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April
11, 2002
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Looking
Glass
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Taking
on the pseudo patriot
One
looks to policemen, good policemen that is, for action. One usually
expects a policeman to restore order through decisive physical acts
or manoeuvres rather than with abstract ideas. Which is why it was
refreshing the other day to find one of the countrys best
known former policemen, Julio Rebeiro, come up with a strategic
move that revolved not around techniques of controlling mobs or
diffusing tensions though his past experience and his involvement
in Mumbais mohallah committee scheme should give him an expertise
on the subject but one that revolved entirely around terminology.
Addressing
a gathering of businessmen in Mumbai on the recent events in Gujarat,
which he identified as a massacre not riots
he revealed that he had coined a new term for the saffron brigade:
pseudo patriots. The attack at Godhra evoked
horror and condemnation. But events since then have pointed to a
deliberate planned and relentless campaign against the minority
community in Gujarat. For several of us watching with horror the
unfolding of this violent campaign, there has been a sense of helplessness
over many things: the collapse of institutions, the apparent complicity
of agencies meant to protect lives, the unapologetic brutality that
has surfaced. But, as much as anything else, there has been a feeling
of widespread consternation over how a groundswell of public opinion
could have been created to permit and justify such actions, if not
actually perpetrate them.
There
is a realisation that it is this tacit, at times open, acceptance
that has given violent criminals the cover of respectability and
the impetus to act freely. Yet there is a feeling of inadequacy
amongst many; of not having the right words or the right approach,
of being unable to counter the hatred and palpably false propaganda
spread by the proponents of a violent Hindutva ideology.
How
have things come to this pass? The reasons may be many but one is
certainly the tricky war of words that has been played out over
time. The peddlers of religious disharmony have had the advantage
of being highly motivated and of attacking first managing, in this
way to take their critics by surprise and putting them on the defensive.
Over the last two decades Hindutvawadis have used all the tools
of propaganda disinformation, half truths, distortion, double
talk, effectively to convince and win over some and to surprise,
confuse and bewilder those who would challenge their ideology.
And
now, in the latest round of the ongoing battle, it is a campaign
of vilification they have clearly embarked upon. The recent physical
and verbal attacks on journalists is one part of the strategy; the
other is to tar those who speak against sectarian conflict and for
communal harmony with the taint of that meaningless term pseudo
secularists. How does one respond to the term? It is
like responding to the question: Have you stopped beating your wife?
Confirm it or deny it, you are guilty.
In
his direct way the supercop, however, has suggested a new and effective
solution: the way to deflect a surprise ambush may well be to turn
the attackers ammunition on himself. And speaking of ammunition
of the many words that have passed into saffronspeak none
have been as effective as the word pseudo.
Pseudo defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as false,
seeming, professed but not really has become almost
a form of abuse in the hands of the Hindutvawadis.
But
now, if one was to point a finger back at the accusers and
the recent violence in Gujarat offers sufficient examples for the
task one could do well to ask is it patriotism or pseudo
patriotism to act in a way that divides Indians, runs up huge economic
losses and hurts Indias image externally? Is it control or
pseudo control of a situation in which violence continues unstoppably?
Is it governance or pseudo governance to punish policemen who acted
in line with their duty? Is it justice or pseudo justice to apply
laws selectively or to offer different scales of compensation on
the basis of community? Is it a defence or a pseudo defence to claim
that since there were riots during Congress rule there is nothing
wrong with the present? And, above all, is it religion or a pseudo
religion that permits even encourages rape, arson and the murder
of men, women and children in its name?
The
Bangalore-based playwright, Mahesh Dattani, in a recent article
bemoaned the takeover of the symbols of his religion, by proponents
of Hindutva; many like him have expressed the resolve to reclaim
them. Perhaps it is time also to reclaim other things, like the
word pseudo and apply it where it truly
belongs.
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