Can Zawahiri Add
To Communal Cauldron Already Full?
Saeed Naqvi
How
dangerous are Ayman al Zawahiri’s exhortations to Muslims on the sub continent?
There
is an expression in Hindi, “Soney pey suhaga”, suhaga being the powder which
makes gold shine. In a volatile social situation, where communal polarization
is an electoral requirement until key state elections are out of the way, the
Zawahiri slogan may have some short term advantages for the ruling party. It is
perverse to say so but that is the way it is.
In
the division of labour between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP President
Amit Shah, Modi will be the assertive statesman, from New Delhi to the ends of
the world. That is the way he has managed to get himself projected.
The
media has not spotted the paradox. The man who came to power riding the crest
of the biggest media campaign in history has, after having come to power,
distanced himself from the media. He is establishing the rhythm: the media will
be available when he needs it.
In
this he is following the dictum of the genius who marketed the Beatles, Brian
Epstein, the first manager of the singing sensations. For better publicity,
Epstein kept the press at a distance. So far this approach has served Modi
well.
The
more onerous task has been left to Amit Shah, the party president. His job is
to keep pushing the frontiers of communalism, to create circles of Hindu
consolidation around the Muslim individuals, neighbourhoods, villages, markets,
fairs. This is not communalism for its own sake but more as an electoral asset,
from state to state, constituency to constituency.
At
this phase of the Hindu Rashtra project, the al Qaeda’s exhortations will help
Hindu consolidation that much more. In fact Amit Shah may well survey the scene
and proclaim with satisfaction: with such enemies, who needs friends?
With
the sort of defence being offered by the great secular, youth trio of Rahul
Gandhi, Akhilesh Yadav and Omar Abdullah, Amit Shah will score one field goal
after another.
Shrewdly
anticipating more defeats coming his way in the state elections, Rahul has
charged off to the security of Amethi, making cow eyes at TV cameras. Of all
the images he could pick to chastise the Prime Minister, he has settled for one
where Modi looked exceptionally good: competing with a Japanese drum beater.
Modi played the drums with great dexterity, like a Gujarati practiced in dandia
rasa. But Rahul thought he shouldn’t be doing this while food prices were high.
Just
that morning newspapers were full of stories about former Supreme Court Chief
Justice P. Sathasivan being made governor of Kerala without any cooling off
period, but Rahul was focused on the Japanese drums. Yogi Adityanath has not
only declared it a Hindu nation, but has unilaterally changed street names in
places like Gorakhpur. He announced these changes on TV. Does the Congress Vice
President have nothing to say?
Modi
in his very first speech in Parliament had the honesty to blame India’s many
debilities on the fact that it had been under “foreign rule for 1,200 years”. I
disagree with him but I respect him for having said something Congressmen
believe in but do not have the courage to say. They will try to please Muslims
privately but keep publicly mum on that issue. Does Rahul even understand the
nuances of the issue at hand? Front pages of newspapers have been carrying
photographs of men being given bucket baths in city squares as part of the
ritual preparatory to their return to the Hindu fold from Christianity. Love
Jehad is the flavour of the season. Any thoughts, Rahul?
Akhilesh
Yadav in Lucknow and Omar Abdullah, who rules Kashmir from his bungalow in New
Delhi, are a shade worse than Rahul. They have thrown in the towel for the next
round. The word to their partymen is: we are not coming back in the next round.
So help yourselves.
With
such an open field, does Amit Shah need more polarizing material from Zawahiri?
In the established custom of the Indian media, Zawahiri will be sourced to
Pakistan and some high decibel discussions will be mounted in which
masochistic, retired, Pakistani Generals will make guest appearances to be shouted
at. Is it a fix like World Heavyweight Wrestling?
Given
this state of play, chances are that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s mangoes will
be reciprocated with some Gujarati dhokalas only after the elections in Jammu
and Kashmir are over in January. Until then, communalism is an electoral
necessity and an opening with Pakistan is incompatible with this requirement.
Unless, ofcourse, Modi lives upto his reputation of being capable of surprises.
By
this time the nation may well have lived through its most intense phases of
communal tension. Amit Shah’s electoral needs will have been exhausted only by
February. There may be some relief then or there may not be depending how the
Hindu Rashtra project can be navigated alongside “sub ka saath, sub ka vikas”.
Desperate
Muslim youth may at that stage be in search for a rallying force, but I find it
difficult to believe that Zawahiri kind of Islam, extracted from Saudi
Wahabism, will have a burgeoning clientele in India. The danger will arise when
more muscular forces like the ISIS, with their mastery over the new media
technology begin reaching out to pockets of agitated Muslims on social
networks. That would be dangerous because the turmoil in West Asia is a regular
part of the Arab and Western media diet. They have some understanding of issues
from their different perspectives.
On
foreign affairs Indian audiences have no sources of information other than what
is doled out to them by outsiders. We have so far survived being frogs in the
well. But this time a huge tsunami may be drifting in our direction. For nation
not to have its feet on ground will be dangerous. Television channels must
mount informed discussions, along with the staple of shouting matches.
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