South Asia's Feudalism
by Ishtiaq Ahmed
Daily Times, 30 June 2002
There can be no doubt that the struggle for democracy requires that big feudal
holdings be abolished and a peasant-proprietor structure established in much
of South Asia
Karl Marx believed that his theory of historical materialism had uncovered
the primary contradiction which propelled human societies forward. It was the
class struggle between the owners of the means of production and the dispossessed
working masses — slave-owner versus slave; feudal lord versus serf; capitalist
versus proletariat — and in that historical order.
According to Marx, at certain moments in time class struggles resulted in social
revolutions and society entered a higher phase of civilisation, albeit still
divided by social injustice and domination of the property-owners over the alienated
masses. The last stage of such antagonist class relations was capitalism. Once
capitalism had revolutionised the production processes and things could be produced
in sufficient abundance for the rational needs of all, human history will undergo
the final struggle to discard the obsolete system of private property. Thenceforth,
humankind would enter a period of social harmony, cooperation and
peace and the history of classes would give way to the history of the emancipated
individual under communism.
History has not moved in the direction he predicted. In his own lifetime he
had to come to grips with the fact that class struggle was not a universal phenomenon.
He found that two regions of ancient and continuous civilisation, the Indian
subcontinent and China, had stagnated at the level of an extractive agrarian
economy. Marx came up with the supplementary Asiatic Mode of Production to solve
the puzzle. According to the Asiatic Mode of Production, an all-powerful state
expropriated the wealth of society through various coercive and cultural systems
and concentrated it at the centre where the king and his immediate associates
frittered away the wealth in the pursuit of warfare, conquest and merry-making.
No meaningful public services were provided to the peasant or opportunity given
to master craftsmen to establish independent production. Thus the whole system
preyed upon the labour of the oppressed classes and was parasitical through
and through. In contrast, although Western feudalism was thoroughly exploitative
the various tiers of feudal vassals resulted in a fragmentation of power and
thus kept the state within the bounds of customs and laws. This provided opportunity
for capitalism to gradually emerge as manufacturers and others could balance
one power against the other.
One can dispute Marx’s thesis about oriental despotism and his belief
that no progressive change occurred in Asiatic societies for hundreds of years.
But there is no doubt that the Hindu and Muslim ruling class of India had little
or no interest in public works, exceptions like the fascinating Sher Shah Suri
and some others, notwithstanding. In fact each time the emperor or king died,
the existing incumbents of the military-feudal land-holdings risked losing them
because they had no right of ownership and the new ruler preferred to place
his own men in such places. Consequently, any chance to occupy such holdings
was precarious and was used to acquire as much wealth as possible. This resulted
in a rapacious system of exploitation.
After the British had ruthlessly crushed the 1857 uprising, they established
a more stable structure of landlordism by conferring property rights on those
who remained loyal to them. This class became the mainstay of the colonial system
and most of them (maharajas, zamindars, khans, and pirs) opposed the freedom
struggle. The radical and popular scholarship described this class with the
term feudalism.
In the post-independence politics of India and Pakistan, the feudal lobbies
opposed democratic reforms. Radical land reforms in some of the Indian states
such as Punjab and Haryana broke the hold of the traditional landlords over
politics, but in Bihar big land-holdings survived and that state became notorious
for the exploitation and cultural oppression of landless peasants most of whom
were low caste or dalits. The existence of democratic institutions, however,
provided an opportunity for these castes to move up the political ladder. Laloo
Prashad Yadav and Mulayam Singh Yadav are two well-known names representing
the rising power of the so-called Other Backward Castes.
In Pakistan, the feudal class retained most of its privileges and despite a
series of land reforms Sindh (interior), southern Punjab, much of Balochistan
and many parts of the North West Frontier Province remain bastions of feudal
tyranny. The failure of democracy to take root was partly the result of the
fickle politics of the feudal lords. The suppressed Sindh Hari Report of the
1950s prepared by the senior civil servant Masud Khadarposh and the classic
work of Malcolm Darling from the 1930s ‘The Punjab Peasant in Prosperity
and Debt’ tell the woeful tale of millions of poor peasants and other
rural workers crushed under the deadweight of economic, cultural and political
feudalism.
Fifty-four years later, the promise to relieve the peasant from feudal oppression
and the economic stranglehold of the baniya and moneylender, which the erstwhile
Muslim League made to the people, has not been fulfilled. Instead the feudal
lord now combines the role of employer and patron with that of lender of loans
on most oppressive conditions.
It is interesting to note that the feudal system received its greatest support
from the fundamentalist ideologue Abul Ala Maududi who argued that in Islam
there was no limit on the ownership of land if it is ‘legally’ acquired.
Considering that almost all the big landholdings were bestowed by the British
on the landlords, Maududi’s arguments were flawed from an Islamic viewpoint.
But no other major authority on Islam tried to prove that, or that Maududi’s
interpretations of Islam could be wrong. In fact the head of the rival Rabawa-based
Ahmadiyya sect (since declared non-Muslims) furnished almost identical sources
from his version of Islam to support unlimited ownership of land.
Looking around South Asia, it appears that feudalism is strongly entrenched
in Nepal and Bhutan while the tea plantations of Sri Lanka maintain their own
system of exploiting the workforce. Bangladesh probably has the most egalitarian
structure of agricultural land ownership.
There can be no doubt that the struggle for democracy requires that big feudal
holdings be abolished and a peasant-proprietor structure established in much
of South Asia. However, economic prosperity of the region requires that environmental-friendly
industry and a progressive agriculture be protected against predatory global
actors looking for new ways and means to exploit South Asia’s working
people.
The author is an associate professor of Political Science at Stockholm University.
He has authored two books and written extensively for various newspapers and
journals
[taken from http://www.statsvet.su.se]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/3/2004 6:48:56 AM
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