The song is from singer-songwriter Kabir Suman’s 2007 album, Nandigram, a collection of protest songs by arguably the most influential musical personality in Bengal in the past three decades. The backdrop was the seventh Left Front government’s mission to acquire farmland for setting up mega industrial projects such as the Tata Nano plant in Singur, Indonesia’s Salim group’s chemical hub in Nandigram and the Jindal steel plant in Salboni. Farmers’ protests broke out at all places. The Left has always fought for the rights of farmers over their land. But now they were telling farmers to part with their land, some of which yielded four crops a year, to make way for industrial growth. A number of prominent Leftist cultural personalities swung into protest, visiting Singur and Nandigram, meeting people and addressing rallies. The likes of Suman and Pratul Mukhopadhyay penned songs and sang them during mass meetings. The chief of the Trinamool Congress (TMC), Mamata Banerjee, whose political career had reached its nadir after the blows from the 2004 Lok Sabha elections and the 2006 assembly elections, jumped onto the bandwagon of leftist cultural personalities and intellectuals, and smaller Left parties and organisations. “Land to the tillers,” she said, hijacking the old Leftist slogan from the CPI(M). When the CPI(M) cited that the existing land acquisition act of 1894 gave no scope for obtaining the consent of the landowners and that they were trying to offer the best rehabilitation package possible under the existing law, Banerjee brought forth the old Leftist argument: the people on the streets have created laws and will create a new one. The times were interesting. The CPI and the CPI(M) were part of the movement against the South Korean steel giant POSCO’s proposed plant in Odisha’s Kalinganagar as well as movements against Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in Maharashtra. But in West Bengal, Medha Patkar, who had been an ally of the CPI(M) and the CPI in different mass movements against displacement in different parts of the country, was now barred by the Left Front government from entering Singur and Nandigram. After Patkar managed to dodge the police and visit several villages, the CPI(M) and Patkar fiercely criticised each other. The chain of reactions triggered by events at Singur and Nandigram isolated the CPI(M) from the broader Leftist camp in the anti-displacement movements taking place in other parts of the country, stalled all three projects in Bengal, toppled the 34-year-old Left Front regime in 2011 and led to the enactment of a new land acquisition law by the parliament in 2013.