[A view worth taking note of.

<<An overdue agenda of India’s cultural politics has been to intelligently
deny the Hindutva camp proprietorship of Hindu cultural identity. More
acutely, Gandhi’s articulation here underscores that Hindutva, far from
being a religious construct, is essentially a neo-fascist political theory
of state and polity. Therefore, it’s far removed from Hinduism as practiced
by India’s majority population. Where quotidian Hindus – like quotidian
Muslims – have always practiced their faith in non-sectarian ways, Hindutva
has viciously stoked sectarian and hate-filled cultural proclivities.

It cannot be detrimental for this contrast to have been flagged during the
campaign. Gandhi, then, did not so much as succumb to Hindutva as he sought
to dethrone its pernicious content with the virtues of personally-held
faith. I make bold to say that if the Congress party works this agenda with
intelligent discrimination and in tandem with demonstrated pluralism in
government and on the ground, such praxis may rid us of a menace against
which Indian politics seems helpless.>>]

https://thewire.in/politics/why-rahul-gandhi-is-right-to-pit-hinduism-against-hindutva

Why Rahul Gandhi Is Right to Pit Hinduism Against Hindutva
Gandhi underscores that Hindutva is a neo-fascist theory which is far
removed from Hinduism.

Why Rahul Gandhi Is Right to Pit Hinduism Against Hindutva

Congress party president Rahul Gandhi. Credit: PTI

Badri Raina

3 HOURS AGO

It is never a good thing for politics to go just one way in a democracy as
pluralist as India’s.

The defeat of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party in the three Hindi
heartland states, therefore, must be seen as a salutary course correction.

A hitherto supine Indian National Congress is clearly up and about, and a
feisty revival of its self-confidence is visible everywhere. It will be
graceless pusillanimity to deny that Rahul Gandhi as the new Congress
president had anything to do with this. Gandhi has battled self-doubt and
derision with a steady and humble self-application to the complexities both
of his own party and the national zeitgeist, and he emerged triumphant.

Gandhi’s sifting of the campaign agenda and his denomination of personnel
at all levels has, for the most part, been impeccable and untainted by
small-minded considerations. As has been his refusal to answer the politics
of hate and chicanery by similar means. He has earned his spurs the hard
way and decisively put to rest speculations about his leadership. It may be
said that his career graph defines a heroism of sincerity.

Most electoral campaigns in democracies tend to follow largely predictable
axes of propagation, but three aspects of Gandhi’s campaign invite
particular attention.

Also read: Here’s What Congress Needs to Do to Continue Its Winning Streak
in 2019

Throughout the Congress’s campaign, Gandhi has sought to take the party
more to the Left than could have been expected. He has relentlessly
attacked the crony-corporate friendliness of the Modi dispensation and
countered it by highlighting  agrarian distress and joblessness – issues
that have yielded considerable traction among the populace – both in the
rural and urban sectors.  The severity of these mass predicaments  has been
far too real to be fobbed off by the regressively emotive shenanigans
sought to be unleashed by the Hindu rightwing.

More controversially – and for most liberal commentators, problematically –
Gandhi, after listening to the findings of the A.K. Antony report, has
sought to boldly embrace his Hindu identity.

On the face of it, this aspect of his campaign must seem dismaying to those
who hold on dearly to the secular principles of constitutional  politics.
There is no doubt that this new turn within the campaign has caused deep
apprehension among minority communities, especially  Muslims, who,
regardless of their misgivings, see in the Indian National Congress some
guarantee of secular safety.

Upon deeper reflection, however, a more constructive and long-term
interpretation of this turn seems warranted.

An overdue agenda of India’s cultural politics has been to intelligently
deny the Hindutva camp proprietorship of Hindu cultural identity. More
acutely, Gandhi’s articulation here underscores that Hindutva, far from
being a religious construct, is essentially a neo-fascist political theory
of state and polity. Therefore, it’s far removed from Hinduism as practiced
by India’s majority population. Where quotidian Hindus – like quotidian
Muslims – have always practiced their faith in non-sectarian ways, Hindutva
has viciously stoked sectarian and hate-filled cultural proclivities.

It cannot be detrimental for this contrast to have been flagged during the
campaign. Gandhi, then, did not so much as succumb to Hindutva as he sought
to dethrone its pernicious content with the virtues of personally-held
faith. I make bold to say that if the Congress party works this agenda with
intelligent discrimination and in tandem with demonstrated pluralism in
government and on the ground, such praxis may rid us of a menace against
which Indian politics seems helpless.

This must now involve re-owning India’s minority populations with
conviction and without fear of the hitherto accusations of ‘minority
appeasement’. Given that, however subtly, Gandhi has shown Hindutva to be
the larger and more detrimental appeasement politics, Indian Muslims need
not suffer any longer on account of an opprobrium that the Congress party
has caved into off and on.

The Indian masses have seen enough of the depredation wrought by Hindutva
as a political-cultural posturing now to know that it is anything but
Hinduism. Gandhi has courageously taken on the onus to exorcise Hindutva
jinn from India’s statecraft and body-politic. However, should the Congress
be seen jittery again in embracing India’s minorities, especially Muslims,
it would only end in paying a fatal compliment to the adversary it seeks to
vanquish.

Also read: Assembly Elections 2018: What Does This Loss Mean for the BJP?

The third aspect of Gandhi’s tenure as party president concerns his style
of leadership. By all accounts, his democratic humility is no mere posture.
The stunning revival of the party structures from top to bottom seem
intimately connected with his determination to respect opinions on as wide
a scale as party functioning permits. He seems truly to have encouraged
First Amendment rights, so to speak, to workers, satraps, regional leaders
and party spokespersons to a point where they now seem both unafraid and
all the more committed to the party’s ideology rather just to his person.
This is a fine prospect for India’s multi-party democracy and for the
Indian National Congress particularly.

But, having ousted the BJP from its heartland bastions by appraising the
electorate of the hollow nature of political jumlas, the Congress must now
ensure that its own manifesto does not similarly remain a fake gesture. It
will be crucial for the party that its governance remains rooted in
delivering upon its promises. Where if fails to do so for objective
reasons, it must be able to forthrightly communicate to the people the
constraints which prevented it from performing in those areas.

Much of the party’s credentials to play a leading role in unifying
political opposition against the BJP in the upcoming general elections will
depend on its people-oriented governance.

Badri Raina taught English literature at Delhi University for four decades.
He is the author of Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth, The Underside of
Things: India and the World, Kashmir: A Noble Tryst in Tatters and other
books.
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Peace Is Doable

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