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11. The riots
11.1 Reporting vs. comment
"The 'progressive' people in this country show a
remarkable eagerness to see communalism even in the most
harmless observations of [Hindu] religious leaders, while
overlooking such outrageously communal and provocative
statements as the one made by the former government
official Syed Shahabuddin, that contact with the Hindus
debased the Muslim, or the one by Syed Abdullah Bukhari,
the Imam of the Jama Masjid in Delhi, that the Muslims
would resort to a civil war." This observation by
Subhash Chandra Sarkar149
is quite correct, and it
explains the peculiar features of press reporting on
communal riots. The progressive pressmen attribute every
riot to "Hindu communalism raising its ugly head", while
justifying or explaining away the undeniable cases of
Muslim communalist violence.
When reading the press reports about communal riots, one
should make a distinction between two stages of riot
reporting. The day after a riot breaks out, the press
will just write what happened, in some detail. The
report will be a little bit blurred by the obligatory
usage of non-definite terms for the communities involved
: "As members of one community passed through an area
dominated by another community, stones were thrown at
them", etc. But the experienced reader can mostly
understand who is who.
However, the editorials devoted to these instances of
communal carnage are not interested in the details of
the matter, and in their effort to allot guilt and
suggest remedies, they often implicitly start from a riot
scenario which is totally unsupported by the factual
details that appeared in the first report. The autumn of
1990 has offered some striking examples of this recurring
press phenomenon.
For instance, about the Hyderabad violence of December
1990 there could be no doubt whatsoever about who was the
aggressor and who the victim. The violence was,
according to press reports, started by revenge action of
Muslims against the police, for killing an influential
Muslim goonda, Mohammed Sardar. This man was a convicted
murderer, and while free on parole, he had killed a
policeman, and gone underground. When the police caught
up with him, he was killed in an exchange of firing.150
This encounter triggered a wave of stabbing by people
belonging to the same community as this Mohammed. Not
only in Hindu-Muslim terms it is very clear who started,
but also in miscreant-police terms: the first victim was
not the Muslim goonda, but a policeman. it is not the
partisan anti-Hindu police who killed the victims for
whose murder Mohammed Sardar was convicted, it was not
they who killed the policeman that was killed by him, and
it was not they who started the stabbing.
Moreover, while in many riots Muslims take the initiative
but then lose it to the more numerous Hindus, here it was
the Muslims who were on the attack all through the weeks
of violence.151 The Statesman reported : "An
unusual
feature of the current clashes was the heavy toll
inflicted on the majority community, forcing many of them
to flee their hearth and homes south of the Musi, which
were immediately occupied by members of the minority
community." The inserted comment that heavy suffering
on the part of the Hindus is unusual, is of course
based on secularist estimates. The report continues:
"House-to-house searches in the [predominantly Muslim]
old city yielded a rich haul of weapons, imported from
the north."
But in the same issue, the editorial has heard nothing of
Muslim attacks, Muslim goondas, Muslim arms caches.
Under the caption Spark from Ayodhya, it writes : "If the
trouble in Aligarh followed the stabbing of a policeman
[by a member of an unnamed you-know-which community], it
is not yet clear what caused the eruption in Hyderabad.
Nor is it worthwhile any longer to look for specific
reasons since a focal point already exists."152 The
focal point is (guess once) the BJP/VHP's "cynical, vote-
catching policies relating to the disputed shrines in
Ayodhya".
If one would believe the columns in the national English-
language press, Mr. Advani's Rathyatra has left a trail
of bloodshed. But when one turns to the actual reports
of the riots, this very serious allegation turns out to
be totally contradicted by the facts.
During the Rathyatra, which was underway for about a
month until it was stopped on October 22, there were some
riots in Karnataka, and many very serious riots in Uttar
Pradesh in the first state, Advani had only tipped the
North-East corner on his way from Maharashtra to Andhra
Pradesh, in the second he had not set foot at all. Now,
those who are biased and perforce need to blame Advani,
can say that at least he created the atmosphere that
led to the riots. But then they should explain how he
managed to cause riots five hundred miles distant from
his Rathyatra, and none in its vicinity. Where he could
personally impress his atmosphere on audiences, there
was no violence, but where it was only a distant echo, it
would have moved people to utter barbarities like those
that took place in Gonda, U.P.: a strange explanation.
To my mind, it would seem that such an explanation does
not spring from the scientific temper which secularism
seeks to inculcate, but rather from a political
compulsion to blame the Hindu campaign at any cost and/or
to shield the real culprit.
11.2 Inspiring and starting riots
A far more logical explanation for the non-occurrence of
riots in or near the Rathyatra, and the large-scale
occurrence of serious riots in Uttar Pradesh, is this.
For the common Hindu, the passing of the Ram Rath was a
joyous religious event, perhaps compounded by a sense of
relief or even victory because it announced the
symbolical righting of the centuries of persecution
inflicted by Muslim rulers upon the Hindus. At any rate,
it was a happy affair that sweetened the atmosphere
rather than create bitterness and violence. Moreover,
mr. Advani in his speeches called on all Indians to
celebrate and to cultivate harmony. That his speeches
were not inflammatory, I know for certain even though I
heard not one of them : mr. Advani has many enemies who
watch him for discrediting mistakes, and if he had made
any objectionable statement, it would have been splashed
across the front pages. It may be true, as some papers
have written, that some local BJP leaders did make
inflammatory speeches. but at least the starring speaker
called for peace and harmony, and the very invoking of
Ram created a positive atmosphere good enough to yield
the actual result that no riots place.
By contrast, in Uttar Pradesh the ubiquitous public
speaker was chief minister Mulayam Singh Yadav, a man
with an impressive crime record (highlighted in
Illustrated Weekly after the 1989 elections, but now
forgotten thanks to his uncompromising secularism), who
gave very inflammatory and confrontationist speeches :
"Not even a bird shall be able to enter Ayodhya", for
"We will crush them". The power of the word was
demonstrated once more : while the man who called for
self-restraint and harmony had a peaceful Rathyatra, the
man who called for confrontation, got confrontation.153
In spite of unprecedented police deployment and curfews
in many towns, riots broke out.
A recurring scenario, in conformity with the general
pattern of Hindu-Muslim riots in the twentieth century,
was that Hindu processions, especially the Ram Jyoti
processions, were attacked when passing through Muslim-
dominated areas. These attacks were largely a
materialization of all the fiery curses that Mulayam in
his mass rallies had cast upon the Ram processions. In
many cases, the Hindus retaliated by attacking any
Muslims they could find, which unfortunately were mostly
innocent bystanders. Or villagers who got involved in a
riot in town went back to their village and attacked the
Muslims they could find there (that was the scenario of
the huge Bhagalpur carnage of 1989, this repeated on a
smaller scale in Gonda).
However, it seems it was not only by the power of the
word that those riots got going. The Gonda riot started
when actual bombs were thrown at a Hindu procession.
According to press reports as well as the report by a BJP
fact-finding team, at least one of them had been thrown
from the local Janata Dal office by people working for
Munnan Khan, the local MLA. This man is a friend of the
chief minister : with the latter's support, he was
elected in 1989 as an independent candidate (though a JD
member) against the official candidate of the anti-
Congress combine (a BJP man). After people had been
killed in this unilateral attack on the procession
(officially six ; according to Congress MP Anand Singh,
one hundred), mutual fighting broke out. And still
later, some Hindu hotheads took out revenge parties to
Muslim quarters outside the city.
Many papers have, in their final overview of the riot,
consciously blurred the first stage of the Gonda riot,
and highlighted the last stage in order to absolve the
Muslims and put the blame on he Hindus, i.e. on the
Janmabhoomi movement, i.e. on L.K. Advani who was far
away.
Consider this report in the Times of India :"The
procession numbering about 5000 people was wending its
way through the narrow streets of Colonelganj shouting
some slogans which could be deemed provocative in an
atmosphere of tension, when it was attacked with stones,
bombs and other missiles. The attack allegedly began
from the roof of the Janata Dal office, according to some
shopkeepers whose shops were gutted."154 This
suggests
that slogan-shouting on the part of the processionists
has caused the violence. But of course, bombs are not
picked up and thrown in an emotional reaction to
inflammatory slogans, as too many journalists would like
us to believe. Bombs are quite certainly purchased or
made beforehand, and a bomb-attack is definitely
premeditated. In fact, on rooftops not even loose-lying
stones are that readily available for impulsive acts of
stone-throwing.
It is very clear to an unbiased reader that the Gonda
carnage has started with a pre-meditated attack on the
procession. Going by the original newspaper reports,
some Janata Dal miscreants affiliated with Muslim party
leaders were the aggressors, and the processionists were
the victims. However, it is in the nature of aggression
that the victims get the blame. Thus, a rapist will
usually say that the girl had asked for it, that she had
provoked him. Here too, it is not stated simply that
the processionists were attacked. Rather, it is said
in goonda-speak, approvingly broadcast by the secularist
press, that the procession has provoked violence and
caused riots.
In the same newspaper report, mention is made of an
earlier incident: "It all began with a girl being teased
by anti-social elements owing allegiance to one Talukdar
Khan." Even for this earlier stage of the communal
conflict, the paper does not hide what side started. And
then it goes on to say that "the other side was provoked
and mobbed his house", without specifying how exactly
they were "provoked" by the Muslims, upon which "he drew
up plans with his supporters to attack the procession on
September 30".155
So, at every stage of the escalation, you see Muslims
starting, Hindus merely reacting, and Muslims pre-
planning large-scale violence. And it is not me who says
so, I read this in the reporting of secularist
newspapers (though not on their Opinion page). These are
indications from unsuspected sources that members of the
Muslim community take a disproportionately large part in
starting communal violence.
11.3. Received wisdom on riots
As a foreigner, I have no access to certain archives,
much less to police records. But going by the riot
information generally available, I do find that there is
truth in the received wisdom that
- a clear majority of the riots are started by Muslims,
- a clear majority of the victims are Muslims, at least in the final count
- a clear majority of the victims shot by the police (not
including the Kar Sevaks) are Muslims; the police in most
of these case claims self-defense against attacks by mobs
or snipers.
To start with an unsuspected source, Mufti Mohammed Saiyid,
Home minister, made a statement on communal riots between
January and April 1990. It lists nine riots, with their
causes. The monthly Muslim India reproduces the
list156, but omits parts of
the stated causes of five
of
the riots, e.g.: "Clash between anti-social elements...on
black marketing of cinema tickets". This leaves the
reader guessing what was omitted. The causes of two
other riots are stated in the well-known indeterminate
terminology: "Alleged misbehavior with a girl of the
other community". but the two remaining riot causes, the
only ones clearly saying which community was attacked
(and leaving little doubt as to which community
attacked), are these : "Stoning of Holi procession
passing a place of worship", and "Alleged murder of the
president of VHP, Kheda District, by persons belonging to
other community".
One might of course start blaming any possible (I hasten
to prefix alleged) provocative slogans uttered by
the processionists and by that local VHP leader; but
normally, people who start the violence, like throwing
stones or committing murder, are held responsible for
these acts, and at least partly responsible for the
reactive violence which they may trigger. It is humanly
quite feasible to listen to objectionable and insulting
slogans without having a knee-jerk reaction of throwing
bombs. It is a free human decision to react with
violence. At worst, slogans can be a reason for violence
; given human freedom, they can never be the cause.
This take excuse of the provocative slogans leading
mechanically to stone-throwing and worse, is used
routinely by biased reporters. For another example, on
October 30 there was a riot in Bijnor, with officially 14
people killed, others say 55. A procession with about
100 women members of Durga Vahini had gone out to the
Ghanta Ghar area. "There they raised communal slogans,
resulting in stone-pelting and bomb-throwing."157 This
cheap excuse for a pre-planned bomb attack is even
contradicted by other information in the same article.
Superintendent of Police Praveen Singh arrested Municipal
Chairman Javed Aftab Siddiqui, alleged to have
masterminded the riot. District Magistrate Ramesh Yadav
confirmed that the violence was instigated by J.A.
Siddiqui. This case proves that newspapers keep on
blaming the slogan-shouters even when it is crystal-clear
from their own information that the violence was
premeditated and engineered by the other side.
Let's hear some examples of newspapers inadvertently
reporting that Muslims have started riots, in late 1990.
On October 29, "members of two communities indulged in
heavy brickbatting, stabbing and exchange of fire. The
whole trouble started when Kar Sevaks shouting anti-
government slogans burnt the effigy of the chief
minister, mr. Mulayam Singh Yadav [so far, no-one hurt],
and members of the other community objected to this."158
In Lucknow, BJP people "marched towards Moulviganj
shouting slogans. Seeing the frenzied mob advancing
towards them the members of the other community took up
positions and pelted stones and missiles, resulting in a
violent clash."159
In Bulandshahr, near Aligarh, a bomb factory was
discovered when it exploded, due to uncareful handling
of the precious factory output. Since many riots,
including the big ones of Bhagalpur and Gonda, have
started with bomb attacks on processions, many Hindus
believe that Muslims have started to manufacture bombs
illegally. That may not be a communalist prejudice,
for the owner of the factory, who died in the explosion
(with three of his friends wounded) had at least a Muslim
name.160 In the same mohalla, "nine
countrymade bombs
and a huge quantity of explosives were recovered".161
An article titled Anatomy of Carnage reports: "In Ganj
Dundwara in Etah, the spark was provided by a minor
injury to a Muslim girl caught in a melee of 100-odd two-
wheelers escorting BJP MP Uma Bharati."162 So, this says
that the Muslim girl had not been attacked, not even
while Uma Bharati was whipping up communal passions,
but then the Muslims retaliated to this non-attack by
attacking the Hindu crowd. And in Hyderabad, "the latest
about of violence broke out after a leader of the Majlis-
e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen (MIM) was injured on December 5
following a private land dispute. Within minutes of his
admission into hospital - [it] was not serious -- MIM
supporters killed a Hindu traveling in an autorickshaw."
So, the dispute was neither communal nor serious, and
then Muslims made it communal and serious by attacking
and killing a non-involved Hindu.
While this article lists a number of riots that had a
precise local cause, the whole wave of violence is
attributed in one sweep to, of course, Ayodhya : "There
is no denying that the flames of communal hatred which
scorched the towns of Uttar Pradesh and Hyderabad were
the consequence of state impotence in responding to the
message of revenge and hatred that echoed with every
frenzied call for a Ram Mandir at Ayodhya."
BJP leader V.K. Malhotra has aptly ridiculed this facile
allegation in a speech in the Lok Sabha :"The country has
witnessed 2500 riots between 1950 and 1990. Godhra city
had communal riots in 1947, 52, 59, 61, 65, 67, 72, 74,
80, 83, 89 and 90. Were all of these caused by the
Rathyatra ?" He pointed out that those who were painting
a grim picture of the minorities being massacred, were
doing a great disservice to the country and giving it a
bad name. The fact was that 90% of the people killed in
Hyderabad were Hindus. The riots in Delhi (Sadar Bazaar,
on November 14) had been engineered by Muslims, as even
the Shahi Imam had admitted (even while the report by
the Leftist IPF had sophisticatedly blamed economical
rivalries and the Congress-I).163 In Sambhal
(Moradabad,
U.P.) all those killed were Hindus, and yet the BJP was
being blamed.
Mr. Malhotra also reminded his colleagues that the ex-
chief minister of Andhra Pradesh, Chenna Reddy, and
Andhra opposition leader N.T. Rama Rao had said that the
BJP had had no role in the Hyderabad riots. That M.J.
Akbar, spokesman of the Congress fact-finding team (some
called it a fault-finding team), kept on blaming the
BJP, only added to the widespread suspicion that a
Congress faction had fomented the riots in order to make
Chenna Reddy step down and make room for a Chief Minister
more agreeable to the party leadership. The same
explanation has also been given for the October riots in
Karnataka, which had equally forced a Congress Chief
Minister to step down.
On the U.P. riots, Mr. Malhotra said that they had been
caused by the inflammatory speeches delivered by the
Chief Minister:"It was he who had asked Muslims all over
the state to were these irresponsible utterances that
caused the trouble in that state."164
We may conclude that the whole business of blaming Hindu
organizations and political parties has little to do with
the actual responsibility. While this dirty and futile
game may be forgiven to politicians, it is unacceptable
from newsman and independent intellectuals. But it is not
only the automatical blaming of the Hindutva
organization that has lost its credibility. The blaming
of politicians in general only touches the surface of the
problem. It is quite possible that the Congress has used
communal riots in order to get its own Andhra and
Karnatka chief ministers replaced; and if is not true, at
least some other party-political ploys are surely behind
some of the riots. But then, that is only possible
because a riotproneness already characterizes the
communal co-existence in India. The unscrupled and
cynical use of communal friction by politicians is bad
enough, but this problem is just a parasite on the more
fundamental problem: the communalism inherent in India's
Hindu-Muslim relation.
11.4 Muslims and the police
The mutual enmity between the Muslim community and
the police is a well-known feature of India's communal
friction. Both parties say the other one always starts.
This is what newspaper reports say: "A head constable was
killed in an assault in Mirzapur area [of Ahmedabad]
while a brother of a constable was stabbed to death in
Gomitpur area. Another person was also killed in
stabbing... The head constable was stoned to death by a
group of rioting mob..."165 Whatever the
name of you-
known-which community that stabs and stones policemen and
their family members: at any rate, the police clearly
have a point when they claim they are often put in a
situation of pure self-defense.
In the Hyderabad violence,"police were finding it
difficult to enforce curfew in the lanes and by-lanes of
the [predominantly Muslim] Old City. People on the roof-
tops were pelting stones on the police. On Friday
morning, about 200 people gathered... at around 11a.m.
and began pelting stones at the houses of members
belonging to one [i.e.Hindu] community, besides indulging
in stabbing, looting and torching houses and shop. to
quell this mob,police opened fire...resulting in the
death of one person and injuries to three others. In view
of the seriousness of the situation, police clamped
curfew at around 12.30 p.m... By this time, nearly 15
persons had been stabbed."166
In Aligarh, "miscreants spread the rumour that two
constables had been stabbed by AMU student". These
terrible rumour-mongers fortunately had it all wrong:
"Senior officials, however, said that the two constable
were only beaten up with hockey sticks". Ah, so the
aversion of Muslim students for policemen is not that bad
after all. Even more reassuring is the explanation given
by the AMU vice-chancellor, prof.M.N.Farooqi: "The
students have formed vigilance groups. One such group
stopped two or three constables when they were entering
the university in plain clothes. And a fight ensued."167
After stating that the AMU vigilance groups routinely
beat up people dressed in plain clothes, he doesn't add
what would have been the procedure if they had been in
uniform. Stabbing instead of hockey sticks?
In fairness, Hindu students of BHU have also taken on
the police, albeit only with some stone-throwing, and
only after being provoked by a ban on the demonstration
they wanted to take out against the Aligarh killings. A
lathicharge was enough to control the situation, and on
one got killed.
In Aligarh however, the situation must have been
very grim for the policemen, for they went to the unusual
length of not resuming duty on October 13, after their
two colleagues had been attacked. These attacks had by
far not been the only ones, and now the policemen were
not even allowed to defend themselves anymore. That at
least is pro-Muslim. "So he has ordered us not fire on
them even as we are being attacked by them every day. We
can't even fire in self-defense." The policemen even
quoted him as saying: Go die, but don't kill.168
A BJP spokesman said that the violence in Aligarh had
started when a Friday mob [i.e. coming from the mosque]
assaulted a policeman and snatched his rifle. "The
violence spread to other areas of town including AMU,
which has always been a hotbed of communalism." The BJP
spokesman, J.P.Mathur, also alleged that in Badaun two
boys were caught throwing a bomb at a mosque and turned
out to be Muslims: a genuine case of provocation. He also
reported that a murderous assault had been made on BJP MP
Uma Bharati, known for her fiery Ayodhya speeches.169
Another version of the Aligarh eruption says that on
December 7, "some youths came out of a mosque after the
Friday prayers and confronted a PAC picket in the Kotwali
area. From all accounts the PAC overreacted, and thus
began an orgy of violence..." Thus ? We have not been
told anything precise about how it began. What does
confronted mean ? Further on in the article, about the
same incident we read that " when the PAC men were
confronted by the Muslim youths, they first fired plastic
bullets but resorted to firing when three of their men,
including the senior superintendent of police, were
injured."170 This makes sufficiently clear
that the PAC
had a point when they invoked self-defense as a
legitimate ground for firing.
Nevertheless Muslim leaders and secularists go on
blaming the police Local Congress leader Haji Nooruddin
said :"Had the police shown a little more restraint, the
slogan-shouting youths would have dispersed without any
major damage." From the reports, it is clear that the
Muslims youths attacked the police. But even if Haji
Nooruddin is right in equating this attack with mere, we
may remind him that according to Muslim and secularist
commentators, slogan-shouting mechanically and
irremediably (and therefore, excusably) provokes bomb-
throwing or other lethal reactions. So these Muslim
youths who confronted the police, even if it had been
with mere slogans, should not complain ; just like the
Hindu processionists who get killed by Muslim bombs
without any secularist editorial to weep for them.
Janata Dal leader Ajit Singh reportedly charged the PAC
with collusion [with the Hindus] and has questioned its
presence "in a cent per minority locality in Aligarh".
And he attributed the violence to Uma Bharati's speeches
and L.K. Advani's Rathyatra. With that "he indirectly
admits that the minority community was provoked to attack
first", comments reader Sahil Brelvi.
171
And he adds a
report of another riot : "I was in Bareilly on December 7
and the facts ascertained from authentic sources and
reported widely in the local newspapers point to a pre-
planned mischief by the minority community, in collusion
with the Janata Dal and the Left parties to teach a
lesson to the VHP. The trouble started immediately
after Friday prayers when the mob fanned out on a
killing spree in all directions shouting jihad. One
crusader snatched the rifle of a policeman on duty
signaling the trouble and punitive action by the
police." If Muslim bomb-throwing has to be glossed
over on the ground that it was provoked by slogans,
then why all this uproar about police action which,
after all, has merely been provoked by jihad ?
So, rather than blaming the police, mr. Ajit Singh and
many other secularists should answer mr. Brelvi's
questions : "Why the communal trouble starts on Fridays
after jama prayers, as in Aligarh, Hyderabad and
elsewhere ? How can the police succeed in flushing out
the illegal arms and check the attackers without being
posted on the troubled spot ? Why is it that illegal arms
are mostly recovered from minority areas ?" M. Brelvi
also makes short work of the reports blaming the PAC
:"Not long ago in Meerut, the earlier reports of PAC
'excesses' in Maliana on the minority community were
found baseless, when handgrenades and bullets with
Pakistan Ordnance Factory markings were recovered by the
same PAC."
And this is what happened in Kanpur on December 12 :"In a
major flare-up on Wednesday, armed mobs came on the roads
in curfew-bound areas on Chamanganj and Beconganj
following provocative speeches on loudspeakers mounted
atop some religious places, and mounted an attack on a
police picket at the Phoolmati trisection and surrounded
the Heerman ka Purwa police outpost. According to
[director-general of police] dr. R.P. Mathur, the police
personnel facing the threat of being lynched or murdered,
opened fire resulting in the death of four rioters and
dispersal of others."172 So it is true that the
police
has killed Muslims. The statistics will correctly say
that more Muslims than Hindus got killed : four to zero
(though elsewhere in town some Hindus got stabbed to
death). Yet, they have no one to blame but themselves.
So, there is no truth in the picture given by secularist
commentators, that the PAC decided one day to start a
genocide against the poor and defenseless Muslim
community. That is not to say that police crimes and
atrocities have never occurred.173 But they
cannot
completely explain the systematic attack on the PAC by
Muslim goondas on the streets and by secularists in the
press.
A better explanation can be found in the statement by a
Muslim leader to Tavleen Singh : "Once Muslim feel that
the state is not going to protect them and they are on
their own, it is only a question of time before they
start doing what the Sikhs are doing in Punjab. As it
is, when we visit a town after a communal riot, people
say : if the police wasn't there, we could take the
Hindus on."174 The militant Muslim want
the PAC out of
the way, to have their hands free.
And this is what Imam Bukhari has said : "We will look
after ourselves. Let there be a direct confrontation
between communal forces. The world will witness the
battle, but let the police forces keep out."175 A
section of the Students Islamic Movement (SIM) threatened
direct action if a fresh attempt was made to touch the
Babri Masjid.176 Syed Shahabuddin declared that
he could
understand the young Muslim who had told him : "Let us
blow up this bridge, let us do something. If the state
can kill us, we have the right to rebel against it."177
On December 18, 1990, prominent members of the Indian
Union Muslim League submitted a memorandum to the Prime
Minister, demanding, among many other things, the
disbanding of the PAC and the constitution of a special
anti-riot force with 30% Muslims. This more-than-
proportional grip on the police is really the punch line.
The demand to just get the police out of the way (voiced
by Imam Bukhari and by Tavleen Singh's spokespersons)
will not be readily conceded, so the next best thing is
to get a friendly police. Of course, Muslim demands for
a more-than-proportional reservation in a number of
sectors of society were a central feature of pre-
independence Muslim League politics, and we know to what
it has led.178
N.S. Saxena has devoted a two-part article to Riots in
U.P. the questions.179 He attacks the cheap
explanations
and cheap solution proposals that are being repeated
again and again in the press as well as on the Lok Sabha
floor. Thus, no matter how crude and inflammatory the
rhetoric of Mulayam may have been, it has not pushed the
number of riots and riot victims spectacularly higher
than in other years. Under Mulayam's predecessors, U.P.
was about equally riot-prone. Similarly, Advani's
rathyatra, if at all a factor, has also not managed to
make much of a difference. After all, U.P. was already
riot-prone under the totally different administration in
unpartitioned British India.
If we look for other factors that are now falsely
mentioned as decisive, but that have not made a
difference in the past, we see that in the ten years
preceding independence, the percentage of Muslims in the
U.P. police was 30 to 35%, and yet there were hundreds of
riots every year. The insecurity among Muslims was so
big that they opted for the creation of Pakistan. In
the communal-riot-free year 1970, Muslims formed only 2%
in the PAC.
SO, the solution for communal violence lies not in a
communalist recruitment policy (reservations for Muslims
in the police). The most immediate need is that all
people guilty of communal violence in any of its stages
be brought to book without exception. If riot-mongers do
land in jail, they may not start again, and it may deter
their colleagues. Also, riot investigation reports
should be taken serious, instead of ending in a drawer.
On the basis of real impartisan investigation (instead of
these partisan fact-finding missions with their all too
convenient conclusions) and court proceedings, fingers
must also be pointed at the culprits behind the scene.
The cloud around the communal identity of both killers
and victims should go. Now, everyone thinks his
community has suffered worst. There are even Muslims who
believe that riots are mostly started by Hindus, and
Muslim communalists actually stage dharnas to protest the
communal violence which they themselves have fomented,
without feeling ridiculous. At any rate, the truth must
be told, the causes of the riots diagnosed without
secretiveness, and the culprits should bear the
consequences through judicial prosecution.
11.5. Who starts ?
One phase of the 1990 Aligarh violence was the attack on
a train on December 8. "Four passengers were killed when
a 600-strong mob stopped the Gomti Express at Daud Khan
near Aligarh, stoned the train and set on fire the Second
Class bogey in which the passengers were traveling.
Five passengers were also injured."180 The
unofficial
death toll was eleven. I have it from one of the
passengers in that ill-fated train, that the attackers
were a Muslim mob. Papers reported tellingly that an
earlier attack on a train had been attempted "close to a
Muslim locality".181
The violence on November 7 had started, according to a
Frontline report, with "an attack on a group of people
bound for Etah from the house of Manawwar Hussain, ex-
chairman of the Nagar Palika, and from a nearby Masjid.
A similar incident was reported on November 16".182 The
police has lodged a criminal case against mr. Hussain.
We may as well continue to read this report :"On December
4, the motorcade of the BJP MP, Uma Bharati, who was
supposed to address a public meeting, was reportedly
attacked from the house of Manawwar Hussein... Trouble
started again on December 7 when some PAC men were
attacked by a group of people belonging to the minority
community while returning from a masjid in the Upper
Court area. One of them snatched the rifle of a PAC
jawan and stabbed him. The jawan's colleague who tried
to save him, was also attacked. Bombs were reportedly
thrown on the PAC men who retaliated by opening fire
killing some of the assailants. The news spread like
fire and clashes between the two communities began."
The same report quotes the vice-chancellor of AMU,
Mohammed Nasim Farooqi, who traces the violence to the
Ram Janmabhoomi issue :"It is wrong to say that the
minority community had a hand in the violence. Why
should they be insecure when they are in the mainstream
of public life ?" He mistakenly links riot starting with
the secularist concept of "insecurity among the
minorities", as the standard explanation if not
justification for all kinds of anti-social behaviour.183
Instead of denying the proven facts of the Muslim
initiative in every single round of the Aligarh
violence, he should question his own dogma (now
contradicted by the facts) that the secure Aligarh
Muslims are incapable of starting riots ; this at least
is what a man of scientific temper would do.
This report I have been quoting, was published in a
secularist paper, and the reporter is in sympathy with
the anti-PAC elements, as will be clear from the
italicized words: "The people's hatred for the PAC knows
no bounds. They have been demanding for a long time that
the PAC be removed". But PAC men aver that once they go
out the town would go up in flames. "The PAC's presence
is as good as its absence', said one of the saner
elements in the town." Our reporter, K. Kannan, thinks
that the aversion against the communalized PAC has
somehow remained uncommunalized, and that it is the
people who want them to go. In fact, it is just the
Muslims and the secularists who want to expel or disband
the PAC.
So, here we have one more case of a press report giving
facts that just don't allow any other explanation than
that Muslims started the violence, and yet it ends with
supporting the Muslim demands and blaming the police.
While such a single case does not give a conclusive
picture of who is most riot-prone, it does prove the
tendency in the press to gloss over Muslim violence and
to blame those who get blamed by the Muslims be they
the police or L.K. Advani.
Let us formulate a working hypothesis for further
research. Not using any esoteric information, just
carefully reading the newspaper reports, I think there
are strong indications that riots are in a majority of
cases started by Muslims, often after Friday prayers ;
that Hindus commit large-scale reactive violence, mostly
against weaker and less organized Muslim communities; and
that the high incidence of confrontations between police
and Muslims is also often started by Muslims, so that the
police perceives its own action as self-defense.
These provisional conclusions are based on a limited
number of cases. So they can be amended once positive
proof for alternative generalizations is offered (but not
earlier). However, these few riot reports and comments
have furnished some striking cases of blatant distortion
sneaking in on the way from news to views. When the
report left no ambiguity about Muslims having started a
riot, still the editorial (or even the peculiar
terminology in the riot report) would blame the Hindus or
the police.
If taken seriously, the systematic blaming of the Ram
Janmabhoomi campaign for all the riots should make us
very happy. Because, if all the riots are caused by this
one factor, then that means that there are no longer any
riots being caused by all the other factors that used to
cause riots in the past. So, most riot factors have been
eliminated : remove this one Ram factor, and there will
be communal harmony. Unfortunately, the secularist blame
Ram explanation has little to do with the real forces
behind the continuing communal violence in India.
11.6. Riot strategy
As for the latter-stage attacks by Hindu goondas on
innocent Muslim villagers, which took place in the huge
riots of Bhagalpur 1989 and Gonda 1990, both in reaction
to the initial attack by Muslims on a Hindu procession,
these are equally hideous crimes as the original attack
on the procession. But the responsibility for this stage
of violence is shared with those who created the entire
riot in the first place. For, there is a system in the
seeming madness of Muslims starting a riot in which they
know Muslims will be killed.
Syed Shahabuddin has once rhetorically asked how people
could believe that riots are most often started by
Muslims, when in fact substantially more Muslims get
killed in riots than Hindus. Indeed, such suicidal
behaviour needs a good explanation. The paradox only
exists when we accept Syed Shahabuddin's communalist
assumption that it is the Muslims who get killed in
riots. In reality, there are two very distinct groups of
people involved: those who start riots, and those
who bear the consequences.
Goondas have of course their own imponderable reasons for
creating trouble. But the assumption we must make in
order to make sense of crimes such as the communal
riots, is that those who commit them expect some real
benefit from them. Now the benefit that communalist
politicians may expect from a riot in which people of
their own community get killed, is quite substantial. It
makes the ordinary people, who have no specific
animosity against people of the other community, perceive
the latter as the enemy. You thereby strengthen their
feeling of being a community, in which the members have
to depend on each other against a hostile environment.
This can go as far as a physical migration from mixed
neighbourhoods to pure ones. Moreover, you make them
feel they need a strong protector: in politics the
communalist MP or MLA, on the ground his goonda gang.
This scenario is not a hypothetical construction. It has
been staged on a very large scale in 1946, when the
Muslim League felt that it was not yet sufficiently
supported by the common Muslims, and that the Hindus had
not yet unambiguously conceded Pakistan. To convince
the former that only the Muslim League and Pakistan could
protect them, and to terrorize the latter into the big
concession, the Muslim League government in Bengal
organized a mass killing of Hindus (the Direct Action
Day). They knew fully well that the Hindus would end up
retaliating by killing innocent Muslims. Upon which more
Muslims would kill Hindus, etc. The important effect was
that Muslims suffered at the hands of the Hindus , lost
all faith in co-existence with them, and joined hands
with the communalist leaders. The pogroms against the
Hindus caused a lot of deaths among the Muslim
population, but for the Muslim League this brought
resounding success.184
This scenario is being repeated on a small scale in many
of the communal riots in independent India. When in
these riots Muslims get killed, it is at least partly
owing to a design by another class of Muslims.
What makes creating riots even more attractive, is the
sympathy you get for them from secularist politicians and
intellectuals. When the Muslim League killed thousands
of Hindus in Calcutta, Congress leader Jawaharlal Nehru
looked the other way. But when Hindu workers staying in
Calcutta fled to their villages in Bihar and started
killing Muslims there, the same Nehru proposed to bomb
those villages from the air. When Hindus got killed, he
didn't move a finger, but the killing of Muslims was
enough to blow off his Gandhian facade and make him
demand indiscriminate killing. When mass killing
accompanied the Partition, mass killings which both sides
equally committed, and for which the ultimate
responsibility lay with those who had wanted Partition in
the first place, communist writer Bhishma Sahni wrote the
novel Tamas, in which the Hindus are painted as the
villains.
When today Muslim goondas create a riot in Bhagalpur or
in Gonda, the secularist press will obscure this
beginning (in both cases bombs thrown from Muslim
establishments at Hindu processions) and highlight the
ensuing Hindu part of the violence. Some M.J. Akbar will
poignantly describe the suffering of some Muslim
villagers, and then blame the atmosphere created by the
Rathyatra in some distant town, without even mentioning
that the riot started with a pre-planned armed attack on
a Hindu procession. That is how the secularists assure
communal riot-mongers double fun : first the proper aim
of the riot is achieved, and then on top of that, your
very enemies are covered with abuse for provoking the
riot.
Not only do you gain on the propaganda front, the press
may even come out in support of your demands. For some
time, Muslim communalists have demanded a ban on
processions. More than 95% of religious processions are
Hindu processions anyway, for processions are a
thoroughly Pagan practice which in Islam can only be a
heterodox oddity. Now, on 14 November 1990, Muslim
communal groups together with Sikh communal groups took
out a demonstration through Delhi's Sadar Bazaar, and went
violent, killing several people. Oddly, the next day
several editorials opined that this spate of violence
proved the need for a ban on processions. The violent
demonstration was a sadbhavana yatra, a goodwill march.
It was of course no procession, in fact it had nothing to
do with religion (it was neither a Sikh nor a Muslim
festival, and they don't have common festivals anyway).
And yet, the secularists have made it an occasion for
support to the Muslim communalists' long-standing demand
for a ban on Hindu processions.
With its distorted representations of communal riots,
with its guarantee to Muslim communalists that they will
never get the full load of exposing and condemnation
which they deserve, the secularist press, for all its
bla-bla about communal harmony, is effectively giving a
measure of encouragement to riot-fomenters.
11.7. A case study in riot comment
For one more example of secularist analysis of the riot
problem, let us take a look at the article Making a
Lebanon of India? by Prem Shankar Jha.185 The
article's
object is to show that the more compromising position of
the new Chandra Shakhar government towards the Ram
Janmabhoomi campaigners, has been the cause of more
communal riots than V.P. Singh's and Mulayam Singh
Yadav's confrontationist policy had been (P.S. Jha had
been V.P. Singh's spokesman). It advocates a hard stand
against the Ram Janmabhoomi movement and all that goes
with it.
"For four years, the VHP has sown the wind of communal
hatred. We are now reaping the whirlwind. In a
sustained blast of propaganda, each and every real or
fancied grievance of the Hindus has been pulled out of
the closet and aired till it has begun to look
respectable." For almost a century, Muslim communal
groups have been articulating their demands mostly in
terms of grievances. If four years can make us reap a
whirlwind, what about forty years, or ninety ? For more
than a thousand years, every Muslim has been drilled in
the belief that all non-Muslims are his enemies, that he
should fight them, because Allah has said so dozens of
times in the Quran and the Prophet has set this example.
If four years of propaganda can make us reap a whirlwind,
what about a thousand years ?
Here come the real or fancied Hindu grievances.
Referring to an article by mr. K.R. Malkani, member of
the BJP national executive, mr. Jha sums up : "India was
partitioned on Muslim insistence. India is having to
spend thousands of crores of rupees every year on
defending itself against 'Islamic' Pakistan. Every
census shows a Muslim population growth well above the
national average. They would not agree to a uniform
civil law, commended by the Constitution. The Muslim
would not agree to the relocating of a mosque or grave --
to widen a road or right an old wrong -- something common
in Muslim countries. And on top of all this, they are
complaining all the time." This propaganda it is, that
has been causing communal riots, according to mr. Jha.
Actually, each of the contentions made by mr. Malkani,
are pure fact. Of course India was partitioned on Muslim
insistence, no amount of history-rewriting can change
that. Of course this partition and the immediate
invasion by Pakistan in Kashmir, has forced India to
spend a lot on defense. It is a fact verifiable from the
census figures that the percentage of Muslims has been
constantly rising since 1881, in British India, in
Pakistan, in India, and in Bangla Desh, in each of these
states and in each decade without exception.186 It is
a
fact that the leaders of the Muslim community, supported
by many secularists, have defended the Shariat as the
sole Muslim personal law, and go on refusing the
implementation of the constitutional recommendation of a
common civil code. It is a fact that in at least one
case, the Muslims have been refusing the relocation of
a mosque structure. And it is a fact that they are
complaining all the time, witness the papers of each of
the Muslims parties big and small.
In this complaining, they are supported by secularists
like mr. Jha. Further down he writes : "Muslims too
have their grievances against the majority community,
several of which have far more substance than those
articulated by mr. Malkani." Personally, I think that
mr. Malkani has not even mentioned the most serious
grievances of the Hindus. Anyway, let's hear those of
the Muslims.
Muslims are poor, under-represented in the bureaucracy,
the armed forces and the private corporate sector, over-
represented in unemployment, and very vulnerable to the
effects of riots when self-employed as craftsmen or
shopkeepers.
These are grievances, but are they "grievances against
the majority community" ? Where Muslims live together
with other communities, they are often the poorer
community, even if they are in power and declare an
Islamic republic. In Malaysia, the non-Muslim Chinese
are far better off than the Muslim Malays. In Egypt,
the Copts are a prosperous business community, though
they often live in fear of the poorer Muslim majority.
Muslim poverty in India is largely due to factors
unrelated to the Hindus, such as large families, little
education (these two are related), and the fact that
many rich Muslims in 1947 chose Pakistan. It is a
socialist mistake that economic inequality is the "fault"
of the government (here assumed to be a largely Hindu
government).
The educational backwardness of the Muslims is again not
the fault of the Indian Constitution and laws, which give
all due safeguards and even privileges, it is not the
fault of other communities. But the educational
backwardness itself is the single largest factor in the
Muslims' underrepresentation in the bureaucracy and the
corporate private sector, and their high unemployment
rate. That it is not the Hindus who keep the minority
underrepresented in any sphere, can be proven from the
situation of the other minorities : Sikhs are quite
over-represented in government and army posts,
Christians in education, Parsis and Jains in business.
That Muslim shopkeepers are very vulnerable during riots,
is a fact. It also counts for Hindu shopkeepers. But I
agree with mr. Jha that Muslim craftsmen and traders have
been singled out for attacks and destruction of their
trade equipment in many communal riots, the motive being
more economical than communal.
Now the riots themselves. Mr. Jha says that Rajasthan
hardly knew any riots until October 1989. The blame is
of course on the VHP. They came in with their propaganda
"in preparation of the centenary year of dr. Hedgewar,
founder of the RSS", so before 1989. They were followed
by Muslim activists who "began to sensitize the
Muslim masses of the threat that the Ram Janmabhoomi
posed to their religion". Can you believe it ? This
secularist is repeating, without any distancing or
questioning, the BMAC claim that Islam is in danger due
to the Ram Janmabhoomi ; a danger to which the Muslim
masses have to be sensitized. Anyway, these Muslim
activists began arriving as late as 1988. And by the
time they were all there, in 1989, the communal riots
started.
Then mr. Jha sets out to disprove the Hindu assumption
that nine out of ten riots are started by Muslims.187
He
gives the list of communal clashes between 1 p.m. of 29
October, and 6 p.m. of 30 October, a time-span of 29
hours. No doubt he carefully selected a time favourable
to his case. He could have chosen any of the days of the
Hyderabad carnage, or any Friday, to disprove his own
suggestion that Hindus are more riot-prone. But no, mr.
Jha wants to pull our attention away from those more
representative occasions, and towards this one day when
he counted more Hindu than Muslim violence.
In different places in Karnataka, four Muslims were
attacked, one of whom died, some Muslim property was set
on fire, an attempt to damage a mosque was stopped by the
police, and an Idgah was damaged. A one-sided struggle,
indeed, but no proof that Hindus are just as good at
starting trouble : communal violence had been going on in
the state, not too intense but rather widespread, for
most of October. Mr. Jha has merely selected a time when
it was the Hindus' turn.
In Andhra, a person was assaulted, and a workshop
belonging to a Muslim was burnt. Since Muslims are
named as such, can we make an inference about the
religion of the person ? Further, a Muslim was killed
and an Idgah and a Dargah attacked. Then follow a number
of explosions and acts of arson not specified as to
community, which experienced readers tend to see as a
strong pointer in a certain direction.
In Jaipur, a Hindu succumbed to his injuries, stones were
thrown at a mosque, a Muslim was assaulted, a Muslim's
shop set on fire. Alleged BJP/VHP workers set four
(empty) State buses on fire. A Muslim was stabbed and
two Dargahs desecrated.
In Ahmedabad, police had to open fire, killing a Hindu.
A mosque was damaged, two Muslims set on fire, of whom
one died. In Baroda, two bodies of Hindus were
recovered. "Two Muslims were Killed and four injured in
police firing", an event bracketed with an anonymous
"spate of stabbing, mercifully not fatal" (the toning-
down and the anonymity are unmistakable pointers).
Elsewhere, "the police had to open fire on another mob,
and one Hindu was killed". When Hindus get killed, it is
because the police had no choice but to fire on the
mob. But when a Muslim gets killed, it is a different
story : "No one needs to be reminded of the outrage
committed on Muslims by the PAC in Meerut, Bhagalpur, or
now in Aligarh". About Aligarh, I have fairly complete
information, and it is quite clear that the PAC was the
target of unsolicited attack by Muslim mobs on several
occasions.
I cannot check the correctness and especially the
completeness of this overview of a day of riots. Though
following the national press closely, including the paper
in which mr. Jha's article appeared, I have not heard of
a number of these incidents. But I have heard of ten or
so more people killed (and an unknown number injured) in
communal violence during the 29 hours under
consideration, in a very well-known incident : the
shooting of unarmed Kar Sevaks in Ayodhya by the infantry
of the ruling secularist sect, around noon on 30 October.
In spite of mr. Jha's attempt to conceal it, most victims
on his chosen day were Hindus, not Muslims. Apart from
that, one cannot fail to notice that mr. Jha's
interpretation of what happened and the terminology he
uses, are far from neutral.
"Throughout the weeks that preceded the Kar Seva, the
pattern had remained unvarying from day to day. While
miscreants of both communities were active, the majority
of the attacks took place on Muslims. There was a
pattern to the sustained provocation: mosque were
attacked, Idgahs and Dargahs desecrated, provocative and
insulting slogans shouted, until mayhem broke loose."
Like so many times before, a secularist builds up this
pre-riot crescendo, all the way up to the provocative
slogans stage, and then disappoints the reader by hiding
in a cloud of impersonal vagueness :Mayhem broke loose.
What does he have to hide ? If the slogans were
provocative, does it mean that they effectively
provoked violence ? In that case, the implication would
be that the violence came from the other side. And that
is precisely what so many riot reports suggest : when
Hindus appear in public and do something that some Muslim
care to consider provocative, they get a violent
welcome.
And in fact, mr. Jha almost concedes as much. If not in
October, then certainly in December. He says that the
Muslim youth "have slipped the leash of their elders, and
decided, as they see it, to defend themselves. The
lumpen and the criminals belonging to the Muslims have
therefore come into their own. That is why the death
toll is so high now. For unlike October, both sides are
now [mid-December] indulging in retributory murder."
According to mr. Jha, the reason for the increasing
resort to armed struggle among the Muslim youth, is that
the unflinching defense of the Babri Masjid by V.P. and
Mulayam, had been replaced with a policy of "compromise
with Hindu communalism". Chandra Shekhar was in effect
pressuring the Muslims into giving up the Babri Masjid,
or so it seem to these Muslim youngsters.
And now that he was working out a compromise, rather than
taking a 100% pro-Muslim and 100% anti-Hindu stand, the
country will have to face the consequences :"Worse, far
worse, is yet to come. Hot-heads among the Muslim youth
are already saying that the only way to deal with the PAC
is with AK-47s. They are talking of dying with honour
rather than waiting to be extinguished. The search for
Ak-47s may well have begun, and the first signs of a
link-up with Sikh extremists have already appeared."
So, the Janmabhoomi campaign is not taking India towards
Ram Rajya, but towards "another Lebanon, Cyprus or
Ethiopia, a country torn apart by unending civil war".
Incidentally, the comparisons are telling. In Lebanon,
the civil war started as an attempt by the Christians to
stop the progressive take-over of their country by the
Palestinians (who had tried this before in Jordan, but
had been driven out). In Cyprus, it started with a
Muslim demand for a partition and a larger-than-
proportionate piece of the territory, which they got, by
force. Ethiopia is more complex, involving Communist as
well as Muslim separatism in Eritrea and a decade of
Communist misrule and oppression.
But let us mention the more straightforward case of
Sudan, which mr. Jha somehow overlooked even though it is
as much tormented by communal violence as Lebanon is. In
Sudan, a Muslim majority in the North has imposed the
Shariat on the non-Muslim South. Faced with this Islamic
oppression, the non-Muslim Dinkas and other peoples in
the South want a separate secular state. With Lybian
aid, the Muslim North fights an all-out war to keep the
South down. When Muslims are in a minority, they want
partition; but when it is a non-Muslim minority that
wants a separate state, the Muslim rulers don't let their
booty escape.
What is the practical conclusion of this article ? Does
it condemn the people who take up arms because they don't
like a political compromise on Ayodhya worked out by a
democratic government ? No, it wants the Hindus to make
the concessions demanded by those who threaten with Ak-
47s. Mr. Jha writes in his conclusion that "the only way
to tackle communalism is to tackle it head on, never,
never compromise with it... Compromising with the
aggressor gives him legitimacy... Thus, paradoxically,
compromise hardens positions, increases self-
righteousness, and raises the level of violence in
society." I agree with him, but for me that implies the
opposite of what it implies for him. He thinks it means
no compromise with a basically non-violent mass-movement
for the symbolic redress of an old crime, systematically
inflicted on Hindu society by invaders who came with the
medieval equivalents of AK-47s. For him, it also means a
pre-emptive compromise with those who may take to the AK-
47 in the near future, in order to deal with the police
force and the majority community.
In my opinion, an essential part of any successful anti-
riot policy is that no compromise whatsoever is made with
those who start or threaten riots. If they find they can
extract concessions by starting or threatening riots,
they are encouraged to continue and perfect this
strategy. It must be made clear to riot-mongers that
their strategy will not yield them anything. The Shah
Bano decision, the ban on The Satanic Verses and other
books, the non-recognition of the Hindu rights over Ram
Janmabhoomi, have all been obtained by Muslim extremists
by means of actual or threatened agitation. All these
concessions to extremist threats have encouraged the same
extremists to continue stoking violence for new demands.
In autumn 1990, they knew perfectly well that riots would
be used by the secularist press to blacken the BJP/VHP
and to intensify its opposition against the Ram Mandir.
When we see who gets systematically blamed by the press
and the politicians for any and every riot, then we know
who has no objective interest in fomenting riots. And
when we see who gets all the sympathy, and the support
for their demands, whenever riots occur, we know who has
an objective interest in continuing the riots.
A very good illustration is the next and very important
demand of the Muslim communalists : a larger than
proportionate reservation for Muslims in the army and the
police. With every clash between Muslims and the PAC, we
see secularists plead for the disbanding of the PAC, and
the granting of reservations of the Muslims (the
minorities, as they say), either in the existing forces
or in a new anti-riot force, amounting to some 25% or
even 30%. In other words, we see those who started the
carnage in Bhagalpur '89, in Gonda '90, in Aligarh '90,
in Hyderabad '90, being rewarded with secularist support
for their demands, and more support with every riot.
11.8. Hindu riots
For good measure, I must not let the Hindu riot-mongers
go scot-free either. In the typical riot cases where
Hindus merely react to attacks by some Muslims, it is
certainly possible to keep the quantity of violent
revenge at a lower level than is now the case. If the
Hindu organizations, when a communal crisis breaks out,
immediately apply themselves to limiting the damage,
immediately move in to calm people down and to
effectively prevent the anti-social elements in their own
ranks from attacking Muslims, then the death toll could
be far lower. I have so far never heard from a Hindu
activist being thrown out of these Hindu organizations
for irresponsible and violent behaviour. Yet, such
miscreants certainly exist, and if the RSS etc. fail to
stop them or to formally punish them, these organizations
are co-responsible.
A plea which these Hindu organizations often make, is
that goondas with no affiliation to the VHP, RSS or BJP,
merely use the riot, after others have started it, to get
their share of looting and raping. I cannot judge in
what percentage of the cases that this was what
happened188, but suppose that it really goes like
that.
Even then a determined move to restore order and
discipline within all sections of the local Hindu
community would make a substantial difference. That this
is not being done on anything like a sufficient scale, is
clear to me from the fact that the apologetic
literature189 of the RSS, while making a rather
strong
case for this organization's non-riot-prone character,
does hardly say anything about the constructive role they
have or have not played in the process of stopping the
violence once it has started, or in the healing process
afterwards.190
In my opinion, the virginity which the RSS spokesmen
claim concerning the start of riots, and their
unimpressive record (relative to their numbers and level
of discipline and organization) in actively intervening
to stop violence against Muslims191, are the result
of
one and the same fact concerning the RSS: it is not a
militant organization of vanguard troopers (as they are
portrayed by some secularists who like to clamour about
Hindu fascism), but an organization of quite ordinary
people, shopkeepers and schoolboys, who have no
inclination to start real fights or to enter the
battlefield once the fight has started, even as peace-
makers.
While RSS workers are killed by the dozens by the
Khalistani terrorists (and/or by Pakistani provocateurs
dressed as Sikhs), we never hear of any violent
retaliation. This lack of retaliation is not just
because of a policy of not aggravating tension between
Sikh Hindus and other Hindus, but simply because the
RSS doesn't have the capability to strike. Incidentally,
this frustrates the Khalistani and Pakistani calculations
: believing the secularist propaganda about the RSS as a
fascist militia ready to terrorize the minorities,
they had hoped to get another Direct Action Day going,
with mutual killing of common Hindus and Sikhs.
Apart from reactive violence against Muslim attacks, the
Hindu groups cannot disown some cases of unprovoked
aggression on their own part. While the Rathyatra had
been peaceful, mr. Advani's arrest was the occasion for a
more grim and militant line of action on the part of BJP
workers. In Jaipur, the Bharat bandh on October 24
generated a series of riots.
As any communist or trade-unionist can tell you, a strike
is seldom a collectively voluntary action. Most often, a
motivated minority forces the strike on the majority.
In the Bharat bandh also, the BJP workers went around the
city to check that all the shopkeepers downed their
shutters. According to their own explanation, a
shopkeeper refused to comply with their demand that he
close his shop, took out a gun and shot at them. And
that was the beginning of a week of communal violence.
If one analyzes the responsibility, one might say that
the demand to close shop was an encroachment on the
shopkeeper's constitutional rights : already more of a
provocation than the legitimate though insensitive use
of free speech to utter provocative slogans. That
doesn't justify the use of firearms yet.
The readiness to retaliate against the most defenseless
classes among the Muslims, in reaction to well-planned
Muslim goonda violence, betrays that trait
stereotypically attributed by Muslims to Hindus :
cowardice (not that the Islamic behaviour of throwing
bombs at processions is all that courageous). But it
also betrays two things about which the Hindu
organizations can readily do something : despair, and a
lack of education. It is out of despair that people
attack just whoever they can get, feeling that they can
not leave the Muslim attacks without a fitting reply.
This irrational tendency to take revenge on just anyone
belonging to the Muslim community, can only be cleared
away through education. The short-term necessity in
solving the riot problem is a more effective police force
and most of all an effective judicial prosecution of the
culprits (which implies breaking through the nexus of
politicians and criminals). But the long-term necessity
for reducing the communal violence is education.
I don't mean education with moralistic campaigns to
tell them not to do such ugly things, sadbhavana yatras
and human chains for communal amity : those things only
convince the already-convinced, and they have no impact
once a crisis breaks out. What Hindu leaders should
teach their followers (and first of all imprint on their
own minds), is that the Muslims are not to blame for
communal violence. Even when it is established that a
far more than proportionate amount of the communal
violence emanates from Muslim quarters, it should still
be upheld as dogma that he Muslim people are not to
blame.
"The Muslims" are just people like the rest of us, but
they happen to be open to the influence of the Quranic
ideology propagated by Islamic religious personnel. In
fact, the common Muslim is hardly aware of Islamic
theology. For him, being a Muslim means being what he
himself is. And for his, the Muslim are not so much
the followers of Mohammed, but simply the community to
which he belongs. And he will intensify his bond with
his community whenever it is in confrontation,
offensively or defensively, with another community. Not
because of a theology of Momins vs. Kafirs, but out of a
natural tribal instinct. Unfortunately, there are
leaders who take these common people with them, in
actions inspired by this theology of which the common
people know so little.
The common Hindu has so often heard of or been confronted
with Muslim violence, that he has come to associate
Muslims with violence. On the other hand, he is taught
by his leaders to only see the face value of this
violence, not the ideology behind it. An RSS man told me
that one day Guru Golwalkar gave a speech, saying that
Mohammed was a great prophet, and that Islam is a
great religion, but that, inconsequentially, the Muslims
are big fools. What nonsense : the one thing that
defines Muslims as a group, is their adherence to Islam
and the Prophet. How can you make a collective
allegation against the Muslims if you first praise that
which makes them into one collectivity ?
One should look for the reason for the apparently typical
Muslim proneness to riots, in that which defines the
Muslim collective identity, the Islamic ideology. It
would have been more fair, and historically more
accurate, to explain Muslim violence by saying that the
Muslims are our brethren, but they or their leaders are
mentally in the fangs of "Islam, that religion of jihad"
created by "Mohammed, that prophet of icon-breaking".
That way, you distinguish between the human and the
ideological level, and then you can educate the people
and make them see the key formula that will take the
sting out of Hindu vengefulness against their Muslim
countrymen : the problem is not the Muslims, the problem
is Islam.
Of course, once a procession is being attacked, it is too
late to say to the crowd :"Hey, don't attack the Muslims,
attack Islamic ideology". At that time, they are
confronted with a physical enemy, and they will react
physically. However, in the longer run, some education
in comparative religion is the solution, or at least a
central part of the solution.
Today, Hindus have to swallow all kinds of negative
image-building concerning Hinduism. Islam, by contrast,
is depicted as a liberator from inequality, a religion of
peace and brotherhood, and more such fictional terms of
praise. But then, after being fed all these nice things
about Islam, they find that their procession is being
attacked by Muslims. This anomaly they cannot
understand. So they are left to the immediacy of the
situation, and even afterwards they cannot comprehend
what happened, as long as they are not informed about
Islamic doctrine.
Well, some secularist Swami may tell them that all
prophets are great, that it is only their followers who
err. In fact, this sweet little lie is the worst
contributor to the communal violence on the Hindu side :
it is not true that the Muslims err and "mis-apply the
teachings of that great prophet Mohammed". Most of them
just follow the lead given by fanatical Imams, and these
fanatical Imams can at worst only be blamed for not
erring and fully applying the doctrine of the Prophet.
So, Hindus should know that these Muslims are only
sincerely applying the teachings of the real culprit of
most of the communal violence in India : Mohammed.
There is every reason to tell them the truth about Islam.
Hinduism should not be painted in rosy colours, but
evaluated in a fair and truthful way. The treatment
Islam receives, should be the same. Now, a fair and
truthful presentation of Islam will include : the
absolute inequality of believer and unbeliever, the
boundless self-righteousness of the Prophet and the
believers who imitate him, the crudely physical nature of
the Islamic precepts (the complete lack of a
consciousness dimension), the strongly political and
anti-secularist objectives of Islam, and the logical
absurdity of the very idea of prophethood.
Once this distinction between Muslim human beings and
anti-human Islamic doctrine is clear in people's minds,
you can demand from them a Gandhian self-restraint in the
face of terrible provocation. When your procession gets
attacked, you will still not set the Muslims' shops on
fire. This distinction between the ideas working through
some people, who in turn can set entire crowds and gangs
in motion, and on the other hand the people themselves,
will make a crucial difference.
Secondarily, the curbing of Hindu retaliation will also
have its effect on the propagandistic and political
front. At present every riot, regardless what the facts
and who the victims, is held up as a proof of the rabid
and fascist character of the Hindu communal forces
who are stirring the communal cauldron. The secularist
agitprops should be starved of every semblance of
evidence. In this respect, it is better to get killed
than to kill.
Or at least, anything is better than to kill innocents.
Against terrorists, using force is the most effective way
to stop them, because it is the language they understand.
But that job should be left to the legitimate security
forces.
This work at the level of thought should also deal with
the communal attitudes that have crept into Hinduism
during its confrontation with the Muslim onslaught.
Islamic thought has deeply influenced the Indian
intelligentsia, including champions of Hindutva. Thus,
Dayananda Saraswati espoused monotheism, denounced idol-
worship, and treated the Veda like a revealed, complete
and final Scripture. V.D. Savarkar thought that Hindus
have to borrow forms of organization and lifestyle from
the Muslims in order to overcome them. He has been
accused by the secularists (and with him, the entire
Hindutva movement) of reducing Hindu identity to an us
vs. them pattern of enmity against the Muslims. The
secularists correctly denounce such an attitude, while
glossing over the fact that this enmity is intrinsic to
Islamic doctrine, and has only, crept into Hinduism
reactively, during the long self-defense of Hindu society
against Islam. Anyway, they do have a point when they
perceive this enmity as a strong factor in the current
activist Hindu identity.
So, Hindus should weed out these Islamic attitudes of us
against them from their thought. Their Hindu identity
should not be centered around their attitude towards
another doctrine, but on Hinduism's own genius and
effectiveness as a cultural framework for social
integration and individual happiness.192 And they
should
not define people in terms of their communal identity,
which is but the Islamic game of judging people on their
being Momins or Kafirs, rather than on their merits.
Unlike Islam, they should dis-identify and distinguish
human being from the religion they profess ; so that, if
ever the need arises, they can attack and expose Islamic
doctrine without any mental or physical hostilities with
the Muslim people.
To sum up, the communal problem in India is largely the
Muslim problem, or rather, the Islam problem. Islam
is communal through and through, preaching a total
abyss between its own community members and the rest of
humanity. So, very generally, the cause of communal
riots is Islam. The cure is Sanatana Dharma. It teaches
that everything is generated by thought. While seemingly
a difficult notion, in this context it is very easy to
understand : the physical problem of communal riots is
but the materialization of communal thinking. This
communal thinking should be identified : its most potent
and consistent form is the Islamic doctrine of the
struggle between Momin and Kafir. Other communalisms
like Sikh separatism and the anti-Muslim animus among
some Hindu people, are but the indirect effects of this
Islamic doctrine. Then, this communal thinking should be
removed through dialogue and education. No matter what
law and order measures will further be needed before the
age of communal riots is over, at any rate it is this
work at the level of thought which will ultimately solve
the problem.
11.9. Riots in Muslim countries
In order to keep an assessment of riot patterns in
perspective, we should compare with the situation in
Pakistan and Bangla Desh. The general pattern there is :
- Roughly 100% of Hindu-Muslim riots are started by
Muslims.
- Roughly 100% of the victims in the actual
communal confrontation are Hindus.
- Those few times the police intervenes, it does have the decency
to stop
the attackers rather than their fleeing victims, so the
vast majority of those killed in police firing on the e
occasion of riots, are Muslims. But like in India, the
police often fails to intervene, which may get
interpreted as a form of passive connivance with the
majority community.
The secularist theory that there is no ideological (as
opposed to socio-economical) explanation for the
different degree of riot-proneness between the different
religions, and their denial of this very difference, both
fall apart when called on to explain the riot pattern in
the Islamic republics that used to be parts of India.
If Muslims are not more riot-prone than Hindus, then why
do you never ever hear of a Hindu attack on mosques in
Bangla Desh, but a lot of the reverse ? Or, for that
matter, why not Christian attacks on mosques, even while
Christians do get their share of attacks and harassments
from the Muslims? In these Muslim-majority countries,
communal violence is a completely one-directional affair.
Even when Muslims destroyed hundreds of Hindu temples on
the pretext of protest against the Shilanyas in Ayodhya,
there has not been any report of similar retaliation by
the Hindus.
We may safely say that in Bangla Desh, the Muslim
participation in the starting of riots, is more than
their percentage of the population : about 100% as
against some 87%. In Pakistan also, even though Muslims
form about 97% (including Ahmadiyas) of the population,
they still manage to have an even larger share in the
starting of riots.
The secularist theory that whatever slight Muslim over-
representation in riot-starting they are willing to
concede, is attributable to the insecurity to which
Muslims are subjected, can also not hold. Firstly, in
India there are minorities who simply don't start riots
(Jains, Parsis), or only few (Christians), and yet they
are fewer in number than the Muslims and consequently
more insecure. Secondly, in Pakistan, Bangla Desh and
Malaysia they have Islamic republics, and still that
doesn't stop them from maltreating the non-Muslims and
attacking their places of worship on the slightest
pretext. Moreover, within Pakistan there are also a lot
of attacks by the majority Sunnis on minority Shias and
Ahmadiyas, and that again cannot be attributed to
insecurity.
As a general rule, in communal conflicts the world over,
you will find majorities attacking minorities, seldom the
reverse. Have you ever heard of pre-1940 Jews attacking
the German or Polish majorities in Central Europe ? Have
you ever heard of the Coptic minority in Egypt attacking
the Muslim majority ? They form about 6% of the
population, but furnish 0% of the riots and other forms
of harassment. And have you ever heard of the Hindu
minorities in South Africa, the UK, Singapore, the US,
starting riots ?
But in India, you do see one of the minorities on the
offensive even where it is clearly outnumbered. Even if
their percentage of starting riots was only proportional
to their percentage of the population, i.e. about 12%
(and no secularist so far has been dishonest enough to
suggest this), then that would still be more than what
minorities elsewhere, and especially in Islamic
countries, would dare to do. It becomes hard to evade
the conclusion that there is something in Islamic
doctrine that incites people to non-integration and even
violent struggle with their neighbours.
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