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Popular Muslim Stereotype As Opposed To An Official one
Saeed Naqvi
On Thursday, 30 July, 2015, two
high profile burials took place, almost formalizing new stereotypes of Indian
Muslims. A former President of India and
the other a convicted terrorist, were buried in graveyards as far removed as
Rameswaram in Tamil Nadu and Mahim in Mumbai. The President was given a state
burial. The “convict” received a popular burial, one befitting an iconic
figure.
The old stereotypes showed
Muslims as hubble-bubble smoking, paan chewing debauches, reciting Urdu poetry,
surrounded by nautch girls. Or, they were “Qasais” or butchers who bathed only
on Fridays, married several times and multiplied like rabbits. By now these
images had begun to pall. New stereotypes were required for propagation.
President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam
received a state funeral. Army, Navy and Air Force saluted someone billed as
India’s most popular Head of State. The occasion was given further elevation by
the presence of Prime Minister, Narendra Modi and important members of his
cabinet.
His humble beginnings were in
constant focus. This brilliant scientist came from a family of fishermen, self
taught, deriving greatly from the Hindu ambience of Rameswaram. He read the
Gita, studied the Vedas, played the Veena. He accepted Hindu culture without
juxtaposing it against any of his own. He was the perfect example of what
former BJP President Murli Manohar Joshi famously described as a “Mohammediya
Hindu”.
An irony attended the two
burials. Kalam’s funeral was stately, suitably somber, but lacking in
spontaneity. A spontaneous, emotional crowd, about 15,000 strong, thronged Mumbai’s
Bada Qabristan. This, despite TV channels blacking out the event – under
official instruction. In the popularity stakes, Memon would win by many lengths.
Does this imply that Indian Muslims stand four squares behind terrorists? A resounding
no. They are with Memon because they do not have an iota of faith in the criminal
justice system when it concerns Muslims. Sad, but true.
The establishment, on the other
hand, was bringing out in bold relief the image of its most acceptable Indian
Muslim distinct from the Saiyyid, Pathan, Sheikh, stereotypes.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi,
in his very first speech in Parliament in May 2014, blamed India’s backwardness
on 1,200 years of “ghulami”, which means slavery or serfdom. In one sentence
Modi, had dismissed the entire Muslim period in India as “alien” and
repressive. In Modi’s framework, Aurangzeb, for example, falls in the category
of foreigners. Renaming of Aurangzeb Road to Abdul Kalam Road is in that
sequence.
It would have been comforting
to imagine that Nadeswaram player Sheikh Chinna Maulana Sahib, great Kathakali
singer Kalamandalam Hyderali, music director Allah Rakha Rahman would, like
Kalam, be acceptable to the likes of Modi. They were converts who retained “Hindu”
culture. But this morning’s newspaper upsets even this thought. Kerala’s powerful
Mathrubhumi newspaper was persuaded by Hindutva groups to discontinue M.M.
Basheer’s series on Ramayan. Abuses were heaped on the editor as well as
Basheer. The argument was that a Muslim cannot understand Rama’s Godliness.
Let us, in the meanwhile, gauge
the extraordinarily large crowd from Memon’s house in Mahim to the Bada
Qabristan. Was it a ringing vote of no confidence in the Indian state’s
communal partiality? The crowd had been requested by Memon’s family not to
raise slogans. This request was heeded. Why did Muslims turn up in such large
numbers for the burial, despite the government’s ‘gag order” on the media?
The BJP leader and governor of
Tripura, Tathagata Roy tweeted. “Intelligence agencies should keep a tab on all
who attended Yakub Memon’s corpse. Many are potential terrorists.”
A more sensitive response,
appeared in writer Aakar Patel’s column in Outlook magazine. The crowds had not
come to protest. “They had come to sympathise because they too were victims.”
This is not part of the routine Muslim narrative of victimhood. This is
specific to the sequence of events beginning with the demolition of Babari
Masjid on December 6, 1992. These led to Mumbai riots of January-February 1993 which
provoked the Mumbai blasts of March 12, 1993.
It is official policy to deny
linkages between the three incidents. But Justice B.N. Srikrishna in his
Judicial Inquiry Commission into the Mumbai riots had concluded:
“One common link between the
riots of December 1992 and January 1993 and the bomb blasts of 12 March 1993,
are that the former have been a causative factor for the latter. There does
appear to be a cause and effect relationship between the two riots and the
serial bomb blasts.” Also, why did successive governments in Maharashtra not
have the courage to name politicians the report heaps all the blame on?
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