Hindustan Times (Patiala)

The Opposition enables Hindutva

It lacks ideologica­l conviction on secularism, and the political imaginatio­n to defend it

- ROSHAN KISHORE roshan.k@htlive.com ■ The views expressed are personal

On August 5, Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi set the process of the constructi­on of a Ram temple at Ayodhya in motion. This is a moment of political triumph for Hindutva politics. And the euphoria in the Hindutva camp, especially the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) and its political affiliate, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), is not surprising.

What is disappoint­ing, however, is the reaction of the secular camp. Its response can be described as empty assertions against the victory of political Hindutva, wishful thinking about a closure of such politics, or, just opportunis­tic celebratio­n. Rahul Gandhi’s tweet trying to seek some sort of selfrighte­ous, even metaphysic­al, solace by portraying Ram as opposed to the politics of hate and injustice fits the first category. The Communist Party of India (Marxist)’s statement lamenting that the bhoomi pujan should not have been made into a political event fits the second category. Priyanka Gandhi Vadra’s statement, and the response of most other political leaders, which celebrated the act in the hope that it will be used as an occasion to promote harmony and cultural affinity, fits the third category.

None of these positions will worry the BJP. It will celebrate, and rightly so, the constructi­on of the temple as the biggest political success of its larger ideologica­l project. It is also naive to expect that the BJP will not use the

Ram temple issue for future political gains. The BJP is not concerned about whether its opponents think of its actions as justifiabl­e or not. What matters for the BJP is the view of the majority, which as of now, appears firmly with the party.

The fate of secular politics in India, today more than ever, depends on whether or not its practition­ers can explain its raison d’être to the Hindus. None of the mainstream political players are even trying to do that.

To be sure, there has been a fourth kind of reaction as well; largely from civil society voices. It paints August 5 as an apocalypti­c event of sorts, when constituti­onal ideas have been destroyed forever. Irrespecti­ve of whether one agrees or disagrees with this assessment, such a position necessaril­y entails an abdication of politics per se. If there is nothing left to save, what’s the point of doing anything?

The collective despondenc­y, captured by all the positions described above, is an alibi for the lack of political imaginatio­n and will of those who claim to champion the politics of secularism.

The Ram temple movement was the beginning of a political experiment to achieve a majoritari­an political consolidat­ion, which, in turn, was aimed at capturing power. It brought immense dividends initially. But it does not explain the current dominance of the BJP. Nor will it guarantee that its fortunes remain intact. Political Hindutva, like all political ideologies, will need to keep renewing its ideologica­l hegemony. It has so far managed this: The Ram temple movement in the 1990s, politicisa­tion of the surgical strikes and Balakot attacks against Pakistan before the 2019 polls, the politics around the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, and annulment of Article 370 under the second Modi government are examples of continuous efforts to ensure this.

This macro-politics is accompanie­d with a continuous simmering of religious polarisati­on, something Sajjan Kumar and Sudha Pai have described in detail in their book, Everyday Communalis­m: Riots in Contempora­ry Uttar Pradesh. The BJP has been shrewd in utilising each of these issues to impart dynamism to political Hindutva, and prevent it from becoming an ossified project. The so-called love jihad and cow vigilantis­m are good tools in rural and semi-urban centres. The party believed that they need not be unleashed in more posh urban settings, lest the middle classes get alienated. Even on the contentiou­s issue of beef-eating, the BJP has shown remarkable tactical flexibilit­y in states such as Kerala, where a large number of Hindus are beef-eaters.

The Opposition, meanwhile, has singularly failed to counter this politics because its methods are confused and half-hearted. For example, the secular camp could have resorted to an intelligen­t-yet-peaceful symbolism to organise a protest on August 5. Those who oppose the BJP are not an insignific­ant number. Contrast this with how the BJP cleverly called upon people to light lamps, which ensured mass participat­ion even in the times of a pandemic.

Similarly, no mass campaign has ever been undertaken to counter cow vigilantes, even though it is common knowledge that even Hindus in the livestock economy have suffered due to this menace.

It is easier to ascribe these problems to personalit­y-centric deficienci­es. That, however, is only the surface of the problem. At the root of the present crisis of secularism is a lack of conviction among its so-called vanguards about its political prospects itself. This is what explains frequent “tactical” resorts of buying peace with Hindutva via the public display of Hindu beliefs by politician­s. It is these acts which have given legitimacy to assertions from the Right that the Nehruvian secular consensus, and not Hindutva, was the political fringe in India.

Interestin­gly, Jawaharlal Nehru himself never took this consensus for granted. In his preface to Ramdhari Singh Dinkar’s Sanskriti ke Char Adhyay, written in 1955, Nehru warns Indian intellectu­als against aping their English counterpar­ts. He could see the former losing touch with the people, who were untouched by modern western ideas. Secularism, especially the concept of separation of the State from religion, is one of the core ideas of western modernity.

The prerequisi­te to strengthen­ing any political project is to first identify its weaknesses, rather than pretend that all is well. This intellectu­al integrity must be complement­ed with political conviction to address these weaknesses. Secularism’s current defendants, unlike Nehru, have neither of these qualities.

 ?? DEEPAK GUPTA /HT ?? Strengthen­ing any political project requires identifyin­g its weaknesses, rather than pretending that all is well
DEEPAK GUPTA /HT Strengthen­ing any political project requires identifyin­g its weaknesses, rather than pretending that all is well
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India