Angana P. Chatterji | |
---|---|
Born | November 1966 (age 57) Calcutta, India |
Citizenship | Indian |
Education | MA (political science) PhD (humanities) |
Alma mater | CIIS, San Francisco |
Notable work | Violent Gods, Buried Evidence |
Partner | Richard Shapiro |
Website | anganachatterji.net |
Angana P. Chatterji (born November 1966) is an Indian anthropologist, activist, and feminist historian, whose research is closely related to her advocacy work and focuses mainly on India. She co-founded the International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Kashmir and was a co-convener from April 2008 to December 2012. [1]
She is currently a research scholar at the Centre for Race and Gender at the University of California at Berkeley. [2]
Angana Chatterji is the daughter of Bhola Chatterji (1922–1992), a socialist and Indian freedom fighter and Anubha Sengupta Chatterji. She is the great-great-granddaughter of Gooroodas Banerjee, a judge and the first Indian Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calcutta. She grew up in the communally-tense neighborhood of Narkeldanga and Rajabazar in Kolkata. Her family included intercaste parents and grandparents, and aunts who were Muslim and Catholic. [3]
Chatterji moved from Kolkata to Delhi in 1984, and then to the United States in the 1990s. She retains her Indian citizenship but is a permanent resident of the United States. [4] Her formal education comprises a BA and an MA in Political Science. She also holds a PhD in the Humanities from California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS), where she later taught anthropology. [5] The topic of her dissertation (completed in 1999) was "The Politics of Sustainable Ecology: Initiatives, Conflicts, Alliances in Public Lands Access, Use and Reform in Orissa." [6]
From her graduation until 1997, Chatterji worked as director of research at the Asia Forest Network, an environmental advocacy group. During this period, she also worked with the Indian Institute of Public Administration, the Indian Social Institute, [7] and the Planning Commission of India. [8]
Chatterji joined the teaching staff of the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) in 1997, and taught Social and Cultural Anthropology there. Her social and academic advocacy work was related to anthropology, as she was examining issues of class, gender, race, religion, and sexuality as formed by background (history) and place (geography). [9] At CIIS, she worked with her colleague and partner, Richard Shapiro, to create a new academic center focused on postcolonial anthropology. [10]
Chatterji's publications include research monographs, reports and books. [11] In 1990, she co-published a report on immigrant women's rights in Delhi's slums and resettlement colonies. [12] In 1996, based on participatory research on indigenous and Dalit land rights issues and on caste inequities, she self-published a monograph Community Forest Management in Arabari: Understanding Socioeconomic and Subsistence Issues. In 2004, she co-edited with Lubna Nazir Chaudhury a special issue of Cultural Dynamics, entitled "Gendered Violence in South Asia: Nation and Community in The Postcolonial Present" [13] In 2005, she co-edited a book with Shabnam Hashmi entitled Dark Leaves of the Present which was non-scholarly and intended for the general public. In March 2009, after six and a half years of collaborative and theoretical research, she produced a study on Hindu nationalism entitled Violent Gods: Hindu Nationalism in India's Present; Narratives from Orissa, published by Three Essays Collective, [14] which received favourable reviews in popular periodicals, [15] [16] [17] and has been reviewed by American Ethnologist . [18]
She has co-contributed to an anthology with Tariq Ali, Arundhati Roy et al., Kashmir: The Case for Freedom (2011) and to South Asian Feminisms (2012), co-edited by Ania Loomba and Ritty A. Lukose. [19] She is co-editor of Contesting Nation: Gendered Violence in South Asia; Notes on the Postcolonial Present (2013) and is working on a forthcoming title: Land and Justice: The Struggle for Cultural Survival. [20]
In 2002, Chatterji worked with the Campaign to Stop Funding Hate in the production of a report on the funding of Sangh Parivar service organizations in India by the Maryland-based India Development and Relief Fund. [21]
In 2005, she helped form and worked with the Coalition Against Genocide in the United States to raise public awareness and protest the visit of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi to the U.S. as an honored guest. [22]
In 2005, she co-convened a People's Tribunal to record testimonials on the experiences and concerns of different strata of people on the rise of the Hindu nationalist Sangh Parivar in Orissa. In this, Chatterji worked with Indian People's Tribunal on Environment and Human Rights, with Mihir Desai, Retired Chief Justice K.K. Usha of Kerala, Sudhir Pattnaik, Ram Puniyani, Colin Gonsalves and others. As the People's Tribunal on Communalism in Orissa was ongoing in June 2005, Sangh members disrupted the Tribunal's proceedings, threatening to rape and parade the women members of the Tribunal. [23] [24] [25] [26] The Tribunal released a detailed report in October 2006, warning of future violence. [27]
After the outbreak of violence between the Hindu and Christian groups in December 2007, Chatterji testified to the Panigrahi Commission against the Sangh Parivar groups, and warned of further violence. She wrote articles criticizing the Hindutva groups, when fresh religious violence broke out in Orissa after the murder of Swami Lakshmanananda in August 2008. [28] [29]
Chatterji was lead author of a 2009 report titled Buried Evidence: Unknown, Unmarked, and Mass Graves in Indian-administered Kashmir, detailing 2,700 unknown, unmarked, and mass graves across three districts and 55 villages. [30] [31] The findings of the report would be verified by the united nation Human Rights Commission in 2011. [32]
On 30 August 2010, Chatterji was announced as a member of advisory board of the Kashmir Initiative at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy of Harvard Kennedy School. [33]
In October 2019, Chatterji testified before the U.S. Congressional Committee on Foreign Affairs on human rights violations in Indian-administered Kashmir. [34] [35]
In November 2010, Chatterji's husband, Richard Shapiro, was denied entry to India by immigration authorities at the Delhi airport, [36] [37] and was forced to return to the United States. Though no official reason was given to Shapiro for the denial of entry, [38] many suspect that he had been denied due to Chatterji's work on human rights issues in Kashmir. [39]
Chatterji and Shapiro were suspended in July 2011 and dismissed in December 2011 after 14 and 25 years of service respectively, after the CIIS received student complaints against them. The CIIS Faculty Hearing Board found them guilty of failure to perform academic duties and violation of professional ethics. [40] The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that Chatterji (along with Shapiro) had been fired for having “breached student confidence, falsified grades, misapplied funds, and otherwise engaged inunprofessional conduct, generally to ensure the loyalty and obedience of those they taught and advised.” [41] However, according to India Abroad, 39 Anthropology students from a Department of 50 retained legal counsel to take action against CIIS. [42] The Chronicle of Higher Education also reported allegations by a student, who had been supportive of Shapiro and Chatterji, of being pressured to say negative things about the two professors." [41] All accusations against Chatterji and Shapiro were dropped by CIIS in early 2013 as part of an arbitration agreement, with the school paying toward their legal fees. [43]
In October 2011, Verso Books published the book Kashmir: The Case for Freedom, of which Chatterji is a contributing author. [44]
She is co-editor of Contesting Nation: Gendered Violence in South Asia; Notes on the Postcolonial Present (Zubaan Books), released in April 2013. [45]
In 2012, she and Shashi Buluswar co-founded the Armed Conflict Resolution and People's Rights Project, housed at the University of California, Berkeley. [46] The Project co-authored its first research report in 2015, "Access to Justice for Women: India’s Response to Sexual Violence in Conflict and Mass Social Unrest" with the Human Rights Law Clinic at Boalt Law School. [47] In the same year, it also published a monograph, Conflicted Democracies and Gendered Violence: The Right to Heal. [48] The monograph included a statement by former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay and a foreword by Veena Das.
Chatterji co-edited, with Thomas Blom Hansen and Christophe Jaffrelot, the 2019 book Majoritarian State: How Hindu Nationalism is Changing India, in which contributors discussed how Hindu nationalism has influenced Indian government bodies and social sectors since 2014. [49]
In September 2021, Chatterji authored BREAKING WORLDS: Religion, Law and Citizenship in Majoritarian India The Story of Assam in collaboration with Mihir Desai, Harsh Mander, and Abdul Kalam Azad, on the "weaponization" of citizenship laws and policies to erode or remove the citizenship rights of certain minorities, especially those of Bengali Muslims. [50]
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is an Indian right-wing, Hindu nationalist volunteer paramilitary organisation. It is the progenitor and leader of a large body of organisations called the Sangh Parivar, which has developed a presence in all facets of Indian society and includes the Bharatiya Janata Party, the ruling political party under Narendra Modi, the 14th prime minister of India. Mohan Bhagwat has served as the Sarsanghchalak of the RSS since March 2009.
The Sangh Parivar refers, as an umbrella term, to the collection of Hindutva organisations spawned by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), which remain affiliated to it. These include the political party Bharatiya Janata Party, religious organisation Vishva Hindu Parishad, students union Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), religious militant organisation Bajrang Dal that forms the youth wing of the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), and the worker's union Bharatiya Kisan Sangh. It is also often taken to include allied organisations such as the Shiv Sena, which share the ideology of the RSS.
Anti-Christian violence in India is religiously motivated violence against Christians in India. Human Rights Watch has classified violence against Christians in India as a tactic used by the right-wing Sangh Parivar organizations to encourage and exploit communal violence in furtherance of their political ends. The acts of violence include arson of churches, conversion of Christians by force, physical violence, sexual assaults, murders, rapes, and the destruction of Christian schools, colleges, and cemeteries.
Religious violence in Odisha consists of civil unrest and riots in the remote forest region surrounding the Kandhamal district in the western parts of the Indian state of Odisha.
Ram Puniyani is an Indian author, former professor of biomedical engineering and former senior medical officer affiliated with the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. He began his medical career in 1973 and served IIT in various capacities for 27 years, beginning in 1977. He has been involved with human rights activities and initiatives to oppose Hindu fundamentalism in India and is currently the President of the Executive Council of the Centre for Study of Society and Secularism (CSSS). He is also an advisory board member of the Muslim Mirror.
Thomas Blom Hansen is a Danish anthropologist and commentator on religious and political violence in India.
Hindu nationalism has been collectively referred to as the expression of social and political thought, based on the native spiritual and cultural traditions of the Indian subcontinent. "Hindu nationalism" is a simplistic translation of हिन्दू राष्ट्रवाद. It is better described as "Hindu polity".
The Akhil Bharatiya Itihas Sankalan Yojana (ABISY) is a subsidiary of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), an organisation. Envisioned in 1973 by Moropant Pingley, a pracharak of the RSS, and founded in 1978-79, ABISY holds that India's history was distorted by the British Raj, and seeks to correct the biases. Scholars state that the actual aim of the organisation is to rewrite Indian history from a Hindu nationalist perspective.
Christophe Jaffrelot is a French political scientist and Indologist specialising in South Asia, particularly India and Pakistan. He is a professor of South Asian politics and history the Centre d'études et de recherches internationales (CERI) at Sciences Po (Paris), a professor of Indian Politics and Sociology at the King's India Institute (London), and a Research Director at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS).
The Indian People's Tribunal (IPT), also called the Indian People's Tribunal on Environmental and Human Rights or Independent People's Tribunal, was a People's Tribunal set up by the Human Rights Law Network (HRLN) on 5 June 1993. The IPT is an unofficial body led by retired judges who form a panel that conducts public enquiries into human rights and environmental abuses. It provides an alternative outlet for the victims faced with official obstruction and delays. Since being founded the IPT has conducted numerous investigations into cases of relocation of rural people to make way for dams or parks, eviction of slum dwellers, industrial pollution and communal or state-sponsored violence.
K. K. Usha was an Indian judge who served as Chief Justice of the Kerala High Court. She was the first female judge on the High Court. She advocated for women's rights and for the elimination of all forms of discrimination. Usha served as president of the Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal.
Subash Chouhan was the national President of the Bajrang Dal, a Hindutva organization in India that is the youth wing of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP).
Mihir Desai is a human rights lawyer in cases of mass murders and riots, fake encounter and custodial deaths by the police, police brutality, freedom of speech and journalists, political activists & prisoners of conscience, excesses by the state, mass disappearances and deaths and genocide probes. A senior counsel, he has been practicing criminal matters in Bombay High Court, Mumbai and the Supreme Court of India.
Sudhir Pattnaik is a journalist and a social activist from Orissa, India. He is the editor of Samadrusti, a fortnightly political and social news magazine in the Odia language published from Bhubaneswar.
International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Kashmir (IPTK) is a People's Tribunal formed by Indian human rights activists for the purpose of probing human right violations in the Indian-administered territory of Jammu and Kashmir, and bridging the gap between people living in Kashmir and rest of India. It was first convened in 2008 by Parvez Imroz, Angana P. Chatterji, Gautam Navlakha and Zaheer-Ud-Din. Chatterji served as convener until December 2012.
The 2008 Kandhamal violence refers to widespread violence against Christians purportedly incited by Hindutva organisations in the Kandhamal district of Orissa, India, in August 2008 after the murder of the Hindu monk Lakshmanananda Saraswati. According to government reports the violence resulted in at least 39 Christians killed. Reports indicate that more than 395 churches were razed or burnt down, between 5,600–6,500 houses plundered or burnt down, over 600 villages ransacked and more than 60,000 – 75,000 people left homeless. Other reports put the death toll at nearly 100 and suggested more than 40 women were sexually assaulted. Unofficial reports placed the number of those killed to more than 500. Many Christian families were burnt alive. Thousands of Christians were forced to convert to Hinduism under threat of violence. Many Hindu families were also assaulted in some places because they supported the Indian National Congress (INC) party. This violence was led by the Bajrang Dal, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and the VHP.
The Kashmir conflict has been beset by large scale usage of sexual violence by multiple belligerents since its inception.
The 2007 Christmas violence in Kandhamal violence refers to the violence that occurred during the Christmas of 2007 between the groups led by Sangh Parivar together with the Sangh-affiliated Kui Samaj and the Christians in the Kandhamal district of Odisha.
Akhil Bharatiya Pratinidhi Sabha is the highest decision making or apex policy making body of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
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