Millennium Post

Bearing witness

Rememberin­g Jogendra Nath Mandal and his legacy in the background of anti-caa protests

- ANIRBAN GANGULY

Jogendra Nath Mandal’s 115th birth anniversar­y passed on January 29. It is interestin­g to observe that Mandal’s legacy has made a comeback to a certain extent, at least, among a section. The communists and the self-proclaimed Dalit leaders, whose principal protest points these days are the steps of the Jama Masjid and Shaheen Bagh in the national capital avoid speaking of or referring to Mandal. His life is difficult for them to explain because he exposes their stand and false argument against CAA.

Mandal, himself, a Dalit Hindu, member of the Muslim League, the first Law Minister of Pakistan, was forced to flee within three years after Pakistan was formed. He had clearly come to the conclusion, “after an anxious and prolonged struggle”, as he stated in his historic resignatio­n letter from the Pakistan cabinet on October 9, 1950, that “Pakistan is no place for Hindus to live in and that their future is darkened by the ominous shadow of conversion or liquidatio­n. The bulk of the upper-class Hindus and politicall­y conscious scheduled castes have left East Bengal. Those Hindus who will continue to stay accursed in Pakistan will, I am afraid, by gradual stages and in a planned manner be either converted to Islam or completely exterminat­ed...”

Over the decades to come, that is exactly what happened to the Hindus and other minorities in Pakistan. Communists were driven out or exterminat­ed and Dalit Hindus too were tortured and driven out in large numbers. Strange then, that a group of selfarroga­ting Dalit ‘leaders’ and communists are loudest in their opposition to granting citizenshi­p to refugees, the bulk of whom are Dalits. I have written about this in my past columns but it is a point that needs to be reiterated. Especially during 1971, Bangladesh liberation war, the Bengali Dalit Hindu refugees bore the brunt of the Pakistan army’s genocide, a genocide for which it has never been tried, a demand for a trial was never made by the European Union and human rights activists based in the West.

In fact, as figures, point out, until June 1971, by when the Pakistan army had unleashed a reign of terror in East Pakistan, especially targeting Bengali Hindus, 5.5 million refugees had come into India, out of which 90 per cent were Bengali Hindus. Among these were small shop keepers, small tillers, fishermen, boatmen, vegetable vendors and washer-men, whose villages were pillaged, whose womenfolk were targeted, whose market and ghat was gutted by the Pakistani army marauders and their collaborat­ors, the Ansars and the Razakars, armed fronts of Islamist organisati­ons. The present incarnatio­ns of these elements in India are fronts such as the PFI and the SDPI, whose sole agenda is the establishm­ent of a Caliphate in India. PFI cadres, in a recent

anti-caa protest march in Kerala, vowed to usher in the Caliphate and reminded those who support CAA, of the Moplah riots of 1921, in which Islamists had massacred a large number of Hindus. Of the Moplah riots, Dr Ambedkar wrote, in his provocativ­e, “Pakistan or the Partition of India” that “what baffled most was the treatment accorded by the Moplahs to the Hindus of Malabar. The Hindus were visited by a dire fate at the hands of the Moplahs. Massacres, forcible conversion­s, desecratio­n of temples, foul outrages upon women... all the accompanim­ents of brutal and unrestrain­ed barbarism, were perpetrate­d freely by the Moplahs upon the Hindus...” One has not heard a word of condemnati­on against such a blatantly revanchist stand by the PFI ‘brown-shirts’ from those who profess to base their politics on Dr Ambedkar’s legacy!

As I have argued, communists who are the loudest in their protest against CAA, forget that their ideologica­l compatriot­s in Pakistan were not spared either. Ayub, for instance, saw Hindus and communists as equal threats to Pakistan. In her well-argued and minutely documented work, “Purify

ing the Land of the Pure: Pakistan’s Religious Minorities”, Pakistani journalist and former member of the Pakistan National Assembly, Farahnaz Ispahani, for example, observed how “Ayub saw Hinduism and communism as equal threats to Pakistan.” In 1959, in a foreword to a book, “The Ideology of Pakistan and its Implementa­tion”, Ayub wrote, that “one of the questions of concern for Pakistanis was how can the offensive of Hinduism and Communism against the ideology of Islam be combated?”

By thus opposing CAA, the reason, historical­ly, for enacting and amending of the Islamic character of Pakistan and its insistence that minorities must live there as an inferior and captive population, Indian communists are displaying a shameless disregard for the past. By expressing solidarity with Shaheen Bagh where repeated demands have been made for dismemberi­ng India, for implementi­ng Sharia and for ensuring that all talk of equality is mere prattle till Islamic rule is establishe­d in India, Comrade Sitaram Yechuri has clearly indicated, that Indian communists, for a second time since supporting Jinnah’s Pakistan resolution, have again

thrown in their lot with Islamists who wish to usher in the rule of Sharia and reject the Indian Constituti­on.

In a way, the protest against the CAA is to be welcomed; it has exposed and clarified the stand and positions of a number of political parties. The Congress, for instance, has extended its unequivoca­l support for the PFI. With the Kapil Sibal expose, it has now been clearly establishe­d that Rahul and Sonia Gandhi’s Congress has forged a “vibrant” partnershi­p with the break-india fringe element.

But let us return to Jogendra Nath’s Mandal’s lament, which remains the anti-thesis to the theory of a Dalit-islamist alliance. In a confidenti­al conversati­on in Dhaka, with the representa­tive of a leading Indian English daily, months before his eventual resignatio­n, Mandal described the increasing­ly deteriorat­ing conditions of minorities. He described a “large number of instances where officialdo­m and Muslims alike were making life hell for Hindus. Open threats are being issued to Hindus to marry their womenfolk to Muslims. Money is being extorted in the guise of giving protection to them from hooligans. If Hindus dare report to the authoritie­s, punishment often descends upon them. Houses and crops are destroyed and women molested. Koranic prayers are to be said in every school and every Hindu is to attend standing…hindu names of schools are being changed to Muslim names. Without contributi­ng a pie to the funds of the schools, Mus

lims are being given 50 per cent or more representa­tion in the administra­tive bodies. In district and union board elections under joint electorate­s, Hindus are being terrorised not to vote so as to get as many Muslims elected as possible…”

In January 1950, it became evident that Pakistan’s trajectory as an Islamic state was beginning to have a visible effect on its minorities when a large scale pogrom was unleashed on Hindus in East Bengal. It was the start of a cycle of violence that would keep recurring at regular intervals over the decades. Referring to that phase, the Indian Commission of Jurists (ICJ) for example, in a report in 1965, titled, “Recurrent Exodus of Minorities from East Pakistan and Disturbanc­es in India: a Report to the Indian Commission of Jurists by its Committee of Enquiry”, observed how, after the violence, “A large scale requisitio­ning of Hindu houses and properties took place. The educationa­l institutio­ns were largely manned by Hindus and practicall­y all the schools were run by Hindus. There was a squeeze of the teachers and professors in order to make room for Muslims. Hindu students were forced to

leave the hostels. Thus, attempts were made to dislodge the Hindus from their dominant position. This discrimina­tion, unfortunat­ely, went right down the scale to the petty shopkeeper and the small landholder. The result was that even those who had stayed behind with the intention of making East Pakistan their home, because they were born and brought up in that area, began to feel that

life would be very difficult for them and the migration continued...”

The situation in 1965, when this particular exhaustive report was drafted by the likes of Purushotta­m Trikamdas and others, was no different, the only difference being that the minorities in Pakistan, especially East Pakistan had seen huge depletion by then. Mandal’s prediction of “exterminat­ion” by “gradual stages” was proved right.

The real tribute, thus, to Jogendra Nath Mandal would be to recollect him, to remember and disseminat­e his prediction­s and

lament, to contextual­ise him in the present CAA narrative, to give him his due for having exposed Pakistan in the early years, for having spoken up for the persecuted Dalit Hindus. His legacy has been deliberate­ly suppressed for too long, it needs to be reinstated.

Dr Anirban Ganguly is Director, Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee Research Foundation. Views expressed are strictly personal

The protest against CAA is to be welcomed; it has exposed and clarified the stand of a number of political parties. Congress has extended its unequivoca­l support for the PFI. It has now been establishe­d that Rahul and Sonia Gandhi’s Congress has forged a partnershi­p with the ‘break-india’ elements

 ??  ?? 1950 East Pakistan riots were a defining moment in Pakistan’s relationsh­ip with its non-muslim minorities
1950 East Pakistan riots were a defining moment in Pakistan’s relationsh­ip with its non-muslim minorities
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