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Gurdial Singh Paharpuri: A lifetime of revolutionary contribution and unfulfilled aspirations

By Harsh Thakor* 
Gurdial Singh Paharpuri, a Central Committee member of the Communist Party Re-Organisation Centre of India (Marxist-Leninist) (CPRCI(ML)), passed away on July 2, marking a significant loss for the Indian Communist Revolutionary movement. For six decades, Singh championed the cause of revolution, leaving an enduring impact through his lifelong dedication to the global proletarian movement. His contributions are considered foundational, laying groundwork for future advancements in revolutionary thought. He is recognized as a key figure among Indian Communist revolutionary leaders who shaped the mass line, and his example is seen as a model for revolutionary communists to follow.
A commemoration event for Singh drew approximately 400 attendees to Lord Rama Hall in Bathinda, where various factions of the Revolutionary Communist camp offered tributes. Editors from the communist revolutionary magazines Surkh Leeh and Lal Parcham, along with Harbans Kaur, Singh's spouse and revolutionary partner, honored his memory.
Singh's ideological foundation was deeply rooted in the Naxalbari uprising. He adeptly analyzed the uprising's agrarian revolutionary core, recognizing its mass character and embracing the strategy of protracted people's war. Darsan Singh Bagi was instrumental in introducing Singh to communist ideology and inspiring his early political development. Singh dedicated 81 years of his life to advancing human liberation through revolutionary class struggle.
In Punjab, Singh was a leader in revolutionary practice, demonstrating courage and resilience in resisting left adventurism and upholding T. Nagi Reddy's mass line in the early 1970s. His efforts were crucial in revitalizing the revolutionary student movement in Punjab. He played a vital role in unifying disparate forces, reorganizing the Punjab Students Union in 1971. With unwavering resolve, he countered the dissolution and rejection of mass organizations, meticulously guiding the Punjab Students Union toward a mass revolutionary path. A small group, under his leadership, not only preserved the organization but also developed a plan for its resurgence.
For six decades, Singh consistently upheld Mao Tse Tung Thought. As a leader of the UCCRI(ML) in Punjab, he steadfastly opposed right deviationist tendencies that sought alliances with political forces under Jayaprakash Narayan's leadership and the autocratic regime, which included aligning with feudal comprador elements. He vigilantly fought against open party work, advocating instead for the establishment of an underground party to guide the new democratic revolution. Singh firmly rejected the parliamentary path. During the Emergency, a period of heightened authoritarianism, he skillfully organized mass resistance through clandestine operations of mass organizations.
Following the significant changes in China, he staunchly defended the Maoist legacy of the Great Debate and the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. As a devoted follower of Harbhajan Sohi, Singh led the denouncement of opportunist right-wing factions like the RCP and Enver Hoxha, as well as the revisionist current of RCP USA. His critique of the RIM is considered a definitive exposition of the mass line.
Singh was instrumental in guiding the Communist Revolutionary organization through various challenging phases and significant shifts. His ability to resolve theoretical, ideological, political, organizational, and practical issues within the revolutionary movement underscored his comprehensive role in establishing central policies for implementation, considering specific conditions, and overseeing the documentation of policies to support party work.
Singh's expertise in refining the proletarian revolutionary line profoundly influenced the trajectory of the Communist Movement. He combated opportunist trends, both theoretical and practical, during the Khalistani movement, which at times leaned towards compromising with Khalistani ideology. He was vital in mobilizing a cohesive mass resistance that challenged both state and Khalistan terrorism. He addressed various facets of the peasant movement, particularly how it became susceptible to the influence of feudal-rich peasant oligarchies, and he was crucial in developing strategies and organizational structures within mass organizations to overcome these issues. He meticulously investigated the theoretical underpinnings of opportunist leaderships and formulated effective policies to counter them. He assessed the specific level of class struggle and the gaps in public consciousness that needed to be addressed. Singh encouraged broader class unity within mass movements and linked it with educating party members to integrate with party work. He established a concrete framework to promote democratic centralism within mass organizations. He tirelessly advocated for shifting the focus of party work to prioritize political-organizational aspects. He initiated numerous internal party campaigns to implement rectification and clarify the Leninist concept of party organization. Under centralized organizational guidance, he devised a systematic approach to planned work, educating party members on the theoretical and political content of Harbhajan Sohi's political line.
Singh guided party members in fostering collaborative activities among Communist revolutionary organizations, with the ultimate goal of achieving party reorganization. He consistently opposed all barriers and divisive tendencies that fragmented unity within the Communist revolutionary camp. He facilitated processes of united action to achieve organizational reunification. This was accomplished by consolidating the platforms of revolutionary mass organizations based on shared understanding and organizational principles, and by developing new platforms founded on mutual agreement.
Singh's journey included leadership roles within state and all-India apex bodies of Communist Revolutionary organizations across different periods. In the 1970s, he was a key committee member of the Punjab Coordination Revolutionary Committee led by Harbhajan Sohi, which later merged into the UCCRI(ML) in 1975. He served as a secretary of the state committee of the UCCRI(ML), after it split from the all-India group led by D.V. Rao, on the question of the Three World theory. In 1982, he assumed the role of All India Secretary of the party. In every phase, he gave a boost to the cutting edge of Leninism and Mao Thought.
Gurdial went on to play a pivotal role of an architect in fusing different Communist revolutionary bodies, in the transition towards the formation of the erstwhile Centre of Communist Revolutionaries of India in 1988, and later the Communist Party Re-Organisation Centre of India (Marxist-Leninist) in 1995, which the CCRI merged into. As part of the Central Committee of the Communist Party Re-Organisation Centre of India (Marxist-Leninist), he unwaveringly orchestrated the prime objective of party-reorganization.
In my view, Singh was one of the most principal architects of the party, the Communist Party Re-Organisation Centre of India (Marxist-Leninist), that from 1995-2012, epitomized the practice of the mass line more than any other Communist Revolutionary body in India, of which the resultant mass movements on Punjab and Orissa were a testament.
No individual played as considerable a role in executing or giving shape to the path of Harbhajan Sohi as Gurdial Singh. In that respect, he even overshadowed Harbhajan Sohi, playing an even bigger role in putting the mass line into concrete practice. Singh was one of the finest exponents of waging political struggle against deviationist currents and giving the cutting edge to the Leninist party.
Singh's work and journey were a testament to the legitimacy of Mao Tse Tung Thought, as he successfully overcame the steepest or most tortuous hurdles, applying it and giving credibility to the fact that it is not a mechanical process or ideology.
It has to be questioned today, or it is a matter of regret, that despite such invaluable inputs from leaders like Singh, we have not witnessed in India a consolidation of the original mass line trend of the Communist Party Re-Organisation Centre of India (Marxist-Leninist) or a sharpening of the agrarian revolution. Regrettably, we have witnessed high stagnation in the Revolutionary Communist camp and a decline in the consolidation and practice of the revolutionary mass line.
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*Feelance journalist

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