Damodar, it was a multi-paged article and you missed part of it...

=====

For years the overtly Islamic and violent aspect of the insurgency in the
Valley kept many secular Indian liberals from visibly sympathising with the
plight of Kashmiri Muslims: if only the Kashmiris, I often heard, had
organised a Gandhian-style political campaign.In recent weeks the Kashmiris
have repeatedly staged massive non-violent protests, provoking such
establishment figures as Vir Sanghvi and Swaminathan A. Aiyar into an
exasperated reckoning of Kashmir's cost to India. But Arundhati Roy's frank
analysis of the collapse of Indian legitimacy in the Valley is still rare
enough to profoundly unsettle many liberal assumptions.

The commonest secularist response consists of fierce denial and bluster.
Kanti Bajpai avers that since the Indian state has not committed genocide in
Kashmir, the Kashmiri demand for freedom is groundless—surely by this
legalistic logic Gandhi and Nehru had no right to ask the British to quit
India? G. Parthasarathy at least has the hawkish virtue of clarity when he
implores India to follow Russia's example in Chechnya and strike Kashmir
with an 'iron fist'.

What's much more disturbing, however, is when Harish Khare of *The
Hindu*accuses separatists and the isi of stirring up trouble in the
Valley and
urges the government to use force to underscore "New Delhi's will and
capacity to stay put in Kashmir". Ritually denouncing the BJP, Khare also
exhorts us to a "renewed fundamentalist faith in the idea of secular India".


Indeed, more than one liberal commentator reacting to the mass upsurge in
Kashmir piously invoked the 'idea of India'. This solemn liturgy makes it
seem that the 'idea of India', like the 'American dream', is divinely
ordained to bring happiness to anyone who subscribes to it, as though
electoral democracy in a poor, multicultural country isn't an ongoing
experiment, one of the most utopian and arduous in modern history, and as
such subject to rigorous scrutiny and pragmatic revision—an experiment that
is, harsh though this may sound, prone to periodic malfunction, even
failure.

The Indian liberal's perennial defensiveness on the question of Indian
Muslims has trapped him into a rigid fealty to the 'idea of India'—or what
is really an exaggerated faith in the Indian state's ability to maintain
India's secular identity in Kashmir. It is true that the original conception
of the Indian state contained many redemptive notions of cultural plurality,
and social and economic justice. But whatever prelapsarian integrity the
Indian state under Nehru may have had (Kashmiris have their own views on
this), it now appears to have been deeply compromised; and *if our
secularist narcissism managed to survive two state-supported pogroms in 1984
and 2002, one of them by an avowedly secular political party, it is likely
to be shattered by the enthronement of Narendra Modi as India's prime
minister. *

During two decades of vicious anti-Muslim campaigns and terrorist
retaliation, the Sangh parivar has not only given Indian nationalism a hard
majoritarian cast; it has also infected India's state and civil society with
its illiberalism. Certainly, Kashmiri Muslims, who feel assaulted with an
iron fist by both Hindutva-wadis and secularists, cannot be blamed for
failing to spot the fine distinctions between the idea of India and the idea
of Akhand Bharat.

The Kashmiris are hardly alone in failing to detect wisdom and generosity in
a state that detains and tortures Muslims on the flimsiest of charges,
ignores the killing of Christians, organises mercenary armies against
tribals and Maoists, and helps big businessmen to fleece small farmers and
uproot the landless.

Secular fundamentalists may continue to venerate the state, hoping, against
all available evidence, that it would preserve the idea of secular India in
Kashmir (and the Northeast, another region where faith in the idea of India
needs to be propped up by the Indian state's brutality). But in their
revulsion from the inevitably 'communal' politics of Kashmiri Muslims they
will find themselves standing with the most virulent Islamophobes among
Hindu fundamentalists.

This proximity can't be written off as an unfortunate accident of
history. *Fundamentalism
in the cause of secular ideals has proved even more noxious than its
religious counterpart, as the 20th century's extraordinary ideological
violence reminds us.* *The secular fundamentalists, who are determined to
nail their cherished 'idea of India' into Kashmiri hearts and minds, seem to
forget the many political leaders and intellectuals who rationalised
totalitarian brutality and imperialist wars by pointing to the garishly
virtuous nature of their secular ideologies (nation-building, economic
prosperity, freedom, democracy). The spectacle of American liberal
intellectuals cheerleading the war for 'human rights' in Iraq has more
recently underscored the grotesque irony of what Albert Camus called
'massacres justified by philanthropy'. *

Camus knew that a secular ideology of progress, which tries to validate
state violence by positing noble-sounding but purely abstract ends, had
replaced traditional religion in the world-conquering nations of the West,
one which, as he wrote, 'can be used for anything, even for transforming
murderers into judges'.

Having arrived late in the history of the nation-state, we are probably
fated to replicate some of the West's ideology-fuelled disasters. The
fundamentalist cult of the 'idea of India' has already demonstrated its
murderous potential in Kashmir. Is it too late to unshackle the 'idea of
India' from a repressive Indian state and its callous elite? This is
certainly necessary—for the sake of democracy and pluralism in India as well
as in Kashmir. Such revisions in the political and moral imagining of
nations are never easy. But until they are made, the 'idea of India' will
increasingly risk becoming yet another one of recent history's many
beautiful abstractions stained with blood.

=====
Regards
Afthab Ellath


On Mon, Sep 29, 2008 at 2:15 PM, damodar prasad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

> Dear Aftab,
>
> Did you see this outlook article by Pankaj Mishra *India: A Massacre
> Justified By Philanthropy?
>
> http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20081006&fname=Cover+Story&sid=3
>
> since it is "pankaj mishra" , his credentials will ever be questioned?!!!
> we should be grateful to people like Pankaj Mishra.
>
> *
>
> For decades now, Kashmir has hosted a bloody stalemate, in which a
> powerful nation-state repeatedly tries, and fails, to impose its will on a
> small unyielding population. The Indian state uses political means
> (elections, special privileges) and financial inducements as well as
> military force to convince Kashmiris that they should not dream of
> self-determination. Still, Kashmiri defiance and harsh Indian retaliation
> exact a terrible human toll: tens of thousands killed, innumerable many
> disabled, tortured, orphaned and widowed. There is hardly a family in the
> Valley left untouched by the biggest military occupation in the world.
>
> People in mass democracies are usually slow to recognise the nature of the
> undeclared wars conducted by their representatives. But by the late 1960s
> there was hardly a public figure in the United States—from J.K. Galbraith to
> Philip Roth—who did not feel compelled to build up a chorus of denunciation
> against their country's deeply dishonourable involvement in Indochina. In
> comparison, the deaths, in less than two decades, of nearly 80,000 people in
> Kashmir have barely registered in the Indian liberal conscience.
>
> "I cannot imagine," Pratap Bhanu Mehta wrote last month, "what it is to
> live like under half a million troops." Until very recently, such honest
> confessions of a moral impasse were rare not only in an increasingly
> corporatised media, which is as defiantly ignorant as it is nationalistic,
> but also among the people most likely to initiate national introspection on
> Kashmir—the impressively numerous writers and intellectuals who by training
> and temperament are secular and liberal.
>
> A few Indian commentators did deplore, consistently and eloquently, India's
> record of rigged elections and atrocity in the Valley, even if they spoke
> mainly in terms of defusing rather than heeding Kashmiri aspirations. But
> many more tended to become nervous at the mention of disaffection in the
> Kashmir Valley. "I am not taking up that thorny question here," Amartya Sen
> writes in a footnote devoted to Kashmir in *The Argumentative Indian*. In
> the more resonant context of a book titled *Identity and Violence*, Sen
> yet again relegates the subject to a footnote.
>
> It is not easy for me to point to these acts of omission. Most Indian
> liberals have fought with admirable courage the good and necessary war to
> prevent Hindutva from damaging India's multicultural ethos, and their
> commitment to justice for the poor and defenceless in Indian society cannot
> be faulted. They are right to suspect Pakistan of malicious intent in the
> Valley, and to fear that the four million Kashmiri Muslims demanding azadi
> expose 150 million Indian Muslims even further to the BJP-VHP's bigotry.
>
> But it makes progressively less sense why many Indian liberals should not
> make nuanced distinctions between Kashmiri and Indian Muslims; why they
> should help the fanatics of Hindutva hold Indian Muslims hostage by refusing
> to publicly uphold Kashmiri rights to a life of dignity.
>
> A commonplace secular-nationalist argument is that Kashmiri Muslims, if
> given the slightest concessions by India, would go radically Islamist or
> embrace Pakistan, emboldening separatists in the Northeast. But it has never
> been clear that radical Islam has a sustainable appeal in Kashmir. The
> Kashmiri feeling for Pakistan, too, is highly capricious, almost entirely
> fuelled by hatred of the Indian military occupation.
> For years the overtly Islamic and violent aspect of the insurgency in the
> Valley kept many secular Indian liberals from visibly sympathising with the
> plight of Kashmiri Muslims: if only the Kashmiris, I often heard, had
> organised a Gandhian-style political campaign.
>
> PS: I did not copy the image along with the text. its very evocative :-)
> See how "asoka sthabam" is transformed!!- damodr prasad
>
> >
>

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