Who defines intolerance?
by Sandhya Jain on 06 Aug 2019 16 Comments

Former Mumbai police commissioner and director general of police, Gujarat and Punjab, Julio Ribeiro, recently expressed unhappiness with the Bharatiya Janata Party for inducing 10 Congress MLAs to its side in Goa, deviating from its political philosophy and ethics. Recalling his friendship with Ms. Laxmi Kanta Chawla and Hit Abhilashi in terrorism-afflicted Punjab, Ribeiro says he felt the BJP would uphold “a different type of politics”.

 

He himself “never voted for the BJP because the general run of minority thinking is that the BJP is an exclusively Hindu party”. What a strange political orthodoxy to espouse. However, he explains, “My Hindu ancestors in Goa were converted by the Portuguese more than four centuries ago. Since then, we have become a minority in our own country and our vote goes to those who will protect our culture and identity”.

 

The officer misses the deep introspection this should have triggered. He does not say if his ancestors converted out of attraction towards the faith of the new conquerors, or out of fear to escape the cruel Inquisition. Historical evidence suggests it was the latter. Did the new converts in Goa feel inferior to the white invaders, and does the sense of being “a minority in our own country” originate with those tyrants? Or was it vis-à-vis the British who dominated India until 1947, though Portugal retained its Goan colony till India expelled it in 1961?  

 

Obviously, this refined sense of minority-hood began with independence in Hindu-majority India, possibly due to subtle mentoring by the outgoing colonial masters. Unlike Jinnah and the Muslim League, Christians did not demand a separate homeland, but the church did eye, and continues to eye, large tracts of India as a Christian lebensraum. The church has an acute political sense and has instilled deep psychological separatism in the minds of its flock. Priests openly suggest which party to support during elections, a diktat followed scrupulously. Hence, though Hindus celebrate diversity and pose no threat to anyone’s culture or identity, a minority vote bank has been created for political bargaining.

 

Simultaneously, 49 self-styled conscience keepers of the nation (film maker Mani Ratnam later backed out) wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi (July 23, 2019) demanding an end to the “lynching of Muslims, Dalits and other minorities”. Projecting the alleged lynching as a routine affair, they demanded that the offence be made non-bailable, which means that anyone accused of a crime can be jailed without bail until the courts take up the matter. This is too clever by half.

 

In recent times, allegations of Muslims being forced to say “Jai Shri Ram” have proved false on police investigation. Yet the authors of this inchoate letter plead they should not to be branded as “urban Naxals” or anti-government when they exercise free speech. The wide dissemination of their letter proves that free media and free speech are blooming in India. Interestingly, one of the signatories was convicted of sedition in 2010, and is on bail during pendency of his appeal.

 

The senior police officer and 49 eminences (minus one) are part of an ecosystem unique to India. The Hindu majority is dubbed as communal and demonised; vicious propaganda is spread against it within the country and in the West (mainly London, Washington, and UN bodies), even as the “conscience keepers” are embedded in government structures in India or receive other forms of State patronage, if not both (foreign awards are separate). However, in recent years, the narrative is bringing diminishing returns as Hindus shun political formations that demean them. Its demise abroad is a matter of time, thanks to Western economic decline.

 

The open letter is an attempt to extend the shelf life of their false narratives. So selective is their truth that they kept a deafening silence when separatist leaders in Kashmir valley quietly sent their offspring abroad to study, work, and settle down, while exhorting poor families to send their wards to pelt stones at security forces. Being part of the same ecosystem, this “Lutyens extended family” was aware of the truth, but kept quiet as teenagers bunked school to needle security forces that were compelled to retaliate, all aimed at showing the world that the Indian State is keeping Kashmir by force.

 

Despite ignoring the truth in Jammu and Kashmir, these eminences cringe from accepting the anti-national tag. They profess compassion for the suffering multitudes, but have never said a word in support of the Kashmiri Pandit community that was driven out of the Valley in the winter of 1989-1990. Later, they shamelessly blamed Governor Jagmohan who arrived in Srinagar on the morning of exodus, and was powerless to prevent it.

 

The signatories have never spoken up for tribal victims of Naxal terror, but lionize “Urban Naxals” as human rights crusaders. They maintained silence when calls to dismember India rang out in the heart of the capital, and showed more compassion for Ajmal Kasab who perpetrated unspeakable horror in Mumbai in 2008, and for Afzal Guru, mastermind of the attack on Parliament in 2001.

 

In West Bengal, last bastion of secular-minority irredentism, the chief minister ordered imprisonment of those chanting Jai Sree Ram; violence was unleashed during the Panchayat elections in 2018 and Lok Sabha elections in 2019; students were fired upon in Daribhit High School for demanding a teacher of English and computers; temples were vandalised in Kaliachak, Deganga, Baduria and Raniganj. There have been many episodes of violence against BJP workers, but not one eminence called the chief minister or Trinamool Congress workers to account.

 

In July 2019, a temple was vandalised in Chandni Chowk in the heart of the capital; public anger ensured that the incident could not be hushed up. But the “Lutyens united family” remained unfazed. Its greatest moment came in September 2018 when the Supreme Court ruled that women of all ages could enter Sabarimala Temple, breaking a centuries-old restriction on women of a certain age group. Despite a spontaneous #Ready-to-wait movement, non-believers egged on by chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan tried to gatecrash the temple precincts to humiliate the devotees.  

 

We thus see an invented narrative of “majority oppression” coupled with strong advocacy of everything Hindus consider unfair and unjust. For these stalwarts to complain of threats to their freedom of speech is just another perversion of the public discourse in India.

 

(The writer is Senior Fellow, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library; the views expressed are personal)

User Comments Post a Comment
Excellent analysis of the unraveling of the GOP, INC India

The Gandhi Family under Antonio Maino has brought ruination to the nation as well as the party. Let's hope a credible and genuine leadership emerges in the opposition ranks in days to come, on the debris of the family rule
Hope
September 15, 2020
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Sonia Ghandi is one of thouands of anachronisitic elitists who fearfully intuit a global population rejecting their desire to reinstate medieval fuedalism, and so they are pooling resources to harness the chaos of Covid-19 mismanagement and, quite literally, reset the entire global financial and governmental infrastructure.


This event was scheduled for the 26 January 2021 Davos conference but has been postponed for later this year, for reasons which we can only speculate about. Significantly, Sonia was not invited. Sonia, like the Rockefellers, Rothschilds, Soros, Gates, and other investment bankers and the politicians they own, are confident that this will redistribute all power and wealth into their fortified compounds, but canny investors have a different attitude to those of 1929 to 1933.

These investors, more particularly their analysts, now see the elite, and their adulating sycophantic edeological elitists, as mad... quite mad... realising that their machinations are a threat to global prosperity. In their investment idvisory publications, these analysts see the Reset tsunami as a wave to ride for survival and profit, but they no longer respect the dynastic demigods. And the likes of Sonia Ghandi are viewed as neurotic hangers-on who lack the intellect to see the world for how it is.
Tony Ryan
September 15, 2020
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Insightful analysis
Dev
September 15, 2020
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Very interesting analysis
Bela
September 15, 2020
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She must go
Done enough damage
Ajay
September 15, 2020
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Congress victory in Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh is highly overrated. In Karnataka, BJP was the largest party. The diff. in vote share was bet. 2 to 3 %.

In other two states, BJP ruled for successive three terms. (15 years). There was bound to be some anti incumbency. In spite of that, in MP, BJP won more seats and more percentage of votes than Congress.

Nothing positive about, people turning back to congress.

Whatever, now onward, Congress party does, Rahul Gandhi is bound to be failure. It is the question of how many faithfuls stick to him.


Kanu Mistry
September 15, 2020
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Excellent article.
Pradeep
September 15, 2020
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'Jitin Prasada has also been given charge of party affairs in West Bengal, and Andaman and Nicobar Islands, possibly an attempt to woo back the disaffected cronies of Rahul Gandhi.'-is it to woo him back or sending him to his Waterloo?

There is no doubt that Rahul Gandi at the helm of scamgress is more helpful to the BJP than, possibly, their own efforts.

It is true that the NDA government under Modi has done a lot of good but it cannot be said to have done much with delivery of mandatory government services to the people. Corruption, whims and fancies, incompetence and indifference still rule the roost in public offices. Even the PM had reportedly told the IAS lot that they had wasted his first five years and he will not let it repeat this time around.
P M Ravindran
September 15, 2020
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You are right about The Family wanting to remain in control of the party.The Family will need total support of the party and its old hangers on to survive.They have given up on 2024.Family will wait out the eclipse of Modi and hope for anti incumbencies to set in.2029 could be a different ball game if BJP degenerates in to carbon copy of Congress by trying to woo all and sundry with computers, Korans, catholicity and what not.
Jitendra Desai
September 17, 2020
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Sandhya Jain is right. Churning has just begun in Congress.
Bill
September 19, 2020
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