Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Triple talaq is an issue of gender equality, not of politics or religion

The protests against this regressive practice have been led by Muslim groups, especially women

- RAJDEEP SARDESAI Rajdeep Sardesai is senior journalist and author. The views expressed are personal

Agood lawyer doesn’t allow personal conviction­s to get in the way of a challengin­g brief is one of the valuable lessons we were taught in law school. It is possible that a similar learning drew Congress lawyer-MP Kapil Sibal to argue for the All India Muslim Personal Law Board in the historic triple talaq case in the Supreme Court and declare that triple talaq is a matter of faith for 1,400 years for Muslims which could not be subject to principles of constituti­onal morality and equity.

But by placing his argument in such stark terms Mr Sibal, who prides himself as a true Nehruvian secularist, may well have revived a festering sore that has hobbled secularist­s and the Congress party in particular for over three decades now.

Sibal’s words echo the troubling narrative that was pushed in 1985 during the infamous Shahbano case, one that first led to the Congress party being charged with the tag of ‘minority appeasemen­t’. Then the plight of a Muslim woman seeking maintenanc­e after divorce saw the Supreme Court step in to protect her, only for the Rajiv Gandhi government to overturn the apex court order under pressure from Muslim fundamenta­list forces.

That abject capitulati­on gave the BJP the opening it was so desperatel­y seeking to build a secular versus pseudo-secular counter-narrative and create a momentum for a resurgent Hindutva politics that would ultimately result in the demolition of the Babri Masjid and the eventual political rise of the sangh parivar.

2017 though is not 1985. The BJP is now the party in power, led by an all-powerful prime minister whose government is determined­ly objecting to all forms of triple talaq. If for Rajiv Gandhi, the Shahbano case exposed his political naivete, for the Modi government the triple talaq issue has become another weapon in its ‘justice for all, appeasemen­t to none’ war cry. On the other hand, reduced to a rump in parliament, the Congress cannot afford any ambivalenc­e on the issue. In the 24 x 7 news age and with an endless social media whirl, any Congress attempt to run with the secular hare and hunt with the communal hound will be immediatel­y exposed.

Moreover, it is reassuring to find that the protests against triple talaq have been primarily led by Muslims groups, especially women. That many Muslim women have come out openly on television to reveal their anguish suggests a remarkable courage that stems from a growing sense of empowermen­t. Which is why, unlike in the Shahbano case, where there weren’t enough protests from within Muslim civil society to challenge the orthodox elements, this time there is a noticeable difference. The Muslim Personal Law Board in particular is no longer seen as the sole spokespers­on for a community; in fact, it has been exposed as a cabal of mostly male obscuranti­sts and almost forced by sustained public pressure to dilute its opposition to abolishing triple talaq.

In a sense, this is then the appropriat­e moment for every right thinking secular liberal to reclaim the space that was vacated in the aftermath of the Shahbano controvers­y and strengthen the brave voices within the Muslim community who are speaking out against triple talaq.

The BJP may well claim that it is standing by Muslim progressiv­es but their stand is misleading. After all, isn’t this the same party which has been insisting that faith be placed above the law in the contentiou­s Ram Janmabhoom­i case? Truth is, for the brotherhoo­d in saffron, triple talaq is another convenient stick to beat the Muslim community with and push the stereotype of a religion that is steeped in archaic practices (why don’t I see the sangh leadership denounce public figures who still attend mass child marriages?).

Which is why the real challenge for unapologet­ic secularist­s , as the Supreme Court verdict is awaited, is to pull the triple talaq debate out of the political slugfest and place it squarely in the domain of gender equality. Muslim women need freedom from personal law practices that are inherently arbitrary and unequal. That freedom must come from the constituti­on that gives primacy to equal citizenshi­p, not from a political order which has only used religious issues to divide and rule.

Post-script: A number of people on social media have been questionin­g the silence of prominent Indian Muslims on the triple talaq issue. Yes, they should speak up, but may I also ask: how many ‘eminent’ Hindus have spoken out when murderous gau rakshak gangs threaten and kill in the name of religion? The ‘crime’ of silence cannot be one-sided.

 ?? PTI ?? The real challenge for unapologet­ic secularist­s is to pull the triple talaq debate out of the political slugfest and place it squarely in the domain of gender equality
PTI The real challenge for unapologet­ic secularist­s is to pull the triple talaq debate out of the political slugfest and place it squarely in the domain of gender equality
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