Jadavpur University Vice Chancellor, Abhijit Chakrabarty, in an interview with News X, refused to accept the demand for his resignation. He also fantasized. His imaginative prowess, as evident in his responses in the televised interview, included statements to the effect that the students of Jadavpur University were being manipulated by Maoists, Drug Lords and a Liquor Mafia. He said that he feared for his life on the night when the students gherao’ed him. We fear for his sanity.
These incidents come in the wake of an equally unfortunate incident in Shantiniketan, in Vishwa Bharati university, where once again, a callous administration humiliated a students from Sikkim and her family, asking her to leave the campus when she complained of sexual assault. There is a pattern here. University authorities and the ruling political culture in West Bengal are simply unable to cope with young women demanding dignity and autonomy. Their first response is ‘victim shaming’, (even in Jadavpur, the ‘professors’ sent to inquire into the victim’s complaint made absolutely irrelevant and unnecessary statements about her attire and her personal life-choices. Their second response is a refusal to follow due process and their third response, when it comes to a crunch, is to call in the police and unleash violence.
This is not a question just about students or women alone. This is about the way in which people in power view those who they think they wield power over. This is the same smug arrogance that is routine in factories and offices where managements treat workers and employees with contempt. It is the same arrogance that makes patriarchs and politicians insult the autonomous choices made by young people by invoking the poison of ‘love Jihad’. It is the insults that the powerful throw at dalits, and especially young dalit women and men who are trying to carve lives of dignity with education, by wearing what they want to, by simply being ‘present’ in public space. It is the racist slur that the Delhi landlord throws at his young north-eastern tenant. Each of these instances is an offensive in war that has been unleashed on the young. On students, on young women, on young workers. It is a war on love, on pleasure, on friendship, on solidarity and on the right to lead one’s life with dignity and with freedom. And now the young are beginning to fight back.