At the gathering of the Communist family organized as part of the centenary of the Indian Communist Party celebrations, the State Secretary of CPI Binoy Viswam shares the moment of camaraderie with Ramankutty, son of the former main Minister Kerala C. Achuth Menon. In the area you can also see V. Vijayan, son of former Minister and MP VV Raghavan and Minister K. Rajan. | Photo Credit: Kk Najeeb
The State Secretary of the Communist Party of India (CPI) Binoy Viswam said that the country was under the rule of a full -fledged fascist regime.
Mr. Viswam, who spoke in the inauguration of the centenary of the birth of the CPI and the Communist Family Assembly held at the Thrissur Town Hall, accused the ruling Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) -Bharatiya Janata (BJP), who are trying to marry the Commission with the same.
“RSS and BJP are rooted in foreign ideologies. Now it is now trying to place this label on the head of the Communist Party,” he said. “The first RSS Sarsaghchalak, Hedgewar, was a former congressman who sent his follower Dr. Moonje to Italy to meet Mussolini. He was inspired by this meeting, importing fascist ideas to India. They are named, as they are named, as they are named, as they are named and, so, so, so, as they are named, like this, as they are named, as they are named.
Mr. Viswam added that what the country saw today was not just a drift to fascism, but a full -fledged fascism. “The regime is marked by a shameful racial rule and shameless corporate nausea.”
Full freedom
He reminded the audience that the Communist Party was the first to clearly demanded “Poorn Swwaj” for India before Congress. He referred to the 1921 Ahmedabad Congress meeting, where Maulana Hasrat Mohani introduced the Poorny Swaraj resolution, and attributed the Communist Party for being a full freedom ahead of us.
“CPI is not a party that can or should change to fit in times. They only exist until we stay faithful to our basic values,” Viswam said. “Historical events, such as the division of 1964, were unfortunate, but the division will not change history. We are not interested in creating any controversy.”
He remembered the contribution of the leader of the CPI and the former main Minister C. Achutha Menon, who tried to create a modern keral. Mr. Viswam warned that he had allowed narrow political interests to erase this transformation period.
Regarding contemporary political reality, Mr. Viswam stressed that leaving unity is necessary and warned of alliances that weakened progressive policy. “The victory is only possible if we stand together. We have to resist and defeat the wicked alliances that undermine left -wing power.”
He chaired the secretary of the CPI district KK Valsaraj. Minister of income K. Rajan, leaders of CPI KP Rajendran, CN Jayadevan, AK Chandran, P. Balachandran, Mla and VS Sunil Kumar dealt with the assembly.
Fascism prospered where the human struggle disappeared, and should be not only politically but also culturally against him, said poet Alankode Lelakrishnan. He spoke at the seminar called “Progressive Art and Literary Movement: Heritage of Resistance”, organized in Thrissur as part of the celebrations of CPI birth.
Culturalness
“Wherever people stop resisting, fascism begins to settle. In today’s India, where fascist shadows are spreading, we cannot afford to overlook this reality,” Mr. Lelakrishnan warned. “Cultural alertness is essential for the confrontation and dismantling of dirt of fascism.”
When he thought about Kieral’s legacy of social reformations, he said it was the strength of progressive cultural interventions – playing, literature and social stories – that supported the state’s renaissance. “It was a fire illuminated by art and literature that powered social reformation. Responsibility for maintaining alive fire is based on the Communists,” he said.
Karivellur Murali, secretary of Keraral Sangeeth Nataka, said that those who are trying to rewrite the history of India today lacked any historical grounding. “They rewrite the past they have never been part of,” he said in his address.
The seminar also represented the writer Valsalan Vathussery and the writer of the screenplay Kr Sunil, who spoke of the need to defend and deepen the progressive cultural heritage.
Published – May 27, 2025 9:15