November 29, 2008  How politicians turned this man from hero to villain to
hero again Hindustan Times

by Mukul Kesavan
November 29, 2008

The death of Hemant Karkare, the chief of Maharashtra's Anti-Terrorist
Squad, in the battle against jihadi terrorists in Mumbai, puts the recent
squabble over the term 'Hindu' terror into perspective. The alleged
involvement of Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur, Lt Col Purohit and Swami Dayanand
Pandey with the terrorist explosions in Malegaon had lazy journalists using
the term as a kind of tabloid short hand.

Spokesmen for the BJP and commentators sympathetic to the Sangh Parivar
objected to the use of Hindu in this adjectival way and they were right. To
assimilate a large law-abiding community to the violence of a few bigots is
not just politically incorrect, it is dangerously polarising. Hindutva or
Hindutva-vadi terror is more accurate and more appropriate, just as the term
'Islamist' is used to distinguish violence by jihadi Muslims from Islam in
general or Muslims as a community.

But the Sangh Parivar's objection to the term doesn't spring from such
intellectual scruple. It is born of the need to deny that Hindus can be
associated with terror at all. For L.K. Advani and Praveen Togadia, the
offence lies in the suggestion that there can be any equivalence between
violence by Muslims and violence by Hindus. The reason Hindus can't be
terrorists is that in Hindutva lore, Hindus have historically been victims
and victims can't be perpetrators.

This, however, was not something that could be categorically stated in a
situation where Anti Terrorist Squads, hitherto notable for their pursuit of
Muslim suspects, had begun to brief the press about the evidence they had
accumulated against the Sadhvi, the Swami and the Colonel. Notorious as
Indian police agencies are for their inability to make prosecutable cases
against alleged terrorists, the chance that they did have the goods on the
Malegaon suspects forced the Sangh Parivar to make its case for blanket
Hindu innocence in a more roundabout way.

The opening gambit was to say that justice should take its course and the
guilty ought to be punished. This was read by some to mean that the BJP and
the RSS were distancing themselves from the more extreme Hindu groups like
Abhinav Bharat, which have been linked by the police to the Malegaon
suspects. But after a momentary hesitation when the story broke, the Sangh
Parivar embraced the accused.

The BJP announced its intention to provide them with legal aid (this after
becoming apoplectic when the vice-chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia
extended the same facility to students arrested for an alleged involvement
in terrorist incidents), it accused the ATS of torturing Pragya Singh
Thakur, it criticised Karkare for doing the bidding of his Congress masters,
it lobbied for the case to be removed from the jurisdiction of the ATS and
called for a judicial investigation.

The next rhetorical move was to argue that unlikely though it was that
Hindus could be terrorists, even if it were allowed (for the sake of
argument) that the suspects had been responsible for setting off the
Malegaon bombs, the context of their actions absolved them morally, or, at
the very least, mitigated their guilt.

This context was, of course, the historically constant state of victimhood
in which all Hindus lived. It followed, then, that if Hindus were guilty of
terror, it was terror of a lesser order, it fell under the category of
'understandable' violence. One commentator even found a term for it:
'retributive terror'. From 'retributive terror' it is a short step to the
'cleansing violence' so beloved of ethnic hygienists.

The opportunism, the dishonesty, the moral squalor of this position has been
thrown into high relief by the deaths of policemen like Hemant Karkare,
Ashok Kamte and Vijay Salaskar. These men who died fighting Islamist terror
were the same people who had been investigating the possible involvement of
Hindu suspects in terrorist explosions in Malegaon and elsewhere. For this
they were pilloried by the BJP; now the leaders of that party are queuing up
to hail them as Indian heroes, as martyrs in the war against terror.
Gujarat's chief minister Narendra Modi decided to visit Karkare's family to
offer his condolences and a crore of rupees. The ATS chief's widow didn't
meet him and refused to take his money.

A party that condemns policemen one day for investigating terror suspects
and then commends them the next day for dying while fighting the good fight
against terror (because it sees Hindus as intrinsically innocent and Muslims
as congenitally guilty) is unfit to rule. To defeat terrorism India needs
intelligence that's gathered and acted upon by clear-eyed, even-handed
policemen. The last thing we need is to have these policemen bullied by
politicians who are blinkered by prejudice and made stupid by bigotry.

Mukul Kesavan is the author of Secular Commonsense.
*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*
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