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Outlook India, May 6, 2002
Democracy: Who's She When She's At
Home?
by Arundhati Roy
Last night a friend from Baroda called. Weeping. It took her
fifteen minutes to tell me what the matter was. It wasn't very
complicated. Only that Sayeeda, a friend of hers, had been caught
by a mob. Only that her stomach had been ripped open and stuffed
with burning rags. Only that after she died, someone carved 'OM'
on her forehead.
Precisely which Hindu scripture preaches this?
Our Prime Minister justified this as part of the retaliation by
outraged Hindus against Muslim 'terrorists' who burned alive 58
Hindu passengers on the Sabarmati Express in Godhra. Each of
those who died that hideous death was someone's brother,
someone's mother, someone's child. Of course they were.
Which particular verse in the Quran required that they be roasted
alive?
The more the two sides try and call attention to their religious
differences by slaughtering each other, the less there is to
distinguish them from one another. They worship at the same
altar. They're both apostles of the same murderous god, whoever
he is. In an atmosphere so vitiated, for anybody, and in
particular the Prime Minister, to arbitrarily decree exactly
where the cycle started is malevolent and irresponsible.
Right now we're sipping from a poisoned chalicea flawed
democracy laced with religious fascism. Pure arsenic.
What shall we do? What can we do?
We have a ruling party that's hemorrhaging. Its rhetoric against
Terrorism, the passing of POTA, the sabre-rattling against
Pakistan (with the underlying nuclear threat), the massing of
almost a million soldiers on the border on hair-trigger alert,
and most dangerous of all, the attempt to communalize and falsify
school history text-booksnone of this has prevented it from
being humiliated in election after election. Even its old party
trickthe revival of the Ram mandir plans in
Ayodhyadidn't quite work out. Desperate now, it has turned
for succor to the state of Gujarat.
Gujarat, the only major state in India to have a BJP government
has, for some years, been the petri dish in which Hindu fascism
has been fomenting an elaborate political experiment. Last month,
the initial results were put on public display.
Within hours of the Godhra outrage, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad
(VHP) and the Bajrang Dal put into motion a meticulously planned
pogrom against the Muslim community. Officially the number of
dead is 800. Independent reports put the figure at well over
2,000. More than a hundred and fifty thousand people, driven from
their homes, now live in refugee camps. Women were stripped,
gang-raped, parents were bludgeoned to death in front of their
children. Two hundred and forty dargahs and 180 masjids were
destroyedin Ahmedabad the tomb of Wali Gujarati, the
founder of the modern Urdu poem, was demolished and paved over in
the course of a night. The tomb of the musician Ustad Faiyaz Ali
Khan was desecrated and wreathed in burning tires. Arsonists
burned and looted shops, homes, hotels, textiles mills, buses and
private cars. Hundreds of thousands have lost their jobs.
A mob surrounded the house of former Congress MP Iqbal Ehsan
Jaffri. His phone calls to the Director-General of Police, the
Police Commissioner, the Chief Secretary, the Additional Chief
Secretary (Home) were ignored. The mobile police vans around his
house did not intervene. The mob broke into the house. They
stripped his daughters and burned them alive. Then they beheaded
Ehsan Jaffri and dismembered him. Of course it's only a
coincidence that Jaffri was a trenchant critic of Gujarat Chief
Minister, Narendra Modi, during his campaign for the Rajkot
Assembly by-election in February.
Across Gujarat, thousands of people made up the mobs. They were
armed with petrol bombs, guns, knives, swords and tridents. Apart
from the VHP and Bajrang Dal's usual lumpen constituency, Dalits
and Adivasis took part in the orgy. Middle-class people
participated in the looting. (On one memorable occasion a family
arrived in a Mitsubishi Lancer.) The leaders of the mob had
computer-generated cadastral lists marking out Muslim homes,
shops, businesses and even partnerships. They had mobile phones
to coordinate the action. They had trucks loaded with thousands
of gas cylinders, hoarded weeks in advance, which they used to
blow up Muslim commercial establishments. They had not just
police protection and police connivance, but also covering fire.
While Gujarat burned, our Prime Minister was on MTV promoting his
new poems. (Reports say cassettes have sold a hundred thousand
copies.) It took him more than a monthand two vacations in
the hillsto make it to Gujarat. When he did, shadowed by
the chilling Mr Modi, he gave a speech at the Shah Alam refugee
camp. His mouth moved, he tried to express concern, but no real
sound emerged except the mocking of the wind whistling through a
burned, bloodied, broken world. Next we knew, he was bobbing
around in a golf-cart, striking business deals in Singapore.
The killers still stalk Gujarat's streets. The lynch mob
continues to be the arbiter of the routine affairs of daily life:
who can live where, who can say what, who can meet who, and where
and when. Its mandate is expanding quickly. From religious
affairs, it now extends to property disputes, family
altercations, the planning and allocation of water resources...
(which is why Medha Patkar of the NBA was assaulted). Muslim
businesses have been shut down. Muslim people are not served in
restaurants. Muslim children are not welcome in schools. Muslim
students are too terrified to sit for their exams. Muslim parents
live in dread that their infants might forget what they've been
told and give themselves away by saying 'Ammi!' or 'Abba!' in
public and invite sudden and violent death.
Notice has been given: this is just the beginning.
Is this the Hindu rashtra that we've all been asked to look
forward to? Once the Muslims have been "shown their
place", will milk and Coca-Cola flow across the land? Once
the Ram mandir is built, will there be a shirt on every back and
a roti in every belly? Will every tear be wiped from every eye?
Can we expect an anniversary celebration next year? Or will there
be someone else to hate by then? AlphabeticallyAdivasis,
Buddhists, Christians, Dalits, Parsis, Sikhs? Those who wear
jeans, or speak English, or those who have thick lips, or curly
hair? We won't have to wait long. It's started already. Will the
established rituals continue? Will people be beheaded,
dismembered and urinated upon? Will fetuses be ripped from their
mothers' wombs and slaughtered? (What kind of depraved vision can
even imagine India without the range and beauty and spectacular
anarchy of all these cultures? India would become a tomb and
smell like a crematorium.)
No matter who they were, or how they were killed, each person who
died in Gujarat in the weeks gone by deserves to be mourned.
There have been hundreds of outraged letters to journals and
newspapers asking why the "pseudo-secularists" do not
condemn the burning of the Sabarmati Express in Godhra with the
same degree of outrage with which they condemn the killings in
the rest of Gujarat. What they don't seem to understand is that
there is a fundamental difference between a pogrom such as the
one taking place in Gujarat now, and the burning of the Sabarmati
Express in Godhra. We still don't know who exactly was
responsible for the carnage in Godhra. The government says
(without a shred of evidence) it was an ISI plot. Independent
reports say the train was set on fire by an enraged mob. Either
way, it was a criminal act. But every independent report says the
pogrom against the Muslim community in Gujaratbilled by the
government as spontaneous 'retaliation'has at best been
conducted under the benign gaze of the State and, at worst, with
active State collusion. Either way the State is criminally
culpable. And the State acts in the name of its citizens. So as a
citizen, I am forced to acknowledge that I am somehow made
complicit in the Gujarat pogrom. It is this that outrages me. And
it is this that puts a completely different complexion on the two
massacres.
After the Gujarat Massacres, at its convention in Bangalore, the
RSS, the moral and cultural guild of the BJP, of which the Prime
Minister, the Home Minister and Chief Minister Modi himself are
all members, called upon Muslims to earn the 'goodwill' of the
majority community. At the meeting of the national executive of
the BJP in Goa, Narendra Modi was greeted as a hero. His smirking
offer to resign from the chief minister's post was unanimously
turned down. In a recent public speech he compared the events of
the last few weeks in Gujarat to Gandhi's Dandi Marchboth,
according to him, significant moments in the Struggle for
Freedom.
While the parallels between contemporary India and pre-war
Germany are chilling, they're not surprising. (The founders of
the RSS have, in their writings, been frank in their admiration
for Hitler and his methods.) One difference is that here in India
we don't have a Hitler. We have instead, a traveling
extravaganza, a mobile symphonic orchestra. The hydra-headed,
many-armed Sangh Parivarwith the BJP, the RSS, the VHP and
the Bajrang Dal, each playing a different instrument. Its utter
genius lies in its apparent ability to be all things to all
people at all times.
The Parivar has an appropriate head for every occasion. An old
versifier with rhetoric for every season. A rabble-rousing
hard-liner for Home Affairs, a suave one for Foreign Affairs, a
smooth, English-speaking lawyer to handle TV debates, a
cold-blooded creature for a Chief Minister and the Bajrang Dal
and the VHP, grassroots workers in charge of the physical labor
that goes into the business of genocide. Finally, this
many-headed extravaganza has a lizard's tail which drops off when
it's in trouble, and grows back again: a specious socialist
dressed up as Defense Minister, who it sends on its
damage-limitation missionswars, cyclones, genocides. They
trust him to press the right buttons, hit the right note.
The Sangh Parivar speaks in as many tongues as a whole corsage of
trishuls.
It can say several contradictory things simultaneously. While one
of its heads (the VHP) exhorts millions of its cadres to prepare
for the Final Solution, its titular head (the Prime Minister)
assures the nation that all citizens, regardless of their
religion, will be treated equally. It can ban books and films and
burn paintings for 'insulting Indian culture'. Simultaneously, it
can mortgage the equivalent of 60 per cent of the entire
country's rural development budget as profit to Enron. It
contains within itself the full spectrum of political opinion, so
what would normally be a public fight between two adversarial
political parties, is now just a Family Matter. However
acrimonious the quarrel, it's always conducted in public, always
resolved amicably, and the audience always goes away satisfied
it's got value for moneyanger, action, revenge, intrigue,
remorse, poetry and plenty of gore. It's our own vernacular
version of Full Spectrum Dominance.
But when the chips are down, really down, the squabbling heads
quieten, and it becomes chillingly apparent that underneath all
the clamor and the noise, a single heart beats. And an
unforgiving mind with saffron-saturated tunnel vision works
overtime.
There have been pogroms in India before, every kind of
pogromdirected at particular castes, tribes, religious
faiths. In 1984, following the assassination of Indira Gandhi,
the Congress Party presided over the massacre of three thousand
Sikhs in Delhi, every bit as macabre as the one in Gujarat. At
the time, Rajiv Gandhi, never known for an elegant turn of
phrase, said, "When a big tree falls, the ground
shakes". In 1985 the Congress swept the polls. On a sympathy
wave! Eighteen years have gone by. Nobody has been punished.
Take any politically volatile issuethe nuclear tests, the
Babri Masjid, the Tehelka scam, the stirring of the communal
cauldron for electoral advantageand you'll see the Congress
Party has been there before. In every case, the Congress sowed
the seed and the BJP has swept in to reap the hideous harvest. So
in the event that we're called upon to vote, is there a
difference between the two? The answer is a faltering but
distinct 'yes'. Here's why: It's true that the Congress Party has
sinned, and grievously, and for decades together. But it has done
by night what the BJP does by day. It has done covertly,
stealthily, hypocritically, shamefacedly, what the BJP does with
pride. And this is an important difference.
Whipping up communal hatred is part of the mandate of the Sangh
Parivar. It has been planned for years. It has been injecting a
slow-release poison directly into civil society's bloodstream.
Hundreds of RSS shakhas and Saraswati shishu mandirs across the
country have been indoctrinating thousands of children and young
people, stunting their minds with religious hatred and falsified
history. They're no different from, and no less dangerous than,
the madrassas all over Pakistan and Afghanistan which spawned the
Taliban. In states like Gujarat, the police, the administration,
and the political cadres at every level have been systematically
penetrated. It has huge popular appeal, which it would be foolish
to underestimate or misunderstand. The whole enterprise has a
formidable religious, ideological, political, and administrative
underpinning. This kind of power, this kind of reach, can only be
achieved with State backing.
Madrassas, the Muslim equivalent of hothouses cultivating
religious hatred, try and make up in frenzy and foreign funding,
what they lack in State support. They provide the perfect foil
for Hindu communalists to dance their dance of mass paranoia and
hatred. (In fact they serve that purpose so perfectly, they might
just as well be working as a team.)
Under this relentless pressure, what will most likely happen is
that the majority of the Muslim community will resign itself to
living in ghettos as second-class citizens, in constant fear,
with no civil rights and no recourse to justice. What will daily
life be like for them? Any little thing, an altercation in a
cinema queue or a fracas at a traffic light, could turn lethal.
So they will learn to keep very quiet, to accept their lot, to
creep around the edges of the society in which they live. Their
fear will transmit itself to other minorities. Many, particularly
the young, will probably turn to militancy. They will do terrible
things. Civil society will be called upon to condemn them. Then
President Bush's canon will come back to us: "Either you're
with us or with the terrorists."
Those words hang frozen in time like icicles. For years to come,
butchers and genocidists will fit their grisly mouths around them
('lip-synch', filmmakers call it) in order to justify their
butchery.
Mr Bal Thackeray of the Shiv Sena, who has lately been feeling a
little upstaged by Mr Modi, has the lasting solution. He's called
for civil war. Isn't that just perfect? Then Pakistan won't need
to bomb us, we can bomb ourselves. Let's turn all of India into
Kashmir. Or Bosnia. Or Palestine. Or Rwanda. Let's all suffer
forever. Let's buy expensive guns and explosives to kill each
other with. Let the British arms dealers and the American weapons
manufacturers grow fat on our spilled blood. We could ask the
Carlyle groupof which the Bush and Bin Laden families are
both shareholdersfor a bulk discount. Maybe if things go
really well, we'll become like Afghanistan. (And look at the
publicity they've gone and got themselves.) When all our farm
lands are mined, our buildings destroyed, our infrastructure
reduced to rubble, our children physically maimed and mentally
wrecked, when we've nearly wiped ourselves out with
self-manufactured hatred, maybe we can appeal to the Americans to
help us out. Airdropped airline meals, anyone?
How close we have come to self-destruction. Another step and
we'll be in free-fall. And yet the government presses on. At the
Goa meeting of the BJP's national executive, the Prime Minister
of Secular, Democratic India, Mr A.B. Vajpayee, made history. He
became the first Indian Prime Minister to cross the threshold and
publicly unveil an unconscionable bigotry against Muslims, which
even George Bush, and Donald Rumsfeld would be embarrassed to own
up to. "Wherever Muslims are," he said, "they do
not want to live peacefully."
Shame on him. But if only it were just him: in the immediate
aftermath of the Gujarat holocaust, confident of the success of
its 'experiment', the BJP wants a snap poll. "The gentlest
of people," my friend from Baroda said to me, "the
gentlest of people, in the gentlest of voices, says 'Modi is our
hero.'"
Some of us nurtured the naive hope that the magnitude of the
horror of the last few weeks would make the Secular Parties,
however self-serving, unite in sheer outrage. On its own, the BJP
does not have the mandate of the people of India. It does not
have the mandate to push through the Hindutva project. We hoped
that the 27 allies that make up the BJP-led coalition at the
Center would withdraw their support. We thought, quite stupidly,
that they would see that there could be no bigger test of their
moral fiber, of their commitment to their avowed principles of
secularism.
It's a sign of the times that not a single one of the BJP's
allies has withdrawn support. In every shifty eye you see that
faraway look of someone doing mental maths to calculate which
constituencies and portfolios they'll retain and which ones
they'll lose if they pull out. Except for Deepak Parekh of HDFC,
not a single CEO of India's Corporate Community has condemned
what happened. Farooq Abdullah, Chief Minister of Kashmir and the
only prominent Muslim politician left in India, is currying favor
with the government by supporting Modi because he's nursing the
dim hope that he may become Vice-President of India very soon.
And worst of allMayawati, leader of the BSPthe great
hope of the lower castes, is on the verge of forging an alliance
with the BJP in UP.
The Congress and the Left parties have launched a public
agitation asking for Modi's resignation. Resignation? Have we
lost all sense of proportion? Criminals are not meant to resign.
They're meant to be charged, tried and convicted. As those who
burned the train in Godhra should be. As the mobs, and those
members of the police force and the administration who planned
and participated in the pogrom in the rest of Gujarat should be.
As those responsible for raising the pitch of the frenzy to
boiling point must be. The Supreme Court has the option of acting
against Modi and the Bajrang Dal and the VHP suo motu (when the
Court itself files charges). There are hundreds of testimonies.
There's masses of evidence.
But in India if you are a butcher or a genocidist who happens to
be a politician, you have every reason to be optimistic. No one
even expects politicians to be prosecuted. To demand that Modi
and his henchmen be arraigned and put away, would make other
politicians vulnerable to their own unsavory pastsso
instead they disrupt Parliament, shout a lot, eventually those in
power set up commissions of inquiry, ignore the findings and
between themselves make sure the juggernaut chugs on.
Already the issue has begun to morph. Should elections be allowed
or not? Should the Election Commission decide that? Or the
Supreme Court? Either way, whether elections are held or
deferred, by allowing Modi to walk free, by allowing him to
continue with his career as a politician, the fundamental,
governing principles of democracy are not just being subverted,
but deliberately sabotaged. This kind of democracy is the
problem, not the solution. Our society's greatest strength is
being turned into her deadliest enemy. What's the point of us all
going on about 'deepening democracy', when it's being bent and
twisted into something unrecognizable?
What if the BJP does win the elections? (The buzz is that
engineering a war against Pakistan is going to be the BJP's
strategy to swing the vote.) After all, George Bush had an 80 per
cent rating in his War Against Terror, and Ariel Sharon has a
similar mandate for his bestial invasion of Palestine. Does that
make everything all right? Why not dispense with the legal
system, the Constitution, the pressthe whole
shebangmorality itself, why not chuck it and put everything
up for a vote? Genocides can become the subject of opinion polls
and massacres can have marketing campaigns.
Fascism's firm footprint has appeared in India. Let's mark the
date: Spring, 2002. While we can thank the American President and
the Coalition Against Terror for creating a congenial
international atmosphere for its ghastly debut, we cannot credit
them for the years it has been brewing in our public and private
lives.
It breezed in in the wake of the Pokhran nuclear tests in 1998.
From then onwards, the massed energy of bloodthirsty patriotism
became openly acceptable political currency. The 'weapons of
peace' trapped India and Pakistan in a spiral of
brinkmanshipthreat and counter-threat, taunt and
counter-taunt. And now, one war and hundreds of dead later, more
than a million soldiers from both armies are massed at the
border, eyeball to eyeball, locked in a pointless nuclear
standoff. The escalating belligerence against Pakistan has
ricocheted off the border and entered our own body politic, like
a sharp blade slicing through the vestiges of communal harmony
and tolerance between the Hindu and Muslim communities. In no
time at all, the godsquadders from hell have colonized the public
imagination. And we allowed them in. Each time the hostility
between India and Pakistan is cranked up, within India there's a
corresponding increase in the hostility towards the Muslims. With
each battle cry against Pakistan, we inflict a wound on
ourselves, on our way of life, on our spectacularly diverse and
ancient civilization, on everything that makes India different
from Pakistan. Increasingly, Indian Nationalism has come to mean
Hindu Nationalism, which defines itself not through a respect or
regard for itself, but through a hatred of the Other. And the
Other, for the moment, is not just Pakistan, it's Muslim. It's
disturbing to see how neatly nationalism dovetails into fascism.
While we must not allow the fascists to define what the nation
is, or who it belongs to, it's worth keeping in mind that
nationalism, in all its many avatarssocialist, capitalist
and fascisthas been at the root of almost all the genocides
of the twentieth century. On the issue of nationalism, it's wise
to proceed with caution.
Can we not find it in ourselves to belong to an ancient
civilization instead of to just a recent nation? To love a land
instead of just patrolling a territory? The Sangh Parivar
understands nothing of what civilization means. It seeks to
limit, reduce, define, dismember and desecrate the memory of what
we were, our understanding of what we are, and our dreams of who
we want to be. What kind of India do they want? A limbless,
headless, soulless torso, left bleeding under the butchers'
cleaver with a flag driven deep into her mutilated heart? Can we
let that happen? Have we let it happen?
The incipient, creeping fascism of the past few years has been
groomed by many of our 'democratic' institutions. Everyone has
flirted with itParliament, the press, the police, the
administration, the public. Even 'secularists' have been guilty
of helping to create the right climate. Each time you defend the
right of an institution, any institution (including the Supreme
Court), to exercise unfettered, unaccountable powers that must
never be challenged, you move towards fascism. To be fair,
perhaps not everyone recognized the early signs for what they
were.
The national press has been startlingly courageous in its
denunciation of the events of the last few weeks. Many of the
BJP's fellow travelers who have journeyed with it to the brink
are now looking down the abyss into the hell that was once
Gujarat, and turning away in genuine dismay. But how hard and for
how long will they fight? This is not going to be like a
publicity campaign for an upcoming cricket season. And there will
not always be spectacular carnage to report on. Fascism is also
about the slow, steady infiltration of all the instruments of
State power. It's about the slow erosion of civil liberties,
about unspectacular day-to-day injustices. Fighting it means
fighting to win back the minds and hearts of people. Fighting it
does not mean asking for RSS shakhas and the madrassas to be
banned, it means working towards the day when they're voluntarily
abandoned as bad ideas. It means keeping an eagle eye on public
institutions and demanding accountability. It means putting your
ear to the ground and listening to the whispering of the truly
powerless. It means giving a forum to the myriad voices from the
hundreds of resistance movements across the country who are
speaking about real thingsabout bonded labor, marital rape,
sexual preferences, women's wages, uranium dumping, unsustainable
mining, weavers' woes, farmers' worries. It means fighting
displacement and dispossession and the relentless, everyday
violence of abject poverty. Fighting it also means not allowing
your newspaper columns and prime-time TV spots to be hijacked by
their spurious passions and their staged theatrics, which are
designed to divert attention from everything else.
While most people in India have been horrified by what happened
in Gujarat, many thousands of the indoctrinated are preparing to
journey deeper into the heart of the horror. Look around you and
you'll see in little parks, in big maidans, in empty lots, in
village commons, the RSS is marching, hoisting its saffron flag.
Suddenly they're everywhere, grown men in khaki shorts marching,
marching, marching. To where? For what? Their disregard for
history shields them from the knowledge that fascism will thrive
for a short while and then self-annihilate because of its
inherent stupidity. But unfortunately, like the radioactive
fallout of a nuclear strike, it has a half-life that will cripple
generations to come.
These levels of rage and hatred cannot be contained, cannot be
expected to subside, with public censure and denunciation. Hymns
of brotherhood and love are great, but not enough.
Historically, fascist movements have been fueled by feelings of
national disillusionment. Fascism has come to India after the
dreams that fueled the Freedom Struggle have been frittered away
like so much loose change.
Independence itself came to us as what Gandhi famously called a
'wooden loaf'a notional freedom tainted by the blood of the
thousands who died during Partition. For more than half a century
now, the hatred and mutual distrust has been exacerbated, toyed
with and never allowed to heal by politicians, led from the front
by Mrs Indira Gandhi. Every political party has tilled the marrow
of our secular parliamentary democracy, mining it for electoral
advantage. Like termites excavating a mound, they've made tunnels
and underground passages, undermining the meaning of 'secular',
until it has just become an empty shell that's about to implode.
Their tilling has weakened the foundations of the structure that
connects the Constitution, Parliament and the courts of
lawthe configuration of checks and balances that forms the
backbone of a parliamentary democracy. Under the circumstances,
it's futile to go on blaming politicians and demanding from them
a morality they're incapable of. There's something pitiable about
a people that constantly bemoans its leaders. If they've let us
down, it's only because we've allowed them to. It could be argued
that civil society has failed its leaders as much as leaders have
failed civil society. We have to accept that there is a
dangerous, systemic flaw in our parliamentary democracy that
politicians will exploit. And that's what results in the kind of
conflagration that we have witnessed in Gujarat. There's fire in
the ducts. We have to address this issue and come up with a
systemic solution.
But politicians' exploitation of communal divides is by no means
the only reason that fascism has arrived on our shores.
Over the past fifty years, ordinary citizens' modest hopes for
lives of dignity, security and relief from abject poverty have
been systematically snuffed out. Every 'democratic' institution
in this country has shown itself to be unaccountable,
inaccessible to the ordinary citizen, and either unwilling, or
incapable of acting, in the interests of genuine social justice.
Every strategy for real social changeland reform,
education, public health, the equitable distribution of natural
resources, the implementation of positive discriminationhas
been cleverly, cunningly and consistently scuttled and rendered
ineffectual by those castes and that class of people who have a
stranglehold on the political process. And now corporate
globalization is being relentlessly and arbitrarily imposed on an
essentially feudal society, tearing through its complex, tiered,
social fabric, ripping it apart culturally and economically.
There is very real grievance here. And the fascists didn't create
it. But they have seized upon it, upturned it and forged from it
a hideous, bogus sense of pride. They have mobilized human beings
using the lowest common denominatorreligion. People who
have lost control over their lives, people who have been uprooted
from their homes and communities who have lost their culture and
their language, are being made to feel proud of something. Not
something they have striven for and achieved, not something they
can count as a personal accomplishment, but something they just
happen to be. Or, more accurately, something they happen not to
be. And the falseness, the emptiness of that pride, is fueling a
gladiatorial anger that is then directed towards a simulated
target that has been wheeled into the amphitheater.
How else can you explain the project of trying to disenfranchise,
drive out or exterminate the second-poorest community in this
country, using as your footsoldiers the very poorest (Dalits and
Adivasis)? How else can you explain why Dalits in Gujarat, who
have been despised, oppressed and treated worse than refuse by
the upper castes for thousands of years, have joined hands with
their oppressors to turn on those who are only marginally less
unfortunate than they themselves? Are they just wage slaves,
mercenaries for hire? Is it all right to patronize them and
absolve them of responsibility for their own actions? Or am I
being obtuse? Perhaps it's common practice for the unfortunate to
vent their rage and hatred on the next most unfortunate, because
their real adversaries are inaccessible, seemingly invincible and
completely out of range? Because their own leaders have cut loose
and are feasting at the high table, leaving them to wander
rudderless in the wilderness, spouting nonsense about returning
to the Hindu fold. (The first step, presumably, towards founding
a Global Hindu Empire, as realistic a goal as Fascism's
previously failed projectsthe restoration of Roman Glory,
the purification of the German race or the establishment of an
Islamic Sultanate.)
One hundred and thirty million Muslims live in India. Hindu
fascists regard them as legitimate prey. Do people like Modi and
Bal Thackeray think that the world will stand by and watch while
they're liquidated in a 'civil war?' Press reports say that the
European Union and several other countries have condemned what
happened in Gujarat and likened it to Nazi rule. The Indian
government's portentous response is that foreigners should not
use the Indian media to comment on what is an 'internal matter'
(like the chilling goings-on in Kashmir?). What next? Censorship?
Closing down the Internet? Blocking international calls? Killing
the wrong 'terrorists' and fudging the DNA samples? There is no
terrorism like State terrorism.
But who will take them on? Their fascist cant can perhaps be
dented by some blood and thunder from the Opposition. So far only
Laloo Yadav of Bihar has shown himself to be truly passionate:
"Kaun mai ka lal kehta hai ki yeh Hindu rashtra hai? Usko
yahan bhej do, chhati phad doonga!" (Which mother's son says
this is a Hindu Nation? Send him here, I'll tear his chest open.)
Unfortunately there's no quick fix. Fascism itself can only be
turned away if all those who are outraged by it show a commitment
to social justice that equals the intensity of their indignation.
Are we ready to get off our starting blocks? Are we ready, many
millions of us, to rally not just on the streets, but at work and
in schools and in our homes, in every decision we take, and every
choice we make?
Or not just yet...
If not, then years from now, when the rest of the world has
shunned us (as it should), like the ordinary citizens of Hitler's
Germany, we too will learn to recognize revulsion in the gaze of
our fellow human beings. We too will find ourselves unable to
look our own children in the eye, for the shame of what we did
and did not do. For the shame of what we allowed to happen.
This is us. In India. Heaven help us make it through the night.