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HUM HINDUSTANI: Two questions, two surnames —J Sri Raman
In a television interview, Jaswant Singh asked the anchor and the viewers to “look into the eyes” of Indian Muslims, “an alienated lot”, and see their “pain”. All these years, he has not been caught even once playing the ophthalmologist with the surviving victims of the Gujarat pogrom
My column is devoted this time to two searching questions and two controversial surnames.
Let us start with the questions.
Question 1: What was Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s role in the Partition of India?
Answer: The jury is still out on that one. The Quaid-e-Azam, however, is playing a crucial posthumous role in splitting the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), the political front of the Parivar (India’s Far Right “family”.
Former External Affairs (or Finance or Defence) Minister Jaswant Singh is now also a former BJP leader and member. The party has thrown him out for writing a biography of Jinnah and releasing it on the eve of a “brainstorming session” of the leadership on the BJP’s reverses in the recent general election. As widely reported, the book titled “Jinnah — India, Partition, Independence” absolves Jinnah of all blame for the bloody event of 1947 and attributing responsibility for it instead to India’s Congress party and government leaders Jawaharlal Nehru and Vallabhbhai Patel.
This, of course, is not the first time Pakistan’s founder has caused a furore in the BJP and the Parivar. As widely recalled again, a tribute on Pakistani soil by former Deputy Prime Minister Lal Krishna Advani to Jinnah as a “secular leader” led to the most traumatic phase of the former’s career within the Far Right fraternity. He was divested of party presidency as a punishment, but soon became the party’s “shadow prime minister”, though the voters denied him the substance.
Advani’s rehabilitation, however, did not come before the party firmly asserted its stand on the Quaid-e-Azam in a formal resolution: “Whatever may have been Jinnah’s vision of Pakistan,” said the resolution, “the state he founded was theocratic and non-secular”. A party spokesman said on the occasion that the BJP viewed Jinnah as one of the “main” persons responsible for Partition.
Advani could not but have anticipated the inner-party reaction to his praise of Jinnah. He could not have been unaware of the influence on his party of its ideological parent (of which more in a moment). If he still went ahead with his statement, it was not because he was ready to reveal a radical change in his outlook. Hardly hidden was the political motive behind his homage to Pakistan’s first Governor-General. Advani’s was an attempt to acquire the moderate image of Atal Bihari Vajpayee and thus acceptability to allies, without whom the party could not capture power.
With Advani’s example before him, Singh must have been even more aware of the inevitable consequences of his adventure as an author. He, too, could not have proceeded with the book and its release without political motive. Critics in the party relate this to his rebellious role after the poll debacle. He had said there should be “some relation” between “inam” (reward) and “parinam” (result), provoked by the denial of plum parliamentary posts distributed among his rivals. He can complain no more.
Singh did not exactly stick his neck out in Advani’s defence when the latter faced inner-party punishment for his indiscretion in Pakistan. Advani returned the silent compliment, as BJP cabal banished Singh. Advani showed the same moral courage as when he witnessed the demolition of Babri Masjid, making December 6, 1992 “the saddest day of my life”. He did nothing, either, to see that August 19, 2009 did not become the saddest day of Singh’s political life.
Singh has also been trying to secularise his image after thirty years in the BJP. In a television interview, he asked the anchor and the viewers to “look into the eyes” of Indian Muslims, “an alienated lot”, and see their “pain”. All these years, he has not been caught even once playing the ophthalmologist with the surviving victims of the Gujarat pogrom. He might do so now, after the imposition of a ban on his book in the state. Narendra Modi, the favourite child of the BJP’s ideological parent mentioned before, has acted fast.
Which brings us to our next poser.
Question 2: Who wears the pants in the Parivar?
Answer: In the largely dhoti-clad world of Indian politicians, it is difficult to say. But we know who wears the khaki half-pants in the clan of majority communalism. It is the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
In recent years, we have been witness to a debate among political pundits on the degree of control the RSS has over the BJP. The patriarch of the Parivar has now pronounced the authoritative answer. The RSS only let its displeasure be known over Advani’s ideological deviation. It has preferred to crack the whip more conspicuously in Singh’s case. Advani has an RSS background and has always worn the badge with professed pride. Singh has never been a member of the minority-dreaded outfit.
Talking to a TV channel the other day, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat minced no words of what he has in mind for the BJP. He said there were many RSS members among BJP leaders and stressed that the organisation could issue directives to them. An indirect directive he issued right in the interview was for the installation of a new party leadership, preferably from the age group of 55 to 60. Octogenarian Advani, who wants to remain the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha (Lower House of India’s parliament) for five years, cannot say he has not been warned.
It is time to move on to the two news-making surnames. The first, of course, is Jinnah. If this is a reliable red rag to the “saffron brigade” as the feistier of India’s Far Right are called, so is the tag of “Khan” to the anti-terror security staff at American airports. The surname, in the present instance, belonged to popular Bollywood star Shah Rukh.
Details about the matinee idol’s detention at Newark airport are old hat by now. Several stories about his and other Muslim surnames leading to similar harassment and humiliation of others, and not only celebrities, have already been reported and recalled as an instance of religious profiling. What this columnist found curious, however, was a statement by a BJP spokesman joining in a condemnation of the practice.
Not long ago, India watched the videotape of an election rally oration by BJP candidate Varun Gandhi, which caused a nation-wide uproar (noted in these columns before). A particularly hair-raising line of the hate speech was: “Badey daraawne naam hotey hain inke... Karimullah... Mazharullah... agar raat ko kabhi dikh jaayen... to darr rahen hain...” (These people have such scary-sounding names... Karimullah... Mazharullah... If you ever encountered them at night, you’d be scared...)
Now, if that is not name-based religious profiling, nothing is. The country, however, has heard no clear condemnation of this from either Advani or Singh or any BJP spokesperson.
The writer is a journalist based in Chennai, India. A peace activist, he is also the author of a sheaf of poems titled At Gunpoint
In a television interview, Jaswant Singh asked the anchor and the viewers to “look into the eyes” of Indian Muslims, “an alienated lot”, and see their “pain”. All these years, he has not been caught even once playing the ophthalmologist with the surviving victims of the Gujarat pogrom
My column is devoted this time to two searching questions and two controversial surnames.
Let us start with the questions.
Question 1: What was Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s role in the Partition of India?
Answer: The jury is still out on that one. The Quaid-e-Azam, however, is playing a crucial posthumous role in splitting the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), the political front of the Parivar (India’s Far Right “family”.
Former External Affairs (or Finance or Defence) Minister Jaswant Singh is now also a former BJP leader and member. The party has thrown him out for writing a biography of Jinnah and releasing it on the eve of a “brainstorming session” of the leadership on the BJP’s reverses in the recent general election. As widely reported, the book titled “Jinnah — India, Partition, Independence” absolves Jinnah of all blame for the bloody event of 1947 and attributing responsibility for it instead to India’s Congress party and government leaders Jawaharlal Nehru and Vallabhbhai Patel.
This, of course, is not the first time Pakistan’s founder has caused a furore in the BJP and the Parivar. As widely recalled again, a tribute on Pakistani soil by former Deputy Prime Minister Lal Krishna Advani to Jinnah as a “secular leader” led to the most traumatic phase of the former’s career within the Far Right fraternity. He was divested of party presidency as a punishment, but soon became the party’s “shadow prime minister”, though the voters denied him the substance.
Advani’s rehabilitation, however, did not come before the party firmly asserted its stand on the Quaid-e-Azam in a formal resolution: “Whatever may have been Jinnah’s vision of Pakistan,” said the resolution, “the state he founded was theocratic and non-secular”. A party spokesman said on the occasion that the BJP viewed Jinnah as one of the “main” persons responsible for Partition.
Advani could not but have anticipated the inner-party reaction to his praise of Jinnah. He could not have been unaware of the influence on his party of its ideological parent (of which more in a moment). If he still went ahead with his statement, it was not because he was ready to reveal a radical change in his outlook. Hardly hidden was the political motive behind his homage to Pakistan’s first Governor-General. Advani’s was an attempt to acquire the moderate image of Atal Bihari Vajpayee and thus acceptability to allies, without whom the party could not capture power.
With Advani’s example before him, Singh must have been even more aware of the inevitable consequences of his adventure as an author. He, too, could not have proceeded with the book and its release without political motive. Critics in the party relate this to his rebellious role after the poll debacle. He had said there should be “some relation” between “inam” (reward) and “parinam” (result), provoked by the denial of plum parliamentary posts distributed among his rivals. He can complain no more.
Singh did not exactly stick his neck out in Advani’s defence when the latter faced inner-party punishment for his indiscretion in Pakistan. Advani returned the silent compliment, as BJP cabal banished Singh. Advani showed the same moral courage as when he witnessed the demolition of Babri Masjid, making December 6, 1992 “the saddest day of my life”. He did nothing, either, to see that August 19, 2009 did not become the saddest day of Singh’s political life.
Singh has also been trying to secularise his image after thirty years in the BJP. In a television interview, he asked the anchor and the viewers to “look into the eyes” of Indian Muslims, “an alienated lot”, and see their “pain”. All these years, he has not been caught even once playing the ophthalmologist with the surviving victims of the Gujarat pogrom. He might do so now, after the imposition of a ban on his book in the state. Narendra Modi, the favourite child of the BJP’s ideological parent mentioned before, has acted fast.
Which brings us to our next poser.
Question 2: Who wears the pants in the Parivar?
Answer: In the largely dhoti-clad world of Indian politicians, it is difficult to say. But we know who wears the khaki half-pants in the clan of majority communalism. It is the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
In recent years, we have been witness to a debate among political pundits on the degree of control the RSS has over the BJP. The patriarch of the Parivar has now pronounced the authoritative answer. The RSS only let its displeasure be known over Advani’s ideological deviation. It has preferred to crack the whip more conspicuously in Singh’s case. Advani has an RSS background and has always worn the badge with professed pride. Singh has never been a member of the minority-dreaded outfit.
Talking to a TV channel the other day, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat minced no words of what he has in mind for the BJP. He said there were many RSS members among BJP leaders and stressed that the organisation could issue directives to them. An indirect directive he issued right in the interview was for the installation of a new party leadership, preferably from the age group of 55 to 60. Octogenarian Advani, who wants to remain the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha (Lower House of India’s parliament) for five years, cannot say he has not been warned.
It is time to move on to the two news-making surnames. The first, of course, is Jinnah. If this is a reliable red rag to the “saffron brigade” as the feistier of India’s Far Right are called, so is the tag of “Khan” to the anti-terror security staff at American airports. The surname, in the present instance, belonged to popular Bollywood star Shah Rukh.
Details about the matinee idol’s detention at Newark airport are old hat by now. Several stories about his and other Muslim surnames leading to similar harassment and humiliation of others, and not only celebrities, have already been reported and recalled as an instance of religious profiling. What this columnist found curious, however, was a statement by a BJP spokesman joining in a condemnation of the practice.
Not long ago, India watched the videotape of an election rally oration by BJP candidate Varun Gandhi, which caused a nation-wide uproar (noted in these columns before). A particularly hair-raising line of the hate speech was: “Badey daraawne naam hotey hain inke... Karimullah... Mazharullah... agar raat ko kabhi dikh jaayen... to darr rahen hain...” (These people have such scary-sounding names... Karimullah... Mazharullah... If you ever encountered them at night, you’d be scared...)
Now, if that is not name-based religious profiling, nothing is. The country, however, has heard no clear condemnation of this from either Advani or Singh or any BJP spokesperson.
The writer is a journalist based in Chennai, India. A peace activist, he is also the author of a sheaf of poems titled At Gunpoint