13. Hindu and Other Peoples� Nationalism
13. Hindutva and other peoples'
nationalism
�������� The BJP's subordination of any and every ideological or religious conflict to questions of "national unity and integrity", this most mindless form of territorial nationalism, is also a worrying retreat from the historical Hindu conception of Indian nationhood and its implications for the evaluation of foreign problems of national unity.� Along with Mahatma Gandhi and other Freedom Fighters, the BJS used to be convinced that India was a self-conscious civilizational unit since several thousands of years, strengthe�ned in its realization of unity by the Sanskrit language, the Brahmin caste, the pilgrimage cycles which brought pilgrims from every part of India all around the country ("country" rather than the "Subcontinent" or "South Asia", terms which intrin�sically question this unity), and other socio-cultural factors of national integration.� The notions that India was an artificial creation of the British and a "nation in the making", were floated by the British themsel�ves and by Jawaharlal Nehru, respectively, and both are obvious cases of unfounded self-flattery.� Gandhi's and the BJS's viewpoint that India is an ancient nation conscious of its own unity is historically more accurate.
�������� In foreign policy, one can expect two
opposite attitudes to follow from these two conceptions of India, the Gandhian
one which derives India's political unity from a pre-existent cultural unity,
and the Nehruvian one which denies this cultural unity and sees political unity
as a baseless coincidence, an artificial creation of external historical
forces.� In its own self-interest, an ar�tificia�lly
created state devoid of underlying legitimacy tends to support any and every
other state, regardl�ess of whether that state is the political embodiment of a
popular will or a cultural coherence.�
The reason is that any successful separatism at the expense of a fellow
artificial state is a threat to the state's own legitimacy.� That is, for instance, why the founding
member states of the Or�ganizat�ion of African Unity decided from the outset
that the ethnically absurd colonial borders were not to be altered.� It is also why countries like Great Britain
and France, whose own legitimacy within their present borders is questioned by
their Irish, Corsican and other minorities, were reluctant to give diplomatic
recognition to Lithuania when it broke away from the Soviet Union.
�������� By contrast, those who believe that
states are merely politi�cal instrum�ents in the service of existing ethnic or
cultural units, accept that state structures and borders are not sacrosa�nct in
themselves, and that they may consequently be altered.� That is why Aleksandr Solzhenit�syn proposed
to allow the non-Slavic republics to leave the Soviet Union, and why as a sterling
Russian patriot he pleaded in favour of Chechen independence from the Russian
Federation: it is no use trying to keep Turks and Slavs, or Chechens and
Russians, under one roof against their will.�
If Russia is meant to be the political expression of the collective will
of the Russian people, it is only harmful to include other nations by force, as
the Chechens and Turkic peoples once were.�
�������� To be sure, even partisans of this
concept of "meani�ngf�ul" (as opposed to arbitrary) states will
concede that there may be limitations to this project of adjus�ting state
structures and state borders to existing ethnic and cultural realiti�es,
especially where coherent com�munities have been ripped apart and relocated, as
has happened in Russia.� Also, cultural
and ethnic identities are not static givens (e.g. the "Muslim"
character of India's principal minority), so we should not oversimplify the
question to an idyllic picture of a permanent division of the world in states
allotted to God-given national en�tities.�
But at least the general prin�ciple can be ac�cepted: states should as
much as possible be the em�bodiment of coherent cultural units.� That, at any rate, is the Hindu-nationalist
understanding of the Indian state: as the political embodiment of Hindu
civilization.�
�������� Now, what is the position of the
BJS/BJP regarding the right of a state to self-preservation as against the
aspirations of ethnic-cultural communities or nations?� The BJS originally had no problem supporting
separatism in certain specific cases, esp. the liberation of East Turkestan
(Sinkiang/�Xinjiang), Inner Mongolia and Tibet from Chinese rule.� At the time, the BJS still adhered to the
Gandhian position: India should be one independent state because it is one
culturally, and so should Tibet for the same reason.� Meanwhile, however, this plank in its platform has been quietly
withdrawn.�
�������� As A.B. Vajpayee told the Chinese when
he was Janata Party Foreign Minister, and as Brijesh Mishra, head of the BJP's
Foreign Policy Cell, reconfirmed to me (February 1996): India, including the
BJP, considers Tibet and other ethnic territories in the People's Republic as
inalienable parts of China.� The BJP
has decisively shifted towards the Nehruvian position: every state, by virtue
of its very existence, must be defended against separatist tendencies, no
matter how well-founded the latter may be in cultural, ethnic or historical
respects.� That is, for example, why the
BJP is not supporting Kurdish sovereignty against Iraqi and Turkish
imperialism.� Along
with falling from cultural Hindu nationalism to empty secular-territorial
nationalism, the BJP has also fallen from solidarity with other oppressed and
colonized nations to a short-sighted Indocentrism.
�������� When you ask why the BJP has abandoned
its support for the Tibetan freedom movement, the standard reply is that this
would justify other separatis�ms, including those in Kashmir and Panjab.� Exactly the same position is taken by
non-BJP politicians and diplomats.� But from
a Hindu and from an Indian nationalist viewpoint, this position does injustice
to India's claim on Kashmir and Panjab, which should not be put on a par with
all other anti-separatism positions in the world.� Firstly, while Tibet was never a part of China, and while
Chechnya was only recently (19th century) forcibly annexed to Russia, Kashmir
and Panjab have been part of the heartland of Hindu culture since at least
5,000 years.� Secondly, in contrast with
the annexations of Chechnya and Tibet, the accession of Panjab (including the
nominally independent princedoms in it) and the whole of the former princedom
of Jammu & Kashmir to the Republic of India were entirely legal, following
procedures duly agreed upon by the parties concerned.�
�������� Therefore, Indian nationalists are
harming their own case by equating Kashmiri separatism with independentism in
Tibet, which did not accede to China of its own free will and following due
procedure, and which was not historically a part of China.� To equate Kashmir with Tibet or Chechnya is
to deny the profound historical and cultural Indianness of Kashmir, and to
undermine India's case against Kashmiri separatism.� Here again, we see the harmful effect of the BJP's intel�lectual
sloppiness.�
�������� To be fair, we should mention that the
party considers its own compromising position on Tibet as very clever and
statesmanlike: now that it is preparing itself for Government, it is now
already removing any obstacles in the way of its acceptance by China and the
USA (who would both be irritated with the "destabilizing" impact of a
Government in Delhi which is serious about challenging Beijing's annexation of
Tibet).� In reality, a clever statesman
would reason the other way around: possibly there is no realistic scope for
support to Tibetan independence, but then that can be conceded at the
negotiation table, in exchange for real Chinese concessions, quid pro quo.� If you
swallow your own hard positions beforehand, you will have nothing left to
bargain with when you want to extract concessions on the other party's hard
positions, i.e., China's territorial claims on Ladakh, Sikkim and Arunachal
Pradesh, and its support to Burmese claims on the Andaman and Nicobar
islands.� International diplomacy should
teach the BJP what it refuses to learn from its Indian experiences, viz. that
being eager to please your enemies doesn't pay.