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    Default Women Martyrs of The Indian Revolution

    "Women hold up half the sky."

    - Mao

    For millenia has the toiling woman been bound by the chains of servitude towards men. Long has she endured the tyranny of patriarchy in the same civilization that revolves like the earth around the glorious sun of her own sweat and blood. In the era of proletarian revolutions that we live in, it is not time for her to plead for freedom with folded hands, but to snatch it with clenched fists. Behold as the legends of Joan of Arc and Hua Mu Lan come alive in her in every corner of the world from Naxalbari to Ayacucho ! Hear her battle cry echoing through the forests and fields of Bastar and Lalgarh that make imperialists all over the world tremble ! Bow down before her valiance as she leads her comrades into battle ! Leave way for her, for she has a world to win !

























    The following posts constitute the introduction to the book “Women Martyrs of the Indian Revolution (Naxalbari to 2010)". Download the full book in two parts here :

    http://www.bannedthought.net/India/C...-Vol-1.pmd.pdf

    http://www.bannedthought.net/India/C...-Vol-2.pmd.pdf

    This is the list of five hundred women martyrs from India :

    http://www.bannedthought.net/India/C...bariTo2010.pdf
    Last edited by red cat; 4th April 2011 at 13:09.
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    Let Us Realize the Dreams of the Great Martyrs

    We are presenting here the poignant life histories of undaunted
    courageous and ever inspiring women who were martyred in the struggle
    for New Democratic Revolution (NDR) in India, since the historic Naxalbari
    armed peasant rebellion which burst forth like a ‘Spring Thunder’ in 1967.
    The great Naxalbari rebellion, the armed agrarian revolution itself was
    not an isolated phenomena and it had erupted in an international
    background of earth-shaking events. Particularly, it was inspired by the
    Great Debate against modern revisionism of Kruschev & Co. and Great
    Proletarian Cultural Revolution launched under the leadership of Mao in
    China. Naxalbari had broken the back of the modern revisionism, mainly
    that of CPI (M) and shown the real path of liberation for the oppressed
    masses of India.

    The spring thunder of Naxalbari was a clarion call for the oppressed
    and exploited people of India. It showed them the path for liberation. It
    has been forty years since six peasant women, two children and a peasant
    had laid down their lives in Naxalbari while fighting for land and life with
    dignity – their liberation. Then onwards oppressed people of our country
    have begun to write a new history of their own through their own class
    struggle and with their own hands to reach their ultimate destiny which
    paves the way for the liberation of entire mankind from all clutches and
    prejudices of class society. This all-encompassing history is tremendously
    influencing all spheres of our society, the polity, economy, relations
    between different social classes and communities, family, culture, literature
    and ecology. The history of oppressed women is the real history of the
    dearest daughters of our beloved country which is an inseparable, vital
    component of the history of oppressed people. And no success in the
    revolutionary war or the final victory of the revolution is imaginable or
    possible without women. Hence, the need to study their history. These
    life histories are an inseparable part of this people’s history.
    In these long-drawn forty years, the Indian revolutionary communist
    movement had gone through many ups and downs and twists and turns.
    After the setback of Naxalbari struggle, the CPI (ML) party split into
    many streams. MCC was the other revolutionary stream which stood by
    the slogan ‘Naxalbari Ek Hi Raasta’ (Naxalbari is the only Path) and built
    a revolutionary movement in some states. Of the many splinters of the
    CPI (ML), CPI (ML) (People’s War) and CPI (ML) (Party Unity) stood by
    Naxalbari politics and built revolutionary movements covering some states.
    These two parties merged in 1998 and formed the CPI (ML) [People’s
    War]. Finally on September 21, 2004 the two main streams of revolutionary
    communists – the MCCI and the CPI (ML) [People’s War] merged and
    formed the CPI (Maoist) and thus a strong single centre to lead the
    revolutionary movement finally emerged. In the 37 years of class struggle
    and people’s war of these two main streams before the merger many
    comrades had laid down their precious lives for the victory of NDR in
    India. The villages, towns, soils, furrows of fields, collieries, woods and
    mountains, rivulets and rivers of vast India turned red with the warm blood
    of these thousands of immortal martyrs which included hundreds of women
    comrades. In the thorny and tortuous trajectory every success, experience
    and the unity of the party could be achieved only through their innumerable
    sacrifices. It is the base on which the party stands today and endeavors
    to advance the People’s War. It is by paying homage to their glorious
    martyrdom that the unity was cemented. Now, the CPI (Maoist) is
    advancing in the path of protracted people’s war and striving to develop
    guerilla war into mobile war and to develop People’s Liberation Guerilla
    Army into People’s Liberation Army with the aim of establishing Base Areas.
    It is the duty of every communist to pay tribute to the memory of martyrs
    by continuing the unfulfilled tasks till the victory of communism. People
    are always inspired by the sacrifices of martyrs. So it becomes our bounden
    duty to propagate about their great qualities, which we have to emulate,
    their lives and their ideals, among the vast masses so that they are inspired
    to join the liberation struggle to carry forward and realize their lofty aims.
    July 28 to August 3 is celebrated as Martyrs’ Memorial Week to
    commemorate the martyrs and take a vow that we will follow their footsteps
    with renewed vigor and determination. We are using this occasion to give
    the readers a glimpse into the lives of women martyrs. It is really sad that
    we could not collect the life histories of all the martyred women comrades.
    CPI (Maoist) is leading a revolutionary movement which is spread over a
    vast area and that too it is concentrated in the most backward and remote
    pockets of India and is working under severe repressive conditions. So,
    one of the main reasons for the unavailability of their life histories is the
    fascist repression it is facing. We have made an effort to compile the
    whole list of women comrades martyred from Naxalbari to 2009. We are
    giving the available life histories and list of women comrades martyred in
    this period as far as we could gather. The list is more or less complete but
    there are some more women comrades who were martyred during the
    state sponsored Salwa Judum, the counterrevolutionary and terrorist
    military campaign unleashed by the Chhattisgarh and central governments.
    We could not get in time their names and details. Some more women
    comrades also were killed recently in encounters with paramilitary and
    other armed forces in various parts of India whose details we could not
    obtain due to the war like situation prevailing in these areas as part of
    Operation Green Hunt. We would definitely try to overcome these
    shortcomings in the next edition. But meanwhile we thought it would be
    useful and inspiring to bring out as many life histories as possible on this
    solemn occasion when we commemorate our beloved martyrs.

    Here we have compiled in two volumes the life histories of women
    revolutionaries who were martyred since Naxalbari to 2009 under the
    leadership of those streams of the Indian revolution which merged into
    the CPI (Maoist) in 2004. In the first volume we have included the life
    histories of women martyrs from Naxalbari to September 2004. In the
    second volume we have included the life histories of women martyrs from
    September 2004 to 2009, i.e., since the formation of CPI (Maoist). The
    life histories of women martyrs of CPI (Maoist) and some of those who
    were part of the genuine democratic and progressive movements have
    been recorded here.

    When we look at the lives of these women martyrs many things strike
    us as extremely significant. The NDR in India is led by the working class
    and peasantry is its main ally. So the majority of the martyrs belong naturally
    to the peasantry. In the Srikakulam armed agrarian revolutionary struggle,
    which was the major armed struggle of the Naxalbari period, there were
    17 women martyrs. The most prominent among them was Panchadi
    Nirmala who has inspired and is still inspiring generations of young women
    to join the revolution. Altogether the total number of that period will be in
    dozens. But after 1985 and especially in the 1990s and in the new
    millennium their numbers reached hundreds. And more than two hundred
    women comrades have laid their invaluable lives just in this past six years
    since the formation of the new party. The protracted people’s war (PPW)
    doesn’t advance along a smooth and straight path and its nature of
    momentum is always zigzag. So this reality is reflected in these life histories
    too. They represent the many ups and downs and successes and failures
    experienced by the revolutionary movement. The Indian ruling classes
    have always used brutal force to suppress the revolutionary movement.

    They have launched many a suppression campaigns one after another
    and have deployed lakhs of police and paramilitary forces to crush the
    movement in the most heinous ways possible. The brutality of these forces
    is on par with the brutality of most suppressive forces in the world. No
    surprise, most of the women martyred in the movement died while fighting
    these forces. They died in real encounters and fake encounters, both of
    them illegal according to the existing constitution. Guerillas have been
    surrounded by the mercenary forces which are many times over and above
    their strength and have been fired upon without any warning or any effort
    to arrest them. While some died in face to face battles, some of the women
    guerillas were caught with injuries in different types of armed
    confrontations. Many of those who were caught with injuries were gang-
    raped, tortured and killed in cold blood. Many women revolutionaries were
    caught unarmed in villages and towns and killed in fake encounters. Many
    of them had been jailed and some died due to the tortures and the abysmal
    jail conditions.

    It was not just the women guerillas who died at their hands. Many
    unarmed women activists of both over ground and underground mass
    organizations (peasant, worker, women, cultural, youth, student etc) have
    also been killed in cold blood either by the police, paramilitary or by vigilante
    gangs sponsored by the reactionary governments. Unarmed urban women
    activists who organized the working class, urban poor and various sections
    of urban people were caught, cruelly tortured and killed. There are both
    professional revolutionaries and part-time party activists among those who
    died.
    .
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    Apart from these comrades, some comrades have died due to illness
    and in accidents (accidental fires, thunderbolt, snake bites, drowning etc).
    Some died during child birth. In one sense, these deaths are also caused
    due to the severe inhuman repressive conditions prevailing in the main
    struggle zones or states. People and revolutionaries are dying due to
    non-availability of medical facilities in those backward areas and the
    embargo imposed by the enemy. The fascist governments are putting
    restrictions even on sale of medicines in these areas and harassing the
    doctors who treat the revolutionaries, even killing them some times. A
    woman dying during child birth is due to the lack of any kind of pre-natal
    and ante-natal care in the backward rural areas even after more than six
    decades of “independence”. So, we can say most of these deaths are
    also caused by the callousness of the ruling classes or manmade.
    There are women of all age groups among these martyrs ranging
    from babies to women over 60 years of age. Some were mothers of
    children, some were pregnant and some had just given birth. Many teenage
    girls were killed too. Neither age nor their physical condition deterred the
    police from killing them.

    As one goes through this book, one would find a wide spectrum of
    women belonging to oppressed classes, castes and sections among these
    martyrs. More than ninety percent of these martyrs belong to the most
    oppressed classes and oppressed castes from the rural areas. It comes
    as no surprise as New Democratic Revolution is waged in the vast rural
    tracts with the strategy of liberating villages as a part of area-wise seizure
    of power and surrounding the cities, ultimately liberating the whole country.
    So agrarian revolution is at the core of this revolution and naturally the
    women of oppressed classes and castes are the main revolutionary social
    force. Some women belonging to the working class and urban poor had
    also been martyred.

    A considerable number of women belonging to the petty bourgeois
    classes and sections like students, intellectuals, employees have also
    been martyred. The specific feature to be remembered about these women
    martyrs coming from a petty bourgeois background is that they have
    realized that women’s liberation in India or anywhere in the world is not
    possible without the liberation of the overwhelming majority of peasant or
    working women and so had joined the agrarian revolution. They left their
    homes, life styles and class baggage behind and completely integrated
    with the rural women populace, educating them and getting educated in
    class politics in turn. Comrades Snehalata, Kurnool Padma, Nyalakonda
    Rajitha, Parvati of Karnataka, Ellanki Aruna, Suguna (Mahboobnagar),
    Anuradha Ghandy, were some of the most popular and illustrious leaders
    from this genre. Anuradha was an ideological and political leader of the
    party and had developed to the level of CC. Rajitha was a state committee
    member. Padma, Suguna and Aruna were on their way to become state
    level leaders at the time of their killing and later would have developed as
    central level leaders. Rajitha, Aruna and Suguna were great military and
    political leaders of the movement and Padma was one of the best
    organizers the party had ever produced and was a political and ideological
    leader. She worked mainly in the urban areas amidst severe repressive
    conditions and is one of the main architects of the urban women’s
    movement in AP from 1989 to 1994. Anuradha was the in-charge of the
    Central Mahila sub-committee and comrades Padma and J. Savitri were
    members of AP Mahila Coordination committee. These were structures
    formed by the party to specially concentrate on developing revolutionary
    movement, to develop women comrades and tackle problems of patriarchy
    in the whole revolutionary camp. So one can calculate the loss the women’s
    movement had suffered with their deaths. Both Padma and Savitri were
    killed by the brutal AP police. It is noteworthy that Anuradha and Padma
    had particularly strived to build friendly relations with other democratic
    and progressive women’s organizations and individuals in the country.
    Revolutionary women organizations were built in the villages of forest
    and plain areas and also urban areas and these organizations had
    mobilized thousands and lakhs of women in various struggles and political
    movements. Thousands of them are active participants in the People’s
    War at various levels. These women organizations, the women leaders of
    these organizations and the party women organizers who are the motive
    force behind them have been specifically targeted by the ruling classes
    and many have been killed in fake encounters and massacres of people.
    Scores have been killed by the dozens of vigilante gangs sponsored by
    the armed forces in all the struggle areas, the most notorious of them
    being the Salwa Judum in Chhattisgarh and Sendra in Jharkhand.
    On the other hand, when we look at some of the incidents we can
    gauge how the fascization of the armed forces and entire state has risen
    to unprecedented heights. It even looks as if the state is exceptionally
    cruel towards women. In the bizarre Manala covert killings three women
    comrades (along with another seven male comrades) were very cruelly
    tortured after they became unconscious from the sedatives mixed in their
    food and then killed them. The whole scene was so ghastly that people
    were terrified when they saw the mutilated, mauled bodies. In the
    Aguruguda encounter three women comrades were killed. In
    Sangidigundala, six women comrades were brutally gunned down. Out of
    them three were Chenchu adivasi young girls and the other three were
    also young women from a poor peasant background. In the Seshachalam
    Hills encounter also six women comrades were killed. This was also a
    covert operation. In the Daraboyinapenta encounter (in which the AP state
    committee secretary Com. Madhav was also killed) five women comrades
    had laid down their lives. In the Gunukuralla encounter, three women
    died fighting the police bravely. The notorious AP Greyhound commando
    police did not spare even an old mother of four children. They tortured
    and killed Eswaramma in a fake encounter after she was arrested. The
    fake encounter of seven unarmed teenage girls at Sathrajpalle would go
    down in history as one of most cruel killings. The only crime these girls
    committed was trying to organize themselves into a women’s organization
    to address their grievances as women.

    Nayan’s child in Naxalbari, Biddika Chandram

    Nayan’s child in Naxalbari, Biddika Chandramma’s six-month old baby
    in Srikakulam, Mounika, a 2-year old child in Nalgonda district, 3-Year old
    Beronica Titoya in Jharkhand, 10 year old Oyam Bujji in DK are just a few
    names of children who have lost their lives to the brutality of the police. In
    fact, their numbers would be more if we meticulously gather all the details
    about the repression in the struggle zones.Some women lost their lives
    for being family members of revolutionary activists or for giving them
    shelter. Haseena Begum and Niranjana of NT were killed for this. Avalam
    Lakshmi (DK) and Manthena Rajavva (NT), both old women lost their
    lives just because they resided in the movement areas and happened to
    cross the way of the armed forces.

    The number of women dying at the hands of the various vigilante
    gangs sponsored by the state are also increasing. And these count as
    some of the most macabre killings ever. Belli Lalitha was a great singer
    who worked in the cultural movement for Separate Telangana. She was
    hacked to 17 pieces by the most notorious black gang of AP led by Nayeem
    and those pieces were thrown into various wells. The gruesome murder
    of Malati and Lakshmi in Bhitar Amada by NASUS would make one
    shudder. Badki Devi of Jharkhand was strangled to death by the
    reactionaries. All the women killed as part of Salwa Judum come under
    this category. The spiteful killing of Kumme and Chaithe in DK by killer
    gangs as part of Operation Green Hunt (OGH) in 2010 by raping them
    and hacking their necks indicate what is in store for women activists from
    such gangs. Their bodies were purposefully left naked. Some women
    comrades lost their lives at the hands of coverts (Santha of AP, Manala
    women martys of NT). Many coverts had been given targets by the police
    officials to kill the women leaders in particular.

    In many incidents, the AP and DK police raped women comrades
    who were injured in encounters and then murdered them. This is the lowest
    level they can stoop to in bestiality. If this sounds horrible then when we
    hear about the atrocities the poor, adivasi women are subjected in DK,
    particularly during Salwa Judum (SJ), there would be no words to describe
    the horror. The kind of hatred with which their breasts and private parts
    were attacked has perhaps never been witnessed in this scale in India in
    Maoist revolution. When we remember the fact that these adivasi women
    had to wage bitter struggles with their men to cover their breasts and
    private parts properly with cloth, we may perhaps understand why those
    parts are so particularly targeted. All along, ruling classes all over the
    world have always used rape and sexual violence on women as a weapon
    to suppress people’s movements and SJ is an appalling continuation of
    that policy. Whether it is the DK adivasis or AP Chenchu adivasis or
    Jharkhand Santhal adivasi or Odisha Kond adivasis or the dalit women in
    the various plain and suburban areas, it is always the poor, backward,
    lower caste women who are becoming victims of state repression. Their
    only crime was to try to take their lives into their hands; to try to liberate
    their people. In SJ, they particularly targeted Kranthikari Adivasi Mahila
    Sangathan (KAMS) leaders and members, members of peoples’ militia
    and Cultural front and common women. India, which boasts to be the
    world’s largest democracy, doesn’t even allow poor adivasi women to
    organize into women’s organizations for their fundamental rights. It is high
    time the world sits up and expresses indignation at this appalling condition.
    One should note that the revolutionary women’s movement of India is
    one of the main and widespread women’s movements in the world and in
    India apart from the nationality women’s movements in Kashmir and
    Manipur.

    These women martyrs were inspired by Maoism and the revolutionary
    movement. The reasons for their joining the movement may vary but one
    common feature we find in them is their aspiration to be liberated from
    patriarchy and to liberate all women from patriarchy. Most of them were
    themselves victims of patriarchy and some of them though not as
    oppressed had consciously joined as they felt Maoism provided the answer
    to the eradication of patriarchy. So when we go through the life histories
    of these extraordinary women, we find that they fought patriarchy in society,
    in their comrades in arms and also in themselves.

    The women revolutionaries have been victims of patriarchal
    psychological war of the ruling classes too. They have been put down as
    sexual victims of their male colleagues. Their personal lives have
    sometimes been derided with all kinds of slander as part of the foul
    propaganda unleashed by the ruling classes’ psychological warfare, an
    important component of the Low Intensity Conflict strategy to crush the
    Maoists. The irony is that even some women (very few) who claim to
    represent the interests of women have swallowed this propaganda
    uncritically and wrote articles with the same tenor. The fact is that
    revolutionary movement has the avowed aim of fighting patriarchy and
    encourages women to fight it at all levels. One cannot explain the huge
    participation of women in the movement if the above had not been true.
    The revolutionary movement had never claimed there were no
    manifestations of patriarchy in the party, people’s army, or in the
    revolutionary camp. In fact, it has released documents explaining its origins
    and the forms it gets manifested in and even created some specific forms
    to fight it like rectification campaigns against patriarchy apart from the
    regular criticism-self criticism sessions. The lives of these martyrs are
    testimony to the above facts and we hope these would dispel some of the
    doubts which lurk in minds of some people about women being victims of
    patriarchy in the movement. Such a view does not see these women as
    active participants in the revolution or as makers of history and only sees
    them as ‘victims’. Doesn’t this view represent one of the most disgusting
    forms of patriarchy too? The lives of these martyrs not only show how
    they had fought patriarchy but also how to fight against it till its elimination
    or its complete eradication from the face of the globe. With their glorious
    lives they had demolished every kind of feudal and bourgeois stereotype
    about women in all the fields and this is no ordinary feat for the ‘backward,
    uneducated’ peasant, dalit and adivasi women or the ‘fragile’ petty
    bourgeois women.

    One more thing we want to emphasize about the lives of these martyrs
    is the extremely difficult conditions in which they had worked and died.
    They braved it all with sheer determination and their aspiration for a better
    society for all the oppressed masses of India and ultimately for the
    establishment of a classless society in the entire world. The daily lives of
    these women are full of circumstances which require extraordinary grit to
    continue. In the severe repressive conditions, they had to go without food
    and water, go without sleep and forego all kinds of comforts. In the plain
    areas, they had to walk the whole night and take shelter in a small secret
    place with almost no movement in the daytime. In Telangana they used to
    take shelter in the homes of the peasants and they had to be so secret
    that they had to urinate and defecate inside the house into pots. They
    would be disposed only in the night when they go out of the shelters.
    Taking bath was an extremely risky job and could cost you your life. Some
    comrades had died fetching drinking water for the squad as water points
    are ambush spots for the police. One can imagine what the women
    comrades in the plains in those severe repression days went through
    when they were menstruating. They had to work under constant physical
    and mental pressure amidst police combings and mopping up campaigns.
    None of them could be counted under the category of ‘healthy’ women
    and had to survive with all kinds of diseases and illnesses including
    gynecological problems, not to mention the omnipresent, constant
    companion – the dreadful malaria resulting in severe anemia. Some had
    surgical operations for various ailments and worked under severe physical
    constraints. Their commitment to the people is unparalleled and worthy of
    admiration.

    After the setback of Naxalbari, women comrades like Chittekka of
    Srikakulam, a veteran comrade who served people for above forty years
    till her last breath had worked under severe repressive, discouraging and
    hopeless conditions. Chittekka’s life is so full of inspiring episodes that
    she deserves a whole book or novel in her name. They were part of the
    pioneer comrades who had revived the revolutionary movement in India
    again from scratch after the setback of the Naxalbari, and Srikakulam,
    Bhirbhum and other struggles. Their unflinching confidence in Maoism
    even under such difficult conditions is exemplary and worthy of emulating.
    Many women comrades had lost their loved ones in the movement but
    continued with redoubled spirit, vowing to carry on the lofty aims of their
    beloved life partners. Some have married again but lost that partner too.
    And all this at a very young age. In some incidents both the husband and
    the wife had died in the same incident (both in real and fake encounters).
    Some of these are very young couples. Some of these martyrs had lost a
    brother/sister/relative in the movement. Bhagyalakshmi’s and Nagamani’s
    (AP) brothers were martyred before them. There are some comrades
    who have a relative in the enemy camp too. Morri Lakshmi (NT) killed her
    own brother when he turned covert and damaged the party. Such vertical
    divisions in the family could be seen mostly during the SJ fascist campaign.
    Some martyrs had lost their limbs or were injured in firings (some of them
    more than once) but nothing could dampen their spirit. Some of them
    could not get treatment in time due to the repression and so had to undergo
    a lot of pain and some even had to carry on with disability due to this
    delay.
    .
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    Majority of the women comrades, particularly the guerillas had chosen
    not to have children. Some of them had children when at home and had
    left them to join the movement. Some gave birth to children in the
    movement but left them with somebody and dedicated themselves to the
    people. In one sense, they have shattered the myth of ‘motherhood’
    concept imposed on them by the feudal society. They have proved with
    their practice that communist women do not love or care for only their
    own children and that they love and take care of all the children belonging
    to the oppressed masses. These ‘mothers’ left their own children and
    worked and died for the bright future of all the children in this world. Another
    myth that some of these comrade have shattered is that women follow
    their husbands whatever they may do. Comrades like Padma, who
    developed into a Divisional Committee member in Adilabad district, Santhi
    of Nallamala in AP did not leave the movement till their last breath even
    though their husbands abandoned the movement. This shows their higher
    level of class consciousness and their immense commitment of these
    comrades towards the people. The women comrades in the revolution
    are the pioneers for building new man-woman relations in the party, army
    and in society. They are steeling themselves in the class struggle and are
    also establishing new relations and new values through their practice in
    the class struggle. Establishing new man-woman relations is also part of
    this all-encompassing class struggle. Some martyr couples or martyr
    comrades had forever remained as models to follow in man-woman
    relations.

    Among these martyrs we would particularly like to highlight the life
    histories of those senior women comrades who had dedicated their lives
    for decades together for the revolution and had almost remained nameless
    till their death due to the nature of their work in the technical mechanism
    formed for the protection of leadership and other tasks like press, weapons
    production etc. Comrades like Bhagyalakshmi (technical mechanism, AP),
    Vijayakka (technical mechanism, AP), Narmada (Weapons Production,
    DK), Jilani Bano (technical mechanism, NT) are just a few names. They
    spent years together in these works withstanding all kinds of difficulties
    and problems in that life. It was a sacrifice on their part because as
    communists they would have always preferred to work among the people
    and not spend their lives in some secret den. Matta Rattakka was the first
    woman comrade from the plains to come to DK and work there. Later she
    worked for many years in the technical mechanism and then she again
    came back to DK and died in an encounter while working there. Rajeswari
    of Karnataka, another senior comrade, left her job, joined the movement
    and edited party organs from underground. The revolutionary movement
    considers the life histories of all those veteran women comrades as
    treasures to be preserved for the future generations and always urges
    the younger comrades to learn from their lives, works and from their long-
    standing commitment and steadfastness in the face of umpteen numbers
    of difficulties. The very mention of their long revolutionary lives fills one’s
    heart with a warmth and inspiration which the younger comrades should
    hold on to very dearly.

    Comrades belonging to various departments of the party, PLGA and
    Janathana Sarkar were martyred. There were computer operators
    (Swetha, AOB), tailors (Gadapa Sarita, DK), teachers (Madhavi, AP),
    doctors (Karuna, AOB; Anju, JH; Kamala, DK), technicians (Narmada and
    Sunita, DK), press workers (Chaithe, DK), agriculture workers (Kumli, DK)
    etc among the martyrs. Their contribution in these various fields which
    are an inseparable part of the ongoing PPW is unforgettable.
    The readers would find that there are a few comrades who had
    committed suicide. It is really one of the tragedies of the movement that
    some comrades had committed suicide in spite of being in the revolutionary
    camp. They had been active in their fields and had a great promise in
    them. The movement had rescued many women in the society who were
    on the verge of suicide and we can only imagine how many more would
    have committed suicide in the villages if not for the revolutionary women’s
    movement. So a woman committing suicide while being in the revolutionary
    camp is to be taken seriously. The revolutionary movement takes these
    incidents seriously though they are very few in number because they show
    where the weaknesses of those comrades and that of the movement lie.
    The movement reviews these incidents to avoid such occurrences again.
    Their life histories, particularly those of oppressed people, adivasi,
    dalit, show the tremendous efforts they had put in to develop themselves
    ideologically, politically, organizationally and militarily in order to become
    communist leaders of the movement. Most of them became literate after
    joining the movement. Many of them had developed as party committee
    members right from village party committee to district/divisional level
    committees. We are very proud of the manner they carried on their
    responsibilities as committee members quite efficiently. Their efforts in
    this direction will serve as an inspiration for all comrades in the generations
    to come. They have forever buried the false dictum of this society that
    women are always inferior. So we see women doing all kinds of works
    and taking up all kinds of responsibilities in the party, army and united
    front activities. They are working and leading in all fronts of the revolution.
    Another feature we want to highlight about these martyrs is their
    bravery and valiance in fighting the enemy. Innumerable incidents of their
    bravery can be quoted. They have been immortalized in many art and
    literary forms not to mention the countless songs which describe their
    bravery and courage. They have become legends in the eyes of the people
    and sometimes we find even their ‘enemies’ praising their valiance. Their
    military skills are not inferior to any of the male comrades and sometimes
    even surpassed that of their male colleagues. Ordinary peasant, adivasi
    and petty bourgeois women had become soldiers and military leaders.
    The military exploits of Rajitha and Lalitha of NT have become legendary
    and even the armed forces feared them. Karuna and Somvari died during
    Daula raid, Rambatti during the illustrious Nayagadh raid, Rukmati during
    the historic Mukaram attack, Anju in the Jhumra Pahad raid, Srilata during
    the raid on Tirumalagiri PS and many are the working class heroines who
    died fighting the enemy valiantly in attacks on the armed forces and in the
    scores of encounters with the armed forces. Porteti Penti (DK) had special
    forces training and proved her mettle in the last encounter with the police.
    Vanaja’s (AOB) and Radha’s (DK) last battles with the police are some of
    the most valiant fights put up by the guerillas of PLGA. Rathna (AOB) was
    an action team member. A woman in action teams is still a rarity to find in
    the PPW. Many sacrificed their lives in these armed confrontations to
    save their fellow comrades. Health is not on their side and one would be
    surprised at how much these undernourished, lean, short built women
    could achieve in the military sphere. The answer is again the same – their
    determination to fight all patriarchal notions about women and their
    commitment towards the people as builders of new society.

    Here lies the strength of the communist ideology which makes such
    things possible. It can give rise to this kind of selflessness and their lives
    in turn guarantee the ultimate triumph of this ideology over selfish class
    interests and ushers in the communist society. It is their communist spirit
    and selflessness which turned them into such wonderful human beings.
    Not for nothing do the masses mobilize in thousands and lakhs to pay
    homage to these great martyrs.
    The one point we want to emphasize many times over to all those
    who go through this book is the huge number of budding women leaders
    that had been done away with by the ruling classes. One’s heart bleeds
    when one thinks of the kind of people’s leaders India has lost in this severe
    repression unleashed by the perpetrators of exploitation, oppression and
    male domination in the society. There were ideological, political,
    organizational, military and cultural leaders among them. There were great
    mass leaders who could lead thousands of people in various struggles.
    Lingakka (NT), Linge Nano, Pauribai Salaami, Mallam Seethi of DK,
    Lakshmi (AP) and Badki Devi (JH) were such leaders to name a few.
    Leaders of the newly emerging people’s political power organs were killed
    (like Mainabai Naitham of DK). Young dynamic militia comrades and militia
    commanders who were to develop into future military leaders were killed
    (like Pottami Aithe, Midiyam Aithe of DK). Great singers and artistes who
    could inspire lakhs of people with their performances had been killed.
    They were leaders of the cultural movements too. Now, we are talking of
    the leaders who had a chance to prove themselves. But we have to talk
    more about the women who had the potential in them to develop into
    great leaders but had been extinguished too soon. Undoubtedly, many of
    them could have developed into state level and central level leaders. The
    revolutionaries are often questioned about the less number of women in
    the higher level decision making bodies in the party. A perusal through
    the life histories of these martyrs shows one of the main reasons behind
    that fact. If only, if only these women had not been killed, one can surely
    say that they would have developed to those higher levels without any
    difficulty. Their potential is stuff that leaders are made of. Any person who
    genuinely feels that revolutionary movement should have considerable
    number of women leaders should take this fact into consideration and do
    everything possible to oppose and stop the killings of women
    revolutionaries.

    Some of these martyrs had been arrested and had spent jail terms in
    the course of their revolutionary lives. They had been tortured when they
    were arrested and even in jails they had to live in abysmal conditions. But
    they kept the red flag aloft in jails too and had placed a model before the
    people about the role of a revolutionary in jail. The important thing to note
    is that in such difficulties did not make them step back but fought against
    the system in a different way by facing immense torture including solitary
    confinement for indefinite period and they immediately joined the
    revolutionary movement as soon as they were released. In fact, some of
    them had to try hard to get the contact of the underground party and had
    to face more difficulties meanwhile. The ruling classes try to break the
    spirit of revolutionaries by torturing and putting them in jails but in majority
    of the cases all this only served to redouble their commitment. We hold
    such martyrs in great esteem and put their example before the people as
    models to emulate. Even today, scores of women comrades are
    languishing in jails but are keeping up their spirits with the inspiration of
    such martyrs.

    The life histories presented here just give a glimpse about their lives.
    In fact, if we write in detail about every individual comrade, it will become
    a book. And we genuinely feel it is worthy of writing too. But our limitations
    are such that in this war it is becoming increasingly difficult to record the
    number of deaths or to note the details about their lives. It made us
    extremely sad to see that about some women comrades the information
    available is so meager. It made our hearts bleed to write so less about
    somebody who had not hesitated to make the supreme sacrifice for the
    sake of the oppressed people. We are painfully aware that the task of
    recording their life histories would become even more difficult in the future
    as the war intensifies. So we are using this occasion to place an imperative
    request before all of you to try and bring to light the various inspiring
    aspects in the lives of these great women in as many ways as possible.
    Already as part of the revolutionary cultural and literary movements,
    innumerable songs, write ups, memoirs, poems, stories, articles etc had
    been written about the martyrs. A novel was written about Com. Jilani
    Bano in Telugu. Separate books/booklets/folders had been published about
    some women comrades. Their writings were published too. But even these
    do not suffice. They show us only the tip of an iceberg. Recording the
    various emotional, moving and inspiring aspects in their lives cannot be
    done by any individual and so we would like each person concerned about
    or associated with the revolutionary and democratic movements in our
    country to take this up as one of the tasks to be fulfilled as part of their
    activities. We also request the comrades in the revolutionary movement
    to be more diligent and meticulous in recording the life histories of martyrs
    and to do it in time as far as possible. This should be realized as an
    integral part of the ‘war’ too – the war to reclaim our memories from those
    who swear to destroy them.
    The reason for the repression becoming more and more severe in the
    past 15 years is the globalization policies pushed by the government under
    the guidance of the imperialists. The imperialists, big comprador
    bureaucratic capitalist and the feudal landlords want to plunder the vast
    mineral and natural resources of India especially in the forest areas of
    Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, West
    Bengal and Andhra Pradesh, Kanataka, Northeast, etc. The reactionary
    ruling classes want to suppress the Party and PLGA which defends the
    interests of the people and which are organizing the people into struggles
    against the plunderers. The unjustified ‘War on People’ was launched in
    the name of Operation Green Hunt for this purpose since mid-2009. Many
    people as well as party activists and soldiers of PLGA and highest level
    party leaders were targeted and killed. They sacrificed lives in this bitter
    struggle against the imperialist led ruling classes. As more and more
    women are realizing the truth and joining the struggles, the number of
    women losing their lives also increases. But this large number not only
    indicates the level of repression and the scale of the movement but also
    the fact that women are joining the party and army in large numbers. It
    shows that oppressed women are increasingly choosing the revolutionary
    path.

    Never in the history of the Indian communist movement have so many
    women comrades (that too in leading positions in the party, army and UF)
    been killed by the armed forces. It is necessary to build up a strong civil
    rights and democratic movement to fight this brutal repression. Highlighting
    the repression on women should be one of the main tasks of this
    movement. More than anything the need of the hour is to unite every just
    struggle of the women under a banner of democratic and revolutionary
    organizations. We hope this book would serve its role in inspiring the
    people of our country to take steps towards taking and intensifying such
    action. Comrades like Anuradha Ghandy, Kurnool Padma and many other
    comrades had strived to interact with the other democratic and progressive
    women’s movements and individuals in their life time to build such a broad
    based united women’s movement building bridges between the vast rural
    tracts and the expanding urban populace. It would be a fitting homage to
    the efforts of such martyrs to build such a unity among the oppressed
    women of all sections.
    The ruling classes are using every opportunity at their disposal to
    carry on psychological warfare against the revolutionaries. It is one of the
    main tasks of the revolutionary movement to fight back this foul propaganda
    in various forms and manners. The life histories of these great martyrs
    are one of the most powerful weapon in the hands of the party and the
    revolutionary people to defeat the psy-war of the ruling classes which
    always to try to portray the Maoists as ‘terrorists’ ‘cruel’ ‘selfish’ ‘killers’
    ‘hoarders’ ‘oppressors and exploiters of women’ etc etc. By giving a
    glimpse into what goes into the making of a communist, these life histories
    prove without an iota of doubt that communists represent the most humane
    values in life and that they have sacrificed their lives to establish those
    values in the whole society.

    The revolutionary movement is also humbly accepting that it has to
    review the causes for the martyrdom of each invaluable comrade and
    analyze the shortcomings which led to them. This is a class war and no
    victory for the oppressed people is possible in this war without sacrifices.
    In fact, as the People’s War intensifies, the brutal onslaught of the exploiting
    classes would increase further and martyrdoms would also increase due
    to this. But it is the declared aim of the communist party to achieve the
    liberation of the people with as less sacrifices as possible. The
    revolutionary movement vows to overcome the shortcomings, wrong
    assessments and any other reasons which may have led to martyrdoms
    which could have been avoided if only more attention has been paid to
    these reasons. This constitutes one of the important inherent aspects in
    the homage paid to the martyrs by the revolutionary party. The glorious
    martyrs are teaching lessons to their revolutionary heirs not only through
    their lives but also with their deaths. Every revolutionary should humbly
    learn these lessons in order to advance the People’s War further.
    The fact that so many women and men are getting killed in the
    movement is not dampening the spirit of the fighting people in the
    movement areas. On the contrary, their lives are inspiring more and more
    women and men to join the revolution. The most popular books among
    the cadres, soldiers of PLGA and people are the books which contain the
    life histories of these martyrs. Even these martyrs had been inspired by
    revolutionaries who had been martyred before them. The cadres studiously
    study their lives to imbibe their exemplary qualities. As the people’s war is
    advancing, most of the cadres find their close comrades in arms getting
    martyred in front of their eyes. Many a time they have to carry their dead
    bodies and weapons to safety and perform their last rites in revolutionary
    tradition. Death has become a daily fact of life and the cadres and soldiers
    know that one day it will be their turn.

    The occasion which is observed with great solemnity in all the
    movement areas is the Martyrs’ week from July 28 to August 3. July 28 is
    the day when Comrade Charu Mazumdar, the great founder leader of
    Naxalbari rebellion and leader of Indian revolution was martyred in police
    custody. This week is observed in the memory of the innumerable martyrs
    of Indian revolution starting from Com. Charu Mazumdar and Com. Kanhai
    Chatterji, the founding leaders of the party. People build martyrs’ columns
    in their memory, conduct meetings, rallies, sing songs and perform plays
    and vow to fulfill the dreams of martyrs of the Indian Revolution and the
    World Socialist Revolution. The maximum number of songs written as
    part of the cultural movement is about the martyrs. Parents, relatives and
    friends of the martyrs attend these meetings and pay their homage. Most
    of them are proud of their darling daughters and sons who have won a
    place in the hearts of lakhs of people. In the movement areas, martyrdom
    is something to be inspired from, to be proud of and not something to be
    feared or to be apprehensive about.

    And this is what the ruling classes fear the most. That is why their
    mercenary armed police and paramilitary goons try to destroy everything
    that even remotely reminds one of their supreme sacrifices. Martyrs’
    columns are demolished; July 28 meetings are disrupted, fired upon;
    people are jailed, maimed and harassed for attending the commemoration
    meetings; martyrs’ families are threatened and so forth. So now July 28
    has become not just a day of commemorating martyrs but a day of
    defiance, a day of battles with the police to preserve their memories.
    Publishing books like these would also amount to ‘treason’ in the eyes of
    the ruling classes.
    The Indian revolution is carried out as part of the World Socialist
    Revolution and the CPI (Maoist) considers itself an inseparable part of it,
    considers the PLGA as a detachment of the army of the international
    proletariat and the new democratic people’s power or base areas as an
    integral part and parcel of bases of world proletariat and oppressed people.
    Countless leaders and soldiers and people have laid down their lives all
    over the world in all the countries as part of the revolutionary struggles
    and Maoist movements. Many women have become martyrs as part of
    the ongoing nationality struggles against the imperialists and reactionary
    ruling classes. Likewise there have been many sacrifices of women in the
    revolutionary movements of Peru, Turkey, Phillippines and Nepal. All over
    the world, many women are sacrificing their lives in anti-imperialist
    struggles. On this occasion we remember all those martyrs who gave
    their lives for building a better society for all of us as part of the World
    Socialist Revolution.

    On this solemn occasion let us bow our heads humbly before the
    martyrs and once again vow that till our last drop of blood we will continue
    their work and strive to realize their lofty aims. As the People’s War
    advances the sacrifices also increase. No revolution can advance without
    such supreme sacrifices. Let us mobilize millions upon millions women,
    intensify the revolutionary war for area-wise seizure of power, liberate our
    country and realize the dreams of our beloved martyrs.
    Let us vow to prepare ourselves for any kind of sacrifice to fulfill their
    dream of establishing communism all over the world where there is no
    exploitation, domination and oppression of the people. The lives of these
    martyrs would constantly inspire us in fulfilling these aims.
    .
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  9. #5
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    Excellent post!

    Women's representation in the MLM movement has been extremely visible and explicit in areas in the midst of PPW. Journalist Robin Kirk, when speaking about communism in general, wrote that: "[...] it's a 'boys only' club, forged in the Che Guevara image. [The] Shining Path is the first to break that model." Even the bourgeois newspaper New York Times asserts that of "[...] the 19 members of the central committee, the governing body of the guerrilla group, at least 8 are women, the police say. Shining Path literature asserts that 40 percent of its guerrillas are women.".

    This is how it has been in PPWs, from Peru to the Philippines -- women are always at the forefront and are treated with respect, equality, and, most importantly, they are empowered in a traditionally backward, semi-feudal society which marginalizes women.

    Break the chains! Unleash the fury of women as a mighty force of revolution!

    Last edited by mosfeld; 5th April 2011 at 00:04.
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    Thanks for the gr88 post.
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    The various photographs are awesome!

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