| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 39, Dated Oct 04, 2008 |
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| CURRENT
AFFAIRS |
|
pros&cons |
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Communalism,
Centrestage
Communal forces have invaded all spaces,
including the minds of secular politicians
SHABNAM
HASHMI
Life and liberty are not the gift of society, state or Constitution but
inalienable rights of every individual. The flame of liberty will glow so
long as there are persons who have guts, grit, and vision to expose and
disprove those nibbling away liberty in the name of expedients.
|
Illustration:
Anand Naorem |
A JOURNALIST OF a well-known television channel recently
asked me why the community to which I belong (of
human rights activists) always takes stands which are opposed
to the stand of the whole nation. Can the shrill
voices of the electronic media replace our whole being?
Can they replace the Indian Constitution and the rule of law? The
strong judgements passed by the media after every terror attack,
every encounter and every arrest of a ‘mastermind’, can sway the
middle classes and the executives working in the multinational companies.
But can they stop a nation from questioning?
Even at the height of Hitler’s rule in Germany, when benches on
the roadside had signs saying, ‘Not for Jews’, someone had the guts to
put a black cross on them, establishing that
such politics of genocide was not acceptable.
Though India is being transformed at a
fast pace where all minorities are being
forced to realise that they are second-class
citizens, the difference is that there are
many more people in India who are challenging
the fascist agenda of those who are in power and others,
who are desperately trying to capture power in the coming election.
The ascent of these forces has been systematic and well planned.
Twenty years ago, most of the secular forces believed that the communal
fascist forces were on the fringe of society and laughed
at the possibility of their ever moving centerstage. Today the situation
has reversed — the communal forces are so centrestage, it is
difficult to differentiate between what is right and what is centre.
They have invaded all spaces and areas including the minds of our
secular politicians.
Among the plenty of weapons that they have used in this journey —
from the peripheral to the Centre — fake encounters occupy a fairly
important position. They have cleverly used different weapons at different
stages. Beginning from ordinary bhajan mandalis, they moved
to more organised kathas, to new age gurus. Working at different levels
over 15 years — shishu mandirs, shakhas, ekal vidyalayas, sant samagams,
television serials, the rath yatras, leaflets, videos, CDs — they
have slowly entered the consciousness of an entire society with targeted
messages against minorities. Only those sections of society who
strongly and consciously contested this ideology could retain their
sanity. After the seeds of hatred were sowed successfully and the harvest
was being reaped, started the more decisive phase — the physical
attacks and largescale genocide. Most of the experiments were done in
Gujarat and the remote areas of other states. For example, the experiment
within the tribal belts started in the late 1960s and early 1970s.Almost simultaneously, the VHP swamis then moved into these areas.
Today, we have reached a stage when an innocent person can be
killed in a fake encounter, and declared a terrorist. A large number
of innocent young Muslim boys are being victimised by the police
on charges of terrorism. In most cases, they
are not shown to be arrested by the police
until many days after their arrest in gross
violation of the law. Their families are also
not informed about their arrest and while in
police custody, they are made to ‘confess’
and sign blank papers. The courts routinely
deny them bail. When the police chargesheet them, the trials go on
almost endlessly during which the poor victims are virtually
defenceless. GUJCOC, MCOCA, POTA and many other such draconian
laws are required only so that the statements which the police force
out of the victims can be considered as evidence.
After years of torture and confinement, when the case against the
victims is found to be baseless, no action is taken to hold police
officials accountable. The young patriotic journalists, of course, are
then not around to report the horrors of all those years lost in the
dark cells of a jail. Stopping the victimisation of the innocents will be
the first step towards finding a solution against terrorism.
(Hashmi is a social activist with Anhad) |