made the forbidden connections
between Capitalism, Imperialism, Racism and the
Vietnam War. As a result, after he was
assassinated, even his memory became toxic to
them, a threat to public order. Foundations and
Corporations worked hard to remodel his legacy
to fit a market-friendly format. The Martin
Luther King Center for Nonviolent Social Change,
with an operational grant of $2 million, was set
up by, among others, the Ford Motor Company,
General Motors, Mobil, Western Electric, Procter
& Gamble, U.S. Steel and Monsanto. The Center
maintains the King Library and Archives of the
Civil Rights Movement. Among the many programs
the King Center runs have been projects that
work—quote, 'work closely with the United States
Department of Defense, the Armed Forces
Chaplains Board and others,' unquote. It
co-sponsored the Martin Luther King Jr. Lecture
Series called—and I quote—’The Free Enterprise
System: An Agent for Non-violent Social
Change.’"
It did
the same thing in South Africa. They did the
same thing in Indonesia, you know, with
the—General Suharto’s war, which all of us now
know about because of The Act of Killing
in Indonesia. And very much so in even places
like India, where they move in and they begin to
NGO-ize, say, the
feminist movement, you know? So you have a
feminist movement, which was very radical, very
vibrant, suddenly getting funded, and not
doing—it’s not that the funded organizations are
doing terrible things; they are doing important
things. They are doing—you know, whether it’s
working on gender rights, whether it’s with sex
workers or AIDS. But
they will, in their funding, gradually make a
little border between any movement which
involves women, which is actually threatening
the economic order, and these issues, you know?
So, in the forest, when I went and spent weeks
with the guerrillas, you had 90,000 women who
were members of the Adivasi Krantikari Mahila
Sangathan, this revolutionary indigenous women’s
organization, but they are threatening the
corporations, they are threatening the economic
architecture of the world, by refusing to move
out of there. So they’re not considered
feminists, you know? So how you domesticate
something and turn it into this little—what in
India we call paltu shers, you know,
which is a tame tiger, like a tiger on a leash,
that is pretending to be resistance, but it
isn’t.
NERMEEN
SHAIKH:
But before we conclude, Arundhati Roy, you have
not written a novel—you’re probably sick of
being asked this question—since The God of
Small Things. And you said that you may
return to novel writing now as a more subversive
way of being political. So could you either talk
about what you intend to write or what you mean
by that?
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
I’ve been writing straightforward political
essays for 15—almost 15 years now. And often,
they are interventions in a situation that seems
to be closing down, you know, whether it was on
the dam or whether it was about privatization or
whether it was about Operation Green Hunt. And I
feel now that, you know, in some ways, through
those very urgent political essays, which are
all interconnected—they are not just separate
issues, they are all interconnected, and they
are, together, presenting a worldview. Now I
feel that I don’t have anything direct to say
without repeating myself, but I think what—you
know, that understanding, which was not just an
understanding I had in the past and I was just
preaching to my readers, you know; it was I was
learning as I wrote and as I grew. And I feel
that fiction now will complicate that more,
because I think the way I think has become more
complicated than nonfiction, straightforward
nonfiction, can deal with. You know, so I need
to break down those proteins and write in a way
which—I don’t have to write overtly politically,
because I don’t believe that—I mean, I think
what we are made up of, what our
DNA is and how we are
wired, will come out in literature without
making a great effort to raise slogans. And—
AMY
GOODMAN:
Before we end, and before you come out with this
next novel that we’ll ask you to read next time
when you come to the United States, I was
wondering if you could read from an earlier
essay. It’s an excerpt that you read at the New
School, when hundreds of people came out to see
you here recently.
ARUNDHATI
ROY:
Well, it was—it was really the first—in a way,
the first political essay I wrote, anyway, after
The God of Small Things, and it was an
essay called "The End of Imagination," when the
Indian government conducted a series of nuclear
tests in 1998.
"In
early May (before the bomb), I left home for
three weeks. I thought I would return. I had
every intention of returning. Of course, things
haven’t worked out quite the way I planned." Of
course, by which I meant that India just wasn’t
the same anymore.
“While
I was away, I met a friend of mine whom I have
always loved for, among other things, her
ability to combine deep affection with a
frankness that borders on savagery.
“’I’ve
been thinking about you,’ she said, 'about
The God of Small Things — what's in it,
what’s over it, under it, around it, above
it...’
“She
fell silent for a while. I was uneasy and not at
all sure that I wanted to hear the rest of what
she had to say. She, however, was sure that she
was going to say it. 'In this last year,' she
said, 'less than a year actually—you've had too
much of everything—fame, money, prizes,
adulation, criticism, condemnation, ridicule,
love, hate, anger, envy, generosity—everything.
In some ways it’s a perfect story. Perfectly
baroque in its excess. The trouble is that it
has, or can have, only one perfect ending.’ Her
eyes were on me, bright with a slanting, probing
brilliance. She knew that I knew what she was
going to say. She was insane.
" She
was going to say that nothing that happened to
me in the future could ever match the buzz of
this. That the whole of the rest of my life was
going to be vaguely unsatisfying. And,
therefore, the only perfect ending to the story
would be death. My death.
“The
thought had occurred to me too. Of course it
had. The fact that all this, this global
dazzle—these lights in my eyes, the applause,
the flowers, the photographers, the journalists
feigning a deep interest in my life (yet
struggling to get a single fact straight), the
men in suits fawning over me, the shiny hotel
bathrooms with endless towels—none of it was
likely to happen again. Would I miss it? Had I
grown to need it? Was I a fame-junkie? Would I
have withdrawal symptoms?
“I told
my friend there was no such thing as a perfect
story. I said in any case hers was an external
view of things, this assumption that the
trajectory of a person’s happiness, or let’s say
fulfillment, had peaked (and now must trough)
because she had accidentally stumbled upon
'success.' It was premised on the unimaginative
belief that wealth and fame were the mandatory
stuff of everybody’s dreams.
“You’ve
lived too long in New York, I told her. There
are other worlds. Other kinds of dreams. Dreams
in which failure is feasible. Honorable. And
sometimes even worth striving for. Worlds in
which recognition is not the only barometer of
brilliance or human worth. There are plenty of
warriors that I know and love, people far more
valuable than myself, who go to war each day,
knowing in advance that they will fail. True,
they are less 'successful' in the most vulgar
sense of the word, but by no means less
fulfilled.
“The
only dream worth having, I told her, is to dream
that you will live while you’re alive and die
only when you’re dead.
“’Which
means exactly what?’
"I
tried to explain, but didn’t do a very good job
of it. Sometimes I need to write to think. So I
wrote it down for her on a paper napkin. And
this is what I wrote: To love. To be loved.
To never forget your own insignificance. To
never get used to the unspeakable violence and
the vulgar disparity of life around you. To seek
joy in the saddest places. To pursue beauty to
its lair. To never simplify what is complicated
or complicate what is simple. To respect
strength, never power. Above all, to watch. To
try and understand. To never look away. And
never, never to forget."
AMY
GOODMAN:
Arundhati Roy, reading from her essay, "The End of
Imagination." She is the author of the new book,
Capitalism: A Ghost Story. To read an
excerpt of that new book, you can go to
democracynow.org. We will also link there to our
full
archive of interviews with Arundhati Roy, as
well as her speeches.
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