People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 10 March 09, 2014 |
TRIPURA DYFI, TYF Organise Protest on
Railway Issue
Rahul Sinha DEMOCRATIC
youth of Tripura gave vent to their anger against the
deprivation of Tripura of
a railway division. Recently the chairman of the Railway
Board announced that three
new railway divisions will be opened at The
Democratic Youth Federation of India (DYFI) and the Tribal
Youth Federation (TYF)
termed the decision as yet another instance of the political
deprivation being
meted to the state of Tripura for a long time. Opposing this
discrimination,
the two youth organisations recently launched a three day
protest programme
throughout the state. On Sunday, March 2, the two
organisations organised
protest marches and meetings at more than 25 spots across
the state. The
protest programme continued till March 4. At
Agartala, the protest meeting on March 2 was preceded by a
militant march of the
youth. The meeting in front of the Agartala railway station
was addressed by
DYFI state president Pankaj Ghosh, its state secretary Amal
Chakraborty and state
secretariat members Tapan Debnath and Swapan Poddar. These
youth leaders said the
setting up a railway division in Tripura was one of the four
demands on which the
DYFI and TYF had organised a “March to Guwahati” last year,
and that the two
organisations were steadfast on the demand. While having no
objection to Silchar
becoming the headquarters of a railway division, the two
organisations said the
longstanding demand of the state of Tripura has again gone
unheeded. Terming it
as a clear case of political deprivation, the youth leaders
questioned the
silence of the Congress party in Tripura on this issue. They
said the Congress
led governments at the centre have time and again deprived
the state, but that
the people would not forgive them and teach them a befitting
lesson in the
forthcoming parliamentary elections. SANSKRITI SAMANWAY KENDRA HOLDS CENTRAL CONFERENCE THE
Tripura Sanskriti Samanway Kendra (TSSK), a premier
progressive cultural
organisation of Tripura, organised its fourth central
conference from February
26 to 28 at the Muktadhara Auditorium of Agartala. The
conference was inaugurated Manik Sarkar, by the chief
minister of Tripura. The
inaugural session was attended among others by Kamal Lohani
(eminent freedom
fighter and intellectual of Bangladesh), H Kanhaialal
(internationally
acclaimed theatre activist from Manipur), Nargis Choudhry
(eminent singer of
Tagore songs from Bangladesh), and Dr Paramananda Majumder
(president of the
Assam Sahitya Parishad), among others. Inaugurating
the conference, Manik Sarkar said culture is for life and
culture cannot grow
by ignoring the realities of life. He said the cultural
activists must mingle
with the masses as the components of culture evolve out
essentially from the
sense, realisation, feelings and reactions of the masses.
Any cultural movement
cannot gain momentum by avoiding the people’s movement.
Culture created in the
confines of solitude can be of no good to mankind. According
to Manik Sarkar, capital today has acquired an international
character;
likewise its forms of exploitation have become international
in nature. They
are targeting the young minds to turn them into self-centred
individuals.
Families are getting shattered; children are abandoning the
parents. A virulent
attack of negative venomous thoughts is being mounted.
Cultural activists must
fight these onslaughts in order to safeguard their own
culture and atmosphere.
Manik Sarkar termed the national situation as a critical
one, as the economic
crisis, price rise and agrarian crisis are becoming acute
and unemployment is
on the rise. A political party which aims at dividing the
people on communal
lines is trying to project itself as the alternative. But
the real alternative
that can fulfil the aspirations of the people is taking
shape and it would
combat both the incumbent regime and the communal forces.
The cultural
activists must come forward in support of this alternative
and fight against
the attacks on the mindset of the people by propagating
healthy and positive
cultural values. Kamal
Lohani said even 42 years after independence Kanhaialal
said the intrusion of capitalist culture is destroying our
indigenous culture.
The urban areas are the most affected. We must fall back
upon the rural
culture, gather healthy values from there and spread it to
counter the western
culture. The
inaugural session concluded with a rich cultural function. The
second day of the conference started with the placing of a
draft report by TSSK
general secretary Dr Mahadev Chakraborty. A total of 19
delegates each from all
the divisional committees discussed on the report. The
delegates also presented
songs, recitations and dances. They spoke about their
movements for a healthy,
positive culture and their campaigns against drug addiction,
witch-hunting,
superstitions, domestic violence and environmental
pollution. They stressed on
regular interaction with the masses to ensure that they
don’t fall prey to the
campaigns of confusion and falsehood. They stressed upon the
need to double the
efforts against powerful attacks of consumerism through TV
and internet. Greeting
the conference on the third day, Dr Rabindra Kumar Das of
Natun Sahitya
Parishad said Tripura is showing the way --- showing how the
people of
different races and cultures can be brought together and
made to maintain unity
and advance. He stressed on the need to further strengthen
the cultural ties
between the two neighbouring states. Dr
Mahadev Chakraborty replied to the discussion of the
delegates. The
conference unanimously elected a new central committee of
119 members. Anil
Sarkar was re-elected president and Sisir Deb was elected
the new general
secretary. Concluding
the conference on behalf of the presidium, Gautam Das, vice
president of the
organisation, said our cultural movement must have deep
relations with the day
to day struggle of the masses and reach out to the cultural
activists who are
still not with us. We must be more committed to the society
and focus on
sharpening the thinking of masses through presentation of
healthy and positive
cultural values. Our culture is people’s culture but we have
miles to go in
putting up a befitting resistance to the attempts of our
enemies to vitiate the
minds of youth by their cocktail culture. In Tripura we must
guard against any
repetition of the bloody days of violence and further
strengthen the unity of
tribal and non-tribal masses by further promoting our mixed
culture. At the
same time we must raise our voice against the growing
economic inequalities,
social problems, crime against women and religious
fundamentalism and
communalism in order to forge and safeguard a healthy social
atmosphere.