The
acquittal of Swami Aseemanand and others in three cases of “Hindu terror”,
including last week in tThe Samjhauta Express case, due to lack of evidence,
demonstrates the sinister nature of the plot to paint Hindu terror as a threat
to the “idea of India”. – Minhaz Merchant
Over
several years, a myth has been carefully manufactured that “Hindu terror” poses
an existential threat to Indian Muslims, Christians and other minorities.
During
the Congress-led UPA-1
and UPA-2 governments, this myth
was given a label—“saffron terror”.
The
crafting was meticulous.
The
reported Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorist, Ishrat Jahan, killed by the Gujarat
police, became a secular cause célèbre. Websites sprang up describing her as an
innocent college girl, murdered apparently on the orders of then-Chief Minister
Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah. The narrative was smoothly taken up
by certain co-opted media. In Parliament, Home Minister Shivraj Patil spoke
darkly of “Hindutva terrorism”.
P.
Chidambaram, then finance minister, warned of the dangers of saffron terror.
Terrorism, he reportedly said, had no religion—but it had a colour.
Rahul
Gandhi showed an early predilection for backing such subverted narratives. He
reportedly told a visiting American envoy, in a conversation leaked by
Wikileaks, that right-wing terror was more dangerous to India’s integrity than
Islamist terrorism.
In
November 2008—as if to cruelly mock that
assertion—LeT terrorists killed 166 people in two Mumbai hotels, a Jewish outreach
centre and Mumbai’s largest railway station, over three and a half days of
rampaging terror.
The
acquittal of Swami Aseemanand and others in three cases of “Hindu terror”,
including last week in the Samjhauta Express case, due to lack of evidence,
demonstrates the sinister nature of the plot to paint Hindu terror as a threat
to the “idea of India”.
By
aligning its position with Pakistan, against the court’s acquittal of Swami
Aseemanand, the Congress has once again revealed where it stands on “saffron
terror”—the wrong side of history.
Comments
by Sam Pitroda, Congress president Rahul Gandhi’s senior advisor, apparently
questioning the Jaish-e-Mohammed’s role in the Pulwama terror attack and the
efficacy of the IAF’s Balakot air strikes, underscore deep fault lines in the
Congress.
A
cottage industry now exists that also promotes the bizarre position that
“saffron terror” is different from “Hindu terror”—this is a direct fallout of
the realisation by the Congress and its so-called secular bedfellows, such as
the Samajwadi Party (SP), the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and the Left, that
conflating terrorism with Hinduism loses votes.
Hence,
the painstaking effort to differentiate “saffron terror” from “Hindu terror”.
Meanwhile,
Rahul Gandhi’s attempted transformation into an observant Hindu, praying at
temples, paying homage to the holy Ganga and visiting sadhus, has been met with
an understanding wink from the Congress’ faithful Muslim vote bank.
Muslims
know which side Rahul is really on. His temple-love, they nudge each other, is
to win elections. Don’t worry about it. He’s our man.
The
foreign media is puzzled by all this chicanery.
The
Economist noted dolefully that the Congress is no longer “secular”. In a recent
cover story on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, it wrote: “The BJP’s main
opponent, the Congress party, has largely dropped talk of secularism. Since
winning the state of Madhya Pradesh in December, Congress has outdone the BJP
on cow protection, budgeting millions to build shelters for retired cattle. Its
national leader, Rahul Gandhi, now punctiliously visits temples.”
It
added unctuously: “The rival visions confronting India’s 900 million voters have
rarely been so sharply defined. Hindu nationalists regard India as a nation
defined by its majority faith, much like Israel or indeed Pakistan. On the
other side stand those who see India’s extraordinary diversity as a source of
strength. For most of the country’s seven decades, multicoloured secular vision
has prevailed. But the orange-clad Hindutva strain has grown even bolder. Under
Mr Modi, the project to convert India into a fully-fledged Hindu nation has
moved ahead smartly.”
The
Economist’s understanding of India’s complexity has never been particularly
sophisticated.
Modi
has, in fact, done less to drive the Hindutva agenda than both his detractors
and benefactors expected. The Economist notes this without recognising,
artlessly, how it contradicts its earlier argument on Modi’s Hindu
nationalism—“The demand to erect a Ram temple in Ayodhya has not progressed,
either. The issue has been stalled in courts for decades. This has not helped
Mr. Modi’s standing with the Hindu religious establishment. At this year’s
Kumbh Mela, several senior religious figures seemed unhappy. They have been
talking of nothing but Ram, Ram all these years, and now they ask us to stop?
mutters Swaroopanand Saraswati, the head of two of Hinduism’s most prestigious
monasteries. Another high-ranking holy man, his forehead streaked with
turmeric, complains that the BJP and RSS are trying to hijack the faith while
doing little for issues such as protecting the sacred Ganges river.”
Clearly,
Modi isn’t quite the Hindutva icon people expected—it shouldn’t surprise anyone
with, unlike The Economist, a passing knowledge of Indian politics.
During
his more than a decade tenure as chief minister of Gujarat, Modi ran the Vishva
Hindu Parishad (VHP) out of the state, demolished temples that encroached on
public spaces, and sent the VHP’s fire-breathing president Praveen Togadia into
near-oblivion.
~
~ ~
Hinduism
has more than one billion adherents worldwide. The other two major
religions—Christianity and Islam—have respectively two billion and 1.6 billion followers globally.
Uniquely
though, all but around 25
million (2.5%)
of Hindus
live in one country, India—that is a concentration level of 97.5% in one nation.
By
contrast, Christians and Muslims are widely dispersed. The country with the
largest concentration of Christians is the United States. But even its 300 million Christians make
up only 15% of two billion Christians
worldwide. Islam is even more dispersed. Saudi Arabia, the custodian of Islam’s
holiest mosques in Mecca and Medina, has 33 million Muslims—just over 2% of 1.6 billion Muslims
worldwide.
The
reason, of course, is the sword and the gun.
Christianity
proselytised with gunships, Islam with swords. As a result, the subcontinent,
with nearly 600 Muslims in India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, comprises nearly 40% of the world’s total
Muslim population.
And
Hinduism? It never proselytised. Its monks went to China, Cambodia, Indonesia
and further east to share knowledge—not to convert. The great temples of
Cambodia and Indonesia are testament to the benign influence of Hinduism.
The
challenge for India’s one billion Hindus now is to embrace modernity, rise
above caste that holds so many back, and make Hinduism the all-embracing mother
religion it was always conceived to be. – Daily-O, 25 March 2019
»
Minhaz Merchant is the biographer of Rajiv Gandhi and Aditya Birla. He is a
media group chairman and editor, and the author of The New Clash of
Civilizations.
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