14. The Sangh�s Muslims
14. The Sangh's Muslims
�������� In criticizing the Sangh's simplistic
anti-Americanism, I am not holding a brief for American foreign policy.� The Organiser is entirely right in
arguing that American officials are being extremely silly when they base their
policies on the assumption that Pakistan is a bulwark against (rather
than of) Islamic fundamentalism.�
But this mistake is hardly typically American: in Organiser
itself, columnists play the same game of labelling Muslim entities, without
asking their consent, as bulwarks against Islamic fanaticism.�
�������� Ever since he counseled Muslims to
abandon their claim to the Ayodhya site, one Maulana Wahidud�din Khan is
regularly presented in Organiser as an en�lightened alternative to Is�lamic
fanaticism.� He is also
credited with admitting that most riots are started by Muslims.� Yet, Wahiduddin Khan is an ideologue and
leader of the Tabligh movement, the object of which is to
"purify" Muslim culture of Hindu influence.� It is
motivated by the same hostility to Hinduism as the Muslim League's Pakistan
movement was.� His endorsement of the
Hindu claim on Ayodhya springs from the realization that the Muslim campaign
for the islamization of the disputed site in Ayodhya (in use as a Hindu temple
since 1949) has proven harmful to Muslim interests.� Similarly, his chastising the Muslims for starting riots can
perfectly be explained by the bad image which this gives them among Hindus, who
are not fooled by the secularist lies about "pogroms", and are kept
on the alert against Muslims.� But the
RSS, in its eagerness to find some kind of approval in the enemy camp, wilfully
ignores the fundamental hostility of a Wahiduddin Khan (and of many others whom
they welcome on Hindutva platforms), just like the US Government ignores the
intense anti-Americanism and Islamic militantism in Pakistan.
�������� Similarly, the enthusiasm in Sangh
circles for Ansar Hussain Khan, a second Muslim who actually talks with Sangh
people and thereby breaks through the cordon sanitaire which the
secularists have laid around the Hindutva movement (assuring him of intense
gratitude in Sangh circles), shows a painful lack of viveka/discrimination.� I have nothing against the man personally,
and from his acclaimed book The Rediscovery of India I get the impression
that he is sincerely seeking an exit from the Islamic worldview; only, he has
not yet freed himself from certain basic attachments to things Islamic.� I know
from experience that outgrowing a closed creed like Christianity or Islam is
usually done in stages (e.g. there are millions of people in Europe who have
rejected their Church but not yet Christ), so I will not hold it against him
that he hasn't reached the stage of full emancipation yet.� I also appreciate the courage it must take
for a Muslim secularist to write in positive terms about the Sangh.� But if we limit our evaluation to the actual
ideas formulated by Ansar Hussein Khan, we find certain things which are
just unacceptable.
�������� First of all, he builds up the
well-known argument that the crimes which Islam has committed in India are
violations of the true spirit and the true law of Islam.� This is the great illusion which most modern
Hindus cherish: the true Islam as conceived by the founder is impeccable, the
only problem is that some followers misunderstood him, or that purely nominal
Muslims with little interest in the true Quranic message falsely used the label
"Islam" as justification for their un-Islamic selfish acts.� Even among known Hindu critics of Islam, if
you scratch the surface, something of that illusion has withstood their best
scholarly insights.� I
suggest Hindutva ideologues start to live up to the image which the secularists
have propagated about them, viz. that they are anti-Islamic.� Unfortunately, though a good many of them
are anti-Muslim at heart, most of them are not anti-Islamic at all.
�������� The second and most dangerous message
in A.H. Khan's book is his plea for undoing the Partition, reminding us of
similar pleas by K.R. Malkani and other Sangh stalwarts.� True, India should not have been
partitioned, the Hindu masses were right to vote for a party which promised to
prevent Partition (unfortunately, that party, the Congress, was deliberately
fooling the voters), the Hindu organizations were right to campaign against it.� But history moves in strange ways, and
yesterday's disaster may be today's blessing.�
For Hinduism as such, Partition has by now proved to be a blessing in
disguise, a last chance to survive.�
When you consider that before Independence, the Hindu Congress stalwarts
were taken for a ride by the determined Muslim leadership though the Muslims
represented less than one-fourth of the population and there were practically
no Islamic states to support them, how would the Hindus fare in a united India
in which the Muslims now constitute one-third of the population and receive
support from rich and well-armed Islamic states?�
�������� The last offers made to Jinnah to make
him abandon his Partition plans included 50% reservations for Muslims at all
levels and an effective predominance of the Muslims in the government.� What Jinnah gave up by refusing the offer
was a Muslim-dominated Akhand Bharat, an unassailable country with the highest
population in the world, with "Vedanta brain and Muslim body" (freely
after Vivekananda): Hindu brains to serve the progressively islamicizing regime
by building satellites and nuclear bombs, and Muslim muscle to push back the
Hindu element until it would vanish the way it is actually vanishing from
Pakistan and Bangladesh.� Possibly this
would have led to a civil war, but it is by no means certain that Hindus would
have won.� Hindus were just not ready
for Akhand Bharat, because they were not ready with Islam.�
�������� The present Indian state is already
difficult for Hindus to manage; apart from the Demolition (responsibility not
acknowledged) and a few Supreme Court verdicts (no merit of politicians), the
Hindutva forces have suffered defeat upon defeat in their struggle with the
secularists and Islam, essentially because they have never resolved to wage war
against the Islamic-cum-secularist forces which are already waging an all-out
war against Hinduism.� They failed to
enact an effective ban on cow-slaughter, to enact effective curbs on missionary
subversion, to integrate Kashmir, to stop the 1991 Places of Worship Act, to
withhold statutory status from the Minorities Commission, to stop (let alone
reverse) Bangladeshi infiltration.
�������� In this light, all the Hindutva
daydreaming of a pan-Subcontinental federation (whence the cordial welcome to
A.H. Khan) is profoundly mistaken.� It
amounts to saying: "Now that we have proven ourselves unable to handle
small problems, give us big problems to let us handle those."� It is no coincidence that all Muslim
intellectuals now openly deplore Partition: they now realize that Indian Islam
lost on Partition, and that it is quite capable of taking control of the whole
Subcontinent.� They have given up
believing their own lies about the RSS being a formidable fighting force
threatening the Muslims, they know very well that Hindu society under its
present "leadership" is no match for determined Islamic
gangsterism.� They even think that the
RSS can serve their ends: bringing down the one defence which stands between
Islam and the annihilation of Hinduism, viz. the Indian state.� For all its Muslim appeasement and
anti-Hindu discriminations (cfr. infra), the Indian state is not aggressively
anti-Hindu: the Hindu-born ruling class may sell itself for petro-dollars, but
it does not organize the kind of oppression which exists in Pakistan.� It does not support Hinduism, but at least
it passively allows Hindu culture to flourish on its own strength.� Most importantly, the Indian police and
armed forces (unlike those in the Akhand Bharat which Jinnah spurned) are predominantly
Hindu, and they are not passive bystanders when Muslims terrorize Hindus, as
they are in Pakistan and Bangladesh.
�������� Partition has been a mistake, from the
Islamic viewpoint.� The Muslim community
has been split into three roughly equal parts; Pakistan and Bangladesh are
uninspiring backwaters; the Muslims in the more promising state of India cannot
entirely free themselves of the Partition stigma, and will be unable to take
power there for at least another half century.�
It is now clear that from the viewpoint of Islamic interests, the
pro-Partition Aligarh school was wrong and the anti-Partition Deoband school
was right: Islam in India should not have settled for a part of the country,
but should have aimed for control of the whole country.� The plan is that Pakistan and Bangladesh
remain Islamic states, but India should become a joint account.� In Bangladesh the idea is very popular
because it would formalize the de facto permeability of the Indian
border for Bangladeshi migrants.�
�������� Short, Akhand Bharat is now high on the
Islamic agenda, and calculating Muslims are welcoming and encouraging RSS
romantic daydreaming about reunification.�
But so far, I have not seen any Sangh spokesman pause and wonder why
Islamic strategists have suddenly joined them in wanting to undo the
Partition.� They see no reason for
suspicion.
�������� A similar case of unjustified lack of
suspicion seems to be moving up on the BJP's and India's political agenda:
proposals to change the electoral system, including the replacement of the
first-past-the-post system with a proportional system.� This system, which functions well in the
Netherlands and Israel (and in diluted form in most European countries), would
be an unwise choice for India, because it would allow Islamicist parties to
enter the parliaments, not just from Muslim-majority districts but from
wherever the Muslim vote is worth a seat.�
This would then force secular parties to compete with the Muslim League
for the Muslim vote, which they will do by promising ever-greater concessions
to Islam.� The effect will be similar to
the creation of separate electorates in the pre-independence period.� At the time of writing, I am not aware of a
definitive consensus about this in the BJP, but not of a realization of the
danger either.� The BJP
used to support the proportional system which favours smaller parties when it
was a small party itself, but now that it is a large party, it may avert the
danger out of sheer self-interest.��
�������� As for undoing the Partition, it is
true that India should ultimately be reunited, but which India?� What do the Sangh people expect to achieve
by undoing Partition without undoing the doctrinal conditioning which led to
Partition in the first place?� Do they
prefer an Islamic Akhand Bharat to a partitioned India which allows Hinduism to
survive in its major part?� Have they
given any thought to the probable outcome of their policies?� In their case, that is always the question.
�������� Unfortunately, Sangh Parivar ideologues
labour under the illusion that they can leave Islam intact while removing the
"anti-national" element from it.�
Most of them, even including the fairly radical former BJS president
Balraj Madhok, have suggested that the Islam problem can be solved by
"indianization": Islam has to "indianize" itself.� Or as the Organiser once put it:
"Let Muslims look upon Ram as their hero and the communal problems will be
all over."� Islam,
however, is a seamless garment, and it cannot be freed from its anti-Hindu
doctrine while retaining its Allah and Mohammed.� Muslims cannot look upon Rama as "their" hero without
ceasing to be Muslims.
�������� The term "indianization"
implies that the problem with Islam is its un-Indianness.� And this, in turn, would imply a nationalistically
distorted view of religion: that a nation should only follow native traditions
and shun foreign contributions in religion.�
By such standards, the adoption of Hinduism or Buddhism by the peoples
of East and Southeast Asia would not be a matter of pride (as it seems to be
for the Sangh) but a violation of the proper world order.� The Khmers should have rejected Shiva and
built their Angkor temple to some native deity; the Balinese should not enact
the Ramayana but create an epic around a native hero instead.� The "holyland" of many East-Asian
Buddhists is not their own country, but India: the Mahabodhi temple was
renovated in the 19th century by the king of Burma, and is now surrounded by guest-houses
catering to many thousands of pilgrims from each Buddhist country every
year.� Should we deduce that these Thai
or Japanese pilgrims are being "anti-national" by having such
"extra-territorial" religious loyalty?� And that the Mongolian and Chinese Communists were right to crack
down on Buddhism?� That would be the
implication if we start reducing religions to their geographical provenance
instead of studying their contents.� In
this case, patriotism is not the refuge of scoundrels, but of duffers.
�������� This futile attempt to identify the
Islam problem in terms of "Indian" vs. "foreign" implies a
second similarity with certain undesirable xenophobic trends in the West.� Semi-literate xenophobic ideologues in
Europe identify Islam as "a foreign religion, fit for Asiatics but not for
Europe".� In their opinion, there
is nothing wrong with Islam, as long as it remains in its country of
origin.� This is not too different from
the applause given in Hindutva publications to Anwar Shaykh's thesis that
"Islam is the Arab national movement".� In his book Islam, the Arab National Movement, the
Pakistan-born apostate author from Cardiff (with a death-warrant fatwa on his
head since 1994) accurately documents how islamization has meant external
arabization (names, clothes, script) for most converted populations, but
wrongly infers that Islam is a form of Arab nationalism or Arab imperialism.
�������� For the Sangh, this thesis was doubly
welcome: it recast the Islam problem in the familiar, safely secular-sounding
terms of nationalism, and it legitimized Islam ("See we're not against
Islam?") all while limiting its legitimate geographical domain so as to
exclude India from it.� The implication
is that Hinduism is Indian nationalism, and Islam is Arab nationalism.� This is grossly unjust to the Arabs and the
native Arab culture which Islam destroyed.�
There is nothing Arab about Islam, a doctrine confabulated by Mohammed
from half-digested bits and pieces of Jewish and Christian lore, combined with
his own extraordinary self-image and the hallucinations registered on his sensory
nerves (the Quranic voice he "heard").� Except for a small minority of people attracted to Mohammed out
of gullibility or lust for booty and power, the Arabs were only forced under
the yoke of Islam after valiantly resisting it.� For the sake of comparison, Communism was not the "Chinese
national movement" just because Chairman Mao's Communists militarily
wrested the country from the legitimate Nationalist Government of Chiang
Kai-shek.� The genuine Arab national
movement was the so-called Ridda ("return" to god-pluralism)
uprising against the Islamic state after Mohammed's death, in which the Arabs
tried to restore their pluralistic culture.
�������� The review of Anwar Shaykh's work in Organiser
was titled "Muslim proud of his Aryan heritage".� This was, first of all, an untruthful
statement.� It is true that Anwar Shaykh
has rediscovered the "Aryan" (i.e. Vedic) heritage which his
great-grandfather had abandoned by converting to Islam.� But the
consequence of this rediscovery was precisely the opposite of what the Organiser
title suggests: he quit Islam, becoming a "non-Muslim proud of his Aryan
heritage".� Secondly, this title
sent the wrong message to Indian Muslims.�
The message which Organiser sought to convey was that Indian
Muslims should follow Anwar Shaykh's example: remain Muslim all while
rediscovering their Aryan heritage (or with an older term,
"indianizing" themselves).�
This was a replay of the Gandhian myth of the "nationalist Muslim"
for whom Islam and Indianness are not incompatible.� But the
case of Anwar Shaykh proved just the opposite: by rediscovering his Hindu
heritage, a Muslim loses his Muslim identity.�
Islamic fanatics are wholly aware of this phenomenon, which is why they
try to nip it in the bud, e.g. by forbidding Hindu religious music on Pakistani
radio.� The message of the Organiser
should have been: "Indian Muslims, follow Anwar Shaykh's example,
rediscover your Vedic heritage, and abandon Islam."
�������� A similar case is that of BJP
office-bearer Sikander Bakht.� Mr. Bakht
is a thorough gentleman, but his main value for the BJP is that he is a born
Muslim.� He is often shown off as the
party's token Muslim, but just as often, angry Muslims write letters to the
editor to explain that Mr. Bakht is not a Muslim at all.� They say that he actually converted to
Hinduism on the occasion of his marriage to a Hindu lady, and that his children
were raised as Hindus.� Now, when I am
to choose between the BJP version and the Muslim version, I tend to attribute
more credibility to the latter.� If it
is true that Mr. Bakht is a convert, I certainly applaud the BJP policy of
giving due prominence to him.� Only,
they should have the sincerity and the wisdom to add the correct message, which
is not: "We have Muslims as well", but: "We welcome Indian Muslims
seeking the way out of Islam back into their ancestral culture."�