Premonitions about false Nationalism and Violence

It occurred to me as I was ruminating about the content and tenor of
certain Facebook posts about the Naga rebel leader Isak Chishi Swu’s death
that a good number of the young generation are out rightly obscured by the
false sense of nationalism which has been time and again promoted, rather
read propagated, by Delhi since Independence of India. In specifically
mentioning Delhi I categorically blame every power that has reigned the
country from The Throne at the nation’s capital, using the same
divide-and-rule tactics taught by the Colonial rulers, which in later years
proved as the most effective tool at the hands of the wily politicians and
the crafty bureaucrats. Yet, people suffer from dangerous situations of
amnesia, as they fail not to be consumed by heightened sense of nationalism
which evades a wider understanding of an unbiased history of one's own land.

History of the country has been long blemished through the absence of
scientific historical studies and analysis introduced to us in the nation’s
early years by one Late Dr. Kosambi and rest who followed the tall,
pioneering historian’s trail. What remained of the trail, and what came
into being at latter stages, have been conveniently erased for the
governing powers’ benefit. Minimal understanding of social realities of
particularly the marginalized areas of India, seen and treated by New Delhi
as extensions of a nation rather than deriving an inclusive outlook towards
such regions like Northeast India and Kashmir, which have incidentally,
failed to find mention even in the nation’s national anthem, cannot be seen
as mere blemish. The great river Brahmaputra which has been sustaining
civilizations across ages not finding significance in the country’s first
Noble laureate’s verse turned into an anthem of the nation is, perhaps,
symbolic of what these areas mean to the collective consciousness of rest
of the country. Telengana, parts of central India, however central it may
have physically been, along with parts of the Dravida landscape could be
added to this list of unfortunates, who remained distant from a country's
comprehensive understanding of these areas and what is conflicting in its
very definition of “mainland India”, assuming the rest to be hinterland.
For many from rest of the country, except for the sighting of the
pre-historic one-horned rhinoceros at Kaziranga, and the pious Shaivites’
visit to Kamakhya, their motherland ends at Bengal towards the country’s
east.

Considering such an appalling reality about my country, it is hardly
surprising for the progeny of such a reality lacking in their understanding
of what have been long infuriating the denizens of these regions considered
by the Delhi durbar and its every Home Ministry as disturbing areas of the
land. Militancy in these regions did not fall from the sky or heaven if
there is a heaven at the first place. In saying so I am, in no way remotely
trying to support militancy which has, also, become a cottage industry of
sort, certainly not without the support and nexus of the all powerful
politicians shaping a nation’s destiny.

However, leaders like Isak Chishi Swu stood by their conviction following
the legendary Naga leader Phizo's call for resistance, just like many
others of his ilk did and signed a plebiscite to express unity through
their stand. They stood up for what they felt 'at their time' as
impingement of their independence, implicitly supported by rest of their
tribesmen. Sadly, a country which attained Independence from two centuries
old rule by colonialists, lacked in maturity to handle an issue of identity
cautiously and sensitively. it, instead, relied on a violent path applying
brute force to curb the voices of resistance which Delhi saw as
‘disturbance’ and ‘contestation of national entity’. This enraged the
independence loving tribesmen who were, as the legend goes, forced to rebel
against Nehru and his use of force. Even in much latter years I have heard
Naga elders say that, had Mahatma Gandhi been alive they would not have had
to suffer the way them have.

At another point of India’s unscripted history which cannot be covered even
within reams and reams of paper, the same nation used its own air force to
bomb by strafing market places belonging to its 'own countrymen' to silence
a Mizo uprising caused by a famine, and subsequent failure on the part of
governments to provide suitable basic amenities like food to the suffering
people. Instead of supplies of food what went the victims' way can be best
described as insults, which added more salt to a wound.

Suspicion has long been a cancer distancing people from people. The genesis
of people from the regions like the Northeast and Kashmir feeling alienated
lies in a nation’s peculiar sense of suspicion towards natives from these
regions seen and treated as sub-humans at times. The callous and militant
remarks against a leader who died of ailments at old age highlights the
ills crippling a myopic section, and that is a growing list of people
suffering from a syndrome of superficial being, whose understanding of
nationalism is driven more by promises made, and charisma of individual
politicians, and politically motivated situations, rather than deeper
insight and understanding of what nationalism has globally been. The danger
lies in the fact, that ours is a nation whose destiny would be etched and
decided by many of these youth relying on their superficiality finding
expressions of a myopic being.

Those who have suffered from arms conflicts know that forgiveness alone can
heal old wounds and help overcome miseries to reconcile for peace. Nagaland
has the longest history of arms conflict in Southeast Asia, and the Late
Swu surely knew this well as he, at his old age, continued until his death
to be an integral part of steps to derive a solution to his own people’s
sufferings, also a nation's problem. However, the sense of intolerance that
one can perceive from posts which are out rightly unforgiving of any voice
of resistance for identity, evidently harbours hatred which is no less
disturbing than what the same minds define and fear as militant. Lack of
cultural understanding of regions defined as disturbed areas on the part of
those who try and derive perspectives through a blurred prism of suspicion
and hatred, only end up contributing more towards the different tides of
intolerance wearing masks of non violence.


Maulee Senapati <https://www.facebook.com/maulee.senapati?fref=nf>
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