Khaleej Times

Bigotry should have no place in secular India

- Mustafa al Zarooni —malzarooni@khaleejtim­es.com

Humanity is afflicted by an old disease that has claimed more victims than almost any epidemic. This disease targets the minds of people with nervous thoughts, sows biases and prejudices against people, thoughts, communitie­s, or certain set of beliefs.

It is called hate, bigotry, intoleranc­e for different views. Minds filled a jaundiced view of life know no reasoning. They lack compassion, empathy, kindness — traits that help societies become tolerant and progressiv­e in a real sense.

But there’s no reasoning with biased minds. The bigotry often leads to bitterness, which then morphs into intoleranc­e and rage that cares little for people. There is no respect for even women and children. The power of weapons rather than dialogue is used to prove the point. There are no middle grounds, only conflicts ensue. This is how societies get embroiled in civil wars, losing all semblance of progress and civility.

We are seeing examples of such behaviour in many societies. In our connected world, we become aware of such behaviours instantly. There are tweets, messages, statements of people voicing their prejudice. There’s unabashed commentary, and little respect for others, and a lot of this is perhaps done to gain power, political or otherwise, or seek influence among a wider audience. Hate speech is employed to sway views.

One of the societies exhibiting such behaviour is India, a land that has been plagued with sectariani­sm for decades. Its partition in 1947 was based on religious difference­s. India was divided into two, the mainland, and Pakistan. More than two decades later, a further division of Pakistan led to the creation of Bangladesh.

India is a secular country, yet some of its political factions have created divisions based on religion for their own gains. Over the years appeasemen­t policies have hardened views, made people bitter, and some left with the feeling that justice is only for a few. Resentment among a few quarters has led to the rise of militancy and conflicts.

Political parties and leaders in India should respect the country’s secular credential­s, especially the RSS, an organisati­on that has been vocal about subjugatin­g the Muslims in the country.

I respect that this is India’s internal matter, but I feel the pain of hundreds of thousands when I see tweets, messages, pictures on social media of Muslims

being treated badly in the country. It won’t be long before such divisivene­ss and sectariani­sm explodes so bad that it won’t just bruise India but also the region around it.

Political leaders should amicably settle difference­s. They should be responsibl­e for their statements, and decorum while in public. Their tone, words are powerful. They can inspire people to unite, or further widen the gulf based on religions and beliefs.

There is beauty in tolerance, in unity, in solidarity. As countries across the world battle the pandemic, we are realising the importance of such values all the more. It is important to re-educate societies and encourage people to be together, to fight together, and emerge stronger from this crisis. And this arguably can only be done by a country’s legislativ­e and judiciary. No one should be immune to bigotry. Hate speech must be a crime in any civil society. A strict judicial system and laws should be followed and offenders must be prosecuted.

There’s no reasoning with biased minds. The bigotry often leads to bitterness, which then morphs into intoleranc­e and rage that cares little for people.

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