[I. <<Yashpal Saxena rejected what I call the Doctrine of Vicarious Guilt.
It is the idea that an entire community must collectively carry the guilt
for crimes – real or imagined, committed now or in history – which any of
its members may have perpetrated. This doctrine harbours a moral
rationalisation of violence that people may wreak on other people in
vengeance solely for sharing the same identity as the real or imagined
criminal.
...
For the gruesome killing of Dalits in Tsundur, Andhra Pradesh, in 1991, in
Jhajjar, Haryana, in 2002, in Khairlinji, Maharashtra, in 2006, or indeed
the atrocities against Dalits that shame every generation, the upper caste
Hindus are never held collectively responsible. Nor are they pronounced
jointly guilty for the massacre of Sikhs in 1984 and of Muslims in 2002.
Much less are all men held responsible for the subjugation of women through
history in much of the world. Such collective responsibility seems to be
apportioned only to religious minorities, most of all to Muslims.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. I. below.)

II.<<Preparations to unleash communal violence – for it is almost never
spontaneous, but results from careful groundwork and calculations regarding
costs and benefits – damage the social fabric. A Muslim family murdering
the Hindu suitor of their daughter damages individual lives. Moreover, and
perhaps ironically, while the act may be motivated by the horror of having
to welcome someone from another religion into the family, it may not
necessarily be inspired by a dread of that religion. There are many Muslims
who cannot imagine marrying a Hindu and many Hindus who would be just as
resistant to the idea that one of their own might marry a Muslim. This,
however, does not mean such Muslims and Hindus hate the other community. In
many parts of India, these communities exist peacefully, recognising the
right of the other to its own lifeways.
Communalism is the context in which the right of another community to exist
is questioned. Identities are complex: I may not wish to enter into certain
kinds of relationships with you but that does not mean I wish to destroy
your identity and seek to subsume it within my own. We know each other’s
boundaries and occasionally wander across them and relate to one another in
some contexts, but not in others. This maynot be the ideal situation for a
multi-religious society but it is how most lives in such societies are
lived. Historically, too, the situation has not been much different.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. II. below.)]

I/II.
https://scroll.in/article/868168/india-owes-ankit-saxenas-father-a-debt-of-gratitude-for-refusing-to-communalise-his-sons-murder

India owes Ankit Saxena’s father a debt of gratitude for refusing to
communalise his son’s murder
Yashpal Saxena, whose son was killed by the family members of a Muslim girl
he was in love with, lights the way for us in these dark times of hatred.

India owes Ankit Saxena’s father a debt of gratitude for refusing to
communalise his son’s murder
Via YouTube

Yesterday · 07:30 am

Harsh Mander

By affirming that he bore Muslims no ill will, Yashpal Saxena, whose only
son Ankit Saxena was murdered by the family of the Muslim girl he loved,
demolished one of the most widely used rationalisations for communal
hatred. For this, for his luminous humanity even in the face of great
personal tragedy, the nation owes him an immense debt of gratitude.

Yashpal Saxena rejected what I call the Doctrine of Vicarious Guilt. It is
the idea that an entire community must collectively carry the guilt for
crimes – real or imagined, committed now or in history – which any of its
members may have perpetrated. This doctrine harbours a moral
rationalisation of violence that people may wreak on other people in
vengeance solely for sharing the same identity as the real or imagined
criminal.

Some of the most brutal mass crimes in recent history were such acts of
collective vengeance against a community for the real or imagined crimes of
a few of its members. More than 3,000 Sikhs were killed in 1984 in reprisal
for the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi by two Sikhs guards.
The 9/11 attack has been invoked to condone military strikes on civilian
populations in faraway Afghanistan and Iraq. Each terrorist attack in Paris
inevitably makes the entire Muslim population of France culpable in many
eyes. It is the same idea that is invoked to justify communal violence and
hate crimes in this country.

Remarkably, though, this doctrine is applied selectively. For the gruesome
killing of Dalits in Tsundur, Andhra Pradesh, in 1991, in Jhajjar, Haryana,
in 2002, in Khairlinji, Maharashtra, in 2006, or indeed the atrocities
against Dalits that shame every generation, the upper caste Hindus are
never held collectively responsible. Nor are they pronounced jointly guilty
for the massacre of Sikhs in 1984 and of Muslims in 2002. Much less are all
men held responsible for the subjugation of women through history in much
of the world. Such collective responsibility seems to be apportioned only
to religious minorities, most of all to Muslims.

Murderous thinking
When Shambhulal Regar chose the 25th anniversary of the Babri Masjid’s
demolition to kill Mohammad Afrazul Afrazul Khan, a migrant worker from
West Bengal living in Rajasthan’s Rajsamand town, he did not target him for
any crimes he had committed. He felt justified hacking Afrazul to death and
burning his body for the many crimes he believed Muslims were responsible
for. He listed them in a series of videotaped rants: he speaks of love
jihad, a conspiracy theory pushed by Hindutva groups that Muslim men woo
Hindu women for the sole purpose of converting them to Islam; of
counterfeit money that funds terrorist groups; of films such as PK and
Padmavati that make fun of Hindu gods and distort “Hindu history”; of a
Muslim conspiracy to destroy a generation of Hindus by attracting them to
drugs; of mafia dons who find safe havens in Pakistan while looting India;
of sinister black-robed Muslim men who surround mosques; and of Ayodhya,
where a Ram temple could not be built even 25 years after the Babri Masjid
was razed.

The same rationalisation drove the violence that accompanied the campaign
to demolish the Babri Masjid and replace it with a grand temple to Ram. The
logic went thus: Babar had demolished a Ram temple and built a mosque in
its place – it was irrelevant that there was no convicting archaeological
or historical evidence to back this claim – and Indian Muslims today must
atone for the 16th century Mughal emperor’s crime by giving up their claim
to the site. The Bharatiya Janata Party leader Lal Krishna Advani began his
1989 Rath Yatra, meant to galvanise the Hindu masses for building the Ram
temple, from Somnath temple in Gujarat to underline “Muslim guilt” that
dates back even further – this temple had been looted and destroyed by the
Muslim invader Mahmud Ghazni in 1024 CE.

In 1999, when Australian missionary Graham Staines was burnt alive with his
two young sons in Odisha by the Sangh Parivar activist Dara Singh to
“avenge the crime” of converting Hindus to Christianity, Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee implied the same rationale of vicarious guilt by
calling for a “national debate” on conversions.

It was also implicit in Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s notorious remark, in
relation to the 1984 Sikh massacre in Delhi, that when a big tree fell, the
earth was bound to shake. At that time, I was posted in Indore, Madhya
Pradesh, and my wife taught in the city’s Daly College. One of her
colleagues, reading out the attendance sheet, stopped and asked a little
boy with cropped hair, “Are you not a Sikh?” The boy was petrified, then
responded in a shaking voice, “Hanji, Madam, main Sikh hun, par maine
Indira Gandhi ko nahi mara.” Yes, I am Sikh, but I did not kill Indira
Gandhi.

An identical rationale lay behind the Gujarat carnage of 2002. At a meeting
of the BJP’s parliamentary party in Delhi in December 2002, Vajpayee, in a
thinly disguised rationalisation of the “Hindu anger” that manifested in
the violence that followed the alleged torching of a train coach carrying
Hindu pilgrims, lamented: “Why didn’t people of the Muslim community
condemn the Godhra incident? Even today, there is no repentance that we
committed a mistake or that this should not have happened and that it was a
crime.”

Regretting the post-Godhra violence, he had asked in April 2002, “Lekin aag
lagayi kisne?” Who lit the fire? The poet prime minister suggested that
Muslims as a community should seek forgiveness for the crime that some of
their co-religionists had allegedly committed.

The orgy of slaughter, rape, loot and arson that followed the burning of a
train coach in Godhra was widely perceived as righteous, or at least an
understandable reaction to the “barbaric crime” of the Muslims. Photo
credit: AFP

In fact, ever since that train coach burned at Godhra railway station, an
intolerably heavy burden of vicarious guilt has been thrust upon the
shoulders of India’s Muslim community. The orgy of slaughter, rape, loot
and arson that followed was widely perceived as righteous, or at least an
understandable reaction to the “barbaric crime” of the Muslims. Chief
Minister Narendra Modi described the gruesome incident at Godhra as a
planned “one -sided collective terrorist attack by one community.” In a
speech telecast on Doordarshan on February 28, 2002, he said, “This heinous
crime, cowardly and inhuman crime, has taken place in Gujarat. It cannot be
justified in any civilised society. A crime that can never be forgiven.” He
has never made a comparable speech expressing anguish at the murders and
rape of Muslims that followed the train burning.

Not just for Modi. For a very large number of my friends, extended family
and colleagues in the Indian Administrative Service, the anger and violence
against Muslims by Gujarati Hindus was understandable, if not actually
righteous, because some Muslims were claimed to have deliberately set fire
to a train compartment filled with Hindu women, children and men. If there
was evidence this had indeed happened, it would not justify the killing,
rape and looting. But even the facts of what happened at Godhra that
fateful morning are far from settled.

Still, The Times of India reported that Modi quoted Newton’s law that every
action has an equal and opposite reaction to virtually justify the massacre
of Muslims. The statement was denied later, but the Special Investigation
Team appointed by the Supreme Court to look into the Gujarat riots cases
confirmed that Modi had made this statement in a television interview. The
team’s report quotes the exact statement: “Kriya pratikriya ke chain chal
rahi hai. Hum chaete hai ke na kriya ho, aur na pratikriya.” A chain of
action and reaction is going on, he said, we neither want action nor
reaction.

Lighting the way
It is these ideas of vicarious guilt and the inevitable, even righteous,
action-reaction that Yashpal Saxena has rejected. His photographer son fell
in love with a Muslim college student in his neighbourhood and they wanted
to marry. Her father was opposed to their relationship and allegedly killed
Ankit Saxena in what was a gruesome hate crime.

The magazine Caravan reported that when Delhi BJP chief Manoj Tiwari went
to meet Yashpal Saxena, he begged him and the media not to communalise his
son’s murder. “I had one son,” he said. “If I get justice, it’s good. If
not, even then I don’t have hatred against any community. I have no such
(communal) thinking. I am unable to understand why the media is showing
this issue in that way.”

One of Ankit Saxena’s closest friends was a Muslim, Mohammed Azhar Alam. He
told The Quint he accompanied Yashpal Saxena to Haridwar to immerse Ankit
Saxena’s ashes. There he performed puja with his friend’s father. “Uncle
even showed me the way in which the holy dip is taken in the Ganga,” he
said. “I took the dip with him, and prayed with him.”

The Caravan report is full of endearing stories about Ankit Saxena’s
carefree group of friends who called themselves “Awaara Boys”. One of them,
Chetan Narang, said, “Temple, gurudwara, mosque, church – we used to go
visit every place of worship. It was Ankit who would take us to all these
places. He never discriminated against any religion.”

India would be a an infinitely more humane land if we had more people like
Ankit Saxena and his father. We owe Yashpal Saxena a special debt for his
humanity and fairness, for rejecting the doctrine of collective communal
responsibility for the crimes of individuals and of “action justifies
reaction”. He lights the way for us in these dark times of hatred.

II.
https://scroll.in/article/867913/opinion-we-must-resist-calls-to-see-ankit-saxenas-killing-in-delhi-as-an-act-of-communal-violence

Opinion: Ankit Saxena’s murder is tragic but it does not warrant protest
marches from liberals
Personalised violence cannot be equated with systematic, normalised
violence.

Opinion: Ankit Saxena’s murder is tragic but it does not warrant protest
marches from liberals
Facebook

3 hours ago

Sanjay Srivastava

Every now and then, there is an exception to the Great Indian Obsession
with things mathematical and scientific. I refer to the well-established
calculus of response whenever there is an incident that involves Hindus and
Muslims. The tabularisation goes something like this: if the so-called
liberals march and hold protest meetings after a Muslim is killed by a
Hindu, then they should do the same in case the opposite happens. The
argument also goes: just as they interrogate Hindu opinion in the case of a
Muslim killing, so they should ask questions of Muslims in the obverse
case. But the family of Ankit Saxena, a young man whose life was cut short
by the blind rage of human senselessness, have bucked this calculus. They
have spurned offers of assistance by politicians and others to cast the
tragedy as an instance of Hindu-Muslim violence.

In their hour of unimaginable grief, they have refused to be swayed by an
imagination of good and evil whose key aim is the persistent pursuit of
social disharmony in the cause of political gain.

It has been reported that members of Saxena’s extended family have publicly
said his murder by the family members of a young women he intended to marry
should not be seen as communal. Rather, they have appealed, the murder
should be seen as a tragedy at a personal level, a disaster visited upon
one family by the mindless actions of another.

It would, of course, have been easy for them to align with a political
cause and, perhaps, gain some material benefit as well as the gratitude of
some very important people. They did not. And by refusing to let their
personal suffering be the stage for enacting cynical political dramas, they
served an important pedagogical function. They told us that the calculus of
public rage ought to be reconsidered so that we better understand the
relations between action and reaction. They told us that we must not be
threatened into becoming robots with a mechanical understanding of outrage.

A human understanding of outrage against violence – marching and
protesting, say – must direct our attention to situations created by
systematic, planned and normalised violence. It should enable us to realise
the difference between personalised violence and the kind of violence that
requires one community to be seduced into thinking of another as the enemy.
Grief deserves an answer, but it cannot be the same under different
circumstances. This only serves to make banal the nature of empathy and
political outrage. We should, of course, be outraged by Saxena’s murder.
Further, it should be deeply concerning that those who murdered him did so
because they did not want a member of their family marrying a person from
another faith. But this in itself does not constitute communal violence, as
Saxena’s family has pointed out.

Communalism as context
Preparations to unleash communal violence – for it is almost never
spontaneous, but results from careful groundwork and calculations regarding
costs and benefits – damage the social fabric. A Muslim family murdering
the Hindu suitor of their daughter damages individual lives. Moreover, and
perhaps ironically, while the act may be motivated by the horror of having
to welcome someone from another religion into the family, it may not
necessarily be inspired by a dread of that religion. There are many Muslims
who cannot imagine marrying a Hindu and many Hindus who would be just as
resistant to the idea that one of their own might marry a Muslim. This,
however, does not mean such Muslims and Hindus hate the other community. In
many parts of India, these communities exist peacefully, recognising the
right of the other to its own lifeways.

Communalism is the context in which the right of another community to exist
is questioned. Identities are complex: I may not wish to enter into certain
kinds of relationships with you but that does not mean I wish to destroy
your identity and seek to subsume it within my own. We know each other’s
boundaries and occasionally wander across them and relate to one another in
some contexts, but not in others. This maynot be the ideal situation for a
multi-religious society but it is how most lives in such societies are
lived. Historically, too, the situation has not been much different.

This, then, is what the Saxena family’s reaction tells us in all its
undeniable tragedy: in their sorrow, they seek no false comfort of hating
that which they can tolerate.

This is also why we must resist calls to hit the streets in protest against
the murder of Saxena as an act of Hindu-Muslim violence. It cheapens pathos
by casting it as part of an abstract drama of identity, rather than the
site of personal grief. And it sets rolling preparations for greater
tragedies.

Sanjay Srivastava is a sociologist.


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Peace Is Doable

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