Meaning Of Latest Turn In Kashmir Lies Outside The State
Saeed
Naqvi
Two policemen
leading the mob which ultimately lynched a Muslim in Hapur is, ofcourse, part
of familiar communalism which has to be revved upon to a higher pitch in order
to prepare the ground for the General Elections in 2019. The animal to be
protected is not the cow, but power.
For this
ultimate goal, incidents like the one in Hapur and the more ghoulish ones
before it, hundreds of them, are all essential to maintain conditions of edgy,
combustible intolerance. Nothing else seems to be working. Why not continue
playing the game one knows best?
An
accumulation of such incidents, even their simultaneous eruption on a large
scale, amplified by the media, can whip up majoritarianism wherever Muslims are
visible and where the majoritarian current has not been weakened by caste
polarization. This applies much more to what the British called the “cow belt”
but which is more accurately described as the “Hindi belt” – UP, Bihar,
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh plus Maharashtra and Gujarat.
The 2019
Kurukshetra has to be organized, mobilized, galvanized, whipped up (with the
media in tow) only by anchoring communalism to a higher purpose. In other
words, “nationalism” has to be invoked. Cow and Love Jihad cannot be given the
elevation of nationalism. Mere communalism results in finger pointing at the
state apparatus; nationalism justifies the deployment of this apparatus. Whether
this deployment is for a national or the nationalist’s cause is open to
question.
Cow and Love
Jihad cannot be posited as harbingers of national danger. They are not issues
endangering national security.
This is where
the new turn in Kashmir comes in. Polarization on a massive scale is the
electoral requirement now that 2019 looms. This polarization would have been
implausible with the BJP in chummy proximity to the PDP’s Mehbooba Mufti in
Kashmir.
By sliding
away from Mehbooba in the state assembly, the BJP has turned its back on the
Muslims of the valley, ofcourse. It has also, in effect, freed millions of
Hindutva cadres across Bharat Varsha to blow conch shells heralding the great
2019 epic.
The tearing
hurry in which the Partition of India was affected may have been one reason why
our founding fathers were unable to visualize what we face today. Progressive
intellectuals may dismiss The Guilty Men of India’s Partition by Ram Manohar
Lohia and The Tragic Story of India’s Partition by the late H.V. Sheshadri,
Gen. Secretary of the RSS until 2000. But would they dismiss with equal
contempt Maulana Abul Kalam Azad’s India Wins Freedom, particularly the crucial
30 pages which were kept in the custody of the National Archives until 1988?
The Maulana is worthy of being read again today.
By the act of
Partition and the sleight of hand in Kashmir, India trapped itself into a
triangle. This truth has to be continuously repeated because the Indian mind is
in the drill to chant a mantra faster than it is to understand a shloka. The
three sides of this triangle are actually three axes which are New
Delhi-Kashmir; India-Pakistan; Hindu-Muslim. These three axes are, in effect,
one comprehensive complex of issues. As in a geometrical theorem, the triangle
has to be addressed as a whole. It cannot be sorted out axis by axis, one side
after another.
If Ram Madhav,
the BJP’s point man for Kashmir, marches off to Srinagar with a carte blanche
from the High Command to solve the problem at any cost, there is nothing he can
achieve without bringing Pakistan into the bargain. Activation of these two axes
will have an impact on the third, Hindu-Muslim axis. This would entail the
communal temperature coming down considerably. Will that serve the electoral
aims of the party in power in New Delhi?
Ofcourse, it will
not, and here, to complicate matters, another triangle comes into play. Since
the 80s and 90s the primary triangle has become entangled with a very durable
caste triangle. The caste pyramid or triangle instead of being left to social
forces, time and attrition to equalize at its own pace, was aggravated by the
sudden eruption of caste politics in North India in the wake of the Mandal Commission.
Communal politics is the upper caste strategy to manage the caste upheaval from
below. The upper caste or the ruling class formations project Muslims and other
minorities as the “other” to keep the Hindu flock together, the Pyramid in some
state of repair. The lower castes, likewise, would like to co opt the Muslim as
an enabler in their bid for power and equality.
The Hindu
ruling class in its Hindutva Avatar is averse to vertical or horizontal
fragmentation. A federal India, corresponding to its regional diversity is
anathema to the votaries of Hindu Rashtra. The preservation of this unitary
Bharat is an article of faith with those controlling the Delhi Durbar. To
mobilize masses towards this end requires a constant harping on an external
enemy in cahoots with the enemy within.
The enemy
within can be manipulated along the two internal axes of the triangle: New
Delhi-Kashmir and Hindu-Muslim. The India-Pakistan axis, essential to complete
the triangle cannot be played according to New Delhi’s will alone. External
stakeholders include China, Russia, Central Asia and the US. As Charlie
Chaplin, having fallen into a drum, his feet and neck protruding in an awkward
loop, takes his hat off in an attempted bow, and announces: “Ladies and
gentlemen, we are stuck!”
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I really hope this year's Amarnath Yatra is not made into another Godhra!
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