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WEST BENGAL
Return PresentThe appointment of
the chief minister's biographer as pro vice-chancellor of Calcutta University rankles not
only the Opposition but also CPI(M) allies.
By Avirook
Sen
Jyoti Basu: "Where have you heard the line, 'there is a tide in the
affairs of men'?"
Surabhi Banerjee: "Julius Caesar."
Jyoti Basu: "Now locate this line, 'What a piece of
work is man'."
Surabhi Banerjee: "Hamlet."
The first round of interviews for a modest literature
teacher's post? Certainly not. It took place at the CPI(M)'s headquarters on Alimuddin
Street in the early '80s, when Chief Minister Jyoti Basu met a young English literature
professor for the first time and was clearly impressed by her responses to his (decidedly
elementary) questions. It was a lasting impression: one that led to Surabhi Banerjee
becoming Basu's authorised biographer. And, last week, pro vice-chancellor of Calcutta
University (CU).
CRONIES
PREFERRED |
| BHARATI
RAY: Former pro vice-chancellor, CU. Was given a Rajya Sabha
ticket by the CPI(M) RAJAT
BANDYOPADHYAY: Former confidential assistant to senior minister
Buddhadev Bhattacharya is now registrar, Jadavpur University
RATHINDRA NARAYAN BASU:
VC, CU, was reappointed since he is considered close to the party
DILIP K. BASU: VC,
Burdwan University, considered close to the CPI(M)
BASUDEB BURMAN:
VC, Kalyani University, close CPI(M) links |
In her late 40s, Banerjee is the author of 15 books on
various aspects of Indian and European literature and a prolific biographer and
translator. But With the People, the authorised biography of Basu, is the one book that
she would rather not have written. Then again, ask Basu's critics (and they have grown
considerably in number after Banerjee's elevation from head of the department of English),
would Banerjee be holding her present prestigious post if she hadn't?
Banerjee's appointment came quietly. CU Vice-Chancellor
Rathindra Narayan Basu handed over charge on March 5. The CPI(M) mouthpiece, Ganashakti,
carried only a paragraph report buried in the inside pages the next day but it was enough
to start a row that refused to die down. Opposition political parties, the CPI(M)'s allies
in the Left Front and the academic establishment all expressed outrage. A section of the
CPI(M) fell silent. And Basu retorted angrily to questions: "Why question me about
the appointment? Ask the governor who is the authority."
Sure. But this case was a little different. "The
governor told me he was given a prepared file to sign," said Trinamool Congress
leader Mamata Banerjee after her meeting with Governor A.R. Kidwai who is also the
chancellor of CU. The file usually goes to the governor once the university's Senate
Syndicate suggests three names for such positions. In West Bengal, however, it is almost
an unwritten rule that the Left Front's Education Cell makes the list for the Syndicate.
But in this case even the cell had no role to play. Says Shyamapada Ghoshal of the Forward
Bloc, a member of the cell: "We were never consulted. But we heard rumours that
Banerjee, as Basu's biographer, was the favourite to get the post."
The Forward Bloc isn't the only CPI(M) ally that has
criticised the appointment. RSP leaders too have reacted sharply: "It is the CPI(M)'s
appointment, they should take the flak for it." The RSP's draft report on the current
political situation in the state itself is unflattering: "It is being observed with
concern and dismay that many major decisions are being taken bypassing the Left Front
Committee."
In the present case, however, the CPI(M) leadership too seems
to have been bypassed. Basu's close links with Banerjee also are under scrutiny. After
all, this is not the first favour that Basu has granted his Boswell. Banerjee's husband
received a 4,000 sq ft commercial plot in Salt Lake, to the east of the city, from the
chief minister's quota even before the biography was published (in 1997). Insiders say
that even staunch Basu men like CPI(M) State Unit Secretary Anil Biswas (known as
"super vice-chancellor" because of his invisible hand in most important academic
appointments) made mild noises. But Basu would have none of it.
The book that changed Banerjee's fortune, is, incidentally, a
pedestrian work made worse by a number of factual errors. To cite just a few: she has
attributed the slogan "Garibi Hatao" to Nehru instead of Indira Gandhi; says the
split in the Congress party took place in 1969 and not 1967; claims the Communist Party
was unconcerned about the Quit India movement of 1942 when it was opposed to it. Basu may
or may not have seen the bloomers. But what he certainly doesn't see is that future
(unauthorised, most likely) biographies will surely treat his role in Surabhi Banerjee's
appointment as a political bloomer. It wouldn't be factually incorrect either. |