http://www.tehelka.com/modi-epitomises-what-the-other-idea-of-india-could-look-like/#.UefYkKMC2QM.gmail


   Modi epitomises what the other idea of India could look
like<http://www.tehelka.com/modi-epitomises-what-the-other-idea-of-india-could-look-like/?singlepage=1#>
*With his provocative comments, he is exacerbating the underlying prejudice
against Indian Muslims*
 [image: Shoma Chaudhury]
 Shoma Chaudhury <http://tehelka.com/author/shoma-chaudhury>
July 18, 2013

<http://www.printfriendly.com/print?url=http://www.tehelka.com/modi-epitomises-what-the-other-idea-of-india-could-look-like/>

 Thomas Macaulay once famously described India as the “strangest of all
political anomalies”. He may not have said that in the spirit of admiration
it deserved but he wasn’t off the mark. Even 66 years after Independence,
India continues to be that: a strange political anomaly: a miracle idea
rather than a commonplace nation.

Ordinarily, nations form themselves around majoritarian impulses: either of
religion, ethnicity or language. But unlike every other nation in the
world, India dared to base its nationhood on the idea of plurality rather
than homogeneity. It dared to believe it could transform itself overnight
from a poor, feudal, illiterate, colonised society into a modern,
progressive, liberal nation, with equal rights for all its citizens, and an
avowed commitment to social justice. One only has to think of the
continuing struggles of other post-colonial societies and recent emerging
democracies to remind oneself just how miraculous the idea of India is.

But by no means is that idea a settled one. The fact is, India could as
easily have conceived itself as another kind of nation. Lashed together by
the idea of religious dominance rather than coexistence. And constantly
vulnerable to the intensely divisive forces this would inevitably have
unleashed. There is every possibility this version of India would not have
survived 66 years without falling apart. But its temptation persists. The
miracle of India therefore — the idea of unity in diversity — can endure
only if one displays both a poetic and pragmatic commitment to it. It’s an
idea that needs constant reiteration and reinforcement. Events this past
week once again is proof of that.

The angry controversy over Gujarat
<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/gujarat/>Chief Minister Narendra
Modi <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/narendra-modi/> evoking the accidental
death of a “*kutte ka bachcha*” in the context of the horrific killing of
Muslims under his watch in 2002; his assertion of being a “Hindu
nationalist” and his mockery of the Congress as a party that hides behind
the “burqa of secularism” is a symptom of this continuing faultline. Those
who speak against Modi and his positions are automatically billed by his
supporters as “Muslim lovers” and sycophants of the Congress. But that is a
peculiarly blinkered view. Opposition to Modi does not equal a devotion to
the Congress or blindness to its frailties. Nor is this merely about the
competitive politics between two parties. The dismay about Modi taps far
deeper.

It is a clash between two essential ideas of India. Modi epitomises what
that other idea of India could look like. This image is intensified by the
toxic armies who defend him on social media. To voice a contrary view on
him is to invite not reasoned argument but an ugly, atavistic hate that is
unparallelled. A barrage of lies, insults and vile misogynistic and
religious abuse; an intellectual mindset that equates Kandahar’s terrorists
with an entire community. The Taliban with the Indian Muslim. The trouble
is, when Modi speaks of “*hum paanch, hamare pachees*”, and mocks the
“burqa of secularism”, he knows he’s giving gleeful voice to this
constituency. That is what makes him such a dangerously polarising figure
in Indian politics. That is what drives opposition to him.

As this tussle for India’s soul continues, it’s important to remember that
one can never be vigilant enough. There are some in the media who feel too
much is made of the majority-minority debate. But scratch just the skin of
things, and the unfinished project of India becomes apparent. The truth is,
Muslims in India still find it hard to find jobs, rent homes, get equal
access. It is true both the inwardness of the community itself and the
Congress — as the party that has been in the saddle for maximum number of
years — have much to answer for. But the underlying prejudice is terribly
daunting.

Senior Editor Rana Ayyub <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/rana-ayyub/> has been
having a close taste of this in recent weeks. Over the past three years,
Rana — one of TEHELKA’s most sterling and fearless journalists — has
doggedly chased the story of fake encounters in
Gujarat<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/gujarat/>.
Her journalism has been driven by a keen sense of justice and
constitutional values. Yet, as her scoops on the Ishrat
Jahan<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/ishrat-jahan/>case began to make
national headlines, she has had to face the humiliating
experience of being assessed not as a professional but as a “Muslim
journalist”. Equally dismaying, a despicable slander campaign has been
unleashed against her — shadowy whispers about a CD involving her and
CBI<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/cbi/>officers that have absolutely no
basis in truth.

India is an imperfect experiment. But if we abandon the poetic idea that
underpins it, this is what we will get: “Hindu nationalists”, “Muslim
journalists”, and women professionals we try to defang with scurrilous lies.

[email protected] <[email protected]%20>


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