How Communalism Divides the Nation? Dictate to Chant ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ as an Example!

[email protected] (Ram Puniyani)
April 10, 2016

Today in India the gulf between religious communities is widening at a rapid pace. The ‘Hate other ideologies’ abound and are percolating down to the social levels at dangerous pace. As such India is a plural, multi-religious society, where diverse people have been living together for centuries. The Ganga Jamuna Tehjeeb, the mixed culture present in our society gets manifested in its food habits, dressing pattern, celebrations, festivals and religious traditions. These show how over a period of centuries the people of different communities have been adopting to each other in the spirit of ‘Vasudhaiv Kutumbakan’ (Whole World is my family) and ‘Love thy Neighbor’. While ethnic strife was there; the violence in the name of religions, Hindu-Muslim-Christian was conspicuous by its absence. The sectarian strife: Shaiv-Vaishnav, Shia-Sunni was there but the social scenario was by and large marked by amity. The highest points of these interactions can be seen in the traditions like Bhakti, Sufi and even the coming into fore of a new religion Sikhism and a new language: Urdu.B1sRQxkCEAARCQp

The problem begins with the British colonial period when the rulers adopt the policy of ‘divide and rule’ and in pursuing that policy they introduce communal historiography where the focus of history becomes Kings’ religion and selective picking up of points related to temple destructions, forcible conversion, taxation policies and atrocities on women, become the ground for spreading hatred. This hatred is the foundation on which violence is based. India comes to become a nation through its struggle against colonial powers and during the formation of this nation large sections of population are included in the newly forming India on the grounds of Liberty, Equality Fraternity. The Indian nationalist streams reject the British presentation of communal historiography and base their understanding on National historiography, one of the manifestations of which comes in Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj, where he talks of inclusive character of different rulers of the past, cutting across the religious boundaries.

In contrast to Gandhi-Indian nationalists, the communalists take up the divisive communal history and adopt it to suit their narrow goals of Muslim Nation or Hindu nation. The Muslim League presents the case as if India (rather sub continent) was being ruled by Muslims so British should hand over power to Muslims. Hindu Mahasabha-RSS presented the ideology of this land being a Hindu Nation from times immemorial. Here the pattern of production, hunter society, nomadic society, agricultural society with kingdoms and the then society with changes of Industrialization are glossed over and a lineage of present Hindu society with hunter-nomadic communities is presented to claim the ruler ship, as being the original inhabitants of the land. Hindu kings-Hindu society is presented as an ideal, trouble free society which gets problems due to Muslim invasion, so need to bring back Hindu nation becomes the agenda of Hindu Mahasabha-RSS.

These communal streams, the one’s vouching for Muslim nation or Hindu nation, had no interest in the problems of ‘people’, the dalits, adivasis, women or workers. Their focus was the interests of lineages of earlier rulers, the landlords, Kings in whose times the birth based hierarchies, operating at political, social and gender level were the basic hallmarks of society. They began a double ideological battle. On one hand to demonize the kings of ‘other’ religion-glorify the rulers of their own religion and two to present the birth based hierarchies in a glorified manner.

Their social reach was limited but they started spreading their version of History and promoting the hatred for other community. This was at a time when National movement was uniting the people cutting across the boundaries o religion, caste, region and gender. The communalists took up emotive issues, music before the mosque, pig-cow in their sacred place, creating nuisance when others have religious festivals and so on. The hatred forms the basis of violence and consequently polarization in the society. While we have seen the intensification of this polarization during last few decades, we have also seen a gradual rise in the intensity of hatred against some and insecurity among those who are being made the object of hate around many issues. Be it cow slaughter, temple destructions, forcible conversion, ‘our women’ being subjected to atrocity, global terror and what have you. Now a new emotive issue has been thrown up very recently, its fresh from the Bakery, so can serve a good example of understanding the anatomy of construction of object ‘Hate’ , demonization of the ‘other’.

RSS Sarsanghchalak, Mohan Bhagawat (March 2016) gives a statement on his own that ‘the time has come to ask the new generation to chant ‘Bharat mata ki Jai’ ‘ (BMKJ). This acts like letting loose the cat among the pigeons. For being ‘politically correct’, he later says that nobody should be forced to chant this slogan. As if on a cue, while it was not necessary to respond to this unwarranted, communal intervention by Bhagwat, Asaduddin Owaisi supplements the game by saying that he will not chant this slogan even if a knife is put on his throat. At the same time he says that he has no problem in saying Jai Hind. In the talk shows which follow the RSS-BJP spokespersons deliberately begin the story with Owaisi, forgetting the statement by Bhagawat. In a holier than thou spirit Javed Akhatar chants the same slogan thrice to win the kudus from the sectarian and many other elements.

To take the story further, and this shows how such emotive issues are constructed, Congress-NCP, trying to play the role of B team of Hindutva, against the prevalent laws of the land, asks for suspension of Waris Pathan (Owaisi party) who refuses to chant the slogan; from Maharashtra Assembly. Communal politics of RSS combine has a good back up in these so called secular parties like Congress-NCP so to say. Then steps in Devendra Fadanvis, Maharashtra Chief Minster, one brought up on the ideology of Hindu nationalism: RSS. This gentleman has been brought up more on ‘Bunch of thoughts’ of Golwalkar rather than the values of Indian Constitution. He does not want to know about the values of Indian Constitution despite being a Chief Minster. Taking further his mentor Bhagwat’s statement he asserts that those who do not chant this slogan (BMKJ) have no right to live in India! So India of 125 Crore has now has an ideology and its soldiers are out to maul the Indian Constitution. To take the matters to the streets and community comes in RSS fellow traveler, Baba Ramdev. He picks up from Owaisi and blurts, ‘If no law would have cut the heads of those who don’t say Bharat Mata Ki Jia’

While many of these worthies now will be trying and explaining their outpourings towards and acceptable language, the damage has been done. The communal force is now equipped with one more weapon to consolidate its social and electoral base. My earlier article on the topic explains as to how BMKJ can be a voluntary for those who want to chant it and it is equally OK if someone does not chant it. With Ramdev’s statement one more emotive issue has been constructed ‘successfully’. Celebrations may be on among those who want to distract the attention from the problems of Bharat Mata of Jawaharlal Nehru (125 crore people of India), the problems of dalit students (Rohith Vemula) the problems of University autonomy, (Kanhaiya Kumar), the problems of farmers suicide, the rising prices, lack of employment generation and what have you.

It’s time that the India wakes up to realize the game of communal forces and vow not to fall prey to their machinations around such slogans or other emotive issues which are manufactured by them on regular basis and are pulling us back on the scale of Indian nationalism.

Comments

kr
 - 
Friday, 29 Jul 2016

U can see only his creation not creator

pk
 - 
Monday, 11 Apr 2016

WORSHIP THE CREATOR NOT HIS CREATION

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Ram Puniyani
March 14,2020

In the wake of Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) UN High Commissioner, Michele Bachelet, has filed an intervention in the Supreme Court petition challenging the constitutionality of the Citizenship Amendment Act, as she is critical of CAA. Responding to her, India’s Foreign Minister S. Jai Shanker strongly rebutted her criticism, saying that the body (UNHCR) has been wrong and is blind to the problem of cross border terrorism. The issue on hand is the possibility of scores of people, mainly Muslims, being declared as stateless. The problem at hand is the massive exercise of going through the responses/documents from over 120 crore of Indian population and screening documents, which as seen in Assam, yield result which are far from truthful or necessary.

The issue of CAA has been extensively debated and despite heavy critique of the same by large number of groups and despite the biggest mass opposition ever to any move in Independent India, the Government is determined on going ahead with an exercise which is reminiscent of the dreaded regimes which are sectarian and heartless to its citizens, which have indulged in extinction of large mass of people on grounds of citizenship, race etc. The Foreign minister’s assertion is that it is a matter internal to India, where India’s sovereignty is all that matters! As far as sovereignty is concerned we should be clear that in current times any sovereign power has to consider the need to uphold the citizenship as per the principle of non-discrimination which is stipulated in Art.26 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political (ICCPR) rights.

Can such policies, which affect large number of people and are likely to affect their citizenship be purely regarded as ‘internal’? With the World turning into a global village, some global norms have been formulated during last few decades. The norms relate to Human rights and migrations have been codified. India is also signatory to many such covenants in including ICCPR, which deals with the norms for dealing with refugees from other countries. One is not talking of Chicago speech of Swami Vivekanand, which said that India’s greatness has been in giving shelter to people from different parts of the World; one is also not talking of the Tattariaya Upanishad’s ‘Atithi Devovhav’ or ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbkam’ from Mahaupanishad today.

What are being talked about are the values and opinions of organizations which want to ensure to preserve of Human rights of all people Worldwide. In this matter India is calling United Nations body as ‘foreign party’; having no locus standi in the case as it pertains to India’s sovereignty. The truth is that since various countries are signatories to UN covenants, UN bodies have been monitoring the moves of different states and intervening at legal level as Amicus (Friend of the Court) to the courts in different countries and different global bodies. Just to mention some of these, UN and High Commissioner for Human Rights has often submitted amicus briefs in different judicial platforms. Some examples are their intervention in US Supreme Court, European Court of Human Rights, International Criminal Court, and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. These are meant to help the Courts in areas where UN bodies have expertise.

 Expertise on this has been jointly formulated by various nations. These interventions also remind the nations as to what global norms have been evolved and what are the obligations of individual states to the values which have evolved over a period of time. Arvind Narrain draws our attention to the fact that, “commission has intervened in the European Court of Human Rights in cases involving Spain and Italy to underscore the principle of non-refoulement, which bars compulsory expulsion of illegal migrants… Similarly, the UN has intervened in the International Criminal Court in a case against the Central African Republic to explicate on the international jurisprudence on rape as a war crime.”

From time to time organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have been monitoring the status of Human rights of different countries. This puts those countries in uncomfortable situation and is not welcome by those establishments. How should this contradiction between ‘internal matter’, ‘sovereignty’ and the norms for Human rights be resolved? This is a tough question at the time when the freedom indices and democratic ethos are sliding downwards all over the world. In India too has slid down on the scale of these norms.

In India we can look at the intervention of UN body from the angle of equality and non discrimination. Democratic spirit should encourage us to have a rethink on the matters which have been decided by the state. In the face of the greatest mass movement of Shaheen bagh, the state does need to look inwards and give a thought to international morality, the spirit of global family to state the least.

The popular perception is that when Christians were being persecuted in Kandhmal the global Christian community’s voice was not strong enough. Currently in the face of Delhi carnage many a Muslim majority countries have spoken. While Mr. Modi claims that his good relations with Muslim countries are a matter of heartburn to the parties like Congress, he needs to relook at his self gloating. Currently Iran, Malaysia, Indonesia and many Muslim majority countries have spoken against what Modi regime is unleashing in India. Bangladesh, our neighbor, has also seen various protests against the plight of Muslims in India. More than the ‘internal matter’ etc. what needs to be thought out is the moral aspect of the whole issue. We pride ourselves in treading the path of morality. What does that say in present context when while large section of local media is servile to the state, section of global media has strongly brought forward what is happening to minorities in India.   

The hope is that Indian Government wakes up to its International obligations, to the worsening of India’s image in the World due to CAA and the horrific violence witnessed in Delhi.

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Ram Puniyani
February 10,2020

Noam Chomsky is one of the leading peace workers in the world. In the wake of America’s attack on Vietnam, he brought out his classic formulation, ‘manufacturing consent’. The phrase explains the state manipulating public opinion to have the public approve of it policies—in this case, the attack of the American state on Vietnam, which was then struggling to free itself from French colonial rule.

In India, we are witness to manufactured hate against religious minorities. This hatred serves to enhance polarisation in society, which undermines India’s democracy and Constitution and promotes support for a Hindu nation. Hate is being manufactured through multiple mechanisms. For example, it manifests in violence against religious minorities. Some recent ghastly expressions of this manufactured hate was the massive communal violence witnessed in Mumbai (1992-93), Gujarat (2002), Kandhamal (2008) and Muzaffarnagar (2013). Its other manifestation was in the form of lynching of those accused of having killed a cow or consumed beef. A parallel phenomenon is the brutal flogging, often to death, of Dalits who deal with animal carcasses or leather.

Yet another form of this was seen when Shambhulal Regar, indoctrinated by the propaganda of Hindu nationalists, burned alive Afrazul Khan and shot the video of the heinous act. For his brutality, he was praised by many. Regar was incited into the act by the propaganda around love jihad. Lately, we have the same phenomenon of manufactured hate taking on even more dastardly proportions as youth related to Hindu nationalist organisations have been caught using pistols, while police authorities look on.

Anurag Thakur, a BJP minster in the central government recently incited a crowd in Delhi to complete his chant of what should happen to ‘traitors of the country...” with a “they should be shot”. Just two days later, a youth brought a pistol to the site of a protest at Jamia Millia Islamia university and shouted “take Azaadi!” and fired it. One bullet hit a student of Jamia. This happened on 30 January, the day Nathuram Godse had shot Mahatma Gandhi in 1948. A few days later, another youth fired near the site of protests against the CAA and NRC at Shaheen Bagh. Soon after, he said that in India, “only Hindus will rule”.

What is very obvious is that the shootings by those associated with Hindu nationalist organisations are the culmination of a long campaign of spreading hate against religious minorities in India in general and against Muslims in particular. The present phase is the outcome of a long and sustained hate campaign, the beginning of which lies in nationalism in the name of religion; Muslim nationalism and Hindu nationalism. This sectarian nationalism picked up the communal view of history and the communal historiography which the British introduced in order to pursue their ‘divide and rule’ policy.

In India what became part of “social common sense” was that Muslim kings had destroyed Hindu temples, that Islam was spread by force, and that it is a foreign religion, and so on. Campaigns, such as the one for a temple dedicated to the Hindu god Rama to be built at the site where the Babri masjid once stood, further deepened the idea of a Muslim as a “temple-destroyer”. Aurangzeb, Tipu Sultan and other Muslim kings were tarnished as the ones who spread Islam by force in the subcontinent. The tragic Partition, which was primarily due to British policies, and was well-supported by communal streams also, was entirely attributed to Muslims. The Kashmir conflict, which is the outcome of regional, ethnic and other historical issues, coupled with the American policy of supporting Pakistan’s ambitions of regional hegemony, (which also fostered the birth of Al-Qaeda), was also attributed to the Muslims.

With recurring incidents of communal violence, these falsehoods went on going deeper into the social thinking. Violence itself led to ghettoisation of Muslims and further broke inter-community social bonds. On the one hand, a ghettoised community is cut off from others and on the other hand the victims come to be presented as culprits. The percolation of this hate through word-of-mouth propaganda, media and re-writing of school curricula, had a strong impact on social attitudes towards the minorities.

In the last couple of decades, the process of manufacturing hate has been intensified by the social media platforms which are being cleverly used by the communal forces. Swati Chaturvedi’s book, I Am a Troll: Inside the Secret World of the BJP’s Digital Army, tells us how the BJP used social media to spread hate. Whatapp University became the source of understanding for large sections of society and hate for the ‘Other’, went up by leaps and bounds. To add on to this process, the phenomenon of fake news was shrewdly deployed to intensify divisiveness.

Currently, the Shaheen Bagh movement is a big uniting force for the country; but it is being demonised as a gathering of ‘anti-nationals’. Another BJP leader has said that these protesters will indulge in crimes like rape. This has intensified the prevalent hate.

While there is a general dominance of hate, the likes of Shambhulal Regar and the Jamia shooter do get taken in by the incitement and act out the violence that is constantly hinted at. The deeper issue involved is the prevalence of hate, misconceptions and biases, which have become the part of social thinking.

These misconceptions are undoing the amity between different religious communities which was built during the freedom movement. They are undoing the fraternity which emerged with the process of India as a nation in the making. The processes which brought these communities together broadly drew from Gandhi, Bhagat Singh and Ambedkar. It is these values which need to be rooted again in the society. The communal forces have resorted to false propaganda against the minorities, and that needs to be undone with sincerity.

Combating those foundational misconceptions which create hatred is a massive task which needs to be taken up by the social organisations and political parties which have faith in the Indian Constitution and values of freedom movement. It needs to be done right away as a priority issue in with a focus on cultivating Indian fraternity yet again.

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