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Being Muslim in India Today: Some Reflections
 
By Yoginder Sikand 
The Milli Gazette Online 
8 September 2006   
Communal prejudices, already deeply-rooted in the minds of most Indians, have 
been further reinforced owing to a series of events and developments in recent 
years, both at home and abroad. These prejudices are almost universal in India, 
and the state has never seriously sought to counter them except by pious 
proclamations of 'Hindu-Muslim Unity', 'Respect for All Religions' and so on. 
Being thus left largely unchallenged, these prejudices, actively promoted by 
various right-wing, conservative and traditionalist religious groups, have 
succeeded in preventing the emergence of a truly secular society.
 Anti-Muslim prejudice and what is now called 'Islamophobia' are not a new 
phenomena, but these have received a tremendous boost in recent years. The 
attacks of 9/11, the blasts in Benaras, Delhi and Mumbai and the continuing 
conflict in Kashmir have further fuelled the flames of hatred and prejudice 
against Muslims among many Hindus, so much so that the claim that Islam preaches 
terrorism, hatred for other religions and their adherents, misogyny, disloyalty 
to states where Muslims are not a majority or the ruling community and so on, 
actively propagated by Hindutva forces, has become an integral part of the 
social 'common sense' of a vast number of non-Muslim Indians. This has been 
facilitated by ever-expanding media networks, few of which are controlled by 
Muslims, and many of which have clear Hindutva affiliations. The US-led 'war on 
terror' is only further exacerbating this, with Hindutva forces and large 
sections of the Hindu-owned Indian media lending support to what many Muslims 
see is an all-out war directed against Islam and Muslims in general.
 
 The recent series of violent attacks have been used to tar all Muslims with the 
same brush, as essentially terrorists or potential terrorists. In the case of 
some of these attacks the actual perpetrators remain unknown but they are 
somehow automatically assumed by the non-Muslim media to have been the handiwork 
of Muslims. In the case of certain violent attacks where certain Muslims were 
indeed responsible, the underlying causes for growing resentment among Muslims, 
a host of economic and political factors, are ignored, and Islam itself comes to 
be projected as the underlying reason. Thus, for instance, supposing the recent 
Mumbai blasts were indeed the handiwork of a group of Muslims (a claim made by 
the media but not as yet fully ascertained), the fact that the slaughter of some 
three thousand innocent Muslims in Gujarat in a state-organised pogrom might 
have something to do with the anger that motivated the perpetrators has been 
totally ignored. Rather, most newspapers claim, it is simply the _expression of 
an uncontrollable and blind rage, of irrepressible intolerance and hatred of 
non-Muslims that, they argue, Islam allegedly preaches. No such attribution to 
Hinduism was made, of course, when Hindu mobs embarked on that bloody slaughter 
of Muslims in Gujarat or in the case of innumerable cases of such violence prior 
to the Gujarat genocide, in which the principal victims were Muslims. Likewise, 
the killings of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, Afghans, Koreans, Vietnamese 
and so on by American forces has never been attributed by the media to 
Christianity. One wonders why Muslims must be singled out as an exception in 
this regard.
 
 What of the rich contributions of Muslims to the country's composite culture? In 
large measure, this is now given mere lip-sympathy to, being 'mummified' and 
confined to museums and mushairas, and presented as a sort of exotic add-on to 
what is presented as 'Indian culture', which is defined in essentially 
Brahminical Hindu terms. But if Hindutva leaders were to have their way, even 
this ritual recognition would cease, and the cultural contributions of the 
Indian Muslims would either be destroyed or else appropriated and presented as 
actually 'Hindu', in the same way as, for instance, the Dravidian gods, Buddha, 
Kabir and Nanak later came to be heralded as 'Hindu' in order to negate their 
challenge to the Brahminical system. A classic case of Hindutva denial of the 
Muslim contribution to India's culture relates to the Taj Mahal, with Hindutva 
ideologues now insisting that it was actually 'Tejo Mahalya', a supposedly 
Rajput Hindu palace, and that Delhi's famed Mughal Red Fort was, in fact, the 
Hindu 'Lal Kot'.
 
 The most effective means to dissolve communal prejudices is through close 
personal interaction between people of different communities, in the course of 
which people begin to discover their common humanity, transcending narrow 
religious barriers. Although such interaction does take place between many 
Hindus and Muslims, in some communally-mixed workplaces and schools, scope for 
this is contracting. Muslims are being forced, through compulsion, fear, the 
need for security, poverty and mounting anti-Muslim prejudice, to move into 
their own neglected and squalid ghettos, obviously much to the satisfaction of 
communal forces, both Hindu and Muslim, who thrive on such geographical, in 
addition to religious, separation.
 
 Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have a vital role to play in bringing 
together people of different communities to work on issues of common concern, 
such as economic and educational development and empowerment, and in the 
process, promoting inter-community interaction and countering communal 
stereotypes. One would have thought that in the face of growing anti-Muslim 
feelings in the country NGOs would have taken up this issue with the seriousness 
that it deserves. This, however, has not happened on a significant scale, for 
several reasons. In north India especially, Muslims have few such organizations 
and most of them work for Muslims alone. Further, most Muslim NGOs are religious 
charities devoted to Islamic education. This is both a result as well as a cause 
of the influence of the ulama, who, given the miniscule Muslim middle class, are 
able to present themselves as authoritative spokesmen of the entire Muslim 
community. And, given the insular sort of training that they receive, the ulama 
and the NGOs that they run are not best equipped to promote better relations 
with others. On the other hand, relatively few non-Muslim NGOs work with Muslims 
as a community, Muslims typically not being seen by these groups as a 
marginalized group in the same way as as Dalits or Adiviasis are, although the 
living conditions of most Muslims are almost as pathetic as theirs. The work of 
many of the few non-Muslim NGOs that are engaged with Muslims as a community is 
often limited simply to promoting communal harmony, ignoring, unconsciously or 
otherwise, the crucial issue of Muslim economic and educational empowerment, the 
lack of which is responsible, in part, for sustaining the authority of 
conservative religious groups among sections of the Muslim community, which, in 
turn, further strengthens negative stereotypes about Muslims.
 
 The implications for mounting anti-Muslim sentiments for India as a whole, and 
not just for Muslims alone, are frightening, to say the least. Conservative 
'upper' caste Hindu forces are actively fanning these prejudices among 
marginalized 'lower' castes so as to use them as foot-soldiers in organized 
anti-Muslim pogroms. Consequently, these marginalized castes are being subtly 
co-opted, their attention being turned from their real oppressors onto the 
imaginary and carefully constructed 'menacing other' in the form of Muslims. The 
dangerous consequences that this has for the struggles of Dalit, Adivasis and 
Other Backward Castes for their rights and empowerment are enormous. As the 
'Muslim question' comes to dominate media discourses, the continued oppression 
of the 'low' castes, the social and economic mounting inequalities in the 
country, the ruling classes' nexus with imperialist forces and so on, are all 
being deliberately displaced from public consciousness. And as anti-Muslim 
hatred is being so actively fanned at the same time as India is being sold to 
Western multinational corporations, Hindutva forces, who never tire of 
proclaiming themselves as super-patriots, appear least concerned about the 
prospects of civil war and continuous bloodshed that their actions are designed 
to promote.
 
 That said, the general Muslim response to mounting Islamophobia has met with 
little success. Muslims are now forced on the defensive and somehow feel forced 
to prove their patriotism. Islam does not preach terrorism, Muslim leaders now 
tirelessly argue, but since Muslim organizations have few links with the 
non-Muslim media, and because large sections of this media have no interest in 
countering negative stereotypes about Muslims, these claims generally fall on 
deaf ears. The Urdu media, where these voices are mainly articulated, is read 
almost entirely by Muslims alone, and so non-Muslims are left unaware of Muslims 
seeking to clear Muslims of charges of 'terrorism'. Muslim organisations lack a 
proper media policy, being run almost entirely by conservative ulama, whose 
knowledge of the complexities of the real world, including the media, is 
limited, to say the least. The ulama's insistence that Muslims, by definition, 
cannot be terrorists because the Quran lays down that to take the life of an 
innocent is like slaying the whole of humanity has few non-Muslim takers, for 
non-Muslims have plenty of groups to point to, in South Asia and elsewhere, who 
define themselves as 'Islamic' and who seek to justify their actions in the name 
of Islam. Middle class Muslims, who might have played the role of countering 
anti-Islamic media discourses more effectively because of their different 
cultural capital, are, by and large, silent, content with their quest for 
material comfort, having little or no organic links with the community at 
large.
 
 For the general masses of the Muslims, mostly of 'low' caste background, mired 
in desperate poverty and illiteracy, the mounting wave of Islamophobia, 
occasioned, in part, by the actions of self-styled champions of Islam, has meant 
even less hope for their myriad social and economic problems to be addressed. 
The media insists that Muslims themselves are responsible for their plight and 
that the main cause of their 'backwardness' is not, as the case really is, the 
macro-structures of heavily unequal distribution of and access to resources and 
assets, further skewed by economic 'liberalisation' and 'globalisation'. 
Instead, it is argued, the fundamental causes of Muslim 'backwardness' are what 
are labeled as 'medieval madrasas' 'obscurantist mullahs' and radical Islamists. 
Hence, it is asserted, Muslim 'backwardness' does not require active state 
intervention, but, instead, can be 'cured' only if the ulama and their madrasas 
are 'reformed' and if Muslims take on the Islamists. In this way, both the cause 
of and the solution to Muslim 'backwardness' are sought by the media to be 
firmly located internally, within the Muslim community, as if state policies, 
international factors and anti-Muslim discrimination have nothing to do with 
this. This argument, tagged on to the growing indifference to the 
marginalisation of the Muslim masses promoted by mounting anti-Muslim propaganda 
in India and in the West, has made it increasingly difficult for Indian Muslims 
to press their claims on the state for economic, educational and political 
empowerment.
 
 To add to this is the fact that as anti-Muslim feelings grow, conservative 
Muslim religious forces, too, receive a shot in the arm as a reaction, 
presenting themselves as saviours of Islam and representatives of all Muslims. 
And so the vicious circle of competing brands of religious conservatism and 
fundamentalism feeding on each other gets continually reinforced.
 
 * The author works with the Centre for Jawaharlal Nehru Studies, Jamia Millia 
Islamia, New Delhi. He moderates an online discussion group called "South Asian 
Leftists Dialoguing With Religion" (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/saldwr/)
   
http://www.milligazette.com/dailyupdate/2006/20060908_Muslim_india_reality_reflections.htm     |