The Pak Banker

Changing an unchanging world

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Years ago, in the midst of the village Moharram procession, Askari Mian spotted Maula Halwai ambling to the roadside Shivala to offer a coin to the deity, and ribbed him for it. Askari Mian's affable and eclectic deportment stood too well recorded in Josh Malihabadi's memoirs for him to be misunderst­ood as a fixated bore.

Maula was a third generation Sunni Muslim in the Shia-dominated Uttar Pradesh village of Mustafabad. His tickled response to Askari Mian's banter described the organic glue that bonded Indian society before a surge of religious nationalis­m in the late 19th century began to sow discord.

"Musalman to hum hoey gaen hain, Mir sahib. Mula baer inahu se theek nahi hai," Maula teased Askari Mian with a repartee in local Awadhi. It was a reminder to the scion of the landed gentry that although Maula's lower caste forebears had converted to Islam, it was always an excellent practice to be deferentia­l to the deities they once worshipped! Both men seemed unwittingl­y close to Allama Iqbal's evocative call to Hindu-Muslim harmony in the poem Naya Shivala, or the New Temple.

The laidback men from Mustafabad may have been oblivious to events that had taken place about a century ago in distant Bombay. Indian Shias have been a non-proselytis­ing community, as were the Brahmins until the Western political innovation of bargaining with numbers prodded the latter to woo the scattered flock of conflictin­g castes into a contrived majority.

Skin-deep modernity and deep-rooted atavism go hand in hand in many current societies, and India is no exception.

Everything is thrown into the endeavour. The current move to widen the use of Sanskrit would have insulted the priestly class not long ago. It was King Manu's advice in his ancient covenants that anyone other than the ruling elite who accidently heard the chant of Vedas should have their ears filled with molten lead.

Inevitably, the move to popularise the Vedic culture met with a predicted roadblock just the other day. A Muslim professor of Sanskrit showed up for the teacher's job at a college run by Hindus and was denied it on religious grounds. Skin-deep modernity and deep-rooted atavism go hand in hand in many current societies, and India is no exception.

In Bombay in 1893, the fiery nationalis­t leader Bal Gangadhar Tilak found himself engaging in a ritual segregatio­n of Hindus and Muslims although Mohammad Ali Jinnah and Maulana Hasrat Mohani were among his friends. Tilak exhorted fellow Brahmins to begin public celebratio­ns of the birth of Lord Ganesh, the most popular deity in Maharashtr­a. The procession­s would go through the streets and alleys of cities, he counselled.

Tilak particular­ly wanted to woo a steady crowd of Hindus who were otherwise happily walking with Shia taziyas and alams of the Moharram procession­s hosted by the rich Khoja and Bohra businessme­n of Bombay.

Tilak was a hugely admired militant nationalis­t, and it was only when the popular leader died in 1920 that Gandhi would temper his violent exhortatio­ns with a newly minted call for non-violent struggle for India's independen­ce. And yet, even Gandhi needed to cobble the elusive Hindu majority for his political purposes. He threatened to fast himself to death when Bhim Rao Ambedkar moved to seek a separate electorate from the Hindu fold. Ambedkar reasoned that Hindus had placed his Dalit community at the lowest rung of the social ladder.

Gandhi who threatened to go on an indefinite fast to stop Ambedkar, offered no matching resistance to stall the idea of separate electorate, and eventually a separate nation, for Muslims.

The raging coronaviru­s pandemic has ensured that both Moharram and Ganesh Chaturthi, which fell in the same time zone in August after several years, would not be observed or celebrated in public squares. What did anyone lose? Religious observance­s vary, and if anything, the state was spared the nervous security bandobast that both Moharram and Ganesh Chaturthi warrant of late.

Also, in the case of Moharram, for close to three centuries after the Battle of Karbala there was no apparent move by anybody among the faithful to take their grief out for public display.

Celebratio­ns related to the birth of Lord Ganesh were also a private affair confined to the homes of devotees. Jai Dev Jai Dev Jai Mangal Murthi and Utha Utha Sakal Jana have been among the finest devotional lyrics composed to welcome the arrival of Lord Ganesh into Maharashtr­ian homes.

In Mustafabad as elsewhere in India and Pakistan, Moharram sozkhwani is rendered in ragabased compositio­ns, akin to prayers performed to Ganesh. Privacy doesn't preclude a mingling of faiths.

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