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Haj subsidy: Inaction of Muslim leaders allowed BJP to perpetuate bogey of minority appeasement
Hindutva’s selective secularism is suspect.
Amit Dave/Reuters
The Bharatiya Janata Party, the political wing of a
Hindu supremacist organisation that is committed to turning India into a
Hindu Rashtra, seems to have discovered to its glee that even secular
means can be useful in the pursuit of a communal end. The latest example
of this is the scrapping of the Haj subsidy. What is more, this helps
the myth promoted by the BJP and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh that
political parties calling themselves secular are in fact
“pseudo-secular” and that the lotus, the BJP’s election symbol, is the
sole representative of true secularism in India. What could be better
from the perspective of the brotherhood in saffron?
When
asked for the government’s view on a petition filed by Muslim victims of
triple talaq – instant, unilateral divorce that is pronounced only by
men – the Narendra Modi government had no hesitation in telling the
Supreme Court that the practices of triple talaq, nikah halala (the
stipulation that a divorced Muslim woman cannot remarry her former
husband until she marries and divorces another man after having sex with
him), and polygamy among Indian Muslims must be struck down as
unconstitutional. Which thinking person would disagree that such
practices discriminate against women and must therefore be banished? On
August 22, the Supreme Court “set aside”
the practice of triple talaq, while two of the five judges on the
Constitution bench prompted that a new law be passed by Parliament on
the issue. Advantage, BJP and its parivar.
In the Winter Session of Parliament, which began on December 15, the Modi government passed
the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Bill, 2017, in the
Lok Sabha. While declaring triple talaq as “void” and “illegal”, the
Bill criminalises the practice. It proposes a three-year jail term for
men who violate the law. This is not the place to delve into the Bill’s
serious flaws, including its implicit communal intent. But one must
remember that none of the major self-proclaimed secular parties dared to
vote against the Bill in the Lok Sabha lest their commitment to
secularism be scrutinised.The Bill was held up
in the Rajya Sabha but only because the government refused to accede to
the proposed amendments. No one questioned the Modi government’s
intent. Advantage, the BJP and its parivar.
Then there is
the new policy of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance government
regarding women travelling to Mecca, Saudi Arabia, on Haj. This is a
pilgrimage that all Muslims are enjoined to go on at least once in their
lifetimes. In his Mann Ki Baat radio address last month, Prime
Minister Modi said that his government would allow groups of Muslim
women above the age of 45 to travel on Haj unescorted by mahram – male
relatives they are prohibited from marrying under Islamic law. In this
case too, the BJP emerged again, smelling of roses. The Union Minister
for Minority Affairs, Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, has seized every opportunity
to let the world know that this was something the Congress could well
have done but chose not to. Once again, advantage, BJP and its parivar.
The
scrapping of Haj subsidies is the latest move in the BJP’s ostensible
pursuit of secular politics. “This is part of our policy to empower
minorities with dignity and without appeasement,” Naqvi has told the
media. Nothing demonstrates the cynicism with which the BJP clothes its
communal politics in a secular garb more than the bogey of “appeasement
of minorities”. Foreign
Minister Sushma Swaraj speaks with pilgrims in New Delhi on June 16,
2015, ahead of flagging them off on their journey to Mount Kailash in
Tibet. (Photo credit: Prakash Singh/AFP).
Sangh Parivar propaganda
Since
the 1980s, the propaganda machinery of the BJP and the Sangh Parivar
has successfully used the appeasement canard to demonise Indian Muslims.
Throughout this period, the Haj subsidy for Muslims figured prominently
in the long list of alleged appeasements. It sounds like a legitimate
grievance on the face of it. After all, what business is it of a secular
state to subsidise religious activity? This secular principle, however,
has never been the basis for the Sangh Parivar’s angst. The BJP, RSS
and the rest of the saffron brotherhood has never had any issue with the
government subsidising Hindu religious yatras.
According to official statistics, since the Supreme Court’s 2012 order
to end Haj subsidies over a 10-year period, the total subsidy from the
Union government has been scaled down year after year, from Rs836 crores
in 2012-’13 to Rs408 crores in 2016-’17. But besides the Haj subsidy,
the Union government also provides a subsidy to Hindu pilgrims for the
Kailash Mansarovar Yatra. It organises the yatra to Tibet, spending
money on facilities for pilgrims and on their security.
State
governments also chip in with this and other yatras. For instance, the
previous Samajwadi Party government in Uttar Pradesh used to give a
subsidy of Rs 50,000 per pilgrim for the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra. The
Adityanath government doubled
this amount shortly after it took over last year. Nearly a dozen state
governments also provide subsidies or fully paid pilgrimages to the Char
Dham Yatra – which entails going on a circuit of Badrinath, Kedarnath,
Gangotri and Yamunotri in Uttarakhand – as well as the Sindhu Darshan
Yatra in Ladakh. Yet, the BJP and Sangh Parivar have never questioned
such widespread appeasement of Hindus in secular India.
The matter of gender justice
What
is true with regard to a secular state’s subsidy for religious
pilgrimages is equally true about the issue of gender justice. The same
Modi government and the BJP who swear by their “Muslim sisters” appear
to be least concerned over the plight of deserted Hindu wives
who far outnumber the victims of triple talaq. Nor has the Modi
government said a word about the repeated demand of the Congress party
to reintroduce the lapsed Women’s Reservation Bill, 2008. Given the
Congress’s support, the Bill is certain to sail through both houses of
Parliament.
If Hindutva’s selective secularism is
suspect, the Haj subsidy issue also highlights the tactical myopia of
the self-proclaimed secular parties as well as that of the Muslim
religio-political leadership. If state subsidies to religious
observances of all faiths is a given in the Indian version of
secularism, what has prevented governments run by secular parties from
running sustained advertisement campaigns to highlight the fact that
Hindus are being appeased no less than Muslims?
It is
interesting to note that both religious leaders and political leaders
like Asaduddin Owaisi have welcomed the scrapping of the Haj subsidy.
This is not surprising for various reasons. One, this subsidy was never a
demand of Muslims. Two, Haj is an obligation only for Muslims with
means, and, three, the subsidy benefited national carrier Air India, not
the pilgrims.
Considering that Muslims across the board
in India were so clear on this, what prevented them from foiling the
Sangh Parivar’s three-decade long anti-Muslim propaganda by proactively
launching a nationwide movement to demand the scrapping of the Haj
subsidy? Imagine what that might have done to the perception about
Muslims in India. Javed Anand is Convener, Indian Muslims for Secular Democracy and co-editor, Sabrang India.