Indian Muslims and (Indian) Liberals are trapped in a toxic relationship

Joe Shearer

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A file image of Muslims offering prayers during Ramadan in Srinagar | S Irfan | PTI

Representational image | Muslims offering prayers during Ramadan in Srinagar

India’s Muslims and liberals are withering in each other’s embrace. The liberal discourse in India has come in for sharp criticism not only from the Right-wing but also the non-partisan centrists for being unprincipled in its tacit indulgence of minorityism, which might have widened the chasm between the majority and minority communities where the former is always a bully and the latter always has its back to the wall.

It has been often said that despite mouthing the platitude of mainstreaming the minority, liberals helped in institutionalising minorityism. It cocooned liberals in a paternalistic aura.


The situation was further exacerbated when the middle caste’s electoral assertion piggybacked on the Muslim vote. OBCs and minority politics were found cosying up in the bed of secularism. This was a marriage of convenience.


How did liberalism come to this when it had been the byword for everything progressive, humanistic, secular, democratic, reformative and transformative; and a default opposite of obscurantism, regression and totalitarianism? It is for these reasons that Indian Muslims’ relationship with so-called liberals has started yielding diminishing returns in politics today. Either liberalism gets a makeover, or the relationship is re-invented, or the Muslim community begins to invest in its own liberals.

Also read: New India has a solution to all its problems — Blame the Muslim



Different trajectories
But how could the ascendant Hindutva politics blame liberals of political opportunism and cultural deracination? It’s another surprise that these accusations also began to stick. To understand this, let’s trace its trajectory.

A dialectic tussle between the agents of change and the votaries of status quo is the hallmark of a living society. As the colonial impetus stirred India into a new life, the first generation of Hindus in modern education devoted themselves to religious and social reformation. This laid the foundation for a liberal nationalist politics in India.


The Muslim trajectory was different. They were latecomers to modern education which, again, had come at the cost of abandoning religious critique and social reform. A superficial modernity without its moral and intellectual values could be the right instrument for revivalism. The two politics, Hindu and Muslim, because of the different preparatory grounds they stood on, went in different directions. While one aimed at forming India into a nation and winning independence for it, the other wanted to make the Muslim community into a separate nation.


However, the intrinsic sincerity of the liberal political class and the exigency to put up a united front against colonialism made it accommodate the separatist tendencies in order to forge a composite territorial nationalism. This template endured for a century. It had some quaint tropes, which left no urge among Muslims to liberalise.

Also read: Not Kunal Kamra, the real test for Indian liberals is Sharjeel Imam

Century-old tropes
The first instance of mollycoddling was to sanitise the history of Muslim rule. In the history books, the testimony of contemporary chroniclers such as Ziauddin Barani, Abdul Malik Isami and Ferishta, etc. was ignored in order to paint an idyllic picture of cultural confluence. In a travesty of secularisation, acts of temple destruction, Jizya tax imposition, and forced conversion would be presented as inspired by political exigency, not religious fanaticism. It was as if desecration for political reasons would be less obnoxious. It gave a clean chit to the principle of statecraft that would permit such a sacrilege even if it were actually a pretext.


Although done with the good intention of not letting the bad blood of the past spill onto the present, a total whitewashing didn’t let the people develop the maturity to face up the past and recognise its wrongs. One is not answerable for what their real or adopted ancestors did, but they shape their own attitude towards the past. If one sees glories in the good of it, they would have to partake of its bad too.

The second trope was the romanticisation of Islam as an egalitarian religion and Muslims as a casteless society. Conversion to Islam was credited to the equality in Muslim society. The fact, however, was that people carried their caste into the new religion and remained at the same level as earlier. The Muslim ruling class adopted the caste system and placed itself at the apex. In fact, their emphasis on foreign lineage as a mark of superiority infused a fresh racial element into it.

Besides caste, gender issue was the main area of social reform in Hindu society. True, Muslims didn’t have a Sati system, but they had all other patriarchal discriminations. In fact, purdah among the Hindu upper class was an influence of Muslims.


It became conventional wisdom that Muslims didn’t need to introspect, reform or liberalise. And so, when independent India’s most ambitious social reform programme was undertaken, and Hindu Code Bills were introduced, the Muslim Personal Law was left untouched on the plea that the push for reform had to come from within the community. It never came, and instead became the basis of identitarian politics as was seen during the Shah Bano and triple talaq cases.

Also read: UP Police didn’t become anti-Muslim under Yogi. Look at secular Congress’ bloody past

Mere tactical allies
The sanitised history repeated itself first as a tragedy and next as a farce. The tragedy was the liberal argument in the Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi case that there was no proof that the mosque in Ayodhya was built on a demolished temple. Its implication for such mosques as were clearly built on demolished temples was not weighed in. And, the farce was in the revisionist historiography of Partition, which invisibilised the fact that, in the end, it was the Muslim League that demanded Pakistan, and had it. Such historiography helped in reviving the same old pernicious narrative.

The dictum that minority communalism was a lesser evil was myopic inasmuch as it ignored its ability to inflame majoritarian. The paternalistic minorityism of liberals made them equivocate on burning issues. So, in one kind of bomb blast, terror had no religion; but in another, it did. The discourse of ‘hurt sentiment’ became normalised as demands to ban now a book and now a movie became the norm. The Right-wing learnt fast, and how.

In spite of all this, no organic relationship could develop between liberals and Muslims. Both treated each other as tactical allies rather than ideological kin. In the Muslim repertoire of grievances against the present dispensation, there is hardly one that has not been levelled against liberals since the late 19th century (Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan’s speech at Meerut, 16 March 1888 ). The Islam-in-danger rhetoric, paranoia of subjugation by Hindus, neglect of Urdu, under-representation in services, bias in the behaviour of state machinery, particularly that of police during riots, and myriad other complaints of discriminations are century-old tropes.

Also read: Indian Muslims must rewrite their victim mindset to be indispensable in India’s rise

Aatmanirbhar Musalman
Muslims love Hindu liberals conditionally, and together they hate the microscopic Muslim liberals unconditionally. Muslims love liberals because the latter don’t question their narratives, and liberals value Muslims because they are their only support left. In an India where two kinds of Hindus are debating how to engage with Muslims, the liberals represent them without questioning why Muslims are unable to represent themselves, and whether the 200-year-long liberal hegemony of public discourse has any responsibility for it.

There is no redemption for Muslims unless they develop their own liberal intelligentsia, and no comeback for liberals unless they become more scrupulous about their avowed principles. True, Muslims are not represented in all sectors of the national life in proportion to their population. It not only reflects their lag in modern education but also the lack of drive and initiative in their corporate life.

At about 20 crore, the Muslim population is so huge that even a minuscule percentage of its educated and affluent would be humongous enough to constitute the critical mass for a big social change. One reason why this has not happened is the community’s utter dependence on the liberal establishment for representing them. Muslims could represent themselves in the idiom of the modern nation state only if they had crafted their own discourse and coined their own vocabulary. It’s very much doable. An Aatmanirbhar Musalman could be the pride of an Aatmanirbhar Bharat.

Najmul Hoda is an IPS officer. Views are personal.
 

Joe Shearer

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I don't agree with many things said in this article, but acknowledge that Indian liberals have compromised themselves by not being honest about historical events, and about present-day social tensions.

Najmul Hoda is a Muslim member of the IPS, the Indian Police Service, that provides officers from Assistant Superintendent to Director-General, for every state in the country (there are 28 states and 8 union territories). Muslims are under-represented in these all-India services, including the Indian Administrative Service, the Indian Foreign Service, the Indian Foreign Service, and so on.

I am not sure what Hoda Sahib is trying to say. The complaint that Indian liberals have fallen into a trap and promote the point of view of orthodox Muslims and the Mullahs, and ignore the views of liberal Muslims, is not new; it was used very effectively against the Indian National Congress, the political party that did most of the political activity during the Indian freedom movement, and was in power by itself or in coalition until 2014.
 

Nilgiri

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and was in power by itself or in coalition until 2014.

Morarji, VP and Atal have something to say about this.


I don't agree with many things said in this article, but acknowledge that Indian liberals have compromised themselves by not being honest about historical events, and about present-day social tensions.

I agree with you, the author has made a good consumption piece by neatly doing the old black/white contrast for everything....whereas grey nuance is really a defining feature of India.

I'd have to agree that a lot more honesty is required from all parties and identities (and sub-identities) in India about the past, present and future they acknowledge and envision. It will need a critical mass of people to understand a basic empathy for another human being and give him/her the benefit of any doubt first thing as the default. You and I both know how hard this can be in Indian society....this is the crux of the issue... the "how", rather than the "what" which almost every well-meaning rational citizen agrees upon.

Honesty can hurt, especially in the short term....but it is worth it in the end....but like anywhere in the world it is also the most difficult thing because so many "easier" and "pleasant" routes are put in front of us...and human nature is what it is.
 

Saiyan0321

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I don't agree with many things said in this article, but acknowledge that Indian liberals have compromised themselves by not being honest about historical events, and about present-day social tensions.

They cant be honest because the thinking is very simple. For the greater good, a little bit of dishonesty is justified in their eyes and this is where it is becoming even more harmful since that dishonesty creates rifts between the rest of the populace.

I want to say three things here and they are what the Liberals believe and have found themselves trapped in and i dont know the Indian society so i could be wrong. .

First that the glossing of history. This will be a sore point because there is right now two forms of history that is rising in India. One where Muslims were synonymous with Valor and bravery and just rule and one where they were walking and talking monsters. With this the Muslims of India obviously support the former and many Hindus especially right wing support the latter and this is becoming another form of the divide and this chasm has not been bridged. It was not bridged in 1940 and it isnt bridged now. The liberals are left in this growing divide, they try to protect the pluralism of the country by glossing over history and giving more and more limelight to the statement that the Muslim rulers were heaven sent however this is protested by the Right wing because they then state that being part of the left, why they are siding with a right wing conservative group which advocate as such since it is a fact that right wing is more vocal by nature and thus the Indian liberals find themselves agreeing with alot of right wing muslims. You see you are advocating the political belief of a group which has been part of their culture, their stories, their custom and their history and all these will be most protected by the conservative faction. So from the Hindu right wing eyes, they see liberals allying themselves with the right wing and thus use this to demean them. At this point, what those rulers were really like is a moot point now because history is being divided as well. As Jinnah said that the hero of one is the enemy of the other and vice versa so you can see how serious this situation is.

Second the Liberal left sees the muslims as synonym of the plural secular nature of India and feels that they must be given a special place and be given more leeway since any marginalizing of the Muslims would mean the death of the Secular India. That is what they think will protect the secular nature of India and thus they try to justify each and every action of the Muslims from personal laws to protests and sometimes they are left in a sticky situation because of that. Let me say something here. I absolutely refuse to believe that the Indian muslim are secular left since the only muslim group that you would find to be liberal or secular would be either bosniaks or the turks. The rest could at best be categorized at center moderate. Be advised that i am using the western definitions of Left, Right, Center, Moderate here and i am not talking individuals but as a group. So in this situation the remaining India witnessed the liberal left side with a group that was far from liberal principles and it gave the impression that the liberals are a dishonest bunch however what the liberals were doing was try to protect the pluralism of India in the most foolish way.


Thirdly that a problem happened with India. Most of the enlightened bunch of Muslims came to Pakistan and left their mark. The liberal section of Muslims came to Pakistan and they left their mark here and through that mark gave birth to new form of reformers and thinkers who in turn gave birth to the next group. The Impact of Faraz or wali baba and many others that is not just felt in Pakistan but is seen as a wave, what impact would that have been created on Indian muslims if they had stayed in Pakistan? Indian muslims were deprived of these thinkers and poets and philosophers but Pakistan was blessed and you see that the country is heavily impacted by it. Their thinking is not just carried forward but bends the thinking of the nation as well. We didnt just take these guys as well. We took the waris shahs and buleh shahs and lal qalanders and bahus and shah bhattis and all of them and what was left to enlighten the Indian muslims? we took all the power stations so who can light the bulb now? This left a serious mark on the psych of the Indian muslims and helped widen the chasm between two groups and the liberals are not equipped to bridge it.


All of these united have created a very bad situation where the liberals find themselves questioned more and more. Not a good situation to be in. I an be wrong with the above but me being wrong wont change the fact that India is in trouble here
 

Nilgiri

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Most of the enlightened bunch of Muslims came to Pakistan and left their mark. The liberal section of Muslims came to Pakistan and they left their mark here and through that mark gave birth to new form of reformers and thinkers who in turn gave birth to the next group. The Impact of Faraz or wali baba and many others that is not just felt in Pakistan but is seen as a wave, what impact would that have been created on Indian muslims if they had stayed in Pakistan? Indian muslims were deprived of these thinkers and poets and philosophers but Pakistan was blessed and you see that the country is heavily impacted by it. Their thinking is not just carried forward but bends the thinking of the nation as well. We didnt just take these guys as well. We took the waris shahs and buleh shahs and lal qalanders and bahus and shah bhattis and all of them and what was left to enlighten the Indian muslims? we took all the power stations so who can light the bulb now? This left a serious mark on the psych of the Indian muslims and helped widen the chasm between two groups and the liberals are not equipped to bridge it.

Like I get where you are coming from....

...but receiving (and asserting identity upon past ones) these enlightened folk didnt stop this intelligentsia from imparting some basic common sense to yahya, tikka, bhutto and all their types....who's own enlightened actions saw a permanent loss of half the country. Unparalleled in the 20th century.

It is not so cut and dry as you put it here, at least to me.

All of these united have created a very bad situation where the liberals find themselves questioned more and more. Not a good situation to be in. I an be wrong with the above but me being wrong wont change the fact that India is in trouble here

We will do it the hard way its fine.

Everything from having muslim population fertility rate to 2.1 as quick as possible (unlike Pakistan with the enligtened influx still stuck around 3.5) so that socioeconomic progress through education and opportunity may reach every average muslim household in more intense way if they have fewer children to focus it on.

All the way to producing and harnessing minds like that of APJ Kalam. He is from modest origins as nearly is possible.

You get the cards you are dealt and you make use of them the best you can.... its better approach than constantly worrying about being in trouble. We are always in trouble in some way anyway.

You see thats what the Bangladeshis did too and have been doing for a while now. They could gripe all day and all year about their enlightened getting deliberately wiped out by operation searchlight in large numbers....but you see, they dont. They pulled their sleeves up and got to work to make tomorrow better.

The result in subcontinent are there for all to see now (comparing just Muslims if you want to). "Enlightened inheritance" only means so much....it is what you choose to do with what you have to actually get larger situation to produce and sustain more enlightened (and all walks of other worthies) in current and future ages that matters the most.

If errors in approach are made, they are eventually learned from and steered a better way. Indian elephant you see.
 

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From a foreigners perspective, I always thought that the people who are called 'liberals' in India are actually those who are followers of Ghandi's ideas and his whole view on society and life. Am I misreading the Indian society? They are portrayed as anti-Indian and enemies of Hindus within Hindistan. What happened?
 

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