If
Freelance Muslim Spokesmen Do Not Shut Up, Its Advantage BJP
Saeed Naqvi
It is one of the great ironies of our
times that Muslims are a problem for all political parties, except the BJP. In
a totally different way, for Mamata too. Without Muslims as a foil, there would
be no Hindutva gameplan. If, by some miracle, Indian Muslims were to vanish
into thin air, the social edifice erected so far, around which politics is
spun, would collapse. Communities and castes would splinter. A new adhesive
would be required to put Humpty Dumpty together again.
For the Congress, Muslims are a squeezed
lemon. It would be indiscreet for them to say so but it is a fact they have internalized.
Having been copiously used, the Muslim can now be discarded. The party may discard
them but the far right, for its own reasons, can still allege a Congress collusion
with minorities: “look they are silent on Love Jihad, how our women are being
exploited.”
Confronted with this “have you stopped
beating your wife question”, the Congress looks the other way. The other day, a
member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of India expressed his
exasperation with what he called the “Muslim question”. To navigate politics
past communalism, it is important to set aside “the Muslim question” he said. I
suppose “setting aside” means ignoring the issue, not talking about it.
This is easier said than done. How do
you set aside a community whose would be leaders pop up, like eager beavers, on
the most aggressive channels only to be brutalized by the anchors. They may
imagine their being willingly pummeled earns them brownie points with the Qaum
and for their own next life, but in this life their rants only swell the ranks
of the BJP. As a function of deep strategy, the Muslim must shut up.
That the BJP led government has
appointed an interlocutor for Kashmir is welcome because any talk is an advance
on the jam in which Kashmir is. But anyone with minimal common sense knows that
the interlocutor has not been appointed to proceed towards any resolution of
the issue. That would require reaching out to Pakistan.
Such a scenario is unthinkable before
the 2019 general elections. And for a very simple reason. Indo-Pak talks would
bring down the communal temperature. It would cause the saffron in the air to
turn pale. National Anthem, Vande Matram, lynching for the cow, Love Jihad, Ram
Temple are all nudging the nation towards a crescendo, a climactic clashing of
the Cymbals. This carefully crafted backdrop would begin to fray if the
interlocutor were to be infused with serious purpose.
In this national mood, with saffron as
the dominant shade, political parties can quite sensibly avoid responding to
issues the Hindutva tribe is tossing up to provoke Muslims, a sort of
invitation for their most willing but least articulate spokesmen to rush to TV
channels.
It is a tossup whether these solo
operators do more harm to the Muslim cause or the collective called the Muslim
Personal Law Board. Both are self appointed and both, by the sheer quality of
and frequency of their utterances, serve as multipliers for the Hindutva cause.
A contrived feeling of pre eminence in the wider community is so heady for this
lot that it blinds them to the harm they do. It serves the Hindutva purpose to
confer recognition on this growing multitude of spokesmen in the clerical
mould, supremely identifiable as the “other”.
It is not that the Hindutva spokesmen on
show are God’s gift to brilliant debates. They are quite as hopeless as the
counterparts they have been set up to tease. Their job is to peg away at a
nagging length on an issue in such a way as to invite bumbling responses and thereby
add a few shades to the saffron already in the air.
If I am being carried away it is because
the imagery in my mind derives largely from the Hindi belt, Maharashtra and
Gujarat. There being no monoliths in India, the communal interplay in the South,
for instance, is different, except Telengana where memories from Nizam’s rule
have faded but attitudes linger.
Communal politics in Kerala became
possible because currents came together in the 80s. The quadrupling of oil
prices attracted labour from Malabar who returned with irritating new wealth
some of which went into the building of garish villas, the Dubai houses, quite
out of character with Kerala’s austere skyline. Along with the nouveau riche
came nouveau Islam, complete with hijab and other marks of assertion. The
phenomena coincided with Nizam e Mustafa in Zia ul Haq’s Pakistan. The huge
play given to the 1981 Meenakshipuram conversions in neighbouring Tamil Nadu
was the final cherry on the communal cake.
The RSS has therefore gained but not
enough to break its duck in the State Assembly. But it is making inroads
through its undeclared B team, the Congress. The purpose of this configuration is
to devour the CPM.
It is this RSS-Congress interplay, which
peaked during K. Karunakaran’s Chief Ministership, that makes CPM General
Secretary Sitaram Yechury’s proposed line for the 2019 elections so reckless.
He sees Narendra Modi as the ogre which all democratic forces, primarily the
Congress, must combine to crush. His heavy weight Politburu comrade, Prakash
Karat says “plague on both their houses”. How can the CPM support the Congress
which it fights tooth and nail in Kerala? And you never know when they start playing
toey toey with each other.
Yechury’s basic anxiety is to recover
the Kingdom of West Bengal lost to Mamata Banerjee. For this reason, the CPM
coordinated with the Congress for 2016 Assembly elections and came a cropper.
Mamata has mobilized the State’s 30 per
cent Muslim as the central column of her support. While Mamata, with cent percent
Muslim support, is willing to stand on the secular democratic platform against
Modi, Yechury sees Mamata as the main enemy.
To take advantage of the confusion, the
BJP has rushed to preempt the opposition by announcing November 8, the first
anniversary of Demonetization, as Black Money Day. Congress, JDU, RJD, DMK, SP,
BSP, Trinamool etcetera have sworn to dwarf BJP with their very own “Day of
Shame”. Why is the Left missing from this galaxy? Because the CPM is unwilling
to stand on the same platform as Mamata.
Instead, the Left will have their own
show – day of Protest. Does this not weaken the opposition against Modi?
No, no, no, Yechury’s voice wafts
across. We shall walk separately but strike together.
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