http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/nation/look-whos-romancing-the-autocrat

17 May 2014
Look who's romancing the autocrat
Think before you dismiss those who see the intimations of fascism as
alarmists
BY Priyamvada 
Gopal<http://www.openthemagazine.com/category/author/priyamvada-gopal>

Let's get a few things out of the way. Criticising an influential political
leader is not evidence of disrespect for India and Indians. Since I happen
to live and work in the United Kingdom at the moment, I've been turned into
a *'desh drohi'* (traitor) at the receiving end of vitriolic denunciations
for having voiced grave disquiet that a professed adherent of Hindutva
might lead the proudly plural country in which I was born and educated and
for which I continue to have great affection. Ironically, much of the
hostility--often couched in violent and misogynist terms--has come from other
NRIs, keyboard warriors sitting in Salford or San Jose, giving themselves
sobriquets such as 'Atheist Hindu' or 'Internet Hindu' (no actual spiritual
concerns appear to trouble them) and pretending that shrill support for
Narendra Modi's candidacy somehow makes them better Indians and truer
Hindus than others. Modi campaigners reject criticism as 'foreign' but
welcome the uncritical support for Modi which has come from NRIs like the
British peer, Lord Meghnad Desai, and the American economist, Jagdish
Bhagwati. Similarly, dissenting from what is presented as a majority view
is not anti-democratic: democracy would be a pretty pointless endeavour if
dominant trends were not subjected to robust challenge. India has long been
a country of dissenters however much Modi's adherents might wish it
otherwise; to be or remain proudly Indian is surely to not allow oneself to
be cowed--or bamboozled--into acquiescence.

What should worry us is the prospect of a regime that will create and
enforce a culture of such acquiescence to narrow conceptions of India, in
both social and economic terms. Such compliance can be ensured through a
combination of intimidation, familiar to many in Gujarat already, as the
Padmashri-awardee, Ganesh Devy recently noted, and consent produced by an
obliging media, happy to purvey disinformation or blithely ignore the
unpalatable. Most recently, a critical article containing myth-busting
points about Modi was deleted by the website of the newspaper DNA: how much
worse will this kind of repressive complicity get should he get the top
job? Some have argued that we should separate Modi's Hindutva ideology and
RSS affiliations from his claims to being a man of development and
progenitor of the so-called 'Gujarat Model' to be launched on a national
scale, and focus on the latter. This is to conveniently separate two
integrally connected parts of Modi's appeal to many, including those who
are not religious zealots but eager for strong rule: together, hardcore
Hindutva adherent and Vikas Purush hold out the promise of all-encompassing
ideological certainty, no room for doubt, diversity or flexibility, razing
to the ground whatever stands in its way, regardless of human cost. It
makes no sense to think that a neoliberal Hindu extremist will remain
extreme on the economy but go soft on his cultural nationalist ideology
whatever 'moderate' face is currently being put on for electoral
consumption. For all the 'anti-commie' rhetoric of his most devoted
followers, Modi and 'Modinomics' are actually in thrall to the Chinese
model--capitalism on steroids combined with Stalinist autocracy, no pesky
democratic processes, popular protests or sub-nationalisms allowed to get
in the way. Democracy is an idol that will be worshipped only to the point
where electoral majorities swing in Modi's direction. After that, any
criticism or popular resistance will be managed and contained, dissent
turned into sedition. Note the suggestion already made by a Modi ally that
his critics, frequently vilified as 'Hindu-haters', will need to leave
India.

+++

This scenario is one that some in the liberal intelligentsia, such as
historian Ramachandra Guha, have dismissed as 'alarmist'. Like political
scientist Ashutosh Varshney, Guha touts the resilience of Indian democratic
institutions which will automatically forestall any such repressive
scenario. While India's democratic institutions remain hugely valuable,
they are not invariably robust--not everyone at all times has been a
beneficiary of impartial administration or justice-- and as Indira Gandhi in
dictatorial mode proved, they can also be suspended by Emergency powers.
Blind faith in their invulnerability will, perversely, undermine them. In
days to come, the defence of democratic institutions will require less
romanticism and greater courage than some in the Indian commentariat are
showing, even as several brave voices continue to speak out against the
dangers of simply turning India over to the Hindutva brigade and hoping for
the best. It is wrong, too, to suggest that all of Modi's critics overlook
the cronyism and dynastic culture of the Congress and endorse it as 'the
last bulwark against fascism' (Guha). The venerable anthropologist Andre
Beteille has been quoted as saying that because the Congress has become too
complacent and caught up with a single family, the BJP, which he doesn't
like, should now come to power; we must live with the choice of 'unsavoury'
Modi as leader. That pragmatic attitude would be fine if we could somehow
overlook not only the autocracy and unrepentant communalism of the man who
is being posited as the only alternative in a bad situation, but also
Modi's own cosy relationships with the Adanis, Ambanis and Tatas of the
world--the sweetheart deals he struck with them bear a striking resemblance
to cronyism. Even a hard-headed magazine like *The Economist* finally shied
away from amoral pragmatism noting that while change is desperately
needed--and no one can deny that it is, given the Congress' abysmal
failures-- it simply cannot come from someone so unapologetically
'associated with sectarian hatred' and resultant violence.

*The Economist*--much to the chagrin of Modi*bhakts* and unusually for such
a conservative journal--was bracingly plain- spoken. It is the slow death of
precisely such vital plain-speaking within a largely acquiescent, indeed
fawningly pro-Modi Indian media, that we have to worry about in days to
come, the token acknowledgment of dissenting views notwithstanding. Quite
apart from the overblown support for a candidate whose claims to
exceptional growth in the state of Gujarat are, at best, questionable, we
must assess the increasingly evasive nature of criticism of Modi as
dissenters prepare to come to terms with a shift in power. The danger to
the Indian public sphere may come less from direct repression-- though we
should certainly not underestimate that possibility, given how it has
already been exercised in places like Kashmir and Chhattisgarh--than a quiet
accommodation of an ideological *status quo*. As erstwhile naysayers become
emollient, they start legitimising the claims of extremists to having
become more moderate overnight, like that leopard which went for zebra
stripes, but with no real evidence of such a profound change of heart. Thus
we have Swami Agnivesh, stern critic of the 2002 Gujarat massacres,
fawningly insist that 'he can see a new face of Modi *ji*'. Where? In
election campaign 'speeches and interviews'. Naturally.

Then we have true Liberal Guha, 'a Hindu and a patriot', as he insists,
opine condescendingly that 'alarmist critics' worry too much about the
advent of Hit- ler or Mussolini-style Fascism. He goes on to generously
concede that such 'fears are not entirely invalid' since Modi is, in fact,
quite intolerant of dissent and has intimidated artists and writers in
Gujarat. We will set aside for now the matter of Haren Pandya, the BJP
dissenter who turned up mysteriously, to use a non-alarmist phrase, lacking
in vital signs, or the serving police officers now paying the price of
whistleblowing. It is worth recalling that many Liberal European
commentators in the 1930s also insisted that German democratic institutions
would withstand totalitarianism.

Just to be clear: no one who evokes Germany or Hitler in the context of
Modi and Hindutva--easily sneered at as 'scare-mongering' by the terminally
complacent--is saying that Modi is a carbon copy of Hitler. We are clearly
at a different historical moment and in another cultural context. Those who
invoke the dangers of fascism are, however, noting that deeply
authoritarian regimes often emerge from perfectly democratic processes in
tandem with long years of demonising minorities and valourising both
strongmen and growth rates. If these warnings are overdoing it, then those
who blithely insist that fascism has no currency in the current context are
culpable of wilfully minimising danger signs. However much we wish it were
so, India hasn't been issued a special get-out clause that renders it
peculiarly immune to the possibilities of fascism--defined broadly as
militarised authoritarian rule in the name of the majority community at the
expense of minorities, both religious and political, accompanied by a
personality cult. The showmanship and spectacle that have accompanied Modi
electoral rallies are entirely familiar to a fascist ethos and should
elicit deep dismay, not grudging aesthetic admiration. As the political
analyst Dilip Simeon notes in his excellent blog, while it is counter-
productive to shout 'fascism' at every opportunity, it is also 'dangerously
misleading' and, frankly, simplistic, to suggest 'that Fascism may be
properly recognised only when it seizes absolute power.' By that point, it
might be too late to abandon the supercilious postures of mild concern.
Unlike disarmingly honest internet Modibots who openly insist that a
'benevolent dictator is better than ignorant democracy', liberal purveyors
of moderation and nuance will only admit blandly that there are 'troubled
communal waters' or, to use Pratap Bhanu Mehta's unflappable phrase, there
'should be no complacency over the communal question'. That suggestion
quickly morphs into advice to the BJP to simply 'act reassuringly'.

+++

Since much attention has been paid to the habit of hyperbole that
'alarmists' are ostensibly given to, let's assess Liberal moderation or
hypo-bole. In a recent op-ed, Mehta deprecates something he calls 'The
Indian Left' (presumably not just the electoral parties) and seeks to hoist
it on its own petard. 'The Left', he pronounces damningly, 'are incapable
of dialectical thinking'. By 'dialectics', Mehta appears to mean a mishmash
of factors that which have gone into the making of Hindu nationalism,
including a larger culture of the 'political construction of identities' in
which other parties have also played the communal game. (Chances are that
neither Hegel nor Marx would recognise this version of dialectics, but let
that pass). Including an uncertain economic future and various secessionist
movements, these 'dialectics' can only be overcome by the transcendence
provided by 'a growth narrative that can restore India's confidence'.
Curiously, then, for Mehta, Hindu nationalism can only be defeated by that
rather undialectical formula offered by Modi himself: the triumph of the
neoliberal economic will.

I'm not saying that all this talk about the need for intellectual
'complexity' combined with denunciations of 'alarmism' is so much sophistry
which simply feeds the so-called Modi wave. Or at least, that's not all I
am saying. I am asking what will happen to old-fashioned plain speaking, if
throat-clearing and fudging become the order of the day at a time when
India faces the very real prospect of rule by a man who is known for an
authoritarian style of governance, cosy relations with large powerful
corporations, a willingness to run roughshod over whatever comes in his
way, be they protesting farmers or dissenting police officers, and a
profound commitment to an organisation which is founded on the idea of a
Hindu Rashtra, turning India into a Hindu Pakistan. It's all very well to
bang on, as Mehta does, about 'a complicated country feeling its way
through difficult times', but should such banal observations be allowed to
obscure the dawning reality of majoritarian rule? If alarmism is unhelpful
(to whom?), who is helped by equivocation and waffling which render
authoritarianism, described euphemistically by Guha as 'a tendency to
centralise and self-aggrandise', a matter of 'unbecoming' bad manners
rather than a lethal political problem? In a typically palliative manner,
Mehta suggests that we must now proceed 'on a wing and a prayer'. A less
romantic if more difficult approach may well lie in disavowing all this
obfuscation, embracing honesty, and, as so many already are in the towns
and villages of India, putting up some quite outright and courageous
resistance.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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