The Loneliness of Hope, the Persistence of Struggle, and the Communist Imagination in Feudal Haryana
By Ramphal Kataria
"Jangal ke phoolon ka kya khilna aur kya murjhana"
("What does it matter if the flowers of the forest bloom or wither?")
--Inderjeet Singh
"What does it matter if the flowers of the forest bloom or wither?"
The sentence appears simple. Almost fatalistic. A casual observer may mistake it for resignation. A poet may see melancholy in it. A romantic may read despair.
But those who have spent decades fighting against entrenched injustice hear something entirely different.
They hear the voice of a revolutionary who has spent his life sowing seeds in soil that often refuses germination.
They hear a man who knows that history is not made by immediate victories but by stubborn persistence.
They hear the loneliness of conviction.
And they hear hope.
Not the cheap hope sold by politicians during elections. Not the hope packaged as motivational slogans by corporate gurus. But the harder hope of a communist who has spent a lifetime standing with workers, farmers, women, students, and the dispossessed, despite knowing that the society around him may not yet be prepared for the world he dreams of.
The words belong to Inderjeet Singh, a veteran communist leader of Haryana. To understand the depth of this statement, one must understand the social landscape in which it was spoken.
The Tragedy of Haryana: Prosperity Without Emancipation
Haryana is frequently celebrated as a success story.
High agricultural productivity.
National-level sporting achievements.
Rapid urbanization.
Industrial corridors.
Growing infrastructure.
But beneath this glittering narrative lies another Haryana.
A Haryana where caste still determines social worth.
A Haryana where women continue to face systemic restrictions.
A Haryana where labour remains invisible.
A Haryana where village democracy often operates under the shadow of extra-constitutional authority.
A Haryana where feudal consciousness survives long after feudal economics has begun to crumble.
The contradiction is profound.
Tractors have replaced bullocks.
Smartphones have replaced postcards.
But social relations often remain trapped centuries behind.
Karl Marx observed that while productive forces evolve, social relations frequently lag behind them. This contradiction creates tension, conflict, and eventually transformation.
Haryana represents precisely such a contradiction.
Its economy increasingly belongs to modern capitalism.
Its social imagination often remains feudal.
"The greatest victory of exploitation is not economic control; it is convincing the exploited to identify with their exploiters."
Why the Communist Appears Alone
One of the most striking realities of political work in rural North India is the isolation of those who challenge caste hierarchy.
The communist organizer enters a village and speaks about wages.
The labourer agrees.
He speaks about land rights.
The farmer agrees.
He speaks about education.
The youth agrees.
He speaks about healthcare.
The women agree.
But the moment he speaks about caste, the conversation changes.
The room becomes uncomfortable.
The village remembers its boundaries.
The oppressed begin defending the structures that oppress them.
Marx wrote that the ruling ideas of every age are the ideas of the ruling class.
In Haryana, one may add:
The ruling ideas are not maintained merely by the ruling class. They are often reproduced by those who suffer under them.
This is the genius of social domination.
It requires neither chains nor prisons.
It survives through habit.
Through culture.
Through inherited prejudice.
Through fear.
And through the promise of belonging.
The Village and the Illusion of Unity
The Indian village is frequently romanticized.
Politicians celebrate it.
Films glorify it.
Nationalists idealize it.
But Dr. B.R. Ambedkar offered a much harsher assessment.
He described the village as a site of exclusion, hierarchy, and oppression.
History has repeatedly validated his warning.
The village is not a naturally harmonious community.
It is a contested space.
Different classes.
Different castes.
Different interests.
Different power structures.
To imagine otherwise is to ignore reality.
The landlord and agricultural labourer do not share identical interests.
The dominant caste and marginalized caste do not experience the village similarly.
The moneylender and indebted farmer do not stand on equal ground.
Yet political narratives often erase these contradictions.
Why?
Because exposing them threatens existing power.
"A society does not become just because it calls itself traditional. Many traditions survive precisely because they serve power."
The Cruel Genius of Caste
Perhaps nowhere has exploitation shown greater adaptability than in the caste system.
Capitalism changes.
Governments change.
Political parties change.
Empires rise and collapse.
Yet caste demonstrates extraordinary resilience.
Why?
Because caste converts economic inequality into moral legitimacy.
The poor are not merely poor.
They are told their position is natural.
The privileged are not merely privileged.
They are told their dominance is deserved.
This ideological transformation makes resistance difficult.
Marx described religion as the opium of the masses, not because he despised faith, but because he recognized how suffering can be justified through narratives that postpone justice.
In India, caste often performs a similar function.
It converts historical exploitation into social common sense.
And common sense is often the most difficult prison to escape.
The Communist's Impossible Task
The communist in Haryana confronts a paradox.
The people whose lives would improve most through collective political action are often divided by identities that weaken collective action.
Workers compete with workers.
Farmers distrust farmers.
Villages divide villages.
Castes oppose castes.
Religions confront religions.
The result is predictable.
The exploiters remain united.
The exploited remain fragmented.
This is why communist politics often appears slow.
Painfully slow.
Generationally slow.
Because its task is not merely economic.
It is psychological.
Cultural.
Civilizational.
The communist is not simply organizing protests.
He is attempting to transform consciousness.
And consciousness rarely changes overnight.
Lessons from History: Why Persistence Matters
History offers countless examples where movements appeared defeated before they transformed society.
When Marx wrote in nineteenth-century Europe, socialism seemed impossible.
Monarchies dominated.
Capitalists appeared invincible.
Workers possessed little power.
Yet labour movements transformed entire continents.
When Lenin organized revolutionaries in Tsarist Russia, they were a tiny minority facing one of the world's most powerful empires.
Most observers considered them irrelevant.
History decided otherwise.
When anti-colonial revolutionaries challenged the British Empire, independence appeared unimaginable.
The empire governed a quarter of humanity.
Resistance seemed futile.
History decided otherwise.
When Nelson Mandela entered prison, apartheid looked permanent.
History decided otherwise.
When Bhagat Singh spoke of socialism, many dismissed him as a dreamer.
History remembered him differently.
When E.M.S. Namboodiripad and the communist movement in Kerala advocated land reforms, critics predicted disaster.
Instead, Kerala emerged as one of India's most socially developed states.
The lesson is clear.
The measure of a movement is not whether victory is immediate.
The measure is whether its analysis of society is correct.
Because if the analysis is correct, history eventually catches up.
"Every transformative idea spends years looking unrealistic before it begins looking inevitable."
“Bach Jana Hi Ek Kamaal Hai”
Inderjeet Singh explains his dictum through an observation about rural life:
"The life of a villager is a great challenge. Merely surviving is an achievement. One may die of malnutrition, become prey to an animal, drown in a pond, or perish in some accident. Returning safely itself is a great accomplishment."
This statement operates at multiple levels.
It speaks literally about precarious rural existence.
But it also speaks politically.
To remain committed to social justice for decades is itself a form of survival.
Movements die.
Organizations fracture.
Comrades age.
Resources disappear.
Defeats accumulate.
Yet some continue.
Not because victory is guaranteed.
But because surrender would guarantee defeat.
The communist tradition has always understood this.
Its greatest strength is not certainty.
Its greatest strength is endurance.
The Gift of Adversity
Inderjeet's final reflection may be the most profound:
"The world has given me experiences in the form of accidents and hardships; I am merely returning them."
This is not bitterness.
It is transformation.
The suffering experienced by one individual becomes collective wisdom.
The wound becomes testimony.
The struggle becomes memory.
The memory becomes resistance.
And resistance becomes hope.
Every major movement in history emerged from such transformations.
The workers of Manchester.
The peasants of China.
The anti-apartheid activists of South Africa.
The freedom fighters of India.
The civil rights movement in America.
None were created by comfort.
All were forged through adversity.
The communist understands this better than most because communist politics begins not with idealism but with reality.
Reality is harsh.
Reality is unequal.
Reality is unjust.
The task is not to deny these facts.
The task is to change them.
Khap, Caste and Class: Why Rural Haryana Resists Equality and Why History Suggests Change Is Still Possible
"What does it matter if the flowers of the forest bloom or wither?"
The question continues to haunt us.
Not because it reflects despair.
But because it forces us to confront a painful reality: what happens when a just cause confronts a society that is structurally resistant to justice?
This is not merely the story of a communist organizer in Haryana.
It is the story of every revolutionary who has attempted to push history forward while society remains firmly anchored in the past.
The tragedy is not that the struggle exists.
The tragedy is that the beneficiaries of change are often mobilized against it.
That is the central contradiction of rural Haryana.
The Khap: The Persistence of Feudal Authority
No serious discussion of Haryana can avoid the institution commonly known as the Khap.
Its defenders describe it as a traditional social institution.
Its critics see it as an extra-constitutional power structure.
Both descriptions contain elements of truth.
Historically, Khaps emerged as mechanisms of social organization.
In periods when state structures were weak, they often played important administrative and dispute-resolution roles.
History, however, is not judged by origins.
It is judged by contemporary function.
The critical question is not what Khaps once were.
The critical question is what they represent today.
In contemporary Haryana, many Khaps continue to exercise social authority over marriage, women's autonomy, social behaviour, caste boundaries, and village relations.
Their power does not derive from the Constitution.
It derives from social legitimacy.
That legitimacy is precisely what concerns democrats, feminists, and communists alike.
Because whenever unelected institutions claim moral authority over citizens, democracy becomes incomplete.
"The struggle against feudalism is not a struggle against culture. It is a struggle against power disguised as culture."
The Invisible Cage
The most effective prisons are invisible.
People recognize physical chains.
They recognize economic deprivation.
But they often fail to recognize ideological captivity.
The young labourer who votes according to caste rather than class interest may sincerely believe he is acting rationally.
The small farmer who supports political forces aligned with dominant elites may genuinely believe he is protecting community interests.
The unemployed youth who directs anger toward another religion rather than toward unemployment itself may think he is defending society.
This is not stupidity.
It is ideological conditioning.
Marx described this condition as false consciousness.
The exploited frequently perceive the world through frameworks created by those who benefit from exploitation.
The result is tragic.
The victim begins protecting the very structures responsible for victimization.
Why Caste Survives Capitalism
Many early Marxists believed capitalism would gradually erode pre-capitalist identities.
Reality proved more complicated.
Capitalism did not destroy caste.
It adapted to it.
In India, caste and capitalism frequently cooperate.
Recruitment networks follow caste lines.
Business relationships follow caste lines.
Marriage alliances follow caste lines.
Political mobilization follows caste lines.
The market may be modern.
The mindset often remains feudal.
This explains why economic development alone cannot create social equality.
A village may have luxury vehicles and modern machinery.
Yet the social distance between castes may remain unchanged.
Economic growth without social transformation merely creates modernized inequality.
"A tractor can replace a bullock. It cannot replace an idea. Social revolutions occur when ideas change."
The Worker and the Farmer: Natural Allies Divided
One of the greatest successes of ruling classes throughout history has been dividing those who share common interests.
In Haryana, this division often appears through caste identities.
A landless worker and a small farmer frequently face similar economic vulnerabilities.
Both struggle with rising costs.
Both confront market uncertainty.
Both depend upon larger economic forces beyond their control.
Yet they are often mobilized against each other.
The division benefits neither.
It benefits those above them.
This pattern is not unique to Haryana.
It has appeared throughout history.
European aristocracies divided peasants.
Colonial powers divided communities.
Industrial capitalists divided workers.
Modern political elites divide voters.
The mechanism changes.
The objective remains identical.
Prevent solidarity.
Because solidarity is dangerous.
When ordinary people recognize common interests, existing hierarchies begin to tremble.
Why Communists Speak About Class
Critics often accuse communists of reducing everything to economics.
The criticism misunderstands the Marxist project.
Class analysis does not deny caste.
It does not deny gender.
It does not deny religion.
It asks a different question:
Who benefits?
Who loses?
Who possesses power?
Who performs labour?
Who controls resources?
Who shapes political decisions?
These questions reveal structures often hidden beneath cultural narratives.
When a worker earns less than the value he produces, exploitation exists.
When a woman performs unpaid labour while lacking social power, exploitation exists.
When caste determines opportunity, exploitation exists.
The communist seeks to expose these relationships.
Not because culture is irrelevant.
But because culture frequently conceals material inequality.
The Forgotten Revolutionaries
History often remembers kings.
It remembers generals.
It remembers wealthy industrialists.
It remembers prime ministers.
Yet social progress has usually emerged from very different people.
Anonymous workers.
Peasant organizers.
Teachers.
Trade unionists.
Women who challenged patriarchy.
Students who challenged authority.
People who possessed little power except conviction.
Their names rarely appear in school textbooks.
But without them history would look entirely different.
The eight-hour workday did not emerge from generosity.
Universal education did not emerge from charity.
Women's voting rights did not emerge from kindness.
Labour protections did not emerge from benevolence.
Every significant democratic gain was won through struggle.
Someone organized.
Someone sacrificed.
Someone endured ridicule.
Someone was defeated repeatedly.
And yet continued.
"History is written by famous people. History is changed by ordinary people."
The Long Shadow of Bhagat Singh
Among Indian revolutionaries, Bhagat Singh remains uniquely relevant.
Many celebrate his courage.
Far fewer engage seriously with his ideas.
Bhagat Singh was not merely an anti-colonial nationalist.
He was a socialist.
He believed political independence without social and economic justice would remain incomplete.
His concern was not only who ruled India.
His concern was what kind of India would emerge after colonial rule.
Would exploitation disappear?
Would inequality disappear?
Would workers gain dignity?
Would peasants gain freedom?
These questions remain unresolved.
In many respects, they remain more relevant today than ever.
The communist movement in India inherited this unfinished agenda.
Its successes have been partial.
Its failures have been significant.
Yet the questions it raises remain unavoidable.
Women: The Most Revolutionary Question
No struggle for equality can ignore women.
Indeed, the status of women often reveals the true character of a society.
Haryana's gender contradictions are striking.
The state produces internationally recognized athletes.
Women increasingly enter education and employment.
Yet patriarchal control remains deeply entrenched.
Family honour continues to regulate female autonomy.
Marriage remains heavily controlled.
Social surveillance remains intense.
Violence persists.
The communist tradition has long argued that women's liberation cannot be treated as a secondary issue.
A society cannot become genuinely democratic while half its population remains constrained.
The struggle against patriarchy is not separate from the struggle against exploitation.
It is part of the same struggle.
"Every hierarchy seeks permanence. Every emancipatory movement seeks equality. The conflict between them is unavoidable."
Why Defeat Is Often Misunderstood
One reason people abandon political struggle is their misunderstanding of victory.
They expect immediate results.
Immediate transformations.
Immediate recognition.
History rarely works this way.
Marx died without witnessing socialist revolutions.
Ambedkar died before seeing the full constitutional promise realized.
Bhagat Singh never saw independence.
Rosa Luxemburg never saw socialism triumph.
Many great fighters for justice died believing their work remained incomplete.
Yet their efforts transformed future generations.
This is perhaps the deepest lesson embedded within Inderjeet Singh's words.
The revolutionary does not work only for his own lifetime.
He works for a future he may never personally witness.
That requires extraordinary faith.
Not religious faith.
Historical faith.
Faith that truth possesses greater endurance than power.
Faith that justice possesses greater legitimacy than privilege.
Faith that human beings eventually learn from suffering.
The Communist and Hope
The popular stereotype portrays communists as angry pessimists.
Reality often suggests the opposite.
Few people possess greater optimism than those who dedicate entire lives to social transformation.
Imagine believing that centuries of inequality can be overcome.
Imagine believing that ordinary people can govern themselves.
Imagine believing that workers, farmers, women, students, and marginalized communities can collectively build a better society.
Such beliefs require immense hope.
The communist may appear critical.
But criticism emerges from expectation.
One criticizes society because one believes society can become better.
Cynics expect nothing.
Revolutionaries expect everything.
That is why they continue despite setbacks.
That is why they continue despite defeats.
That is why they continue despite ridicule.
And that is why voices like Inderjeet Singh's remain relevant.
Because they remind us that struggle itself contains dignity.
When the Flowers Bloom
Perhaps the most profound misunderstanding of revolutionary politics lies in the assumption that success arrives suddenly.
It rarely does.
The flower blooms long before anyone notices.
It blooms when a young woman refuses imposed silence.
It blooms when a worker questions exploitation.
It blooms when a student challenges prejudice.
It blooms when caste boundaries weaken.
It blooms when communities discover solidarity.
It blooms when fear loses authority.
The bloom may remain invisible.
For years.
For decades.
Even generations.
Yet history accumulates such moments.
Eventually quantity becomes quality.
Small changes become large transformations.
What once appeared impossible becomes ordinary.
This is how history moves.
Not in straight lines.
But in contradictions.
Not without setbacks.
But not without progress.
And this is why the communist persists.
Because he understands something that cynics do not.
The future is not predetermined.
It is contested.
Toward the Dawn
The words of Inderjeet Singh are not an obituary for hope.
They are a declaration of endurance.
The forest flower blooms whether anyone notices or not.
Its existence itself is resistance.
Likewise, the communist organizer continues whether victory appears imminent or distant.
He organizes because exploitation exists.
He speaks because silence serves power.
He persists because surrender serves injustice.
And perhaps that is the ultimate meaning of his statement.
The flower may bloom.
The flower may wither.
History may advance slowly.
Society may resist change.
Defeats may accumulate.
But the struggle itself remains necessary.
Because every right enjoyed today emerged from someone who refused to stop fighting when success appeared impossible.
The village labourer.
The peasant rebel.
The trade unionist.
The feminist.
The student activist.
The anti-caste reformer.
The communist.
All belong to the same historical tradition.
The tradition of people who refused to accept the world as it was and insisted upon imagining the world as it could be.
That is why the voice may be dim.
But it remains piercing.
That is why the flower may appear alone.
But it continues to bloom.
And that is why, despite everything, hope survives.
For history has repeatedly demonstrated a simple truth:
The forces of privilege possess power.
But the forces of justice possess time.
And time, ultimately, belongs to those who refuse to surrender.
The Forest Flower and the Red Flag
There are people who make history.
There are people who write history.
And then there are those rare individuals who spend their entire lives trying to bend history toward justice, even when they know that history may never acknowledge their existence.
Inderjeet Singh belongs to the third category.
The modern world celebrates success.
It glorifies winners.
It worships power.
It measures achievement through wealth, offices, electoral victories, media visibility, and social prestige.
Yet history's most important struggles have rarely been led by those who possessed any of these things.
The great warriors of social transformation were often defeated repeatedly.
Many died poor.
Many died isolated.
Many died ridiculed.
Many died before witnessing even a fraction of the future they had dedicated their lives to creating.
The question, therefore, is not whether Inderjeet Singh won.
The question is whether he belonged to that long historical tradition of men and women who chose justice over convenience.
If the answer is yes, then he belongs in the company of the world's great social rebels, irrespective of whether history grants him recognition.
"The revolutionary is often judged by the present. History judges him by the future he helps create."
Why Haryana Produces Rebels and Conservatives Simultaneously
To understand the significance of Inderjeet Singh's life and philosophy, one must first understand Haryana itself.
Few regions in India embody contradiction as sharply as Haryana.
The state produces Olympic medalists and honour killings.
It produces modern industries and medieval social attitudes.
It produces immense agricultural wealth and deep social inequality.
It produces some of India's most courageous women athletes while simultaneously policing women's autonomy.
The same village may possess luxury SUVs and caste-based discrimination.
The same family may celebrate modern education while enforcing ancient hierarchies.
The same society may praise bravery while fearing social equality.
These contradictions are not accidental.
They emerge from the coexistence of modern economic development with deeply entrenched feudal social relations.
Marx observed that societies often carry remnants of previous historical epochs within themselves.
Haryana illustrates this phenomenon vividly.
Its economy increasingly belongs to modern capitalism.
Its social consciousness often remains partially feudal.
And within that contradiction lives the communist.
The Communist as an Outsider
Communists are frequently portrayed as outsiders.
In one sense, they are.
Not because they belong to a different society.
But because they refuse to accept society's dominant assumptions.
The communist enters a village and asks uncomfortable questions.
Why does one person own hundreds of acres while another owns none?
Why are some occupations associated with dignity and others with humiliation?
Why are women expected to sacrifice more than men?
Why do caste boundaries continue to define human worth?
Why does religion become a weapon against people whose economic interests are fundamentally similar?
Why do the poor repeatedly vote for policies that strengthen the powerful?
Such questions disturb the social order.
And every social order resists disturbance.
"The first act of rebellion is not protest. It is asking questions that power does not want answered."
The Loneliness of Political Work
One of the least understood aspects of activism is loneliness.
Observers see rallies.
They see speeches.
They see slogans.
They see public meetings.
What they do not see are the years between those moments.
The endless travel.
The repeated defeats.
The shrinking audiences.
The financial difficulties.
The emotional exhaustion.
The constant confrontation with apathy.
The realization that many people who agree privately remain silent publicly.
This loneliness is particularly severe in societies dominated by caste and patriarchal structures.
The activist often finds himself confronting not merely political opponents but inherited social assumptions.
Every village meeting becomes a battle against centuries.
Every conversation becomes a confrontation with history.
Every attempt at mobilization collides with deeply internalized prejudice.
Yet people like Inderjeet continue.
Why?
Because they understand a truth often forgotten by the comfortable.
Injustice survives not because it is morally superior.
It survives because it is organized.
Therefore justice must also become organized.
Learning from the Russian Revolution
The Russian Revolution remains one of the most consequential events of modern history.
Regardless of one's opinion of its outcomes, its significance is undeniable.
When Lenin and the Bolsheviks began their work, Russia was largely agrarian.
Illiteracy was widespread.
The peasantry constituted the majority.
Political repression was severe.
The possibility of revolution appeared remote.
Most educated observers considered socialist transformation impossible.
Yet within a few decades, a backward empire had been transformed into an industrial power capable of defeating Nazi Germany and sending human beings into space.
The lesson is not that every aspect of Soviet history should be replicated.
The lesson is that societies can change dramatically when ordinary people become politically conscious.
Lenin understood something crucial.
Revolutions are not produced by misery alone.
People can suffer for centuries without rebelling.
Revolutions emerge when suffering acquires political meaning.
This remains relevant in Haryana today.
Economic hardship exists.
Agrarian distress exists.
Unemployment exists.
Social inequality exists.
The challenge is transforming individual grievances into collective understanding.
That is precisely the work communists attempt to perform.
Telangana: India's Forgotten Red Dawn
If one seeks an Indian example, the Telangana Armed Struggle offers powerful lessons.
Between 1946 and 1951, peasants challenged feudal landlords under the Nizam's rule.
Millions participated.
Thousands sacrificed.
Women played extraordinary roles.
The struggle was not merely about land.
It was about dignity.
It was about ending arbitrary authority.
It was about dismantling feudal domination.
The movement demonstrated that even seemingly permanent power structures can be challenged.
More importantly, it showed that rural populations are not naturally conservative.
They become conservative or radical depending upon historical conditions.
The same peasantry capable of submission is also capable of rebellion.
The same village capable of conformity is also capable of transformation.
This remains true today.
"Every village contains two histories: the history of obedience and the history of resistance."
Bhagat Singh's Unfinished Question
Perhaps no revolutionary is more misappropriated in contemporary India than Bhagat Singh.
His image appears everywhere.
His ideas appear nowhere.
Bhagat Singh was not fighting merely for national independence.
He was fighting for social emancipation.
He feared that political freedom without economic equality would simply transfer power from foreign rulers to domestic elites.
His concern remains relevant.
What is freedom if hunger persists?
What is democracy if inequality dominates?
What is development if dignity remains absent?
What is nationalism if workers remain exploited?
These questions haunt modern India.
They haunt Haryana.
And they haunt every activist who refuses to confuse economic growth with social justice.
Caste: The Greatest Obstacle to Working-Class Unity
Marxists often emphasize class.
In India, however, class cannot be understood without caste.
Caste fragments potential solidarity.
It creates multiple hierarchies among people who share similar economic conditions.
A landless labourer may feel greater affinity toward a wealthy member of his caste than toward a worker from another caste.
This is politically significant.
Because it weakens collective action.
Dr. Ambedkar understood this clearly.
His critique remains indispensable.
A society divided by caste cannot easily unite around economic interests.
Therefore any meaningful emancipatory politics in India must confront caste directly.
Not as a secondary issue.
Not as a cultural issue.
But as a structural question.
Communists who ignore caste fail.
Anti-caste movements that ignore economic exploitation also face limitations.
The challenge is synthesis.
The challenge is building solidarity without erasing difference.
The challenge is constructing unity without denying historical injustice.
This remains one of the greatest unfinished tasks of Indian democracy.
Women and the Measure of Progress
No society becomes free while its women remain constrained.
The communist tradition has repeatedly insisted that women's liberation is central to social transformation.
This is particularly relevant in Haryana.
The control of women's choices remains deeply embedded in social structures.
Marriage.
Mobility.
Inheritance.
Public participation.
Personal autonomy.
Each becomes a site of negotiation and conflict.
The reactionary mindset fears women's freedom because freedom destabilizes hierarchy.
Every hierarchy depends upon obedience.
Every emancipatory movement depends upon autonomy.
Thus the struggle for women's rights is fundamentally a struggle over power itself.
"Patriarchy is feudalism inside the family."
Why Hope Persists
The remarkable feature of communists like Inderjeet Singh is not their criticism.
It is their optimism.
One cannot spend fifty years organizing workers and peasants without believing in humanity's capacity for change.
The cynic withdraws.
The revolutionary participates.
The cynic mocks.
The revolutionary organizes.
The cynic predicts failure.
The revolutionary creates possibility.
This distinction matters.
History advances because some people continue despite uncertainty.
Not because success is guaranteed.
But because surrender guarantees failure.
This is the deeper meaning hidden within Inderjeet's statement.
The flower blooms.
The flower withers.
Neither outcome changes the necessity of flowering.
Likewise, the activist struggles.
Victory may arrive.
Victory may not arrive.
Neither outcome changes the necessity of struggle.
Because struggle itself affirms human dignity.
The Communist's Inheritance
Communists inherit neither wealth nor privilege.
They inherit memory.
The memory of workers shot during strikes.
The memory of peasants evicted from land.
The memory of women resisting patriarchy.
The memory of students confronting authoritarianism.
The memory of anti-colonial rebels.
The memory of those who refused to accept injustice as destiny.
This inheritance is not material.
It is moral.
And moral inheritances often outlive empires.
The Meaning of the Forest Flower
Let us return to the sentence that inspired this reflection.
"What does it matter if the flowers of the forest bloom or wither?"
At first glance it sounds pessimistic.
In reality it is profoundly dialectical.
The flower blooms not because recognition is guaranteed.
The flower blooms because blooming is its nature.
Likewise, the revolutionary struggles not because victory is guaranteed.
The revolutionary struggles because resistance to injustice is a moral necessity.
The flower's significance does not depend upon applause.
The activist's significance does not depend upon electoral success.
Both derive meaning from existence itself.
That is the essence of Inderjeet Singh's philosophy.
And perhaps the essence of revolutionary politics itself.
The Men Who Plant Trees Under Whose Shade They Never Sit
There exists an old saying:
"Society grows great when old men plant trees under whose shade they know they shall never sit."
The same can be said of revolutionary politics.
The communist often works for a future he may never witness.
He organizes workers whose grandchildren may enjoy the benefits.
He challenges caste whose complete destruction may require generations.
He confronts patriarchy whose defeat may remain incomplete throughout his lifetime.
He fights because the struggle is necessary.
Not because the reward is immediate.
In this sense, Inderjeet Singh represents something larger than an individual.
He represents a tradition.
A tradition stretching from Marx and Engels to Lenin and Rosa Luxemburg.
From Bhagat Singh and Ambedkar to the unnamed workers and peasants who fought for dignity.
A tradition that refuses surrender.
A tradition that believes humanity deserves better than exploitation.
A tradition that persists even when isolated.
A tradition that continues even when history appears hostile.
And therefore, when Inderjeet Singh says:
"What does it matter if the flowers of the forest bloom or wither?"
One hears not despair.
One hears courage.
One hears endurance.
One hears the quiet confidence of a man who knows that history moves slowly, but it moves.
And that somewhere, beyond the horizon of the present, the seeds planted by forgotten fighters will eventually become forests.
The Soil Beneath the Slogan: Haryana's Contradictions and the Quiet Persistence of Revolution
"The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters."
— Antonio Gramsci
The true measure of a political philosophy is not how it behaves during victory.
Its true character emerges during periods of defeat.
When crowds disappear.
When elections are lost.
When movements fragment.
When comrades grow old.
When society appears indifferent.
That is precisely the moment when one begins to understand people like Inderjeet Singh.
For more than half a century, communist politics in Haryana has survived in circumstances that would have extinguished many other ideological traditions. It has survived not because it commands state power. It has survived not because it controls institutions. It has survived because the conditions that produced it continue to exist.
The language changes.
The rulers change.
The parties change.
But exploitation remains astonishingly adaptable.
And nowhere is this more visible than in Haryana.
Haryana: Prosperity's Unfinished Story
To outsiders, Haryana appears prosperous.
The state is often celebrated as the poster child of India's Green Revolution.
Its highways are modern.
Its villages possess tractors, harvesters, SUVs, and increasingly sophisticated infrastructure.
Its athletes win international medals.
Its farmers contribute enormously to India's food security.
Its industrial belts generate substantial wealth.
Yet beneath this image lies another Haryana.
A Haryana where land ownership remains highly unequal.
A Haryana where agricultural indebtedness continues to grow.
A Haryana where rural youth increasingly face unemployment despite education.
A Haryana where women continue to negotiate the constraints of patriarchy.
A Haryana where caste remains one of the most important determinants of social life.
This contradiction is not accidental.
It reflects the peculiar trajectory of capitalist development in North India.
The Green Revolution increased production.
It did not eliminate hierarchy.
The market expanded.
Social democracy did not.
Technology advanced.
Human relationships often remained trapped in older structures.
As Marx observed, economic development alone cannot guarantee social liberation.
The machine can transform production.
It cannot transform consciousness.
"The tragedy of modern Haryana is not that it failed to become prosperous. The tragedy is that prosperity did not automatically produce equality."
Khap and Democracy: Two Competing Visions of Authority
Few institutions reveal this contradiction more clearly than the Khap.
Its defenders present it as a custodian of community values.
Its critics see it as the surviving architecture of feudal authority.
The truth lies in understanding its historical function.
The Khap emerged in a period when modern democratic institutions did not exist.
It organized collective life.
It resolved disputes.
It coordinated social affairs.
But history creates new standards.
The question is no longer whether the Khap once performed useful functions.
The question is whether unelected social authority should continue exercising influence over the personal freedoms of citizens in a constitutional democracy.
This is where the communist critique becomes relevant.
The issue is not culture.
The issue is power.
Every hierarchy eventually claims cultural legitimacy.
Every structure of domination presents itself as tradition.
Every privilege seeks historical justification.
The communist asks a simple question:
Who benefits?
Who decides?
Who obeys?
Who suffers?
These questions often reveal realities hidden beneath cultural rhetoric.
The Workers Nobody Sees
Haryana's economic success rests not only upon landowners and industrialists.
It rests upon labour.
The invisible army that constructs roads.
Builds factories.
Harvests crops.
Loads trucks.
Produces wealth.
And yet remains largely absent from public discourse.
Walk through the industrial belts of Faridabad, Gurugram, Manesar, Panipat, Yamunanagar, Sonipat, or Bahadurgarh.
One encounters thousands of contract workers.
Temporary labourers.
Migrant workers.
Casual employees.
Men and women whose lives remain precarious despite their contribution to economic growth.
The communist movement's insistence upon labour rights emerges from this reality.
The worker remains indispensable.
Yet often remains powerless.
The contradiction remains unresolved.
Migration and the New Working Class
One of the most significant transformations in Haryana has been the growth of migrant labour.
Workers from Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, and West Bengal now constitute an essential component of the state's economy.
Yet their presence also reveals the limits of regional prosperity.
The factories cannot function without them.
The construction industry depends upon them.
Agriculture increasingly relies upon them.
Yet they frequently remain socially marginalized.
Politically voiceless.
Economically vulnerable.
Marx would have immediately recognized this phenomenon.
Capital requires labour mobility.
But societies often resist social equality.
Thus the worker becomes economically necessary but socially expendable.
This contradiction remains one of the defining features of modern capitalism.
"The worker builds the city yet rarely owns a room within it."
The Farmers' Movement and the Return of Collective Memory
The Farmers' Movement of 2020–21 was perhaps the most significant democratic mobilization in contemporary India.
Its importance extended beyond the farm laws.
For a brief period, it reminded people of something that neoliberal politics had spent decades attempting to erase:
Collective action works.
Farmers occupied highways.
Organized kitchens.
Built libraries.
Conducted discussions.
Created democratic spaces.
Sustained solidarity for more than a year.
The movement demonstrated that ordinary people remain capable of extraordinary political maturity.
For communists, the movement carried particular significance.
It revived the language of class, exploitation, and collective struggle.
Words that had gradually disappeared beneath the noise of television nationalism.
Most importantly, it demonstrated that economic questions cannot be permanently suppressed.
Eventually they return.
Because hunger returns.
Debt returns.
Unemployment returns.
And when they return, politics must confront them.
Women Wrestlers and the Politics of Courage
The movement led by India's women wrestlers provided another revealing moment.
These women represented the very image of modern Haryana.
Athletes.
International medalists.
Symbols of national pride.
Yet when they challenged entrenched power, they encountered resistance from the same structures that had celebrated their achievements.
The episode exposed a deeper truth.
Patriarchy does not disappear merely because women succeed.
Indeed, successful women often become its most visible targets.
The communist movement has historically argued that women's liberation cannot be treated as a secondary question.
The experience of Haryana's women repeatedly confirms this argument.
Economic progress without gender justice remains incomplete.
Political democracy without gender equality remains unfinished.
"Every woman who refuses silence weakens a structure centuries older than herself."
Caste: The Great Divider
No discussion of Haryana can ignore caste.
Indeed, caste remains the single greatest obstacle to the emergence of broad democratic solidarity.
Its genius lies in its ability to fragment people whose economic interests often overlap.
The landless worker and the small farmer may share common economic concerns.
Yet caste encourages them to view each other through inherited social boundaries.
The result is political fragmentation.
This is precisely why both Marx and Ambedkar remain essential.
Marx explains exploitation.
Ambedkar explains exclusion.
Together they provide perhaps the most powerful framework for understanding contemporary India.
Any politics that ignores class becomes economically superficial.
Any politics that ignores caste becomes socially blind.
The future belongs to movements capable of addressing both simultaneously.
Why Communists Continue
Critics frequently ask why communists persist despite electoral weakness.
The answer is remarkably simple.
Because the problems they identified continue to exist.
Workers remain exploited.
Farmers remain indebted.
Women remain unequal.
Caste remains powerful.
Wealth remains concentrated.
Public resources continue moving into private hands.
The forms change.
The substance remains.
Communists continue because history continues producing the conditions that make communist questions relevant.
Their voice may be smaller.
Their organizations may be weaker.
Their influence may fluctuate.
But the realities they describe remain stubbornly present.
And reality possesses a way of eventually demanding attention.
Inderjeet Singh and the Politics of Endurance
This is where we return to Inderjeet Singh.
His importance does not lie primarily in electoral achievements.
His importance lies in endurance.
He represents a generation that refused to abandon the possibility of social transformation despite witnessing repeated setbacks.
He belongs to a tradition that understands politics not as an event but as a process.
Not as a sprint.
But as a relay race.
Each generation carries the baton for a while.
Then passes it forward.
The communist does not expect to complete history.
He merely hopes to move it a little further.
That is why Inderjeet's metaphor resonates so deeply.
The flower blooms.
The flower withers.
Another blooms.
The forest survives.
Likewise, activists come and go.
Movements rise and decline.
Organizations weaken and recover.
But the struggle for justice persists.
Because injustice persists.
And because somewhere, in every generation, there are people unwilling to accept exploitation as destiny.
Toward a Different Haryana
The future of Haryana will not be decided merely by elections.
It will be decided by deeper questions.
Can caste yield to citizenship?
Can patriarchy yield to equality?
Can competition yield to solidarity?
Can economic growth be accompanied by social justice?
Can democracy move beyond voting toward genuine participation?
These questions remain open.
Their answers remain unwritten.
But history suggests one thing with certainty.
No society changes without those willing to challenge it.
And no challenge succeeds without those willing to endure.
That is the legacy of Inderjeet Singh.
Not certainty.
Not triumph.
But endurance.
The stubborn refusal to surrender hope.
The quiet confidence that history remains unfinished.
And the belief that somewhere beneath the hard soil of the present, the seeds of a more equal future continue waiting for rain.
References
1. Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich. The Communist Manifesto.
2. Marx, Karl. Capital, Volume I.
3. Lenin, V.I. State and Revolution.
4. Gramsci, Antonio. Selections from the Prison Notebooks.
5. Ambedkar, B.R. Annihilation of Caste.
6. Bhagat Singh. Why I Am an Atheist and Other Writings.
7. Gail Omvedt. Dalits and the Democratic Revolution: Dr Ambedkar and the Dalit Movement in Colonial India.
8. A.R. Desai. Rural Sociology in India.
9. D.N. Dhanagare. Peasant Movements in India, 1920–1950.
10. Utsa Patnaik. The Agrarian Question and Development of Capitalism in India.
11. E.M.S. Namboodiripad. History of Indian Freedom Struggle.
12. Irfan Habib. Essays in Indian History: Towards a Marxist Perception.
13. Surinder S. Jodhka. Caste in Contemporary India.
14. Bina Agarwal. A Field of One's Own: Gender and Land Rights in South Asia.
15. Nivedita Menon. Seeing Like a Feminist.
16. P. Sainath. Everybody Loves a Good Drought.
17. Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen. An Uncertain Glory: India and Its Contradictions.
18. Reports and publications of the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) on agrarian distress and farmers' movements.
19. Economic and Political Weekly (selected articles on Haryana, Khap Panchayats, caste, agrarian change, labour migration, and the 2020–21 Farmers' Movement).
20. Speeches, interviews, pamphlets, and public interventions of Inderjeet Singh on peasant struggles, workers' rights, social justice, and democratic transformation in Haryana.
(Closing Note
This essay is inspired by the lifelong struggles of workers, peasants, women, students, and social activists who continue to challenge exploitation, caste oppression, patriarchy, and inequality despite adversity, believing that the struggle for a just and humane society is itself an act of hope.)
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