Does Imran Khan Know He Has Followed
Josh Malihabadi’s Advice?
Saeed Naqvi
Pakistan
Prime Minister Imran Khan has taken the leaf out of great Urdu poet Josh
Malihabadi’s book:
“Badlay
ki rasm jinse wafa mein haram hai
Ehsaan
ek shareef tareen inteqam hai.”
(For
gentlemen of conscience, revenge is an odious response.
When
the enemy expects the worst, do him a favour – that’s noble revenge.)
Whenever
India-Pakistan relations take a turn, for better or for worse, animated
discussions with Inder Gujral (Inder bhai, as I called him) come to mind. He
would dampen my optimism by giving me a Xerox copy of the latest editorial of
Nawa e Waqt. “Read this on your way back home: when this changes, Indo-Pak
relations will improve.”
The
hardline Urdu newspaper was launched in Lahore in 1940 in direct opposition to
Khizr Hayat Khan’s Unionist party which was stoutly opposed to the Two Nation
theory. Khizr Hayat belonged to a distinguished line of landowning aristocrats
whose liberalism derived from his exposure to western education, beginning
with Aitcheson College. Hameed Nizami the founder of Nawa e Waqt was by
comparison more homespun, a journalist and a Muslim League activist who worked
for a Muslim homeland. The idea had to be hurriedly buttressed because
progressive rivals like Saiyid Sibte Hasan, Khawaja Ahmad Abbas and Dr. K.M.
Ashraf were making inroads with a Leftist publication “Opinion”.
The
Progressive, Muslim line was more in harmony with Jawaharlal Nehru’s derivative
of Fabian Socialism, tailored for Congress purposes. It was Nehru’s larger than
life persona that he was able to single handedly carry the project for as far as
he could in his lifetime. It began to unravel soon after him.
It
is the metaphor of our times that the world’s largest statue is not his but
that of his senior colleague, and Deputy Prime Minister Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel. And, to rub salt in the Congress wounds, this statue has been built not by
the Congress but by the RSS.
Nehru
and his cohorts, the ICS variety, were averse to a Hindu India because they
were averse to an image of a muffassil, un-grand India. So they accepted half
of the two-nation: Pakistan, a theocratic state. “Secular” India was essential
for Nehru’s other great passion. That was the only way to keep Kashmir.
Also,
secular India was an advertisement, a blandishment. A thriving, secular state,
without any discrimination would be a foil to a theocratic state. It was to guard
against this “foil” that Nawa e Waqt had to fortify itself up as the “Guardian
of Pakistan’s ideology”. Nawa-e-Waqt. Editor Majid Nizami (he died in
2014) explained why the newspaper had self-consciously adopted a “pro American,
anti communist” stance from the outset. “Nehru’s socialism, his proximity to
the Soviet Union and the sprinkling of Communist intellectuals around him.”
Indira
Gandhi split the Congress in 1969 and flirted with the Communist Party of
India. This invited a huge backlash by a “gathbandhan” (coalition) behind Jaya
Prakash Narayan’s or JP’s Bihar movement in 1974, leading, after a series of
mishaps, to the Emergency in 1975 and Indira Gandhi’s rout in the 1977
General Elections.
When
she returned to power in 1980, she was a chastened politician. She fought the
Jammu elections in 1983 on a communal, anti-Sikh, anti-minority platform. This
appeared to her to be a promising path. In June 1984 Operation Blue Star was
launched; the army moved into the holiest shrine of the Sikhs. In October
84 a Sikh bodyguard shot her dead. Rajiv Gandhi won the December 84 elections
by a massive majority, 414 seats in a House of 514.
Obviously
the sympathy created by Indira Gandhi’s assassination was a factor but the
Congress interpreted the massive mandate differently. It was Hindu
consolidation against minority communalism. The concept of Hindu consolidation,
in other words, became kosher on both sides of the aisle.
In
competitive communalism, temple hopping, cow worshiping, cow urine bottling,
keeping Muslims out of bounds from election meetings, throwing young Muslims in
jails without trial – in all of these the BJP and the Congress are neck to
neck. But it must be strongly asserted that cow vigilantism, love jehad,
ghar wapsi, changing place names and suchlike are areas in which the BJP has
left the Congress sleeping by the lamp post. In her first appearance at the
Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) External Affairs Minister Sushma
Swaraj, otherwise a sensible lady, decided to flutter the flag of Hindu
cultural nationalism. She said that 185 million Muslims in India speak many
languages including Bhojpuri. It must be amnesia of a very high order she
forgot to mention Urdu.
On
Pakistan and Kashmir the approaches of the two parties vary marginally but in
the post 9/11 global Islamophobia, both are quite snug with the global mood. In
the Indian context this acquires a tone of deep saffron. This saffron cannot be
softened because much of the largest percentage of communalism has been
spread by Pakistan hating anchors of Indian channels. They occasionally toss in
Asaduddin Owaisi by way of variety. (Let me emphasize – there are some very
laudable exceptions.)
Because
I remembered how Inder Gujral repeatedly directed me to Nawa e Waqt editorials,
I googled that paper’s editorial page soon after IAF claimed to have destroyed
Jaish e Mohammad assets in Balakot. “Maharaj, aag se na khelo, aman ko raasta
do, Ilaqai ghurbat ko khatam karney mein haath batao, warna ghamand samet,
bhasm ho jao ge.”
“Maharaj,
don’t play with fire, keep the door open for peace, join hands to fight
regional poverty, otherwise you will be incinerated along with your pride.” At
about the time I was reading the edit, an anchor on one channel was growling:
“Yeh khooni darinde jhoot bolte hain” (The blood thirsty (Pak) beasts lie
all the time). In the Gujral framework, what should Imran Khan say?
Nawa
e Waqt’s anti “Bharat” stance was to consolidate the theocratic state against
India’s proselytizing, liberal secularism. Now Nawa e Waqt can tone down
because we are well on our way to becoming a Hindu state. Hindus don’t
proselytize; they don’t convert. But cultivating a hatred for Pakistan,
Kashmiris, Muslims is a means to “pursue” the project of Hindu consolidation.
Only “pursue” not “achieve”, mind you, because consolidating a multi ethnic,
multilingual, multi religious sub-continent will remain a work in progress
till the cows come home. The easier way to consolidate is, ironically,
mentioned in the Nawa e Waqt edit quoted above.
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Asweome sister good bless you
ReplyDeleteCarry on love from Kashmir
Laughable to say Imran did a favour....
ReplyDelete