THE HINDU BACKLASH
By
M.L. Sondhi
The Statesman, 1990
Pandit Nehru’s “secular” views overrode all other values in
independent India. To the “progressives”, Hinduism was
incompatible with the political system and posed a threat to
the social fabric. The Nehruvian perspective was coherent
as long as the protection of Muslims did not deprive Hindus
of their rights. But by the ‘70s, Indian secularists had
come up against something they could no longer ignore –
Islamic fundamentalism and conversion of Hindus. The
conversion of Hindus en masse to Islam in
Meenakshipuram created a social and psychological problem,
with communal peace taking a back-seat.
The Jamaat-e-Islami’s sixth all-India
conference in Hyderabad, with the blessings of Indira Gandhi
and P.V. Narasimha Rao (the then Foreign Minister), was used
to separate further the Muslims from the Hindus. The
Hyderabad conference revolved around presenting an exclusive
and dynamic view of Islam and portraying Hindus as
antagonists. To counter this antagonism, political and
material support for converting Hindus to Islam was sought –
paying scant regard to national unity.
“Existential representation”, says Eric
Voegelin, political thinker, is basic to a national
community’s expression. Indian policy-makers failed to
realize the perils of Islamic fundamentalism in the ‘70s and
more so in the ‘80s. Increasing the Muslim population in
India to 200 millions in a decade and creating a
Pakistan-type polity within the Indian Union were the
principal areas of thrust at the Hyderabad conference.
These, no doubt, could not be translated into reality, but
Hindus saw in it a threat – given the backdrop of conversion
of Harijans to Islam.
Politics itself is a process of resolving
conflict says the political scientist, David Bastrop and
Hindus and Muslims could use the Indian political process to
reach enduring agreements by accepting each other’s
proposals or by developing alternatives which would help
restore respect for each side. But the “mass conversion”
aided by foreign funds and rigidity of the Muslim leadership
paved the way for a severe Hindu backlash.
The aggressive stand of one group can
threaten the existential representation of the national
community. The Hindus by the mid-80s realized the
fundamentalist tendencies inherent in Islam both at home and
abroad. Though the Muslim leaders continued to swear by the
Indian Constitution their activities smacked of the
political process that led to partition. What with the
increased emphasis on a “dispossessed ruling elite”, and
disregard for democratic values, the philosophy of
non-violence seemed somewhat misconstrued. Hindu
“ecumenicalism” was misunderstood. The Ramakrishna Mission,
the Ramana movement, the Aurobindo experience together with
Narayan Guru, the Shankaracharya of Kanchi and ISKON
installed a sense of unity among the Hindus. Given this
backdrop, Islamic fundamentalism only forced the Hindu
religious leaders to call for restoring Hindu dignity.
To forget the ghosts of the past, needed
were meaningful moral gestures by Hindus and Muslims towards
each other. It is true that people like Mian S. Abdul Hasan
Nadvi tried to present social and moral models before Indian
Muslims, appealing for reconciliation of Islamic brotherhood
with “the means of strengthening and furthering the
interests of their own country”. But this was confined to
the philosophical and metaphysical level, for Muslim
politics was “getting tough” and keeping a safe distance
from “healing the wounds”. This created “Hindu voters” who
segregated themselves from the Muslims with the obvious
intention of furthering their “cause” and fulfilling the
interests of the majority community.
The growing importance of the Hindu vote for
electoral gains in north India and the effect it has had on
the politics of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Congress
(I) has drawn much attention. With the exacerbation of the
Babari-Masjid Ram Janambhoomi controversy, the political
situation in the country seems to have reached a stalemate.
There is even talk that India has been led to the brink of
disaster. Creative thought and discussion are not
stimulated by continuing to argue ad nauseam that the
feeling for Lord Ram is sham emotion and that everything
would be fine if the BJP stopped fanning Hindu revivalism.
The decisive question in this context is whether the
Nehruvian paradigm of secularism is conducive to communal
peace. The stock answer to this question is bedevilled by
intellectual dishonesty. Passing moral judgements on the
faults of the Hindus and being insensitive to their needs is
not the best way to maintain communal harmony.
A better way to harmony would be to adopt a
rational policy which would eschew militant proselytisation
root - cause of the present malady. Hindus and Muslims
should adhere to a stable value consensus which would pave
the way for an enduring partnership in national affairs.
Hindus should not be at a disadvantage only because it is
not a monolithic bloc. If the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak
Committee can be an essential protective mechanism for the
Sikhs, and the Waqf Board for the Muslims, the Hindus should
be allowed to achieve a minimum level of stability with
institutions like the Vishwa Hindu Parishad.
Elimination of poverty in India and
improving the economy require Hindu-Muslim cooperation.
Ideas like Islamic banking can be novel applications of
economic practice. Communal peace must become the basic
influence on political rationale. Once the fundamentalist
logic of mass conversion is given up, Hindus and Muslims can
come together to establish a society which would meet the
needs of the interdependent world.
In an article published recently in the
International Herald Tribune, Barbara Crossette has lauded
the peaceful atmosphere and communal harmony in south
India. She has referred to Kerala as an “ecumenical state”
where Hindus, Jews, Christians and Muslims have lived in
harmony for a millennium. A little insight would have told
her that the fundamental balance of Hinduism in south India
was not disturbed by religious fanaticism to the same extent
that it was in north India. Even in the North, if the Hindu
cosmic myths are not threatened by the forces of mass
proselytisation, it will usher in a new era of communal
harmony.
Once an equal partnership is established
between Hindus and Muslims, there would be nothing wrong in
political competition as such. Today, we need a leadership
that would recognize the importance of the recovery of
spiritual values. |