People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)

Vol. XXVII

No. 06

 February 09, 2003


ON TO 11TH SFI CONFERENCE

K K Ragesh

THE Students Federation of India (SFI) is holding its 11th all-India conference at Kozhikkode, Kerala, from February 14 to 18. The event comes at a time when the students and youth all over India, along with other class and mass organisations, are launching a series of struggles on the question of education and employment, and against the anti-people policies of the BJP-led NDA government. Representing 28,69,918 members of the organisation, 750 delegates will participate in the five-day conference. A huge students rally will be organised on February 14, to be addressed among others by Jyoti Basu. Prior to the all-India conference, more than two lakh students have participated in the conferences from the unit to the state level, so as to further strengthen and expand the base of the organisation.

LEGACY OF STRUGGLE

The imperialist globalisation brings unprecedented misery to the common man all over the world by imposing neo-colonialism over the developing countries. India’s economic sovereignty is under attack; its resources and wealth are being looted by imperialist powers. It is high time to prepare for a second independence struggle to free the country from the stranglehold of international finance capital and Indian monopolists. The SFI is one student organisation in the country, which has been in the forefront of struggles against this assault and against the anti-people, anti-education policies being pursued by the NDA government at the diktat of imperialist powers.                

The student movement in our country has an impressive legacy of anti-imperialist struggle against the British colonial rule. Academic Association, a pioneering student organisation of our country, was formed even before the formation of Indian National Congress. The Association was inspired by the ideas of “Equality, Liberty and Fraternity” proclaimed by the French Revolution. Many of the students stood in the forefront of struggle for our country’s independence and sacrificed their lives for this noble cause. The great martyrs of the anti-colonial struggle like Bhagat Singh, Chandrashekhar Azad, Udham Singh, Khudiram Bose, Madan Lal Dhingra, Hemu Kalani, Chitharanjan Thakkurdha and Lal Padma Dhar were students when they plunged into this battle.

Since its formation in December 1970, the SFI has been fighting for the genuine cause of the student community, thus becoming a speck in the eyes of the ruling classes. The Indian state did not make any significant effort to fulfil the constitutional obligation about universal and compulsory elementary education. Its effort has been to make education cater to the needs of capitalist development by limiting it to a privileged few. The SFI fought the challenge of Emergency amid a series of attacks, trials and imprisonment, emerging as the real successor of the student movement that was born in the turbulent phase of anti-imperialist struggle.

THE NEW MENACE

Now the economic policies of the BJP-led NDA dispensation have become a menace to the toiling masses and a serious threat to national interest. On the pretext of bringing down fiscal deficit, the government is curtailing its expenditure on all social sectors including education. The BJP-led regime’s promise in its last election manifesto to allocate 10 per cent of its budget to education and to strengthen the public education system has proved to be a cruel hoax. The central government’s decision to get rid of the subsidies for education is leading to an ouster of the poor from the realm of education. The government funding for higher education is being systematically curtailed. The UGC has issued a circular to the universities, asking them to generate 25 per cent of their recurring expenditure from internal sources; this has led to a massive fee hike in the institutions of higher learning. The state is promoting “quality education” in the interest of the rich, based on the “user pay principle.” As a result, meritorious students are getting thrown out of the realm of education. Merit is getting substituted by money, further leading to a qualitative decline in the field of professional education and research in natural sciences, social sciences and technology.

During the last four years, there has been a ruthless and systematic assault on the secular fabric of the polity also. The Hindutva forces, using state power, are giving priority to transforming the academic ethos by infiltrating RSS loyalists into various academic and cultural institutions such as the ICHR, ICSSR, Indian Institute of Advanced Studies, NCERT, UGC, NIEPA, Archaeological Survey of India, Nehru Yuvak Kendra, and so forth. They are determined to communalise the entire education system in order to create an environment where the seeds of the RSS’ political agenda can easily be nurtured and the young minds indoctrinated with its pernicious ideology. The UGC and the central government, that cite finance crunch when confronted with arguments against commercialisation, have no qualms in allotting crores of rupees to universities and colleges that are willing to introduce obscurantist courses like Jyotish Shastra and Karmakand. Hence the warning the SFI’s 10th all-India conference gave: “The ideological-political character and content of a communal-fascist education policy implies a very centralised and undemocratic administrative structure alongside a content comprising the scum of Hindu revivalism, a rabid anti-minority hatred, and anti-rationalism, anti-pluralism and obscurantism and a stinking racial and cultural prejudice.  In short, a system that systematically geared up to kill the faculties of criticism, creativity and innovation.”

The conference identified the urgent need to fight the menace of communalisation and commercialisation of education and also stressed the need to build a joint movement with all the Left and progressive student and youth organisations all over India. 

THRUST OF ACTIVITIES

Since its 10th all-India conference, the SFI has been working hard to strengthen the struggles against such policies, communal threats and saffronisation drive, and to build a movement all over India. The last three years have witnessed resounding and widespread student agitations all over the country. The struggles on basic issues facing the students community, and against communalisation and commercialisation of education, suppression of democratic rights of the academic community and against educational backwardness were carried out all over India. Some of these were at the local/district level, some at the state level and others at the national level.

A massive March To Parliament was organised on November 27, 2000 at the call of the SFI and DYFI to save education and employment. Thousands of students from all over the country, especially the Hindi heartland, joined this march. Organised by the SFI and DYFI, such marches acted as a trendsetter for student-youth mobilisations the capital city witnessed in recent times.

On the same day, a call was given for an All India Student Strike on January 19, 2001, which was a splendid success. Prior to the Parliament March, massive signature campaigns, student-youth jathas and state level rallies were also organised. All through the next academic year, the organisation concentrated on state level agitations; rallies and militant agitations were organised in different parts of the country.

Along with the DYFI, a second Parliament March was organised on November 21, 2002 during the winter session of parliament, on the question of employment and education. The state’s attempts to sabotage the movement were all in vain; SFI activists stood firm in front of the brutal police attacks and imprisonments. Over 15 thousand students and youth came together, to make the march successful.

The 10th all-India conference laid emphasis on the need to take initiative in bringing the Left-oriented student organisations to a common platform on the issues concerning the student masses and facing the education system. Many steps were taken in this regard. A national level joint convention of Leftist youth and students was organised on May 10, 2002, at New Delhi. State level conventions were held in most of the states in pursuance of the call given by the May 10 convention. There is no need to iterate how important it is, in the present milieu, to carry forward and strengthen the Left unity and joint struggles, along with the SFI’s independent initiatives.

At the call of the 10th conference to draw newer sections into the movement, the SFI’s all-India centre took initiative in building the sectoral movements. It organised conventions and workshops of various sections of the student community. After the all-India girl students’ workshop (Urang, Maharashtra, February 2001), the SFI organised an all-India girl students’ convention (Halishahar, West Bengal, July 2002), the first of its kind. Both these efforts helped to smoothen the process of building a movement among girl students all over India. The university students and research scholars workshop at New Delhi and the third all-India university students convention at Vishakhapattanam have also benefited the organisation. A convention of agriculture science students was organised at Hisar, Haryana in this period.

Serious efforts were made to regularise the Student Struggle, the journal of SFI, after the last all-India conference. It was the centre of serious concern during the discussions in the consecutive all-India conferences; some of the delegates also quoted V I Lenin’s words that “an organisation without a journal is like a person without tongue.” As a result of the serious efforts by the all-India centre, the Student Struggle has been regularised as a monthly organ; 26 issues were published after the last conference, out of which the last 18 issues came out consistently. And now, the journal is reaching by post to all subscribers and is ideologically equipping the rank and file of the SFI. The organisation also took initiative in publishing a series of booklets in order to arm the student community with ideological precision and to equip them to face the current challenges. It is extremely important to take the Student Struggle to the campuses as part of the SFI’s ideological struggles, as a true weapon for politicisation of the academic community. 

The college union elections last year were held in the backdrop of a series of struggles that were launched against the anti-student and anti-national education and economic policies of the governments in the states and at the centre. The SFI emerged victorious in many prestigious universities such as the JNU, Himachal Pradesh University while its supported front won in the Hyderabad Central University. The SFI also won in all the universities in Kerala and West Bengal, in Udaipur Agricultural University (Rajasthan) and also in many college unions in various states. No doubt the election results are, to an extent, an indicator to the future of Indian campuses and the beginning of a new epoch of struggles.

The uncompromising struggles against communal frenzy and neo-liberal policies, the initiatives in ideological fight, the confidence created with election victories, etc, have all helped the organisation expand in many states. The SFI’s membership has crossed the long stagnating position of 25 lakhs and increased to 28,69,918. Though the current weakness of uneven growth continues, with the lion’s share of the membership coming from strong states, many weak states registered marked and systematic growth in membership.

MARCHING WITH CONFIDENCE

It is in the backdrop of such a situation and of such diverse experiences of struggles and movement building that the SFI is now all set to hold its 11th all-India conference. The conference is to discuss and adopt an updated draft programme and constitution for the SFI. The political discourses and ideological debates that have taken place in the run-up to the updating of SFI programme will certainly strengthen the organisation in many ways. It is important for streamlining the organisation to face the current challenges posed by imperialist globalisation. In the background of new developments all over the world, sticking to its ideological and political perspective, preserving the organisation’s mass character and emphasising its role in social transformation will be taken proper care of while undertaking the updating exercise. The updated programme to be adopted by the coming conference will boost the SFI’s advance as the leading student organisation.

There is no doubt that the SFI has made commendable achievements in membership enrolment, in ideological battles and election victories. Yet much more remains to be done to strengthen the organisation in order to face the challenges of the reaction that aims to reinforce the ruling class hegemony by forging apoliticisation of the campuses, among other things. The 11th SFI conference will chalk out a series of programmes and agitations to confront precisely such new challenges, to inspire the organisation and further its struggles by sharpening its weapons against the menace of neo-imperialism and communal fascism.

(K K Ragesh is a joint secretary of the SFI.)