*Status of Minorities: A Tale of Two Neighbors*

*Ram Puniyani*





Pakistan and India, these neighbors got Independence in the mid August
1947. Today 55 years after the Independence where do these two major
countries of the subcontinent stand vis a vis their religious minorities,
is the question which we need to answer to ensure a better and more
democratic area.



On August 11, 2012, a mob of over 50000, mainly Muslims, assembled in Azad
Maidan to protest against the ill treatment of Muslims in Assam and
Myanmar. After some speeches full of provocation and after display of some
provocative posters, the mob turned violent and vented its ire against the
media for not covering the plight of Assam’s Muslims displaced in the July
violence involving Bodos and Muslims. Needless to say that in Assam
violence nearly 80 people have been killed and over 4 lakh people, mostly
Muslims-Bodos, have been displaced, right under the nose of the ruling
government. It burned few OB vans. Mob also took on the police.
Humiliated-molested women police personnel and beat up other police
personnel. While controlling the violence the police did the firing, which
lead to death of two young men. In the whole scuffle many a police
personnel also got injured. Now, the Raza Academy, the organizers, has
issued an apology saying the meeting was infiltrated by provocateurs. Still
the organizers cannot shun their responsibility from the whole tragedy. The
protest has always to be on democratic lines, non violent and the speeches
in meetings have to be on moderate lines, the hate speech and inciting the
mobs is not excusable on any condition.





In the same week there is news that nearly 300 Hindus have crossed over to
India from Pakistan. Ostensibly they have come here for pilgrimage, but
many of them have stated that they will not go back as they don’t feel safe
in Pakistan. Most of these Hindus are from Sind and Baluchistan. There are
reports of forced abduction and conversion of Hindu girls there and the
religious minorities have to live the life of second class citizens. The
religious minorities persecuted in Pakistan are not just Hindus; Sikhs and
Christians but also Shias and Ahmadiyas, a sect of Islam.



Where do we find ourselves nearly six decades down the line after we
committed ourselves to democracy and secular principles? India came into
being as a secular democratic state and even Pakistan which was formed in
the name of Islam for the Muslim majority areas of British India began with
the secular principles as enunciated in the oft quoted 11th August 1947
speech of Qaed-e-Azam Jinnah. In the speech he said that the state has
nothing to do with the religion, people are free to go to their mosques,
temples and churches or whatever, as it is their personal matter. He also
said that the white color in Pakistan flag represents minorities. Still the
logic of communalism was ‘built-in’ in the whole system. One can make a
secular speech but the social base which had resulted in formation of
Pakistan, the one of feudal elements was intact. Mere secular speeches
don’t change the social reality. The communalism caught up in Pakistan in
due course of time and in late seventies, with Zia ul Haq-Maulana Maududi
duo ruling the roost, the Mullahs came to the fore-front. The
Mullah-Military complex backed up by the United States, which had a
substantial say in the affairs of Pakistan, violated every letter and the
core spirit of the speech of Mr. Jinnah, to the extent that today even the
Muslim minorities, Shias and Ahmadiays are as much victims of religious
intolerance and it is getting reflected in their political status in the
country.





India with Gandhi and Nehru as the major pillars of shaping the values of
Indian national movement, were unshakable in their commitment to
secularism. Gandhi, the devout Hindu and Nehru the atheist had the vision
of a state totally committed to respecting the people of all religious
denominations, while keeping a distance from those trying to bring in
matters related to faith in the ambit of the policies of state. Nehru while
doing this realized two major handicaps. One that, while our constitution
is secular, the society is in the grip of religiosity, so he found this as
an obstacle in full implementation of secular policies. The second flaw he
saw was that in his party, which was founded on the grounds of secular
values has been infiltrated by communal elements. There was no one to heed
to his warning, and in due course many an actions of some Congress leaders
were indistinguishable from those of the communal elements, those forcing
the country in the direction of religious nationalism.





The health of democracy in any country has to be gauzed by the security and
equity of minorities in the country. Through the complicated mechanisms,
the influence of communal elements has risen exponentially during last
three decades in particular. The whole trajectory of these two countries
has been very different. While in Pakistan, there was always a space for
communalism to creep in comfortably, task of communal politics became still
simpler with the country falling in to the grip of Military dictatorships
time and over again. The intervention of United States and US policies in
Afghanistan, in particular, added fuel to the fire.





In India, the opportunism, the fallacies of electoral system, first past
the poll, the rising anxiety of sections of society, the successful effort
of communal forces to project the fear of the small minorities to the big
majority and the politics around emotive issues like Ram Temple completed
the picture. Today roughly while Muslims are 13.4% in population, their
percentage amongst violence victims is 90%. Today they are standing at the
bottom of socio-economic indices. Sachar Committee has demonstrated it
beyond any shadow of doubt. In Pakistan, the percentage of Hindu minorities
has declined over a period of time and their security and social status is
abominable. The injustices on minorities in one country are no
justification for heaping of injustices in other country. The reactionary
communalism is used by political forces in their own ways. The communal
forces in India look at the Hindus exiling from Pakistan and the Assam
violence as the attack on Hindus. In Pakistan the atrocities on Muslims in
India give them a handle to further intimidate the Hindus there. In
response to Babri demolition, many a temples were razed to dust in Pakistan.





All said and done there is a gross contrast between the situation in
Pakistan and India. Despite setbacks, the secular democratic values are the
foundation of Indian system, though very much compromised in recent
decades. In Pakistan on the other hand, democracy has been a marginal
value, there are efforts to root it in Pakistan but the obstacles are
immense. The common factor is the suffering of minorities though the degree
of this suffering is very different in both these countries.





Where will all this lead us to? The communal issue is a big brake to the
social development of the countries as a whole. The values of affirmative
action for weaker sections of society, the going an extra mile to protect
them and to bring them up in social area is what is needed.  Sixty five
years after coming out from the yoke of colonialism, it is time we remember
the values of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, the principles which guided
our freedom movement. In India there is an urgent need to reform our
electoral system to reflect our social and political needs. Communal
violence and discrimination against minorities is an immense loss to our
national ethos and humanism. Time to check it and reaffirm in practice,
those values which made us India! And for Pakistan high time to come back
to the values outlined in the speech of Jinnah on 11th August 1947, decline
in the percentage of minorities and their exodus from Pakistan is a great
insult to the founder of Pakistan!

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement?hl=en.

Reply via email to