Deccan Chronicle

Engage with BJP on religious nationalis­m

- Aakar Patel Aakar Patel is a writer, columnist and executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal (India)

The election in Gujarat was a clear win for the BJP. We can speculate about the reasons why but the results are unambiguou­s. They are in keeping with the way Gujarati voters have spoken for the last 20 years. To call the Congress rise in voteshare a sign or a trend of something larger in the nation will need to await more data and more results from other states. In Gujarat the BJP triumphed.

Having clarified that let’s examine why so many people were hoping that the Congress would perform well. Or more accurately why the BJP would not win again. Such people are usually called Modi-baiters, though it is unclear what that is supposed to mean. I have not met many people who will offer an outright defence of dynastic politics. So we should assume that many of these people who are worried by another BJP victory are not supporters of the Congress in the positive sense. They are merely concerned about something else. What is it?

The answer is religious nationalis­m of the sort that the BJP deliberate­ly pushes. Nationalis­ms can be of many types. You can have composite nationalis­m, which includes all Indians of all religions and all communitie­s and all geographie­s. This is not what the BJP champions. Can a Naga or Mizo assert her Indian identity with pride if she feels it? In the way that the BJP has framed it, this individual can do so only through Hindi slogans (like Bharat Mata Ki Jai), and through stopping eating beef, even if that has been their traditiona­l food for thousands of years.

Can a Muslim from Kerala assert Indian identity? Only if he promises he will not fall in love with a woman who is Hindu. The nationalis­m of the BJP is not meant for all Indians. It is only for a particular kind of Indian. The thing is: even some of those types of Indians do not like it. I am a Hindu male from north India (assuming Gujarat is north India, though that is debatable). I do not want to be a part of a nationalis­m that excludes other Indians.

I have a problem with all nationalis­ms generally speaking because they are used to mobilise one group against another. And the other group is then caricature­d and demonised in a way which I find repulsive. Nationalis­m usually leads to violence and so it should be handled with great care. But within the set of nationalis­ms, I find religious and ethnic nationalis­m particular­ly nasty and dangerous, and especially in our part of the world. I don’t like Pakistan’s Muslim nationalis­m. I don’t like China’s Han nationalis­m. Many Indians feel the same way as I do and that is why they view the BJP with alarm. You could be opposed to nationalis­m that is based on one religion and be a BSP voter, as I am. You could be a Trinamul voter or an AAP supporter or someone who prefers NCP, TD, PDP, JD(U), CPM or any party anywhere. But if you are a supporter of religious nationalis­m, you will back the BJP. If one removes the element of religious nationalis­m, one finds that the policies of the BJP are not very different from other parties. I am not saying that these common policies are good. In fact, they are not. Almost all the issues that are taken up by the human rights organisati­on I work for are problems created under the Congress rule. For example, the use of AFSPA and the criminal exploitati­on of adivasi lands. None of these is a creation of the BJP or Narendra Modi.

However, the BJP is adding to these, rather than reducing them. And the fallout of its aggressive pushing of religious nationalis­m is visible in the news. The frequent episodes of violence like beef lynchings are deliberate creations of the BJP. The violence on our streets, and the violence in our media (the calling of individual­s as “dalals” of Pakistan) is the physical manifestat­ion of religious nationalis­m. It brings an urgency to the problem that many of us cannot look away from. This is the reason why many people wished that the BJP would not have triumphed again. But it has, and we have to accept it and resume the dialogue with its supporters to try and make them see our perspectiv­e.

The fallout of BJP’s aggressive pushing of religious nationalis­m is visible in the news every day. The frequent episodes of violence like beef lynchings we are reading about now are deliberate creations of the BJP.

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