[ This article was published in the New Indian Express on 24.1.2017 under the title: LESSONS FOR THE UNIFORM SOCIAL CODE]
Leap-frogging is a
good game for children but fraught with danger when applied to cultural or
social reform. This is the primary lesson emerging from the Jallikattu protests
playing out in Tamil Nadu. Social reforms- changing age old habits and beliefs-
cannot be enforced by governmental or judicial dictats overnight: they have to
be nurtured through patient persuasion, enlightened leadership and personal
example. In a country where politicians prefer to be led by the nose rather
than themselves leading by personal conduct and example, and where the
judiciary is increasingly being viewed as residing in an ivory tower, there can
be no quick fixes. In the age of marketing even progressive and enlightened
ideas have to be sold to the people. Jallikattu is the latest example of this,
but there is an even bigger precipice the executive and judiciary are rushing
towards- the Uniform Civil Code.
The Indian state
appears to be in a similar unseemly haste in trying to push through a UCC.
Granted, it is an ideal we should be working towards, but it would be a good
idea to get the 200 million plus Muslims , Christians and other minorities to
also share this view before we ram it down their “ regressive” throats. All
social, religious and cultural beliefs are legal fictions- imagined truths- and
what is held to be “ correct” in
one age may have been unacceptable at another time. Gender equality did not
exist a hundred years ago, racial superiority of the “ whites” was a biological
truism till the 19th century, slavery was the economic bedrock of
the imperial age. These are widely accepted as reprehensible beliefs today, but
it should not be forgotten that it took hundreds of years and many social
movements to change these mind sets.
Laws FOLLOWED these efforts to give them permanent legitimacy, they did
not precede them. The mistake we appear to be making with UCC is precisely
this-we are rushing through with coercive legislation without preparing the
ground to receive these seeds of change. This is a recipe for disaster:
Jallikattu is only a curtain-raiser.
There is no
constitutional compulsion for either the govt. or the judiciary to be in such a
hurry: the Constitution does not mandate a UCC, it is a recommendation in the
Directive Principles. The latter are not justiciable as per Article 37.
Furthermore, there is a legal quandary here: whereas Articles 14 to 24 of the
Constitution prescribe an individual’s rights to freedom and equality ( the
purported justification for a UCC), Articles 25-30 protect the religious and
cultural freedom of minorities. This apparent friction and clash between the
two sets of Articles may or may not give a handle to those who oppose the reform,
but it should at least give the govt enough reason to pause and try to build a
consensus before proceeding further.
The political
context in India today is not conducive for such a radical reform: the ruling
party, with its overt and aggressive Hindu ideology and agenda, is not
perceived to be an honest broker. The Muslim community increasingly perceives
itself to be under siege, and not only because of the intemperate remarks and
threats from adherents of the BJP. The actions of the govt. itself have given
enough reason for apprehending that this community is being targeted: the Enemy
Property Act Amendment Bill 2016 will confiscate the properties of thousands of
Muslims who chose to stay on in India post 1947 and 1968 ( retrospectively) and
also deny them recourse to the courts, the govt. has announced that it will
accept only non-Muslim immigrants from neighbouring countries, a virtual media
and legal war has been launched against the practice of Triple Talaq, the Law
Commission has circulated a questionnaire on Triple Talaq whose bias is self
evident, the hard line approach to the Kashmiris even after months of privation
and a hundred deaths engenders suspicions in the minds of the Muslims about the
true objectives of the govt.
The ideal of uniform
civil rights can be achieved without confrontation if we exercise patience and
an understanding of the minority mind set. This is a psyche which is constantly
apprehensive about being dominated by the majority and thus asserts its
identity as a defensive manoeuvre, and in this effort religious and cultural
symbolism plays a large part. Delegitimising them by laws only strengthens
their resistance to any change. Instead, if left to the normal legal and social
processes the desired change will come about organically, slowly but surely,
without any communal overtones. And this is already happening. Divorced muslim
women have been quietly granted maintenance ( something their clerics had been
opposing)-a Delhi High court judgement of 2011 and a Supreme Court order of
2015 have now made this the law. Similarly, triple talaq has also been struck
down by the courts: the SC in the Shamim Ara case of 2002 has declared it
illegal and invalid. As recently as on the 11th of January 2017 the
Madras High Court declared the issue of triple talaq certificates by a Kazi “
has no legal authority”. On the 19th of this month itself the
Supreme Court has ruled that the church does not have the jurisdiction to
adjudicate matrimonial disputes between Christian couples and that the Indian
Divorce Act 1989 overrides Christian personal law. The Parsis- one of our most
insular and protective minority communities- are also changing, in the face of
opposition from their own religious leaders. They are gradually giving up one
of their most hallowed traditions- the practice of leaving the bodies of their
dead in Dakhmas to be consumed by vultures. Parsis in Mumbai are now opting for
cremation, and this January 8th Zoroastrians in Navsari in Gujarat(
the birthplace of Dadabhai Naoroji and the hometown of the Tatas) have voted to
allow burials. The near extinction of vultures in India have forced this
change, not some aggressive legislation. Even the Catholic church, under
intense public pressure, has accepted homosexuality. There have been no
agitations against these judgements. The point I’m making is that our political
parties should stop grandstanding on such sensitive matters, and allow the
changes to come about organically and gradually,and not inflict another “ surgical strike.” Education,
exposure, social mobility, improved incomes and public opinion will do a better
job of bringing about these changes. If the Jallikattu furore teaches us this
at least, it will have served the nation well .
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