[1] The Focus Kerala, a southern state in India, recently
witnessed an unprecedented political uprising in the form of an
Adivasi-Dalit movement for land rights and self-determination. This
struggle1
has a long-drawn-out history, with political ideologies and parties
of various persuasions taking up and sponsoring the struggles of
Dalits and Adivasis in Kerala. However, what is radically new about
the recent developments is that the movement has now taken the
dimension of a subaltern identity politics. Led by an Adivasi
woman, C.K. Janu, around 1500 Adivasis occupied the Muthanga
forests of the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary in North Kerala. This was
in protest against the political apathy of the State Government
that had promised, through an agreement reached between the
Government and the leaders of the Adivasi movement, to provide five
acres of land to each Adivasi family. On August 16, 2003, an
atrocious police operation managed to evict the Adivasis from the
forests, resulting in the killing of an Adivasi leader and a
policeman and injuring hundreds of Adivasis. Despite the
State-sponsored terror inflicted on Adivasis aided by an unholy
alliance of the local elite and the forest mafia, the struggles of
Adivasis continue to gather momentum under the banner of a new
political initiative called "the Adivasi Gothra Maha Sabha" (AGMS),
the Grand Assembly of the Adivasis. This is an expression of an
'Adivasi Republic' where representatives from each Adivasi village
(with gender parity) take decisions for themselves. This assembly
has also forged an alliance with Dalits in Kerala. Unlike other
political movements, the movement led by C.K. Janu represents a new
political awakening in that it is a movement of and led by Dalits
and Adivasis themselves. The fact that the herald of the movement
is an Adivasi woman, articulating issues of social justice and
ecological balance through the forum of 'Adivasi Gothra Sabha' is
of immense political significance. This has, I believe,
ramifications for shaping the future course of ecofeminist
discourse in India. My sense is that the movement led by C.K. Janu
provides an appropriate locus for fleshing out an alternate version
of ecofeminism-an 'organic womanism', as I would want to call it,
in India. A brief survey of 'ecofeminism' is offered here before we
attempt to delineate 'organic womanism' in details.
[2] Introduction Like any other progressive
strand, 'ecofeminism' is also a 'movement', albeit a recent one,
against a particular kind of domination. Whilst most of the
environmental movements impugn anthropocentrism for ecological
crisis, ecofeminism would deem 'androcentrism' the root cause of
the problem. Ecofeminism can be rendered as an attempt to
synthesize two strands of thought-worlds, ecology and feminism,
which hitherto had been viewed as almost completely discrete and
disjointed entities. Put differently, ecofeminism seeks to
highlight the interconnectedness or the isomorphism that exists
between women and nature. It indicates a politic that revolves
around the indispensable correlation between women and nature, both
in essence and praxis.
[3] Genesis of the Movement Simone d'Beauvoire
is considered to be the first acknowledged ecofeminist. According
to her, it is not just the economic advantages that drive 'man' in
his craze for development, but certain psychological incentives as
well.2
Perhaps the earliest roots of the discourse on ecofeminism could be
located in the notion of 'Mother Earth'. Primal religions, by and
large, conceived of god in feminine terms until patriarchy crept
into the indigenous traditions as well. Eric Newman, an illustrious
pupil of Carl Jung, talked about the 'great mother' and her
relations to nature in his Great Mother. Edward Vitand's The Return
of the Goddess is another classic on this tradition. However,
ecofeminism should not be confused with a project that seeks to
merely revive and put the grand old tradition of the goddess back
on the agenda.
[4] It was a French feminist by name Francoise d'Eaubonne who
really set up the project of ecofeminism as part of launching a new
initiative called 'Ecology, Feminism Center' in 1972. In 1974, she
published her path-breaking book Feminism or Death. She used
the word 'ecofeminism' to refer to women's potential to bring about
an ecological revolution. In one of the chapters entitled "The Time
for Ecofeminism," the author contended that in order to restore the
planet for humanity for tomorrow, we had to take it away from the
male. If the male society persisted, she cautioned, there would be
no tomorrow for humanity. In her own words:
"The planet placed in
the feminine will flourish for all."3
[5] However, with the project of 'patriarchalization' of
cultures gaining steady momentum, women's productivity along with
earth's fertility came under the control of men. Thus, phallocracy
came to be identified as the primary cause of both population
explosion as well as environmental calamity.
[6] Various Strands of Eco-feminism Ever since
the dawn of 'eco-feminism', there have been various approaches to
it out of different contextual and ideological persuasions. As
already indicated, ecofeminism is an attempt to transcend the
dichotomization of the struggles for women's rights and
environmental justice. The integral connection between domination
of women and of nature is, perhaps, the central tenet of
ecofeminism. According to Vandana Shiva and Maria Mies, the noted
Indian exponents of ecofeminism:
[7] Ecofeminism is about connectedness and wholeness of theory
and practice. We see the devastation of the earth and human beings
by the corporate warriors (MNCs) and the threat of nuclear
annihilation by the military warriors as feminist concerns. It is
the same masculinist mentality, which would deny us our right to
own bodies and our sexuality, which depends on multiple systems of
dominance and state power to have its way.4
[8] Theorizing of the concerns of women and ecology has been
done from various conceptual perspectives. Adherents of 'deep
ecology' and 'nature feminists', for instance, regard humanity and
other forms of life as quintessentially one and the same ('radical
egalitarianism'). They tend to reject anthropocentrism in toto.
George Session's Deep Ecology: Living as if Nature Mattered (1989)
has been a pioneering work in this field. The major lacunae of this
school of thought, is that it fails to take into account the social
justice component, itself a major aspect of 'environmentalism of
the poor5'. In the effort to
valorize ecological concerns, the eco-just dimensions are ignored.
As Ramchandra Guha discerns, deep ecology's focus on
anthropocentrism effectively masks the role of capitalism and
political economy in the domination of nature and human beings.
Deep ecology can, therefore, sit comfortably with a capitalist
system, without necessarily challenging it. Hence Guha would
warn:
[9] Both the Western style of development and the American brand
of Deep Ecology are grave.6
[10] Elitism of deep ecologists is also reflected in their
concerns such as building and beautifying parks and resorts.
Eco-friendly, though they might sound, have, nevertheless, far
reaching ramifications in the Third World contexts. For instance,
as Guha cautions us, setting aside wilderness in densely populated
cities and villages in India can only mean eviction of the poor,
Dalits and tribals from their homeland and transference of
resources from the poor to the rich industrialists. In effect, the
elite will continue to enjoy the material benefits of a thriving
capitalist economy as well as the aesthetic benefits of a 'pure'
and unadulterated nature. Engaging the category of
'post-materialism7', expounded by
political scientist Ronald Inglehart, Guha calls it
'environmentalism of the rich'. Deep ecology represents this
ever-increasing desire for 'post-materialist' pursuits such as
'enjoyment of clean and beautiful environment'. Here, 'greenness'
becomes the ultimate luxury of the consumer society. Many of the
environmental movements in the North find their motivation from
this post-materialist quest for 'green leisure and comforts', often
at the expense of social justice for indigenous communities who
live in close proximity with nature.
[11] Radical or cultural feminists are inclined to analyze
environmental problems from within its critique of patriarchy. Mary
Daly and Susan Griffins are, perhaps, the most representative of
this school. Daly's Gyn/Ecology and Griffins' Women and Nature are
considered to be contributions of immense import in this area. For
both of them, patriarchy is at the heart of subjugation of women
and nature, and their analysis is basically grounded in biological
difference of men and women. Human beings are biologically sexed
and socially gendered, they would contend.8 Sex and gender
relations provide men and women with entirely different sets of
power concepts. Men, according to them, use women to secure their
'immortality' through child bearing. Hence, only a separatist
movement can hold, the argument goes. This approach is often
criticized for its 'ahistorical' and essentialist tendencies.
[12] 'Social feminists' or 'socialist feminists', on the other
hand, maintain that there is both symmetry as well as asymmetry
between human beings and other beings. They refuse to view
ecological issues as detached from a social justice point of view
and would hold that environmental crises have their origin in
certain political power structures. This implies that in addressing
the concerns of ecofeminism, one needs to challenge the systems of
social domination based on class and gender. While rejecting the
romanticism so characteristic of deep ecology, social ecofeminists
challenge the spirit and logic of consumerism and capitalism. They
consider gender construction (patriarchy) and classism (capitalism)
as integral to the oppressive systems of domination, leading
eventually to subjugation of women and exploitation of nature. The
problem of capitalist technology, itself one of the causes of
today's environmental crisis, is also an impasse caused by
patriarchy. Whilst radical feminists ground their analysis in
biological reproduction, socialist ecofeminists also bring in the
dimension of social reproduction into its analytical orbit. The
socialist feminist theory of 'body' as a socially constructed (re)
producer has informed a public discourse of 'reproductive freedom'-
the freedom to (re) produce or not to (re) produce with their body.
It is in this particular area, as Ynestra King9 suggests, socialist
feminism has become a political force to reckon with. She also
exposes the theoretical scantiness of this school. Although they
have articulated a vigorous economic and class analysis, they have
failed to address the domination of nature in a convincing manner.
This is partly due to their over-reliance on Marxism of whose
language of productivity has been proved wholly inadequate. The
Marxist critique of 'mode of production' does not necessarily
challenge the principle of production. This perspective (critique
of capitalism and patriarchy) makes a formidable impression on
Vandana Shiva and Maria Mies. However, a combination of class and
gender in analyzing the issues of women and ecology, no doubt an
important perspective in itself, is still inadequate in the Indian
context, because class and gender are essentially categories of
Occidental derivation. In India, these postulates have to be
approached from other angles such as caste, tribe and ethnicity.
Seen from this lens, there seem to be at least two pitfalls with
social(ist) ecofeminists such as Shiva and Mies in India. Firstly,
implied in their propositions is an assumption that the obvious
answer to the capitalist development model lies in a 'socialist'
development paradigm, often understood in Marxist categories.
Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, there is a conspicuous
silence on caste and other subaltern categories, either by
oversight or design, in their discourse on women and ecology in
India.
[13] Whilst it is beyond the scope of this essay to dwell on the
first concern, that is, the contention that a socialist development
paradigm constitutes a viable alternative model to the capitalist
one, it would suffice to indicate here that there is hardly any
choice between capitalism and socialism when it comes to
development, as both the models are anthropocentric and rely
heavily on unlimited exploitation of natural resources for the sake
of increasing production.10 It could be said that
just as deep ecology and nature feminists tend to mask the role of
capitalism, most social ecofeminists masquerade the role of
'socialist development' in effecting environmental calamities.
Furthermore, some among social/socialist ecofeminists in India tend
to camouflage the role of feudalism and casteism in the
exploitation of women and land (ecology). The interlocking of
caste/tribe with class and gender in the Indian context is not
engaged sufficiently in the work of ecofeminists such as Shiva.
Vandana Shiva's best known work Staying Alive: Women Ecology and
Survival in India, for instance, has no reference to caste system
or Dalit issues (except for a passing reference to Dalit women
once). About the burden of the book, the author has this to
say:
"The book focuses on science
and development as patriarchal projects not as a denial of other
sources of patriarchy such as religion but because they are thought
to be class, culture and gender neutral"11
[14] Note the evasion of the term 'caste' in the quote. As
Gabriele Dietrich observes, Mies and Shiva have tended to locate
patriarchy exclusively in Western and modernist locales, ignoring
the age-old link between patriarchy and caste system in India. Even
when Shiva idealizes "the democratically organized collective
agriculture dominated by the 'feminine principle," she leaves out
the interplay between caste, class, and gender in traditional
village systems where exchange systems and ownership of resources
are dominated and determined by the dominant caste. They control
the production, redistribution and allocation of resources. This,
no doubt, is 'ecologically sustainable', but this sustainability is
achieved at the expense of 'lower caste' groups and Dalits. Shiva
and Mies, according to Dietrich, are:
…in danger of
contributing to an ideology of patriarchy reductionism which
resembles the class reductionism of the traditional left in
reverse.12
[15] Moreover, the religious symbols and spiritual traditions
that Shiva invokes in her writings are predominantly Sanskritic in
their orientation. Differently put, there appears to be a
'Brahminic' slant about much of what is termed 'ecofeminist'
discourse in India. Shiva's discussion of Indian traditional
culture and spirituality abounds in elitist imageries, especially
upper caste Hindu notions, symbols and metaphors. Pantheism,
goddess tradition, Vedas and Puranas, glorification of 'Ayurveda',
worship of 'sacred tulsi' are just a few of the esoteric Hindu
strands that Shiva appeals to.13 She even employs
the symbol of the 'sacred cow', which has come to assume Brahminic
Hindu overtones in contemporary India. Connecting the symbol of
'cow' with the notion of 'sustainability', Shiva maintains:
Ecologically the cow has
been central to Indian civilization. Both mentally and conceptually
the world of Indian agriculture has built its sustainability on
maintaining the integrity of the cow, considering her inviolable
and sacred, seeing her as the mother of the prosperity of food
system.14
[16] This understanding of sustainability is certainly alien to
the worldview of Dalits and tribals in India. In the view of
Kailash Malhotra, the ancient caste system was actually based on a
concept of sustainable development.15 According to him, the
notion of sustainable development was deftly used to discipline
society by dividing the use of natural resources according to caste
occupations. O.P. Dwivedi appears to be holding the same view when
he opines:
The Hindu caste system can
be seen as a progenitor of the concept of sustainable
development.16
[17] As already indicated, one discerns this element of
'saffronising' of ecological discourse in Shiva. Her invocation of
certain environmental myths associated with the river Ganga will
further reinforce this argument. According to Shiva, Brahman, the
creator of the universe was deeply concerned about the ecological
problem of the descent of Ganga from the heavens to earth. As Mukul
Sharma reminds us, such myths have become profitable tools in the
hands of Hindu fundamentalists to propagate saffron versions of
environmental politics. On invoking the tradition of 'sacred
Ganga' in the anti-Tehri dam movement, he comments:
…antit-Tehri dam
politics has persistently and centrally been constructed through a
conservative Hindu imagery, often in partnership with Hindutva
politics. Ganga becomes holier and holiest. The ecological
reasoning is blurred and goes beyond logic, eliciting Hindu
support, patriotism and xenophobia…. These myths together
integrate the identity of a river and a 'Hindu'
identity.17
[18] Vandana Shiva is uncritical in her use of Brahminic Hindu
symbols (especially problematic when such symbols are heavily used
by the evangelists of "Cultural Nationalism' in India) and also
quite insensitive to the Dalit (caste) dimensions of environmental
concerns. However, there are others such as Aruna Gnanadason,
Gabriele Dietrich and Elizabeth Joy, who seek to look at ecological
issues from the vantage point of Dalit and Adivasi
women.18
Any attempt to grapple with the issues of women and nature sans a
focus on the caste and tribal interplay in India will be of little
relevance.
Towards an Organic Womanism
Naming women…
[19] One of the academic challenges for feminism in India, it
appears, is that of expounding an organic womanist perspective as
against a Western, middle class and at times elitist brand of
ecofeminism, a perspective which would address the issues of women
and nature, particularly from a Dalit/tribal perspective, not
merely from a perspective of women in an unqualified sense.
Imagined and presented as a homogenous and monovocal category,
'women' in eco-feminism remains by and large an un-problematized
construct. Organic womanism, on the other hand, particularizes
'women' -it is the Dalit and Adivasi women interacting with land
(ecology) that constitutes the core of organic womanism.
[20] The term 'organic womanism' is used here in preference to
'ecofeminism'. 'Womanism' is a category that has been popularized
by African feminists. Pointing out the limitations of ecofeminism
vis-a-vis its largely middle class orientation, and its inability
to address the specific issues of the interlocking of race and
gender, African feminists have coined the term 'womanism' as
an alternative vision to ecofeminism. In the Indian context, which
is also characterized by the phenomenon of casteism, womanism makes
much more sense to women of Dalit and Adivasi locale. One of the
arguments in favor of ecofeminism, though, is that it provides a
much more inclusive framework, as it does not necessarily exclude
men from interacting and co-operating with the project of feminism.
Womanism, in this sense, need not be seen as an exclusive
enterprise of women alone. At the same time, it will also be
interested in retaining a certain sense of 'methodological
exclusivism', which is required for an identity politics oriented
discourse such as organic womanism. The adjective 'organic' is
engaged here to highlight the natural relationship that Dalit and
tribal women have with nature, which women of middle class and
other sections of society do not possess at the same level and
intensity.
[21] Given that in India the ownership of women's body and
sexuality, and that of land (ecology) has its base in the power
relations that are primarily rooted in caste and ethnic structures,
this perspective is of immense significance. In the caste-ridden
Indian society, bodies of Dalits and tribal women continue to be
the 'property' of upper caste men. As Elizabeth Joy expresses
the plight of Dalit women:
The Dalit women who work in
the field constantly face the threat of rape…the bodies of
Dalit women are the most exploited and abused. No other sections of
women face this situation as Dalit women do.19
[22] Even today, in many parts of the country, Dalit women are
raped and sexually abused by their feudal and upper caste lords.
They are forced to undergo this experience almost like a ritual.
Such accounts of atrocious demeaning of Dalit bodies and sexuality
find little space in the cerebral exercises of Shiva and Mies.
Moreover, it ought to be noted that in India, social division of
labour (caste system) and sexual violence also plays a significant
role in causing ecological crises.20 Shiva and Mies miss, almost
entirely, this important cross- current of caste in the interplay
of class and gender. While economic class reductionism is one of
the major flaws in Marxist analysis, gender reductionism appears to
be the real travesty in Shiva and Mies. According to
them:
We see the devastation of
the earth and her beings by the corporate warriors, and the threat
of nuclear annihilation by the military warriors as feminist
concerns. It is the same masculinist mentality, which would deny us
our right to own our bodies and our sexuality21
[23] The masculinist culprits here are identified as the
corporate and military warriors, the global capitalist forces.
However, the local protagonists, the 'upper caste' warriors and the
system of casteism are let off in this scrutiny. The 'we' and
the 'us' in Shiva and Mies represent women in general, not
specifically women of Dalit and tribal locale.22 The particularity of the
plight of Dalit and tribal women in India cannot but be emphasized
because they bear the real brunt, and form the immediate victims of
masculinist hegemony in India. In this regard, one needs to
critically look at some of the traditional Indian (Brahminic Hindu)
strands on women and sexuality. Sanskritic Hinduism goes to the
extent of glorifying women and nature, even according them divine
status, albeit in an 'orientalist' and esoteric sense. The
patriarchal face of this tradition is unmistakably recognized in
Narada Smriti, which has this to say about women:
Women are created for
offspring, a woman is the field and a man is the possessor of the
field.23
It further adds:
Like the earth, a woman too has to bear pain. The earth is
ploughed, furrowed, dug into…a woman also is pierced and
ploughed.24
[24] As Leela Dube argues, a woman's body is equated here with
the field or earth and the male semen with the seed and the process
of reproduction with the process of procreation. Like land
(nature), women are also considered the private domain of men. This
is a misogynist understanding of women-nature conflation. In this
connection, one must not miss the point that it is the same Hindu
value system that the emerging fascist Hindutva forces are seeking
to invoke today as part of their new enterprise of Cultural
Nationalism25. It is the body of
Dalit and tribal women and the body of women from minority
religious sections that the fascists are after. In much the same
fashion, they also seek to invade the space of Dalits and Adivasis
by evicting them off their homeland. Even more intriguing is the
fact that all this is done in the name of environmental
sustainability and preservation. Organic womanism faces this
paradox and challenge boldly. As far as organic womanism is
concerned, what is critical is the rape of Dalit and tribal women,
not just the rape of any women. In much the same vein, the crucial
question for an organic womanist is not quite the rape of the earth
as a whole, but rape of the land of Dalits and Adivasis. This is
because meta-theories and global narratives play a relatively
subservient role to the much more localized micro perspectives in
organic womanism.
[25] The caste factor in 'organic womanism' is also vital
because in India, as Louis Dumont and others have convincingly
established, the question of purity and pollution are measured by
the degree of human interaction with organic life in the
traditional societal life. Involvement in child bearing and
agriculture are, therefore, deemed polluting. Consequently,
Dalit/Adivasi women, unlike other women, become carriers of 'double
pollution' on account of their role in child bearing as well as in
agriculture. Dietrich has derived yet another insight from Dumont.
Although death is thought to be ritually polluting, the martial
castes, that were the professional death dealers, were not
considered polluted through their vocation. To the contrary, they
were even ranked next only to those involved in production of life.
This has pertinent ecological ramifications, holds
Dietrich26, as it connects with
the pseudo-productivity of the predatory approach which Shiva and
Mies describe in contradistinction to the production of life
carried out by women and Dalits. This element of organic touch of
Dalit and Adivasi women, their direct and close encounter with
nature is one of the raison d'être for my preference for
'organic womanism' to ecofeminism. Ecofeminism in its contemporary
manifestation, in its present form and content, stands devoid of
this cutting edge, the particular focus on Dalit and Adivasi women
and their sense of organic environmentalism. Transcending the
red-green (these days even saffron) version of ecofeminism of the
likes of Shiva and Mies, organic womanism postulates a
black-red-green brand of environmentalism. Blackness (the
Dalit/Adivasi identity) here is more than a shade and does not get
subsumed by green and red in the new political configuration. In
fact, blackness is what provides green its red hue. Elements of
such an organic womanism are seen in the emerging Dalit/Adivasi
struggles for land in Kerala, spearheaded by the Adivasi woman
leader C.K. Janu.
[26] Beyond the Masculine and the Stereotypical in
Ecofeminism Organic womanism can also transcend certain
other limitations of an ecofeminist framework. The prefix 'eco' has
been avoided here for mainly two reasons. First, the prefix appears
to have lost its teeth because of the excessive and rather over
simplified use of the term in contemporary discourse on ecology.
For instance, the 'eco' in 'eco-tourism' stands for anything but
ecology. At best, it points to an elitist environmental
project- 'environmentalism of rich'. Moreover, 'eco' in ecofeminism
is, in fact, a masculine category, the prefix being an abbreviation
of 'ecological', itself a derivative of the Greek masculine term
'oikos' meaning 'household'. The ancient Greek concept of 'oikos',
it may be noted, was very much a patriarchal notion.27 By projecting an
almost essentialist identification of women and nature, between
women and 'household' to be precise, ecofeminism is, in fact,
engaged, albeit unwittingly, in a project which can be
self-defeating in its goal. Ecofeminism, by accepting the 'natural'
('the given') responsibility of women in looking after the
'household' actually falls into the patriarchal trap of
'housewifization' of women. As J. Devika cautions:
The ideology of domesticity
marks out the home as a space for fashioning the modern
individualized self, overseen by the women (the 'housewife') who is
given the responsibility of regulating the altruistic exchange
between the members of the household. She is granted a subtle,
sentimental non-coercive power, which she is to exercise over the
other members of the family. However the cost of such power is
always very high: these women must also subject herself to the
strictest self-disciplining.28
Beyond the Classical 'Care Ethic'…
[27] Organic womanism, as an alternative vision to ecofeminism,
instead, raises the question of ownership of land (nature) and
therefore of power relations as well. Dalit and Adivasi women
are talking about the preservation of their own space and therefore
about their own ecology. They are no more willing to take on the
'feminine' responsibility of taking care of space and ecology,
which isn't theirs. In other words, there is no sense of idealizing
the 'feminine' virtues here. Celebration of stereotypical 'feminine
values' can become the very cause of domination of women by men and
hence is resisted. In other words, it is not the classical 'care
ethic' of the essentialist ecofeminism that organic womanism
proposes. Rather, recapturing of the lost ownership of their
ancestral land (nature) and its 'care' through an organic
interaction is what organic womanism is all about. 'Care' in
organic womanism ceases to be a patronizing moral virtue; rather it
assumes an affirmative nuance. Dalit and Adivasi women project
themselves as owners of their land and space, (their identity is
not that of 'workers' in some one else's field as the traditional
'working class' label apparently entails) assuming subject hood,
selfhood and motherhood.
[28] 'Motherhood' in Organic Womanism The image
of 'mother' is an important facet of organic womanism, doubtless
with a radically different countenance. Aruna Gnanadason revisits
'motherhood' as an epistemological category in her reflections on
the interconnectedness of women and nature, especially from an
Indian contextual perspective. In her view, motherhood is
understood in India beyond its biological functionalist overtones.
Appreciated as a powerful symbol of care and nurture, motherhood
also represents creativity, regeneration and sustenance.
Gnanadason, however is conscious of the inherent potential for this
image to be appropriated by patriarchy and hence calls for a
process of deconstruction of the image.
[29] According to Gnanadason:
…we must debunk
patriarchy's appropriation of motherhood and the ways in which this
has been used to trample on the rights of women in India and
elsewhere and to control their sexuality and
creativity.29
[30] In their musings on women and ecology in Africa, there is a
recurrent use of the term 'ecomotherists'. Motherhood image fits in
well within an ethic of care. As Sara Ruddick30 points out, a mother's
experience of bringing up children and taking care of conflicts
among them represents a spirit of nurture and care. Applied to
social engineering, it becomes a life affirming
principle.31
[31] Innate in Dalit and Adivasi ethos is a strong attachment to
the image of mother. C.K. Janu echoes a similar voice in her
biography where she portrays forest as mother.32 However, it is
different from the 'benevolent colonial mother'33 of elitist
environmentalism, who takes care of her 'adopted' children in a
patronizing manner. Neither is the Adivasi vision a cryptic one
where Adivasis and Dalits are taken care of as 'the other' by the
superior mother, the Self. This has revolutionary implications for
an identity politics, which would challenge the hijacking of
environmental movements and their leadership by non-Dalits and
non-Adivasis. This is what has happened in the Mutthanga struggle
where Dalit and Adivasi women have effectively removed the middle
class environmentalists and politicians from their role of
'benevolent mothers'. The relationship of the mother and her
children here is not romantic, that is, understood exclusively in
terms of 'intrinsic worth of creation' (reverence for mother
nature), rather, it is a non-mechanistic relationship, an
interaction geared toward the survival and sustenance of both
nature and her children. This way, the social justice component
(eco-justice34)
is not lost in this approach. The mother and the children own each
other. Both women and nature assume the roles of the mother and
children interchangeably, owning and caring for each other.
[32] Organic Womanism: A New Political Praxis
Organic womanism stands out also on account of its revolutionary
political praxis. Whereas much of ecofeminism remains at the level
of mere intellectual engagement, organic womanism asserts itself in
the form of civil society movements through concrete
socio-political action. In this sense, organic womanism actually
takes the debate on women and ecology to a postmodern phase. It
takes on the dimensions of 'micro-politics' or 'resistance
politics'35, raising unsettling
questions about capital (economic, cultural and symbolic),
questions of ownership and control over resources. Power is
understood vis-à-vis a 'multiplicity of relations,
de-centred and produced incessantly from one movement to the
another', as Foucault describes it. De-centred power warrants
de-centralized politics. As Ashi Sara observes, the 'self-rule'
concept of Adivasis, as it has been explicated by the Adivasi
Gothra Maha Sabha (AGMS) in Kerala, corresponds to this
postmodern/post-structuralist notion of democratic
power.36
It is not a democracy imposed by the State, but a democracy where
Adivasis and Dalits represent themselves. From this perspective,
organic womanism would care less about the political correctness of
theory because the very power relations behind a theory are brought
under close scrutiny here. As Quinby puts it, theory is applied
here not in the prescriptive mode, rather in the interrogative
mode, raising questions about leadership and power dynamics. No
ideology enjoys a sacrosanct position in such politics, which
affirms the provisional nature of all ideological points of
reference. This will even challenge certain essentialist tendencies
within ecofeminism. Organic womanism refuses to treat women as a
monovocal subject, feminity as of pure essence, nature as a fixed
locus, holism as a deterministic system, and body as a static
materiality.37 Gayatri Spivak also
warns us on the dangers of essentialism when she says:
Essentialism is a
trap…Homogenizing women's diverse experiences and then
romanticizing that "essence" blind us to the myriad ways in which
the idea of 'womanhood' is implicated in constraints on and
brutality against women. 38
[33] Shiva and Mies seem to have taken the slippery slope
position vis-à-vis their essentialist proclivity. In
contrast to the objective 'we' and 'us' in Shiva and Mies, a
subjective 'we' is constructed. The new 'we' is not a category
without a name and a face. Neither is this 'we' represented in 'on
behalf of' terms, but by themselves. The 'we' are Dalit and Adivasi
women. Established grand truth claims, both political and
ideological, are approached with a 'hermeneutics of suspicion' and
even challenged by truth claims that are derived from the day- to-
day experiences of specific women. In this sense, it is
'post-class' and post-Marxist' -a subaltern movement. Organic
womanism and organic environmentalism is a form of subaltern
identity politics. It is here that the environmental movements led
by Medha Patkar of the 'Narmada Bachao Andolan' (NBA) and the one
led by C.K. Janu (AGMS) encounter their essential point of
divergence. Medha Patkar cannot express the organic identity that
Dalit and Adivasi women have with nature the way C.K. Janu as an
Adivasi woman is able to.39 Organic environmentalism and
womanism, in other words, will raise questions about the very
identity of those in leadership of movements, questions regarding
ownership of resources and thereby ultimately questions of
political power as well.
[34] Take a look at the names that Vandana Shiva so proudly
presents to us as the 'catalysers' of the famous Chipko Movement-
Mira Behn, Sarala Behn, Hima Devi, Gauri Devi, Gurga Devi, Itwari
Devi, and among men leaders of the movement, Sunderlal Bahuguna,
and Chandi Prasad Bhatt. The caste identity of all these women and
men will speak volumes about the character of the movement. Shiva
has no doubts whatsoever in her mind as to who leads the struggle
conceptually and organizationally. The philosophical articulation
of the movement has been the responsibility of Bahuguna and Mira
Behn, whereas Sarala Behn has been providing the organizational
leadership.40
Shiva calls her brand of ecofeminism 'post-victimology study'. She
explains the concept further when she says:
…the women who participate in and lead ecology movements
in countries like India are not speaking merely as
victims…41
[35] How can the leaders of the movements that Shiva talks
about, speak the language of 'victims' at all, when they do not
constitute the community of 'victims'? This is the point of
departure for organic womanism because it is about victims taking
leadership of their own struggles and articulating their own
world-views. They do not look up to the Mira Behns and the
Bahugunas for conceptual articulations of their concerns and the
'Bhatts' for organizing their movements. It is this process of
rigorous interrogation, Dalits and Adivasis raising critical
questions about their right to ownership of forests and land, about
the leadership of people's movements, that has sent ripples among
the rank and file of some of the 'progressive' environmentalists
and eco-feminists, that is, among the 'colonial mothers'. The kind
of knee-jerk reactions we have had from these 'progressive'
quarters, which included political parties, intellectuals and
activists with leftist ideological leanings, toward the recent
occupation of forests (their homeland) by Adivasis, condemning it
as ecocide, illustrate the deep divisions that exist between a
middle class environmentalism, (eco-feminism included), and the
emerging organic environmentalism and womanism. If anything, C.K.
Janu's movement has exposed the pseudo prophets of our times. As
Quinby predicted, such questioning of traditional, classical mode
of revolutionary thinking could well risk the end of ecofeminist
imagination as it is currently constituted. She adds:
And if another term and a different politics emerge from this
questioning, it will be in the service of new local actions, new
creative energies, and new alliances against power42
[36] In sum, organic environmentalism and womanism, to me, is
certainly a different category that represents a politics with a
difference- a subaltern resistance politics. It is a new brand of
environmentalism where, as Guha explains, the process of resource
capture by 'omnivores', both in the public and private sector, is
resisted by 'ecosystem people' through non-violent
struggles. The Adivasi-Dalit land struggle of which the
harbinger is C.K. Janu, an Adivasi woman (both these words are
important for an identity politics), has all the hallmarks of such
a politics, a much needed paradigm shift that civil society has
been longing for ages. Yes, the subalterns can speak and, indeed,
they have spoken.
© December 2003
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 3, Issue 12
1 See C.R. Bijoy and K. Ravi Raman, "Muthanga: The Real
Story, Adivasi Movement to Reclaim Land" in Economic and Political
Weekly, Vol.XXXVIII, No.20, May 17-23, 2003, pp.1975-1982, for a
detailed analysis of the movement from an historical
perspective.
2 See G. Madhusudan "Ecofeminism Sahithyathil" (Malayalam)
in Mathrubhoomi Weekly, No.450, 2002, pp. 7-11.
3 Quoted in Carolyn Merchant "Ecology: Key Concepts in
Critical Theory", p.10.
4 Vandana Shiva and Maria Mies, Ecofeminism, Kali for
Women, New Delhi, 1993, p. 14.
5 Ramachandra Guha and J. M. Alier, Varieties of
Environmentalism: Essays North and South, Oxford University Press,
Mumbai, 1998, p.xxi.
6 Ibid.
7 Ibid., p. xiv. The theory argues that a rapid economic
growth since World War II has, through the creation of a mass
consumer society, led to the satisfaction of material needs and
expectations for the vast majority of the population.
8 Carolyn Merchant , Ecofeminism and Feminist Theory" in
Irene Diamond and Gloria Feman Orenstein (eds), Reweaving the
World: The Emergence of Ecofeminism, Sierra Club Books, San
Francisco, 1990, p.101.
9 Ynestra King, "Healing the Wounds: Feminism, Ecology,
and the Nature/Culture Dualism" in Ibid., p. 114.
10 For a detailed discussion on the theme, see my Green
Liberation: Towards an integral Ecotheology, ISPCK, Delhi, 1999,
pp.111-145.
11 Vandana Shiva, Staying Alive: Women Ecology and
Survival in India, Kali for Women, New Delhi, 1988, p. xvi
(emphases mine). It is also interesting to note that Vandana Shiva
in her edited book, Minding Our Lives: Women from the South and
North Reconnect Ecology and Health, ignores the caste factor
completely, whereas Gail Omvedt, one of the contributors in the
volume, does deal with the interlocking of caste and gender in the
Indian context. (See p.101)
12 Gabriele Dietrich, Women's Movements in India:
Conceptual and Religious Reflections, Breakthrough Publications,
Bangalore, 1988, p.155.
13 Vandana Shiva, Staying Alive, op.cit., pp. 39-40.
14 Ibid., p.165.
15 Quoted in Mukul Sharma, "Saffronising green" in
Seminar, No.516, August 2002, pp.26-27.
16 Quoted in Ibid., p.27.
17 Ibid., p.29.
18 Aruna Gnanadason, Gabriele Dietrich and Elizabeth Joy
have also critiqued Shiva and Mies. Some of their writings are
referred to in this essay. Perhaps, the difference in their
perspectives has to do with their minority religious and marginal
caste backgrounds.
19 Elizabeth Joy, "Eco-feminist Spirituality: A Response
from Dalit-Tribal Perspective", (an unpublished paper presented at
a National Consultation on Eco-feminism) p. 10. According to Ruth
Manorama, an organic Dalit thinker, Dalit women are 'thrice
alienated' on account of their caste, gender and class
backgrounds.
20 See George Mathew Nalunnakkal, Green Liberation,
op.cit., pp.173-181, for a detailed discussion on the caste
dimensions of women's oppression.
21 Vandana Shiva and Maria Mies, op. cit., p. (emphases
mine)
22 In Shiva's writings, one comes across innumerable
references to 'women', Third World women', 'Indian women', 'Third
World farmers' , 'Indian farmers' etc. All of them appear as
monovocal categories, un-problematized and non-particularized.
'Farmers' in Adivasi belts in Kerala, for instance, are actually
the invaders who took the land away from Adivais.
23 Quoted in Janet Chawla, "Gendered Representations of
Seed, Earth and Grain: A Women Centred Perspective on the Condition
of Women and Earth" in The Journal of Dharma, Vol.XVII, No.3,
July-Sept, 1993, p.237.
24 Ibid., p.240.
25 It must be acknowledged that Vandana Shiva is critical
about such misogynist conflation of women and nature and also about
the patriarchal usage of 'seed' and 'earth' categories. (See her
Minding Our Lives, op.cit., p.128)
26 See Gabriele Dietrich, op.cit., p. 168.
27 'Oikoumene' referred primarily to the 'civilized Greek
world' as against the uncivilized rest of the world. Later, it also
came to be identified with the colonial Roman empire.
28 J. Devika, " Imagining Eco-feminist Politics in
Contemporary Keralam: A Note for Discussion" (an unpublished paper
presented at a National Consultation on Ecofeminism), p.6.
29 Aruna Gnanadason, "Towards an Eco-feminist Theology
from the Perspective of Indian Women", (an unpublished paper
presented at a National Consultation on "Recasting Women, Recasting
Theology"), p.6.
30 See Sara Ruddick, Maternal Thinking: Towards a Politics
of Peace, Beacon Press, Boston, 1990.
31 Virginia Held also dwells on the image of 'mother' from
an eco-feminist perspective in her edited book Justice and Care:
Essential Readings in Feminist Ethics, Westview, Boulder, 1993.
32 C.K. Janu: Januinte Atmakatha (Malayalam), DC Books,
Kottayam, 2003, p.11.
33 Franz Fanon uses this expression in his "Wretched of
the Earth".
34 In one of her recent public speeches , C.K. Janu made
the following statement: "Our struggle is not merely for our right
to live, but also for the rights of every one, every plant and
animal, every creature on this earth" (Translation mine).
35 For a detailed discussion, see Lee Quinby, "Ecofeminism
and the Politics of Resistance" in Irene Diamond et.al (eds),
op.cit, pp. 122-127.
36 Ashi Sara Oommen, "Struggle Survives; Survival
Struggles", an Inter- Disciplinary paper presented at a seminar at
the United Theological College, Bangalore, (unpublished), p.
12.
37 Lee Quinby, op.cit., p.125
38 Quoted in Ibid.
39 Medha Patkar, a popular woman activist, the main leader
of the Narmada Bachao Andholan (NBA) hails from an upper caste
Hindu background.
40 Vandana Shiva, Staying Alive, op.cit., p.71.
41 Ibid., p.40.
42 Lee Quinby, op.cit., p. 126.