“Muslim” Meal On Air India To Protect Hindus From “Halal”
Saeed
Naqvi
On an Air India
flight from London the hostess walked down the aisle taking orders for dinner.
She leaned over and asked almost conspiratorially.
“May I serve you
your Muslim meal now?”
“Muslim meal?” I
asked with a start, casting a glance at my equally puzzled wife.
The hostess was embarrassed.
A new detail had been added to her hospitality protocol and she was not
accustomed to it.
The damage, it
turned out, had been done in my office. Responding to a column on dietary
preferences, the person responsible for air reservation had hunted high and low
for a simple non-vegetarian meal. No such meal was listed. Then he spotted
“Muslim meal”. The explanatory paragraph clarified that “all non vegetarian
meals are suitable for Muslims and are prepared in accordance with halal method.”
The journalist
in me took over.
“Fair enough,
you have identified us as Muslim, but surely there are others on the flight who
are non vegetarians but not Muslim?”
Ofcourse, there
are non vegetarians on Air India but they would not accept the odium of Muslim ancestry
simply to indulge their dietary preference. They want to eat meat but as
thoroughbred Hindus.
Two consequences
follow. Obstacles in the way of non vegetarianism depresses the demand for non
vegetarian food. By the same token Hindu passengers feel they are being short
changed. This was reverse discrimination. They see themselves being pushed to
the lower end of the culinary caste system. The demand for non-veg, therefore,
gains in decibel levels: we want non veg, that’s for sure, but one which is
neither “Muslim” nor “halal”.
A three way
dietary division evolves: (1) Hindus not fussy about labels: “Muslim” or
“halal” accept whatever is available. (2) Those for whom realization has been abrupt
that what they have been eating for generations was “Muslim” – halal. Ignorance
is bliss but not now that enlightenment has come riding on an Air India menu.
(3) Simple vegetarians whose tribe, by the way, is growing by leaps and bounds in
India as elsewhere face no problem whatsoever.
For the authors
of the “Muslim meal” idea the first category is the most disruptive because it
has skewed the process of data collection on how potentially vegetarian or
otherwise, India is. This is the key research required for advancing the aspect
of Hindutva concerned with promoting non Muslim dietary practices. If this category
can stand its ground despite the disincentive of being called Muslims and halal
eaters, this non veg constituency might just stabilize, even grow. God forbid,
it may come in the way of full spectrum Hindutva, vegetarianism et al.
The second
category is demanding a non vegetarian meal which is unsullied by Muslim-halal
connotations. This is a new demand. This clientele does not quite know what it
wants; it knows what it does not want in the non-veg arena. It has clearly
asked the catering department of Air India a question which is not easy to
answer: what non veg fare can you serve which is not Muslim-halal?”
Here the
discussion acquires exactly the potential for which it was initiated – to
polarize and, as a trial run, divide the aircraft cabin between vegetarians and
non vegetarians who, the perpetrators hope, would not like to be grouped as
halal-eating Muslims. The cabin is, in this instance, a microcosm of the meat-mukt
India of Hindutva’s dreams.
A quick answer
to halal is jhatka, the method of severing the animal’s head with one stroke,
favoured by Sikhs. The jhatka-halal debate is custom made for an Arnab Goswami
show. Have a devout Sikh, a muscular Mullah and a Bajrang Bali Bhakt, peer out
of three windows. Extract all the gory details on jhatka and halal from the spokesmen
of two distinct schools of slaughter. A possible walkout by the abstemious
Bajrangi may well spur Hindu consolidation on an unprecedented scale.
On a more
practical note, the “shosha” (mischief) started by AI can be put to some
constructive use. A new approach to cuisine may involve drastic change: a non
veg cuisine developed over centuries as a near art form may have to be
jettisoned from official banquets and national carriers. The problem will,
ofcourse, arise when lynch mobs on the lookout for a cause, enter restaurants
advertising non veg fare. Individual non vegetarians may also incur the wrath
of the lynch mobs. In fact a malicious rumour has been floated that the monkeys
that have been let loose on Delhi’s citizenry are an animal loving Minister’s project
directed against non-veg addicts. The monkeys, says the rumour, are being
trained on the Ridge to block entry of meat into non veg kitchens. The producer
of super hit Bajrangi Bhaijan, has threatened to go on hunger strike if the
avatars of Bajrang Bali are involved in operations which have anything,
negative or positive, to do with meat
The hypocrisy
around the cuisine at official banquets at Hyderabad House or even the
Rashtrapti Bhawan until the other day, has always bordered on the pathetic.
There was an insistence on tasteless fare called Mughlai food at a time when
streets named after the dynasty were under assault. The banquets begin with a bogus
“toast” of some flat cola. This then is a good time to take a hard look at the
rampaging Vegan movement globally. Climate change, animal care, fear of
artificially inflated livestock for the table is turning the world to organic,
vegetarian food. Jeremy Corbyn, who may well be Britain’s Prime Minister one
day, is a vegetarian.
The core idea of
the Nouvelle cuisine Air India should be searching for (and not just creating
communal trouble) was available in the “prasada” or “offering” cooked each day
in gigantic vessels at the Dargah in Ajmer. The daily fare followed one golden
principle: it should be acceptable to widest possible range of pilgrims. The
“prasada” was free even of onion, garlic, mushrooms, potatoes or any vegetable
which grows underground. This principle is followed in all major Hindu and Sikh
places of worship. Somewhere here is the answer to Air India’s quest. To
monitor strict vegetarianism in flight, a free ticket may be considered for a
representative of the lynch mob on every Air India flight.
# # # #
Jim Corbett National Park, which is a part of the larger Corbett Tiger Reserve, a Project Tiger Reserve lies in the Nainital district of Uttarakhand. The magical landscape of Corbett is well known and fabled for its tiger richness. Established in the year 1936 as Hailey National Park, Corbett has the glory of being India’s oldest and most prestigious National Park. Check Latest Offers on Uttarakhand Tours Here
ReplyDelete