An author's final cry against Hindutva

[email protected] (Vaibhav Sharma, International New York Times)
July 28, 2016

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Bengaluru, Jul 28: URA examined the rival ideas that shaped modern India: plural nationalism and majoritarian nationalism

The last months of U R Ananthamurthy's life were tumultuous. One of India's foremost novelists and political commentators, Ananthamurthy, who died in August 2014 at 81, had threatened to leave the country if Narendra Modi, then leading the nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), won the Lok Sabha elections.

Ananthamurthy's remarks drew vitriol, abuse and death threats from Modi's supporters, and he remained under round-the-clock police protection for months. In June, a political tract Ananthamurthy wrote during the final stage of his life, the parting shot of a writer who devoted substantial time to warning of the dangers of Hindu nationalism, was published to widespread acclaim.

More than two years after Modi's election as prime minister, even as many continue to fear that India's founding values of secularism and diversity are under threat, Ananthamurthy's voice has served as an urgent reminder of the perils of majoritarianism and hypernationalism.

The tract, “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj,” an excoriating critique of Modi and Hindu nationalism in India, was completed between Modi's election in May 2014 and Ananthamurthy's death.

A novella-length tract, in the manner of Ta-Nehisi Coates' “Between the World and Me,” the book takes the form of a conversation with the nation.

“I feel an urgent need to talk to myself,” Ananthamurthy writes in the book as he reflects on a country he says he barely recognised, “both because of the nationwide humiliation that came my way when I rejected Modi and because of Modi's overwhelming victory that left me astounded.”

Ananthamurthy was a literary colossus in Karnataka, a state greater in size and population than England. His 1965 novel, “Samskara,” written in Kannada, about a Hindu society stifled by caste and tradition, is widely considered to be one of the landmarks of 20th-century Indian literature.

(In “India: A Wounded Civilisation,” V S Naipaul hailed “Samskara” and described Ananthamurthy as “a serious literary man,” a generous compliment from Naipaul, who tends to be parsimonious in his praise of fellow writers.)

Drawing on a formidable range of intellectual references, from Dostoyevsky to the epics of Hindu mythology, Ananthamurthy's “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj” examines the two rival ideas that have shaped modern India: the plural nationalism originating from the struggle against British colonialism, led by Mohandas K Gandhi; and the muscular, majoritarian nationalism favoured by Modi and his supporters.

Ananthamurthy compares the key texts of these dominant political strains: Gandhi's “Hind Swaraj,” a riposte to British colonialism completed in 10 days, during a ship journey in 1909, and published a year later; and “Hindutva,” the 1923 founding text of Hindu nationalism, written by Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, a right-wing activist imprisoned by the British for his role in India's freedom movement.

“He felt the choice was really between these two ideologies,” Vivek Shanbhag, a prominent novelist and Ananthamurthy's son-in-law, said of Ananthamurthy. “He was saying that it's time that we, as a nation, stop now and take a look before we blindly move forward.”

Shanbhag, who worked as a translator on the book, said Ananthamurthy could never forgive Modi for the 2002 riots in Gujarat, which killed more than a thousand, most of them Muslims. Modi was chief minister of the state at the time, and many consider him culpable. “He said a person like this cannot be the prime minister,” Shanbhag added.

Aakar Patel, a prominent columnist who writes for Mint, a national daily news publication headquartered in New Delhi, said “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj” was the best book on the subject of Hindu nationalism, since Modi's election as prime minister.

“Steeped in our traditions, Ananthamurthy captures the reality as nobody else can,” Patel wrote in Mint. “It is the distilled effort of a lifetime spent in absorbing, reading, writing and observing.”

In many ways, Ananthamurthy turned out to be prophetic, including about his own death. “If Modi becomes the prime minister, it will be a big shock to me,” Ananthamurthy had told a television channel, soon after he made his threats to leave the country. “I won't live.”

Unlike more measured critics of Modi, who saw his rise through a contemporary social and political context, Ananthamurthy, with his novelist's temperament, mounted his criticism in ethical, psychological and civilisational terms.

“People like Modi,” Ananthamurthy writes, “live in a gumbaz, a dome that echoes what they say to themselves over and over again.”

Climate of hostility

Modi's election as prime minister has been followed by, as many feared, a climate of hostility toward minorities and renewed assaults on civil society and free expression.

Last fall, a year after Ananthamurthy's death, dozens of writers returned their awards from the Sahitya Akademi, to protest what they considered a rising tide of intolerance and majoritarianism gripping the country.

One incident, in particular, sparked this collective revolt of writers: the killing of M M Kalburgi, a noted rationalist scholar whose criticism of traditional religious practices had earned him the wrath of Hindu nationalists. (Kalburgi was shot dead in his home in Dharwad, in Karnataka, on August 30 last year.)

Like Ananthamurthy, Kalburgi was part of a robust tradition of Indian-language writers serving on the front lines of social and political battles.

“A Kannada or Bengali writer has a connection to his people, his culture, his society, which an English writer simply does not,” Ramachandra Guha, a historian and one of India's best-known public intellectuals, said in an interview. “Most Indian-English writers who are acclaimed abroad have no impact on society.”

Ananthamurthy's death caused a wave of grief across Karnataka, a state of more than 60 million people. Tens of thousands of people lined up in Bengaluru to pay homage.

Officially, Modi offered condolences, but right-wing groups affiliated with his BJP greeted the news of Ananthamurthy's death with raucous celebrations, setting off fireworks at the demise of a foe.

Though Hindu nationalists hounded Ananthamurthy, especially during the last months of his life, their response to “Hindutva or Hind Swaraj” has been one of unusual silence.

Patel, the columnist, said he was not surprised by the muted reaction. “What passes for the ideological right doesn't have any investment here,” he said. “They don't care about knowledge and learning. They care about prejudices, anger, certitude and emotion.”

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News Network
April 22,2024

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New Delhi: Even though Prime Minister Narendra Modi's nasty election speech in Rajasthan's Banswara has triggered a nationwide controversy, the Election Commission has so far not taken any action. Meanwhile the Opposition bloc INDIA called the speech an attempt to divert attention from "real issues".

Addressing the people Banswara, on April 21, (Sunday) Modi openly attacked India’s Muslims, suggesting they were “infiltrators” and went on to claim that the opposition if elected would give away “mangalsutras” and “land” of those listening to his speech to them (Muslims). 

He referred to his immediate predecessor, Dr Manmohan Singh who was in office for 10 years as prime minister till 2014, and said, “Earlier, when his government was in power, he had said that Muslims have the first right on the country’s property, which means who will they collect this property and distribute it to – those who have more children, will distribute it to the infiltrators. Will the money of your hard work be given to the infiltrators? Do you approve of this?” 

Modi went on to say, “This Congress manifesto is saying that they will calculate the gold of the mothers and sisters, get information about it and then distribute it. Manmohan Singh’s government had said that Muslims have the first right on property. Brothers and sisters, these urban Naxal thoughts will not let even your mangalsutra escape, they will go this far.”

Narendra Modi and the BJP so far in their campaign trail have invoked religious faith, the Ram temple and Lord Ram multiple times, directly using it to call for people to vote for them. The Election Commission has been completely silent on the messaging via videos, tweets and other exhortations. 

Did Manmohan Singh really say that?

Modi’s claim that Dr Singh said that is not new and was refuted in 2006 itself by Singh’s PMO, when Modi had first made the false claim. The PMO had termed such remarks, “a deliberate and mischievous misinterpretation of what the Prime Minister said here yesterday at the meeting of the National Development Council, on fiscal priorities of the government.” It was termed “an avoidable controversy has been generated. The Prime Minister’s observations have also been quoted out of context in some sections of the electronic media, fuelling a baseless controversy.”

The full text of the paragraph in which the Prime Minister referred to the issue of minority empowerment to clarify the matter is as follows:

“I believe our collective priorities are clear: agriculture, irrigation and water resources, health, education, critical investment in rural infrastructure, and the essential public investment needs of general infrastructure, along with programmes for the upliftment of SC/STs, other backward classes, minorities and women and children. The component plans for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes will need to be revitalized. We will have to devise innovative plans to ensure that minorities, particularly the Muslim minority, are empowered to share equitably in the fruits of development. They must have the first claim on resources. The Centre has a myriad other responsibilities whose demands will have to be fitted within the over-all resource availability.”

The PMO’s clarification said. “it will be seen from the above that the Prime Minister’s reference to “first claim on resources” refers to all the “priority” areas listed above, including programmes for the upliftment of SCs, STs, OBCs, women and children and minorities.

Opposition reacts

Chairman, Media and Publicity department of the Congress, Pawan Khera said in a video message in a post, “We challenge the Prime Minister to show us if the word Hindu or Muslim is written anywhere in our manifesto. This kind of lightness is there in your mentality, in your political values. We have talked about justice for the youth, women, farmers, tribals, middle class and workers. Do you object to this as well?”

Khera was referring to earlier mistruths uttered by Modi about the “Muslim League” having influenced the Congress manifesto.

In Jharkhand’s Ranchi at an opposition rally, Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge is reported to have said by BBC Hindi, “If democracy and the Constitution end in the country, then the people will have nothing left. Babasaheb Ambedkar ji and Jawaharlal Nehru ji gave equal voting rights to everyone, due to which all classes got respect. But Narendra Modi wants to snatch their rights from the poor.”

B.V. Srinivas termed it as unfortunate that “this person is the Prime Minister of this country, and an even bigger tragedy is that the Election Commission of India is no longer alive.” He said that “due to the frustration of impending defeat, the Prime Minister of India is openly sowing the seeds of hatred, he is polarising by misquoting Manmohan Singh’s 18-year-old incomplete statement, But the Election Commission (Modi ka parivar) is bowing down.”

Modi’s past hate-speech

Modi, in his 12-year tenure as chief minister of Gujarat was known to have made speeches targeting the state’s minority Muslim community brazenly, terming camps where Muslims were forced to stay in after communal violence gripped the state in 2002. Frontline covered him on his Gujarat Gaurav Yatra started shortly after the violence, at a rally at Becharaji in Mehsana district in northern Gujarat, when he said, “What should we do? Run relief camps for them? Do we want to open baby-producing centres? But for certain people that means hum paanch, hamare pachees.” 

In 2017 it was time again for direct speech targeting Muslims when in February he spoke of ‘shamshaan versus kabristan’ campaigning for UP and then for Gujarat elections when the BJP had its worst performance this millennium, in a speech at Palanpur on December 10, 2017 Modi invoked a “secret meeting” to get Pakistan to fix Gujarat’s assembly polls. He said that a meeting was held at Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar’s residence, attended by former PM Manmohan Singh, former Vice-President Hamid Ansari, former Army Chief Deepak Kapoor and distinguished diplomats to execute the plot. Modi’s PMO faced embarrassment when in response to an RTI filed by the Congress, his office was forced to say that Modi’s campaign speech could have been based on an “informal input”.

In the only question he has answered as part of a press conference with Joe Biden on June 22, 2023, Modi was asked, “India has long prided itself as the world’s largest democracy, but there are many human rights groups who say that your government has discriminated against religious minorities and sought to silence its critics.  As you stand here in the East Room of the White House, where so many world leaders have made commitments to protecting democracy, what steps are you and your government willing to take to improve the rights of Muslims and other minorities in your country and to uphold free speech?”

In response Modi appeared visibly frazzled and denied all charges. “I’m actually really surprised that people say so.  And so, people don’t say it.  Indeed, India is a democracy.” 

The journalist was trolled online by BJP leaders and supporters to such an extent that the White House had to come out and defend her and strongly denounce the trolling and abuse.

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News Network
May 4,2024

Mangaluru, May 4: The Mangaluru International Airport was besieged with a harrowing message of terror recently, when an email, purportedly from malevolent elements, menacingly declared the planting of bombs within the airport premises. 

Addressed to the office of the airport authority, the missive, steeped in ominous overtones, bore the ominous signature of a terrorist faction, ominously named 'Terrorizers 111'.

The communication, disseminated in English, ominously detailed the clandestine emplacement of explosives in areas eluding facile detection, accompanied by a chilling warning of their imminent detonation. The threat, ominously looming over not only the infrastructure but also the airborne vessels, portended a catastrophic deluge of bloodshed and loss.

In response to this dire communiqué, airport authorities swiftly engaged the apparatus of law enforcement, dispatching urgent alerts to the vigilant guardians of public safety. Acting upon the dictates of higher echelons, a formal dossier of this menacing correspondence was meticulously compiled, cloaked in the veil of confidentiality to thwart any premature dissemination.

Mangaluru International Airport found itself in grim camaraderie with more than 30 counterparts under the aegis of the Airport Authority of India (AAI) and private domains, all recipients of this chilling electronic diatribe. A comprehensive net of precautionary measures was swiftly cast, fortifying the bastions of security in anticipation of any nefarious designs lurking within the shadows.

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News Network
May 2,2024

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Hassan, May 2: JD(S) MLC Suraj Revanna on Thursday said that the scandal and charges of sexual abuse levelled against his brother and Hassan MP Prajwal Revanna was a "conspiracy to weaken their family politically".

He claimed that he has no information about the whereabouts of Prajwal Revanna, who has been served a notice by the Special Investigation Team over the alleged sex scandal involving him.

He termed the scandal and charges of sexual abuse against his brother and his father and MLA H D Revanna, a former Minister, as a conspiracy to weaken them politically, and expressed confidence about Prajwal's win in the Lok Sabha polls.

H D Revanna is the son of JD(S) patriarch and former PM H D Deve Gowda. Prajwal, grandson of Deve Gowda, was the BJP-JD(S) alliance's candidate from Hassan Lok Sabha segment, which went to the polls on April 26.

"The (sex scandal involving Prajwal Revanna) case has been handed over for investigation (to SIT), whatever has to be proved will get proved there. How can I react to it? I don't have information about Prajwal Revanna," Suraj Revanna told reporters here.

On an FIR being registered against his father H D Revanna too, he said, "Let them put a thousand more (FIRs), what has to be proved will ultimately get proved. People of our taluk and district know what Revanna is. I don't want to react."

"Anyone can do anything out of political malice. If you take Hassan politics, there is no competitor for Revanna. There is no one who has done politics like him. To weaken him, all these conspiracies are being hatched," he added.

Scores of explicit video clips allegedly involving Prajwal Revanna had started making the rounds in Hassan recently. The state government has constituted an SIT to probe the alleged sex scandal involving the MP.

The SIT on Tuesday issued notice to Prajwal Revanna and his father Revanna, who have been booked for alleged sexual harassment at the Holenarsipura police station in Hassan district on April 28, based on a complaint by a woman who worked in their house, directing them to appear for investigation.

Prajwal who reportedly left for Germany on April 27, the very next day of the polls, on Wednesday sought seven days' time to appear before the SIT.

Regarding reports of his meeting with Deputy Chief Minister D K Shivakumar, Suraj said they were mere speculations and that he had met the former in January, and after that no such meeting had taken place.

Asked whether JD(S) leaders and workers seem to be in some sort of confusion following the developments around the alleged sex scandal, the MLC said there is no confusion. "Even yesterday there were meetings held to take stock of the situation after the polls. Hundred percent Prajwal Revanna will win."

"Let anyone charge anything, let's wait and see what comes out of the SIT probe," he added.

Victims under pressure?

Meanwhile, victims in the videos of the alleged sex scandal involving the MP, are reportedly refusing to come before the SIT which is probing the case.

Some of the victims are said to have told the SIT officials that they don't want to talk to them about the case, while a few are not reachable, sources said.

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