[<<The one indubitable take away from the Gujarat election is that the
hope-inspiring sabka saath sabka vikas slogan has been emptied of all
meaning. There is now no denying the truth in the recent observation of a
professor and RSS ideologue that Hindutva is the nation’s preferred
ideology as it is “compatible with the common wisdom of the Indian masses”.
Although not officially proclaimed, the Hindu rashtra is already upon us.
And to hell with the minorities.>>

That's pretty stinging.
Of course, "the Hindu rashtra" is *not already upon us*.
Nor "democracy", which, inter alia, protects and provides a conducive
ambience for "minorities" - just not of the religious varieties, to freely
voice their opinions and lead their lives, though substantially diminished,
no doubt about that, remains to be extinguished.

That's precisely why the fight to avert such a terrible predicament, using
the opportunities still available, is so very crucial.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/gujarat-assembly-elections-muslim-voters-pm-modi-bjp-5000156/

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/gujarat-assembly-elections-muslim-voters-pm-modi-bjp-5000156/

The other, the enemy
Message from Gujarat elections: The Muslim is more alone than ever before.

Written by Abdul Khaliq | Published: December 27, 2017 12:19 am

According to the reigning electoral arithmetic, to woo the Muslim is to
court disaster. (Photo: Reuters)

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his victory speech justifiably pronounced
that voters in the Gujarat election emphatically rejected the poison of
caste. But he studiously skirted mention of the cancer of communal identity
politics and religiosity that was masterfully deployed by the BJP and
clumsily imitated by the Congress. While the BJP dragged the Muslim
community into the electoral arc lights with loaded references to Aurangzeb
and “Miyan” Ahmed Patel as a Pakistan-inspired Congress CM candidate, the
Congress flaunted its “Hinduness” even as it concealed its dubious concern
for Muslims. According to the reigning electoral arithmetic, to woo the
Muslim is to court disaster. The Muslim is more alone than ever before.

The killing of Afrazul for being Muslim and the celebratory messages,
donations and marches in support of the killer that followed are testament
to a social consciousness that perceives the Muslim as the enemy, not just
the “other”. A friend who knows Gujarat well, observed much before the
election results that despite the enormous hardships caused by
demonetisation, GST and spiralling prices, people still repose faith in the
BJP as they believe that it is the only party that can deal effectively
with the “Muslim menace”. Hate is the most powerful human emotion and also
the most resilient. The spectres of Babri Masjid, 2002 and, dare I say,
Muslim historical figures hang heavy over us. In today’s India, you cannot
be any leader but only a Hindu leader to be acceptable.

A yogi who publicly announced that he will not stop till he turns India
into a Hindu rashtra is now the UP chief minister. In his watch, state and
religion have congealed into one. He sees no contradiction in using state
funds for a Lord Ram statue or sanctioning a Rs one lakh subsidy for every
pilgrim on the Kailash Mansarovar yatra even while opposing the Haj
subsidy. Despite swearing allegiance to the Constitution, he has recently
dismissed secularism as “the biggest lie told since Independence that has
damaged the nation”. In his limited understanding, secularism is equated
with minority appeasement (a cruel joke considering that, despite all the
ministrations of successive governments, Muslims are at par with Dalits in
almost every human development index).

Our claim to being a society fostering social and cultural heterogeneity is
a sham. So is our long-cherished view of ourselves as embodying tolerance.
We are in the grip of a predatory nationalism that is majoritarian in its
sensibilities and brazenly anti-Muslim. A burgeoning club of anti-minority
ultra-nationalists have become arbiters of what is socially acceptable and
for them issues of justice and freedom are of no consequence. The gau
rakshaks, the Hindu Yuva Vahini, the love jihad vigilante squads are their
malevolent foot soldiers.

The good Samaritans on the Karavan-e-Mohabbat, a laudable joint initiative
of about 50 organisations which recently traveled to the sites of lynchings
across eight states to express solidarity with the victims were stunned by
the implacable hatred and absence of compassion for the victims they
witnessed. They have sorrowfully concluded that ours is a republic of
hate.The most chilling finding of those who accompanied the Karavan was
that, in almost all cases of lynching, the police had registered criminal
cases against the victims and treated the accused leniently, not opposing
their bail. The Rajasthan government recently issued directives to students
and teachers of Jaipur to visit a “spiritual” fair to learn, inter alia,
about love jihad and Christian conspiracies. The literature included a
“love jihad rate card” listing the different sums a Muslim man stands to
earn for converting girls from different regions. Even the Supreme Court
has, time and again, shown an inclination to subordinate issues of justice
to majoritarian aspirations in order “to satisfy the collective conscience
of the nation”. The fight against terrorism is being systematically used to
disrupt the lives of ordinary Muslims. A case in point is Hadiya’s sorry
plight which has been precipitated by the justice system pandering to the
bogey of love jihad terrorism, thereby stalling a young woman’s basic
freedom to choose her religion and her mate.

The one indubitable take away from the Gujarat election is that the
hope-inspiring sabka saath sabka vikas slogan has been emptied of all
meaning. There is now no denying the truth in the recent observation of a
professor and RSS ideologue that Hindutva is the nation’s preferred
ideology as it is “compatible with the common wisdom of the Indian masses”.
Although not officially proclaimed, the Hindu rashtra is already upon us.
And to hell with the minorities.

The writer,a former civil servant, is secretary general of Lok Janshakti
Party. Views are personal.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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