I
do not want to
belittle the Bhartiya Janata Party’s victory in
Karnataka state election which has given it a
foothold in the South for the first time since
independence. My contention is that every such
success lessens the space for secularism in
India. When the chips are down, the BJP
represents Hindutva and all that goes with it.
The Congress may be opportunist in outlook,
dynastic in attitude and authoritarian in
approach, its ethos is secular. It represents
pluralism which was also the characteristic of
freedom struggle.
The BJP has over
the past few years hewn a path which circumvents
the Muslim community. The party did not field a
single Muslim candidate in Karnataka, Gujarat or
a couple of other states where it fought
elections in the last one and a half years. This
seems to be the party’s new policy. Muslims are
roughly 15 per cent in the country. Still the
BJP has preferred to ignore them. They do not
fit into the scheme of India the party has in
view.
I am not
suggesting that the BJP does not have Muslims as
members. A couple of them are even
office-bearers at its central organisational
setup. Yet, the image of the BJP is that of a
party which is anything but secular. Its
constant, close links with the RSS makes the BJP
still more suspect because the Sangh dictum is:
Hindi-Hindu-Hindustan.
This is not a
healthy development in a society which is
constitutionally pluralistic and which is
vehemently opposed to the two-nation theory. No
doubt, the Congress is the most to blame because
communal forces over the years have thrived at
its expense. The party leaders, if they have the
courage to speak out, must analyse why the
Congress has lost its secular credentials. When
a leader of the Nationalist Congress party, the
Congress ally, proposes a joint government with
the BJP at the centre and when RSS chief
Sudarshan endorses the suggestion, the Congress
must wake up to the general perception that it
is not very different from the BJP.
The
larger question which the country must face is
why secularism is shrinking in the country. That
the obsession of caste considerations is driving
out the interest of community is largely true.
Elections are fought primarily on the caste
basis. But why the Congress has never projected
the class, an economic conglomeration, to defeat
the caste? It looks as if the party’s own
commitment to socialism and pluralism has got
eroded. In a way, this is natural in a party
where the decision-making process gets confined
to a few and when the upper middle class frames
the policy. History is replete with examples
where a top person has changed the thinking of
people, with disastrous results.
What
about the other non-BJP parties? The Congress is
not the country. All secular forces, big or
small, have to think how to refurbish the value
of pluralism which is losing its appeal. Getting
together of pluralistic parties is worth a while
in political terms so that the secular votes
don’t split. However, the challenge is moral. A
nation traversing the path of constructing a
secular polity is sought to be pushed towards a
direction which is divisive, destructive and
communal. It is not the structure that faces the
danger. It is the very existence of the polity
which has come to have a question mark against
it. Why has the country even after 60 years of
its rule failed to implant firmly pluralism
which has the topmost priority?
India
is proud of democracy. The system is based on
the participation of all, equally and
unequivocally. There is no majoritism or
minoritism. Hindus, Muslims, Christians, Sikhs
or Parsis are limbs which provide nourishment to
the body politic. How and for how long can it
stay healthy if some limbs are discarded or
considered inferior for use? Pluralism and
democracy are two sides of the same coin. When
separated the religion with all its
exclusiveness and bias takes over.
Sometimes I wonder whether Hindutava is creeping
in slowly and relentlessly. That may well have
been the reason why the BJP did not communalise
the election campaign in Karnataka and had no
hesitation in getting Narendera Modi of Gujarat
carnage fame electioneering for more than a
week. The party had kept him away in some
earlier elections. Modi represents the
anti-thesis of pluralism. After all, he is the
successor to L.K.Advani, the BJP’s candidate for
the post of Prime Minister, as the latter has
publicly said.
Muslim extremists only aggravate the situation
because they strengthen the BJP and its type of
thinking when they indulge in bomb blasts or
help the outsiders to do so and provide them
with shelter. An SMS sent on mobile telephones
after the blasts at Jaipur was:Muslims are not
terrorists but terrorists are Muslims. This went
to the houses of Hindu middle class.
Some Muslims
organisations are doing a commendable job in
holding public meetings and seminars, denouncing
terrorism. But extolling the virtues of Islam
from the same platform does not mix well. They
are confusing the public. Terrorism per se
is reprehensible. On the other hand, the
harassment of Muslim youth in the name of
fighting terrorism is instilling fear and a
sense of insecurity into the community. A
Muslim lawyer had a tough time at Faizabad court
in UP the other day when he appeared for
terrorist suspects. The bar had asked all
lawyers not to defend them.
Yet, the basic
question that Karnataka has thrown up remains
unanswered. Is the Congress saleable as an
alternative in the country? It has lost six
states in a row in the last 18 months. Party
president Sonia Gandhi is a crowd puller. But
the crowd does not seem to be getting translated
into votes. Can the ruling United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) be projected with different
constituents?
At present, the
Left is part of the UPA. Understandably, the
Left wants to contest on its own. What about
other non-BJP parties? Some of them have joined
hands with the BJP in forming governments both
at the centre and in the states. A few are still
members of a coalition they jointly run.
The Lok Sabha elections are only 11 months away.
Some combinations are being discussed behind the
scenes. Let the example of former Prime Minister
Deve Gowda be not repeated. He first cheated the
Congress, then the BJP and is now available to
the highest bidder. This is the time for the
parties to show their commitment. They may have
to retrieve the Congress. A country which is
proud to call itself secular cannot be left at
the mercy of one party which is committed more
to power and less to pluralism.