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A
Chilling Message
By
Brook Larmer
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Religious violence in India is
pushing the world's second largest Muslim population
deeper into the ghetto, and endangering the nation's
secular dream.
Mohammad Raqfiq Lalmiya is standing alone, in stunned
silence, before the burned-out hulk of his former mosque
in Naroda Patia, a community in the western Indian state
of Gujarat. This is the first time the 32-year-old rickshaw
driver has dared to return to his old neighbourhood
since Hindu
mobs attacked on Feb 28, seeking revenge for the incineration
of 59 Hindus on a train in nearby
Godhra the day before.
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With the
silent support of the police and the local government,
Hindu Fanatics desecrated mosques, torched Muslim
homes and businesses, and burned to death dozens
of Lalmiya's friends and neighbours. Lalmiya, a
gaunt man is sandals and a soiled yellow shirt,
fled in terror with his wife and two children. Today
he has come back, his fear overcome by a desire
to salvage something, anything, from his former
life. What he finds, however, is a community utterly
destroyed. "Nothing is left", he says,
staring blankly at the twisted metal minarets on
the remains of the mosque. "It's completely
gone."
Innocent lives and property are not all that have
been lost in Naroda Patia. So, too, has the possibility
that Hindus and Muslims can live here together in
pace, the core of India's secular dream. On the
wall that separates the decimated Muslim street
from the untouched Hindu neighbourhood next door,
there is a chilling message chalked in neat Hindi
script: THIS IS THE KINGDOM OF LORD RAM. NO MUSLIM
CAN STAY HERE INDIA IS FOR THE HINDUS. As Lalmiya
surveys the ruins, a portly India policeman approaches.
""You'd better leave now", the cop
says. "You're not safe here". Lalmiya,
head bowed, obeys. Less than 100 meters down the
road, he catches a |
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glimpse of a former Hindu
neighbor. As if spooked by a ghost, Lalmiya turns and
dashes out of sight.
Disappearing is nothing new for India's 150 million Muslims.
They form the second largest Muslim community in the world
(only Indonesia's is bigger), but outside of Kashmir,
they are nearly invisible on the global stage. Even after
September 11, with the West riveted by the threat of militants
Islam, Indian Muslims have been easy to ignore. And why
not? The form of Islam that has flourished in India is
a gentle strain that seems resistant to radicalization.
Moreover, as a minority, the Muslims who stayed behind
after the bloody partition of India and Pakistan in 1947
have always been the most fervent supporters of the secular
ideals espoused by Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru.
The result is a point of pride: they are the only Muslim
population in the world to enjoy such a long and virtually
uninterrupted period of democracy-54years.
But the world can no longer afford to look away. Not every
Muslim India faces as menacing a threat as the residents
of Gujarat, where more than 825 people, almost all Muslim,
have been hacked, shot and burned to death in the past
six weeks. But the fear and anger created by that orgy
of violence have only exacerbated a disturbing trend,
the ghettoization of the Muslim community. Over the past
decade, as India has tried to hitch its fortunes to the
global economy, its Muslim minority has fallen farther
behind the Hindu mainstream. Why? The most obvious culprit
is the rist of Hindu extremism, which has infiltrated
everything from school textbooks |
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to government
policies. But critics say the Muslim community itself
has not given sufficient attention to education,
entrepreneurship and achievement. And now many Muslims
are retreating more deeply into their religious
identity, embracing a more conservative brand of
Islam and, in some cases, turning away from the
modern world. Says Saeed Naqvi, a Muslim intellectual
in New Delhi: "The fact that this huge Muslim
population is not sharing in the country's progress
is dangerous for India and the world."
India likes to tout its successful Muslims, such
as two former presidents, the country's richest
man (high-tech guru Azim Premji) or Bollywood heartthrobs
like Oscar nominee Aamir Khan (box).
But the vast majority of Muslims live in extreme
poverty, and they're being pushed deeper into the
ghetto. Muslim representation in the National Legislature,
or Lok Sabha, has dropped from 9 percent in 1980
to 5 percent today. Discriminated against in almost
every field most Muslims eke out a living as cobblers,
tailors, artisans or rickshaw drivers, earning an
average of $78 a month, compared with $95 for Hindus.
"The country has moved forward, but Muslims
have not kept in step", say Syed Shahabuddin,
a Muslim political leader in New Delhi. |
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| He points out his window at Jamia Nagar,
a sprawling Muslim slum. "There's not a single public
school here. Do you call that equality?" |
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The worst may be yet
to come. While 70 percent of Hindi children from
ages 6 to 14 attend school, less than half of Muslim
children do. Muslim parents often pull their kids
out of school to earn money for the family. But
in recent years more Muslim students, especially
girls, have withdrawn as a reaction to the Hinduization
of the public schools. Muslim literacy rates are,
on average, 5 percentage points lower than the national
level. Experts believe that, unless school enrollment
rises, the gap will continue to grow.
How did this state of events come to pass? The answer,
in part, lies in India's convoluted history. In
1947 most Muslims hailed independence as the end
of 200 years of British colonialism; some Hindus,
however, perceived it as the end of 1,000 years
of foreign domination, beginning with invasion of
the Moguls. (The vast majority of Muslims in India
are descendants oower-caste Hindus who converted
to Islam under the Mogul Empire). The riots that
accompanied partition only drove the wedge deeper.
Hindus blamed Muslims for dividing India. And as
Muslim elites migrated en masse to Pakistan, they
left behind an orphaned community, poor, uneducated
and leaderless. Muslims today account for 12 percent
of the population, compared with 33 percent before
independence, and they are spread out areas where
they are a minority and thus politically disempowered.
"Partition put Muslims under the complete domination
of the Hindus", says Rafiq Zakaria, a leading
Muslim politician and intellectual. They may be
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"the second largest Muslim population
in the world, (but) they are still slaves." Still,
there was the glittering dream of Indian democracy. Nehru,
the first leader after independence, tried to create a
secular state that would respect all religions equally,
and stave off communal violence. But that dreams started
to fade by the late 1980s, as India's political landscape
fractured into a kaleidoscope of parties based on caste,
region, language and, most explosively, religion. The
Muslims lost their political cover, as the Congress party
(still controlled by Nehru's descendants) fell to an upsurge
of Hindu nationalist parties, led by the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP). Why haven't Muslims formed a party of their
own? It's not simply that they are weak and splintered.
Fearing a backlash, Muslims still see broad-based, secular
parties as their best and only effectively defense.
Yet that secular ideal has been looking fairly threadbare
1992, when howling mobs of Hindu zealots tore down a 450-year-old
mosque in the town of Ayodhya with their bare hands. The
destruction of mosque, supposedly built on the birthplace
of the Hindu god Ram, led to riots in which nearly 2,000
people, mostly Muslims, were killed. In Ayodhya today,
as in most towns across India, Hindus and Muslims get
along well enough. But the ideologues who fanned the flames
of the Ayodhya conflict have only hardened their positions
recently. Mohammed Ansari, a 77-year-old local Muslim
leader, says the government has used its endorsement of
the United States' war on terror to further harass local
Muslims. Government agents have descended on Islamic religious
schools, shut down a local Muslim market and issued Ansari,
one of Ayodhya's best known citizens, a bogus electoral
card that makes him ineligible to vote. Ansari asks: "Is
this our country or not?"
The answer in Gujarat, sadly, is clear. The latest spasm
of violence began when a train full of Hindu zealots returning
from Ayodha arrived at the station in Godhra. |
The kar
sevaks, as the Hindu militants are known, reportedly
refused to pay a Muslim tea vendor, forced Muslims
to sing praises to Ram and then allegedly brought
a Muslim girl into their car. The enraged response,
young Muslim men killed 59 Hindus, mostly women
and children, when they set two train cars ablaze,
succeeded only in turning every Muslim in Gujarat
into a target. The Hindi mobs that swarmed into
Muslim communities over the next three days were
exacting more than just an eye for an eye. As they
killed hundreds of Muslim men, women and children,
they were carrying out a more sinister policy, one
that is embraced by a wing of the ruling BJP: the
purification of a Hindu state.
Nowhere is the religious cleansing more horrifyingly
apparent than in Jawan Nagar, a village 15 kilometers
north of Ahmadabad. For more than 50 years, the
village was split evenly, and by all accounts, harmoniously,
between Hindus and Muslims. Today the Hindu side
seems almost normal: children play cricket, men
chew betel nut, women in bright yellow saris sweep
the dirt out of their near little homes. But walk
20 meters down the road and the landscape resembles
a bombed-out war zone. The rubble-strewn Muslim
streets, empty except for a stray cow and a group
of Hindu looters, only hint at the atrocities that
happened here. In one home, pots are on the stove,
toothbrushes are in their plastic cup and the Calendar
is stuck on Feb 28. The floor is covered with pools
of dried blood. Above the door, a tricolour decal
proclaims: I Love INDIA.
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The violence
in Gujarat has left nearly 100,000 Muslim refugees,
and most are too scared to return home. Nazir Master,
a 50-year-old schoolteacher from Jawan Nagar who
hid in his rooftop bathroom during the attack, says:
"How can I go home when I saw my Hindu neighbours,
students that I myself had taught, raping and killing
our village girls?" When the relief money dries
up, these families will have little choice but to
move deeper into all-Muslim ghettos. Says Rahim
Jusubh, a 35-year-old cigarette vendor whose shop
was razed: "The government hasn't given us
any security, so what can we do?"
The answer, for many Muslims across India, has been
to cling more tightly to their religious identity.
Mosques are starting to overflow, and the new faces
are mostly young Muslims like Mohammed Asfaz. A
handsome 30-year-old wearing blue jeans and a closely
cropped black beard, Asfaz emerges from early-morning
prayers in the magnificent white marble Bandara
Mosque in Mumbai. "Ten years ago, this place
was only half full," says Asfaz, who himself
began returning to the mosque last year. "Now
it's so crowded that we have hundreds of people
praying on the terraces".
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The embrace of religion
has been accompanied by a reinvigoration of Islamic
religious schools, or madrasas. The numbers are
not big, there are about 100,00 madrasa students
throughout India, but their tradition-bound mullahs
have a pervasive influence on Muslim social affairs.
The madrasas, an estimated 90 percent of which are
funded by Saudi oil money, teach a conservative
brand of Islam and none more so than Darul Uloom,
a school in the town of Deoband, 160 kilometers
east of New Delhi.
Darul Uloom was founded in 1866 as a way to save
Islamic culture from the onslaught of British imperialism,
and it sees a similar role for itself today. This
time, its main antagonist is not so much Hindu radicalism
as Western-style modernism. The school's 3,500 pupils,
all boys in white robes and skullcaps, are not allowed
to use radios televisions, newspapers, or even chairs.
The Deobandi mullahs, however, are careful to distinguish
themselves from their most famous adherents, the
leaders of Afghanistan's Taliban. "We are not
a breeding ground for terrorist," insists Marghboor
Rahman, the school's 83-year-old vice chancellor,
adding provocatively: "The real cause of terrorism
is the United States itself". |
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The rising influence of conservative mullahs
frightens secular Muslims. "Madrasas are the anchor
of the Muslim community, but they are a millstone around
the neck of the nation," says Naqvi, the Delhi intellectual.
Shabana Azmi, a Muslim actress and member of Parliament,
says, "The battle today is not between Hindus and
Muslims. It is between the moderate, sane voice of Muslims
and the fundamentalist, rabid voice." When Syed Ahmed
Bukhari, Imam of the Jama Masjid in New Delhi, encouraged
Indian Muslims to join the jihad in Afghanistan last fall,
Azmi retorted publicly that Bukhari should be airdropped
into Kandahar to wage the jihad himself.
he high-profile economic progress being made in certain
sectors in India, notably IT, is pushing may Muslims to
confront the dangers of being left behind, and the failures
of their own community. Indeed, some critics say India's
Muslims have focused too much on grievances and too little
on achievement. The school-enrollment rate for Muslims
is a full 10 percent lower than for Hindus, a fact that
explains why literacy among Muslim males lags behind Hindu
males by more than 6 percent. And this feed a cycle of
underachievement.
But there are some pockets of hope. In Aurangabad, a city
in Maharashtra state, a cluster of 15 private colleges
has attracted a new generation of Muslim students, more
than half of them women, and they are starting to rise
to the top in statewide exams. In Hyderabad, a fast-growing
southern city, 30 percent of the students pursuing M.B.A.s
at the Global Business Centre are Muslim women. One of
them, 23-year-old Saleha Firdous, wears traditional hejab
head covering, but she is determined to pursue a career,
and her husband supports her. "In my community, I'm
very much the exception rather than the rule," she
says. But in these dark times, exceptions like Firdous
are lighting the path toward a more inclusive and harmonious
India. For in the end, it is economic empowerment above
all else that will give Muslims a stake in India's future.
With Ian Mackinnon in Hyderabad |
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