Tuesday, 10 October 2017

Gandhian Strategies for combating Communalism

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was a man of millennium ‘who imparts the lesson of truth, Non- violence and peace. The philosophy and ideology is relevant still today. The philosophy of Gandhi was based on truth, sacrifice, non- violence selfless service and cooperation. In modern times, nonviolent methods of action have been a powerful tool for social protest. According to Gandhi one should be brave and not a coward. He should present his views, suggestions and thoughts without being violent. One should fight a war with the weapons of truth and non violence. Gandhi said that, There is no god higher than truth. According to Gandhi‘s thoughts non- violence is ultimate solution of every kind of problem in the world. Gandhi was single person who fought against the British with the weapons of truth and Non-violence by persuading countrymen to walk on the path of non-violence. Gandhi leading a decades-long nonviolent struggle against British rule in India, which eventually helped India, wins its independence in 1947. By the efforts of Gandhi India became independent. Gandhi initiated non violence activities like Quit India movement and non-operation movement. Gandhi could never have done what he did alone – but with his ability to identify a seed here, a seed there and nurture it, he was able to create a forest of human change. He understood that it was not enough to be a leader, but to create leaders.
In quite simple and clear words, Gandhism consists of the ideas, which Mahatma Gandhi put forth before human world. Along with that, to the maximum possible extent, Mahatma Gandhi treated his individual life in accordance with these ideas. Clearly, Gandhism is a mixture of Gandhi‘s concepts and practices. I do not hold merely his theory to be Gandhism. The basic ground ship of Gandhism happens to be non-violence. The non-violence is the most ancient eternal value. This non-violence is the ground of ancient-most civilization and culture of India. Mahatma Gandhi said on this very account while making his concepts and practices based on non-violence: ―I have nothing new to teach you… Truth and non-violence are as old as hill. As we know, non-violence and truth are two sides of the same coin. After knowing Gandhism, it is imperative for us to know clearly the concept of non-violence also as it accords the ground for Gandhism. Gandhi‘s importance in the political world scenario is twofold. First, he retrieved non-violence as a powerful political tool and secondly manifestation of a higher spiritual goal, culmination in world peace. For Gandhi, means were as important as the end and there could be only one means - that of non-violence. As a situation opposite to violence is non-violence, we can firmly state, ―Total non-violence consists in not hurting some other one‘s intellect, speech or action per own thought, utterance or deeds and not to deprive some one of his life.‖ Mahatma Gandhi fully agrees with above-mentioned derivation of non-violence. He himself has said, ―Non-violence is not a concrete thing as it has generally been enunciated. Undoubtedly, it is a part of non-violence to abstain from hurting some living being, but it is only an iota pertaining to its identity. The principle of non-violence is shattered by every evil thought, false utterance, hate or wishing something bad unto someone. It is also shattered per possession of necessary worldly things. In this chain Mahatma Gandhi clarified in an edition of Young India: ―…To hurt someone, to think of some evil unto someone or to snatch one‘s life under anger or selfishness, is violence. In contrast, purest nonviolence involves a tendency and presuming towards spiritual or physical benefit unto every one without selfishness and with pure thought after cool and clear deliberations… The ultimate yardstick of violence or non-violence is the spirit behind the action. There are many examples of their use like resistance, non-violent resistance, and civil revolution. Mahatma Gandhi had to struggle in his whole life, but he never disappointed, he continued his innate faith in non-violence and his belief in the methods of Satyagraha. The significance of Satyagraha was soon accepted worldwide. Martin Luther King adopted the methods of Satyagraha in his fight against the racial discrimination of the American authorities in 1950. Gandhism is very much contextual today on this accord. It is significant. We should grasp importance of Gandhism while analyzing it.
Communalism is one of the most serious problems that India has to face after her freedom from colonial rule in the mid of 20th Century. This problem, which has existed among the followers of two principal religious communities- Hindus and Muslims – many times raised a great challenge before the secular structure of India. In the name of religion such acts have been committed that are no doubt shameful and a act of fleeing from the message of Mahatma Gandhi who lead the country to the door steps of freedom through non-violence, the sacred human value. Mahatma Gandhi devoted his entire life for propounding communal harmony. He wished in ‘India of his dream’, “I shall for an India, in which the poorest shall feel that it is their country in whose making they have an effective voice; an India in which there shall be no high class and low class of people; [and above all] an India in which all communities shall live in perfect harmony.”
Communalism is the political assertiveness of a community to maintain its identity in a plural society which is undergoing modernization. (Modernization and politics of communalism - a theoretical perspective-the American Political Review, vol.64). Communalism is generally associated with “a narrow, selfish, divisive and perspective aggressive attitude on the part of a religious group.” It is a type of blind loyalty of the people towards the community which is placed above their loyalty to the State to which they belong. In a negative sense, it is a kind of hostile attitude shown towards "other communities or religions, while living within the same body-politics.” Communalism exploits both religion and politics. Communalism is the enemy of progress, revolution, democracy and of federal nation-state building on rational scientific lines. Hence, in its totality, communalism is a “political strategy opposed to nationalism as an aggression on multi- ethnic, multi-religious and multi-lingual community."
During freedom struggle two leaders– Mahatma Gandhi and M.N. Roy took serious note of communalism and the Hindu Muslim question. Almost all other leaders under the Congress umbrella, including Jawaharlal Nehru maintained that once the British left, this problem (as also the question of human right violation caused by the hierarchical system) would be solved in no time. Gandhiji, however, often said, in most unambiguous terms, that unless these two evils are done away with, India has no right to Independence from British Raj. Ultimately he fell a victim to an intolerant cult-nationalism. Gandhiji was a religious man, and he had the same respect for other religions that he gave to his own, Hinduism. And he wanted the Hindus, as also other Indians, to follow his example and solve the Hindu Muslim question. Regrettably this approach has not helped in combating communalism.
M.N. Roy wrote a book, while in Jail in 1930-36, Historical Role of Islam with a view to solving the Hindu Muslim question. He wrote: “although Islam came to India after it had played out its progressive role, and its leadership had been wrested from the learned and cultured Arabs, the revolutionary principles of the days of its origin and ascendancy were still inscribed on its flag.” A critical study of history would reveal that Brahmanical orthodoxy having overwhelmed the Buddhist revolution; India of the eleventh and twelfth centuries must have been infested with multitudes of persecuted heretics who would eagerly welcome the message of Islam”. Roy maintained that we must be clear as to the causes of the Muslim conquest of India so that we get rid “of the prejudices that makes the orthodox Hindu Look upon his Muslim neighbor as an inferior being. Unless a radical change of attitude is brought about by a sober sense of history, the communal question will never be solved.”
Addressing the Muslims, Roy wrote: “few Muslims of our days may be conscious of the glorious part played on the stage of History by the faith they profess.” Roy therefore urged upon both Hindus and Muslims to revive the positive aspects and the creative heritage of Islamic culture. “Indians, both Hindus and Muslims”, Roy concluded, “Could profitably draw inspiration from[The] knowledge of Islam’s contribution to human culture and a proper appreciation of the Historical value of that contribution would shock the Hindus out of their arrogant self satisfaction, and cure the narrow- mindedness of the Muslims for our day by bringing them face to face with the true spirit of the faith they profess”. Our government and opinion makers must take Gandhi’s approach minus the mystique and Roy’s scientific approach to a solution of the problem seriously.
Gandhi fought for communal harmony and at last laid down his life for it. He was a devout Hindu but held equal respect for all religions and upheld the right of all the religious minority groups to profess and practice their respective religions freely at footing with the majority group. Gandhi was not opposed to the Varna or caste    based system in Hindu society, but, he insisted that it must carry no connotation of pollution or purity, which generated into the evil and offensive practice of untouchability. Another evil of the Varna system he castigated was the consignment of some castes to manual labour, carrying with it lower social esteem reserving the socially esteemed intellectual work for the others. Gandhi felt that by removing this individual distinction, a socially useful re- construction of the caste system was possible.
Communalism has been a serious threat to national integration in India. It has destroyed other three elements of modern India, such as, secularism, democracy and fraternity unity. Religious fanatic has taken the ugly shape of communal tension and riots in India, leading to the partition of India (1947), killing of Mahatma Gandhi (1948) and Smt. Indira Gandhi (1984), riots in Meerut (1987), Aligarh and Muzafarnagar (1988) and Bhagalpur (1989). Issues like Babri- Masjid and Ramjanmabhumi. Godhra incident have fomented communal tension and threatened       national integration badly. The secular Indian polity has failed to check obscurantism, religious fundamentalism and communal fanaticism which have taken the worst shape of communal violence/ riots frequented between 1947 and 2002.

Gandhian Strategies:

Though Gandhi was an orthodox Hindu even he went against the sentiments or the feelings of the Hindus in order to maintain communal harmony. The famous Vande Mataram’ song had proved an inspiration during those days. Bengali community almost worshipped the song. But when Jinnah, the president of Muslim League and a handful of his follower Muslims objected, disregarding the nationalist sentiment of the song, Gandhi put a ban on it and forced the whole nation to abandon it. In 1940, Congress announced a decision that the words Vande Mataram’ should not be used by Congress members in any public speeches and announcements. Gandhi also put a ban on Shiv Banvani. Shiv Banvani is a small inspiring poem by poet Bhushan. The poet had written that if Shivaji had not been born, entire India would have been converted to Islam. The poet had used exact words to correctly depict the fierce fanaticism and intolerance preached within Islam. Gandhi imposed a ban on this poem to keep the sentiments of his Muslim brothers’.

Khilafat movement was an attempt by the Indian Muslim community to unite together in support of the Turkish Empire ruled by the Khalifa. The Muslims considered the Khalifa as the custodian of Islam. Under the leadership of prominent Muslim leaders, the Khilafat movement was launched in most parts of North India. Gandhi suggested the Muslims - “If the peaceful non-cooperation movement does not succeed in getting justice, then, they have the right to follow the path shown in the Holy Books of Islam and I whole-heartedly support this path.”
Gandhi whole-heartedly supported the Khilafat Movement in order to bring Hindu- Muslim unity. When the Indian Muslims invited the Amir of Afghanistan to attack India and to convert this Darul Harb into Darul Islam, Gandhi supported this move also. Once, when he went to Delhi he held his prayer meetings in a Hindu temple in the sweeper’s colony. Ignoring the strong protests of the priests he adamantly read few passages from the Koran as part of the prayer meeting inside the Hindu temple.
In 1947, millions celebrated the independence that they had won through decades of struggle. But the year was also marked by a holocaust of violence and ethnic cleansing that accompanied Partition. Seventeen million people were forced to migrate and 1 million people were killed. Hundreds of thousands of corpses littered the streets of cities like Calcutta and Delhi. There are descriptions of train cars arriving full only of dead people.
While riots raged in Punjab, Gandhi told a leader of the Muslim League: I want to fight it out with my life. I would not allow the Muslims to crawl on the streets in India. They must walk with self-respect.
At the time of India Pakistan partition violent Hindu-Muslim riot took place. Millions were uprooted from their ancestor’s territory and massive violence and slaughter occurred on both sides of the border. At the lowest estimate, one million people perished and fourteen million became homeless. When hundreds of thousand Hindu and Sikh refugees entered India, Gandhi showed utmost sympathy for them. Gandhi said– "I am grieved to learn that people are running away from the West Punjab and I am told that Lahore is being evacuated by the non-Muslims. I must say that this is what it should not be. If you think Lahore is dead or is dying, do not run away from it, but die with what you think is the dying Lahore. When you suffer from fear you die before death comes to you. That is not glorious. I will not feel sorry if I hear that people in the Punjab have died not as cowards but as brave men.”
Gandhi, in his late seventies, personally journeyed to areas where communal violence had broken out and did his best to persuade people to stop, walking barefoot through the riot-torn slums and threatening “to fast unto death.” His moral authority was able to stop the violence sometimes, but when he left, all the social and economic problems that led people to see another religious group as their main enemy were still in place.
Furthermore Gandhi presented an Ahimsa formula to the Hindu refugees. He advised the Hindus, “The Hindus not to die helplessly. But they are to die without a murmur. Only then the riots will stop.”
In another incident, Gandhi addressed the homeless Hindus at the end of one of his Prayer Meetings and said, “After all, who are the killers ? They are our Muslim Brethren, none other. Does a converting into another religion break the bond of brotherhood ?”
In a speech on April 6, 1947; Gandhi again advised the destitute Hindus, Even if Muslims decide to wipe out the Hindu race, there is no point in Hindus getting angry on Muslims. Even if they slit our throats, we should be patient and accept death. Let them rule the world, we will pervade the world and merge with it. At least we should not be afraid of death. The providence is made of life and death. Why feel unhappy about it ? We will enter a new life if we face death with a smile. We will create a new Hindustan [India].
On September 23, 1947, during a prayer speech, Gandhi said, “[Even if Muslims] killed our relatives, our people, why should we be angry with anyone ? Those who got killed met with a proper end. We should know that they attained heaven. Let this happen with Gods’ wish with each one of us. God should grant us this kind of death. If you want to ask God for anything, let it be this.”
On Muslim slaughter of Hindus and Sikhs, Gandhi elsewhere said. “I would tell the Hindus to face death cheerfully if the Muslims are out to kill them. I would be a real sinner if after being stabbed I wished in my last moment that my son should seek revenge. I must die without rancor. ... You may turn round and ask whether all Hindus and all Sikhs should die. Yes, I would say. Such martyrdom will not be in vain.” Gandhi died for upholding Muslim equality, assassinated in 1948 by a Hindu fascist. The killer, Nathuram Godse, had been trained as an organizer in the RSS in the 1930s.

Conclusion:
In our country people belonging to various religions live in harmony, but there are occasions when the communal fabric gets disturbed, often on trivial issues. It is the responsibility of all sections of society to ensure peace and brotherhood so that all round development of the country takes place rapidly. To eliminate communalism must be our first and top priority. All Indians as a true sons and daughters of motherland must come forward to untiringly fight the forces of communalism which have been putting a grave strain on the health of our nation.
Thus, in order to get rid of the problem of communalism in India, there is a need of collective efforts. All will have to discharge their duties. If we do so, definitely harmony will prevail. Everybody will prosper. This must be done; this was the dream of Mahatma Gandhi for a free India. The main cause of worry today is intolerance and hatred leading to violence and it is here the values of Gandhi need to be adhered to with more passion. He is relevant not yesterday or today but forever!!

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