sorry for cross posting!
A tale of two mosques  January 2009*By: Khalid Anis Ansari*

http://www.himalmag.com/A-tale-of-two-mosques_nw2762.html

   KAREN HAYDOCKOn 6 December 1992, the demolition of the Babri Masjid by
rightwing 'Hindu' forces heralded a major shift in the Indian political
landscape. In a way, it signalled that the long-cherished Indian variant of
'secularism', or the Gandhian notion of sarva dharma sambhava ('Let all
religions prosper'), which held as its ideal the symmetrical treatment of
all religions, was now increasingly outliving its utility for the ruling
classes. And no wonder: since that time, the academic community in India has
unleashed vigorous debates on secularism, and Indians have been greeted with
all kinds of communitarian and postmodern critiques of the same. While the
times to come will surely pronounce a verdict of some type on these
sophisticated intellectual endeavours, let us first digress in order to
explore some areas less treaded by the Indian academic elite.

Some examinations of the Babri episode have linked it to the neo-liberal
shifts in the Indian economy that took place around the same time,
particularly the ambitious economic reforms launched by the Congress
government in 1991. Such an approach has also required studying the
concomitant need to promote authoritarian and fascist tendencies by powerful
interest blocs to divide and tame the working classes. While such a
perspective is quite conceivable, whether there actually existed any
formidable working-class challenge to bring about such a drastic response
from the powers-that-be is worth investigating. Meanwhile, other readings of
the event concentrate on a major incident: the acceptance of a single
recommendation put forward by the Mandal Commission report by the V P Singh
government in 1990, which reserved jobs for Other Backward Classes (OBCs) in
the central government.

This one measure resulted overnight in V P Singh being hailed as a veritable
messiah of social justice by the disadvantaged castes. At the same time,
however, it also precipitated what has been dubbed by the sociologist Gail
Omvedt as the "twice-born riot against democracy", wherein the upper-caste
youth took to the streets of North India, attempting to immolate themselves
for what they saw as a 'darkening of their futures'. After all, how could
such a loud test of the upper-caste monopoly of privileged public-sector
jobs have gone unchallenged? In fact, V P Singh, in his deposition before
the Justice Liberhan Commission of 2001, opined clearly that, "Mr L K Advani
undertook the rath yatra in 1990 to counter the Mandal Commission's report,
as the BJP was apprehensive that it might lose the middle class if the party
supported the report." Moreover, "the BJP also did not want to oppose the
report as it feared that it might result in alienation of the backward
classes, and thought that religious issues would be the proper answer to
cloud the Mandal issue."

Either way, the demolition of the Babri Masjid ensured that, in the
conceivable future, religious identity in India would continue to dominate
the political space at the expense of other identities, especially caste and
gender. As a consequence, since the demolition Indian society has seen an
increasing legitimacy accorded to both the forces of Hindutva and Islamism,
even as the notion gained ground that religious communities are essentially
monolithic. Why exactly the notion of 'community' has been so persistently
sought to be defined monochromatically in religious terms in India is,
meanwhile, an interesting but separate point.

*   IRSHADUL HAQUE Burnt dwelling in Kesaria, BiharAshraf dominance*
When Ali Anwar, one of the leaders of the Pasmanda movement, made up of
Muslim backward-castes and Dalits in Bihar, declared during a conference in
2007, "Hum shuddar hain shuddar; Bharat ke moolnivasi hain. Baad mein
musalman hain" (We are Shudras first; we are the indigenous peoples of
India. We are Muslims later), he was in a sense altering the semantics of
Indian politics. By privileging caste over his 'religious' identity, Anwar
was also upturning the notions of majority and minority that are commonly
invoked by the mainstream political discourse. He stressed that the Pasmanda
sections were a minority only when they identified themselves primarily as
Muslims. But once they begin identifying themselves as Shudras, Dalits or
moolnivasis (original inhabitants), they immediately transform themselves
into a majority (bahujan). After all, he pointed out, even after conversion
to Islam such individuals continue to be identified with their castes by the
upper-caste ashrafiya Muslims. A Dalit who converts to Islam is labelled an
arzal Muslim, while a Shudra who converts to Islam becomes an ajlaf Muslim.
And does not the insistence on endogamy (marrying within a particular group)
on the basis of caste by the ulema perpetuate and legitimise these
hierarchies?

Of the three major theories on conversion to Islam in India – that is, the
'religion of the sword' theory, the 'political patronage' theory and the
'religion of social liberation' theory – it is the last that has been
enthusiastically received by the Muslim elite classes. In a nutshell, this
theory suggests that the lowest and most degraded castes in the hierarchical
Hindu caste system converted to the egalitarian ideology of Islam in order
to escape Brahminical oppression. However, this is a construction without
much historical backing. Some historians have recently argued on the basis
of their reading of the Persian primary sources that, in their presentation
of Islam to Indians, traditional Muslim scholars did not stress the Islamic
ideal of social equality as opposed to Hindu caste, but rather of Islamic
monotheism as opposed to Hindu polytheism. Moreover, there is abundant
sociological evidence to back the claim that those disadvantaged Hindu
communities who converted to Islam to improve their status in the social
hierarchy were scarcely successful, and caste stigma continued to weigh
heavy on them. In contrast to the mythical claims made by elite Muslims,
religious conversion to Islam has simply not been the great social solvent
that it is often made out to be.

The ascendance of the caste movement among Muslims had political
repercussions in the last assembly elections in Bihar in 2005. Ali Anwar
prominently dubbed Railway Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav's so-called M-Y
(Muslim-Yadav) alliance as an FM-Y (Forward Muslim-Yadav) alliance. As a
consequence, a substantial number of lower-caste Muslims voted for Nitish
Kumar, leading to Yadav's defeat – and leading to one prominent journalist
to dub Ali Anwar a "minority spoiler". One of the key aspirations of the
Pasmanda movement has been to contest the emotive politics of symbols that
have been fostered by the Muslim caste elite – the issues surrounding Urdu,
the Uniform Civil Code, Aligarh Muslim University and the Babri Masjid
itself – and instead to concentrate on more organic, development-based
issues facing the community. Along these lines, a few years back another
leader of Dalit Muslims, Ejaz Ali, offered a provocative though arguably
simplistic slogan: "Babri masjid le lo, article 341 de do" (Take Babri
Mosque, give us Article 341). Notably, the movement around Article 341
presses for the scrapping of the Presidential Order of 1951 that ejected the
non-Hindu Scheduled Caste segments from the Scheduled Caste list, thus
depriving them of the benefits of affirmative action. Ali Anwar has echoed
unequivocal similar sentiments. "Our main concern is to raise the issue of
economic deprivation and unemployment among the Muslims," he has said, "and
we want to take the community away from the fold of mosques and mullahs."

Muslim Backward and Dalit Castes constitute more than 75 percent of the
Indian Muslim population. The Pasmanda movement has therefore considerably
unsettled the logic of upper-caste ashrafiya Muslim politics – if not
necessarily on the grassroots level, then certainly in theory. Since the
onset of the movement in the early 1990s, individuals and organisations
representing ashrafiya interests (for instance, Imarat-e-Shariah, the Muslim
Personal Law Board, Jamiatul Ulema-e-Hind, Jamaat-e-Islami-e-Hind, All India
Muslim Majlis Mashaweraat, etc) have largely maintained a conspiracy of
silence on the issues the movement has highlighted, though they have at
times retorted by saying that the movement is trying to divide Muslims along
caste lines, and that caste is antithetical to Islam. But this, the Pasmanda
leaders have argued, is a blatant case of confusing theological reality with
sociological reality. In fact, caste is very much alive within the Indian
Muslim community, with considerable evidence to back up the contention. This
socially variegated profile of the Muslim religious community was even
officially acknowledged by the Sachar Committee report from November 2006,
on the status of Indian Muslims. In the report, the committee's members
broke down the Muslim community into three blocs – ashraf, ajlaf and arzal,
or forward, backward and most backward.
*
   IRSHADUL HAQUE Charred ornamentsLived religion*
Now let us consider another event, which went almost unnoticed by India's
chattering classes. On the night of 6 December 2007 – and the date is indeed
ironic, coming exactly 16 years after the destruction of the Babri Masjid –
members of the upper-caste Muslim community in north Bihar's East Champaran
District set fire to six homes belonging to those from the lower castes of
the same community, in the village of Rampur-Bairiya. The problem is
reported to have begun a few months earlier, over the right to pray. One
day, the upper-caste Meers (Syeds) and Pathans, both constituting the landed
elite in the village, elbowed the backward-caste Ansaris and Mansuris
(largely labouring groups) to the back of the queue at the local mosque.
When this was resented and challenged by the latter two groups, they were
forcibly driven out of the mosque. To avoid controversy, those who were
elbowed out subsequently built a thatched mosque, in order that they could
offer prayers with some dignity. As time passed, however, this newly
constructed makeshift mosque became something of a thorn in the eyes of the
upper-caste Muslims. As such, it was eventually assaulted and a significant
portion of the mosque was damaged.

This had not been a lone incident in Rampur-Bairiya. In one previous
incident, during the marriage of the daughter of a lower-caste Muslim
family, the bridegroom made the grievous mistake of arriving at the wedding
in a Maruti car, a clear symbol of status in the backward village economy.
In so doing, he drove through a street along which lived upper-caste
Muslims. Pandemonium subsequently broke out as henchmen of the upper-caste
community members attacked the wedding guests, and mixed mud into the food.
To top it off, it was not the perpetrators that were later harassed by the
police, but rather the victims themselves. It turned out that the local
inspector was an upper-caste Muslim himself.

A subsequent interview with the alleged architect of the Rampur-Bairiya
mosque episode is telling. When the reporter asked his name, he replied
"Mohammad Idrees". But he was immediately interrupted by one of his female
relatives standing nearby. "Why don't you add Syed before your name?" she
asked. Interestingly, later in the article, this same woman, when speaking
of members of the Ansari community, kept addressing them with the derogatory
term julaha (ignorant). During the subsequent conversation, Syed Idrees
said: "We belong to the Syed Biradari [caste], which is just like the
Brahmins of the Muslim community. Where does the question of our equality
with them arise?'

*Dalit-Dalit unity *
What are the implications of these stories? To begin with, the demolition of
the Rampur-Bairiya mosque starkly brings to the surface the clear fissures
within the Muslim community on the basis of caste and class, challenging the
monolithic construction of the Muslim community by the Indian mainstream.
What will become of the logic of rightwing Hindu politics, which whips up
'Hindu' sentiments by proclaiming loudly that All Muslims are united against
us!, once the notion of a monolithic Muslim community is splintered? Will
communalism be able to endure? Moreover, such a splintering does for Muslim
society what the 'temple entry' campaigns by Dalits did for Hindu society:
it underscores the mosque as a contested and political site.

There is nothing immaculate about religion or religious symbols – at least
the lived versions. They are often either deeply intermeshed with or address
the reigning power structures. Thus, if a community's dominant sections
interpret and appropriate symbols according to their interests, in time the
non-dominant sections too will realise the need to interpret, appropriate
and even invent symbols according to their own interests. More to the point,
why did the mainstream Muslim leadership and institutions – the
Imarat-e-Shariah, Muslim Personal Law Board, Jamiatul Ulema-e-Hind,
Jamaat-e-Islami-e-Hind, All India Muslim Majlis Mashaweraat, etc – which
were so vocal on the demolition of Babri Mosque, maintain total silence on
the issue of the Rampur-Bairiya mosque? Likewise, why was the mainstream
Muslim leadership silent on the Bathani Tola massacre in Bhojpur District of
Bihar in July 1996, in which a half-dozen Dalit Muslims were raped and
lynched by private feudal security personnel? Is it due to the overwhelming
upper-caste content of mainstream Muslim leadership? Is it because
lower-caste Muslims do not figure very large in the ashrafiya imagination,
or that when they do it is strictly as second-class Muslims? Could the same
charges of discrimination that mainstream Muslims level at the Hindu
leadership ultimately be levelled against upper-caste Muslims by lower-caste
Muslims?

Neither is this a new phenomenon. In recent visits by this writer to a
village in western Uttar Pradesh, stories emerged about upper-caste Shia
Syeds burning a mosque belonging to lower-caste Muslims in a riot that
succeeded the 1946 elections, which is hailed as delivering the 'consensus
on Pakistan'. Most of the lower castes were at that point ryots, or tenants,
to upper-caste Muslim landlords. The conflict is said to have broken out
when the lower-caste Muslims decided to support the Congress party and
oppose the 'Two-Nation Theory', in open defiance of the diktats of the
upper-caste Muslims, who were strongly supporting the Muslim League.

The crux of the matter is that if lower castes have converted to religions
perceived to be egalitarian, such as Islam or Christianity or Buddhism, in
order to escape social persecution, then it is also true that in historical
time the upper-caste Hindus likewise converted to religions to extract
benefits from the so-called 'Muslim' rulers or 'Christian' white
colonialists. No wonder that, as time passed, those of the converted classes
were the sections that, due to their cultural capital, ended up monopolising
the interpretational processes of these religions, and heavily influenced
them with the hierarchical value framework of the caste system. Since its
inception, the Pasmanda movement has striven to take these interpretations
head-on. In an interview Ali Anwar said, "We Muslim Dalit and Backward
Castes are 'believing Muslims': we take our faith in Islam seriously. Islam
… stands for social equality and justice. It is completely opposed to social
hierarchy." He continued: "So when we are protesting against inequality and
injustice, how can we be said to be going against Islam? On the contrary,
what we are doing is, in my view, actually mandated by our religion. On the
other hand, those who keep silent on the plight of the Muslim Dalit and
Backward Castes are actually working against Islam, for they are indifferent
to its mandate of social justice and inequality."

The demolition of the Rampur-Bairiyya mosque by upper-caste Muslims quite
patently underscores the complexities and cleavages of lived Muslim reality.
This is not the uplifting story of a united ummah; rather, it is one
abounding in deep fault lines. While the Babri Masjid demolition has been
much theorised about and debated over, it is the destruction of this
makeshift mosque in a remote village in Bihar that will, in the long run,
lead to more probing questions of Indian polity and society. Increasingly,
it will also provide a window through which to glimpse new and more
meaningful solidarities across religious identities to be scripted in the
future. Very recently, a wall along a Patna street bore some graffiti that
read, Dalit dalit ek samaan, hindu ho ya musalman (All Dalits are alike, be
they Hindu or Muslim). Surely slogans such as these are a sign of things to
come.

*Khalid Anis Ansari is a member of the Patna Collective, a research and
activism group based in Patna.*



-- 
"We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need
inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better". -J K Rowling





-- 
Ranjit

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