Congress And BJP: How Different Are Their Attitudes
Towards Muslims
Saeed Naqvi
If Indira
Gandhi had won the 1977 general elections, it would have been a popular
endorsement of her Emergency regime.
Why would
Narendra Modi’s return after the elections be seen differently from Indira
Gandhi’s after the Emergency? There is a list of failures – the economy, rural
distress, record unemployment, the nightmare of demonetization, GST, throttling
of institutions etcetera.
It must be put
down to the effective polarization by Modi that an even more formidable list of
misdemeanors is less talked about – lynching by vigilante mobs for trumped up
charges of cow slaughter, public lynching of Dalits, harassment of Muslims and
Dalits on charges of love jehad, hundreds of Muslims in jail without trial.
These nasty
ingredients like “revenge” and hate” were not part of the impulse which led to the
Emergency. In fact Indira Gandhi was being buffeted by East-West ideological
currents, externally and internally. Remember the 70s were going badly for the
West. Against that global backdrop Indira Gandhi had split the Congress then clasped
the Soviet hand tightly for the liberation of Bangladesh.
CPI leader
Sripad Amit Dange, Mohan Kumaramanglam, a Communist inclined Union Minister,
Left leaning P.N. Haksar as her Principal Secretary were her advisers. The global
right and its Indian sympathizers clustered around Jayaprakash Narayan’s Bihar
movement in 1974. Senior RSS leader, Nanaji Deshmukh was the master strategist
for this movement.
What Indira Gandhi
called the Jute press was stacked against her. Concerted pressure was beginning
to unnerve her when the Allahabad High Court Judgement, unseating her from
Parliament caused her to impose the Emergency.
However,
Indira Gandhi appeared to have been chastened into Hinduism once she returned
to power in 1980. A touch of Hindu majoritarianism dictated her offensive on
Sikh extremism. This was very much on her mind when she fought the 1982 Jammu
election on a patently communal platform. Operation Blue Star was launched in
this mood, which eventually led to her assassination. Followed by the anti-Sikh
pogrom of 1984.
When Rajiv
Gandhi won the 1984 election with 414 seats in a house of 543, the party
extracted two conclusions from the outcome. First, it was a sympathy wave because
of Mrs. Gandhi’s murder. Second, it was also Hindu consolidation against
minority communalism. I learnt this first hand in 1985 from V.N. Gadgil,
secretary in the Congress Working Committee and a good friend. “The feeling
among Hindus is growing that Muslims are appeased.” How appeased the Muslims
were became clear in the Sachar Committee report of 2005 on the dismal socio
economic condition of Indian Muslims. The Congress leadership nevertheless began
to strategize on the basis that Hindu sentiment had to be respected. Opening of
the temple locks, permitting the brick laying ceremony for the Ram temple,
promising Ram Rajya if Congress won the 1989 elections and so on were dictated
by this thinking. So, Rahul’s temple hopping has antecedents.
The BJP,
smarting under the fact that it had been reduced to two seats in 1984, began to
worry more when it saw the Congress stealing its “Hindu” platform. By way of
damage control, the party elected L.K. Advani its President in 1986. For the 1989
elections, Prime Minister V.P. Singh implemented the Mandal Commission report
reserving government jobs for Other Backward castes (OBCs). This aggravated the
intra Hindu caste conflict. The Hindu caste pyramid was in a state of high
agitation when Advani undertook the journey on a Hindu chariot to Ayodhya to
highlight the urgency of Rama’s temple being built. This was to neutralize the
effects of Mandal. Ram Janmbhoomi-Babari Masjid evolved as Hindu-Muslim
conflict no doubt, but its purpose was more complex.
Hindu consolidation,
with Muslims as the Other, would, over a period of time, mobilize Hindus on the
lower rungs of the caste hierarchy against the Muslim “other”. Instead of weakening
the Hindu structure by falling prey to caste politics, the lower castes were
being accorded a place of honour as Hindu foot soldiers, a powerful infantry of
the Hindutva brigade. Communalism, in other words, was to be a strategy to stabilize
the caste pyramid.
Vigorous social
engineering towards this end was launched by an energetic RSS functionary K.N.
Govindacharya in the 90s. At the leadership level, Narendra Modi, Kalyan Singh,
President Ram Nath Kovind, Bangaru Laxman, Uma Bharti, are all a function of
the party’s sensitivity to the lower castes in its midst. Much more impressive was
the way it went flat out on its “reclamation” and “ghar wapsi” programmes. This
is what Congress has set itself up against sans any social engineering. They both
have a Muslim policy, equally harmful to the community but one’s approach is
quite distinct from the other. The BJP is on a no holds barred anti-Muslim
mobilization spree. The Congress, scared to lose Hindu votes, keeps Muslims out
of the frame. “Willing to wound and yet afraid to strike”.
Thinking on
its feet mostly, the Congress imagines it is reinventing itself as an upper caste
party which once had under its canopy Muslims and Dalits too. Dalits, ofcourse,
now have their own caste parties. Muslims have been shuttling between caste parties
or those candidates who are likely to defeat the BJP. Only when they are wriggling
against the wall, totally cornered, will they willy nilly vote for the Congress.
It is
instructive for the Congress to realize that Indira Gandhi’s Emergency was an
aberration in a settled world order. It embarrassed Mrs. Gandhi herself, which
is why she called for elections. Modi’s excesses are in a world order upto its
waist in fascism.
Will he fit
into this order? Unlikely, because he has to grapple with India’s infinite
variety. Geert Wilders can dream a future in fascism for tiny Netherlands. But Modi
has to dream unrealistically of imposing a uniformity on a multi lingual, multi-regional,
multi religious sub-continent, not yet a classical nation state.
That is why
the dream of the Indian middle class that India is about to become a two-party
system, both party’s representing upper castes will remain just that – a dream.
India will survive and thrive in its strong federal framework.
# # # #
Inshallah! May the federation survive!
ReplyDeleteboth are very much the same.one say tolerate them(muslims) and one say how long shall we tolerate them(muslims),one is congress and one is bjp
ReplyDelete