[It is the very essence of the BJP/RSS agenda to mobilise the
"Hindus", cutting across caste, class, linguisticand such other
divides, by (re)defining "Hinduism" in reference to the evil and
perennialy adverserial "other" - the Muslins, in the main, though not
exclusively.

No matter what the Muslims do, or refrain from doing, this agenda is
not going to change.
If there is no other issue left, then the very existence of the
Muslims will be considered as an affront to "Hindu" self-pride.

Of course, one could argue that, in the process, they would lose
support of the bulk of the Hindus and their campaign would lose steam.
But, that's, after all, a matter of speculation.

And, the Muslims are never going to act as a single body.
If nothing else, there'll still be sundry pickpockets, rapists,
murderers and, yes, "terrorists".
As long as there is a group dedicated and determined to fan the flames
of hatred, and even gory violence, it's not easy to douse.

At the same time, it does, however, in no way mean that Muslims should
not look inward and try to inform the conduct of the community with
the changing positive values of the modern times.
That's for their own good, regardless of the Sangh Brigade or Hindus
or any other external factor.]

http://inwww.rediff.com/news/column/jyoti-punwani-not-my-hinduism-should-be-our-slogan/20170410.htm

'Not my Hinduism' should be our slogan

April 10, 2017 08:51 IST
'The cow is sacred to many of us, but these killings are definitely
not part of the Hinduism we know and practise,' says Jyoti Punwani.

How do we deal with the continued lynching of Muslims by gau rakshaks?

In the 17 months since Mohammed Akhlaq was beaten to death in UP on
suspicion of having cooked beef, eight Muslim men have been killed,
two Muslim women raped, and almost 40 persons, including two women and
seven non-Muslims, assaulted by gau rakshaks.

One of the eight victims, 22-year-old Minhaj Ansari, died in police
custody in Jharkhand, after his arrest over a WhatsApp message on
beef.

That's a rate of over two lynchings a month.

On Wikipedia, the topic 'Lynching in the US' informs us that an
average of five lynchings a month took place there over a 73-year
period.

It is time now to create a similar topic for India, with advisories
for tourists on areas with the most lynchings, and a warning that if
they must visit these beautiful locales, eating meat should be
strictly avoided.

One reality we have to face is that the State will not stop such
lynchings. The silence of The Leader has once again been deafening.
Ironically, he was busy welcoming Sheikh Hasina, Bangladesh's prime
minister, when a 55-year-old dairy farmer Pehlu Khan's lynching was
playing out on our television screens and being debated in Parliament.

The smuggling of our cattle to Bangladesh has long been an irritant
for the ruling party. One of the first things Home Minister Rajnath
Singh did was urge the Border Security Force to crack down so hard on
cattle smugglers that Bangladeshis would have to give up beef! The
Bangladeshi PM must surely have heard that remark.

What would she have thought about Pehlu Khan’s lynching? If nothing
else, it must have reassured her that her country was not alone in
letting violent fanatics run amok against minorities.

In Pakistan, there's open rejoicing that finally, their founder's
Two-Nation theory is being proved right in India.

That's just not true. Yet, can we who reject that poisonous theory
convince the Pakistanis otherwise?

Do the powers that be consider these lynchings wrong?

When pushed by a media outcry, the police arrest a few gau rakshaks,
but it is obvious that for them, the survivors of such attacks are the
real offenders.

The filing of charges against Pehlu Khan's companions, who were also
attacked, follow a pattern that began in October 2015, in
Congress-ruled Himachal Pradesh. For the police, whoever is in power,
Hindutva rules, and no Congress state government has done anything to
make the police feel otherwise.

Five Muslims were attacked in Himachal Pradesh's Lavasa village,
Sirmaur district, in October 2015, for ferrying cows; of them,
20-year-old Noman died. The police arrested the Muslims and a few
assailants, but the latter quickly got bail.

Similarly, an FIR was lodged against Mohammed Akhlaq's family members
when the Samajwadi Party ruled UP, though this happened under court
orders.

Today, the lower courts, the government and the police, treat Muslims
dealing with cows, be they dairy farmers or cattle traders, as
offenders. Meat-eating Muslims are similarly treated because today,
the BJP has defined all meat eaten by Muslims as beef.

This was demonstrated not only in Akhlaq's case, but also in the
recent raid on a Jaipur restaurant where workers were thrashed for
discarding chicken bones near a garbage bin where a cow was standing.

Given these ground realities, what should the rest of us do? By 'us'
is meant those repelled by this kind of murderous religious zeal. This
zeal repels us as human beings; but surely it also repels us as
Hindus.

These public killings of unarmed Muslims and the whipping of unarmed
Dalits are being done in the name of Hindu belief in the sanctity of
the cow.

The cow is sacred to many of us, but these killings are definitely not
part of the Hinduism we know and practise. Yes, physical ill-treatment
of Dalits is part of some Hindu texts, but today, few Hindus would
justify it.

Since March 12, 1993, when the first major act of terror was executed
in the country by a group of angry Muslims in Mumbai, we have been
asking Muslims to speak out against the terrorist acts of a few of
their co-religionists.

A similar demand was made a decade earlier from Sikhs, because sant
Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and his followers were creating mayhem in
Punjab. Indeed, the late Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray humiliated
Mumbai's Sikh leaders at a press conference on this very demand.

But Hindu intellectuals have always condemned the likes of Thackeray,
Pravin Togadia, and RSS/BJP leaders, including ex-deputy PM L K Advani
and current PM Narendra Modi. That's as it should be -- wherever one
community is in an overwhelming majority, its intellectuals act as
conscience keepers when minorities are attacked.

But the climate of violent intolerance brought in by the new
government at the Centre must force even ordinary Hindus to speak up
against the way their religion is being projected by the ruling party.

'Not my Hinduism' should become our slogan, and we should be marching
on the streets to proclaim it.

Not only to reassure non-Hindus that the Hindu majority regards them
as equal citizens -- an assurance which is urgently necessary -- but
also to reassure ourselves that the religion we practise is not a
murderous one.

Like Muslims are being told to reclaim Islam from ISIS, Hindus must
now reclaim Hinduism from the version being projected today.

Those who led us through Independence realised the damage done by the
Hindu caste system and the need to compensate, hence they included
reservations in the Constitution.

But those who govern us today show no signs of acknowledging the
crimes being committed in the name of Hinduism by their followers.
Instead, there's unabashed approval of this savagery.

This makes it all the more important for ordinary Hindus to proclaim
their disapproval of this terror, even to express regret to those
attacked in the name of Hinduism.

There is a very recent precedent for this: After Coach S-6 of the
Sabarmati Express was burnt at Godhra on February 27, 2002, the
religious head of Godhra's Muslims, Maulana Umerji, publicly
apologised for this act by members of his community.

Why should only minorities have to bear this burden of guilt for the
misdeeds of their co-religionists? The majority bears much more
responsibility.

What can those bearing the brunt of the attacks do?

After Una, Dalits in Gujarat abandoned dead cows on the streets,
refusing to skin them. Can Muslims give up anything to do with cows,
even rearing them? That would be difficult, given that often their
livelihood depends on them. But it might just be worth the suffering.

Because the ultimate sufferer of the gau rakshak violence and the
rapidly spreading bans on meat eating is the farmer, for whom cattle,
be it cows/bulls, become a burden after a certain age. A majority of
our farmers are Hindus. Let them protest.

As business goes down in cattle fairs, let those who can no longer
find buyers for their cows protest. There have been reports from
across the country of Hindu cattle traders and farmers being angry
with the drop in their business and the risks involved.

In Karnataka, a BJP worker ferrying cows was killed by gau rakshaks
last year, and many Hindu traders have reported attacks on them. Let
them pressurise their governments; after all, the BJP has made it
clear in its electoral campaigns and strategies that it is a party
only of and for Hindus.

That, however, may be an impractical solution. An immediate solution
to end the impunity with which gau rakshaks attack their prey, in
daylight and in full view of passersby, is to petition the courts.

A public interest ligitation filed by Congressman Tehseen Poonawala
asking for a ban on gau rakshaks is currently being heard by the
Supreme Court. But bans work only when the State wants them to.

Instead, why can't rights activists -- most of them happen to be Hindu
-- ask that the court set up a mechanism to monitor the action taken
after attacks by gau rakshaks?

A list of such assaults, the inadequate response of the police,
justifications of these assaults by those in power, and the effect of
these assaults on the lives of the survivors can be presented to the
court in support of such a demand.

If there can be an National Investigation Agency to deal exclusively
with terrorist acts, why can't courts set up Special Investigative
Teams to monitor gAU rakshak terror?

IMAGE: Gau rakshaks on the prowl to catch alleged smugglers. Allison
Joyce/Getty Images went out with one such group in Rajasthan last year
to get a sense of their working style. You can see the feature here.

Jyoti Punwani

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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