Passing away of CPI(M) leader Mythili Sivaraman, women and worker’s rights crusader, mourned by all

A founding member of All India Democratic Women’s Association (AIDWA), she was also its former vice-president, as well as a trade union leader associated with Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU)

Mythily Sivaraman
Mythily Sivaraman
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Satyaki Chakraborty

Mythili Sivaraman, veteran Marxist leader, a champion of workers and women’s rights and a popular political leader from Tamil Nadu, passed away in Chennai on Sunday. She was 84 and is survived by her husband and daughter.

Sivaraman, a leading member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), was suffering from Alzheimer’s for a long time and had recently tested positive for COVID-19.

One of the founding members of the All India Democratic Women’s Association (AIDWA) along with another popular women’s leader, Pappa Umanath, she was also its former vice-president, as well as a trade union leader associated with the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU).

This the second big loss of a woman leader to COVID-19 by CITU, which recently saw the death of its former treasurer, Ranjana Nirula, in Delhi.

Born in 1937 and educated in Syracuse University, Sivaraman worked in the Permanent Mission of India to the United Nations in the mid-1960s as a research assistant.

She was a crusader against imperialism during the anti –Vietnam War movement.

She then left a promising career and returned to India to work with the Left movement and played a key role in organising workers and women in Tamil Nadu.

The popular leader was in the forefront of various struggles, such as the rights of survivors in the Vachathi rape case and the Thanjavur Keezhvenmani massacre involving Dalits. Sivaraman wrote various articles and essays on the issue, which were later published as a book, ‘Haunted by Fire’, compiled by writer V Geetha and her daughter, Kalpana Karunakaran.


“Forty-four women and children from Dalit families died in their homes due to arson committed by upper caste groups leading to the Keezhvenmani massacre and Mythili was among the first to visit and document the brutality,” said a report by News Minute.

Her death was condoled by Tamil Nadu chief minister M K Stalin and leaders, activists, writers, academics and citizens from across the spectrum.

Expressing “deep grief”, a CPIM) polit bureau statement recalled that she led many struggles against caste and gender oppression, notable of which was the struggle of the tribal women of Vachathi. Earlier, she had conducted a searing investigation of the massacre of Dalit agricultural workers in Keezhvenmani in 1968, it said.

“A dedicated Marxist, she worked as a member of the Tamil Nadu CPI(M) State Committee for more than two decades. Mythili wrote a number of important articles and booklets on class and gender issues in Tamil and English,” it added.

The CPI(M)’s Tamil Nadu unit condoled the loss of a “fierce women’s rights revolutionary.”

CPI (ML) leader Kavita Krishnan, tweeted: “Mythili remained a fiery trade union organiser in Tamil Nadu, an AIDWA office bearer, and also a Marxist writer of rare insight and rigour. A rare and most precious quality of hers was her total lack of any left sectarianism.”

Several organisations and individuals also took to social media to condole Mythily’s loss.

K Chandru, former judge of the Madras High Court, who was Sivaraman’s friend for 53 years, told The Hindu: “I still remember the first meeting she addressed at Mangolai in Mylapore against the Vietnam War. We maintained our friendship even after I was expelled from the CPI(M). She attended my swearing-in ceremony as a judge of the Madras High Court.” Chandru said he had dedicated his book, ‘Order Order’, to Mythili Sivaraman.

(IPA Service)

Courtesy: Newsclick

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