writer in Mumbai, are evidence of how much still needs to be done to build a civilised public sphere in India.
But equally, this also means that the party in power cannot itself be a contributor to what one might call the rationalisation of prejudice. And while Modi’s government may not have had a direct hand in any of these incidents, its ministers and spokesmen have certainly provided plenty of ingenious post-facto justification of intolerance.
A revealing case in point is the Mahesh Sharma, the minister of culture, who when pressed for his opinion on the lynching called the brutal murder an ‘accident’, and argued that the cow was so sacred to Hindus that the rumour of a cow being slaughtered had provoked a mob into an act of barbarism.
In one stroke, Sharma revealed a worldview in which not only are the lives of cows as valuable as human lives, but that minorities have the impossible task of behaving in such a way that they are not even suspected of offending the religious sentiments of Hindus.
Indeed, it was instructive to see just how many politicians from the ruling party saw the controversy as being about the potential slaughter of a cow rather than about real manslaughter. Another politician – the chief minister of a state – declared in an interview that Muslims could continue to live in India as long as they gave up eating beef.
Does this make for a saner country, or a more savage one? History gives us dozens of examples of how arguments that demonise a particular community eventually end up legitimising violence against them by deciding, perversely, that it was the attackers who were ‘provoked’.
The intellectuals who have returned their awards in recent months are trying to bring to the attention of their fellow Indians the dangers of a nationalism that wants to put some groups of Indians on perpetual trial according to standards of their own making. Their arguments must be taken extremely seriously.
But equally, the hordes of representatives of the current regime who appear in the media each day – pointing out some equivalent act or justification of prejudice by another government in the past, or asking why writers don’t protest when Hindus are treated like second-class citizens in other countries, or claiming that all Indians should accept that the Hinduism and Indianness are inseparable, or this week accusing Shah Rukh Khan of having ‘his soul in Pakistan’ – also deserve to be listened to extremely carefully.
They deserve to be taken seriously because they are in effect admitting that the state’s declared commitment to the rule of law is actually a conditional, and not an absolute, commitment, to be first passed through the filter of Hindu-nationalist reasoning.
And they are saying that they have no faith, either, in the idea of India as a distinctive political project to be judged by its own ambitious ideals, not that of the narrower or uglier nationalisms of other countries.
If more than 50 distinguished Indians have in the past two months returned the awards given to them, it may be because it appears to them that although India does have a government, the liberal state that gave them those awards has a greatly diminished authority in Modi’s India.
Courtesy: Aljazeera.com