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)
Why the slow drip of anti-Muslim poison in India is now a flood
For vast swathes of Hindu society, the pandemic is a
convenient staging point on the route to the marginalisation of Muslim
India.
This week, I exited a family WhatsApp group after listening
to a particularly inaccurate, agitated and rambling rant – falsely
attributed to the steel baron Laxmi Mittal (debunked
last year) – about how Hindus have been “humiliated, subjugated and
massacred”; how Narendra Modi is relentlessly criticised because he
stands up for Hindus; absurd arguments about how secularism isn’t for
India (“who the f*** cares if you are a secular state or not, Britain is
not a secular state, it is a developed country”); and how we were ruled
by “marauders” for 1,000 years.
I used to point out
inaccuracies, flag fake news and gently say what I believed about the
rule of law, the Constitution and – what I have always considered –
India’s compassionate, accommodative way of life. It made no difference
to some family bigots. My efforts appear so quaint, naive and archaic
today.
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Angry
Hindus are everywhere. I am clearly not one. If I am angry, it is at my
fellow Hindus for becoming what they have: insecure, hateful and
hypocritical, willing to eagerly receive the slow drip of anti-Muslim
poison. That slow drip is becoming a flood, unhindered even by the
life-and-death crisis upon us, indeed even encouraged by it.
It is difficult, these days, to keep up with and feel outrage against the verbal and physical attacks, boycotts and other forms of prejudice to which Indian Muslims are subject. The overwhelming feeling is despair and disquiet.
Embracing Islamophobia
At
the urging of its ruling party, with the acquiescence of its Supreme
Court – which is failing to act as a bulwark against majoritarianism –
and the primacy accorded by Hindus to rabble-rousing media, India is
eagerly embracing its Islamophobia.
The feeling among most Muslims
and those of us who have not joined the tide of Islamophobia washing
over Hindu India is that worse may be coming when the coronavirus
pandemic abates. As the gleeful demonisation of Muslims because of the
boost given to the virus after an ill-advised global meet of the orthodox Tablighi Jamaat sect in Delhi indicates, no opportunity is lost, however grim the circumstances.
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In
the daily pandemic briefings in Delhi, an otherwise-evasive government
spokesman spared no details about the Tablighis, even though the World
Health Organisation’s Emergency Programme director disapproved of India’s religious profiling.
“Since
the Tablighi Jamat story broke, Health & Home ministry has spent
more time blaming Muslims than addressing kit shortages, migrant crisis,
& free treatment,” tweeted
health reporter Vidya Krishnan, who faces a barrage of criticism and
abuse from fellow Hindus whenever she points out government
shortcomings.
It does not matter that even the Uttar Pradesh
police – not exactly a force known for its adherence to
non-discriminatory justice – this week debunked
a stream of fake news that used the Tabhlighi outbreak to mock, abuse
and urge a boycott of Muslims. It does not matter that so many
Tabhlighis tested positive because so many were tested:
India simply isn’t testing enough, and once it does, the Tabhlighi
outbreak will likely fade to inconsequence. It does not matter what the
facts are because the Tabhlighi issue is only the latest that Hindu
India and Modi’s government are happy to seize upon to push Muslims into
second-class citizenship.
“All people are not equal,” the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Subramanian Swamy told Vice News in
a documentary released this week. “They [Muslims] are not in an equal
category.” That Muslims are not, or should not be, equals is not an
uncommon sentiment. Swamy may have been kept out of Modi’s government,
but the thoughts of a man once representing the Hindu fringe are now
fairly mainstream. His views – similar beliefs leak out almost every day
– accurately represent his party’s approach to India’s 200 million
Muslims: that they are too large to be a minority; they have oppressed
us for hundreds of years; they should have gone to Pakistan in 1947;
they must be shown their place.
Anti-Muslim bias
Ever
since it came to power in 2014, Modi’s government has revealed an
anti-Muslim bias, stated expressly and repeatedly by members of
ministers and other members of the ruling party and expressed through
discriminatory legislation and strategic silences whenever Muslims are
attacked. India’s anti-Muslim bias is encouraged, empowered and given
life by fake news and febrile imagination, both of which are available
in ample measure in Hindu society.
That is why there has been no widespread disapproval over lynchings related to theft or slaughter –
imagined
or real – of cows, the criminalisation of triple talaq, the legally
tenuous revocation of article 370 in Kashmir, the withholding of full
internet even with a pandemic raging, the clearance to a Ram temple in
Ayodhya through dubious means, and police brutalities and legal action
against Muslims protesting a law aimed at creating the second-class
citizenship that Swamy indicates may be on its way. The coronavirus is
just another staging point on the route to the marginalization of Muslim
India. Samar Halarnkar is the editor of Article-14.com, a project that tracks misuse of the law and the hope it offers.