["It is to counter this dominant political psychology [that Muslims
are dispensable] why a clutch of Muslim parties have surfaced. They
are not stupid to not know that their chances of garnering Hindu votes
in numbers that could give them a large number of seats are indeed
remote. But their logic behind fielding candidates is that if they can
poll a substantial share of Muslim votes, might not non-Hindutva
parties fearing defeat begin to
address the issues pertaining to the community?"

That's a rather bizarre argument.
If vote gathering is the aim, which indeed is by and large the case
with political parties in an electoral democracy, then Muslim votes in
India can offer, at best, only a limited attraction for the mainstream
parties.
On the all-India basis, Muslims constitute around 15% of the
population, and in UP around 19%.
Then again, they don't vote as a a monolithic bloc.

On the other, Yogi Aditynath's ascension to power in UP, as an
integral element of a still unfolding process, shows up the limited
(rational) options before the Muslims.

*One'd also wonder where're today the fire-eating leaders of the
"Muslim parties" who presumably helped, in no small way, to mobilse
the "majority Hindu" votes behind the BJP?*

The "sickular parties" are making at least some noise.
They raised various issues in the parliament and also met the
President to lodge protest on a number of issues including
"gau-raksha".

In the given context, one'd also like to recall that this writer had
loftily opined, not so long ago, that Rahul Gandhi should have had
focussed rather on Punjab than UP. (Ref.: 'Why Rahul Gandhi's decision
to focus on UP instead of Punjab was a bad idea' at
<https://scroll.in/article/828655/a-loss-in-punjab-will-undermine-rahul-gandhis-predominant-position-in-the-opposition>.)

This is, however, not to anyway suggest that Hindutva politics does
not deserve to be resolutely fought back.
It, no doubt, presents a grave threat to the very idea of "India",
wrought out in the course of our epic freedom struggle in the teeth of
a number of odds, including "Hindu" and "Muslim" exclusivism.]

https://scroll.in/article/834267/uttar-pradesh-meat-politics-why-have-the-sickular-parties-failed-to-show-support-for-muslims

OPINION
Uttar Pradesh meat politics: Why have the ‘sickular parties’ failed to
show support for Muslims?
This is a test for the BSP, the Congress and the SP to prove that they
genuinely oppose Hindutva and are worthy of the trust of the minority
community.

3 hours ago.
Ajaz Ashraf

For all her clamour to forge a Dalit-Muslim social alliance before
Uttar Pradesh went to the polls, Bahujan Samaj Party leader Mayawati
has been inexplicably indifferent to the strike by the meat industry
to protest the closing down of abattoirs and sealing of retail shops
in the state. It would seem that Mayawati’s vision of subaltern
politics is confined to gathering votes of Muslims and forgetting them
till the next election is round the corner.

It might seem unfair to hurl this charge against Mayawati alone. After
all, in the February-March Assembly elections, both the Samajwadi
Party and the Congress entered into an electoral alliance to
consolidate the Muslims of Uttar Pradesh behind them. Neither has been
provoked to take to the streets now.

Yet any criticism of the three parties against their inaction on the
meat issue in Uttar Pradesh must begin with Mayawati. Given the
radical possibility of Dalit-Muslim unity – the first manifestation of
which was BP Maurya winning on the Republican Party of India ticket in
Aligarh in 1962 – Mayawati rekindled hopes of it through her election
speeches.

She never failed to remind us that she had given a whopping 100
tickets to Muslims, and sought to convince the community that should
it align with her Dalit supporters, the Bahujan Samaj Party would
become a bulwark against the Hindutva storm. She assumed that Muslims
would not want proof of her having worked for them before they bought
into the Dalit-Muslim unity call of hers.

Her clarion call for Dalit-Muslim unity lacked in credibility as she
had not even cared to visit Muzaffarnagar in 2013, when it was rocked
by bloody riots. Perhaps she believed an expression of sympathy for
Muslims would outrage the Hindu self of Dalit voters.

After all, in 21st century India, visiting Muslims whose loved ones
have been killed, wounded or raped is likely to be construed as a
policy of appeasing them, of ignoring Hindus, whether Dalits or upper
castes. We do not expect politicians to take this risk, not even those
who have pretensions of effecting social transformation.

But the politics of meat unfolding in Uttar Pradesh does not have this
risk because the meat in question is not beef, but chicken, mutton and
buffalo. The politics in this state is more about Hindutva’s passion
for vegetarianism, upholding the tradition that frowns on meat, and
weakening the economic base of the upwardly-mobile Qureshi community.

This has prompted the rabble rouser-turned-Chief Minister Adityanath
to create a Catch-22 situation. It is the municipality’s
responsibility to ensure that hygienic conditions are maintained in
abattoirs, for which a fee is charged for every animal slaughtered.
But municipalities are notorious for not discharging their duties,
because of which slaughterhouses have supposedly become intolerably
unhygienic.

So these have been closed down and meat shops sealed, even those that
have the requisite licence. If there isn’t a slaughterhouse running,
shopkeepers can access meat only through illegal ones. Better to close
them down then. They have been penalised for the municipality’s
dereliction of duty.

Stung by the irrationality of the Hindutva regime, the Muslim subgroup
of Jamiatul Quresh has gone on a strike, quite understandable as its
members dominate the meat trade. Should its charter of demands not be
met by April 20, it will extend the meat strike to all India.

Mayawati’s inaction
But against the political perfidy of the Adityanath government,
Mayawati does not have a speech to deliver, whether from a
pre-prepared text or extempore. Here is her opportunity to cobble
Dalit-Muslim unity. While the Qureshis dominate the retail meat trade,
the animal skins are sent to tanneries which Dalits own or in which
they are employed in large numbers. Meat, including beef, is also not
taboo for Dalits.

Mayawati supporters at a rally. Photo credit: IANS.
Mayawati supporters at a rally. Photo credit: IANS.
It is hard to explain Mayawati’s inaction on the meat issue. Perhaps
she fears her support for meat would be projected as a policy of
appeasing Muslims that might eventually alienate a segment of her core
support group of Dalits.

Yet another reason was provided by a key Bahujan Samaj Party
functionary in West Uttar Pradesh.

“The cadres are being told that Brahmins feel alienated because a
Rajput has been made a chief minister,” the functionary said.
“Mayawati thinks the Brahmins can still be won over.” This suggests
that Mayawati does not wish to plunge into the politics of meat with a
counter-narrative perhaps because she fears it would not be to the
liking of Brahmins.

Either way then, for this champion of subaltern assertion, the
interests of Muslims must be subordinated to those of Hindu social
groups. It is altogether a different matter that a 2014 government
survey showed that over 50% of Uttar Pradesh ate meat. Dalits and
Muslims together constitute roughly 40% of the state. Since both have
a large chunk of poor who cannot afford meat, consumption of it can be
said to cut across religious and caste divides.

SP and Congress silent too
In this extraordinary display of pusillanimity and chicanery, just
about every political leader in India is implicated. Take the
Samajwadi Party’s Akhilesh Yadav, whose family acquired heft because
of Muslim support. Yet he has not come out on the streets to protest
against the closure of abattoirs and meat shops.

It is easy to see why. His core supporters are Yadavs, who, because of
their traditional occupation of animal husbandry, were principal
supporters of the Gau Rakshini Sabhas at the time these mushroomed in
the late 19th century. They still are – many of those accused of
killing the Muslim man in Alwar for ferrying cows were Yadavs.

Since the vigilantism over the anti-cow slaughter has framed the
debate over meat in Uttar Pradesh, Akhilesh Yadav is perhaps paranoid
that in batting for non-beef meat he would be sending a wrong signal
to the vegetarians among Yadavs, his core supporters, and the upwardly
mobile among them who are said to have become amenable to Hindutva.
Silence is therefore Yadav’s favoured strategy.

It is hard to expect the Congress to take to the streets. Not only is
the party moribund organisationally, it still has a nostalgia for its
Brahminical past, which it hopes will one day become its present as
well. The Brahminical position, revised over many centuries, is that
meat should be shunned. It is altogether a different matter that
Brahmins in East Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, as in many parts of India,
love their mutton and fish.

Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav. (Photo credit: PTI).
Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav. (Photo credit: PTI).
It, therefore, does not surprise that only Muslims are left to rage
over the meat crackdown in isolation. Because the Jamiatul Quresh is a
caste-occupational association, it cannot possibly draw other Muslim
and Hindu consumers of meat, or even vegetarians who might feel food
is a matter of choice, to join its protests. This only the political
parties can.

Politics of meat as a test
But they will not because of their unfounded fears of alienating the
Hindus, many of whom have meat in their diet. Sure, the hypocritical,
unconscionable silence of non-Hindutva parties on meat will anger
Muslims. But political leaders feel in this era of resurgent Hindutva,
Muslims will have no choice but to vote for one of them. They choose
to fritter away their energies in fighting against each other than
Hindutva.

It is to counter this dominant political psychology why a clutch of
Muslim parties have surfaced. They are not stupid to not know that
their chances of garnering Hindu votes in numbers that could give them
a large number of seats are indeed remote. But their logic behind
fielding candidates is that if they can poll a substantial share of
Muslim votes, might not non-Hindutva parties fearing defeat begin to
address the issues pertaining to the community?

If such Muslim parties have not yet had traction, it is only because
the community has not yet given up hope on non-Hindutva parties. But,
certainly, their patience is running thin, slowly being driven to
desperation by the indifference of political parties that love their
votes but not them.

Indeed, the politics of meat is a test for non-Hindutva parties, an
opportunity for them to discover their voices and engage in criticism
and protests. Otherwise, woe betide them, for they would prove they
are neither anti-Hindutva nor deserving of Muslim votes, and on their
way to gradually become an inverted version of “sickular.”

Ajaz Ashraf is a journalist in Delhi. His novel, The Hour Before Dawn,
has as its backdrop the demolition of the Babri Masjid.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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