saiyan0321
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I repeat the battle was lost because the liberals were fighting at the field where they had neither support nor intelligence nor wisdom for the battle. India cannot have western secularism. The founding fathers were not fools and they did understand this fact and it was this gruesome fact that had Jinnah spend an entire political career asking for minority rights or special rights. By the secular definition. Jinnah, who was busy asking for government to make provisions for a muslim minority, does not seem very secular. A parliament that happily continues Muslim personal laws and introduces new and improves versions of personal laws all across the board does not sound very western secular. The liberal left of the Indian left to realize that the secular nature of India was very different from the secular nature of the western world. Where western secularism was based on exclusivity, the Indian subcontinent, home to nations and ethnicities and religions and sects, could not be ignored under an exclusive concept of western secularism i.e. like the Us first amendments. The founding fathers of India realized that they needed to follow the inclusive secular model if they were to keep India united and heck keep Indian government from having to face repeated revolutionary assaults.why did we lose the battle of ideas that prepared the ground for a political defeat? Why has the entire spectrum of Hindu public opinion turned against secularism?
The thing we need to study is whether the British Empire was secular? By all means and logic, people would say that yes since it was not a christian empire and a religious empire is a theocratic empire. If you are not a theocracy, are you western secularist?
The british empire, with its vast and large territories, understood one very important thing that if the central government is to remain in absolute power then it cannot ignore all those religions and sects and ethnicities so it also did what various empires in history did and what Indian government did which was to take upon themselves the burden of all religions and form an inclusive concept of secularism. The liberal left in India has failed to grasp that the greatest glue and the most localized version of secularism was an inclusive version where the government would pass various personal laws or laws which would impact only single society.
What @Indus Pakistan says when he points to examples of Japan or Turkey is the action of a strong dictator or autocracy or any form of 'no opposition' entity which brings forth western reforms that would forcibly bring about an exclusive nature of governance in that area where an effort would be placed to create a society where religion becomes an individual thing rather than a collective because when it becomes a collective, when it creates a collective identity then the government will struggle with exclusive nature of secularism and either they would pander to the theocratic majority i.e Pakistan and Islam or they would try to take a burden of treating all religions equally but they would be treated within the government and that is what we witnessed with India where it tried to take upon itself the burden of all religions and their personal laws. Religion in our region is a collective and a very strong collective thus we have demands for personal laws which the government has to fulfill after all f the government does not fill it with personal laws then it must fill with a single law that is enforced upon all individuals.
Let me give you an example. Sunni and Shia an example of a collective. Now if a country that has significant populations of Sunni, Shia and Hindu and Sikh, all having their own personal cultures and laws, passes a law that bypasses all their personal laws and enforces a set system, would those collective take it lying down? would they not rally and protest and burn tyres and shops? Now lets say a nascent state coming out of a fractured state is now on the cross roads where it has two options. Either give in to personal laws and treat all religions equally or make one code and bring all communities under it? How would you see that new state make which choice?
The collective will struggle and as time passed by the collective is very strong. Indian liberals need to understand this that foreign concepts cannot be exported especially in our areas which are so divided. They needed to fight the battle for inclusive secularism but fought for a garbled version. They need to decide which brand of secularism and what it will bring because if western secularism is the answer for liberal left then how is a Uniform Civil Code a negative thing in their eyes?
Pratap’s answer is attractive: “a new freedom struggle to salvage individual dignity and rights”
You dont need a new freedom struggle but to understand the old one. How and why it was fought and under what principles it was fought and what carried it far and whether it was abandoned or not? Why did the right rise and whether the rise of the right is because of the liberals that spoke of a religiously exclusive government yet supported religiously inclusive acts of the government? or is it because the inclusive nature of the government allowed for a majority entity to usurp through that inclusive nature of the government and are now bringing forth a majoritarian theocracy?
In the end the Indian liberal left must decide what path they are taking and stick to that path with utmost determination without compromise.
Ataturk was a great leader but he had alot of things going for him and even that powerful man had to place Islamic in the 1924 Constitution ( albeit he removed it in 1929 amendment or was it 1934 amendment, no i think it was 1929 amendment) nevertheless even that guy had to place it and Turkey was not that collective as we are. If the Ottoman government was dreaming of grand turkish ethnic state in World War I rather than an Islamic one, then you can imagine how religious or irreligious the Turkish bureaucracy and elites were. We dont have quarter of those things going for us and when i say us i mean both our nations.
This is a great debate that you guys need to have immediately and with great haste and great wisdom and rather than mourn secularism death, utilize the intelligentsia to ask what form of secularism will work here and how it can be implemented and told to the masses?