May 04, 2018
India: The Hindu Right Has More in Common With Jinnah Than AMU Students Do
| Faizan Mustafa
<https://communalism.blogspot.in/2018/05/india-hindu-right-has-more-in-common.html>
The Wire
<https://thewire.in/communalism/the-hindu-right-has-more-in-common-with-jinnah-than-amu-students-do>

The Hindu Right Has More in Common With Jinnah Than AMU Students Do
Resistance by students to the removal of Jinnah's portrait should not be
taken as an endorsement of his ideology. It is merely an assertion of the
democratic right to take their own decisions.
Faizan Mustafa <https://thewire..in/author/fvoq>

No one individual has caused as much damage to the Muslim cause in the
Indian subcontinent as Muhammad Ali Jinnah. Why is it that a lawyer of his
eminence – who had argued even for Bal Gangadhar Tilak – could not
understand that India was going to be a democracy rather than Hindu
monarchy? Did he, as a lawyer, consider the possibility of the future
amendments to the constitution by a majoritarian government?
By dividing the Muslim population into two (now three, after Bangladesh),
he permanently weakened their position and made them a numeric minority in
India. The creation of Bangladesh proved Jinnah wrong within the first 25
years of Pakistan’s establishment.
Given all of this, Muslims in India and the students of Aligarh Muslim
University (AMU) should have genuine grievances against Jinnah, and may
want to discuss whether to withdraw the lifetime membership of the AMU
students’ union he was granted. But no outsider has the right to dictate
what they should do or threaten them on this account. Resistance by
students to the removal of his portrait should not be taken as an
endorsement of Jinnah’s ideology. It is merely an assertion of the
democratic right to take their own decisions.
In fact, extremist Hindu groups like Adityanath’s Hindu Yuva Vahini, the
RSS, VHP and so on have more in common with Jinnah than nationalist and
patriotic Muslims. Hindu leaders like V..D. Savarkar and M.S. Golwalkar,
just like Jinnah, believed that Hindus and Muslims are two distinct
nations. The Muslim ulema were unanimous in their rejection of Pakistan.
Even out of some 11% Muslims who had a right to vote under the Government
of India Act, 1935, many opposed the Muslim League, and an overwhelming
majority, out of their own free will, chose India as their country. The
Hindu Right, strangely, has a problem with these patriotic Muslims, who
think loving India is part of their religion and will sacrifice everything
for their chosen country.
Is it not a fact that the Muslim League and Hindu Mahasabha were coalition
partners in the provincial governments of Bengal and Sindh? When the Muslim
League passed the Pakistan resolution, the Hindu Mahasabha was its ally.
Forget the past, is not the BJP even today in alliance with the People’s
Democratic Party and other similar parties in the Northeast? Will the Hindu
Yuva Vahini force the BJP to withdraw from the PDP government?
Both the Hindu Mahasabha and Muslim League had divisive and regressive
ideologies. The inheritors of Savarkar’s ideology are now bent upon
destroying universities which are, ideally, supposed to be liberating
spaces that allow all kinds of ideas to flourish. After Jawaharlal Nehru
University, AMU is their new target – and an easy prey, as it can help them
polarise the country.
*AMU does not subscribe to the two-nation theory*
AMU does not subscribe to the regressive ideology of nations being formed
on the basis of religion. If nations are really made in the name of
 religion, why do Christian countries fight with other Christian countries,
and Islamic countries with other Islamic ones?
AMU is fully committed to the unity and integrity of India. But then AMU
cannot deny that Jinnah was given life membership of the university’s
students’ union in 1938. Jinnah himself was a great votary of Hindu-Muslim
unity during the major part of his political career, and was called the
‘greatest bridge between Hindu-Muslim solidarity’ by Sarojini Naidu.
The students’ union was established by Morrison, the English principal of
Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental (MAO) college, decades before MAO college was
converted into AMU. As a students’ body, AMUSU is not, strictly speaking,
under the control of the vice-chancellor, though he has been given
ceremonial role as its patron. Thus, Aligarh MP Satish Gautam should have
addressed his letter asking for the removal of Jinnah’s portrait from
AMUSU’s hall to the president of the union, as the vice-chancellor cannot
impose his will on the AMUSU. Even the AMUSU president cannot remove any
portrait, or for that matter take any decision, on his own, without
debating the issue in the union’s general body.
Scenes from Wednesday’s clashes at the campus of Aligarh Muslim University.
Credit: Special arrangement
Such a debate would have allowed for the expression of all kinds of views,
and in all likelihood students on their own would have decided to remove
the portrait. But then the extreme Hindu Right does not believe in
democratic processes and frank deliberations, and by their aggressive
posture have created an unnecessary controversy. Now, as and when such a
debate is held, there will be speakers (Muslim rightists) who will take a
tough stand and insist that they will not budge under external pressure
from non-state actors like the Hindu Yuva Vahini.
Prestigious lifetime membership of AMUSU was also given to stalwarts like
Mahatma Gandhi, Nehru, Chandra Shekhar Azad and B.R. Ambedkar. AMU cannot
deny that Jinnah did donate money to it and probably even made a mention of
this institution as a residuary beneficiary in his will. Bombay University
too was a similar beneficiary.
*Jinnah and the Bombay high court*
We continue to host Dalhousie town and Victoria Memorial in India. Should
our revulsion of Jinnah mean we erase historic facts? If so, then the
Bombay high court should not display Jinnah’s enrolment certificate as
lawyer in its museum. This certificate was even shown to Prime Minister
Narendra Modi at the 150th anniversary of the high court. We continue to
have People’s Jinnah Hall and Jinnah House in Mumbai. Why do the Shiv Sena
or other rightist parties not raise a voice against it? Why do we continue
to have Jinnah tower in Guntur as a symbol of peace and harmony, on Mahatma
Gandhi Road? It seems Jinnah’s picture with Hindutva idol Syama Prasad
Mookerjee is even displayed in parliament.
Is it not a fact that the Indian constituent-assembly-cum-first-parliament
had paid rich tributes to Jinnah on his death? Even L.K. Advani, as deputy
prime minister visited his grave and called him a great secularist. In
fact, Jinnah did oppose mixing religion and politics. Thus there is some
truth in the protesting students’ slogan: “*Jinnah to bahana hai *(Jinnah
is just an excuse)”.
This is the ‘New India’, which is entirely different from the liberal and
progressive India which Gandhi, Nehru and other freedom fighters had
imagined. We now want to take the path of those who did not participate in
our freedom struggle <https://thewire.in/history/rss-hindutva-nationalism> and
do not have faith either in our composite culture or in the fundamental duty
<https://indiankanoon.org/doc/867010/> enshrined in the constitution – to
cherish and follow the noble ideals which inspired our national struggle
for freedom.
*Faizan Mustafa <https://thewire.in/author/fvoq> is Vice-Chancellor NALSAR
University of Law, Hyderabad. The views expressed are personal.*

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"humanrights movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/humanrights-movement.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to