http://www.outlookindia.com/article/notes-about-yakub-memons-funeral/294993

File - AP PHOTO/ RAFIQ MAQBOOL

Opinion

Notes About Yakub Memon's Funeral

Those gathered at the graveyard were not there to protest. They came to
sympathise because they are also victims.?
Aakar Patel <http://www.outlookindia.com/people/1/aakar-patel/7344>

<http://www.outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?294993>

The convicted terrorist Yakub Memon was buried this week, the same day as
former president and scientist APJ Abdul Kalam.

The government forbade the media from reporting Memon's burial, while Kalam
was given a state funeral on a gun carriage (which was fitting since his
fame came as a developer of atom bombs and the missiles to carry them).

The media complied on the matter of Memon, and this was for two reasons,
though it is usually fiercely protective of its free speech rights. The
first reason was that Mumbai's media agreed with the government's concern
that an overly supportive crowd of Muslims at the funeral of a convict
would polarise a city which has seen more than its share of communal
violence.

The second reason was that there was distaste at the fact that a convicted
terrorist was being given public sympathy if not respect. Some channels
carried on-screen banners announcing their position that they would not
give publicity to such distasteful happenings.

The only indication Indians got of the numbers at the Memon funeral were
some photographs that newspapers carried the following day. *Indian Express*
reported that about "8,000 Muslims from across Mumbai gathered to offer
namaz for Yakub Memon".

The question for us is: why were they there?

The Bharatiya Janata Party leader and governor of Tripura Tathagata Roy
offered his theory of why the Muslims had gathered. He tweeted:
"Intelligence shd keep a tab on all (expt relatives & close friends) who
assembled bfr Yakub Memon's corpse. Many are potential terrorists".

*Indian Express* reported that people came from far away and with "WhatsApp
messages on the venue and time of the last rites doing the rounds, complete
strangers came to mourn for Yakub."

The report added that senior police officers tracked social media for the
briefest hint of anger. However the police commissioner accepted that there
had been "no rabble-rousing" and inside the burial ground those gathered
had been told "koi naarebaazi nahin karega (no slogan shouting)."

If they were not there to demonstrate why did so many show up despite the
extreme hostility in the media and the police scrutiny?

That is easy to understand if we can look on events without prejudice and
without being coloured by the narrative of the media. The sequence of
events is quite clear in that sense. The blasts that Memon was convicted
for happened on March 12, 1993. In January of the same year over 500
Muslims (and over 200 Hindus) were killed in riots in Mumbai. The month
before that the Bharatiya Janata Party led movement against the Babri
M​asjid resulted in the tearing down of the mosque.

In that sense the blasts were part of a larger sequence of events and
linked to violence in which communities were involved to a very large
extent. To the numbers of those killed we must add those who lost their
businesses, those who were wounded, raped and those who were displaced.
These numbers run into the tens of thousands.

This was the background to the blasts. Memon's hanging itself was divisive
and threw up a lot of poison. Television channels were openly hostile to
the idea that he should not be hanged. Meanwhile a report in the *Times of
India* quoting a study by the National Law University said that 94 per cent
of those sentenced to death were either Dalits or Muslims.

This reinforced the perception among many Muslims that they were being
punished for their religion. Even if Memon was guilty, and he was, the
eagerness of the state to kill him was because of his religion. The total
lack of sympathy in this case was contrasted to the murderers Maya Kodnani
and Babu Bajrangi of the BJP, both convicted of equally vicious crimes, but
out on bail.

Then there is the larger reality of being Muslim in India. It would be
instructive to see the reader comments under any article on the internet
that refers to not just terrorism but any related issue where the perfidy
of Muslims can be introduced. In our Anglicised middle classes, the sense
of bigotry and prejudice runs through so strongly that it is frightening. I
need hardly go into the matter of the trouble faced by Muslims who look for
housing and jobs.

That then is the reality of being Muslim in India. There are moments, and
the hanging of Yakub Memon was one, where all of the gathered injustices
are crystallised.

Those gathered at the graveyard were not there to protest. They came to
sympathise because they are also victims.
------------------------------

*Aakar Patel is executive director of Amnesty International India. The
views expressed here are personal.*


<http://www.outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?294993>


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to