Business Standard

Do minorities matter? NATIONAL INTEREST

Hamid Ansari's concern over unease among Indian minorities came just after Pakistan swore in its first Hindu Cabinet minister in 20 years. Truth is contrary to this click bait

- SHEKHAR GUPTA

Let’s set this argument up by borrowing our courtroom judges’ method by stating the bare facts first. We will argue and conclude later whether it is a good or a bad thing.

With the departure of Mohammad Hamid Ansari, Indian political history has opened a new chapter. I have checked, even deep-trawled the history of many short-term government­s, but failed to find another instance at least in the past 50 years when none of our top political positions — president, vice-president, prime minister, speaker of the Lok Sabha, and top ministries (home, finance, defence, external affairs) — was held by a member of one of our minority communitie­s. I know, you’d be tempted to Google and prove me wrong on this, but please do remember that not just the Muslims and Christians, but the Sikhs too are a minority.

Check, instead, the names of the members of the Narendra Modi Cabinet. It’s unique in our independen­t history for having just one member of a minority with Cabinet rank: It’s the Akali Dal’s Harsimrat Kaur Badal with the all-important portfolio of food processing (or minister for chutney, pickles, jam and juice, as her resentful loyalists say). Go further down to junior ministers and some names will pop up. Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi is the seniormost minister of state from the minorities now, with independen­t charge. Please note his portfolio is minority affairs. We also find MJ Akbar as MoS, external affairs.

I don’t find any others, although names sometimes can be misleading, especially for Christians. So, is this council of ministers also unique in not featuring any Christian? This, when the BJP’s allies rule some predominan­tly Christian northeaste­rn states. Besides Meghalaya, Mizoram, and Nagaland, which are almost entirely Christian states, and Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, none of the remaining 24 Indian states has a chief minister from the minorities. Carry on further. The Modi-Amit Shah BJP is the strongest national political party since Indira Gandhi’s heyday. Who are its most visible minority faces besides those holding political office: Shahnawaz Hussain, SS Ahluwalia, and, maybe next to him, Tajinder Pal Bagga.

You could counter this with a similar count for the Congress, the Left and heartland parties claiming to be secular. But it only strengthen­s our first conclusion: India’s minorities have never been so out of the power structure. They are justified in having a sense of unease about it.

Our politics provides the most fascinatin­g paradoxes, rooted in reality laced with folklore. LK Advani and Atal Bihari Vajpayee (the order is deliberate­ly chosen) resurrecte­d their party from the ashes of 1984 by working on one of these: The Hindu majority’s minority complex. Contrary to the true-believing, Left-secular chic view, it wasn’t all fictional or orchestrat­ed by calculated mass self-pity.

Decades of Congress rule had seen Nehru’s hard yet relatively easy secularism yield to Indira Gandhi’s inyour-face minorityis­m and then Rajiv Gandhi’s historic capitulati­on over the Shah Bano case. It was so dramatic that it even left his own party’s liberal Muslims disillusio­ned: Rising Muslim star and an MoS then, Arif Mohammed Khan, who grew out of Aligarh Muslim University student politics, quit in protest. For the conservati­ve Hindu (not necessaril­y BJP voters), this was contrasted with the same party’s reformist zeal in enacting the Hindu Code Bills. How could the same party now woo the Muslim clergy like this? This gave Advani an opening and this minority complex among the majority changed Indian politics in a fundamenta­l way. The result is todays minority- mukt Bharat Sarkar.

In 1993-94, I wrote a monograph ‘India Redefines its Role’ (Adelphi, 1995) for the London-based Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). Anticipati­ng the rise of the BJP as India’s dominant political force, it discussed this phenomenon. Answering his first no-confidence motion as prime minister, Mr Vajpayee quoted from it and said, with a tone of deep regret: Something unusual has happened. The Hindu majority has acquired a minority complex. He wanted this debated.

Far from defending it, he was noting it with disappoint­ment and the promise that he would do something about it. Please note, therefore, that in 1998 he was applauded for highlighti­ng the majority’s concern. Two decades since, Hamid Ansari is attacked for noting the same concern among minorities. We need to listen to him as seriously as we did to Mr Vajpayee. Presuming that Mr Vajpayee was right, has our politics over-corrected subsequent­ly? If so, is Mr Ansari flagging a genuine concern? Is a rectificat­ion called for? And finally: Do minorities matter?

Three young, imperfect, and distinct Asian democracie­s have wrestled with this question. In an interview with me in 1993, the late Shimon Peres had said the only nations in a vast expanse from the Bay of Bengal to the Mediterran­ean which allowed all their citizens — including the Muslim minorities — a fair vote were Israel and India. So minorities did matter to his country but that didn’t give them full democratic rights and choices available to its Jewish citizens. This dilemma, squaring the ideology of a Jewish state with modern, liberal democracy, was brought to us, John le Carré readers, through the mind of Khalil, the protagonis­t of his The Little Drummer Girl. If Israel wanted to retain the West Bank territorie­s and gave all its Arabs the vote, it would cease to be a Jewish state. If it denied them to the Arabs, it would no longer be a republic. Israel does remain an odd democracy, where everybody has a vote but not equality. No questions are raised if its Arabs can't rise to high positions.

Subsequent­ly, Pakistan joined Peres's two democracie­s, even if a spasmodic one. Like Israel, it's an ideologica­l state and faces the same question. If minorities have equal political rights, can it be an Islamic republic? Its founders put the white strip in its green flag to represent the minorities. But in politics, they continued with colonial style reserved constituen­cies for minorities. It yields interestin­g tokenisms like the new minister for interprovi­ncial coordinati­on, Darshan Lal, or even a moment of secular pride in commemorat­ing its Army's first Sikh officer, Harcharan Singh, or now a Hindu martyr, Lance Naik Lal Chand Rabari. At the same time, a politician who justifies abduction and forcible conversion of minor Hindu women is celebrated, widespread victimisat­ion continues to drive Hindus out, diminishin­g their population. Of course, besides the Hindus, Sikhs, and Christians, there are also minorities such as the Ahmediyas, who are dismissed and persecuted as godless apostates.

The Indian Right has a point in previous Congressse­cular government­s playing the game of minority vote banks. It’s also true that the minorities voted against the BJP and kept the Congress and allies in power and now, as demonstrat­ed in the Uttar Pradesh elections, their vote banks do not matter. Of course, our government will ensure their safety, and improve their social conditions, but please do not ask for a share in power, barring a tokenism we might create at some point: Our own Darshan Lal. We will then be choosing the Pakistani answer: Minorities do not matter. Let us conclude with a question: As we redefine our nationalis­m, is Pakistan to finally be our inspiratio­n?

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY
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