The Clever Art of Majoritarian Coercion

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Examples are galore where people with sympathies towards right-wing causes go on making such (provocative) statements without fear of any repercussion. What happens to people in all such cases is normally decided by your proximity to the powers that be.

SUBHASH GATADEĀ | Caravan Daily

A FEW days back while talking to a news channel he had shared the dark prophecy that India could become Syria if the mandir issue was not resolved soon.

ā€œIf the court rules against a temple, there will be bloodshed. Do you think the Hindu majority will allow it? They will garner resentment towards the Muslim communityā€.

As expected he was slammed for his ā€˜provocative remarksā€™ and looking at the fact that this statement which had the potential to further aggravate ā€˜disaffection between communitiesā€™ a few police complaints were also filed in different parts of the country.

What was disturbing to note, that neither the uproar nor the police complaints, had any sobering effect on this self-proclaimed ā€˜mediatorā€™ in the Ayodhya dispute. He also stuck to the controversial statement he made a few days later in Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh while talking to reporters. Reiterating his earlier statement he tried to justify it as part of his freedom of expression like other people. None of the reporters present dared ask him whether transgressing constitutional boundaries or set legal statutes could come under this claim or not.

Coming to such statements there is no ambiguity as far as the law is concerned.

Under the Indian Law, promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion is a recognized criminal offence. The Indian Penal Code (IPC) prescribes criminal prosecution for ā€œwantonly giving provocation with intent to cause riotā€ (section 153); ā€œpromoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religionā€ (section 153A); ā€œimputations, assertions prejudicial to national integrationā€ (section 153B); ā€œuttering words with deliberate intent to wound the religious feelings of any personā€ (section 298); ā€œstatements conducing to public mischiefā€ (section 505 (1), b and c); and ā€œstatements creating or promoting enmity, hatred or ill-will between classes (section505 (2). Section 108 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, in addition, allows an Executive Magistrate to initiate action against a person violating section 153A or 153B of the IPC.ā€

The ā€œGuidelines to promote communal harmonyā€ issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs in October 1997 also point at the precise responsibility of the state machinery to deal with potentially inflammatory statements in the context of communal tension. Guideline 15 states that ā€œeffective will need to be displayed by the district authorities in the management of such situations so that ugly incidents do not occur. Provisions in section 153A, 153B, 295 to 298 and 505 of IPC and any other Law should be freely used to deal with individuals promoting communal enmityā€. Article 20 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which India ratified in 1979, affirms that ā€œAny advocacy of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence shall be prohibited by lawā€.

A close reading of the spiritual guruā€™s statement would reveal that if the legal eagles decide, he will have to face tremendous hassles in wriggling himself out from the situation. A Congress Party activist had even said ā€œ[t]hat if FIR is not filed against Sri Sriā€™s controversial remark then he will move to Court and take legal action against him.ā€

Examples are galore where people with sympathies towards right-wing causes go on making such statements without fear of any repercussion. What happens to people in all such cases is normally decided by your proximity to the powers that be.

Not some time ago, H Raja a veteran leader of BJP from Tamil Nadu had shared a warning on Facebook when Leninā€™s statue was demolished by a rampaging mob associated with Hindutva Supremacist forces in Tripura

ā€œWho is Lenin? What is his connection to India? What is the connection of communists to India? Leninā€™s statue was destroyed in Tripura. Today Leninā€™s statue, tomorrow Tamil Naduā€™s EVR Ramaswamiā€™s statue.ā€

Despite the fact that it had the potential to create disturbances all over the state there was no action against him. There were demands to arrest him and slapping Goondas Act against him from opposition parties. The controversial ex MLA distanced himself from the Facebook post and said that the page was maintained by various administrators. () The matter ended there.

While H Raja did not have to face any ā€˜musicā€™ over an offensive post after a ā€˜clarificationā€™, a teenage boy Zakir Tyagi from Muzaffarnagar was arrested for a satirical Facebook comment on a statement the chief minister Adityanath had made soon after he was elected last year. He ended up spending several weeks in jail after being accused of various crimes including sedition. His statement read like this

ā€œYogiji has said in Gorakhpur that goondas and badmashes must leave UP. Who am I to point out sahib Yogi Adityanathji, that there are 28 cases against you of which 22 involve serious chargesā€.

There are number of similar cases where one can be intimidated , harassed, tortured, jailed with frivolous cases being filed against her/him if you are nobody and dare to share say some morphed image of a ā€˜Great Leaderā€™on social media or make some comment which appears ā€˜offensiveā€™ to the hurt sentiment brigade.

And while one still awaits the official reaction towards the ā€˜provocativeā€™ statement by Sri Sri Ravishankar, it is incumbent upon us to discern the various arguments which flow from it. But before coming to that, it would be opportune to look at the latest developments in the case and some background.

We know very well that Ayodhya, which has been a long time symbol of our composite heritage, was besmirched 25 years ago when a five-hundred-year-old mosque was demolished by vandals belonging to the communal fascist formations. As of now, the Supreme Court is seized of the case where it has decided that it will hear it as a ā€˜land disputeā€™ and the next hearing would be held on March 14.

One can recapitulate that the intervention of the Supreme Court had taken place after it had stayed a judgement of the Lucknow bench of Allahabad High Court which had effectively turned the suit of the ownership of land into a property dispute between three parties and emphasised peopleā€™s beliefs and sentiments as opposed to actual facts to be clinching factors in deciding a case.

The high court judgement had received widespread condemnation from civil society as well because it was clear that it was not delivered on sound legal principles and was driven by the point of settling the long-simmering dispute between the two communities at any cost. It was called a ā€˜Panchayatiā€™ judgement where the word of the arbitrator/mediator was supposed to be the final word. The verdict had rather vindicated the long-standing demand by the Hindutva Supremacist forces that matters of faith were above any law and jurisprudence. It had caused tremendous jubilation in their camp then and with near victory in sight, they had even started raising other contentious issues between the two communities and had even demanded that Muslims should similarly rescind their claims on Mathura and Varanasi and thousands of other similar cases.

A careful reading of Sri Sri Ravi Shankarā€™s interview makes it clear that he was trying to reinvigorate the crux of the Allahabad judgement which had upheld majoritarian claims and disregarded justice.

The dispute, he said, could be simply resolved if Muslims ā€œgive upā€ their claims on Ayodhya. ā€œMuslims should give up their claim on Ayodhya as a goodwill gestureā€¦ Ayodhya is not [a] place of faith for Muslims.ā€

By claiming that if the Supreme Court fails to uphold Hindutva demand then Hindus would erupt in violence, not only the spiritual guru was challenging the rule of law but also questioning constitutional principles before which there is no discrimination on the basis of caste, gender, community, race etc. It was also an ā€˜indirect appealā€™ to all those people/formations who are sympathetic to the Hindutva cause that they remain ready for a new bout of frenzy.

People who are normally taken in by this soft-spoken Sadhu whose global spirituality programme which goes by the name of Art of Living (AOL) ā€“ which is a rage among the generation next ā€“ would feel surprised if they listen to his advocacy of such causes where he appears less like a spiritual man but more a politician owning allegiance with to the Hindutva Brigade.

As an aside, it can be noted that The Art of Living has established its network in 140 countries around the world and claims 20 million members. Many leading corporations like Oracle, Sun Microsystems and Cisco Systems hire AOL teachers to conduct seminars for their employees. Of course, behind the carefully cultivated image of playfulness, love and joy, Sri Sri Ravi Shankar cannot hide what Meera Nanda calls his ā€˜Hindu nationalist passionā€™ It has been an open secret that on matters of Ram Mandir and minorities he has always shown where his sympathies lie.

The British magazine The Economist had described his politics quite accurately:

ā€˜Art of Living is open to people of all faiths. But, in fact, discussing the Ram temple, its guru starts to sound less like a spiritual leader and more like a politician, talking of the long history of ā€œappeasement of the minority communityā€, and of the unfairness of a system that subsidises Muslims to go on the Haj to Meccaā€™. (Page 100, The God Market, Meera Nanda, Random House.)

Art of Livingā€™s occasional metamorphosis into Art of Coercion is a logical conclusion of this vision.

Amen!

________________________________________________________________

Subhash GatadeĀ is an eminent author, activist and the Convener of New Socialist Initiative. He is the author of Pahad Se Uncha Aadmi (2010), Godseā€™s Children: Hindutva Terror in India,(2011) and The Saffron Condition: The Politics of Repression and Exclusion in Neoliberal India (2011).

theclarionindia
theclarionindiahttps://clarionindia.net
Clarion India - News, Views and Insights about Indian Muslims, Dalits, Minorities, Women and Other Marginalised and Dispossessed Communities.

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