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One
of the many significant but underappreciated dimensions
of the Barack Obama moment in the United States has
to be the definite rebuff for the religious right. The
organised religious right was at the core of the Republican
ascendancy for nearly three decades. Fundamentalist
preachers and evangelists such as Jerry Falwell and
Pat Robertson used the pulpit and the reach of the cable
television to manufacture a new American mood, away
from its post-world war liberal value s; in the process,
the organised religious right acquired the clout to
make or unmake congressional and presidential candidates.
And, it was the stupendous success of this phenomenon
that provided the model and the inspiration - and, the
linkages - for the Hindutva project in India. Indeed,
the Ayodhya movement borrowed, rather copied, heavily
the tactics and ideas from the Christian Right in America.
The
Obama victory and its implied setback for the conservative
Christian fundamentalism have come at a time when the
Religious Right is trying to reassert itself, once again,
in Indian political life. The Hindutva voices have resurrected
the old proposition, first heard during the Ayodhya
insurgency, that the sadhus and sants could not be subjected
to the compulsions and constraints of the constitutional
order. Their latest refrain is that a sadhvi, even when
accused of involvement in terror activities, was entitled
to be treated with kid gloves because "sadhus and
sants" were a revered lot in India. The religious
functionaries ipso facto could not be made answerable
to the rule of law and its procedural insistences.
The
assorted BJP leaders have bought into these immunity
claims in this election season, partly because of the
fear of falling out of the sangh parivar's favour and
partly because they think the country is in a mood to
approve and applaud some kind of majoritarian vigilantism.
The manner and extent to which the BJP leaders choose
to kowtow to the sangh parivar's dictates is their business;
but, the claims being made by the BJP leaders of different
yardsticks of investigation and interrogation for the
Hindu religious functionaries are untenable.
In
the months and years after "9/11" the Hindutva
crowd happily embraced the George Bush-Dick Cheney-invented
categories of friends and enemies, of good and bad guys;
read the Washington rhetoric as a validation of its
own anti-Islam theological prejudices and anti-Muslim
political preferences; and, all these impulses converged
during the 2002 Gujarat riots.
In
these last few years of the UPA rule the Religious Right
in India has grafted for itself a new layer of ideological
justification: because of its presumed "vote-bank
politics" the Manmohan Singh government would not
deploy optimally all the resources of the Indian state
against the "enemy" and therefore it was up
to the majority community to get even, put the fear
of retaliation and revenge among the Muslims. The BJP
leaders calculate - like the Republicans did in the
United States - that there is a rich electoral harvest
to be reaped and all that they have to do is to find
an emotive enough issue to tap the Hindu "base."
The party believes that in the likes of Sadhvi Pragnya
Singh Thakur and Lt. Col. Purohit it has found the icons
around whom to replicate the electoral success of early
1990s. If in the earlier days of the Ayodhya "movement"
the Religious Right tapped the medieval animosities,
it has now convinced itself that the majority community
is psychologically primed up to countenance a new idiom
of violent hatred.
The
old Hindutva platform brought together the aggressively
nationalist, the self-styled deshbhakt, the orthodox
and the traditionalist, and the "anti-foreigner";
it became a successful coalition on a national level
when it could entice the liberal, centrist voters, primarily
on the strength of the appeal of a "decent"
Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The Pokhran-II and the Kargil
War consolidated the appeal of the new Vajpayee-centric
coalition.
Even
as the Vajpayee appeal dissipated itself, the sangh
parivar remains convinced that it continues to have
the monopoly of the "nationalist" constituency.
This is an erroneous assumption. Pakistan no longer
looms so large as the organised "enemy" state
as it did a decade ago. True, the ISI and other unfriendly
"intelligence" agencies in our immediate neighbourhood
continue to have the capacity to stage periodic terror
strikes, but Pakistan is too internally distracted by
its own turmoil to constitute a "threat" in
our national imagination. Neither Pakistan nor Bangladesh
is construed in our collective thinking as centres of
imperturbable sites of implacable hostility.
Second,
the BJP can no longer be deemed to enjoy the status
of the sole spokesman of the middle class "nationalist"
sentiment and aspirations. Its presumed monopoly was
snatched away from it during the two-year-old debate
on the controversial "123" nuclear-agreement
with the United States. In was the CPI(M)-led Left Front
that positioned itself as the uncompromising champion
of the "strategic" autonomy and "independent"
foreign policy. Oddly enough, that two-year-long struggle
also saw the Congress pinching away the allegiance of
the NRIs, a significant source of energy and resources
over the years for the Hindutva crowd back in India.
While
the sangh parivar is right in wanting to market the
BJP as the (electoral) answer to our unanswered prayer
for effective response to the terror-mongering outfits,
the larger question is whether the Indian middle classes,
especially the younger generation, are willing to concede
space and deference to sadhus, sadhvis and sants in
public policy. Mr. Obama has demonstrated that it is
possible to get the better of political strategies based
on divisions and compartmentalisation; in the process
he seems to have inflicted an irrevocable reverse on
the politics of religious right, on all those who insist
on defining patriotism and nationalism in narrower terms.
The
Religious Right in India is making its last ditch attempt
to induce young India to put its faith in the presumed
wisdom of religious functionaries. Young India is also
too cynical, too self-assured, too globally-savvy, and
too hooked on profit and good things in life to defer
to sadhus, sants and sadhvis. Just as the voters in
Jammu and Kashmir have surprised everyone with their
democratic engagement, the citizens in the rest of the
country too would prefer constitutional values and decencies
to the allure of majoritarian vigilantism
Source:
Hindu, 21 November 2008
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