Kobad Ghandy, 74, whom the CPI(Maoist) recently expelled, has raised a number of uncÂomfortable questions for the Indian Left. Ghandy studied in elite institutions such as the Doon School, St Xavier바카라™s College, Mumbai and Cambridge University, UK, before joining the Naxalite movement in the early 1970s. Incarcerated for 10 years in different jails in seven states, he wrote a series of articles on ideological and philosophical questions in the media, and his book, Fractured Freedom: A Prison Memoir, was published earlier this year. His wife, Anuradha, who died in 2008, was also a central committee member of the Maoist outfit. Currently out on bail, Ghandy spoke to Snigdhendu Bhattacharya on the victory of the antiÂ-farm laws movement, the lessons that India바카라™s left movement can draw from it and the power of non-violence. Edited excerpts: