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How does a country rise in protest?
‘Not in My Name’, a protest against the recent spate of mob-lynching in India was held on 28 June 2017 in at least ten cities in the country; with more protests planned in the first week of July in Chennai and Pune. Started as a Facebook event by Gurugram-based documentary filmmaker Saba Dewan, ‘Not in My Name’ galvanised public anger in the country, with enormous number of people turning up in Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Chandigarh, Lucknow and London.
Along the way, it became a trending hashtag on Twitter and made front-page newspaper headlines. A day after the simultaneous protests, Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted the following,
Clearly, the protests had made their mark.
The Quint speaks to organisers of ‘Not in My Name’ protests in seven cities, to understand the logistics, and the anger behind the protests.
On 24 June, Saba Dewan created a Facebook event called ‘Not in My Name’ and posted the event on her wall asking for a citizens’ silent protest against mob lynching at Jantar Mantar at 6 pm in Delhi.
By next day, the event was shared on hundreds of Facebook timelines. Speaking to The Quint, Anatya Vallabh, a volunteer who was involved in organising the ‘Not in My Name’ said social media played an important role in spreading the word about the protests,
As a volunteer, Vallabh worked with a group of people to organise the event in Jantar Mantar while simultaneously dealing with requests from people who wanted to organize ‘Not in My Name’ in their cities. But what led to the large turnout in Jantar Mantar?
For Kamayani, a human rights activist and one of the organisers of the ‘Not in My Name’ protest in Bombay, the protest reminded her of the anger in support for Dr. Binayak Sen. She says,
The Mumbai protest was largely planned on Facebook. Students pitched in to help and designers worked on artwork, which was shared and used to make raincoats and ponchos. They relied on emails, Twitter hashtags and Whatsapp to spread the word.
Chennai-based behavioural scientist Yogesh Parmar is a busy man these days. He is organizing the ‘Not in My Name’ protest in Chennai scheduled on 1 July and he is calling and Whatsapp-ing people to inform them about it.
A week earlier, on Monday, Parmar had written a piece about a photo of Junaid’s dead body. The piece went viral on social media, with Parmar receiving threats. Instead, Parmar decided to organise ‘Not in My Name’ in his city. He says,
When Amy Singh, a poet and activist, heard about the ‘Not in My Name’ protest in Delhi, she waited for someone to organise a similar event in Chandigarh. But when nothing materialised, even a day before the planned protest in 28 June in Delhi, she put out a call on Facebook.
She shared the Facebook event with her friends, and much to her surprise, a large number of people turned up on a rainy day to participate in ‘Not in My Name’ in Chandigarh. She says,
Kunal Purohit is a co-founder of SOAS India Society, a body of students who are interested in engaging with issues in India. They had already been planning to engage with mob lynching in India when they heard of ‘Not in My Name’ protest in Delhi through the news.
A Facebook event page was created, the event was shared on Facebook by the Delhi organisers and once the media started writing about it, people started showing their support.
Unlike other cities in India, the organisers in London had a unique challenge; to ensure that the context of mob lynching in India was explained with respect to recent events. And what was the protest like? The SOAS India Society says,
Karthik Venkatesh heard about the ‘Not in My Name’ protest in Delhi from Facebook, and was taken aback by people’s responses to the event. He wrote to Saba Dewan, who’s incidentally his Facebook friend, asking if he could use the ‘Not in My Name’ for a similar protest in Bengaluru. He says,
Alka Joshi, convener of Lokayat, a social organization in Pune, is a happy woman. The ‘Not in My Name’ march in the city was a success; with more than a thousand people estimated to have made their presence felt. Speaking to The Quint, she explains the impetus behind the protest,
American poet and philosopher Henry David Thoreau once said, “Disobedience is the true foundation of liberty.” The idea being that a democracy is often defined by the dissent it witnesses at moments of strife. An organic outpouring of anger – not backed by a political organisation – like the one seen during ‘Not in My Name’ is an important expression of dissent.
What remains to be seen though, is where the anger leads us.
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