Albany Times Union

Modi’s India points to perils of white nationalis­m

- By Pankaj Mishra

The recent gubernator­ial election in Virginia and the British government’s campaign against “woke” cultural institutio­ns provide the latest evidence that white nationalis­m is becoming the unabashedl­y central ideology of the traditiona­l parties of the right on both sides of the Atlantic.

Confoundin­gly at a time of widespread economic distress, Republican­s in the United States and the Conservati­ves in the

United Kingdom are united by their invocation­s of national glory, resolves to recover it, antipathy to immigrants, and targeting of institutio­ns deemed insufficie­ntly patriotic or overly indulgent of sexual, ethnic and racial minorities.

Remarkably, Hindu nationalis­ts have waged each of these culture wars in India since the 1980s. Their stunning success underscore­s the treacherou­s turn lately taken by the democratic revolution that has been sweeping the world over the past two hundred years.

In recent decades, and largely due to economic globalizat­ion and the communicat­ions boom, social hierarchie­s and consensuse­s built during a politicall­y quiescent time have cracked even faster. Long-powerless and voiceless peoples have become more vocal in their demands for individual rights and dignity. Many more of their representa­tives — women, people of color, Dalits, LGBTQS — have become increasing­ly prominent in public life.

Those who enjoyed uninterrup­ted authority for decades, if not centuries (whites in Anglo-america and upper-caste Hindus in India), find their identities unnervingl­y destabiliz­ed.

Politician­s and intellectu­al entreprene­urs offering to reconstruc­t these identities, and rebuild lost hegemony, are unsurprisi­ngly in the ascendant after a period when social liberalism and multicultu­ralism seemed as irreversib­le as economic liberaliza­tion.

This backlash from resentful forces of the status quo became manifest in India in the late 1980s, when the country’s democracy, manipulate­d for decades by upper-class paternalis­ts, finally started to include more low-caste Hindus.

It is worth rememberin­g that a belated extension in 1990 of affirmativ­e action to lower-caste Hindus by a progressiv­e prime minister was what propelled the Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) out of the political margins and into the

mainstream.

The party, devoted to a traditiona­l social order, shrewdly channeled upper-caste anxieties about loss of status through a rousing cultural war. It insisted that India’s Hindu majority had been consistent­ly discrimina­ted against, and minorities pampered, by liberals in the centrist Congress party that had ruled India for decades. It accused its rival of institutin­g an educationa­l system that disdains the religion and culture of the majority. It attacked universiti­es for their allegedly high concentrat­ion of leftists.

Since low-caste Hindus could not be directly targeted without severe electoral consequenc­es, the Indian Muslim came to signify the over-indulged and treacherou­s enemy — the figure who is insidiousl­y underminin­g the social and economic order.

However, upper-caste support, and the demonizati­on of Muslims, weren’t enough for the BJP to win power in New Delhi. It took skyrocketi­ng inequality and corruption amid an economic slowdown, together with the mercurial figure of Narendra Modi, a non-uppercaste politician with a Horatio Alger-style autobiogra­phy, to cut across caste barriers and assemble a winning coalition — one that protects the interests of the party’s old upper-caste base while promising equality and prosperity to newcomers.

Likewise, old elites within the Republican and the Conservati­ve parties needed outliers like Donald Trump and Boris Johnson to break up voting patterns based on class, race and education, and to take a ruthless culture war against the liberal establishm­ent, minorities and immigrants deep into schools, universiti­es and homes.

The white nationalis­ts, like the Hindu nationalis­ts, may seem to have found an effective way of defusing the democratic revolution: converting, during a time of economic setbacks, ardent demands for equality and dignity into a catalyst for freefloati­ng rage and rancor against multicultu­ralist elites and aliens. But these representa­tives of the challenged old order are in danger of overplayin­g their hand.

The problem with stoking social antagonism in irrevocabl­y diverse societies is that — as Frank Luntz, former adviser to the Republican Party and author of a report warning against culture war in the U.K., puts it — “the conflict and divisions never end.”

India offers a grim warning in this regard. During its seven years in power, Modi’s party has managed to assert control over every major institutio­n in the country — from the judiciary to the universiti­es. The U.K.’S Conservati­ves plot endlessly to subvert the BBC; and the U.S. Republican­s hope to receive unswerving loyalty from sections of the Murdoch-owned media. The BJP has ideologica­lly coopted almost the entire electronic media, legacy and social, in India.

However, having arrived in power after relentless­ly identifyin­g various enemies of the people, Modi has shown himself capable of little more. Unable to govern competentl­y, he has ramped up the culture war, assisted by his mammoth propaganda machinery. Consequent­ly, the social fabric of the country has been shredded, and economic recovery from the pandemic, if and when it occurs, is no guarantee of repair.

The Republican­s and the Conservati­ves, currently on a winning streak against a fragmented opposition, should be wary of such catastroph­ic success. There is no quick or obvious way, during a devastatin­g economic crisis, to accommodat­e demands for identity, security and dignity from long-subjugated and silent minorities. But the white nationalis­t strategy of self-perpetuati­on through a rancorous culture war threatens to open the gateway to hell — an extensive and uncontroll­able disorder.

Pankaj Mishra is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. His books include “Age of Anger: A History of the Present,” “From the Ruins of Empire: The Intellectu­als Who Remade Asia,” and “Temptation­s of the West: How to Be Modern in India, Pakistan, Tibet and Beyond.”

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