Jump to content

Sushital Ray Chowdhury

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 1.23.170.207 (talk) at 09:02, 3 December 2016 (Formation of CPI(ML)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Sushital Ray Chowdhary (Born 16 February 1917, Hooghly-13 March 1971), was an Indian Communist intellectual and revolutionary, active in the early all-India organization of the Naxalite groups and the formation of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist). Throughout his life he was the editor of the organs of the CPI, CPI(M) and CPI(ML).[1] [2] He eventually fell out with the mainstream Charu Majumdar group, and died of a heart attack in 1971. His name is also spelt Sushital Raychaudhury.

Career

Sushital Ray Chowdhury graduated from the University of Calcutta and joined the Communist movement at an early age.[1] Initially with Communist Party of India (CPI), he was elected secretary of the Hooghly district committee, and wrote extensively on issues such as the Tebhaga movement in party magazines Swadhinata, Sambad, etc. Joined the Calcutta District Committee after 1947, and joined the editorial board of Swadhinata (along with other radicals such as Saroj Dutta). However, Sushital was inclined to a more revolutionary brand of Marxism, and after the communist party split in 1964, he went with the Communist Party of India (Marxist).

At the time, CPI(M) adopted a radical stance, with erstwhile revolutionary leaders like Hare Krishna Konar "trumpeting revolutionary rhetoric, suggesting that militant confiscation of land was integral to the party's programme."[3]

In the leadup to the Indian general election, 1967, CPI(M) decided to participate in parliamentary elections, much to the chagrin of radical idealists like Sushital. In 1965, he wrote a series of extreme-left articles in the magazine Chinta, challenging the party programme as "revisionist".

United Front government and Naxalbari

CPI(M) did unexpectedly well, and won 18.1% of the popular vote, though Congress remained the largest party with 127 (of 280) seats. In May 1967, The non-Congress parties linked up to form the United Front coalition, (CPI-M along with CPI and the breakaway Bangla Congress).

At this time, Charu Majumdar, who had been involved with the peasant tribals of North Bengal, brought out some cyclostyled pamphlets calling for armed revolution. A group of followers including Kanu Sanyal and Jangal Santhal lived and worked with the armed peasants, ousting landowners. Violence started with land-grabbing in March, but escalated with the murder of a policeman in May. However, with the deployment of state and central police, the movement was extinguished by July, 1967.

Expulsion from CPM

Sushital and other Calcutta radicals supported the Naxalbari movement by forming 'Naxalbari o Krishak Sangram Sahayak Samiti' (NOKSS) in May 1967. Sushital served as secretary.

In September 1967, Sushital, along with Saroj Dutta and others from Kolkata, as well as Charu Majumdar, Kanu Sanyal etc. from Siliguri, were expelled from the CPI-M, which was embarrassed by their actions since it was a member in the ruling coalition, and no longer supported such radical steps.

On November 12, 1967, Sushital organized a two-day all India meeting of radical leftists at his house in Maniktala; Charu Majumdar flew down from Siliguri.[4] Delegates included Satyanarayan Singh of Bihar, Appu of Tamil Nadu, and many others from Bengal.[4][5] In May, 1968 the group adopted the name All India Coordination Committee of Communist Revolutionaries (AICCCR), with Sushital as its convenor. Sushital became the editor-in-chief of the mouthpieces of the group, Deshabrati (Bengali), and Liberation (English).

Formation of CPI(ML)

In April 1969, AICCCR was reorganized into the Marxist-Leninist party, the CPI(ML). The new anti-parliamentary party was announced to the world on May, 1969 at a large meeting on the Maidan organized by Kanu Sanyal. Here there was a scuffle with CPI(M) cadres, a harbinger of much worse to come.

In a national CPI(ML) meeting in 1970, fissures started appearing between Charu and some others. By August 1970, Sushital was complaining that some pieces were appearing in the magazines without his knowledge, though he was editor-in-chief.[6] He also suggested that the party should debate whether statues of personalities such as Rabindranath should be vandalised. However, Charu Majumdar did not agree, and after this Sushital was relieved of his editorial role, though he continued to be a politburo member, but was marginalized.

Early in 1971, Sushital, who had become a forlorn figure, died of a heart attack. It was even rumoured that he may have been attacked by cadres close to the party.[7]

In November 1971, the dissident group Satyanarayan Singh and Shiv Kumar Mishra joined the dissidents. In November 1971, this dissident group formed a new Central Committee with Satyanarayan Singh as the General Secretary, and expelled Charu Majumdar.

References

  1. ^ a b Prakash Singh (2006). The Naxalite Movement in India. Rupa Publications. ISBN 8171672949.Appendix B
  2. ^ Satya Prakash Dash (2006). Naxal Movement and State Power: With Special Reference of Orissa. Sarup & Sons.p. 12
  3. ^ Atul Kohli (1998). From breakdown to order: West Bengal, in Partha Chatterjee, State and politics in India. OUP. ISBN 0195647653.p. 348
  4. ^ a b Mukherjee, Arun (2007). Maoist "spring thunder": the Naxalite movement 1967-1972. K.P. Bagchi & Co., Calcutta. ISBN 8170743036.p.295
  5. ^ http://www.hindustantimes.com/news-feed/nm2/history-of-naxalism/article1-6545.aspx
  6. ^ Mukherjee, Arun (2007). Maoist "spring thunder".p.209-10
  7. ^ Mukherjee, Arun (2007). Maoist "spring thunder".p.221