Wide screen devices may view this page better by clicking here

23 September 2009

Facebook   Twitter

Join the Socialist Party Join us today!

Printable version Printable version

Facebook   Twitter

Listening to Grasshoppers by Arundhati Roy

Reviewed by Clare Doyle

Reading Arundhati Roy's collection of lectures and articles about India could make you want to weep, or to emit the 'feral howl' she herself is tempted to resort to. Her main aim is to reveal the sordid truth about the death, destruction and devastating injustice that underlies the so-called 'democracy' and 'progress' of which India's 'leaders' and friends abroad (especially Washington) tend to boast.

The book takes its title from the swarming of grasshoppers - an ominous sign - that preceded the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians by the Turkish state in 1915. She urges the Indian people to see that bigger horrors are ahead even than the Gujarati 'riots' of 2002, unless big changes can be carried through.

She exposes the devotion of India's two main parties - Congress and the BJP - to neo-liberalism in the period following the attack on the Twin Towers in New York and the slavish adoption of a 'war on terror' in India (and Kashmir).

She exposes the hypocrisy and downright villainy of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), in control for decades of West Bengal, when it uses state forces and its own armed gangs to drive poor farmers from their land in the interests of multinational corporations.

She shows how Hindu nationalist pogroms and mindless terrorism wreak havoc with people's lives and how official responses bear little resemblance to justice.

Arundhati's picture of her beloved India is of a place where human life hangs on a very thin thread; even its rivers, mountains and forests are under attack. Not one major river now reaches the sea because of bungled, ostentatious and expensive irrigation projects.

Whole mountain tops are being sliced off in the pursuit of profit through bauxite and other mineral exploitation - by some of the world's most notorious corporate monsters, all with the willing assistance of the state.

The invasion of areas inhabited for millennia by people who know how to sustain life and nature is akin to the rape of South America by the European colonialists of the 18th century.

Arundhati Roy has pointed to the abject failure of Non Governmental Organisations to overcome the dire plight of the most downtrodden and oppressed.

She exposes the inadequacies of Gandhism, as well as accusing Non-Governmental Organisations of undermining people's will to organise and fight back. She sees how armed struggle becomes the only course of action left to people without the power to defend themselves and to run their own communities. One quarter of India's vast land is actually beyond the control of central and local governments.

Struggle against oppression

Brought up in the 'Communist'-run state of Kerala, Arundhati Roy shares the sentiments that still lie under the surface of Indian society - for struggle against oppression and for a real equality of opportunity in life for all.

The country's new middle class as well as the rich come in for a verbal hammering and a warning of the explosive conflicts they are creating through their drive to maximise profit.

Roy has carried out her own courageous campaigning work, especially on the issue of environmental destruction, but also on issues such as the slaughter of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

She has been not only viciously attacked in the country's media (which she also describes in ugly detail) but has spent time in prison for her brave campaigning. She points to the "systematic dismantling" since the early 1990s, "of laws that protect workers' rights and the fundamental rights of ordinary people" all under the relentless pressure from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the Asia Development Bank.

A powerful author and speaker, Roy plays an important role in exposing the crimes of capitalism - the flagrant everyday injustices being wrought in India on a sickeningly massive scale.

But she stops short of saying what can be done to right these wrongs and fill the huge political vacuum in Indian society.

The situation she describes is crying out for a new mass organised force of workers and poor people with representatives and leaders fully accountable to them and living as they do. The way to replace the gangsters, murderers and hypocrites at the top of Indian society is to conduct a struggle against the system of capitalism itself, root and branch. The most genuine form of democracy in India would be a socialist society. Arundhati Roy is an ally in the struggle for such a society.

Donate to the Socialist Party

Finance appeal

The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.

The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.

The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.

Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.

We therefore urgently appeal to all our viewers to click here to donate to our Fighting Fund.

Please donate here.

All payments are made through a secure server.

My donation £

 

Your message: 

 


In The Socialist 23 September 2009:

No cuts in public services

Prepare political challenge to cuts agenda


Education

Higher education - cuts cuts cuts!

Universities in crisis - Join Socialist Students

Defend education - stop the £2 billion cuts in spending


TUC

Brown declares war on workers

TUC congress: Anger on the fringes, inaction at the top


War and occupation

Afghanistan: An unwinnable war


Postal workers strike

Postal workers strike as national ballot continues

Warrington mail centre


Vestas

Vestas workers determined to continue fight for jobs


Youth fight for jobs

Youth unemployment hits record level

Future Jobs Fund - massaging the figures


Socialist Party news and analysis

Campaign for a Salford workers' MP

Energy rip-off

Threat to Coventry homeless


International socialist news

Socialist Party MEP denounces "campaign of fear" on Lisbon Treaty

Workers' fightback grows in Italy


Socialist Party workplace news

Engineering construction: Stewards' forum recommends bosses' offer Workers should reject!

Portsmouth shipbuilders vote for strike

Bosses ask JCB workers for sacrifice

Battle over pensions means strike threat at Corus

Liverpool bin workers score victory


Socialist Party reviews

Listening to Grasshoppers by Arundhati Roy

The Dirty Thirty - Heroes of the Miners' Strike

The Anti-Flag album 'The People or the Gun'


 

Home   |   The Socialist 23 September 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate  




Related links:

India:

triangleIndia's health system in meltdown under Modi's misrule

triangleFilm Review: The White Tiger

triangleBradford Socialist Party: Farmers revolt in India

triangleWest London Socialist Party: Has Modi finally met his match in India's farmers?

State:

triangleBritish state absolves itself from killings during 'the Troubles'

triangleStop Israeli state brutality

triangleIrish police aid strike-breaking at Debenhams store in Dublin

Capitalism:

triangleCovid, capitalism and mental health

triangleVote TUSC to oppose sleazy capitalism

Article dated 23 September 2009

Join the Socialist Party
Subscribe to Socialist Party publications
Donate to the Socialist Party

MEMBER RESOURCES

Pay in Fighting Fund

Pay in paper and book sales

Leaflets

Bulk book orders

New member submission

WHAT'S ON

triangle15 May Birmingham Socialist Party: How can we fight for socialist change and a new workers' party?

triangle17 May Oxfordshire & Aylesbury Socialist Party: The role of the state

triangle18 May Bristol North Socialist Party: Liverpool - history of socialist struggle

More...


The Socialist, weekly newspaper of the Socialist Party

Election analysis

Ireland

International news

Workplace news

Readers' opinion

Obituary

Subscribespacer|spacerebook / Kindlespacer|spacerPDF versionspacer|spacerText / Printspacer|spacer1133 onlinespacer|spacerBack issuesspacer|spacer Audio files


TUSC 2021 election video

More videos ...

What We Stand For
Socialist Party Facebook page
Socialist Party on Twitter
Visit us on Youtube

Platform setting: =

Desktop version