Thanks To Ardern, New Zealand Today Soothes The Soul
Saeed Naqvi
Those who have
rushed to psychoanalyze 28 year old Australian, Brenton Tarrant, for the
outrage in Christchurch, New Zealand, mosques killing 50 people, are concealing
the reality, possibly without their knowing it. This line of inquiry will not
explain why Christchurch or Pulwama, Utrecht and now Birmingham happened.
When Phoolan
Devi, the low caste “mallah” (boatwoman) shot dead 22 high caste Rajputs in the
village of Behmai, 80 kms from Kanpur in UP on February 4, 1981, she had taken
the law into her own hands. This she had done because no law enforcement agency
had come to her rescue when the very same men had locked her in a room and
taken turns, repeatedly, to rape her over weeks. It was gross injustice she was
fighting.
During the
British mandate over Palestine, Jews formed Haganah a secret, militant
organization – guns, hand grenades et al – to protect Jewish enclaves against
“Arab gangs”. Why was Haganah formed? Perceived
injustice. In 1939 the British produced a White Paper restricting Jewish
immigration. That is when the French built ocean liner, Patria, carrying nearly
2000 Jews to Mauritius was sunk off Haifa killing 267 people. Later, the same
group – its offshoot Irgun – bombed the King David hotel in Jerusalem, killing
28 British soldiers. Both were ghoulish acts. But would Menachem Begin, Member
of Haganah later Prime Minister have seen it this way? According to their
lights, Begin and, indeed, the entire Haganah outfit were fighting British
injustice.
April 13 will
be the centenary of the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in Amritsar. Colonel Reginald
Dyer’s character or a psycho analysis will not shed light on whether or not
police action was required on a scale which killed 1,000 people. The official
British figure was 379 dead. Lt. Governor of Punjab, Gen. Michael O’Dwyer
justified military action on administrative grounds. This is not the way Udham
Singh the nationalist saw the massacre. He turned up in the UK and shot dead
Gen. O’Dwyer in March 13, 1940 at the Caxton hall, now Royal Society for Royal Affairs.
It was injustice he was fighting.
In his trial Udham
Singh said: “He wanted to crush the spirit of my people, so I crushed him. For
full 21 years I have been trying to wreak vengeance. I am happy that I have
done the job.” There are series of such incidents which the state would have
considered acts of terror. The perpetrators have been celebrated as martyrs and
patriot including the great Bhagat Singh. They were fighting an unequal battle
against injustice.
During a visit
to Libya, Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State appeared on global TV making a
V sign and blurting out the unforgettable line, “I came, I saw and he died.”
Even as she spoke this masterpiece of callousness, appeared on the screen images
of Qaddafi screaming, being sodomized by a knife. Would this not have made the
Libyan blood boil with sheer helplessness?
And not just
Libya. Imagine the relentless destruction of Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, all the
9/11wars. Millions are killed. Begins the migrant trek to Europe which all but
shuts its doors, forgetting that just the other day it was complicit in
destroying their homes, their cities and villages.
The samples I
have touched upon are of people experiencing injustice, suffocated and,
presumably, waiting for their time. But the perpetrator of the Christchurch
outrage is in a different category. He experienced no injustice. His phobia,
like that of his fellow murderer from Norway, Anders Breivik, derives from the
contemporary curse called the global media. They have been fed on the post
Soviet Union, post 9/11 wars mentioned above. But they have seen these stories
covered by a media which has mysteriously cast victims as villains. Jean Raspail’s
novel “Camp of the Saints” shows destruction of Western civilization through third
world immigration. This becomes Tarrant’s nightmare.
I was witness
to the launch of the global media in Baghdad on January-February 1991. The Operation
Desert Storm was covered live by Peter Arnett of the CNN. Not to comprehend the
significance of this event is to miss out on the nature of International
Affairs in the post-Soviet period. Remember, the Berlin wall fell in 1989;
Soviet Union came down like melting ice cream in 1991. This was the first time
in human history that coverage of a war was brought live into our drawing
rooms.
The coverage
divided the world into two hostile camps – the triumphant West and the
defeated, demoralized Muslim nations. This critical division got amplified
exponentially as the two Intefadas erupted, followed by the four yearlong
Bosnia war bringing, once again the brutalities heaped upon Bosnian Muslims,
day after day. The climax came with the 9/11 wars and the unbelievable
fireworks over Afghanistan.
With each war
and accompanying global coverage the West-Muslim divide widened. It was this
atmosphere so thoroughly saturated with Islamophobia which shaped the minds of
Breivik and Brenton Tarrant. Leaders like George W. Bush, Tony Blair and
Australia’s John Howard cynically used this “othering” of the world’s Muslims
as a strategy for western cohesion. Fear of terrorism, real or simulated,
resulted in loss of status of foreign offices. Intelligence agencies acquired
saliency.
In India, the
sheer hypocrisy of the elite shrouded and thereby aggravated a corresponding
division between non Muslims and Muslims stoked by our anchors. The new liberal
economic policies of the 90s demanded a multiplication of TV channels. This
coincided with accelerated communalization after the fall of the Babari Masjid
in 1992. Capitalism and communalism joined hands and set the national agenda
conducive to the consolidation of Hindu nationalism. In the ranks of these
nationalist it would not be impossible to find willingness to give a
sympathetic quarter to Brenton Tarrant. But to Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern
goes the credit for having taken the fierce current head on. Do an opinion poll
anywhere: she is the compassionate leader the world is looking for. Donald
Trump minimized the outrage and all but approved of Tarrant. Thanks to Ardern,
New Zealand today feels like a land for pilgrimage to sooth the soul.
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