*It is refreshing to know that there are some in India, who can rise above
the mundane ** and think in broader terms as India hurdles towards a
glorious 'Sensex Ayodhya', demolishing all Babris.

All is not well and Dr. Sunil Khilnani has at least eluded to a Muslim
narrative that is gagged by the media and political class.

That does not bode well. I love my country. I love India. But the way
aggression is becoming the only currency in the land, I feel that 150
million Muslims are pauperized as they  would not or cannot resort to
violence. Their back is to the wall.

Dr. Khlinani has rightly taken note of the gross injustice organized by an
oligarchic ruling class. And the logic of thar institutionalized injustice
is penetrated even into the very annals of the judiciary. Only a big
evolution or revolution will possibly cleanse the system. Till that time,
thinkers and writers like Dr. Khilnani will have to put their thumbs into
the holes of the dikes that is holding the floods.
*

*Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai*

*[email protected]*

*<http://www.ghulammuhammed.blogspot.com>*


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.livemint.com/2010/10/15221258/The-Sensex-can8217t-heal-Ay.html



   - Posted: Fri, Oct 15 2010. 10:12 PM IST

 The Sensex can’t heal Ayodhya’s wounds
*With its verdict on the Babri Masjid dispute, the Allahabad high court
moved beyond the realm of jurisprudence, As the nation looked to the Sensex
for salvation. Ayodhya’s harm can’t be undone by the wealth of economics or
principles of law, but by the struggles and inventions of our politics*

Public Eye | Sunil Khilnani

*A fortnight ago, as the Allahabad high court handed down its judgement on
the disputed title to the site of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya, the Sensex
was hovering at an all-time high. While the lead-up to the Ayodhya judgement
generated much speculative punditry, for many the more mind-focusing
predictive issues concerned the market. Visitors to GaneshaSpeaks.comcould
take counsel from the “Fortune Mantra” for 30 September: “No matter how good
a dealer you are at the stock market, make sure you refer to your birth
chart for the yogas in your main horoscope once & move ahead according to
the planetary positions...People with birth dates 9, 18 & 27 should
wear ‘3 mukhi
+ Ganesha rudraksh’.” *

*In the wake of the Ayodhya verdict, some have taken hope from the apparent
ease with which India’s reservoirs of faith seem to have been rechannelled
from mandir to mandi. A new faith seems to be emerging: Economism, the
belief that India’s steady economic growth will lift us away and out of all
the political vexations we face. *

*[image: Conflicting moods: Ayodhya on 22 September. Security was beefed up
before the high court verdict.]*

*Conflicting moods: Ayodhya on 22 September. Security was beefed up before
the high court verdict.*

*
*

*Reactions to the Ayodhya judgement have been interesting to watch. For a
start, political and intellectual reactions have diverged. In political
circles, the response was relatively muted—there was little effort to revive
the street mobilization the issue evoked in the past, and even the main
political parties were somewhat hesitant to declare too clear a position on
the verdict, happy to stay foggy on whether to see the judgement as a
“victory” or “defeat”. The commentariat, however, has been more divided and
declaratory: some seeing the judgement as a fatal blow to constitutional
secularism and as a denial of minority justice—a “second demolition”; others
finding in it deft legal rope-trickery which could achieve a peaceable
compromise. And the media, while patting itself on the back at not having
been inflammatory in its coverage, nevertheless did all it could to try to
stoke a Punch and Judy show across its talk-shops.*

*We should all be troubled by the Ayodhya decision—but troubled in a way
that does not hasten us into self-righteous claims about what would have
been the right or appropriate decision. *

*We should be troubled not least because no possible verdict would have
offered resolution—each would have been troubling in different ways: in
terms of strict justice, recognition of religious realities, or the
maintenance of social peace. Even the judgement’s one potential virtue—that
it may have helped to dampen the chance of violent reactions—is itself
troubling: because while this is an entirely desirable outcome, it was
reached by dispiriting means. *

*Also Read Sunil’s previous Lounge
columns<http://www.livemint.com/articles/Authors.aspx?author=Sunil%20Khilnani&type=wa>
*

*The fact is, we’ve once again shunted over to the courts questions and
tasks that they are neither designed to fulfil, nor should have to. This
increasing reliance on the courts parallels our increasing resort to
military and paramilitary forces to deal with domestic dissent. In both
cases, the inflated demands we place on the judicial and coercive arms of
the state are a symptom of a political failure: the failure to sustain a
sense of political community across our citizenry.  *

*Why should we be troubled by the Ayodhya verdict?*

*First, at least from a preliminary reading of what is a very long and often
digressive trio of judgements, it seems in the first instance to be a
failure of the judiciary even on its own terms. The high court bench seems
to have failed to confront frontally the act of collective vandalism that
destroyed the Babri Masjid in December 1992—and has failed to even seek any
reparation for that act, let alone find it. There appears to be no
acknowledgement in the judgements that the 1992 demolition was an illegal
act—in fact it has said surprisingly little about the events of 1992, which
is itself astonishing given that all the court’s discussions about
reapportioning possession of the disputed plot turned on the fact that there
no longer exists a mosque at the site. *

*[image: Positive fallout: (left) Lawyers representing the Ram Janambhoomi
Punaruddhar Samiti minutes after the verdict was announced; the Sensex has
remained above the 20,000 mark this month. Photographs: Pradeep Gaur / Mint]
*

*Positive fallout: (left) Lawyers representing the Ram Janambhoomi
Punaruddhar Samiti minutes after the verdict was announced; the Sensex has
remained above the 20,000 mark this month. Photographs: Pradeep Gaur / Mint*

*
*

*Further, and in addition to the court’s silence on the central event that
led to the case being moved—the destruction of the Babri Masjid by a mob,
watched over and cheered by the top leadership of the BJP, all of whose
political if not moral careers directly benefited as a result—the court’s
construal and attempt to resolve the questions of ownership and title seems
puzzling. It’s hard to see the strictly legal basis for partitioning a plot
of land that had been in the possession of the Sunni Waqf Board for a very
long time indeed. As such, the judgement offers an unnerving conception of
the stability of property rights.*

*But of course, the site in question was not about just any plot of
land. And this is where we ask too much of the court, pushing it into
domains beyond its proper concern. The site at Ayodhya is at once—to some
Indians—a unifying symbol in a religious cosmology and narrative, to others
a polarizing and divisive reference in our political and public life, and to
still others a (now destroyed) historical monument, part of a common Indian
heritage. *

*So, while the verdict has chosen silence on the destructive event that
actually provoked the case, it has been voluble on the subjects it is less
equipped to pronounce upon: religious geography and archaeological history.
The result is a sort of curious cut-and-paste history and theology, which
has been inducted into the judgements.  *

*Although forced into alien terrain, it does seem a pity that the court
chose to set itself up as an arbiter on matters of religion and history. It
could perfectly well have acknowledged the existence of deep and widely held
beliefs among many (though not all) Hindus about the sacred character of one
specific area of the site. Without claiming access to a GPS that can lead us
to the exact address where divine delivery occurred—who really knows the
exact spot where our favourite god may have decided to be born?—it could
have registered the fact that many do hold such convictions about the
precise location, and as such these fellow Indians and their views have a
claim to recognition. The right of these Hindus to worship at their
preferred site could be recognized and incorporated into the always
complicated and the now battered-down architecture of the site—in ways that
allow access and use, but without partition. *

*And yet, for all its faults, I am not at all clear that this was a
disastrous verdict—as some have claimed. I think it may have been nearer to
being the least bad one. Why? *

*It’s on the bad end of the spectrum because I don’t buy the “move on”
argument—1992 and all that is just so much blood under the bridge, and
anyway aren’t we all now simply interested in getting on economically? So
let’s forget about those troublesome, divisive matters, and just get on with
the business of getting rich. As long as it catches mice, my cat can pray to
any god. Those who in the early 1990s might have rallied to collect bricks
for shilanyas are now more interested in the annual percentage rates (APR)
for mortgages. All this is true. But this is a fair-weather hopefulness—and
dangerously precarious as such. What happens when the economy chokes and
stumbles—are we disarming ourselves of protections and remedies we may need
when money-making distractions run aground? In this sense, economism as
faith is misplaced.*

*On the other hand, I also don’t buy the argument that this was somehow a
litmus test case over whether Indian Muslims can reliably expect justice,
and fair treatment within our republic. On the Ayodhya matter, it was always
far-fetched to expect the courts to render justice to anyone—let alone to
Indian Muslims. It is through political determination on the part of
political leaders that something more than a symbolic justice might be
achieved. The real scandal, it seems to me, is the fact that the
recommendations of the Sachar Committee remain, four years on, only
superficially addressed. Indian Muslims remain extraordinarily disprivileged
in all the crucial dimensions necessary for a citizen to improve her or his
life chances. *

*I think it may be the least bad decision because the fact is that
politically, large parts of the country have experienced something of a
shift towards the right—especially when it comes to religious feeling (this
applies to all believers). As some have noted, a verdict more fulsomely in
favour of the mosque would have offered fuel to those wishing to reignite
old embers. There is truth to this sort of pragmatism—though it is hardly an
ennobling truth. Accepting it is to acknowledge that the shift in our centre
of political gravity, in our “common sense”, somehow constrains the
operation of our justice system. Yet it underlines another truth: that every
struggle for justice takes place in a particular context—one that defines
the ecology in which courts can operate, and that provides any legal system
with its particular constraints and opportunities, in ways that necessarily
deform more abstract principles of justice. *

*I hope that the Allahabad judgement will be challenged in the Supreme
Court—and I hope the highest court takes its time over the matter, finding
for once virtue in delay. I hope that the Sensex keeps climbing. But any
resolution to the Ayodhya-Babri Masjid matter will ultimately be found
neither in the courts nor in the markets: neither in legalism nor in
economism. Making good the tear in our republic’s fabric that Ayodhya caused
will lie not in the wealth of economics or the principles of law, but in the
struggles and inventions of our politics. What was done to our sense of
political community, in the 1980s by the Congress party, in the past two
decades by the BJP, is not something whose legacy we shall easily escape.
Poison was thrown into the well. We certainly cannot expect our learned
judges to remedy this. It will take a good deal more than even the most
immaculate judicial opinions, or the most happily ascendant Sensex, to do
that.*

*Sunil Khilnani is the author of The Idea of India and is currently working
on a new book, India in Search of Wealth and Power. Write to him at
[email protected]*

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