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Arundhati Roy corrects The Economist

Letter to the Editor following the review of ’Listening to Grasshoppers’

by Arundhati Roy, 5 September 2009

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From: Arundhati Roy
- Sent: 04 September 2009 10:26 AM
- Subject: Fwd: ref: Review of my book: Listening to grasshoppers

Hi folks
- A letter to the Economist about their charming review of my book. No
news from them, so feel free to post on websites/circulate
.

To,
- The Editor
- The Economist, 25 August 2009

Dear Sir

This is with regard to the review of my book “Listening to Grasshoppersâ€
that appeared in the Economist. If this letter is long, ironically it is
because the factual errors in the review are so many. In an attempt to
highlight my “flawed reporting and incorrect analysis†the reviewer
makes some extraordinary errors and leaps of logic:

1. “Ms Roy cites a massacre of perhaps 2,000 Muslims in Gujarat in 2002,
in which the state’s Hindu-nationalist government was allegedly
complicit. Almost no senior official or Hinduist agitator has been
prosecuted over the atrocity. And Narendra Modi, Gujarat’s chief
minister then and now, is currently vying to take over the leadership of
the main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, and one day India. Many of
the country’s industrialists would approve of that; even Ratan Tata, the
gentlemanly head of the vast Tata Group which prides itself on its
ethical dealings, has praised Mr Modi’s business-friendly policies.
Nothing annoys Ms Roy more.â€

Mr Tata did not merely praise Modi’s business policies, he endorsed him
warmly and publicly as a future candidate for prime minister. In India
the said Mr Modi is still being investigated for his role in the 2002
pogrom. In his successful election campaigns after the pogrom, Modi
brazenly cultivated communal hatred. He is a member of the RSS
(Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh) an organization that is proud of its
fascist origins and counts both Hitler and Mussolini as its heroes. In
addition to the massacres about150,000 Muslims were driven from their
homes during the carnage. Even today, under Mr Modi’s administration,
most continue to live in ghettos, socially and economically boycotted in
a brutal system of communal apartheid, while the killers continue to
live as free, respectable citizens. Incidentally, after considering the
available information, the US government has denied Mr Modi a visa. A
handicap, wouldn’t you say, for a potential prime -minister?
Incidentally, for more on the Tata’s “ethical dealings†you could google
“Kalinganagar†or “Singur†.

2. “. . .she is not always a reliable witness. Her claim that in Kashmir
last summer protesters were as likely to call for union with Pakistan as
freedom from India is probably wrong; most seemed to want to be shot of
both countries.â€

I have never made such a claim. Nobody with an even passing acquaintance
with Kashmir would (or should) say something so ridiculous. Given the
intensity and violence of the fratricidal wars that Kashmiris have
fought, and the thousands that have lost their lives over the Pakistan
vs Freedom issue, and given that Kashmiri leadership is still unresolved
about the question, it’s extraordinary that the reviewer can so casually
and so glibly claim to know what the majority of people of Kashmir want.
My essay on Kashmir is actually titled “Azadi†, which in Urdu means
“Freedom†. Perhaps the reviewer is unfamiliar with the language?

3. “More typically, she appears to gather her facts from newspapers (her
articles strike the reader rather as ‘lounge notes’), before selectively
arranging and then exaggerating them to suit her own ends. For example,
about 25% of India’s territory is alleged to be affected by a Maoist
insurgency, but that does not make it, as Ms Roy writes, ‘out of
government control’.â€

If the reviewer had cared to read the book instead of ransacking it,
he/she would have come across a sentence that clarifies that several of
the essays are “responses to the responses†about certain events. Given
that much of my book is a critique of the disturbing role that a section
of the corporate media has played in these events, is it surprising that
media reports are frequently referred to? Most of the time this is in
order to expose them for being false and motivated. To conclude from
this that my “facts are gathered from newspapers†and that the articles
are “lounge notes†is laughable.

The figure of 25 % of India’s territory being under Maoist insurgency is
a figure advanced by the Indian security establishment and is probably a
slight exaggeration. However, it is a fact that vast swathes of India’s
territory are out of government control. It is for this reason that the
Government has announced that in October, after the rains, there will be
a military operation in states like Chhattisgarh, Orissa and Jharkhand
in which ground troops will be backed up with helicopter gunships and
satellite mapping. A brigade headquarters is being established in in
Raipur (Chhattisgarh), and 26,000 paramilitary troops (the same
Rashtriya Rifles who are deployed in Kashmir, and similar to the Assam
Rifles deployed in Assam, Manipur and Nagaland) are being raised for
this war. This is in addition the thousands of security personnel who
are already deployed in these areas. Perhaps the reviewer has never
visited Dantewara , seen the burned, empty villages, or crossed the
Indravati into the territory that is called “Pakistan†, where police and
security forces do not venture? Perhaps he/she hasn’t heard of Abujmaad?

4. “Beyond India, her grasp of her subject-matter gets looser. If Ms Roy believes, as she writes, that a good portion of Africa’s ‘contemporary
horrors’ are caused by America’s ‘new colonial interests’, she would do
well to pay a visit to the continent.â€

My book is about India, not Africa, but yes, there is a paragraph about
Africa. Here’s the sentence the reviewer refers to: “The battle to
control Africa’s mineral wealth rages on— scratch the surface of
contemporary horrors in Africa, in Rwanda, the Congo, Nigeria, pick your
country and chances are that you will be able to trace the story back to
the old colonial interests of Europe and the new colonial interests of
the United States.†My mistake here is that I didn’t mention the new
colonial interests of countries like China and India as well. Does your
reviewer not know about the legacy of Shell Oil in Nigeria? Or the
politics that surrounds the mining of a mineral called coltan? Or of how
Belgium’s colonial regime structured the barriers of hatred between the
Tutsis and the Hutus in Rwanda with their racist profiling and social
engineering? As for the recommendation that I pay a visit to the
continent…it’s a grand idea, but how does one visit an entire continent?
I have visited parts of it. Plenty of times. But the reviewer should
know that it is possible to know things about places even if you haven’t
been to them, like historians know things about history without
traveling back in time.

5. “For a more measured analysis, Ms Roy should perhaps turn to the
finance ministry’s recently published Economic Survey. There she would
read that, ‘High growth is critical to generate the revenues needed for
meeting our social welfare objectives.’ Ms Roy should take note.â€

Am I really being waved back into my seat with the finance ministry’s
Economic Survey? I thought everybody knew that the cut back on public
spending (social welfare objectives) is almost in direct proportion to
the growth rate? It’s often a pre-requisite when loans from the World
Bank, the ADB and the IMF are negotiated. Isn’t that what structural
adjustment is all about? Or is this the old Trickle Down theory being
re-cycled? I’ve always wondered about this. Some times they say the Free
Market provides a level playing field – but then when questioned, they
ask us to wait for Trickle Down. But things only Trickle Down slopes
don’t they? Anyway, there is a school of thought, which believes that
people actually do have rights. The right, for instance to resist the
Government taking away their land and their livelihoods, often at gun
point, and then ordering them to wait for the leftovers (if the
gentlemen leave any) to trickle down after the feast.

Regardless of our obvious ideological differences I hope you agree that
errors and innuendo of this nature undermine the real debate.

With best wishes

Arundhati Roy
- 2A Kautilya Marg
- New Delhi 110021

***

Necessary, but wrong

July 30th 2009

- From The Economist print edition

Listening to Grasshoppers: Field Notes on Democracy. By Arundhati Roy.
Hamish Hamilton; 256 pages; £14.99. To be published in America as “Field
Notes on Democracy†by Haymarket Books in October. Buy from Amazon.co.uk

IT IS impossible not to admire Arundhati Roy. Despite her flawed
reporting and analysis, her left-wing prejudices and one-sided
portentous writing, the author who carried off the 1997 Man Booker prize
for her novel, “The God of Small Things†, is just the sort of brave and
energetic critic that India needs.

Not for her the national image projected by India’s smug elite, of a
nascent superpower lifting off. Ms Roy’s India is a truer one—a poor,
rural country beset by grave problems, where, notwithstanding the
holding of regular elections, wretched injustices are perpetrated by a
corrupt and often brutal state.
Click here

As prime evidence of democracy’s failure to protect Indians, in this
collection of her recent journalism and other writings, Ms Roy cites a
massacre of perhaps 2,000 Muslims in Gujarat in 2002, in which the
state’s Hindu-nationalist government was allegedly complicit. Almost no
senior official or Hinduist agitator has been prosecuted over the
atrocity. And Narendra Modi, Gujarat’s chief minister then and now, is
currently vying to take over the leadership of the main opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party, and one day India. Many of the country’s
industrialists would approve of that; even Ratan Tata, the gentlemanly
head of the vast Tata Group which prides itself on its ethical dealings,
has praised Mr Modi’s business-friendly policies. Nothing annoys Ms Roy
more.

The Hindu nationalists’ hateful tendencies are well-known. Perhaps less
notorious is the weakness of India’s non-political institutions, and Ms
Roy skewers most of them. In three deft articles, she examines the
dubious methods of the police in securing the conviction of Muhammad
Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri, for masterminding a 2001 terrorist attack on the
Indian parliament building—allegedly by planting evidence and torturing
him into confessing. Given that India’s police are often alleged to use
torture, and have long enjoyed impunity in Kashmir, where Mr Guru was
picked up, this would not be surprising. But neither India’s complacent
judiciary nor its often-craven journalists shows much interest in
reinvestigating his case. Mr Guru remains on death row.

Whether or not he is guilty, Ms Roy does laudable work in defending Mr
Guru when others—including at times India’s legal fraternity, according
to Ms Roy—would not. On other issues, however, she is not always a
reliable witness. Her claim that in Kashmir last summer protesters were
as likely to call for union with Pakistan as freedom from India is
probably wrong; most seemed to want to be shot of both countries.

But that faulty observation was at least noted by Ms Roy in the field.
More typically, she appears to gather her facts from newspapers (her
articles strike the reader rather as “lounge notes†), before selectively
arranging and then exaggerating them to suit her own ends. For example,
about 25% of India’s territory is alleged to be affected by a Maoist
insurgency, but that does not make it, as Ms Roy writes, “out of
government control†. Beyond India, her grasp of her subject-matter gets
looser. If Ms Roy believes, as she writes, that a good portion of
Africa’s “contemporary horrors†are caused by America’s “new colonial
interests†, she would do well to pay a visit to the continent.

So entrenched is the anti-globalisation that informs her world view, she
would be tough to dissuade. But what alternative strategies does she
advocate for improving India? Hard to say. A rare suggestion for better
governance—the formation of a shadow parliament “that keeps an
underground drumbeat†—does not seem terribly serious. On economic
policy, Ms Roy has even less to offer—other than to slam recent
governments for aspiring to rapid economic growth. This is a “projectâ€
she considers to be “encrypted with genocidal potential†. For a more
measured analysis, Ms Roy should perhaps turn to the finance ministry’s
recently published Economic Survey. There she would read that, “High
growth is critical to generate the revenues needed for meeting our
social welfare objectives.†Ms Roy should take note.