The Many Faces of Sonal Shah: Obama's Indian

The mainstream media is all hype about the appointment of Sonal Shah in Barack Obama's transition team. Vijay Prashad raises the questions around her link to the role of the 'Vedic Taliban' i.e. The Sangh Parivar.

Courtesy: Counterpunch

Barack Obama has appointed John Podesta to run his transition. During the lean years of the Bush administration, Podesta, native of Chicago, ran a shadow cabinet for the Democrats. Since 2003, the home of this government-in-exile has been the Center for American Progress (CAP), a liberal think tank set-up to rival the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute. The money, about $10 million per year, came from George Soros, Peter Lewis, Marion Sandler and Herb Sandler – the main liberal financiers. CAP has its set of fellows. Many of them worked in some capacity within the Clinton administration (where Podesta was Chief of Staff). There are hard-nosed people like Rudy deLeon (who went through every Defense secretariat in the Clinton years) and Jeanne Lambrew (who served as a health analyst in the National Economic Council during the waning years of the Clinton administration). But there are also the fresh faces, young people who came to Washington with glowing references from the Ivy League. Others marched over from the Hill, after serving various terms as staff members for the Democratic warhorses. They have been groomed to be part of the next Democratic administration. Their hibernation is over. Obama has called.

The likely suspects have picked up the phone and moved to the transition headquarters. Among them is a former CAP fellow and now Google employee, Sonal Shah. Shah is well known in the South Asian American community, and is a fixture in the Washington liberal circuit. The latter know her for her Democratic credentials, most of which seem to lie somewhere between neo-liberalism and welfare liberalism. The bleeding heart pauses, but then ticks again to the tune of pragmatism. This is perfect material for the CAP, which is hardly enthusiastic about the Democratic Leadership Council’s total commitment to triangulation (which means capitulation to conservatism), but it is not averse to a little political calculus itself. Shah, a product of the University of Chicago, shined her corporate shoes at Anderson Consulting (who was Enron’s accountant), which probably made it easier for her to go into Clinton’s Treasury Department, where she helped Robert Rubin put a U. S. stamp on the post-1997 Asian economic recovery. The corporate side was balanced with an interest in the ideology of “giving back.” When Bush took office, Shah went to the Center for Global Development, and while there joined her brother Anand in forming Indicorps. Knowing full well the desire among many South Asian Americans to give back to their homeland, the Shahs created an organization to help them go and volunteer in India, to do for them what the Peacecorps did for young liberals in the 1960s. Shah left the CAP to work for Goldman Sachs, and then went to Google. Shah’s story is not unlike that of most of the CAP fellows, many of whom honed their dexterity at trying to reconcile the irreconcilable, capital and freedom, private accumulation and human needs.

But there is a less typical side to the Shah story. Born in Gujarat, India, Shah came to the United States as a two-year old. Her father, a chemical engineer, first worked in New York before moving to Houston, and then moving away from his education toward the stock market. The Shahs remain active in Houston’s Indian community, not only in the ecumenical Gujarati Samaj (a society for people from Gujarat), but also in the far more cruel organizations of the Hindu Right, such as the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), the Overseas Friends of the BJP (the main political party of the Hindu Right) and the Ekal Vidyalaya. Shah’s parents, Ramesh and Kokila, not only work as volunteers for these outfits, but they also held positions of authority in them. Their daughter was not far behind. She was an active member of the VHPA, the U. S. branch of the most virulently fascistic outfit within India. The VHP’s head, Ashok Singhal, believes that his organization should “inculcate a fear psychosis among [India’s] Muslim community.” This was Shah’s boss. Till 2001, Shah was the National Coordinator of the VHPA.

In 2004, I ran into Shah at the South Asian Awareness Network conference in Ann Arbor, Michigan. At an earlier panel I questioned her links to the Hindu Right, and so asked people to be wary about her organization, Indicorps. She was furious, and we had a bitter exchange in the Green Room. But at no point did she deny her active connections to the Hindu Right. Her brother, Anand, wrote to me not long after, concerned that Indicorps, which he runs full-time from India, would be tainted by our tussle. “I was curious about Sonal’s own personal relationship with the VHPA,” I wrote back, “That sparked some concern for me. Of course we are free to have our multiple associations, and there is no expectation that all our affiliations necessarily influence each other. That necessity is granted, although it is my understanding that the VHPA is a very disciplined organization that demands a lot from its members – notably congruence in all the work that they do. Which is why I raised the question.”

And so I raise the question again.

Don’t Cry for her, Gujarat.

Gujarat was once a tolerant society, made vibrant by its role in the Indian Ocean trade. People of all faiths lived there with the kind of pre-modern conviviality that did not always include respect for each other, but which did not at least dissolve into the kind of virulence on display in recent years. Certainly, oppressed castes bore the full brunt of an unequal social order, but even for them there was escape into Islam and there was a history of protest against the madness of caste rigidity. Gujarat gave us Gandhi, who went off to South Africa to learn his politics and returned to his state in 1915 to incubate the massive nation-wide movement he was to lead. In November 1917, Gandhi launched a major campaign among the Gujarati peasantry at the town of Godhra. He began his meeting there by tearing up the oath of loyalty to the King, making it clear that the new grammar of Indian politics did not require such obescience. From Godhra, charged Gandhian activists went into the villages of Gujarat to organize the peasantry against the many abuses of colonialism. The uprising that resulted, historian David Hardiman points out, made the area “the strongest center of rural nationalism in India.” From Godhra, in 1917, went the quiet fury of freedom.

In 2002, other elements came out of Godhra, showing us how different today’s Gujarat is from its own history. This time Godhra was the flashpoint not for rural protest against tyranny, but for the forces of Hindu fascism. A disputed train fire that killed fifty-eight people (most of whom were activists of the Hindu Right) led to a massive pogrom against impoverished Muslim families and modestly well-off Muslim merchants. Even the normally reticent Human Rights Watch could not hold back, and its report’s title revealed not only the anger of the investigators but also their own principle finding, “We have no orders to save you” State Participation and Complicity in Communal Violence in Gujarat (April 2002). The Hindu Right let loose its warriors who killed two thousand people and displaced several thousand more. The state apparatus either stood by or actively participated in the torment. Investigators who traced the line of violence routinely met people who told them, “They killed my whole family.” The carnage was ghastly. Historian Tanika Sarkar wrote of a “breathless climate of terror,” as people fled their homes for poorly managed relief camps, afraid not only of the organized mob but also of the police. People couldn’t sleep, afraid that their tormentors would come again. Chief Minister Narendra Modi came to one area and told the terrified residents, “You will be taken care of.” The language chills: he might have meant that the state will protect them, or that it would punish them. His scowl and his brazen defense of his mobs was no comfort.

Gujarat remains a manufacturing center, but in the 1970s the social basis of industry changed. From the 1910s to the 1970s, the textile factories hired large numbers of workers, most of whom were members of the Gandhian trade union, the Majoor Mahajan Sangh (MMS). They had their various grouses with the system, but most had grown accustomed to the rhythms of industrial society. When a major riot between Hindus and Muslims broke out in the Gujarati city of Ahmedabad in 1969, the police moved their headquarters to the MSS office, and the union and the state jointly helped to calm things down. But in the 1970s, the large textile factories snuffed their fires, sending their workers from the formal into the informal economy. The social infrastructure of the towns and cities collapsed. Workers went into the piecework economy, driving the economic fortunes of the big businessmen through the roof but at the cost of the workers’ health and social dignity. Globalization arrived in Gujarat.

The disgruntled workers regrouped out of the MSS into the arms of the newly aggressive Hindu Right, which welcomed their grievances and reshaped their dignity around hatred of Muslims and oppressed castes. The riot of 1993 was a dress rehearsal for the pogrom of 2002. Lumpen-capitalism led to the social collapse of Gujarat. In mid-March 2002, a few weeks after the pogrom, sociologist Jan Breman went to meet MSS’s secretary general, who sorrowfully recounted his inability to reach the police during the killings. It is a sign of the eclipse of the Gandhian platform in favor of what has been called the Vedic Taliban.

The Vedic Taliban includes not only the BJP, the party in power during the Gujarat killings, but also a host of organizations known as the Sangh Parivar. These include groups whose U. S. affiliate drew in Sonal Shah’s parents, and to which she also gave her time and energy. This is not in the distant past. In 2004, while at the CAP, Sonal Shah gave the keynote address in Miami for the Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation of the USA. The Ekal Vidyalaya is an organization given over to “education” in tribal areas of India. It is the policy of the Ekal Vidyalaya to organize tribal peoples into the “Hindu community” and to eschew the Christianity and animism that many practice. The climate created by the Ekal Vidyalaya and the VHP in the tribal areas of India led to the recent massacres of Indian Christians. Sonal Shah’s father Ramesh is in charge of the Ekal Vidyalaya in the U. S. She didn’t take the time in Miami to raise these concerns. Rather she talked about her Indicorps project, which has sent volunteers to work with groups like Ekal Vidyalaya. The language of social justice and cultural rights work well to cover over the fascism that is otherwise being promoted.

In 2004, the hard Right government in Gujarat honored Shah with the Pride of Gujarat (Gujarat Garima) award. Sonal Shah could not attend, but her brother was there, to get the award from Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, in the presence of the venomous Narendra Modi.

Hold It In Your Heart.

Obama’s campaign was monumental. The energy unleashed within the country was something to behold. The small dissident wings of the anti-war and anti-free trade movements had not been able to cultivate such a massive wave, and even as many of us had our doubts about this or that element of the Democratic agenda, it was hard to be unmoved by the urgent enthusiasm of the people. Obama himself was super, a disciplined candidate who not only carried the weight of history lightly, but also made sure to remain unruffled by the riotous attacks of the Republicans. Coming to power with an incredibly efficient campaign, it is therefore all the more surprising that he had to turn to the likes of Podesta to form his governing team.

But this is also no surprise. Podesta played a role in the mysterious Democracy Alliance, the group of high rollers around the Democratic Party who were frustrated with the Clinton theory of triangulation and wanted a more robust liberalism to command their party (it was for a time presided over by Rob McKay, the Taco Bell heir who gave some of his millions to finance the San Francisco living wage battle). The Democracy Alliance came together to bridge the gap between the two arguments that tore at the Democratic Party in the Bush years. The principled argument ran between those who pushed a more liberal strategy and those who wanted to take Clintonian pragmatism to its limit. The organizational argument took place between those who felt that the Democratic Party should compete in all fifty states (Howard Dean) and those who wanted to maintain the focus on the fourteen competitive states (Rahm Emanuel). This was a bitter battle. Podesta’s calmness usefully held these two sections together. His CAP, in fact, not only became a neutral ground for these two sections of the Democratic Party, but it also had ambitions to link the Party to the various progressive movements that lay on its outer rim and beyond.

Many of the Centers’ ideas, however, strayed far from progressivism, keener to be bold against its base (such as teacher’s unions) than against the world of finance. A recent study complained about teacher absence in the public schools (ten days a year), something that disproportionately impacted students in low-income neighborhoods. But not a word about the ruin of social welfare by the Clinton White House that resulted in the lack of institutions to shore up parents, teachers and students in these neighborhoods. For our intrepid liberals it is far easier to utilize their calculus of triangulation to blame the teachers.

On foreign policy, the champions of humanitarian interventionism based at the CAP remain confident, regardless of the failures in Afghanistan and Iraq. These are blamed on Bush’s incompetence rather than on the exhaustion of U. S. imperialism. To revive their interventionist fantasies, the CAP liberals use Darfur. It stiffens the spine. John Prendergast holds the reins here, running the ENOUGH project of the CAP. He is committed to the merits of doing something in Darfur, but has little sense of the role that “Darfur” plays within the U. S. in keeping the terminally ill concept of humanitarian interventionism alive (for more on this, look for Mahmood Mamdani’s Survivors and Saviors, coming out in 2009). Right after Obama’s election, Predergast co-wrote a letter to the president-elect asking Obama to “lead a concerted international peace surge for Sudan.” This letter went out just as violence increased in the Great Lakes region of Africa (ground-zero for the Cell-Phone Wars of our day; the region is the source of coltan, an essential element for cell-phones) and as Israel’s armies once more struck the civilian populations of Gaza. Not a word from CAP on this. Nor on the Gujarat violence, or the killing of the Christians by the Hindu Right. No humanitarian interventionism when this affects U. S. imperial interests. Which is why Shah’s own far Right commitments in India are not contradictory to those of the CAP liberals; many of them have similar commitments to the far Right in Israel or in other parts of the world.

When asked to name his favorite books, Obama mentioned that one of them is Gandhi’s The Story of My Experiments with Truth. I encourage him to go to his edition (mine is the Beacon Press one from 1957) and turn to page 155. There he will find a simple sentence, “It has always been a mystery to me how men can feel themselves honored by the humiliation of their fellow-beings.” The Hindu Right thrives on the humiliation of Indian Muslims, Christians, and oppressed castes, and it derives its social power from those who are survivors of the failed experiment in globalization. Those millions, like myself, who feel a joy in snubbing the Bush dynamic and the entire history of social exclusion in the United States should demand that our hopes be held to a higher standard. Not to the howling dogs, but to the doves.

Vijay Prashad is the George and Martha Kellner Chair of South Asian History and Director of International Studies at Trinity College, Hartford, CT His new book is The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World, New York: The New Press, 2007. He can be reached at: vijay.prashad@trincoll.edu

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timely intervention

vijay prashad's piece is a very timely one. the hopes surrounding obama within the progressive sections across the world are misplaced. the sooner the illusion is shattered the better. secular indians should note that it is impossible for obama and his cohorts to be uninformed about sonal shah's RSS-VHP connections. the fact that such a person has found a place in obama's team when an ethnic cleansing of christians is continuing in orissa and christians are being attacked in BJP ruled states like Karnataka, Madhya pradesh, rajasthan and Uttarakhand in an orchestrated manner, speaks volumes about the american democrats' commitment to human rights and justice.

The real Sonal Shah: Inclusive, Tolerant, and Selfless

I was an Indicorps fellow and volunteered for one year in Gujarat, working with an NGO that provides non-formal education to child laborers in the slum areas of Bhavnagar, Gujarat. From first-hand experience, Sonal Shah is an inclusive, tolerant, and service-oriented individual, and this shows through in the way she shaped Indicorps, in addition to all her other commendable work. The diverse members of Indicorps and its projects is a reflection of the united and empowered India that she tirelessly works for.

Sonal should be congratulated for her appointment to Obama’s Transition Team and for breaking new ground for Indian-Americans and, in fact, the global Indian diaspora.

Taliban nonetheless

Shital, you do not object to Prasad's assertion that Shah was a leading activist of the VHP-A, which means that you know it to be true. But the agenda of the VHP is the very opposite of being tolerant and inclusive. It makes no secret of its agenda of spreading religious hatred and organizing communal pogroms. The VHP's role in communal riots--the Gujrat genocide and the Kandhamal violence being the latest examples---is well documented. Activists of the Sangh Parivar today stand accused of having carried out bomb blasts in Indian cities. Someone like Shah who owes allegiance to such a fascistic organization and ideology has no place in a democratic polity and Obama must be criticized for her selection.

"It makes no secret of its

"It makes no secret of its agenda of spreading religious hatred and organizing communal pogroms."

Unsubstantiated assertion.

To anyone who reads

To anyone who reads newspapers regularly, this requires no substantiation: from the Babri Masjid demolition, to Graham Staines' murder, to the Gujarat carnage, to the violence against Christians in Orissa, and many riots and pogroms in between, VHP has been at the forefront of the Sangh Parivar's violent agenda. And as for owning up, just three examples:

"Dara Singh's mother honoured" [by the VHP president; Dara Singh being the killer of Graham Staines. 2002]
"What happened in Gujarat after the Godhra carnage had the blessings of lord Rama," [VHP working president Ashok Singhal, 2004, PTI]
"Violence will be met by violence" [Praveen Togadia, International General Secy. of the VHP, 2008]

Statement by Sonal Shah, for President-elect Barack Obama

The following is a statement by Sonal Shah, Transition Board Member, for President-elect Barack Obama.

"As an Indian-American who has lived in this country since the age of four, serving on the Obama-Biden transition team is a unique privilege for me. A presidential transition is always a time of excitement and, in some cases, of rumors and unfounded gossip. I'd like to set to rest a few baseless and silly reports that have been circulating on the Internet.

First, my personal politics have nothing in common with the views espoused by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), or any such organization. I've never been involved in Indian politics, and never intend to do so.

Second, I've always condemned any politics of division, of ethnic or religious hatred, of violence and intimidation as a political tool. Some factually inaccurate internet rumors have attempted to link me to Hindu Nationalist groups through a variety of tenuous connections: Relief work I'm proud to have helped coordinate following the Gujarati earthquake of 2001, or cultural and religious affiliations of some of my family members, or apolitical humanitarian work I've been privileged to do as a founder of the NGO Indicorps and as the Director of Global Development for Google.org.

Finally, I do not subscribe to the views of such Hindu nationalist groups, and never have. Ridiculous tactics of guilt by association have been decisively repudiated by the American people. I am delighted with what the victory on November 4 says about my country, and about our place in the world. I look forward to serving our President-elect in this time of transition."

###

Good, bad and the ugly

The Good first: Nice to hear Ms Shah distancing herself from the "Hindu Nationalist Groups" and their views.

The Bad: Not a word about her association with VHP-A! There were certainly other ways of helping the victims of the Gujarat earthquake, weren't they? Heck, one only had to collect and donate to the Indian Government. Ms Shah had the "profound judgement", "wisdom" and "ability" to harness her energies for the one organisation that liberal and secular India would love to loathe: the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (albeit for its American chapter). Surely she could have said that aloud and said it clear - hey, I did it only for earthquake relief and I made a mistake of routing my funds through the dreaded VHP. Her bad!

The Ugly: "Ridiculous tactics of guilt by association"! Wow. Thats fresh or is it? "I am delighted with what the victory on November 4 says about my country, and about our place in the world." That's absolution by association, ain't it? What does Obama's victory say about Ms Shah's dalliance with the VHP-A? eh?

Shah's work with Google.org, her charity associations are not called into question, but her links with the VHP are. She tells us that she doesn't subscribe to the views of the Hindu nationalist groups; but it would have been better, if she gave us some "straight talk" as well and admit that she made a judgement error by volunteering for VHP-A (as National Co-ordinator, no less)!

Sonal Shah would accept it as

Sonal Shah would accept it as judgement error as soon as you are able to prove that her monetary help to the Gujarat earthquake victims was misused by VHP to spread hatred against the minorities.

If you don't find any such evidence, you should apologize for unnecessarily maligning a name of genuine social worker.

If you are not prepared to do this, know that you are a hypocrite. And if you are able to do this, I and many more like you would stand with you.

The 'judgement errors' of SS and her apologists

Shah's name as National co-ordinator on the VHP-A's appeal for earthquake relief in February 2001. http://www.vhp-america.org/dynamic/modules.php?name=News&file=article&si...

VHP-A's links to the 'Foreign Exchange of Hate' http://www.stopfundinghate.org/sacw/

Shah is not alone. The organisation that she co-ordinated nationally is part of a larger international umbrella that has systematically funded the Saffron political project of hate. http://www.awaazsaw.org/ibf/index.htm

If one has 'co-ordinated' nationally for such nefarious activities, then it is a 'judgement error' indeed. As for accepting the award from Naredra Modi, whose US visa was revoked by the US government under a US rule that makes any foreign government official who "was responsible for or directly carried out, at any time, particularly severe violations of religious freedom" , what was that - 'temporary loss of memory and cognitive ability'?

The discrete charm of the hypocrisy of denial!

Standing in solidarity

We are glad that you are ready to stand in solidarity with us against Sonal Shah's "previous" associates, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad-America, provided the burden of proof is dutifully carried out by us.

We would like to have more on the secular bandwagon and on the justice bandwagon.. So here goes: 

As for how the contributions of many a world citizen were used in earthquake relief - you would be shocked ( I hope) to know that relief was done on the basis of religion and caste. Vijay Prashad himself points out to two credible reports in this follow up article. Here is the relevant extract: 

There were a host of other agencies that raised money for the earthquake survivors. All the earthquake survivors: credible media reports showed that the money raised by the VHP did not go to Muslim survivors, only Hindu ones (for example, “Communalizing Relief: VHP seizes earthquake opportunity,” Statesman, Kolkata, 12 February 2001 and Vijay Dutt, “Discrimination in Distribution of Relief against Dalits in Gujarat Causes Concern,” Hindustan Times, 27 February 2001). This is hardly an act of charity.

As for "other burdens of proof" about the VHP and its nefarious activities in India and the role of foreign funding in aiding this fascistic agenda- you only would have to scour the internet with some relevant keywords and see for yourself.

Sonal Shah shamelessly says that she is proud of her work and associations during 2001 in co-ordinating activities for the foreign wing of an unabashedly fascist force in the country today. For the VHP's role and agenda during the 2002 Gujarat riots, one indicative and evocative documentary that points out point blank about Hindu fascism in Gujarat is this film by Rakesh Sharma titled "Final Solution". Watch it ..

Still not convinced about Sonal Shah's skeletons in her closet?

Why President elect Obama should have nothing to do with Sonal S

The RSS, VHP and Bajrang Dal activists have disgraced the Hindu religion and continue to do so by increasing the attacks on minorities.
Nuns raped, priest beaten up, churches burnt and people harrased for being Christian
http://orissaburning.blogspot.com/2008/08/they-ordered-me-to-have-sex-wi...
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/38_days later_Orissa_govt_admits_nun_was_raped/articleshow/3556112.cms

Hindu’s disgusted and turning away from Hinduism http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Thousands_of_Dalits_embrace_Bud... )

Article by Hindu Journalist
http://spoonfeedin.blogspot.com/2008/10/columnists-khushwant-singhfaith-...

Hinduvata leader was arrested for distributing trishuls, violating weapons act and making inflammatory speeches
http://timesofindia. indiatimes.com/articleshow/45083119.cms

Trishul's distributed by the bajrang dal in lakhs.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1255512815.cms

Hindu extremist carry out bomb attacks
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Mumbai/Two_of_religious_group_held_fo...

The sevaks of Sanatan Sanstha, a Hindu revivalist group, arrested for their alleged role in the recent bomb blasts
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/Mumbai/They_spent_savings_to_b.... cms

The most recent blast occurred in Sept-2008 .Hindu activist carried out these blast at relief camp site where Christian families were staying.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/Delhi/Crude_blasts_hit_Kandham...

Unacceptable

It is really sad that Obama and his team picked Sonal Shah despite knowing that she headed the US wing of one of the most extremist hindu groups, the VHP. Money that has been donated here in the US has helped VHP spread its communal propaganda to all parts of India. With the same money, they have hurt more Muslims (and now Christians too) and have polarized the Indian society. Having someone like Sonal Shah whose family is a part of VHP-A in the US administration gives more ammunition to the communal VHP who have been dividing India. Obama's team should take this association into notice before it causes more damage!