Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Muslims must open their minds to stay relevant

The era of political expediency and the consequent appeasemen­t of the community is now gone

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The Muslim political power in the Subcontine­nt came to a close with the fall of the Mughal empire. But the downfall didn’t descend in a flash from the heavens. Muslims manufactur­ed it for themselves. By the time the British dismantled their political power, Muslim society was a moribund creature. A decayed society and a depraved politics in the East was no match to a thriving West. The empire fell, and with that panic seized Muslims. It’s still panic-stricken. The response to the happenings, like the recent judgment on triple talaq, is an expression of the same panic. What perpetuate­s this panic is the inability of Muslim mind to undertake reform. It’s a complete withering away, leaving Muslims incapacita­ted to participat­e in and with the changed world.

The blossoming of a people is contingent on an interminab­le flowering of mind. This is the substance of a people when they are alive. After the decline, Muslims are fighting for dead symbols, without caring for substance. The decision on the validity of permanent separation between the spouses, as a result of uttering the word ‘talaq’ thrice in a go, has once again brought to light the mortal affliction of Muslims – ignoring the ever vital substance and chasing the long dead symbols.

The aftermath of the decision on tripletala­q in the Supreme Court has once again raised some cardinal questions. Who are the Indian Muslims and what is their future in India? The bun fight in TV studios and triumphali­st expression­s of the BJP send a message: Deep recesses of Muslim society are no more a no-go area for the State structures. The era of political expediency, and the consequent appeasemen­t of Muslims, that the Congress was accused of, is gone. The new politics has turned things upside down.

With the political value coming to naught, is it time to zero in on Muslim society. When Kemal Ataturk announced the abolition of the Ottoman caliphate, Indian Muslims were crestfalle­n. A huge public mobilisati­on under the leadership of religious and political elite, later supported by Indian National Congress also, in the end was a total failure. This great failure sapped Muslim energies. As a collective, their worth in the anti-colonial struggle within India was at its lowest. The Indian freedom movement, under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi, didn’t cease its anticoloni­al fight. It signalled that politics in India will chalk out its own course regardless of what Muslims think, and do.

From here onwards Muslims developed some deep political responses. One, to be an active part of the Indian National Movement. Two, think of a separate and self-contained politics, and fight against any designs of subsuming the Muslim society into a larger mass of Indian society, that being Hindu by way of numbers. Third, an understand­ing that Muslims comprise a global community and any divisions in the name of nationalis­m were antithetic­al to its society and politics.

There were three broad responses that shaped up the future politics of Muslims in the Subcontine­nt. One, it ended up nourishing itself from the waters of Indian secular politics, for decades led (misled) by Congress. Second, it resulted in the division of territory, and partition of people. Decades later, the third response came to be known as political Islam.

Muslims rushed to the frontiers to ward off dangers when the peril was at the core. Muslims predominan­tly looked at it as a case of Hindu India, or a Christian West, or a godless USSR, scheming against their faith. They hardly looked into the fallacies of their knowledge systems, and the decay of mind.

They never thought that maybe they are the problem. Living in the excitement of past glory, Muslims engaged with the world in a state of rage, frustratio­n, and denial. All this was wholeheart­edly supported by a theologica­l discourse, of which tripletala­q is a remnant. Muslim politics is captive to that theology. This architectu­re of Muslim theology needs a serious revisit. That will announce the opening up of the Muslim mind. Muhammad Iqbal was the person who emphasised this almost a century back, just some years after the failure of Khilafat movement. A century later Muslims are where the man left them. The mind is shut, the limbs shattered.

MUSLIMS RUSHED TO THE FRONTIERS TO WARD OFF DANGERS WHEN THE PERIL WAS AT THE CORE. THEY HARDLY LOOKED INTO THE FALLACIES OF THEIR KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS, AND THE DECAY OF MIND

Mehmood ur Rashid is opinion editor, Greater Kashmir The views expressed are personal

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MEHMOOD UR RASHID

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