27 October 2022 04:53 am Views - 2053
Asad Heider in his highly acclaimed book ‘Mistaken Identity: Race and Class in the Age of Trump’ contends that
Heider’s thesis is obtained from movements in the USA. He focuses on collectives, not individuals. And yet, individuals and their rise in particular social structures in particular contexts can benumb anti-racist movements while distracting from engagement with structures which affirm and perpetuate all kinds of dispossession, disenchantment and destruction. At least for a while. We see this with Rishi Sunak and we saw it with Barack Obama.
There are people going ga-ga over Rishi Sunak becoming the Prime Minister of Britain. ‘Yes, an Indian,’ some Indians salivate. ‘A South Asia, wow,’ exclaim some Sri Lankans. Some ask, slyly, ’When will we get someone who is not a Sinhala Buddhist as President?’ Some even celebrate the fact that Barack Obama, an Afro-American, became President of the USA (he was the fifth, in fact). Again, ‘when will we get someone who is not a Sinhala Buddhist as President?’ Well!
First of all Sunak is no Indian. And ‘India’ didn’t exist before the British Invasion. Sunak is a rich, right-wing citizen of Britain whose ideological preferences completely outweigh any fascination he may have about ancestry and DNA. Obama was a creature of the deep state of the USA, a genocidal maniac whose racism was not in any manner dented by the fact of his skin colour.
"Would a Tamil president, for example, deliver ‘Eelam’ or indeed be inclined to address Tamil aspirations (aspirations, ladies and gentlemen are ten cents a dozen, even in these inflationary times)? The history of the world says, ‘unlikely.’
Now had Obama campaigned as an Afro-American politically invested only in Afro- American issues, one might have some cause for celebration, forgetting of course that his views on the role of the USA in international affairs didn’t diverge from those of his predecessors. If Sunak was all about Indianness, strident critique of the colonial project, the need to fully compensate countries, people and cultures plundered and subjected to mass murder and cultural genocide, lambasting the USA for fuelling a global economic crisis and withdrawal from
NATO, that would have been something.
But no, Obama had a skin color that was different, Sunak has a name that has a sub continental trace. An individual ‘other’ rising to high office does not necessarily indicate a break from the past. Was the status of Sri Lankan women enhanced significantly when Sirimavo Bandaranaike was Prime Minister or when Chandrika Kumaratunga was President? No.
Would a Tamil president, for example, deliver ‘Eelam’ or indeed be inclined to address Tamil aspirations (aspirations, ladies and gentlemen are ten cents a dozen, even in these inflationary times)? The history of the world says, ‘unlikely.’
Perhaps we could talk of the ‘thinkability,’ let’s say, of an individual who is not from a majority community coming to power. The problem is that it is, simply, unmeasurable. Good for rhetoric and the tossing around of half-truths. Good for rabble-rousing. That’s about it.
There are people going ga-ga over Rishi Sunak becoming the Prime Minister of Britain. ‘Yes, an Indian,’ some Indians salivate. ‘A South Asia, wow,’ exclaim some Sri Lankans. Some ask, slyly, ’When will we get someone who is not a Sinhala Buddhist as President?’
Crucially, though, the identity-fascination completely shelves issues of and deriving from structures, especially economic. Sri Lanka is a test case, in fact. How many self-labelled leftists and Marxists still talk of class, still critique capitalism or factor imperialism into their analysis? When did it become more convenient to shift to identity politics? Typically, they dismiss such questions with the assertion that first they need to do away with the ‘Sinhala Buddhist state.’ And typically, they get their whatnots twisted when they feel compelled to look away when any community other than Sinhalese or Buddhists wreck the party (of principled, non-racists, non-sectarian politics). They would say, for example, ‘there are no pure races,’ but strangely but not surprisingly talk of ‘Exclusive Tamil homelands,’ even as they disavow ‘history’ as being merely someone’s version.
They devote oodles of years to constitutional reform which, in their minds, would strike off any special privileges that Buddhists may enjoy, never realizing that such never existed and even the cursory acknowledgment of history and heritage has been negated already. And they forget class. They forget capitalism. They forget imperialism. Indeed, they collude with the capitalist class they collude with imperialists.
In the end such exercises are recognized as the fancies of the deluded and disingenuous. The identity project, if you will, is wrecked by the identity-fascinated. Solidarities are compromised and collective struggles discredited. A doctoral thesis can be obtained by using Heider’s theoretical window to gaze upon the ‘Aragalaya,’ its antecedents, the way it unfolded and what it yielded (and squandered, to be more precise).
So Sunak has ‘Indian’ blood. Big deal. Barack Obama is black. Big deal. Leaders of Sri Lanka have been Sinhala Buddhists. Big deal. This country has been and is being governed by the only true minority: the bourgeoisie. Interestingly, it is the bourgeoisie that gets the biggest kick out of identity politics. Coincidence? Nah!