http://scroll.in/article/774898/intolerance-debate-how-some-historical-brutalities-are-more-special-than-others

OPINION
Intolerance debate: How some historical brutalities are more special than others

'In particular, the brutality of Muslim rulers' and the 'brutal
intolerance of the Church in Goa, Kerala and Puducherry'.
Tony Joseph  · Today · 08:45 am

This is the second of a three-part article.
Part I: Why the 'intolerance debate' is far from over [at
<http://scroll.in/article/774610/why-the-intolerance-debate-is-far-from-over>]

If polishing the Chaturvarna or caste system is priority number one
for the right-wing, priority number two is reinterpreting Indian
history, and Indian nationhood itself, in terms of religious conflict.
Here’s the paragraph from the statement by the 47 right-wing
academicians that sets out this agenda most clearly, in the form of an
accusation against the protesters:
A refusal to acknowledge the well-documented darker chapters of Indian
history , in particular the brutality of many Muslim rulers and their
numerous Buddhist, Jain, Hindu and occasionally Christian and Muslim
victims (ironically, some of these tyrants are glorified today); the
brutal intolerance of the Church in Goa, Kerala and Puducherry; and
the state-engineered economic and cultural impoverishment of India
under the British rule. While history worldwide has wisely called for
millions of nameless victims to be remembered, Indian victims have had
to suffer a second death, that of oblivion, and often even derision.

Go through that paragraph again, and see if you can notice what can
only be termed a peculiar characterisation of the issue.  It makes a
general point: that darker chapters of Indian history ought to be
acknowledged and its victims remembered, just as history worldwide has
wisely called for millions of nameless victims to be remembered.  A
person from outer space would, of course, consider that a valid and
reasonable demand, which ought to be taken aboard and considered.

But wait, the 47 are not concerned about all brutalities; some
brutalities are more special than others. Or, “in particular, the
brutality of Muslim rulers” and the “brutal intolerance of the Church
in Goa, Kerala and Puducherry”. Why would that be? Why would they not
be equally concerned about the brutalities of, say, King Harshadeva of
Kashmir, who destroyed both Hindu and Buddhist temples and even had an
official with the title of devotpaatana-nayaka, destroyer of gods? Or
the depredations of Shashanka of Bengal, who murdered Rajyavardhana,
the Buddhist King of Thanesar, destroyed the Bodhi tree at Bodhgaya,
and replaced Buddha statues with Shiva Lingams; or a hundred other
examples of indignities, brutalities and intolerance in Indian history
(as in the history of all places through all of time) that involved
religions, sects and clans of all kinds – Vaishnavites and Shaivites,
Buddhists and Jains, Hindus and Buddhists.

When history is peppered with atrocities, why would you pick out some
for special treatment? This, despite the fact that multitudes of
invaders, from the Greeks to the Sakas to the Huns to the Kushans,
have come to India and made it their home and despite the fact that
most conflicts among kingdoms and empires, whether in India or
elsewhere, have been the result of temporal or secular power play,
with religion often used only as a tool? This would apply to most
Mughal rulers, or Mauryan rulers, or Alexander, or Darius, or Genghis
Khan for that matter. Even the Christian crusades are better
understood when the domestic political power play and economic
situation in Europe at the time are taken into account.

Indic and non-Indic

So to understand the peculiar stance of the 47 – first to see
conflicts purely in religious terms and then to focus on the
brutalities of some conflicts and not others –  is to understand that
they have, a priori, bought into the Hindutva definition of Indian
nationhood as conceived for the first time in the early 20th century.
In this innovative definition as laid out by Savarkar, all religions
practised in India today are divided into two categories: Indic
(Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism) and non-Indic (Islam,
Christianity). The followers of the second set of religions are
eternal outsiders, to be considered inimical, no matter that the vast
majority of them are as much sons and daughters of the soil as
Savarkar himself is, with equal rights as any other human being to
choose their religions, sects, gods, or non-gods. In fact, the vast
majority of them would also be refugees from the oppression of the
very caste system which the 47 academicians want to applaud.

Here’s the Savarkar quotation that separates out the Muslims,
Christians, Parsis and Jews from the Hindus, Jains, Buddhists and
Sikhs:
“For though Hindustan to them is Fatherland, as to any other Hindu,
yet it is not to them a Holy Land too. Their Holy Land is far off in
Arabia or Palestine. Their mythology and Godmen, ideas and heroes are
not the children of this soil. Consequently, their names and their
outlook smack of a foreign origin. Their love is divided.”

The most influential of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh's founding
fathers, MS Golwalkar, developed this line of pernicious thought
further, to say what all Indians who are not Hindus must do:
“[they] must adopt Hindu culture and language, must learn and respect
and hold in reverence the Hindu religion, must entertain no idea but
those of glorification of the Hindu race and culture…. In a word, they
must cease to be foreigners, or may stay in the country wholly
subordinated to the Hindu nation, claiming nothing, deserving no
privileges, far less any preferential treatment – not even citizen’s
rights.”

This is no isolated statement; the books he wrote teem with paragraphs
that reflect the same sentiment.

Both the original formulation of the theory and its practical
application by Golwalkar are utterly flawed even on a cursory
examination, because if these arguments were valid, then the millions
of Indian-origin American or European citizens who regard India as
their Holy Land would need to be considered inimical in those
countries, especially since they are not even sons or daughters of the
soil, unlike the Muslims or Christians in India.  The same argument
for discrimination would hold true for the hundreds of millions of
Buddhists around the world, whether in Japan, China or Sri Lanaka, who
regard many places in India as their Holy Land.

But let’s keep aside the lack of reason and logic in Savarkar’s and
Golwalkar’s argument, and look at how their views might explain the
stand of the 47. If you see Indian nationhood in Savarkarian terms, as
one defined by faith, then it begins to make sense why Indian history
should be seen through the lens of religion, as a sequence of communal
wars and resultant atrocities. But if you see Indian nationhood as
defined by a common allegiance to the Indian Constitution and by
common shared, lived experiences over the past many centuries and
millennia, the project of the 47 to assign special significance to
some brutalities and not others stand out as a blatantly political
exercise to divide Indian citizens, a project that goes against the
spirit of the Constitution whose foundational principle is equality
for everyone irrespective of caste, religion, or gender.

This is the second of a three-part article.

Part I: Why the 'intolerance debate' is far from over
Part III (to be published on December 12): The single-source theory of
Indian civilisation

Tony Joseph is a journalist and former Editor of Businessworld.



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