Op-Ed in the latest online edition of New Delhi based The Pioneer


*Hindu Angst*

*Prafull Goradia*



Why is there ground level support for Varun Gandhi?



Mr Varun Gandhi’s reported speech at Pilibhit is a long due articulation of
how many Hindus feel about their being the objects of prejudice. This
discrimination against them began with the Khilafat movement, launched under
the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi in 1919. He declared that the saving of the
Caliph or the Sultan of Turkey on his throne was equivalent to India winning
swaraj. When he failed to fulfil his promise, the Muslims were disappointed.
Their feelings were first expressed in anti-Hindu riots in Malabar. In the
words of Annie Besant, the Irish lady who was president of the Congress in
1913, “It would be well if Mr Gandhi could be taken into Malabar to see with
his own eyes the ghastly horrors which have been created by the preaching of
his and his loved brothers Muhammad and Shaukat Ali”.



While writing in the Young India, Gandhi on September 8, 1921 opined that
the Moplahs have succeeded in taking half a dozen lives and praised them for
being among the bravest in the land. In fact, not half a dozen but 600
Hindus were killed and 2,500 Hindus forcibly converted to Islam, Gandhi
wrote in the Young India published on September 29, 1921. He went on to add,
“Be the Moplahs be ever so bad, they deserve to be treated as human beings”.



On September 10, 1924, in Kohat, North-West Frontier Province, several
hundred Hindus were butchered because they had protested against their
womenfolk being abducted and converted to Islam. Gandhi’s reaction was: “I
can only suggest solutions of questions in terms of swaraj, I would,
therefore, sacrifice present individual gain for future national gain”
(Collected Works of Gandhi, 1925).



In October 1939, Gandhi received a telegram from Dr Choitram Gidwani,
appealing for an enquiry committee visit to look into riots, loot, rape and
kidnapping of Hindu women in Shikarpur town of Sukkur, Sind. He replied:
“Now the only effective way in which I can help the Sindhis is to show them
the ways of non-violence” (Collected Works of Gandhi). He went on to advise
the Sindhis to resort to hijrat or leave the place which has proved
inhospitable.



On December 23, 1926, Swami Shradhanand, a disciple of Swami Dayanand
Saraswati, was murdered on his sick bed by one Abdul Rashid, with a dagger.
Despite pleading in the court by Asaf Ali, Rashid was sentenced to death and
hanged. Gandhi reacted by writing, “What true religion was?” and explained
the causes that led to the murder. He went on to call Rashid a brother and
“I do not ever regard him as guilty of Swami’s murder”.



In the Young India of April 9, 1925, Gandhi had called heroes like Guru
Gobind Singh, Ranjit Singh, Shivaji and Rana Pratap as misguided patriots.
In his view, it was incumbent upon Hindus to be non-violent although
Muslims, who were in any case brave, were free to practise violence.



In September 1944, Gandhi went to MA Jinnah’s house on Malabar Hill, Bombay
several times over a fortnight. Jinnah had, at the outset, asserted that
India should be divided into Hindustan for Hindus and Pakistan for Muslims;
the name India should be abolished. By the end of the serial meetings,
Gandhi had conceded Pakistan, subject to there being a referendum by the
people affected by the division. He preferred this to take place after the
British had left India. The meetings were recorded in an exchange of letters
later published in Calcutta and also referred to by DG Tendulkar in his book
Mahatma.



On the British declaration of their decision to leave India, Gandhi opposed
partition and said it could take place only over his dead body. Yet, when
the vivisection took place, to the surprise of many, he did not undertake
any fast unto death as this had been his favourite form of protest.
Nevertheless, despite his opposition to Pakistan, he went on an indefinite
fast to ensure that the new country was paid Rs 55 crore, which was supposed
to be a corollary of the partition. No weight was given to the fact that a
war between the two countries was raging in Kashmir.



Led by Jinnah, eight Muslim league leaders had throughout 1946 and 1947
demanded an exchange of populations concurrent with partition. Gandhi chose
to ignore the League’s demand_,_._,___

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