Title: History of the Communist Movement in Kerala
Author: E. Balakrishnan
Publisher: KurukshethraPrakasan, 1998 (First)
ISBN: Nil
Pages: 268
Kerala’s politics differ much from the Indian mainstream. This was so, right from the incorporation of the state in 1956. The state also witnessed the remarkable occurrence of a Communist movement assuming power through a democratic election based on universal adult franchise and secret ballot for the first time in the world. All the material on the origin of the Communist party in Kerala is written by the comrades themselves. This book presents a refreshing alternate review of the birth and growth of communism in Kerala. This is published by Kurukshethra Prakasan, a mouthpiece of the Sangh Parivar. Naturally enough, the party and its leaders are generally criticised, but it keeps a fine balance to present facts without omission or embellishment. The foreword is penned by P. Parameswaran, former director of the Bharatiya Vichara Kendra, a think tank of the Sangh. E. Balakrishnan was associated with the Communist movement from his school days. He was attracted to the Naxalite movement later and was imprisoned for a short time. The atrocities of Stalin and the communist government distanced him from that ideology. He wanted to follow the path of sanyasa, but later abandoned the idea to become a teacher. This book is his dissertation for doctorate at the University of Calicut.
There is a superb introductory chapter by the noted historian M G S Narayanan. It gives a lively summary of the mess Communists have created in Kerala. The commerce and industry of the state have collapsed due to the proletarian culture rampant among all sections of society. All levels of education are over-politicized. The visible prosperity and higher quality of life are artificial and was created by the parallel economy made by remittances from the Middle East where almost a tenth of the Keralites earn their livelihood. This is hailed by the Communists as an economic miracle called the ‘Kerala Model’. MGS also comments on the duplicity of EMS Namboodiripad in ‘donating’ his family property to the party. He also notes the lack of an in-depth analysis of the economic and social factors which controlled and moulded the political fortunes of the Communist movement in Kerala in the book. Balakrishnan begins the narrative with Gandhi’s Civil Disobedience Movement through which most of the founders of the Communist Party cut their teeth. People opposed to Gandhian tactics worked under the Congress Socialist Party (CSP) which in Kerala metamorphosed into the Communist Party. However, the national leaders of CSP maintained their anti-communist stand till the end. The central narrative of the book begins with the formation of the state committee of the Communist Party in 1937 and ends with the dismissal of the Communist ministry in 1959.
As was the international political norm, the Indian Communist Party was also led and subject to handholding by the Soviet Communist party. In 1920, Lenin instructed Indian communists to work alongside the Indian National Congress even though they were bourgeois. Lenin’s plan for colonies was to fight against the imperialists before playing out any ideological strategy to wrest power. M N Roy, however, refused to toe this line. After Stalin came, this policy was reversed and the Communist party assumed an exclusivist posture. When the Soviets faced threats from Nazis, a rapport was offered in 1936 to create a united front even with class enemies to fight fascism. The author critically examines EMS at many places and brings to light his contradictions and occasional pettiness in dealing with rivals. EMS took part in the 1932 Civil Disobedience from the outset as a leader nominated to that position by Kongattil Raman Menon. As a prisoner, his family requested and obtained Class A facilities for himself. This was in stark contrast to AKG or P. Krishna Pillai who enjoyed no special privileges denied to ordinary workers. AKG had a great appeal on the masses. The author alleges that the foremost contribution of the Communist party in Kerala to the struggle for independence was the sabotage of the Gandhian strategy of nonviolence by staging violent upheavals under the guise of Congressmen. Balakrishnan also identifies five features of the Communist party in the pre-independence period. The first is the sabotage referred above. The other four are, 1) disruptive activities within the ranks of the freedom movement by voicing sectarian demands exclusively for the industrial workers and peasants 2) instigation of the peasantry to violence 3) open alliance with the British and 4) inculcation of fascist behavioural patterns among its cadres.
The book elaborately narrates how the disgruntled leaders first took asylum under the shade of CSP before emerging as full-fledged Communists. Congress Socialists opposed Gandhi’s constructive programs like elimination of untouchability as religious reform because it applied to Hinduism alone. In Kerala, they introduced class-war ideas to lure the industrial workers to buttress the party. Evolution of Congress Socialism to Stalinist Communism began in the latter half of 1935. The CSP stood for a democratic, flexible and realistic political line whereas the Communists articulated a doctrinaire, dogmatic, tough and violent strategy. But they were not ignorant of the cruel and brutal repression Stalin was unleashing on his people in the USSR and his rivals in the party. News of Stalinist repression was appearing abundantly in the Malayalam press too, but these heinous atrocities did not deter the likes of EMS or Krishna Pillai who termed them ‘bourgeois and imperialist lies’. In December 1934, K P Gopalan published an article titled ‘Three World Famous Russians’ featuring Zinoviev, Kamenev and Stalin. Within five days of its publication, Stalin arrested the first two and later executed them after a mockery trial. Still, the Kerala leaders stayed loyal to Stalin as they had developed a trait called ‘authoritarian submission’. While Congress brought all sections of the people together to fight against the British, Communists wanted dictatorship of only the working class. Labour unions became a pawn in the hands of Communist leaders for manipulation for political ends. The first political strike organized by the Travancore Coir Workers Union in 1938 demanded responsible government based on adult franchise in the state rather than better wages or relief measures for the factory staff. Former goons of jenmis (landlords) were accepted as activists in the peasant unions. This was the beginning of the instrumentalization of violence as a political tool. Meanwhile, indoctrination of volunteers and cadres in training camps was organized under the label of KPCC as the socialists had a majority in it.
The decade following the year 1935 was one in which the Communist party in India swayed with the ebbs and tides of the Russian political sea. When Nazis was against the Communists before World War II, they united with other parties to present a common front against fascism. But after the Hitler-Stalin Pact of 1939, Communist policy in India changed and they termed the war ‘imperialist’ and devised stratagems to defeat the British war machine which was arrayed against the Nazi-Communist combine in Europe. Violent protests were organized in Malabar on Sep 15, 1940 that led to police firing and many deaths of both the protestors and policemen. Riots, ostensible for the distribution of scarce rice, broke out in Morazha, Mattannur and Kayyur. Four men were sentenced to death for the murder of a policeman at Kayyur. Meanwhile, EMS transferred his properties to his wife anticipating its attachment by the government. However, the government, and in challenge the court also, struck down this transaction as bogus. When Germany treacherously invaded its Soviet ally in 1941, CPI again changed its policy. After the Soviets allied with the British, Communists did the same in India, betraying the independence movement. Ban on Communists was lifted in 1942. Execution of death sentence of the four Kayyur prisoners carried out at this point was the only awkward moment as far as the party was concerned. Anti-Japanese rallies were organized and Subhash Bose who sought shelter with them was abused in the foulest language. He was called a ‘rascal’ and ‘boot-licker of the Japanese’ (p.169). All peasant and labour unrest was called off to assist the British in their military effort, which was rechristened ‘people’s war’. Active campaigns were initiated to produce more in factories and farms. This cooperation was in spite of the biting inflation of 1943.
Balakrishnan neatly captures the dilemma of the CPI after World War II. Even though they wholeheartedly supported the British, the government sought to mend ways with the Congress and wanted to transfer power to them without much delay. On Dec 4, 1945, the Secretary of State informed British parliament that independence of India was its immediate goal. It was clear to all that total freedom was only months away. An interim government under Jawaharlal Nehru assumed power on Sep 2, 1946 to manage the transition. The Communists desperately wanted to do something big to usher in revolution, if possible, with Russian help. Sensing that time was running out for them, CPI called for resistance in its August 1946 resolution. They fully supported the Pakistan demand as well. Not only two, EMS was suggesting that India was a makeshift patchwork of sixteen nationalities! EMS exhorted Moplahs in Malabar to rebel in response to Muslim League’s call for ‘Direct Action’ in August 1946. Fortunately for Malabar, they did not pay heed to his call. But the Kolkata Muslims did and thousands were killed in the communal riots that ensued. The CPI also organized futile armed action, more in a bid to gain some martyrs for the party rather than effecting any meaningful change in the political scenario. Communists led thousands to avoidable death in Punnapra and Vayalar in October 1946. The author estimates the death toll at 2000, but the Communists concede only a tenth of the figure and calls them out as the only occasion in which a revolutionary party gave the number of its dead which was much less than the official estimates. Violence flared in Malabar as well. Three people were killed in police firing at Karivelloor and five at Kavumbayi. This book continues to point out the revolutionary confusion even after 1947. The Madurai Congress of the party in 1953 reiterated that the objectives of the party can be realized only through a revolution and overthrow of the current Indian state. The party still maintained that India had not achieved ‘real’ independence. The question of political independence of India was recognized only in 1956 in the party congress at Palakkad. The 1958 Amritsar Congress accepted peaceful evolution to socialism which waved the green flag for the party to contest elections.
This book clearly exposes the brazen adherence of early Communist leaders to their ideology even in the face of plain evidence that proved the authoritarianism of its practitioners in the Soviet Union. It includes a review of reportage of Stalinist repression in Malayalam and the national media. As noted earlier, they shrugged it off as an ‘imperialist lie’ and refused to countenance the truth. Propaganda was the lifeblood of the party on which truth was not an essential component. The book lists the newspapers and other publications as well as membership figures of the party and feeder organizations in their formation period. Balakrishnan also makes a comparison of AKG and EMS, the two founding stalwarts of the party. In the early phase of the Communist party, AKG was democratic and accommodative while EMS had a closed mind and treated people on the basis of social classes to which they belonged. A great drawback of the book is that it is solely focussed on Malabar with little or no coverage of party formation in Travancore or Kochi. Great Communist leaders of these two native states had reached the top echelons of the party in future but their trail is not visible here. The narrative is much subdued after 1947 and it feels that the author somehow managed to continue the narrative till 1959 when the EMS ministry was dissolved.
The book is recommended.
Rating: 4 Star