[In India, M F Husain, Salman Rushdie and Taslima Nasreen are arguably
the three most glaring instances of being viciously targeted for
hurting religious sentiments.
And, Narendra Dabholkar, Govind Pansare, MM Kalburgi had to lose their
lives understandably on these grounds.]

http://www.hindustantimes.com/columns/kiku-s-arrest-sends-a-clear-message-religion-is-out-of-bounds/story-dRK1oKDgKK2E4ruVQaQ5zK.html

Kiku’s arrest sends a clear message: Religion is out of bounds
Namita Bhandare |  Updated: Jan 16, 2016 00:04 IST

Comedian Kiku Sharda after being produced in a Kaithal court on
Wednesday. (HT Photo)

The arrest of a comedian sends a clear message: Religion is out of
bounds. Given the volatility of mob sentiment, perhaps a place to
start would be for the Supreme Court to draw a line between religion
and politics. We might make a tentative beginning with simply
scrapping sections in law that today have become convenient tools to
ban and intimidate inconvenient voices.

Late in December, actor/comedian Kiku Sharda did the unthinkable. He
made fun of the head of the Dera Sachcha Sauda (DSS) sect. In the clip
I have seen, Sharda emerges on stage in a shimmery costume astride a
bike in what is apparently standard practice for the sect’s guru — or
at least seems to be if you’ve had the misfortune of watching MSG:
Messenger of God.
The followers of Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh were not amused and filed
complaints in various police stations in Haryana, where the sect is
based, under the dreaded section 295A of the Indian Penal Code that
makes it a crime to outrage religious feeling.

I’m not sure how DSS qualifies as a religion or whether Gurmeet
Singh’s endorsement of the BJP in recent assembly elections have
anything to do with events that unfolded. On Wednesday, Haryana police
arrested Sharda along with eight others.

Singh knows a thing or two about outraging religious sentiment. In
1997, he was on the receiving end when he offended the Akal Takht by
dressing up as Guru Gobind Singh. The offence led to violent clashes
between the DSS and Sikhs in Punjab and Haryana and an eight-year-long
feud that reportedly ended last year when Singh apologised.

Unlike Pakistan, we have no blasphemy laws. Yet, where religion is
concerned, we do place restrictions on freedom of speech. The idea is
to prevent both disharmony and ill-will between religions (section
153A) and deliberate and malicious intent to outrage religious feeling
(section 295A).

But if we look at how these laws are applied, it seems evident at
least anecdotally that complaints are more about intimidation and less
about deliberate and malicious outrage. Sharda’s arrest, for instance,
sends a clear message to actors and comedians to think twice in the
future before assuming gurus and godmen are fair game.

We’ve now reached a stage where it is safest to assume that religion
is out of bounds.
A 2013 Business Today cover of cricketer MS Dhoni as Lord Vishnu has
led to cases filed in different police stations. The Catholic Church
is offended by Agnes of God, a play about the death of a newborn whose
mother is a young nun. And a group of Buddhists are hurt because
actress Raakhi Sawant poses in a bathtub against a statue of the
Buddha.

Our reaction in most cases is to laugh, but the outcome isn’t always
funny. After sustained bullying, a writer announces his retirement.

After threats of legal action, a rationalist seeks asylum away from
our shores. Bit by bit we watch our freedoms slip away.

What happens when outraged religious sentiment spills over into the
street? The full facts are yet to emerge, but in Malda and Purnea,
angry Muslims have been demonstrating against Kamlesh Tiwari, head of
the Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha for his statement against the
Prophet. Tewari is in jail but that has not stopped protesters from
torching vehicles and even a police station.

The Hindu Right complains that governments ‘pander’ to minority,
specifically Muslim, sentiment by banning books and arresting
individuals. Yet even liberals fall short of castigating the state for
failing to protect individual rights in the name of law and order. The
crux is this: Is freedom of expression, including the right to cause
offence, worth dying for? Most of us, myself included, would say no.

So, where do we even begin? Given the volatility of mob sentiment,
perhaps a place to start would be for the Supreme Court to draw a line
between religion and politics. Perhaps we might make a tentative
beginning with simply scrapping sections in law that today have become
convenient tools to ban and intimidate inconvenient voices.

Take away the legal sections and you still have public opinion and the
threat of action that imposes restrictions on speech. But scrap 295A
and you at least take away the tool that enables people like Gurmeet
Singh’s followers from filing complaints that lead to the arrest of
actors and comedians.

Unless we make that beginning, we stand to lose whatever is left of
our right to free speech.

(The author tweets from @namitabhandare. The views expressed are personal)

Read More:
Comedian Kiku Sharda arrested for mimicking Gurmeet Singh, apologises
The channel’s team should have flagged objectionable act: Kiku Sharda
These actors were charged under section 295A before Kiku Sharda

-- 
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 https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to