Published in The Hindu, 1 May 2026

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/when-the-courtroom-was-his-conscience-remembering-dijo-kappan/article70927705.ece/amp/

May Day is meant to honour those who fight for the ordinary person.

This May Day, Kerala lost one of the finest fighters it ever had.

Dijo Kappan was a passionate social activist, political observer, and — to those of us who knew him at Kerala University in the early 1980s — simply a remarkable human being who never stopped believing that the system could be held to account.

I remember him as a young man with a restless mind and a generous spirit. While many of us drifted toward the comfort of academic lives after university, Dijo walked straight toward the fire. He had already entered public life through the Kerala Students Congress, served as the functionary of Kerala University Union, Union Chairman of Pala St. Thomas College, and later as a member of the Kerala University Senate. But titles never defined his mission. The purpose of his activism did.

In 1988, he founded the Centre for Consumer Education — not a political platform, but a weapon of justice for the powerless. Farmers cheated by the system, consumers crushed by unfair tariffs, citizens suffocated by bureaucratic indifference — these were his constituents, and the courtroom was his constituency. He filed petitions against electricity rate hikes, took on the Brahmapuram waste plant scandal, challenged illegal advertisement boards cluttering public roads. He was, in the truest sense, a people’s lawyer without a fee.

What made Dijo extraordinary was how he fought — with consistency, without compromise, and without ever seeking the spotlight. In an age of celebrated activism and social media outrage, he silently appeared in courtrooms, filed documents, and pushed back. Again and again.
His death truly leaves a silence that is difficult to fill. Kerala has many politicians, many commentators, many voices on television. It has very few people willing to spend their lives standing between the state and the citizen with nothing but conviction as their armour.
With Kappn – 1981-83 MA (Politics) batch of Dept of Politics, University of Kerala