
10 minute read
How Hindutva has weaponised Hinduism
the assailants – whereas they have suffered the most losses”.
MUSHROOMING HINDUTVA OUTFITS: Fertile ground for the incendiary attacks by religious festival processions is prepared in many ways. one of these is the sprouting of an abundance of Hindutva organisations. a resident of Khargone in Madhya Pradesh observed to a reporter of the Wire, “Five years ago, only the Shiv Sena was active here. today, we have the Bajrang Dal, Shiv Sena, Gau rakshak Dal, Karni Sena, VHP, Sakal Hindu Samaj…in all about eight or nine sansthans.” to avoid this scenario, Pakistan will need to carefully consider its approach to the alliance, building strong relationships with all major global powers, and ensuring that it is actively engaged in shaping the direction of the alliance. this will require a proactive and strategic approach that takes into account the country’s unique geopolitical and economic position. the political instability in Pakistan could potentially hinder the country’s ability to fully leverage the opportunities presented by the emergence of the BriCS alliance. a stable and consistent government that is able to provide clear policies and direction is essential for attracting foreign investment and building strong relationships with other members of the alliance. if the political situation in Pakistan remains unstable, it could deter foreign investors and potential partners from engaging with the country, which would limit its ability to benefit from the opportunities presented by the alliance. additionally, the lack of consensus and clear direction within the government could hinder Pakistan’s ability to effectively negotiate and secure beneficial trade and investment deals with other members of the alliance. therefore, it is imperative that Pakistan takes steps to address its political instability and create a more stable and consistent political environment. this could include strengthening democratic institutions, improving governance, and promoting political stability through consensus-building and dialogue. the political instability in Pakistan is a potential obstacle to the country’s ability to fully leverage the opportunities presented by the BriCS alliance. it is crucial for Pakistan to address its political instability and create a more stable political environment in order to attract foreign investment, build strong relationships with other members of the alliance, and maximize the benefits of this important shift in the global balance of power.
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Pakistan must be mindful of the potential consequences of inaction or missteps in its approach to the BriCS alliance. if the country does not play its role carefully, it risks being left behind, with india occupying the main position in the alliance. to avoid this scenario, Pakistan must take a proactive and strategic approach, building strong relationships with all major global powers and actively shaping the direction of the alliance.
The writer can be reached at fayyazsalih@gmail.com and tweets @fayyazSHussain
CannaBIS CulTIvaTIon
While cannabis farming has been legalised in Uttarakhand, bhang was removed from the list of intoxicating drugs in Gujarat; UP and MP have similar policies rama, Jai Shri ram.” or the even more raucously hateful: “the day that Hindus awaken, the consequences will be/that the skull-cap wearer will bow down and say Victory to lord rama/the day my blood boils, i will show you your place/then i will not speak, only my sword will.” at some point during these incitements – slogans, hate songs and dances, men wielding weapons – stones are pelted from the mosques. this is invariably followed by extensive arson, targeting shops and houses, mostly of Muslims, and of mosques and dargahs.
Tribune the report records in april 2022 the destruction through burning and looting of at least 100 shops and homes, the injury of 100 people in these acts of violence across states, and the killing of at least four people. it identifies as the immediate spark that led to this cavalcade of violence everywhere to be the routes of the religious processions. it notes that traditionally, temples organised rath yatras in which decorated idols of ram, often of ram as a baby, were paraded in flower-decked processions, usually in the vicinity of temples. But over the years, ram navami processions have been taken over by militant Hindutva organisations. the reason for this is, as the report notes, because “the figure of ram is central to the political imagination of the Sangh”. the attempt is to coerce an artificial homogenisation on an incalculably plural faith tradition, with a single deity and uniform rituals and religious practices, all of which are entirely alien to the practice of the Hindu religion. the celebration of the festival has taken the form of “grand processions of pomp and ceremony attempting to cover entire cities”, involving, in the words of social scientist Megha Kumar, “cavalcades of vehicles, each carrying dozens of men, shouting slogans and frequently carrying arms”. these processions have become increasingly violent, associated with scattered incidents of communal savagery in 2014, 2016, 2018, 2019 and resoundingly in the last two years. tensions are ratcheted even higher when the festival coincides with the holy month of ramzan, enabling the state and the compliant media to project “Muslims uniformly as one advantage for the BJP and its ideological fountainhead, the rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, of these hydraheaded formations is to formally claim to courts of law no association with the most hateful rhetoric and violence of these “fringe groups”, even while harvesting all the electoral bounties of hate and polarisation. in fact, they are not the fringe. the mainstream and the more overtly hateful organisations all concertedly play their roles in a coordinated social and political strategy. this range of Hindutva organisations join hands with vigilante groups and street gangs to sustain a climate of everyday terror that peaks during festivals like ram navami. the processions become visible, visceral assertions of political and social domination of religious minorities through hate and fear. there are also many instances of the public distribution of weapons such as trishuls and swords at widely attended mass events. For instance, in March last year, 5,000 trishuls and daggers were distributed in Himmatnagar in Gujarat in a program led by Praveen tagodia of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, as well as the MP Dipsinh rathore and Mla raju Chavda. religious events like the birth of ram are cynically deployed for strident hate, by choosing routes and timings that have nothing to do with traditional Hindu religious beliefs, but instead target Muslim places of worship and Muslim neighbourhoods. typically, the processions are made up of young men in saffron scarves, shirts and bandanas, waving weapons such as swords, tridents, bricks and batons. they gather outside mosques, at hours that deliberately overlap with the namaz or the breaking of the ramzan fast, and taunt and incite Muslims. even when the slogans are ostensibly “religious” or “patriotic”, they are coded with political hate messaging, such as “Jai Shri ram” or “Vande Mataram”. But more often, the slogans are offensive, insulting, even obscene.
DUrinG the festival of ram navami last week, scores of towns and cities across nine states in india – Maharashtra, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana, Karnataka (all ruled by the Bharatiya Janata Party), and Delhi and West Bengal – were engulfed in stone pelting, bloodletting, aggressive sloganeering and arson, ignited by mobs in militant processions. Hundreds more lurched at the edge. When i was writing this, communal fires were yet to be doused in West Bengal and Bihar.
“routes of Wrath”, a sterling report by a group of lawyers and other citizens (led by lawyer Chander Uday Singh and with a foreword by retired Supreme Court Justice rohinton nariman), scrutinises the worryingly similar rash communal violence during ram navami and Hanuman Jayanti in april last year. the report, released on March 18, detects recurring patterns that show these incidents are systematically orchestrated to terrorise and provoke Muslims, cause extensive damage to their properties and shrines, and through these, construct a bitter communal fracture.
A TEMPLATE FOR VIOLENCE, HATE: a careful study of the findings of their report helps illuminate the source of the fires that once again have been ignited across the land this year.
Yet, as Singh, one of the writers of the report, observes, “they are portrayed by the Hindu right and the mainstream media as innocuous displays of religiosity, and blame is typically assigned to those who would challenge such displays”, the Muslim residents of these localities.
VITRIOLIC SPEECH, DISTRIBUTING WEAPONS: the environment of hate and fear is further animated by runaway hate speech in the build-up to the festivals. open calls are made for genocide and mass rapes, for the economic boycott of Muslims and barring them from living in portions of the town where Hindus reside. the state administrations mostly look the other way.
Manoj Kumar, the national president of the rashtriya Bajrang Dal, is reported to have made hateful and sexually charged speech at this programme, according to the report.
PARADING HATE OUTSIDE MOSQUES: in these processions, the young men dance wildly to blaring music. these are not devotional songs, but are the growing staple of Hindutva pop, outrageously popular on Youtube and Whatsapp. the BJP social media cell openly augments their circulation. there is little in these songs that celebrate Hindu gods. instead, they bemoan the alleged passivity and disunity of Hindus, urge them to unite and take up arms, call for mass killing, celebrate the construction of the ram temple, and decry the alleged perfidy of Muslims with crimes such as cow slaughter and love jihad. Scroll reported on the lyrics of a small sample of what it aptly describes as Disc Jockey Hindutva: “We are hardcore Hindus, we will create a new history/ We will enter the homes of enemies, and will cut off their heads. (…) in every home, saffron flags will be seen, the reign of rama will return/there is only one slogan, one name/Victory to lord the “loot and arson from mobs ransacking houses and shops in the Muslim-majority neighbourhoods where the processions typically instigated violence, resulted in people suffering major, life-changing losses …of their savings, documents of identity and proof of residence and ownership, and their means of livelihood”, says the “routes of Wrath” report. the provocation and incitement to violence by the Hindutva gangs is rarely prevented and even more rarely punished – not the hate speeches, the hate songs, the aggressive display of weapons, the hateful sloganeering, and the violence that follows. the resulting carnage overwhelmingly targets the properties of Muslims, yet they invariably form the bulk of those who are charged with crimes. the state displays brazenly, unashamedly, whose side it is on. First, it does nothing to prevent the movement of processions on routes that could spark violence. once the violence breaks out, in report after report the police are found to be culpably absent, or standing by doing nothing to control or punish the hate speech, hate music or hate attacks. last year, just days after the communal violence in BJP ruled states (also in aam aadami Party-ruled Delhi), the properties of Muslims were bulldozed without even the pretence of the rule of law. last year, Madhya Pradesh Home Minister narottam Mishra had declared ferociously, “Jis ghar se pathar aaye hain, us ghar ko hi pathoron ka dher banaenge. each house from which stones were pelted, will be reduced to piles of stones.” the festival has become even more of a tinder box when it coincides with ramzan, sacred to Muslims who also ritually fast and pray, as it did this year and the last. in these ways, we today stand witness to the particularly “dangerous forms of instigation and provocation that majoritarian festivals can provide cover for”, in the unfolding of communal violence that renders india as a “severely threatened democracy”. But most of india – governments, the political leadership, the media, academia and ordinary citizens – still choose to blame the victim, or look away.
STATE, ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT: the report also establishes the culpability of state administrations in BJPruled states in supporting this comprehensive mutation of religious festivals into militaristic hate displays designed to subjugate Muslim citizens.
His belligerence ignores the fact that there is no law in the country that permits the state to demolish the properties of those who have committed any crimes. also, before the state can decide that a person has indeed committed a crime, due process must be followed. But all this has been thrust aside. it is as though now for Muslim residents the protections of the Constitution no longer apply.
Hindutva has transmuted ram from a symbol of righteousness, duty, compassion and devotion, into a wrathful combative warrior raging against the politically constructed “enemy within”. the festival to celebrate the birth of ram with fasting and prayers has been transformed into an occasion for public displays of hateful aggression by throngs of frenzied young men bearing saffron flags and weapons directed against Muslim neighbours and places of worship.
Harsh Mander is a human rights activist, peace worker, writer, and teacher. He works with survivors of mass violence and hunger, and homeless persons and street children.
ConSiDerinG to legalise cannabis cultivation, the Himachal Pradesh government has formed a committee that will look into its pros and cons. this thinking stems from the traditional production and use of ganja or bhang for recreational purposes. also, the weed is well-known for its effective medicinal properties. Hemp is also used industrially to make fabric, ropes and shoes. Growing this grass on barren tracts of land would make it a profitable proposition for the farmers, besides generating jobs and revenue for HP. the argument that since people are cultivating and using it anyway, it is better that it is done legally holds good as it would keep them away from the crosshairs of the law and, at the same time, fill the state’s coffers. at the heart of the matter is the long-brewing tussle between culture and policing over the recreational use of organic substances. taking cannabis out of the purview of the harsh narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances act, 1985, entails the risk of a spike in the number of people accessing it. Studies around the world where marijuana has been legalised — such as many states in the US and Mexico — point to a sharp rise in the number of youth consuming pot. its detrimental effect on the consumers’ health, including physical, mental or developmental impairments related to pot, is worrisome. More so is the likelihood of cannabis becoming the gateway drug to the more dangerous synthetic ones like the deadly and addictive heroin. Policymakers will have to take utmost care to ensure that its ill effects are widely and regularly propagated, especially in schools and colleges. if HP green-lights cannabis cultivation, it will join the club of states that have climbed down from taking a draconian stand on the matter. While cannabis farming has been legalised in Uttarakhand, bhang was removed from the list of intoxicating drugs in Gujarat; UP and MP have similar policies. this posture also aligns with the one that india took in the Un in 2020 when it joined the majority of the countries in batting for the exclusion of marijuana from the category of most dangerous synthetic drugs.