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Showing posts from December, 2021

Reflecting back on 2021: Academia in the politics of transformation

The year 2021 brought with it a lesson that I hope to carry forward in my academic journey in the coming years. That the sources of power will seek to silence the voices emergent from the margins is a lesson I have borne witness to over the last two decades of academic-community work, in some instances, at personal cost.  As we built the activist-in-residence program, starting with the transformative conversations with Braema Mathi, Sue Bradford, and Tame Iti, the organizing role of power in silencing dissenting voices became all too evident. From generating disinformation campaigns, to planting false narratives, to carrying out witch hunts framed as audits, to targeting academics with hate messages, threats of violence, and incarceration, dominant structures will draw upon a wide array of strategies and tools to silence academic voices that speak with and alongside the margins. In the face of these practices of silencing, academia can continue to thrive as a vital space of dissent tha

Scientific temper and decolonization: A personal journey

Nana with her newspaper In my childhood, an old black and white picture hanging on the family wall stood as a reminder of the possibilities that was India. We knew to pay our respects to the hanging picture, alongside other pictures of ancestors who had passed on our way out the door. Paying homage to the hanging picture was particularly important before exams.   My grandmother, we called her nana, would fondly recall the stories of her Jnan kaka (uncle in Bengali), the bespectacled man, dressed in a white shirt and with a smile, in the picture. She would recall the stories of growing up, of her doctor father, and her Jnan kaka, the scientist in the family. Those conversations would almost always underscore the nation building role of science in modern India.  Sir Jnan Ghosh writing at his desk In the picture, Jnan dadu as we would call him, following our parents, appeared more like a poet, perhaps an invitation to consider the poetic relevance of his role as an architect of the engine

Whiteness of hegemonic interfaith dialogues

  Hindutva forces attacking Muslim prayers As I have been witnessing my social media feed inundate with stories of Muslims and Christians being attacked by Hindutva forces in November/December 2021, listening to genocidal speeches delivered by Hindutva ideologues calling for attacks on Muslims, I am reminded of the powerful communicative inversion, the turning of materiality on its head through symbols, carried out by Hindutva organizations in the diaspora.  Hindutva, deploying violence targeting religious minorities in India, mobilized around symbolic and material strategies rooted in hate, appeals to multiculturalism and multi-faith accommodation in Western democracies to forge the space for itself. It turns itself into a minority, appealing as a minority, building persuasive registers that speak to the overarching logic of diversity and inclusion in Western democracies.  This communicative inversion, the turning of its materiality of hate into a symbolic appeal to the accommodation

Why social justice lies at the heart of interfaith dialogues

Social justice, the articulations of justice rooted in equality, attend to the question of human dignity for all, especially for those at the margins of societies. Amidst the global rise of the far-right and its infrastructure of hate, social justice forms the dialogic anchor for resistance.  Given the role of religion in the attacks carried out by the far-right, interfaith dialogues are key registers for social justice.  Through the conversational spaces created for diverse faiths, registers can be built to organize against the politics of hate.  In these interfaith conversations, majority communities have a vital role to play in listening to the articulations of justice at the margins, in fostering the spaces for claiming human dignity, and in building infrastructures for religious freedom. In India, the rise of the far-right Hindu nationalist forces is embodied in the mobilization for Hindu nation ( Hindu rashtra ). This Hindu nation is built on the monolithic imposition of Hindu sa

On gratitude: The everyday practices of gratefulness

  Over the week, in our monthly college magazine, I read the story of a colleague retiring. The story talked about how this colleague was such a key part of our college. I was overwhelmed with powerful emotions reading the story. A sense of sadness gripped me. The sadness seemed to appear like a tsunami, lifting me up in a tide of emotion. Reading the story, I realized suddenly how I had been putting off sending a "thank you" note to this colleague for the past several weeks to tell them how much I appreciated their kindness and their presence in the college. The rhythms and demands of building and sustaining community-academic-activist partnerships often mean that I am negotiating multiple commitments. Amidst these commitments, which are complicated by the various hate groups that target our anti-racist work at CARE, I end up spending a large part of my labor fire fighting. But perhaps that is an excuse I give myself for not adequately expressing my gratitude to people that