Whispers of a new Left

19
207

“My heart garden garden” is a phrase jokingly used amongst my group of friends. It is a literal translation of the Urdu phrase “Dil Bagh Bagh Hona” – the crassness of translation providing us many a laugh. And yet, my heart went garden garden last Sunday, the death anniversary of Hassan Nasir, an iconic figure in the Pakistani Left. The National Students Federation (NSF), the students group of the Left, had put together a great show to commemorate Nasir’s martyrdom. Whisper it now, the NSF is back, at least in Karachi.
Hassan Nasir Day is an annual event in the Left, almost kick-starting nationwide activism that lasts till spring. Such is the influence that Nasir (along with Nazeer Abbasi, a student leader) wields over the Left, even in martyrdom. Nasir’s politics were of course about socialism and anti-imperialism; he was after all the secretary-general of the Communist Party of Pakistan. In the era of two superpowers, it was his practical advances that turned him into a threat significant enough for his silencing to become a necessity. Nasir was arrested in 1960 – incidentally after disregarding party advice, chucked in a tiny cell in Lahore Fort, and brutally tortured to death.
Last Sunday, as I attended what used to be a customary and staid commemoration, filled by narratives of valour of have-beens, and hollow and empty rhetoric, I realised things had changed. This truly is a new NSF, dissociated and hence unburdened by the usually reductive and reactive politics of the Left parties and groups. Their event had attracted about 100 followers, a significant show that prompted Shahram Azhar (of Laal fame) – tuned in to the event from the United States via Skype – to comment that these youngsters were leaders of tomorrow.
The current NSF in Karachi is broadly divided into three units. One of those units operates in the University of Karachi, with a young woman leading the charge. I mention this fact because this is a break from the current practice in Left parties: leadership structures in parties are not as encouraging for women to step forward and take control, while affirmative action is almost non-existent. NSF leaders explained that although women assuming control “just happened naturally”, there were no barriers to women’s entry as had become the norm in the past. There was no need felt by the NSF to create a separate wing for young women, since young men and women acted in the spirit of gender equity. No compartmentalisation, they argued.
The NSF’s reliance on youth is admirable too. With no ideological qiblas, the students themselves are decision makers. It is because of this youth that the event started 15 minutes late owing to some technical glitches at the venue, as opposed to the customary hour or so delay at Left events. Among the staid narratives, it was the youth of the NSF that captured the audience’s imagination with a skit about Hassan Nasir. I was told later on that the skit was prepared by one of the three units, whose primary task is to create and enact street theatre. Such division of labour had been planned and implemented by the NSF-Karachi’s organising committee whose decisions are binding.
Those who started this NSF were in fact members of a communist party, the Communist Mazdoor Kissan Party (CMKP). Some 24 young men had approached the CMKP to seek their support in building the NSF. Some of them were even prepared to join the party proper. The CMKP, however, denied entry to all on the pretext that they were concerned with the quality of the entrant, not the numbers. Only four were let in; of them, only two are politically active today, both members of the NSF-Karachi. They are close to graduating from the NSF now, having completed their journey as students.
But graduating to what, should be the question.
With their model of ensuring no Left parties can ever “control” their group, the NSF-Karachi’s organisational setup mirrors that of Dr Sarwar’s Democratic Students Federation. Despite that, the usual motley crew was all there at the event: a vice-president of a party, trade union leaders, activists. Some were there to check progress, others to network, some to report to party superiors and some elsewhere.
The Left’s historical bond with the NSF is emotional, yet the assumption that the NSF will join or graduate into a wing of any particular party is all too presumptuous. Left parties have shown little capacity to be able to capture the youth’s imagination; the youth’s attraction to Imran Khan is but one phenomenon that explains the Left parties’ seemingly unending slide into redundancy and their failure to attract and even politicise a younger generation.
But there are factors such as party culture, party institutions and camaraderie that help build a party. Those factors are at play in student groups in Lahore as well, with the Progressive Youth Front and NSF trying to create space for themselves. These factors are not yet at play across major parties in Punjab; till complete generational changes take place in parties’ leaderships, political culture will be rooted between personality cults, caste associations, and talk of the glory days of the 1960s and 1970s, and the persecution of the 1980s. The NSF and PYF have grown precisely for their emphasis on the youth, not the converted.
Left parties will also have to re-evaluate their definitions of class, of who forms the vanguard of change, and of what needs to be pled to those they claim to represent. Such questions need to be asked for Left parties to recreate themselves and their image. Only then can they become viable political alternatives for politicized youth. Failure to do so means that relying on “capturing” someone else’s work and effort will remain the modus operandi.
For all of the NSK-Karachi’s success in developing a model, and carrying out genuine grassroots activism, the result is the creation of members politically aware not to be either fickle or trapped in a leader’s cult of personality. But they should now be asking themselves, what next? For those who want to continue their activism, the NSF is a training ground. Values of social justice and equality of opportunity for all are noble; yet, these are political demands and will inevitably be carried forward by a political party.
Whether the NSF forms a party, joins one, or remains dissociated is a decision their committees will have to take. What the NSF currently enjoys over almost all Left parties is a stronger political culture and adherence to their institutions. In eventual calculations, groups with stronger political cultures and institutions will absorb the weak. Not the other way around, as seems to be the calculation of Left parties. This is a new NSF, and this might just be the beginning of a new Left in Pakistan.

The author is a Karachi-based journalist. Connect with him on Twitter @ASYusuf

19 COMMENTS

  1. What makes it new? and how it will be different from dominant national and provincial political activism? Will it integrate the "other"? How this move is outside the "regime of truth " (Focu) and apparatus of meaning making in current political drama? Where to put the classical example of Focu about Socialist and Nazi state when he talks about modern forms of government as same in both kinds of state-crafts?

  2. Thanks for writing about the Left, which is a forgotten subject in corporate media! Thanks a lot.

  3. Dear Yusuf
    Firstly Congratulate for article. I feel some gaps in article.
    – Name of the guest/speaker and his/her views or memories.
    – Old NSF workers have been formed Awami Jamhori Mahaz (AJM)
    – AJM base on Progressive thought like NSF Philosophy.
    – AJM political work on grass root level. (Urban and Rural areas) Initiation in sindh
    – AJM massages received from different areas like Hyderabad, Noushero Feroze, Kandiaro and Khairpur.
    – All labors participate from AJM platform.
    – Majority NSF workers participate from Pak Colony Unit, Karachi.
    – Theater group also part of NSF Pak Colony unit.
    – second last pera word NSF not NSK.
    So kindly be careful when you make report/article.

  4. Sir
    Most respectfully I wish to correct the author of the report tht Hasan Nasir did NOT disregard the party advice. He was undersground and was moving with his loyal friend for his party work when he was apprehanded at numaish chowrangi. Please tell the writer that his information is not correct. Nasir had always complied with his party discipline.
    Iqbal alavi

  5. Yes, finally the days of pseudo-politics will be gone. Nsf has the legacy to educate, empower their activists. Be it Dr.Sarwar or Dr.Adeeb ul Hasan Rizvi, they all used to belong to the NSF(formerly DSF). Now the demands are again going to be raised; "Equal, Free and Emancipatory Education For All"

  6. Firstly Congratulate for article. I have feel some gaps in this. like
    – Name of the guest/speaker and his/her views or memories.
    – Old NSF workers have been formed Awami Jamhori Mahaz (AJM)
    – AJM believe on progressive politics like NSF philosophy and work on grass root level.
    – AJM messages received from different areas like Hyderabad, Nousheroferoze, Kandiaro and Khairpur but no mention in this article.
    – All labours participates from AJM Platform.
    – Majority NSF worker participate from Pak colony units, but no mention.
    -Theater group also part of the Pak colony unit.
    so kindly be careful when you make report/ article.
    Its my feeling.

  7. NSF is the living spirit of the sixties,when the entire Pakistan left students were unitedly facing from Khyber to Karachi the IJT.Proudly associated in Khyber Pakhtun Khwa(NWFP) as General Secretary.Dr. Rahid Hassan Khan was the president at that time,but the Party friction between the senior comrades ruined the NSF.Very strange we were fighting with our own comrades instead of our enemies.Revival of NSF is possible if we come out from our petty issues.

  8. Instead of going into the historical background of NSF, DSF and innumerable other leftist students organisations of past and present, I wish to pose another question. Namely;
    Can this new movement take the students movement in Chile as an example? Taking up the inequality in the education system and combining it with the general social issues it can paralyse the major Chilean cities for days. The 23 year-old leader of the student protests in Chile, Camila Vallejo Dowling has become the living nightmare of the right wing Chilean President Sebastián Piñera. Camilla is the most popular activist/politician in Chile with nearly 70% approval in the polls.

    The Pakistani and Chilean conditions may be entirely different but what still can be learnt from the Chilean experience is the clarity of primary agenda of the group/organisation. Is it for recruitment of cadres for a parent party, mobilise the students on their education problems with a social perspective, generating and coalescing with other movements of social change, just to have some ‘liberal’ fun or WHAT? http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/aug/24/chile

    An old students activist and a well-wisher of the new guard from Holland.

  9. The work of leadership is to build a mechanism of automation for the organization so that organization become stronger than all the individuals. Eternal leadership usually destroy the party. The most remarkable thing about this article is that writer didnot mention name of the individuals. If NSF is following the same approach no one can stop it!

Comments are closed.