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Sunday, 9 February 2020

RADICALISATION IS NOT A ONE WAY STREET.

                               

   " Radicalisation"- the action or process of causing someone to adopt radical( extreme) positions on political or social issues. ( Cambridge dictionary.)


   The conventional or popular belief  in India ( as also globally) is that radicalisation is associated with only one religious community, the adherents of Islam. How wrong this perception is can be seen in our country over the last few years where an uncharacteristic but toxic fundamentalism appears to have seized the euphemistically termed "majority community", especially in the north and west of the country. Driven by an ideology which has acquired political and executive legitimacy, this "reverse" radicalisation has now become almost state policy and has seeped deep into our social fabric. But whereas earlier it was an insidious infection slowly permeating the organs of this republic, over the last two months, post Article 370 and CAA/NRC, it has now erupted into a full blown pestilence which its carrier-hosts no longer bother to disguise but flaunt as a badge of honour. The radicalisation of the majority community is now seen as essential to protect the motherland from the "traitors".
  This has been a work in progress since 2015, the idea being to persuade the majority that they are under threat from an "other" whose loyalty is not to India. The constant barrage of vilification, hate, fake news and reinterpretation of history has been largely successful, as repeated electoral successes of the BJP prove. For radicalisation to succeed it is essential to create an enemy, and the community of 200 million with the same religion as Pakistan fits the bill perfectly- it has been defacto made an extension of that country, and has therefore become the prime enemy. But with this enemy has been merged anyone who stands up for their rights or criticises the government- liberals, intellectuals, urban naxals, "sickulars": the enemy thus fully conforms to the hydra headed monster to be found in all Hindu mythology- for example, Ravana- which of course has to be slain before Ram Rajya can arrive. The script is complete.
  I am quite amazed at how radicalised my co-religionists have become- well educated, financially secure, widely travelled, privileged families have swallowed the poison being dished out by the BJP and amplified by a craven media; they are willing to believe every lie loaded on Whatsapp and Twitter by the party's IT cell, suspending their disbelief and eager to teach "them" a lesson for all the imagined historical wrongs perpetrated by their ancestors. The govt. takes the lead in this catechism by creating dubious legislation and the patriots follow it up by lynching, desecration and riots. And the BJP periodically hoovers up the votes.
  Even by the low standards of our politicians, however, the ruling party's campaigning style for the February Delhi elections reveals a radicalisation that has plumbed the depths. The protests at Shaheen Bagh and elsewhere have been made the metaphor for anti-nationalism and betrayal. A Minister openly calls for shooting of the "traitors", a MP warns that "they" will enter your homes and rape your womenfolk, another terms the election as a Pakistan vs India match, a Chief Minister thunders that his govt. will not give "them" biryani ( as Kejriwal does) but give them bullets. He has to be taken seriously because his police has just killed 21 such enemies. The Prime Minister, no less, fans the fanaticism by alleging that Shaheen Bagh is not a protest but an "experiment"- the innuendo leaving no room to doubt what this experiment is about. And no one bats an eyelid- not the Election Commission, not the Supreme Court, not my Hindu neighbours in my Housing Society, not my colleagues in the IAS, not even most of my own family.
   It is one thing for politicians to become radicalised, but when organs and agencies of the government and state also adopt such ideologies, then the danger becomes very real. And this appears to be happening with the police forces in some states, particularly the crucial Uttar Pradesh and Delhi. We have learnt to live with the lack of professionalism, ignorance and heavy handedness of the police, but their behaviour in these two states over the last two months goes beyond incompetence and sycophancy into the realm of radicalisation. The savagery with which the students of Jamia Millia ( a minority institution) were beaten up to the accompaniment of racial and religious invectives, revilement and challenges, even a mosque trashed, leaves no doubt that the motivation was to teach these "enemies" a lesson. The brutal conduct of the police in UP where 21 people were shot ( all Muslims, as per media reports) has been even more unambiguous and clear. The homes of members of the minority community were raided in town after town, their cars and belongings vandalised, hundred arrested ( now being released by the courts for want of any evidence), dozens arrested and roughed up, notices served for compensation for " damage" to public properties without due process of the law. One SP of a district was even recorded telling Muslims to go to Pakistan, advice for which he was even praised by Ministers. The Chief Minister himself threatened revenge: the police was only too happy to follow this cue.
  No one disputes that the police are required at times to use force to control a situation. But such use of force must always be proportionate to the danger posed, must not be excessive and should not be motivated by a desire to exact vengeance or to "teach them a lesson". It should cease to be employed when the danger posed is over. Nor should the object of the action be regarded as an enemy just because he or she professes a different religion. The display of force should be "non violent" as explained in a recent article by an officer who was the Delhi police Commissioner at the time of the Mandal agitation in the early nineties. But the bestiality and viciousness displayed by the Delhi and UP police to counter the CAA/ NRC protests mirror an emerging  radicalisation in their thinking not seen before. And it is spreading to other states: in Karnataka a nine year old girl student of a school is charged with sedition, and her teacher and mother arrested, for taking part in a play on the CAA ! Debates and seminars on the subject are disallowed, an Arts India exhibition raided by police in Delhi because someone there was wearing a dress resembling dresses worn in Shaheen Bagh, another JNU scholar arrested for sedition for calling for a blockade of roads in Assam. Never before has the sedition law been wielded so indiscriminately by a rampaging police in BJP ruled states, all in flagrant defiance of the law laid down by the Supreme Court time and again.
   The problem, however, is not that the police or politicians are showing increasing symptoms of radicalisation. The real threat, and challenge, is that one in three Indians support this pervasive paranoia, going by the BJP's vote share. It is evident in the anti-CAA rallies, the three shooting incidents outside Shaheen Bagh, calls for boycott of shops and restaurants owned by Muslims, the eviction of a lady tenant from her Lajpatnagar flat because she dared to protest at an Amit Shah rally, the trolling of Deepika Padukone and withdrawal of endorsement contracts because she stood up for the JNU students.. And the support for this bigoted narrative runs across economic and social stratifications, making it that much more difficult to counter. It's bad enough for a minority community to be radicalised, for that disrupts a society. It is infinitely worse, however, for a majority community to be radicalised, for that can completely change a country's constitutional values, character, ethos and transform it into an unintended mutant. We face this very real danger and possibility today.


   

9 comments:

  1. thanks for saying what you are saying, despite that agreeing with you will amount to sedition.

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  2. Well said,Sir. Dark times. May get worse before it gets better - as it will...
    A minor factual error if my memory serves me right: Deepika visited JNU, not Shaheenbagh.

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    1. Thank you, aarkp, for pointing out the error. Correction made.

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  3. While the despair is fully warranted, I cannot help feeling that there are many many more people speaking up and out against what is now plain for all to see - the deliberate and purposeful assault of the Constitution.
    And that offers some hope. That all of India has not yet given into terror.
    In fact the irony of 'reverses' is now beginning to be seen to appear, in writing, on the walls of the country - with the PM constantly saying the greatest threat to India is from terrorists. It is indeed. Only not from across the border. But from our own upon our own.
    And hence the unprecedented revolt.
    And hope for good to overcome evil.

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    1. It's the fear of a dreaded knock by the Gestapo with sedition charges that's keeping many silent. Sadly the semi literate leadership we have elected has no sense of history, no moral guardrails and no sense of ethics. The damage to the idea of India as a tolerant, pluralistic and vibrant democracy is going to be permanent. Regrettably the institutions that were meant to safeguard the Constitution are all compromised. As probably the oldest among all followers of this blog may i advise all to be circumspect while expressing your views. The IT cell can track you down....and some of you would be jeopardizing personal safety.

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    2. The Gestapo thought is scary.
      I feel many on the majority side are looking the other way as they think the Congress played minority appeasement politics for too long and it is time for the majority to assert now. Also the lack of opportunities to grow and to spend the pent up energy and fear of being left behind on the worlde scene is adding to this acquiescence.

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  4. The growth of the RSS over the past 95 years, its capacity for deceit, and the lack of critical thinking among our people makes me less optimistic about the future. On the other hand when I see how Shaheen Bagh has become a magnet for patriotic and Constitutional semtiment; when I see Kanhaiya Kumar draw very large crowds and present to the common people the true nature of this regime after stripping it of its pretenses, I feel a new political leadership will emerge. I get despondent but I will not give up hope.

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  5. I WISH one could be as hopeful as Kabir in this collective despondency of those who can see how easily and unthinkingly we hurtle down (despite the ongoing protests) into possibly another darkest period of our post Independent history (the first being the Partition). The buy in into this government steered narrative and consequent radicalisation of large numbers of our well educated “Majority” is indeed frightening – the “unintended mutant”? Surely Mr LK Advani, even Mr Vajpayee would have something to say? Why are they silent? And many, many other such stalwarts of their days? It is crucial at this juncture that the Big and Eminent amongst us speak up, clearly and loudly; because if they don’t, with each passing day it becomes that much more difficult to arrest the slide into another unmatched human engineered catastrophe.

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  6. Avay, like you I've been struck by how many of our friends, colleagues and family members have jumped into this Muslim baiting game, happily spreading misinformation, hate and Hindutva propaganda in WhatsApp groups and other forms of social media. This includes retired senior IAS officers who should know better. Serving IAS and other AIS officers are understandably more discreet and restrained, but a sizable number are likely to have similar biases. These types tend to get handpicked into key positions by the politicians in power who are exploiting communal differences. So our hapless minorities (particularly Muslims) have even less recourse to fair treatment by supposedly neutral officialdom in their day to day lives. Thank you for trying to make a difference with your eloquent, impassioned (and somewhat lonely!) voice.

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