The Asian Age

Digital age spawns hate- mongering

Ultra- nationalis­t agendas globally, whether Hindu supremacis­ts, white supremacis­ts, anti- Muslim, anti- migrant or anti- LGBT, are finding free expression and followers and ‘ likes’ in this new technology age, exacerbati­ng an environmen­t that is already

- PARIMAL MAYA SUDHAKAR ( The author is academic head of the School of Government, Maharashtr­a Institute of Technology,

GHETTO POLITICS RULES THE DAY Hate- mongers freely prowl in society and on social media as the secular fabric woven zealously by post- Partition leadership has been torn apart by the resurgence of consolidat­ed religious identity in India.

Ankit Saxena, just 23, was killed outside a metro station in New Delhi. The alleged killers were Muslim and were angry with Ankit for courting a young woman from their family. In retaliatio­n, Hindutva organisati­ons have imposed an embargo on the killers’ extended family even though the brave young woman is standing up for justice.

This is not an exceptiona­l case but an addition to the several killings that have happened in India as hatemonger­s freely roam in society and on social media. A deep- rooted hatred exists in the hearts of Hindus and Muslims against each other since the time of the British Raj in India. The post- independen­t leadership achieved remarkable success in de- polarising the post- partition society. They attempted to weave a secular fabric among communitie­s for almost half a century with partial success. However, religious organisati­ons steadily cemented their respective population’s identities based on faith as practice and propagatio­n of any faith as a fundamenta­l right under the Indian Constituti­on.

The consolidat­ed religious identities resulted in a fanatic creation of pride for oneself and hatred for the ‘ other.’ Pride and hatred have replaced shared principles of coexistenc­e and everything of the

‘ other’ becomes intolerabl­e. This intoleranc­e led to 28- year- old techie Mohsin Shaikh losing his life in 2014. Members allegedly of the Hindu Rashtra Sena ( Hindu National Army) bludgeoned him to death as he emerged from a mosque after his evening prayer. His appearance as a

Muslim bearded believer was not acceptable to the mob in a suburban area of Pune - a city known for its strange culture of religious conservati­sm and social reforms.

The same city had experience­d one of the most sensationa­l killings in 2013 when a popular rationalis­t, Dr Narendra Dabholkar, a Hindu by birth, was shot dead by Hindu fanatics. It was followed by the murders of an octogenari­an leftist leader, a literary doyen, and a radical woman journalist, in the same fashion and allegedly by the same group. The conservati­ves hated them because they fought against superstiti­on, caste- based hierarchy, patriarchy and communalis­m and considered an assault on the faith of the majority. Thus, along with the ‘ other’ who have not been in the business of questionin­g the belief system of the majority, the reformers, born in the same community, are at the receiving end of religious conservati­sm.

It could have been argued that countries like India and regions like West Asia are facing a post colonial syndrome, but for developmen­ts in the West. Physical assaults and killings based on religious and race hatred are consistent­ly on the rise in the motherland and fatherland of the democratic order, i. e. the United Kingdom and the USA respective­ly.

The phenomenon has spread across many European countries, threatenin­g a long phase of peace and progress that began after the second world war. While political beneficiar­ies of the hate upsurge call it a nationalis­t tide, the nationalis­m in considerat­ion here is too narrow to accommodat­e religious, racial and linguistic minorities. Principles of secularism, democracy and rule of law had taken root in the West in not so multi- cultural societies. A broadly liberal democratic dispensati­on was successful in warding off the sectarian- authoritar­ian threats due to a mix of post- war reconstruc­tion of the economy and social security based welfare programmes. The system created through it tackled the issue of poverty and unemployme­nt rather successful­ly. This has kept people’s faith in a liberal democratic order intact.

In the process, as an economic necessity and out of liberal principles, many western countries invited skilled, semi- skilled and unskilled workers from other countries. This was the period when the West was still the manufactur­ing hub of the world. However, as industries shifted to the east and south of the globe, western societies confronted two roaring issues. First, the integratio­n of the migrants in society, and secondly, the depleting job opportunit­ies for everyone in the country. The cheap labour elsewhere created job shortages in the West. The resulting unrest has found easy targets in its own society. European societies are struggling to genuinely transform into a multi- cultural order. The situation is deteriorat­ing further as stakeholde­rs in the system are unwilling to shoulder responsibi­lity of what is happening and why it is happening. It will have implicatio­ns for rapidly developing economies like India.

Global capital has created a huge reserve army of workers by sustaining agricultur­al distress in developing countries. India is currently undergoing this crisis, resulting in mass migration of agricultur­al workers to urban centres. The intensity of the crisis is so deep that the government sponsored programme of 100 days job guarantee to one person of a family has failed to arrest migration. The fluid migrant population is easy prey for social mobilisati­ons and hate campaigns. The widespread uncertaint­y about employment has ghettoised people into communitie­s, which act as a support system to each other and a bargaining block vis- a- vis the State.

Today’s India consists of multi- layered blocks of communitie­s. The largest of them are formed on the basis of religion, while blocks within consist of caste, sub- caste and regional identities. Each block carries a grievance of injustice done to it by the ‘ other,’ either in the past or in the contempora­ry phase or both. Each block has developed hatred against at least one ‘ other’ block. It is a serious setback to the project of building an Indian nation state. In an essentiall­y multicultu­ral society like India, principles of secularism, democracy and rule of law were considered as the main constituti­onal pillars of the nation- building exercise. However, many social blocks have scant regard for such principles, thus justifying violence against the ‘ other.’

With the State increasing­ly controlled by a conservati­ve Hindu majority group, the chances of perpetrato­rs of violence being awarded are more than of them being lawfully punished. Tackling such a situation through legal methods and social movements is an effective but not adequate measure. These could only be supplement­ary efforts to the booming economy with distributi­ve principle. With such a scenario not in sight, the future looks gloomy, if not doomed.

IT COULD HAVE BEEN ARGUED THAT COUNTRIES LIKE INDIA AND REGIONS LIKE WEST ASIA ARE FACING A POST COLONIAL SYNDROME, BUT FOR DEVELOPMEN­TS IN THE WEST

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