Ending
Temple Politics Will Help Harmonize But Pakistan The Cornerstone
Saeed Naqvi
It was delusory to imagine that the
Ayodhya verdict would bring down the communal temperature, even though Muslims
will acquiesce in the judgement after a brief sulk. Ayodhya is part of a much
bigger enterprise. It is, to use my favourite image, a case of two interlocking
triangles.
The caste triangle, is as old as the
hills and which negotiated change across centuries at its own pace, including
the phase of conversions to other faiths. The uplift of lower castes was a
contentious issue throughout the national movement but a volcanic convulsion
erupted only when Hindu interests saw one of their very own, V.P. Singh, subvert
the caste structure by implementing the Mandal Commission Report. Western
notions of democracy, social justice, upward mobility were being imposed on a
uniquely unequal system.
It might have seemed revolutionary to
some but it shook Hindu society to the core. The Hindu riposte was quick and
powerful. V.P. Singh had introduced the Mandal report on 1 August, 1990. On 25 September
1990 BJP President, L.K. Advani embarked on his Rath Yatra from the Somnath
temple in Gujarat to Ayodhya. It was a fiery expedition to mobilize public
opinion for the Ram Temple “exactly” on the spot where Ram was born. Indeed,
V.P. Singh’s provocation came in handy for Advani to implement the BJP’s
resolution adopted at Palampur in June 1989.
In fact Indira Gandhi began to
incorporate a touch of saffron in her own politics as became clear from her
campaign for Jammu election of 1983 when she pitched the campaign against
minority communalism, of the Sikhs in this instance.
Even though Advani raised Ayodhya on an
epic scale to neutralize V.P. Singh’s aggravation of caste, a Ram Temple in
Ayodhya had been central to Hindu pride from the beginning of the Republic. The
first Congress’s Chief Minister of UP, Pandit Govind Ballabh Pant, “accepted”
the installation of the Ram idol under the central dome of Babari masjid on the
midnight of December 22-23, 1949. Nehru asked for the idols to be removed but
Pant expressed his “inability”. Nehru did not punish Pant for his reluctance.
Instead he rewarded him. Pant became Nehru’s handpicked union Home Minister.
When Rajiv Gandhi had the temple locks
opened in 1985 to balance his capricious reversal of a Supreme Court order
giving alimony to a Muslim widow, he was not acting without any precedent – his
own grandfather had will nilly accepted the idol in the mosque. His promise for
Ram Rajya on the eve of the 1989 elections was all part of the continuing
clamour for a Ram temple. By adopting this plank Rajiv was hoping to attract
Hindu votes. The crawl towards the Congress becoming the BJP’s ideological “B”
team had begun.
In fact, what Rajiv Gandhi initiated by
subterfuge on 14 August, 1989, allowing brick laying ceremony on disputed land,
the Supreme Court completed on 9 November 2019. Does the Ayodhya verdict bring
about a closure to the conflict? The way the national mood has evolved since
1947, I do not see the Sangh Parivar having completed its agenda. It can be
argued that mosques in Kashi and Mathura are equally an affront to Hindu
sentiment. I expect these issues coming up down the line, in due course, when
required, because Hindutva has not completed its tasks yet.
What are these tasks? One is to curb the
rise of caste parties which it sees as a fracture of Hindu society. Remember,
the demand for the Mandir entailed the removal of the mosque for which Muslims began
to agitate. Spurred by clerics and lawyers, they dug their heels in. Caste
leaders like Mulayam Singh Yadav spotted an opportunity: they sought to lure
the Muslim away from the Congress by posing as protectors of the mosque. On 30
October and 2 November 1990, Mulayam as UP Chief Minister opened fire on kar
sevaks, or Hindu volunteers who had assembled in Ayodhya in violation of
government orders. Atleast 16 were killed. In hindsight the death of Hindu kar
sevaks must be seen as a defining moment. Muslims embraced Mulayam. (Laloo
Prasad Yadav does not quite fit in the same way because of a different social
structure in Bihar.) But as the Muslim vote drifted towards caste leaders, so
did Hindu consolidation receive a shot in the arm. Deepening of the saffron
shade, by casting Muslims as the “other”, began to show dramatic results in
consolidating Hindus. Straightening the lines of the caste triangle and Hindu
consolidation are exactly the same process. Both processes are as of now incomplete.
To that extent, the clearance of the path towards a Ram temple is only a
milestone.
Narendra Modi appeared on the firmament
in Gujarat, later in New Delhi, blessed by the Gods. The post 9/11 global
Islamophobia, enhanced the tolerance level for an ever more stark anti-Muslim
(anti minority) platform. He gave notice of his intentions in his very first
speech in Parliament in May, 2014. We have to overcome “1,200 years of foreign
subjugation”. As that delightful Congress leader, the late K.K. Tewari told me:
“in his subconscious the Hindu nurses the belief that the Muslim rulers were
foreigners.” But Modi is the first leader to say so.
By firmly opposing the two-nation theory
but, paradoxically, accepting a theocratic Pakistan next door, the founding
fathers muffled the allegations of “double-speak” by their iconic stature as
leaders of the independence movement. The incendiary material for communalism
left behind by them – Pakistan, Kashmir, Indian Muslim tied to beef, love jihad
and terror (the third in the list has been accentuated recently). The triangle
has to be consistently on slow fire to keep sufficient saffron in the air for
the Parivar to proceed on its tasks.
Can this disharmony ever be phased out?
Not by settling Ayodhya, Kashi and Mathura alone. What would be required for
that epochal outcome would involve resetting the corner stone of the communal
edifice relations with Pakistan. That step will open up possibilities in
Kashmir and take the heat off Hindu-Muslim relations. But, then, what happens
to the project of Hindu consolidation?
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Syed Sahib: Please impose Jizya tax on Hindus in India. Distribute it to Pak Generals and Kashmiri "leaders".
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