http://scroll.in/article/813919/from-godhra-to-una-the-face-of-the-gujarat-riots-has-attached-his-name-to-the-dalit-cause

DALIT MOVEMENT

>From Godhra to Una: The face of the Gujarat riots has attached his
name to the Dalit cause

Harsh Mander recollects a meeting with Ashok Mochi, whose photograph
had come to symbolise the terror of the 2002 carnage.

Yesterday · 05:30 pm
Updated Yesterday · 11:02 pm

Harsh Mander

A middle-aged man who repairs shoes on a street corner in Ahmedabad
and who has slept for many years on the pavements of the city is one
among the hundreds who joined the Azadi Kooch, the protest march from
Ahmedabad to Una village in Gir Somnath district against the public
lashing of Dalit men for skinning a dead cow. He declares that he will
work for Dalit-Muslim unity. His name is Ashok Mochi.

Fourteen years earlier, when angry mobs surged through the streets of
Ahmedabad, burning and looting the homes and shops of their Muslim
neighbours and murdering and raping thousands, this man’s face stamped
itself indelibly in public memory. The man himself slipped quickly
back into oblivion, from where he was resurrected recently. And
therein lies a remarkable tale.

Dark chapter
It was the morning of February 28, 2002, the day after 58 people had
been burnt alive in a train in the neighbouring station Godhra. The
killings and arson would continue for weeks to come.


Ashok Mochi’s picture became, for the world, the symbol of those
terrifying and murderous days. The camera captured a lean and bearded
young man, wearing khaki trousers and a loose black t-shirt with
sleeves folded, his hair parted in the middle and a saffron band on
his forehead, standing with both his arms raised – one hand
brandishing an iron rod another with the fist clenched. His mouth was
open, as though he was shouting slogans. There were blurred images of
men in the rear, and a burning heap of materials that a mob must have
set on fire. Behind him, the sky was black with smoke rising from
burning homes, cars and shops across the city.

This photograph, by Sebastian D’Souza, was carried in newspapers
across the world, on magazine covers and later, on books about the
carnage. It quickly became a metaphor of those grim and dark days, of
the hatred that broke out like a dam unleashing one of the most bloody
communal massacres after Partition.

For the decade that followed, fighting for justice and rehabilitation
of the innocent survivors of this carnage became a dominant concern
not just of my life, but also that of many friends and colleagues.
Together, we fought several hundred cases in various courts, trying to
bring those responsible for the bloodbath to justice. A few cases were
won, but the large majority ended in acquittals. Even so, this was the
largest collective effort for justice after communal massacres in the
history of the country.

My colleagues at Aman Biradari, who helped fight hundreds of criminal
cases after the carnage, were idealistic young lawyers and
working-class women and men from the ravaged communities.

Yet, after the years passed, we realised that most of those we
succeeded in engaging in these legal battles were foot soldiers of the
carnage, not its leaders. Who were these men we were able to send
briefly to jails and engage in courts, we wondered? What happened to
them in the years since the carnage?

The man in the photograph
These questions led me to seek out, years after the carnage, the young
man in the photograph that had transfixed the world as a symbol of the
communal violence that had shattered so many lives during those
fateful weeks in 2002. Kishore Bhai, my dedicated colleague, is the
Aman Biradari justice worker who had pursued his criminal case in
court. He told me that the man was Ashok Mochi, a street cobbler from
the working class enclave of Shahpur colony in Ahmedabad. His full
name was Ashok Kumar Bhagwan Bhai Parmar.

His name did not appear in the initial police complaints, but that
could have been because the police mostly did not record the names of
the men that complainants said were part of the mobs who attacked
them. However, in the course of later investigations, Ashok Mochi’s
name entered police records.

A local, Mohammad Hussain Ramzanbhai Sheikh, in his statement to the
Madhepur police seven months later said that Ashok Mochi was part of a
riotous mob of men, armed with daggers and sticks, who attacked and
looted several Muslim homes on the morning of 28 February 2002. Since
the right-wing Vishwa Hindu Parishad had called for a Bandh, most
Muslim residents were in their homes.

They watched with alarm as the mob, which included in its ranks Ashok
Mochi, gathered at ShahpurChowk (where Mochi is seen in the
photograph), where they are said to have burned a couple of
auto-rickshaws. Sheikh said he saw the men enter the homes of his
brother and other relatives and loot suitcases, gas cylinders,
television sets and other things of value before they sprinkled the
houses with petrol and set these on fire. Acid bulbs were hurled on
taller buildings. They followed this up with threats to kill the
residents, who left for relief camps by evening. They lived in these
camps for several months.

Despite Sheikh’s statement, Ashok Mochi was neither arrested nor
questioned by the police at the time. His was one of 2,000 cases
related to the rioting, arson, rape and murder registered after the
Gujarat riots that were closed by the police citing insufficient
evidence against the perpetrators to take the matter to court.

However, I challenged with Indira Jaising the closure of these cases –
which were half the cases filed in the first year of the carnage – the
Supreme Court, as intervener in a case filed by the National Human
Rights Commission. We charged, with several examples, that the police
deliberately undertook shoddy investigation to protect perpetrators of
communal crimes from criminal action. The Supreme Court accepted this
petition, and in a historic judgement, ordered the reopening,
supervised reinvestigation and retrial of all the 2,000 cases.

Various human rights groups took charge of some of these cases. The
one in which Ashok Mochi was an accused was among the several hundred
cases that Aman Biradari took responsibility of.

Ashok Mochi, accused of looting and burning Muslim homes and shops in
the area, was charged under sections 435 and 436 of the Indian Penal
Code (crimes of arson and causing destruction by fire), and arrested.
He spent 14 days in jail, after which he was released on bail
submitted by his elder brother. The case dragged on for several years,
and Ashok Mochi attended every hearing with more than 20 other accused
men.

Justice worker Kishore Bhai attended as many of these hearings as he
could, to sustain the morale of the complainants. But the cases were
adjourned month after month, and the complainants were wearied as they
struggled to rebuild their homes and livelihoods.

Altaf Shiekh, our young lawyer, recalls that on the day the court
wished to record the statements of the Muslim complainant Sheikh, the
local small trader whose house was looted and burned down, he was
unable to attend court. Vexed by his absence, the court closed the
case for lack of evidence, and acquitted Ashok Mochi and all the
others who were accused in the case. In this way, he joined the
thousands who were charged with crimes in the communal carnage of 2002
but ultimately walked free.

Ashok Mochi Credit: Ungal Baz/via YouTube
Ashok Mochi Credit: Ungal Baz/via YouTube
The man outside the photograph
Years later, I asked Kishore Bhai if Ashok Mochi would be willing to
meet me. He was. I walked with Kishore Bhai to where he plied his
trade as a street cobbler on the corner of a sidewalk near Lal
Darwaza. He was around 40 now, but looked older. I would not have
recognised him from his photograph. His hair was grey and cropped
short, his face lined. He did not wear the beard he had in his iconic
photograph of over a decade earlier. He said business was anyway slow
that day; he would close his pavement shop, and we could sit in a
hotel and talk.

He had inherited his father’s cobbler trade. It was not what he wanted
to do. He would have liked to do something purportedly better. But
ultimately, he could not break out of what his caste prescribed for
him, as did the poverty of his family. They lived in a small one-room
tenement in this working class area.

On one side of the road lived Muslims, and on the other mostly
low-caste Hindus. They were mostly day labourers, construction
workers, house painters, mattress makers, trades such as these. From
his work as a street cobbler, his father earned little. Ashok liked to
study and hoped he would be able to make something of his life. But
his father died when he was in Class 6, and his mother a year later.
He was left in the care of his elder brother.

His brother married, and quickly had four children. They fed him, but
he often quarrelled with his sister-in-law about food and clothes.
After he passed his Class 10 examination, he decided he would fend for
himself. He tried his hand at many professions. He told me: Maine
Hindustan ke woh sare chhote kaam kiye jo chhotain saan kar sakta hai
– I did every small job that a small man in India can do. He worked as
a sweeper, a security guard, a house painter, and many other trades,
but in none could he establish himself. In many, he said, caste was a
barrier: people teach their trades like house painting only to people
of their own caste.

He finally took on his father’s caste profession, repairing and
polishing shoes from a street-corner shop on a pavement. He inherited
many of his father’s customers. For a while, he would give most of his
earnings to his brother. But when tensions in the family grew, he left
home and began to sleep on the streets, at the same spot where he
plied his shoe repair trade. Next to him on the pavement sat Nazir
Bhai, who ran an auto-rickshaw repair shop, and on the other side a
higher-caste Hindu who traded in old clothes.

Ashok took care of their materials as well at night. It worked well
for all. He would eat at roadside eateries. There was a working men’s
dormitory close by, where he went in the mornings to bathe and use the
toilet.

And then the storm of 2002 broke out. He had seen many riots in his
life. He was 10 years old when in 1985, Gujarat’s capital, Ahmedabad
was torn by communal violence for several months, taking nearly 300
lives. Smaller riots occurred every two or three years. But none were
like this. Ashok said that people were reminded of the violence
surrounding the Partition of India, when thousands were forced to live
for months on end in relief camps.

Ashok recalled that the streets around which he worked and slept were
tense in the morning of February 28, 2002, when news of the horrific
Godhra incident hit the headlines. The newspapers were full of
horrible pictures of the burnt bodies that made the blood boil. He did
not watch television, but these too carried graphic images of the
corpses. The Hindus were incensed and furious with the Muslims, he
said, and he too was angry. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad had called for a
bandh. Muslims hid in their homes, as Hindu men gathered with weapons
and petrol on the streets. He also worried that the riots would
swallow up his earnings for weeks, even months.

Ashok had grown a beard at the time. (He said it was because of a
failed love story. He had wanted to marry the upper-caste daughter of
a neighbour, but her family found out, and married her off in a hurry
as a teenager to a man of her caste. “I therefore began to grow my
beard,” he told me. “Like Devdas, you know. Except that I did not
drink!”)

Not many Hindu men sported beards, and he was afraid that mobs would
mistake him for a Muslim and attack him. He searched hard for a barber
to shave his beard, but every establishment was closed. He therefore
tied a saffron scarf on his forehead to mark him as a Hindu. He joined
other young men at the ShahpurChowk, where the Vishwa Hindu Parishad
had installed months earlier a board announcing that Gujarat was a
Hindu Rashtra.

It is here Ashok said a journalist walked up to him. He asked him what
he felt about the burning of Hindus in Godhra. Ashok replied that the
Muslims had committed a vile crime, and he was angry. He claims then
that the journalist asked if he would pose for a photograph. He
agreed, picked up an iron rod and stood before his camera for the
picture which was to become history.

Behind the lens
The perspective of D’Souza, the photographer, is quite different.

He told Indrajit Hazra of the Hindustan Times: “Mobs were burning cars
and I saw people stabbing people. The driver I was travelling with had
fled. In the distance, I saw this man leading a group get up on raised
spot. I took a few long-shot pictures with 300 mm lens.” Hazra asked
if he know the man’s name, or whether he spotted him with his camera
and posed. It certainly looked as though he was staring directly at
the camera. But D’Souza denies this: “No, I was too far away. He was
just shouting when I left.”

Ashok claimed to me that he did not lead any mob, nor participate in
any arson, looting or attacks. Late afternoon, the mobs started to
thin. Some were just tired and thirsty. By evening and through the
night, the Muslims fled in police buses to the safety of relief camps,
even as their homes burned. Ashok knew that he would not be able to
buy food at eateries, and the streets would be unsafe to sleep at
night. So he went to his brother’s home to sleep for a few weeks. He
is not on speaking terms with his bhabhi, but at a time like this, she
did not turn him away.

The next morning, Ashok recalls, the mobs only grew. People said:
Narendra Modi ne kuch dinon ka chhoot de diya hai Musalmanon ko marne,
katne, lootne ke liye (Modi has given freedom for a few days to kill,
attack, loot Muslims). Riots went on for more than a week in his area.
Ashok stayed for three months with his brother before returning to his
work on the city pavements again.

During this time, he said, he mostly stayed at home. His picture was
published in many newspapers, and people believed that he was a major
leader of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad or Bajrang Dal. He was worried
about his own safety after his new-found fame. He therefore decided
that he would not stay on the streets for a while. He found a place to
sleep at a corner of the working men’s dormitory.

After several months passed, the Muslim neighbours began to return
dispiritedly from relief camps. Muslim relief agencies gave them money
to rebuild their homes. The help was little, but at least they could
have a roof over their heads. Slowly, they also began to rebuild their
livelihoods. Nazir Bhai returned to set up his street-based auto
repair shop next to Ashok’s cobbler shop.

Ashok returned to sleeping on the streets. He never married. “If I did
marry, what would I give my children?” he asked. “My father was able
to give me neither food nor education. Why should I do the same with
my children? I am better living alone.”

He claims the statements made by some neighbours against him were
false. The attackers were all strangers from other parts of the city,
he maintains, and the Muslims, angry at their loss, just listed the
names of local Hindu men. Years passed before he was arrested and
spent 14 days in jail. Initially, he refused to give his brother’s
address to the authorities. He said his only home was the streets. But
they said that he could get bail only if someone with a home address
was willing to vouch for him. Reluctantly then, he gave them his
brother’s details. His brother bailed him out.

The case again went on for many years and many hearings – he had lost
count. But with the passage of time, he said, the hatred the Muslims
felt for them ebbed. They knew in their hearts that they were
innocent, therefore they did not in the end testify against them.

I spoke to a mellow Ashok Mochi. Riots, he said, are created by
political parties that spread falsehoods and hatred against Muslims.
“Five percent Muslims are bad,” like those who set fire to the train
in Godhra, he said, adding that it is, however, wrong to punish 95%
Muslims for the crimes of 5%.

Modi was chief minister of Gujarat from 2001 to 2014, but it made no
difference to the ordinary person, who continues to struggle for roti,
kapdaaurmakaan (food, clothes and shelter), he told me. “I slept on
the footpath in 2001. I still am sleeping on the footpath today”.

The other symbol
Qutubuddin Ansari Credit: Arko Dutta/Reuters
Qutubuddin Ansari Credit: Arko Dutta/Reuters
In 2014, I read news reports that Ashok Mochi had been invited by the
Communist Party of India (Marxist) to an unusual programme to mark the
12th anniversary of the Gujarat carnage. There was another face that
had come to symbolise those dark days for the world – that of the
victim.

It was a Reuters photograph by Arko Dutta of Qutubuddin Ansari, a
tailor in Ahmedabad, his hands folded, his eyes clouded with tears,
desperately begging security forces to rescue him as he is stranded on
March 1, 2002, on the first floor of his home in the shanty
Sone-ki-Chal, surrounded by mobs threatening to kill him.

The CPI (M) decided to bring the two men together, sharing the same
room and the same stage for a programme in Kannur. Zahid Qureshi and
Swapna Pillai, reporting the event for the Mumbai Mirror, wrote that
Ansari accepted a rose on stage from Ashok Mochi. He reportedly said,
“Even though we are both Gujaratis, we could not have met in Gujarat
like this. This is a new experience for me.”

Jai Maharashtra News/via YouTube
Jai Maharashtra News/via YouTube
He went on to disclose that Ashok Mochi was not the first Hindu to
apologise to him for the riots. “A retired army officer named Anand
Shroff, a resident of Pune, had apologised to me on behalf of the
Hindu community some years back,” he said. “Today, my brother Ashok
Mochihas asked for forgiveness. It means a lot to me. Let this be the
beginning of a new chapter in humanity.”

When Ashok Mochi’s turn came to speak, he said that the riots were a
mistake, “a huge blunder. I do not know what to say, I have never
addressed so many people in my life. But I cannot leave without
talking about insaaniyat (humanity) – that is what I have learnt over
these years.”

He then had the same impulse as Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal
gets when he sees large crowds – to sing a Hindi film song. The song
he chose was Hai Preet Jahan Ke Reet Sada from Manoj Kumar’s film
Purab aur Pashchim. Ansari joined in. “They sang off key,” wrote P
Sudhakaran in the Times of India on March 5, 2014. “The audience
didn’t get a word of what they sang. But they moved hearts. The
applause was deafening.”

Ashok told me when we met that he and Qutubuddin Ansari still meet
once every few months. Ansari once even invited him to his home. Ashok
has no home to host him.

I do not know for sure whether Ashok was indeed an innocent bystander
or whether he led or joined the mobs that looted and burned the homes
of his Muslim neighbours in those hate-charged days in Ahmedabad in
2002. I think he did. But at least he has expressed public remorse for
those crimes. I think he is sincere in this remorse. It is sobering to
remember that most of those who led and organised the massacre of 2002
have never said once they are sorry.


-- 
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