Pale Fires
Don't Scorch
Deviants of Mangalore and Malegaon are
demonised fallaciously

FRANCOIS GAUTIER
Outlook
India
February 09, 2009
When I
began reporting, I went to interview the RSS leadership in Delhi,
expecting, from what I had heard, a few bloodthirsty fascists. I was
surprised to meet those old daddies with their long khaki shorts, who
would not hurt a fly. Twenty-five years later, the word 'Hindu
Talibanisation' is being heard amidst the clamour following the odious pub
episode in Mangalore. Such incidents should be condemned, as it has no
precedent in Indian history—from Prithviraj Chauhan to Shivaji,
Hindus respected the women of even their enemies. Yet, I beg to disagree:
this is not about the Talibanisation of Hindu groups, it is about their
demonisation.
British colonisers in league with the Christian
missionaries realised 200 years ago that the biggest obstacle to fully
subjugating India was Hinduism, as it was ancient, woven into the fabric
of life and held the country together. They set upon defaming Hinduism, by
dwelling on what they perceived as its negatives: castes, sati,
superstition, etc. Simultaneously, they created in a span of two or three
generations a class of Indians who looked up only to the West.
Macaulay, the architect of the scheme, summed it up in his
Minute on Education: "We must do our best to form a class of
persons, Indians in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions,
in morals and in intellect." Macaulay despised Indian culture: "Hindus
have a literature of small intrinsic value, hardly reconcilable with
morality, full of monstrous superstitions...." The demonisation of
Hinduism was apace.
As a result, these Anglicised Indians became
ashamed of their own culture. This Western/anti-Hindu outlook was handed
down from generation to generation, right down to our age, where many of
India's brilliant and articulate Hindu-Marxist intellectuals, products all
of institutions like jnu, or St Stephen's, keep on repeating, as if by
rote, what their hoary forebears were taught by the British. And
unfortunately, they pass it back to their friends from the West, neatly
marking a full circle. How else could a film like Slumdog
Millionaire, made by an Englishman, which literally craps on India
from the very first frame, be feted by most of India's intelligentsia? How
else could India specialists like Christophe Jaffrelot peddle to his
gullible French readers the spurious theory that there is a "Hindu
tradition of terror"?
Politically, the Congress just took over from
the British, as I explain in my new book (A New History of India,
2008, Har Anand), and used its English-speaking press to present Hindu
social and political parties as fanatical and ridiculous. The goal was to
corner the Muslim vote, which was—and still remains—achieved. It does not
help today that the supreme leader of India is a Christian. Whether her
aides or her ministers (many of them capable people in their own right)
rush to gratify her in true bhakti spirit or whether she directly speaks
her will, one does not know. But what better way to please her than by
equating Hindu fundamentalism with the Muslim one and to turn the flak on
to small Hindu outfits which are amateur lambs compared to the Islamic
ones?
There are two standards today used by India's media and
intelligentsia. One for minorities and the other for Hindus. It is totally
illogical: if 4,00,000 Hindus are hounded out of the Kashmir Valley which
has always been their home, nobody protests; but New Delhi has been
rooting for Palestinians for four decades and recently donated a million
dollars for their welfare.
When
blast after blast wrecks Indian markets, when trains are bombed, hotels
attacked by men worse than animals, intellectuals blame it on Babri Masjid
(where nobody was killed) or Gujarat (triggered by the burning of 59
innocent Hindus). But when a few Hindus plan to establish a Hindu rashtra
and plot a clumsy, small-scale revenge, they are equated with deadly
fundamentalists. A universal theorem is made of their single act, which
should stand out as isolated, because Hindus have been for thousands of
years tolerant to the point of cowardice. Our intellectuals never
theorised when, in Kashmir, militants used to throw acid on women who did
not cover up, but now devote reams to the goons of Mangalore.
Finally, to be fair, one has to say that a lot of prudishness has
seeped into India because of the Islamic purdah and, later, Victorian
stuffiness. Yet, Hinduism always enjoined its adherents to live life
fully, including its sexual aspect. We do not want an Indian youth which
blindly apes the West: drinking, drugs and promiscuity. But the Hindu
political leadership should also shun rough, prudish and moralistic acts
which will only alienate its young voters.
(Francois Gautier is the editor-in-chief of the Paris-based La Revue l'Inde)
Source: Outlook India
URL: http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20090209&fname=Cover+Story&sid=6
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