There is great consternation in the
country in the wake of the Dadri lynching incident. "Secular" political
leaders, intellectuals and minority leaders have condemned the dastardly
act, and rightly so. The controversy has now crossed the national
frontiers and is hogging space in international print and electronic
media.
Before this incident, not far back in time, riots took place
in Muzaffarnagar, resulting in the killing and displacement of a large
number of people. The Gujarat riots in 2002 also led to the massacre of a
large number of people belonging to the minority community. This sad
phase in independent India's history is still being examined and
re-examined by government and non-government agencies in the country.
On the other side of the spectrum, we saw the horrific
Mumbai blasts, in which many people from the majority community lost
their lives. Then there were bomb blasts on suburban trains in Mumbai.
The German Bakery blast in Pune is still fresh in our memory. The blast
killed a large number of innocents, including a highly promising
brother-sister duo, leaving their parents childless.
Besides, Kashmiri Pandits were evicted from their homes and
pushed out of Kashmir. They became refugees in their own country.
Incidents of bombings and killings at places of worship of the majority
community are plenty. Even the greatest institution of democracy, the
Parliament, was not spared. All these crimes were committed by criminal
and misguided elements belonging to the minority community, aided by
certain fundamentalist foreign elements.
If we look elsewhere, the present Sheikh Hasina-led
government in Bangladesh is working hard to instil secular values in
public life. However recently, secular bloggers belonging to both
communities (Hindus and Muslims) were butchered in broad daylight by
Muslim fanatics. The population of Hindus has shrunk to seven per cent,
from 37 per cent at the time of independence, and is shrinking further,
in the face of religious persecution by fundamentalist groups.
The facts mentioned are not intended to justify an incident
like Dadri. But it is pertinent to look at the hard facts. The Muslim
population in West Bengal now stands at 30 per cent, thanks to illegal
infiltration from Bangladesh.
Foreign fundamentalist propaganda has radicalised a section
of the Muslim youth in India and some have reportedly travelled to West
Asia to fight alongside the Islamic State (ISIS). Recently, we also saw
people confronting the security forces with Pakistani flags in their
hands in Kashmir. They were not taken to task.
The "secular" political leaders yelling in their support are
not interested in the well-being and development of the Muslims. The
Muslim vote bank have become the trump card to win elections, with the
Hindu population being divided along caste lines by the same leaders.
The same can be said about our secular intellectuals, whose only aim is
to protect their progressive and secular image at the cost of the
majority population. The leaders' agenda is to retain a stranglehold
over the members of their community on religious grounds.
The Hindus by their nature and religious teachings are very
secular and tolerant of other religions. They have not reacted
violently, but are angry. If some sections in our country take advantage
of their anger to stage aberrations like Dadri, are they the only
people to be blamed? Aren't our pseudo-secular political leaders,
intellectuals and community leaders equally responsible? Have politics
of religion turned Indian Hindus communal?
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