(Published
in The Hindustan Times, New Delhi, December 6, 2002, tenth
anniversary of Babri Mosque demolition)
By
Dilip Simeon
He
(Pontius Pilate) took water and washed his hands before the crowd,
saying ‘I am innocent of the blood of this man, see to it
yourselves.. And all the people answered, ‘ His blood be on us and
on our children'! "(Bible, Mathew's Gospel)
"No
law in the world punishes a son for the crime committed by his
father. How can we justify the killing of a 5-year old in Ahmedabad
for a crime committed in Godhra?" - upper-caste shopkeeper in
Ahmedabad.
The
shopkeeper was wrong. For centuries, the Catholic Church (and its
Protestant offshoots) did indeed justify the punishment of Jews for
their mythical role in the murder of Jesus Christ. The myth
originated in the Biblical accounts of the life of Jesus, and was
perpetuated by Christianity's greatest intellects, including Paul,
Aquinas, Martin Luther and Calvin, not to mention the Papacy. The
story was that the Jews took upon themselves and all their children
the onus of this crime. For centuries Jews were condemned as the
devil's offspring, sensual, money-worshipers who deserved to be
enslaved, their property confiscated, their synagogues burnt, their
homes destroyed. They were to live separately, forbidden from owning
land, from marrying Christians. They were held responsible for the
Black Death in the 14th century, they were the special targets of the
Spanish Inquisition. This tradition attained its apogee in the Nazi
genocide of six million European Jews between 1941 and 1945.
Significantly, in a conversation with senior Church functionaries in
1933, Hitler is reported to have assured them that "he will take no
steps against the Jews that the Church has not taken in 1500 years".
In the end, it was only a matter of degree, of elevating murder into
an industry, that marked the difference between Nazism and the hoary
traditions of Christian anti-Semitism. The thundering silence of Pope
Pius XII in the 1940's, despite evidence of mass murder and repeated
appeals by ordinary Catholics, Allied governments and Jewish
organisations was a logical outcome of this theologically ordained
‘enemy system'. It is equally significant that after the Russian
Revolution, a section of the Church began to see a link between
Judaism and Communism - Hitler's favorite theme. The man who
acquired the informal title of being ‘Hitler's Pope', is
currently in process of being made a saint. Meanwhile, the burden of
Christianity's sins against the Jews has conveniently been
transferred to the shoulders of Palestinians.
The
cruel doctrine that guilt passes from one generation to the next has
ancient lineage but is alive and well in modern India. It is the
fulcrum of the world-view of our communalists. All Muslim citizens of
independent India are supposedly responsible for the actions (real
and imaginary) of Muslim rulers in the 16th century. They are also
deemed to bear the guilt of Partition. The same logic was applied to
justify the carnage of Sikhs in the aftermath of Mrs Gandhi's
assassination, and in Bangladesh in 1993, where the Hindu population
was blamed for the destruction of the Babri Masjid. Connected to the
doctrine of collective guilt is the encouragement given to
extra-legal punitive action. Mobs led by groups of well-organised
hooligans ‘punish' ordinary people whose guilt was established
prior to their being born. Revenge and retaliation have been made
instruments of state policy, hence, our ultra-nationalist Lok Sabha
could pay silent homage to the victims of 9/11, but cannot pass a
condolence resolution for victims of communal violence in India
How
could this happen? Article 21 of the Constitution grants every Indian
the right to life and liberty unless deprived of them by process of
law. After the gruesome events in Godhra in February, state officials
in Gujarat withdrew these protections from a section of Indian
citizens. The entire Muslim community was held responsible for the
actions of a few. The killing of innocents was justified on the
grounds of collective guilt. Meanwhile the VHP attacked the
legislative assembly in Bhubhaneshwar on March 16, confident in its
links with the Union Government. Contemporary events have shown that
a section of India's ruling establishment is tolerant of mob
violence, as long as it is directed at ordinary citizens and
channelled along religious lines. Indeed, it mobilises and prepares
such violence, while it criticises Naxalite violence for being
mindless and anti-national. Senior retired bureaucrats and policemen
have supported this endeavour, along with industrialists, wealthy
NRI's and some religious leaders. The violence of the Bajrang Dal
and VHP is ‘nationalism', that of anyone outside the ‘familial'
ambit of the RSS is lawlessness and terror. This hypocrisy has been
transformed into the common sense of our elite, for whom terrorism is
a language spoken exclusively by Muslims.
All
this is not a matter of the whims of demented persons. It is part of
a systematic project to undermine constitutional democracy, which,
for all its flaws, remains a major institutional resource for the
working peoples struggle for a better life. The "enemy system",
as described by John Mack, Harvard psychiatrist, is an instrument by
which political leaders sustain popular hostility towards imagined
adversaries as a means of maintaining power. It thrives on lies,
intolerance and ignorance, the demonisation of other peoples, the
surrender of personal responsibility to ‘great men'. In extreme
form, it appeals to the most destructive and exclusivist aspects of
the human mind. And it glorifies brutality as a ‘selfless' form
of violence.
The
destruction of the Babri Masjid was a foundation stone of the new
political order being constructed by a section of India's ruling
establishment. We are witness to an ongoing ‘constitutional' coup
d'etat. By acts of deliberate deception, (such as the arguments in
favour of the VHP by the Attorney General and the acceptance of a
‘sacred' brick in Ayodhya by an official), the government
supported the fraudulent claim of the VHP to represent all Hindus. By
so doing, the swayamsevaks in high office undermined the status of
Parliament, which has been elected by millions of citizens, including
a large proportion of Hindus. A parallel system of representation is
being forced upon the Indian public.
What
is the purpose of such a project? Nearly thirty crore Indians belong
to families working in the informal sector of the economy.
Savarna-capitalism uses a hierarchical caste structure, the constant
threat of corporal punishment, and oppressive customs to keep wages
abysmally low, neglect social security systems, and undermine the
social-democratic potential of modern state institutions. What we
have in place of a duly regulated work-process, is an
institutionalised Social Darwinism. Ultimately, it is political
authority that regulates markets and wage relations and stabilises
economic systems. Hence governance must be examined for patterns of
regularity. Why is there a gap between official regulations
(regarding working conditions, minimum wages), and their
implementation? Why is the status of citizen effectively denied to
millions of workers? Why does the zone of informality drain away the
rights that arise from the zone of formality? Why do the reigning
authorities periodically suspend the right of citizens to remain
alive, by instigating mass murder in the guise of communal or caste
‘riots', for whose duration the police apparatus is suspended and
the judicial conscience stricken by amnesia? Is it not true that
their main victims are the labouring poor and self-employed artisans?
Communal
and caste violence has become the preferred mode of governance of the
Indian ruling classes, the mode by which they have negotiated their
discomforts with democracy. The periodic outbreaks of mass murder
that we call ‘riots' can no longer be explained away as
unfortunate tangents in an otherwise steady course of India's
development. They are the very face of Indian modernity. Unless we
abolish the enemy system, we will transfer its burden to our
children. And that will be a crime which will not wash easily.
Dilip
Simeon is a Delhi based historian