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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
ARTICLE:
Volume XVIII, No 1, SPRING 2001
Hindu Nationalism
Clouds the Face of India
H. D. S. Greenway
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There is a
moment in one of Paul Scott's classic novels of India, The Jewel
in the Crown, when an old Rajput princess soon after independence
says: "I have a feeling that when it was written into our constitution
that we should be a secular state we finally put the lid on our
Indian-ness, and admitted the legality of our long years of living
in sin with the English."
That was in
the time of Jawaharlal Nehru, the aristocratic Cambridge man whose
secularism was never in doubt. Although an ardent nationalist and
Mahatma Gandhi's chosen heir, Nehru never had any trouble admitting
the legitimacy of British democratic institutions as the model for
India. The Hindu extremists, one of whom assassinated Gandhi for
being too considerate of Muslims, were an embarrassment to Nehru,
and he brought the ruling Congress Party along with him. But there
have always been Indians who looked upon the colonial period as
living in sin. There have always been Hindus-and Muslims too-who
consider secularism on the subcontinent a foreign body to be expelled.
In Pakistan, blowing back from the mujahedin of Afghanistan, Islamic
fundamentalism grows ever more threatening to what is left of Pakistani
democracy. In India, it is Hindu extremism that is challenging the
secular order of things and the rule of law. As with other fundamentalist
movements, the battle has much to do with the modern versus the
traditional in a war of values.
Secularists
realize that a united India was a product of the British Empire.
Before the British, Indians owed their allegiances to family, clan,
religion, or princely state. It was the British who established
a centralized administration, a common educational system, and countrywide
transportation that gave the subcontinent a sense of belonging to
one country. Hindu nationalists, however, believe that for a thousand
years India has been a single cultural unit that absorbed all its
invaders, and that Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, and Buddhists are
all converts from, or offshoots of, a basic Hindu entity. They believe
that differences in geography, religion, ethnicity, and language
never really detracted from this basic cultural whole and sense
of nationhood.
An Assertion
of Indian-ness
To a visitor who first came to India in the 1960s, the last three
decades have seen a considerable assertion of Indian-ness, a disinvestment
in the colonial heritage on the part of both secular and religious
nationalists. With 16 official languages, and many more dialects,
English was, and is, virtually the only universal language in India.
Knowledge of English has also given India a boost in the Internet
revolution in which Indians have excelled. But in nationalist quarters,
English is under attack. In January, Vishnukant Shastri, the governor
of India's most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, lambasted visiting
Rotarians at the opening session of their convention for relying
too heavily on English. He said they should use Hindi a common Indian
language in the north, but which Indians from the south cannot understand.
He said that the use of English made people feel inferior using
their own language. The Rotarians promised to give Hindi its proper
place in future meetings, but few could find the Hindi words for
the convention's topic: "Gazing through a crystal ball, Rotary
in the new millennium."
Throughout
India, English-language newspapers have been steadily losing market
share to the vernacular press. The venerable old cities of Bombay,
Madras, and Calcutta have been renamed Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata
to rid them of colonial associations. In Calcutta, the most recent
to be renamed, there has been some resistance to change. Neeraj
Bhalla, head of the Royal Calcutta Golf Club, "one of the oldest
golf clubs in the world," said that the club would not be known
as the Royal Kolkata any time soon. And of 50 businesses that use
the name Calcutta, 30 opposed changing their names.
In other parts
of the country, there is pressure to abandon what some Hindus see
as a colonial legacy older than the British. Hindu nationalists,
for example, want to change the name of Allahabad, that great city
on the Ganges, to Prayag, which they claim was the original name
for the town mentioned in the Hindu epic, the Ramayana, and
other mythological texts before the Muslim Moghul emperor, Akbar,
changed its name to suit his own god.
In the Indian
military, regiments with traditions far older than the republic,
still cling to their old ways. The annual Republic Day parade in
January saw outfits such as the Rajputana Rifles, raised in 1775,
the Sikh Light Infantry, the 113-year-old Gurkha Rifles, marching
down the Rajpath in New Delhi with the swinging arms and crashing
heels of a crack British unit; with bagpipers in tartan dress bringing
up the rear. They marched to the India Gate, monument to the 90,000
Indian army dead in World War I. But in city squares throughout
India one sees more and more statues of Subhas Chandra Bose, the
nationalist leader who joined the Nazis and then the Japanese in
an effort to raise an Indian national army from Indian prisoners
of war to fight against British rule, and against their own colleagues
in the regular Indian army. Bose is described by tour guides as
a "freedom fighter," and in India today there is debate
over who are the real heroes-those who fought for the Allies or
against them?
Reactions against
Western culture are becoming more frequent. Hindu nationalists have
threatened to close down hotels that celebrate New Year's Eve, and
shops selling valentine cards were recently attacked in Uttar Pradesh
by a group calling itself the "Hindu Awareness Platform."
Similar protests were made in Bombay. The Hindu militants also wish
to forbid the slaughter of cows, which are sacred to Hindus but
not to Christians and Muslims. Protests against Western fast-food
shops have also become a feature of life in modern India.
The Miss Universe
and Miss World contests, which Indians love and often win, are another
symbol of Western decadence to Hindu nationalists. Four years ago,
I found myself in the midst of a Miss World contest in Bangalore,
the center of India's modernity and high-tech industries. The protests
were so vehement-at least one person set fire to himself-that the
swimsuit contest had to be moved offshore to the Seychelles.
A Hindu
Nation
The struggle between secularism and a Hindu-based sense of Indian
exceptionalism is not new. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sang (RSS),
or National Volunteers Association, was founded as a militant Hindu
organization in 1925, dedicated to the over-throw of the secular
programs of the National Congress, which was led by Gandhi and then
Nehru. The RSS late last year celebrated its seventy-fifth birthday
with a military-like drill of 60,000 uniformed men and boys from
7,000 villages-all come to dedicate themselves to a Hindu nation.
In the years since its founding, the RSS has spawned other organizations
such as the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP), which, along with more secular coalition partners,
rules India today. The RSS holds that Christians and Muslims are
basically converts from Hinduism and should be reintegrated into
the mainstream of Indian Hindu culture. If they prefer not to integrate
they should step aside. Christianity has had a toehold in India
since the middle of the first century-far longer than in many parts
of Europe-but Christians still represent less than 2 percent of
the population. Muslims, although hardly more than 15 percent, number
somewhere between 180 and 200 million, however, which makes India
the second biggest Muslim country in the world after Indonesia.
Pakistan, which was ripped from India by partition in 1947, has,
according to the last census, roughly 135 million mostly Muslim
people.
The biggest
political change in India in the last decades has been the demise
of the once all-powerful Congress Party and the rise of regional-based
parties and the Hindu nationalists. Like all political parties that
remain in power too long, Congress fell into corruption and cronyism.
Nehru's daughter, Indira Gandhi-no relation to the Mahatma-brought
India as close as it has ever come to dictatorship in 1975, when
she declared an "Emergency," suspended democracy, and
threw many of her opponents in prison. It is to India's credit that
democracy eventually prevailed. But Indira Gandhi saw India and
the Congress Party as a family enterprise. After her assassination
her son, Rajiv, became prime minister-only to be assassinated himself.
Today, the head of the Congress Party in opposition is Sonya Gandhi,
Rajiv's widow, who is an Italian trying her hardest to appeal to
Hindus.
The Congress
Party's demise has seen the rise of the Hindu nationalist BJP. It
is India's most powerful political force, but it rules through a
coalition that has necessitated a softening of the party's more
militant Hindu positions. The prime minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee,
has gone out of his way in recent weeks to stress the importance
of secular politics. He told a recent gathering of foreign news
executives in New Delhi that "ours is a multi-religious, multi-lingual,
and multi-ethnic nation. The rights of religious minorities are
fully protected. We believe that India's demonstration of unity
in diversity is, in many ways, useful to the entire world in the
age of globalization." Later he said that that there could
be no India without secularism. "As far as I am concerned,
secularism means that the state should have no religion, and there
should be no discrimination on the basis of religion."
But inclusiveness
and the rights of minorities have not always fared well at the hand
of the Hindu nationalists, and Vajpayee's remarks were made in the
shadow of the most divisive issue in India today: Ayodhya.
Ayodhya, in
Uttar Pradesh, was until eight years ago, the site of a sixteenth-century
mosque. It is believed by Hindus that the site is also the place
where the god Ram, an incarnation of Vishnu, was born. Like the
Temple Mount in Jerusalem, Ayodhya is one of those unending, god-inspired
sources of communal friction.
There had been
Hindu nationalist rallies at the site for several years previously,
but in 1992, whipped up by BJP politicians, 200,000 militants shouting
"Hindustan is for the Hindus" and "Death to the Muslims"
stormed the mosque and using sledgehammers, picks, and bare hands
literally reduced the mosque to rubble. Unrest swept India. In the
end some 1,400 people, most of them Muslims, were massacred under
the eyes of the mostly Hindu police. Hindu nationalists want to
build a temple for Ram on the rubble-strewn site. Muslims are incensed
and want the mosque rebuilt. The matter is now in the hands of the
Indian supreme court.
Last December,
the upper house of India's parliament censured the government for
refusing to dismiss three cabinet ministers who had been charged
with the destruction of the mosque. Vajpayee further inflamed the
situation by saying that a temple for Ram at Ayodhya was "an
expression of national sentiment" that had not yet been fulfilled.
Much of his secular talk today is seen as an effort to climb down
from and modify that inflammatory statement. Vajpayee today says
the matter should be settled in discussion between Muslims and Hindus,
and that he would abide by whatever the court decides. Vajpayee
is feeling his way carefully because there are important elections
this year in Uttar Pradesh, where Hindu nationalism is strong.
The militant
Hindu organizations, however, took the occasion of the intensely
religious Maha Kumbh Festival, during which this past January as
many as 70 million Hindus-and Sonya Gandhi-bathed in the confluence
of the Ganges, the Yamuna, and the mythical river Saraswati, to
announce that the government had one year to hand Ayodhya over to
them or they would take matters into their own hands and build the
temple themselves, no matter what the law and the courts said. They
announced plans for mass demonstrations and marches in the coming
months. In a direct threat to Vajpayee's coalition, militant Hindu
leader, Acharya Giriraj Kishore, said that four governments had
already fallen"in the wake of demolition. There will be no
objections if one government goes for construction." As for
the Muslims, they "will act on their own to stop the temple
construction at the disputed site only if government agencies fail
to safeguard the interests of the minority community," said
a Muslim spokesman.
The threats,
and using the sacred bath as a forum, incensed secularists who lashed
out at the militants and blamed Vajpayee for playing both sides
against the middle-saying that his secular statements were only
a mask behind which he hid the intolerance of Hindu nationalism
in his own party.
However he
may feel in his own heart, Vajpayee has tried to tone down the militants
in the BJP, if only to be able to rule India. He held out his hand
to Muslim guerrillas in the Kashmir, a rebellious province that
has caused wars and friction with Pakistan ever since partition,
by twice extending a Ramadan cease-fire. He also entered into the
kind of earthquake diplomacy that brought Turkey and Greece a little
closer by talking to Pakistani leader Gen. Parvez Musharraf, on
the telephone for the first time since the general took power in
October 1999. He thanked Pakistan for its contribution to the victims
of the great January disaster in Gujarat. Both Vajpayee and Musharraf
expressed the desire for further contacts to settle Kashmir.
Secular
at the Political Core
The battle between Nehru's secular India and what the historian
Burton Stein called the "distorted particularisms and intolerance"
of religious-based nationalism comes just as a new, market-oriented
and technologically minded India is trying to be born from the old,
socialist and inward-looking country that was, ironically, also
Nehru's legacy. Wags like to say that India suffered mightily because
socialism was so in vogue at Cambridge University when Nehru was
a student.
Russia and
China hope to woo India into alliances against American hegemony,
but the historic tilt toward India, and away from Pakistan, that
President Clinton wrought is also a powerful draw. A new middle
class versed in modern communications and dedicated to a free-market
economy is growing. Secularists are not giving in easily to pressure
from Hindu nationalists, and it is probable that secularism will
survive at the political core. But in the margins, concessions to
Hindu nationalism will continue to change the face and the customs
of the country.
Postscript-When
Prime Minister Vajpayee finally brought India into the open as a
nuclear power in 1998, the lines from the Hindu epic, the Bhagavad
Gita, that Robert Oppenheimer uttered at Alamogordo in that
dawn of the nuclear age were remembered and widely quoted across
India:
If the radiance
of a thousand suns
Were to burst at once into the sky,
That would be the splendor of the
Mighty One...
I am become Death,
The destroyer of worlds.
Nationalists
like to think of it as a Hindu bomb, and they talk of building a
Hindu temple at that site in the Rajastan desert where the explosion
took place.
-New Delhi,
February 2001
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