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THE USUAL
SUSPECTS
More Gutter InspectorsFor some liberals, a riot-free India is anathema
Swapan Dasgupta
If boisterous after-dinner conversations are anything to go
by, the British writer William Dalrymple is over the moon. Now shooting a TV film on India
for British television, he is ecstatic that Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) loudmouth B.L.
Sharma "Prem" has been egged into committing a series of indiscretions on
camera. These include saying Hitler wasn't such a bad chap after all. Coupled with
intrusive candid camera shots of the elite in private conversation, the visit has
bolstered his pre-conceived belief that BJP-ruled India is fast becoming a hothouse of
sectarian intolerance. If the film turns out the way Dalrymple brags it will, we are
certain to witness another furore over Hindu fascism.
A controversy of this nature, accompanied by intense liberal
breast beating and incredible suggestions of tax raids on anti-nuke activists, fits a
stereotype. The ordinary citizen's experience of the A.B. Vajpayee Government may well
centre on ineptitude rather than intolerance, but that fits uncomfortably into the thesis
of creeping fascism. Juxtapose the Saraswati Vandana controversy with some crazy
utterances of a VHP activist and the rape of nuns in Jhabua, and it is easy to build an
impressive collage of the Talibanisation of India. So what if it doesn't correspond to
reality? It makes good copy and an even higher TV rating.
Yet, there is no point singling out a clever British writer
for opprobrium. For the past fortnight, the Government has been mercilessly flayed for
pressing with its saffron agenda. Sonia Gandhi has spoken about the subversion of the
Constitution, the Minorities Commission has protested against a move to amend Articles 29
and 30 and Star News has grilled Murli Manohar Joshi for allegedly doctoring children's
textbooks. There was even a fanciful report that the US ambassador was anxious to discuss
the Jhabua rapes with Home Minister L.K. Advani. Even if the hoary secular-communal debate
hasn't quite revived, there is an impressive dhobi's list of the BJP's communal
transgressions.
It is tempting to brush aside the concerns as familiar
pre-election posturing. Since Ayodhya featured more prominently in the anti-BJP agenda
during the general election, there is every likelihood of the Congress doing a repeat
performance for the November assembly polls and fuelling minority fears. It may work, but
there is a real danger of minorityism rebounding on the minorities, as it did during the
Ayodhya dispute.
For a start, the objection to extending Article 30 ensuring
the right to establish and manage schools and colleges to "all classes of
citizens" is churlish. If a special right to a few is made universal, it doesn't
compromise minority rights, unless the assumption is that minorities must always be
regarded as special citizens. This, in a sense, is what is implied. The VHP has rightly
been attacked for Sharma's obnoxious comment about the Jhabua incident, but there has been
an embarrassed conspiracy of silence over the growing politicisation of the church. For
example, the National Council of Churches representing some two dozen denominations
denounced the Pokhran tests and charged the Government with ignoring development issues.
Since this is precisely what Sonia said at her election speech in Bikaner last week, can
we rush to the conclusion that the Church in India is the Congress party in prayer? It's a
question worth posing to Dalrymple the next time he goes on his hunt-a-fascist rounds. |