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Sangh parivar's double talk: Beware perverse patriotism
By B G Verghese
It causes deep concern that the armed forces may have been penetrated by ideologically driven groups.
One
must beware of perverse patriotism, disturbing signs of which have been
recently manifest. The arrest of an Army officer on suspicion of having
assisted alleged Hindu right extremist terror bombings in Malegaon and
possibly elsewhere appears sinister. At the moment here are only
allegations that must be thoroughly investigated before definitive
conclusions are reached.
Nevertheless, enough has been established to cause deep concern that
the armed forces may have been penetrated by dangerous, ideologically
driven groups.
The civil and, specially, uniformed services are non-political servants
of the people acting under the directions of the government of the day,
owning allegiance to the Constitution and not to any extraneous
ideology or group.
The defence minister has taken note of whatever has happened and
intends to get to the root of the matter so that incipient mischief is
nipped in the bud. Meanwhile, the single incident that has come to
light should not be considered a trend but an aberration.
What is surprising, however, is the response of the spokesmen of the
Parivar. They disown any association with sadhvi Pragya and other civil
suspects held for the Malegaon bombing. Yet they take the line that
Hindus cannot be terrorists and that the armed forces are a part of
Indian society which has been horrified by the pusillanimous and
apologetic approach of the UPA government to terror attacks and cannot
therefore be blamed for patriotic reactions.
This apologia comes close to showing sympathy for and indirectly
condoning what is undoubtedly a grave dereliction of duty and rank
indiscipline. It echoes the chorus from across the border in praise of
“freedom fighters” as opposed to terrorists, “our” boys versus the
dreadful “other”. Such pernicious double talk is scarcely in keeping
with the Parivar’s insistent demand for “strong” action against terror.
The same attitude of “patriotic anger” was revealed in the disgraceful
conduct of young ABVP hoodlums who broke up a Delhi University meeting
on Democracy and Fascism last week and spat on one of the invited
speakers, SAR Geelani, who was discharged by the Supreme Court in the
parliament bombing case. What was witnessed was fascism in action, made
worse by two comments by the saffron fraternity. ABVP president, Nupur
Sharma said that the offenders were not ABVP members but “outsiders”
and then went on to state in a TV discussion that she would have done
much the same thing in patriotic anger against the government’s poor
record in fighting terror.
The BJP spokesman, Ravi Pratap Rudy’s comment was that the protest
against Geelani could have been “more hygienic” but was nevertheless an
expression of “patriotic emotion” on the part of students with regard
to what was perceived as Geelani’s mistrial. VHP’s Pravin Togadia
repeated the same mantra as senior RSS spokesmen and other saffronites
that a Hindu by definition cannot be a terrorist. He warned that
persisting with such “false charges” against a Sadhvi and army
personnel would evoke a “political backlash.”
In another episode last August, BJP-backed protesters in Jammu rioted
and vandalised property during the Amarnath Yatra Board land agitation.
Here again the commentary extolled demonstrations by “patriotic
Indians” holding aloft the tricolour, as against Valley separatists
brazenly marching to Muzaffarabad. The national flag must be honoured
but cannot be used as a shield against riot police.
Perverse patriotism feeding on false notions of jingoistic nationalism
must be squarely fought as it manifests a malignant fascism. Terrorism
is terrorism, irrespective of community, and can find no place in a
democratic society that offers many avenues for grievance redressal.
Even if poor or partisan governance, political bias in policing and a
creaking criminal justice system have closed many doors, wrong means
cannot be justified in the name of seeking right ends.
The Delhi High Court has sternly admonished police officials to stop
rushing to hold press conferences to leak premature and fallible
“leads” that disclose their line of investigation and instead get on
with their job of bringing criminals to justice. Warped notions of
public interest and press freedom have made nonsense of good reporting
and a growingly irresponsible section of the media is becoming a social
menace rather than performing its proper role of mediation.
Two other straws merit comment. Though Chaat Puja passed off
peacefully, one must be wary of the tendency to use festivals for
political and electoral mobilisation and to overawe “the other”
whosoever that other might be.
The second relates to a parliamentary committee recommendation that
would make a non-official chairman of the Central Wakf Board rather
than a Joint Secretary as at present. But why on earth should
government enter this constitutionally forbidden territory and,
likewise, fund Haj, Kailash-Mansarovar and other pilgrimages at the
taxpayers’ expense? This is to dilute secularism, court trouble and
invite competitive religiosity to garner votes.
Jamiat-Ulema-e-Hind clerics have just met in Hyderabad to reinforce
their previous Deoband fatwa denouncing terror masquerading as jihad.
This is a positive move and should the starting point for further
efforts in the direction of national integration. Bhutan and the
Maldives are happily marching towards democracy and Barack Obama has
set an inspiring example by going beyond narrow identity politics to
set himself larger and higher goals for the United States and the
world. These are beacon lights to follow.
http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Nov122008/editpage20081111100220.asp
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Last modified on January 2nd, 2009 webadmin, CED