Resources for all concerned with culture of authoritarianism in society, banalisation of communalism, (also chauvinism, parochialism and identity politics) rise of the far right in India (and with occasional information on other countries of South Asia and beyond)
A country for the cow: The chronicle of a visit to cow vigilante victim Pehlu Khan’s village
The Mewat farmer lynched by cow vigilantes in Alwar has left
behind a broken family, and a fearful community questioning its place in
the Indian republic.
An impoverished dairy farmer, white-bearded, visibly
Muslim, only a few years younger than me, was lynched on a national
highway by a mob of young men with stones and sticks who claimed that he
was a cattle smuggler. He died later in a private hospital. Compelled
and haunted by images of his attack – captured for history on a couple
of mobile phone cameras – a few colleagues and I went to meet his
bereaved family in their village Jaisinghpur in Mewat, Haryana. When we
sat with them, our eyes lowered, we found it hard to find the words to
convey to the bereaved, distraught and terrified family our sadness, our
shame, and our rage.
And yet before I proceed to tell you their
story, in the strange, fraught times we live in, even I feel obliged to
start by underlining that the murdered man and his sons were innocent,
that they were not cattle-smugglers but legitimate dairy farmers. As
though the crime of their brutal mob killing would be any less monstrous
if they had in some way broken the law. Rajasthan’s Home Minister Gulab
Chand Kataria, while criticising the attack, blamed the victims saying,
“The problem is from both the sides. People know cow trafficking is
illegal but they do it. Gau Bhakts try to stop those who indulge in such
crimes.”
His description of the marauders as Gau Bhakts, or
worshippers of the cow, brought back memories from my years as a
district collector in Madhya Pradesh during the Ayodhya Ramjanam Bhoomi
movement, when rioters who terrorised, burnt and murdered their Muslim
neighbours in town after town of communal frenzy were described benignly
in the press and political speeches as Ram Bhakts, or worshippers of
Ram. The felling of Pehlu Khan on April 1, 2017 on NH8 near Behror,
Alwar, by self-styled cow vigilantes, had as little to do with the love
of the cow as the annihilation of the Babri Masjid had to do with the
love of Ram.
This rationalisation for the hate crime echoed in
many television debates. The studied refusal of the chief ministers of
Rajasthan, where the crime occurred, and Haryana, which is home to the
dead man, as well as the otherwise voluble prime minister to express any
outrage or public regret for the killing reflects the same implied
validation. No one from the Haryana state administration has visited
Pehlu Khan’s home. Alwar’s Superintendent of Police Rahul Prakash
categorically told Rediff.com’s
Prasanna D Zore that the 15 men from Mewat, including Pehlu Khan, who
were beaten up by a mob in Alwar on suspicion of smuggling cows had no
verified documents to prove they were in the dairy business and not cow
smugglers, and therefore, “hundred per cent they were cow smugglers;
there is no doubt about that”. But he was reluctantly prepared to admit:
“I don’t know if they [the attackers] knew for sure if they [the
victims] were cow smugglers or not, but according to the police version
they were cow smugglers.”
Before any criminal cases were filed
against the lynch mob, the Rajasthan police first registered a First
Information Report against Pehlu Khan and the young men with him under
the Rajasthan Bovine Animal (Prohibition of Slaughter and Regulation of
Temporary Migration or Export) Act, 1995. I have a copy of the FIR. It
mentions that they are charged under Section 5 of the Act. According to
this section, “No person shall export and cause to be exported any
bovine animal himself or through his agent, servant or other person
acting in his behalf from any place within the State to any place
outside the State for the purposes of slaughter or with the knowledge
that it may be or is likely to be slaughtered.” The men were
transporting five milch cows that had only recently delivered and
carried papers to prove their purchase from the cattle market on Ramgarh
Road in Jaipur. The only cattle that are taken to slaughter are too old
or diseased to yield milk. Why would any person transport expensive
high-milk yielding cows for a slaughterhouse that would pay them a small
fraction of what they would earn if they were sold as productive milch
cows? And to transport milch cows for dairying no papers or permission
are required by the law.
A videograb of the attack on Pehlu Khan and others in Alwar. Therefore,
there was no ground for any presumption by the police (nor by the
vigilante mob) that the men were cattle smugglers. Even so, criminal
cases were registered against them for crimes that could confine them
behind prison walls for 10 years. They were also charged under Section 9
of the Rajasthan Bovine Animal (Prohibition of Slaughter and Regulation
of Temporary Migration or Export) Act, 1995, which makes it illegal to
cause bodily pain, disease or infirmity to a bovine animal. The claim
was that the cows were being treated cruelly because two or three were
packed with their claves in the back of a pick-up van. I wondered if the
policepersons had ever travelled in an unreserved train compartment, a
state transport bus, or seen casual workers transported in the back of
trucks.
By contrast, the police registered cases against the six
men named in the FIR, and 200 others, only after the men who had been
assaulted were charged. Their attackers were charged under relatively
mild sections of the Indian Penal Code – Sections 147 (rioting), 143
(unlawful assembly), 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), 341 (wrongful
restraint), 308 (culpable homicide), and 379 (theft). On April 3,
Section 308 was changed to that of murder (Section 302) after Pehlu Khan
died in hospital around 7.30 pm. Until the time of writing, none of the
men mentioned in the FIR and in Pehlu Khan’s dying declaration have
been arrested. Saddam Hussain, president of Mewat Yuva Sanghtan, alleged
to the Hindustan Times that the police were unwilling to
arrest the named accused because of their affiliation with right-wing
Hindu organisations, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the Hindu Dharma
Jagran and the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad. “Either there is
pressure from the government to not arrest them or police are not trying
hard enough,” he said.
There are echoes here from the earlier
case of lynching of Mohammad Akhlaq in Dadri by his neighbours over the
rumour that he stored beef in his refrigerator, which also stirred
public conscience. Despite country-wide outrage, criminal cases were
registered against Akhlaq’s family whereas a man charged with his murder
who died of an illness in prison was cremated with his body wrapped in
the national flag, in the presence of a Union minister. Any Muslim or
Dalit victim of mob lynching is somehow criminally guilty, and the
killers are nationalist Hindus understandably outraged because the
sacred cow has been threatened or killed.
The lynching of Mohammad Akhlaq in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh, in 2015 triggered country-wide outrage. Image credit: AFPI
return to our visit to Pehlu Khan’s village Jaisinghpur, with my
friends Farah Naqvi, Mohsin Khan, Zafar Eqbal and Rubina Akhtar, on
April 18, 2017. The village is indistinguishable from many others in the
district Nuh, earlier known as Mewat or the home of the Meo Muslim, who
constitute 80% of this arid and water-scarce, impoverished district. We
approached their home with trepidation. We had made the journey because
we felt compelled to offer solidarity in a small personal way, in the
times that we live in, which I can only describe as times of command
bigotry, hate led and spurred from the top.
But we did not want
to intrude in their time of grief, which was already far too public.
However Ramzan Chaudhary, the large-hearted and courageous lawyer (and a
self-appointed spokesperson of the Meo people) who accompanied us,
assured us that our visit would be welcomed by Pehlu Khan’s family
because he felt we were “not the same” as many of those who had
descended on their home in the past two weeks. But we still arrived
there with unease.
Theirs was a small modest village brick home. A
green cloth canopy had been erected outside the house as the family
could not accommodate the visitors who streamed into their nondescript
village every day after Pehlu Khan’s lynching hit the headlines. There
had been before us some journalists, many local politicians, some
religious leaders, and members of the Kisaan Sabha affiliated with the
communist parties. Farah and Rubina were led into the inner rooms and
came back to us an hour later, harrowed. Pehlu Khan’s mother, a wizened
old woman now completely blind, and his widow and daughters were
inconsolable. Pehlu Khan was an only son. He in turn had eight children.
Some were married, including Irshad, who is in his twenties. The
teenaged Arif was also beaten up with him at Alwar. His daughters and
daughters-in-law cannot make sense of why he was killed. His other sons
and grandchildren are too young to understand what has happened.
Outside,
where I sat with the men, the mood was sombre. More and more men
gathered in the hours that we spent there. The elders sat on benches,
the young men squatted on the ground, deferential to age. I opened the
discussion by saying, “We hesitated to come but at the same time we
could not stay away. Because we want you to know that we share in your
grief and in your anger against the injustice that has been done to
you.” They accepted our awkward words with grace, and insisted that we
must first accept their hospitality and only then talk further. We
protested but to no avail. “We have been taught by our ancestors about
how we should treat our guests, even at times like this.” After much
persuasion, we still had to accept some sweetened soda before we began
to talk.
The story of what transpired with them is well known but
as Pehlu Khan’s older son Irshad and others who were part of this
traumatic journey – nephews, neighbours – spoke, the horror for us
became even more palpable. The family owns barely an acre of land, which
yields little for the family. So, they have always raised milch cattle –
cows or buffaloes – and they sell the milk in the village or to richer
landowners in the surrounding villages. They also buy milch cows from
the cattle markets of Rajasthan, sell their milk for a while and resell
them at a slight profit of a couple of thousand rupees. This helps feed
the family. The sons helped out the father and when they could, drive a
pick-up van or a jeep taxi. Pehlu Khan took even his younger son Arif
with him because he wanted him to learn the cattle trade early.
Members of Mewat Yuva Sangthan take out a silent march in Alwar to demand the arrest of Pehlu Khan's killers. Credit: HT PhotoThe month of Ramzan is a good one for milk sales, the best time of the year. People buy milk and curds for the pre-dawn Sehrior the evening Iftar. Pehlu
Khan took a loan as he always did from richer neighbours, many of them
Hindu Thakurs, at an interest rate of 5% per month. They hired a pick-up
van from a neighbour, loaded on it their buffalo that had stop giving
milk to sell, and with Irshad at the wheel, and Arif, a nephew and some
neighbours in the back, they set off for the weekly cattle market on
Ramgarh Road near Jaipur.
This was a market they visited
frequently. The cattle traders knew Pehlu Khan well. He had initially
set his heart on buying a buffalo to replace the one that he sold. But
he was offered a cow that had recently delivered a calf at a lower
price. The cattle seller milked her in his presence and she gave 12
litres of milk. It was a deal. Other villagers also made their
purchases. Together, they hired one more pick-up truck from the market.
Pehlu Khan sat in the hired truck, with two cows and two calves. Irshad
carried three cows in his pick-up van and drove with his neighbour and
friend Asmat. All the cows were beautiful, healthy, with young calves
and bountiful milk yields. In their villages, they describe pregnant and
milk-giving cows as biyahi, or married.
At the Jaguwas
crossing in Behror, Alwar, the pick-up trucks were stopped by an ugly
crowd of about 50 men. They dragged them out, slapped and heckled them,
claiming they were cow smugglers. Irshad says he showed them the
receipts of the cows from the cattle market but they tore those up.
(Fortunately, he was able to get copies from the cattle market later. He
showed us these copies.) They asked the driver of the truck Pehlu Khan
had hired from the cattle market his name. It was a Hindu name. They
slapped him and told him to run away. The other terrified men tried to
run away as well but the crowd caught them easily. Pehlu Khan was the
oldest among them and received the harshest blows. He tried to pick
himself up weakly but the men rained blows on him again. Asmat was
beaten on his back and spine, Arif was injured in his eye. The mob
vandalised the trucks, twisted the bonnet, and threw rocks on the
windscreen and the engine. They snatched their wallets, watches, mobile
phones and all their money. Irshad had Rs 75,000 left from the loan.
They snatched this as well.
The crowd swelled. More men joined in
the lynching; some vandalised the trucks as though for sport, some
watched, a few took videos on their mobile phone cameras, some walked
past looking at the screens of their mobile phones as though nothing was
amiss around them. No one came to their aid.
They lost track of
time as the beating continued – with sticks, stones and belts – and one
by one all the men fell, lying on the road or pavements in twisted inert
heaps, almost unconscious. They guess some 20 minutes had passed when
the police arrived. “They would have set us all on fire had the police
not come.”
The police confiscated their cows and had sent them to a
private gaushala. They took Phelu Khan and orders to a nearby private
hospital, Kailash Hospital, in Behror. It is there that Pehlu Khan died
on April 3. The doctor who did the post-mortem on him told The Indian Express,
“Injuries were the main cause of death. As said in our post-mortem
report, the (thoracoabdominal) injuries were ‘sufficient cause of
death’. The heart attack was secondary.”
Irshad spoke to us
haltingly, in a low monotone. He was still visibly traumatised, and in
mourning. Besides, young people do not talk loudly in the presence of
their elders. The older men spoke of how the families were ruined. How
will they repay their loans? Will they ever get back the cows they had
bought? Even if they ultimately did, would they still be the beautiful
milch cows that they had bought? They would get back some useless scrub
cattle, if any at all. The remaining cash they had taken on loan at 5%
interest, compound per month, had been stolen from them. They would also
have to pay for the vandalised pick-up truck they had borrowed. Their
father had taken all the decisions but he is not there to guide them
anymore.
We also visited Pehlu Khan’s neighbour Azmat Khan. The
young man, father of an infant girl, lay on a cot, wrapped in an old
nylon sari converted into a sheet. He was still in pain, not yet
recovered from his spine injury. He held my hand for a long time as I
sat by his bedside. We looked at his medical papers from the private
hospital where he was being treated. They did not look good. “I hope he
will be able to walk again,” I whispered in English to my colleagues. He
too had taken a loan to buy a cow for selling milk in the Ramzan month
of fasting and prayers.
Outside virtually every house in the
village is tied a cow or two, or a buffalo. “Our children rarely drink
milk. We have to sell every drop to repay our loans and bring home food.
But now they are terrified about what the future would hold for them.
Anyone can come into our houses and claim that we are raising the cows
for slaughter.” They have few other options. The land is dry and
infertile, and the rains fickle. Education levels are low. Thousands of
young men are drivers but getting a driving licence for heavy vehicles
from the notoriously corrupt district transport office is difficult.
Young men over the years got licences from far corners of the country,
probably because they had to pay smaller bribes. But over the last two
years, these licences have been suddenly derecognised by the district
transport authorities. Ramzan Chaudhary alleges this was done out of
spite in this overwhelmingly Muslim district, rendering an estimated
75,000 drivers out of work.
Gau Raksha Dal members out to inspect trucks on a highway in Taranagar, Rajasthan. Image credit: AFPA
few thousand men opened biryani stalls on the highways but in 2016
raids by police checking if the meat they used was of cows or buffaloes
caused them to shut shop. Today, you see a small number of such shops,
and they hasten to tell you that their biryani has chicken and not beef.
And now even dairy farming has become a dangerous vocation. They
do not know what the future holds, how they will feed their children.
We asked how they will manage. “Bardashth karenge, aur kya?”some of them replied, dully. “We will bear it, what else?” “Bhuke marenge”,said a few others even more dismally. “We will die of hunger.”
Some
of them, though, are planning an unusual if heart-breaking act of civic
resistance. They plan to take their cows to the district collector’s
office and tie them to the gate, leaving it to the government to do what
it will with them. “You do not trust us with the cow, and we are no
longer safe in tending them. Let the government then take them over!”
As
we sat with a large group of men under the makeshift canopy outside
Pehlu Khan’s house, the talk returned over and over to their anguish
about the new climate of hate and suspicion against Muslims that they
found surrounded them. It was never like this, they said. Hindus and
Muslims have always lived together like brothers and sisters. But in the
last two or three years, everything has changed. “We are watanparasth, true
nationalists. Our ancestors made so many sacrifices for our country.
They fought against Babur’s army on the side of Rana Sangha.” We wanted
to stop them: please, you don’t have to do this. Why must you feel you
have to prove your love for your country? But the words got stuck in our
throats as they went on insistently. And they would also ask, “Who
loves the cow more than us Meo Muslims?” Go to any Meo village home and
see how much they love their cows, like they are members of the family.
Any evening, see how lovingly they bathe their cows. And yet we are
being called cow-killers”.
By strange coincidence, the driver of
the taxi we had hired from Delhi to travel to Nuh, a young Dalit Sikh,
turned out to be a man who loved cows. He stopped the taxi on the way
and took out rotis from the car and fed them to stray cows. He said he
had worked as a driver for the owner of a gaushala, and in that time had
come to adore cows. When he is off duty even today, he volunteers to
tend stray cows in a gaushala. Returning from Jaisinghpur, our souls
weighed down by all we had seen and heard, we gave him our leftover
sandwiches to feed the cows. I joined him in feeding them, and as the
cows nuzzled on my fingers, I realised afresh that what had transpired
on the highway at Behror had nothing at all to do with the love of this
gentle animal. Nothing at all.
The words of the villagers in
Nuh echoed in our ears. What is our place in this country, they asked us
over and over again. A country where our life values less than a cow’s?