Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

The Balladeer's Mutiny

Outlook

|

April 24, 2017

For decades, the shirtless bard’s stirring songs lent punch to a class struggle. Gaddar may carry on singing, but his opting to be a voter implies the mutation of a rebel note.

- Prasad Nichenametla

The Balladeer's Mutiny

He would appear typically bare-chested in public venues while rendering revolutionary songs, but what Gaddar stripped himself of the other day came as a surprise to many: the Telugu balladeer has given up Maoism. On April 6, exactly two decades after he survived a murder attempt, the sexagenarian announced embracing democracy. “I have applied for my vote,” he said aloud, waving a voter registration form. “I have no membership with any party. I am only a common man with the freedom to decide my path,” he told a Hyderabad gathering in a voice and tone that resounded with pain as well as relief.

Hundreds of Naxalites have over the years surrendered bef­ore the law, yet Gaddar’s decision to snap his four­decade ass­ociation with the Maoist party was least routine news. For, it also implied his exit from the Jana Natya Mandali (JNM), a Leftist cultural front he founded and led passionately. For long, central India’s most popular Naxalite’s JNM tours were a celebration of hundreds of soulful, earthy songs that stirred the minds of thousands of educated youth and the downtrod­ den, who either joined the armed resistance against the state or turned sympathetic to the class struggle.

Gaddar was born in 1949 to a Dalit family of rural labour­ers in what is now Medak district of west­central Telangana. Gummadi Vittal Rao was the name of the boy who was raised in remote Toopran village. As a youth, he enrolled in Osmania University for an engineering course, but dropped out, inspired by Naxalbari politics. In the late 1970s, Gaddar worked with the Canara Bank for a few years—only to return to the ultra­-Left movement.

Outlook

Bu hikaye Outlook dergisinin April 24, 2017 baskısından alınmıştır.

Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.

Zaten abone misiniz?

Outlook'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Outlook

Free the Word

Book bans are about fear, control and the desperate need to manage public imagination

time to read

7 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

Yeh Duniya Agar Mil Bhi Jaye to Kya Hai

Guru Dutt, whose birth centenary falls this July, created cinematic masterpieces amid the fog of his own uncertainty

time to read

6 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

When the Words Stop

Our worst algorithms have come home to haunt us. The nightmare is no longer something we dream up. It is dreamt on our behalf

time to read

16 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

Rath Jatra

Is Mamata Banerjee's embrace of Lord Jagannath the latest counter to the BJP's Ram-centric politics?

time to read

5 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Zan, Zindagi, Azadi

As missiles fall silent—for now—it's time to explore whether the heart of the Iran-Israel conflict lies in a deeper battle over culture and values

time to read

3 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

The She Voter

Political parties in Bihar are looking to woo women voters—who constitute almost half of the vote bank—ahead of the state Assembly election

time to read

7 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

Veil, Women and Warfare

Policies—whether in the West or in the Muslim world—are imposed on women, not developed with them or for them. How they dress becomes shorthand for community honour, nationalism or piety

time to read

8 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

Forever Hotel

This novel is a flawed, luminous, maximalist love letter to Kolkata’s layered soul

time to read

4 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

Outlook

Regimentation

The US has zero moral authority to want to tell the Tehran regime to behave itself or be nice to its own people

time to read

5 mins

July 11, 2025

Outlook

The Way We War

Modern warfare is a shape-shifting entity and the information explosion has expanded the battlespace far beyond the battlefield

time to read

5 mins

July 11, 2025