Palestine, Israel and Academic Freedom in India
26 November 2023, online
In the past decade, discussion of several subjects has become taboo on Indian campuses, such as terms like the Constitution or Democracy. Now, any discussion of the current situation in Palestine is being added to the list, especially in states controlled by the BJP. Students protesting against the ongoing genocide in Gaza have been prevented from assembling and have been arrested, classroom seminars have been subject to misinformation and media defamation, and academic speakers publicly vilified.
In the same time Indian foreign policy has significantly shifted from support for Palestine to close partnerships with Israel's apartheid regime, particularly in surveillance, militarisation and the technological aspects of disinformation flows. While the official position is still support for a two-state solution, the Indian government’s abstention from a UN resolution calling for a ceasefire overturned decades of foreign policy. Since 7 October 2023, Indian mainstream media has also used the current intensification of settler colonial strategies against Palestinians to further deepen Islamophobia within the country. However, the widespread protests in Kerala, which is not controlled by the BJP shows that the government position does not reflect the views of the people at large. sion of several subjects has become taboo on Indian campuses, such as terms like the Constitution or Democracy. Now, any discussion of the current situation in Palestine is being added to the list, especially in states controlled by the BJP. Students protesting against the ongoing genocide in Gaza have been prevented from assembling and have been arrested, classroom seminars have been subject to misinformation and media defamation, and academic speakers publicly vilified.
In the past decade Indian foreign policy has significantly shifted from support for Palestine to close partnerships with Israel's apartheid regime, particularly in surveillance, militarisation and the technological aspects of disinformation flows. While the official position is still support for a two-state solution, the Indian government’s abstention from a UN resolution calling for a ceasefire overturned decades of foreign policy. Since 7 October 2023, Indian mainstream media has also used the current intensification of settler colonial strategies against Palestinians to further deepen Islamophobia within the country. However, the widespread protests in Kerala, which is not controlled by the BJP shows that the government position does not reflect the views of the people at large. terms like the Constitution or Democracy. Now, any discussion of the current situation in Palestine is being added to the list, especially in states controlled by the BJP. Students protesting against the ongoing genocide in Gaza have been prevented from assembling and have been arrested, classroom seminars have been subject to misinformation and media defamation, and academic speakers publicly vilified.
In the past decade Indian foreign policy has significantly shifted from support for Palestine to close partnerships with Israel's apartheid regime, particularly in surveillance, militarisation and the technological aspects of disinformation flows. While the official position is still support for a two-state solution, the Indian government’s abstention from a UN resolution calling for a ceasefire overturned decades of foreign policy. Since 7 October 2023, Indian mainstream media has also used the current intensification of settler colonial strategies against Palestinians to further deepen Islamophobia within the country. However, the widespread protests in Kerala, which is not controlled by the BJP shows that the government position does not reflect the views of the people at large.
This event, jointly hosted by India Academic Freedom Network (IAFN) and International Solidarity for Academic Freedom in India (InSAF India), discusses the way in which attempts to protest the total destruction of Gaza and call for a ceasefire, as well as academic discussions on the issue are being attacked and silenced in India, and indeed, across the world. It is essential for the academic community to be able to discuss situations like that in Palestine without restriction.
Song/Video Credits: Mat Ro Bachhe (Don't cry, child) is a musical interpretation of the poem “Philistini bacche ke liye Lori” (Lullaby for the Children of Palestine) by Faiz Ahmad Faiz, performed by the Indian rock band Dastaan Live (https://youtu.be/IWEXtSl9txE)
Caste, Covid-19 and the Public Education System in India
Panellists
Akram Dhalait Independent Researcher, Maharashtra, India, Research Team Member, The School Children’s Online and Offline Learning (SCHOOL) Study
Beena Pallical General Secretary, National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights (NCDHR), Delhi, India [Note: Beena was not able to attend the webinar but her work and the NCDHR research informed the conceptualisation of this webinar]
Gunjan Sharma Faculty Member, School of Education Studies, Ambedkar University, Delhi, India
Mohit Verma Bahujan Economists; Research Team Member, The SCHOOL Study; Research Associate, Good Business Lab, India
Moderator
Maithri Research Master's in Cultural Analysis, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Voices of Resistance From Kashmir
The webinar focused on the impact of the increasing repression in Kashmir and its implications for academic work. We invited four graduates to share their experiences, three as panellists and one to co-moderate the session alongside our InSAF India moderator. Days before the webinar, one panellist pulled out. They were worried that participation in our webinar might affect their security clearance to travel abroad. On 31 July 2021, the Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) government issued an order that police verification will be required for issuance or renewal of passports of all Jammu & Kashmir residents. This includes checking the person’s history of participation in “crimes prejudicial to the security of the state”. In a country increasingly using sedition laws to quell dissent, the spectrum of what is a “seditious crimes” is increasingly broadening. Following the webinar, as we heard about students being affected by this order, we decided not to upload the webinar on our YouTube channel.
Stan Swamy: Stories from the Trenches
Panellists
Dayamani Barla, Adivaasi, Moolvaasi, Astitva Raksha Manch, Jharkhand, India
Jerome Kujur, Social Activist, Jharkhand, India
Nikita Sonavane, Lawyer and Co-founder, Criminal Justice and Police Accountability Project (CPAProject), Bhopal, India
Father P.M. Tony, Freelance Researcher, Social Activist, and Colleague of Late Father Stan Swamy, Ranchi, India
Nihalsing Rathod, Defence Lawyer for the Bhima Koregaon Arrestees, Nagpur, India, and Human Rights Law Network
Jailed To Die?
Panellists
Aakar Patel, Director, Amnesty International India and columnist
Shahrukh Alam, Lawyer, Supreme Court of India
Koel Sen, Filmmaker and artist, daughter of Shoma Sen
Jenny Rowena, Lecturer, Delhi University, wife of Hany Babu
Sagar Abraham-Gonsalves, Son of Vernon Gonsalves
Father Joseph Xavier, Associate of Stan Swamy, Bangalore
Moderation
Lotika Singha and Simi Korote (InSAF India)
Ideas Behind Bars
Panellists
Jed Crandall Associate Professor, Biodesign Center for Biocomputation, Security and Society and School of Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering, Arizona State University, USA
Suchitra Vijayan Author of Midnight's Borders: A People's History of Modern India and Founder and Executive Director of The Polis Project
Tarunabh Khaitan Professor of Public Law and Legal Theory, and Vice Dean, Faculty of Law, Oxford University, UK
The Criminalisation of Anti-Caste Research and Activism in India
Panelists
Anjali Arondekar, Associate Professor of Feminist Studies, and founding Co-Director, Center for South Asian Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz.
Dontha Prashanth, Research Scholar at School of Economics, University of Hyderabad.
Uma Chakravarti, Feminist historian and filmmaker
Moderator
Arun Asokan, Post-doctoral Fellow, History and Philosophy of Mathematical Sciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, Switzerland
Why Academics Need to Be Part of the Farmers' Protest in India
Panelists
Harinder Kaur 'Bindu', President, Bharatiya Kisan Union (Ekta Ugrahan) Women's Wing, India.
Vijoo Krishnan, All India Joint Secretary, All India Kisan Sabha, India.
Surinder Jodhka, Professor of Sociology, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, India.
Shreya Sinha, Research Associate, Department of Geography, University of Cambridge.
Moderator
Ashok Kumbamu, Sociologist and editorial board member, Capitalism, Nature, Socialism
The Criminalisation of Student Activism and the Idea of Academic Freedom in India
Panelists
Professor Apoorvanand, Hindi Department, University of Delhi
Nabiya Khan, a poet and an activist
Hadif Nisar, student activist, and President of the Jammu and Kashmir Students' Association, University of Hyderabad
Moderator
Aman Abhishek, Doctoral Student, School of Journalism & Mass Communication, University of Wisconsin-Madison