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March
7, 2001
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The
stormtroopers at Bamiyan
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Yet
the Buddha smiles
Its
not fair to compare the destruction of the Babri Masjid with the
ugly happenings in Afghanistan. Doubtless, what happened on the
banks of the Sarju was a heinous act
The
images of the Buddha exude love and compassion, the quintessential
features of his teachings. Whether perched on a hilltop or in the
serenity of a cave, they bring to humanity the message of peace
and brotherhood. In a geographical dictionary written in the 13th
century, the author Yaqut refers to the images of the Buddha at
Bamiyan. Nowhere else, he wrote, is
there anything to equal these. Abul Fazl, the historian
at Akbars court, noted the sculptured colossal
images, one said to be 80 yards high, the
other 50 yards. They are (were) actually 53 and 38 metres
high. Abul Fazl, well known for his eclectic worldview, may have
added that it is cultural heritage that is perennial and has a message
far beyond any political or ideological biases.
At
the beginning of this new millennium, the Taliban regime has very
different ideas. In a brazen exhibition of religious fanaticism,
its stormtroopers have let loose their religious fury on sites and
symbols of veneration, if not actual worship. They have established
beyond doubt that Talibanisation represents nothing but regression
and the aggressive and evil propensities of man. It
is immaterial, underlines the Indian History Congress
resolution, if the Taliban claim that they are doing
it to fulfill what are alleged to be the prescriptions of Islam.
No religion is entitled to sanction the destruction of the works
of another faith.
Round
one of this unequal contest between the booming guns and the smiling
Buddha may belong to the mullahs in Afghanistan, but the Taliban
regime has forsaken the right to be heard by the international community.
For decades to come, the devotees of the sage from Kapilvastu, as
well as those millions who treasure works of art would be haunted
by the images of a decapitated Buddha, his arms and limbs smashed
by modern weaponry. This act of vandalism vindicates the position
of all those, both in India and elsewhere, who oppose the reassertion
of religion in public life and politics. Moreover, it is a stern
reminder to the Western governments, who have nurtured the Taliban
with the avowed goal of containing communism in the region. Now
that the monster is out in the open, it is devouring its own people
and destroying its own rich cultural inheritance. The public outcry
in the West is a case of too little, too late.
Long
ago, Cicero asserted that there was a true law namely right reason,
which applied to all persons and was unchangeable and eternal. But
the Taliban, impervious to reason and rationality, couldnt
care less. Imposing their own codes on an impoverished and deeply
fractured tribal society, they have disregarded the legitimate aspirations
of their own people for political participation, social justice
and human rights. Now, in this brazen act of vandalism, they have
alerted the world to the dangers of religious extremism and the
urgent need to counter it forcefully and effectively. The
happenings in Afghanistan, states a Sahmat statement,
are a clear demonstration of the threat that fundamentalism
of all hues pose to the creativity, culture and civilization of
the world.
Not
so long ago, the Prophet of Islam is reported to have conceived
of the Muslim community as a single hand, like a compact
world whose bricks support each other. Mind you, Afghanistan
is no dar al-Islam (land of Islam) or dar al-aman (land of peace).
Nor are its leaders seeking to emulate and realise an Islamic religio-political
vision. At best, this country is at war with itself. The enemy lies
within its own borders. The Taliban use Islam as a weapon to suppress
dissent, invoke the Islamic law to legitimise oppression against
women, and employ the rhetoric of holy war to consolidate their
authoritarian structures. At the same time, it is worth remembering
that religious extremism is not restricted to or inherent in any
one religion. What happened in Bosnia-Herzegovina is fresh in everybodys
mind. Similarly, what is happening in Israel is naked aggression
on the rights of the Palestinian people. Negotiating with the hotheaded
zealots can, most definitely, be a nightmarish experience.
What,
then, is the way out? External intervention is ruled out, for it
will harden attitudes and aid, as the Iranian experience illustrates,
the cause of Islamic fundamentalism. The only hope lies in the willingness
of the people of Afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban regime and
organise its decent burial in the Central Bamiyan province itself,
125 kilometers west of Kabul. For their own survival and the preservation
of their own cultural heritage, they are the ones who should also
perform the final rites. I realise this is easier said than done.
Yet the world, which is on their side at this juncture, await their
verdict against their rulers.
The
challenge today is not to stereotype or project a monolithic threat
but to distinguish between the life-patterns of the majority and
a minority who justify their activities in the name of religion,
caste, ethnicity or political ideology. It is, therefore, not surprising
that Muslim countries, including Pakistan, and Muslim organisations
all over the world have uniformly condemned this act of barbarism
perpetrated by the Taliban. Muslim scholars and politicians in India,
too, have unequivocally expressed their anger and indignation. They
realise the seriousness of the Taliban menace and how it endangers
their own position in an otherwise pluralist society. For these
reasons, it is not fair to compare the destruction of the Babri
Masjid with the ugly happenings in Afghanistan.
Doubtless,
what happened on the banks of the Sarju river in broad daylight
was a heinous act. It was a brutal assault on Indias sanskriti,
its multi-cultural and multi-religious ethos that is exemplified
by Ustad Bismillah playing the shehnai at the Vishwanath temple
in Varanasi or the visitations of thousands of Hindus at the shrine
of Khwaja Muinuddin Chishti.
Yet
the vast majority of people in this society, then and now, are not
wedded to the Hindutva agenda. Lets not forget that they rejected
the sangh parivar in Uttar Pradesh, the site of the Babri Masjid
and the storm centre of the Hindu mobilisation campaigns. Let us
also not forget that they are wedded to the preservation of our
composite legacy. This is indeed what makes India different. This
is surely what makes living in this country worthwhile. I raise
my voice against Hindu and Muslim extremism without the fear of
being guillotined. This cannot happen in the Afghanistan of today.
I invoke Gandhi and Nehru with unfailing regularity without the
fear of reprisals from the BJP government. It is, indeed, their
legacy of these outstanding men that fortifies my confidence in
the survival of our democratic and secular republic.
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