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COVER STORY: CRISIS OF FAITH |
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Secular Nemesis |
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communal rage is sweeping India. Some 12 lakh people participated in the Gujarat riots. The fragile consensus of tolerance has broken down, pitting a sullen majority against frightened minorities. The lofty dream of creating a new Indian is shattered. Secularism was an idea that couldnt sustain itself. By Swapan Dasgupta |
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IIn his autobiography,
French socialist intellectual Andre Malraux narrated the story of a meeting
he had with Jawaharlal Nehru in 1958. What, Malraux asked Nehru, was the
greatest challenge he faced as prime minister? Creating a just state
by just means, replied Nehru without hesitation. Then, after a revealing
pause, he added, Perhaps, too, creating a secular state in a religious
country.
Fifty-five years after Independence, the Nehruvian ideal remains woefully
unrealised. On paper, India is unquestionably a secular state with secure
constitutional guarantees for all citizens. Yet, at a social and political
level, secularism seems a delightful and, occasionally, a grotesque abstraction.
If Britainthe country that shaped Indias Constitutionis
a denominational state with a secular society, India is a secular state
with a society divided along religious lines.
In a grim reminder of the Partition years, India has again become compartmentalised
into Hindu, Muslim, Christian and other categories. The vision of a unified
nationhood is at a discount. The corruption of the soul has a new
avatarit is called religious fanaticism, says Bangalore-based
writer Anita Nair. The Birth of Intolerance
The Indian Constitution was born of tremendously lofty ideals, the most important of which was to fashion a new Indian citizen. The people, philosopher-statesman S. Radhakrishnan told the Constituent Assembly in December 1946, whether they are Hindus or Muslims, princes or peasants, belong to this country ... It is not possible for us to think that we belong to separate identities. It was a noble vision, particularly when set against the daunting backdrop of a vocal and vibrant democracy. It was also a vision riddled with imperfections and unanswered questions. The Congress posited a secular Indiaas distinguished from the confessional state of Pakistanbut the ground rules of secularism were left vague. There was a good reason for this ambiguity: very divergent views on the subject. Mahatma Gandhi was a deeply religious man and he could never countenance the separation of religious morality from political conduct. Nehru, on the other hand, was an agnostic who saw religion as an intensely private matter. Then there were leaders like Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and Rajendra Prasad who saw secularism as a matter of pragmatism. The contradictions were bound to surface. There was a mismatch between
a desire to be interventionist and protecting minority rights. For example,
only minorities were given the right to establish and manage their own
educational institutionsa privilege that led to the Ramakrishna
Mission (unsuccessfully) claiming non-Hindu status in 1984. The directive
principles pointed to a uniform civil code but in practice it was only
the Hindu family law that was changed. When the Supreme Court granted
a Muslim woman alimony in its 1985 Shah Bano judgement, the Rajiv Gandhi
government moved quickly to overturn it by law. Today, the uniform civil
code provokes a strident secular veto. Indian secularism was, in practice,
sandwiched between intrusiveness, neutrality and an indifference to religion.
There were occasional voices raised against the states alleged insensitivity
to majority sentimentsas during the 1966 agitation for a ban on
cow slaughterbut there was a broad political and social consensus
in favour of just blundering along. The link between Islamism and terrorist groups targeting India in Kashmir and elsewhere, created an explosive situation and snapped Hindu tolerance. Even after the growing domestic and international hostility following 9/11, Muslim leaders like Delhis Shahi Imam stood defiantly behind Osama bin Laden, espousing a fanatical cause. The Islamist posturing forced an entire community into the ghettos. The bonding that is a prerequisite for common citizenship broke down. Some would say irredeemably. |
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