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6. Communalists and their communities
6.1 Hindu Society
In many press reports, it has been said that the Ayodhya
conflict is a conflict between the Hindus and the
Muslims. Upon closer inspection, that may not be
entirely accurate.
JNU historian Bipan Chandra has often stated that the
religious community is really a fictional entity which in
people's consciousness only blurs the real-life
categories like socio-economical class. The sense of
being a member of a religious community such as the
Hindus or the Muslims is merely false consciousness,
fostered by leaders who want to use the masses for their
own social and political ambitions. While I do not
subscribe to this Marxist view, I do recognize that in
many cases the claim of communal leaders of being their
entire community's mouthpiece, is false.
Thus, it is very doubtful that the agitation against the
1985 Supreme Court ruling in the Shah Bano case, i.e.
against a Muslim divorcee's right to alimony, was an
expression of the wishes of the 50% women in the Muslim
community. And the Congress government's decision to
give in to this agitation was reprehensible not only for
being a case of minority appeasement, but also for
treating the vocal group of fanatical Muslims as the real
representatives of the Muslim community , and ignoring
the countercurrent of women's organizations and
intellectuals (including cabinet minister Mohammed Arif
Khan).
So in the Ayodhya case, to what extent can we say that
the agitation on both sides is supported by the
communities concerned?
On the Hindu side, I find it striking how almost every
person I questioned, has shed all shame of expressing his
support for the Ram Janmabhoomi cause. Many people who
in 1989, when questioned by this foreigner, still took
care not to sound too involved (by calling it a false
problem, a creation of the politicians, or by adding to
their basic support to the cause a criticism of the VHP
people etc.), now simply say : "Well, I am a Hindu. Of
course I think the Mandir should be built." The
shooting of several hundreds of Kar Sevaks on November 2
has of course radicalized many half-hearted supporters.
Most of the people who panic about secularism in danger
and write grim articles against the Janmabhoomi campaign,
are only Hindus in name. Many of them are practicing
communists, and most of them belong to the Western-
educated elite who are convinced that Hinduism is India's
biggest problem. They are still a rather small minority
among the Hindus. What is harder to assess, is how many
"Backward" Hindus, who have supported V.P. Singh and
Mulayam Singh Yadav in their championing of the Backward
Caste cause and the Mandal Report implementation, at
heart supported these leaders on the Ayodhya issue. Most
of my contacts with Indians have been in an urban
setting, so my impression about the rural public opinion
is not first-hand. But for what it is worth, I share the
opinion of some journalists that many rural people who
support the Mandir, would vote for Mulayam or V.P. Singh
anyway, because of their stand on Mandal; which
conversely means that the electoral support by Backward
Hindus for the Janata Dal should by no means be taken as
a head count of anti-Mandir opinion.
If both the Janata Dal (S) and Congress were so afraid of
elections after V.P. Singh's fall, it was because they
knew that this time many people were going to vote for
the Mandir party, and against the undecided and Masjid
parties. Even after some papers reported that many
villagers who declared they would vote for either Janata
Dal because they wanted the Mandal recommendations to be
implemented, eventhough they were just as much in favour
of the building of the Mandir, the secularist parties
did not want to take chances.
The support base for the Mandir is larger than the BJP
electorate. It is a fact that Advani's Rathyatra brought
out far more people than Mulayam's rallies for
secularism, even when all the communist and Muslim
fundamentalist organizations systematically attended the
latter, and even while the state machinery had been used
to mobilize for them. There is simply no honest doubt
that the Ram Janmabhoomi movement had become a genuine
mass movement, the biggest in Indian history, and not
just an artificial creation for the BJP's political gain.
The reason why most of the common Hindus could be
mobilized for the Ram Janmabhoomi cause, is not that the
Hindus have become so fanatical. On the contrary, it is
because they perceive that the building of the Mandir and
the relocating of the existing structure is a very
reasonable and justifiable project. They all know that
Muslim rulers have brought immense suffering over the
Hindu population for destroyed, no fanatic needs to tell
them that. And they have heard that the disputed place
is in use as a temple since 1949, that it is functionally
not a mosque at all, so the rule that any other
community's place of worship should be respected just
doesn't apply. They do not see why anyone should object
to their replacing the existing structure with proper
Hindu temple architecture. They consider it an entirely
internal affair of the Hindu community, and they perceive
the attempts to stop them as yet another aggression
against Hinduism by its enemies.
6.2 The Muslim community
On the Muslim side, the picture is less solid. And it is
less solid, because it does indeed take fanaticism to
uphold the Babri Masjid cause. The Muslim leaders'
position is, in effect, that Hindus cannot take back any
of the thousands of places of worship that have been
stolen from them, but that they themselves can take
possession of a flourishing Hindu temple, standing on a
spot which the Hindus consider sacred, simply because it
has been a mosque more than fifty years ago. The common
Muslim, even if not informed about all the details of the
matter, senses that this position is not equitable. That
is why many ordinary people in the Muslim community are
quite ready to leave the disputed site entirely to the
Hindus, in exchange for more communal peace and a
guarantee that no functioning mosques will be demanded
for take-over by the Hindus.
The most outspoken defender of Muslim agreement to the
building of a new Mandir on the disputed site and
shifting of the Babri structure, has been Indian Muslim
Youth Conference president Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi. He
declared : "It is the duty of every nationalist Indian to
protect the birthplace of Lord Rama to save India's
honour, prestige and cultural heritage.... Anti-national
and communal activities of Muslim fundamentalists are a
blot on the entire community... It is the duty of all
nationalist Muslims to expose such designs and accept the
truth."53
He led a number of his organization's members into
participation in the kar Seva, and some of them even into
Mulayam's jails. It is also reported that two
journalists, S.A. Naqvi and Tanveer Haider Usmani,
president and vice-president of the Kanpur Press Club,
"were arrested here today, together with some other
Muslims, when they were going to Ayodhya for the proposed
Kar Seva".54 In this category are also the
numerous
Muslims belonging to the BJP and even to the Shiv Sena,
including mr. Advani's chauffeur during the Rathyatra,
and BJP-leader Sikander Bakht, who flagged off the
Rathyatra at the Somnath temple.
But there are also many anonymous Muslims, some of whom I
talked to in teastalls or on trains, who are, in
different degrees, willing to make the asked-for
concession to the Hindu attachment to the disputed site.
And some Muslims write to the papers to express what they
think of it. Mr. M.N.H. Siddiqui from Lucknow proposes
that "Muslims themselves should shift the mosque... Ram
temple should be constructed in that place and Muslims
should volunteer to contribute something to it as a
gesture of goodwill... Amendment be made in the
Constitution to the effect that the status quo of 1947 be
maintained..."55
Abdul Moin from Lucknow writes :"All Muslims agree that
namaz cannot be offered if the mosque is built on
disputed land or by demolishing the temple... What is
the harm if the mosque is shifted brick by brick to some
other place? For a building can be shifted but not a
birth place... We should agree to shift the mosque to
some other place and thereby maintain peace and
brotherhood in our country and show the world our secular
credentials."56
Ahmed Zakaria is quoted by Farzana Versey as saying :
"There is absolutely no question of our identity being
submerged. The Babri Masjid committee does not represent
all Muslims. How can two or three people decide ?" And
Farzana Versey, apparently summing up mr. Zakaria's
opinion, adds : "The issue is not the mosque. Most
Muslims would not mind giving it away, but what after
that ?"57 There is some apprehension that a
concession
will be a sign of weakness and will make the Hindus more
aggressive. But the acceptance of the Hindu character of
the disputed site is in itself not deemed unreasonable.
Replying to another letter-writer, mr. Azhar Ahmed Ansari
from Meerut writes : "He is mistaken in believing that
the Muslim minority values the existing structure in
Ayodhya. The fact is that the Muslim masses set no store
by this dilapidated edifice since its utility as a mosque
is extremely doubtful with the presence of numerous
idols... Although most of the icons are mutilated, they
nevertheless remain what they are : an anathema to
Islamic theology, ruling out namaz in their presence.
The Muslim masses have begun to understand this situation
as also the fact that no namaz has been offered here in
the memory of any living person. As many as 18 Muslims
hailing from Ayodhya and Faizabad have submitted an
affidavit before the High Court bench hearing the Ram
Janmabhoomi case, that the Babri Masjid is of no use to
the followers of Islam since it contains icons."58
Mr. Rafat Sayeed does not like to be pressured into
handing over mosques, but "as the mosque has been made
out to be a symbol of an unpleasant past and humiliation,
as Abu Nadeem suggests, let an exception be made and the
masjid shifted and rebuilt in an orderly manner under
expert guidance."59
Mr. Shad Kidwai advises his fellow Muslim : "I Invite all
thinking Muslims to gift the Ayodhya mosque to the
Hindus... Our magnanimity at this critical juncture will
usher in an era of understanding and will, I am
convinced, evoke an equally warm response from all
thinking Hindus. But Muslims should justifiably demand a
constitutional guarantee that the nature of all religious
places as on August 15, 1947, will not be allowed to be
altered."60 A similar proposal has been made
by Rasheed
Talib61, which seems to have earned him the wrath of
some
Muslim leaders.62
And finally, there is none other than Asghar Ali
Engineer, who has written : "The Muslims, in my opinion,
should show magnanimity and [make] a noble gesture of
gifting away the mosque..."63
The proposals made by these Muslims are not far removed
from the one made by L.K. Advani on 13 August 1990.64 He
suggested that Muslims leave the site to the Hindus, and
promised that in return he would persuade the VHP
leadership to even renounce its demand for the hand-over
of the disputed sites in Mathura and Varanasi. Advani's
own supporters were not too happy with his proposals.
One of them said : "You are saying to the Muslims: give
us Ayodhya and then you can take the rest of India." The
VHP later declared that it could not agree to this give
away of two sacred places, and BJP leader Rajmata Vijaya
Raje Scindia said that mr. Advani had no authority to
make such concessions on behalf of the Hindus. While the
demand for the return of all the thousands of places of
worship forcibly taken by Muslims is voiced only by an
extremist fringe in the VHP and Bajrang Dal, the
attachment to the three places specially dedicated to
Shiva (the Kashi Vishvanath in Varanasi), Krishna (his
Janmasthan in Mathura) and Rama is non-negotiable for
most activist Hindus.
Even so, while Advani offered to renounce all claims, no
matter how justified, to any disputed place beyond this
one Ram Janmabhoomi, his offer was spurned by Syed
Shahabuddin. He said that first raising the demand to
three temple hand-over as a compromise was just an old
merchant's trick. As if the demand for the return of
these sacred places is new and just a bargaining chip :
the Hindus have rebuilt and reclaimed the Krishna and
Shiva temples (as well as other demolished temples) many
times, until Aurangzeb imposed the structures standing
there till today. After independence, the demand for the
handover of these three places was made in Parliament on
September 1, 1961 by the Jan Sangh leader Balraj Madhok
(who was to reiterate it in the same forum in 1968), even
before the VHP came into existence.65 The demand
for
three temples was itself already very modest compared to
the thousands of temples-turned-mosque which the Hindus
could claim (it was, moreover, coupled with an offer to
pay for the building of three fine mosques nearby). So,
Shahabuddin's reply had in reality nothing to do with
bargaining chips and merchants' tricks.
The real reason for refusing any deal on the disputed
temple sites was more probably this. Since the Quran
does not say that Muslims should make compromise with the
Kafirs, Shahabuddin and other Muslim leaders who have a
"Muslim India" in mind, could not but refuse every
concession. It reminded the Hindus of that scene in the
Mahabharat : the Pandavas offer the Kauravas the whole
country except for five villages, whereupon the Kauravas
declare they would not grant them even a speck of land
the size of a pinhead. Of course, as Krishna pointed out
to the Pandavas, with such self-righteous and
intransigent fanatics, no compromise is possible. They
have to be defeated.
This boundless self-righteousness on the part of certain
Muslim leaders is bound to confirm the negative image
that Islam has in the Hindu mind. The continued Muslim
intransigence represented by a Shahabuddin genuinely
angers many Hindus. And when the confrontation, which
communalist leaders keep preferring to any kind of
compromise, materializes into riots, it is the common
Muslim, not the communalist leader, who is bearing the
consequences. If only for his own safety, if only for
some peace with his neighbours, the common Muslim is not
averse to compromise. He is willing and able (with the
open-mindedness which is a remarkably strong trait in the
common people in India) to see the Hindu side of the
controversy.
But these conciliating voices in the Muslim community
have not been heard at all. Not by the V.P. Singh
government, which has treated BMAC leader Abdullah
Bukhari as a high-powered cabinet minister (the "Sarkari
Imam"). Not by the government of Chandra Shekhar, who is
closely linked with BMMCC leader Syed Shahabuddin.
Certainly not by Mulayam's Uttar Pradesh Ministry,
counting among its members BMAC co-founder Mohammed Azam
Khan. Nor even by Rajiv Gandhi's Congress Party, whose
spokesman M.J. Akbar uses the secularism plank as just
another forum for the anti-Mandir and anti-Hindu
campaign.66
What is far worse is that the secularist intelligentsia
have joined the politicians' effort to black out the
conciliatory current within Muslim opinion, and have
broadcast that very perception which is basic to the
fanatic leaders' stand, viz. that "Islam is in danger"
and that absolutely no concession to "Hindu communalism"
can be tolerated. The whole jeremiad of Muslims being
a poor and persecuted community, of communal peace (i.e.,
for the ordinary Muslim, his own safety) standing or
falling with the Babri Masjid, of Advani being a fascist
out to destroy the Muslims, all this press hysteria was
exactly what the Muslim communal leaders wanted the
common Muslim to hear and believe. The opinion of some
Hindu authors67, that secularist rhetoric is effectively
a some screen behind which the Muslim communalists can
steal a march, stands vindicated.
Fortunately, human nature is stronger than even Islamic
fanaticism. When Chandra Shekhar formed his Cabinet, he
kept several portfolios to himself, intending to give
them to somewhat controversial friends. Who would be
among the lucky ones ? The answer came in the form of a
letter by Syed Shahabuddin, published in Indian Express
on December 13, 1990. He wrote: "The law protects the
Babri Masjid even if it was constructed on the site of a
temple after demolishing it, but in the interest of
communal amity, as a one-time exception, the Muslim
community is ready to make the offer as a moral gesture,
in accordance with the Shariat."68 Here
also, the
question is legitimate whether he can really speak for
"the Muslim community". Nonetheless, it is fortunate
that Syed Shahabuddin seems to prefer a ministerial post
to the lost cause of Babri Masjid.
However, one Muslim's temporary human weakness could not
suffice for bringing the entire Muslim side to accepting
the Hindu rights to the Janmabhoomi spot. With two
rivaling Masjid Committees around, any concession would
only be branded as a betrayal by the other committee.
So, actually making a concession was very difficult, but
even if made, it would not bring conciliation, since the
other committee would not endorse it and continue
threatening agitation if the Babri structure were
touched.
So, even when after 2 November 1990 nobody in his right
mind presisted in denying the Hindus the right to their
sacred place, a decisive fraction in the Muslim
leadership (supported by a decisive fraction in the
secularist intelligentsia) continued to insist on
confrontation. The arrangement which had seemed to be in
the making, was forgotten and Syed Shahabuddin resumed
his more familiar hard-line tirades. As with the
Kauravas, no compromise with the Muslim fundamentalists.
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