http://bd.thedailystar.net/op-ed/politics-of-love-jihad-40364

Tuesday, September 09, 2014
Politics of 'love jihad'

*Spreading fear through stereotypes*
*Praful Bidwai*

HOW does Narendra Modi's slogan Sab ka Saath, Sab ka Vikaas (inclusion and
development for all) square up with the social-political reality
experienced by India's religious minorities? They had the most to fear from
a BJP victory; some of their fears are coming true. Abdicating their duty,
BJP leaders have failed to allay them.

India's Muslims and Christians feared that they would face exclusion while
being asked to subordinate their religious identities to a "larger",
essentially Hindu, cultural super-identity. RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat
recently said that all Indians must be called Hindu just as people who live
in England are called English.

Worse, the Modi Cabinet's sole Muslim, minority affairs minister Najma
Heptullah, then said there's nothing wrong with the term Hindu being used
for all Indians as a label of "national identity". Under flak, she claimed
she had used "Hindi", an Arabic geographical description, not "Hindu". This
claim was belied by the interviewer's audiotape.

The BJP made a dismal start in the national elections. It fielded just
seven Muslims of its total of 482 candidates, none of whom won. For the
first time in Independent India, the ruling party has no Muslim Lok Sabha
MP. This doesn't speak of inclusion. The trend was reflected in the abysmal
share (0.7 percent) of funds for the minorities in the last budget.

Symbolically, Modi sends out a similar message. He put on every conceivable
headgear (Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist and tribal) in the past six months, but
never a skull-cap. His is also the first Indian government which did not
host an Iftar party during Ramzan. Even the Vajpayee government unfailingly
did.

Symbols matter. India has national holidays on days important to the
followers of all significant religions. Many scholars consider this a
hallmark of Indian secularism which doesn't oppose politics to religion,
but follows the principle of nondiscrimination between religions.

The minorities' fears of violence by Hindutva elements have also
materialised, with 80 communal riots instigated in 100 days in Uttar
Pradesh alone, and with 72 Dalit Christians converted to Hinduism.

.

Potentially even more dangerous is the insidious "love jihad" campaign
being unleashed in UP, which claims that young Muslim men entice Hindu
women into a romantic relationship or marriage only to rape them after
converting them to Islam. This demonises an entire community. The BJP's
Uttar Pradesh president has become a party to this.

The entire Sangh Parivar is mobilising itself to fight "love jihad" in UP,
inspired by Yogi Adityanath, who's in charge of the state BJP's campaign
for the coming 11 Assembly byelections.

This is a throwback to the 1920s when the Arya Samaj and Hindu Mahasabha
exploited the idea of violation of a woman's body to create an artificial
Hindu identity, and launched shuddhikaran (purification) to "reconvert"
Muslims to Hinduism.

The strategy behind such campaigns is to create irrational insecurities and
bring them into intimate spaces: the home, the family, the bedroom. The
campaign doesn't need a cataclysmic event or even a genuine case of forced
conversion. Rumours serve the purpose.

It doesn't matter if the Hindu woman concerned entered into a relationship
with a Muslim man out of free will. Indeed, the whole idea is to deny such
free will or independent agency to the woman. She is, by definition,
innocent and gullible, while the Muslim man is wicked, sexually charged and
violent. She must be protected against his designs.

These stereotypes exploit the patriarchal dread of female sexuality and
free will, and permit self-appointed guardians of community "honour" to
police young women's behaviour.

The "love jihad" campaign tries to cover up the male aggression inherent to
the patriarchal family and externalise it. It's socially regressive because
it reinforces masculine authority, tyrannical hierarchy and women's
oppression.

It promotes the idea that a woman cannot make free choices about love,
pleasure or marriage; these must always be made for her by men, her
self-proclaimed protectors.

It's disgraceful that the BJP should stoop to "love jihad" to win the
coming Assembly byelections. But this is part of a well-established pattern.

Now Yogi Adityanath, who faces several hate-crime cases, has launched a
provocative attack on Muslims: "In places where there are 10 to 20 percent
minorities, stray communal incidents take place. Where there are 20 to 35
percent of them, serious communal riots take place and where they are more
than 35 percent, there is no place for non-Muslims."

There's a clear case for prosecuting Adityanath under Section 153A of the
Indian Penal Code for promoting hatred between religious communities. But
BJP leaders are deafeningly silent on this.

There isn't even a squeak out of Modi, despite his exhortation against
communal strife "for 10 years". But there could be a menacing sub-text
here: India can safely return to strife after 10 years! Anyway, the
exhortation sounds hollow.

If BJP leaders want a minimally inclusive and secure society, in which
religious minorities don't feel that they are being reduced to second-class
citizens, then the party and its government must change their ways. Or
else, they will divide India further --violently and irreparably.


*The writer is an eminent Indian columnist. E-mail: [email protected]
<[email protected]>*


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Peace Is Doable

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