|
Not
Just People Next Door
Mohalla
committees that sprang up in Mumbai after the riots of 1992-93
have gone a long way in brokering peace between Hindus and
Muslims despite serious provocation, says Smruti
Koppikar
FOR
THOSE of us who had a street-side view of the 1992-93 riots
in Mumbai, it has been a terrifying edge-of-the-seat journey
through these years, forever wondering when the country’s
so-called cosmopolitan metropolis will plumb the depths of
communal frenzy again. What provocation would make men behave
like hungry beasts after a prey, even the men in uniform whose
duty it is to protect? What spark would ignite passions in
the city yet again? What perceived injustice would the self-styled
peddlers of Hindutva find to incite violence? And Mumbai being
Mumbai, we wondered when a quibble over a water tap in a slum
would escalate into a communal riot and engulf the entire
city.
Somewhere in the ashes of the 92-93 riots lay the kernel for
a peace-keeping formula too. Somehow, people from all walks
of life and sections of society who stood up to the communal
frenzy and went around with a healing touch figured out a
way to institutionalise that effort. Sometime during those
terrible aftermath months in early 1993, a simple idea became
a workable reality. Now, nine years later, the mohalla committee
is part of the civil society structure in a city that usually
has little time or mental space for such niceties.
Sceptics and cynics need to rewind to the momentous events
of last year alone to see how much mohalla committees have
had to with keeping the peace in the city. There have been
many a provocation, enough reason for communal sentiment to
assume disgusting forms — rumours of the Quran burning in
Delhi, communal violence in nearby Malegaon, the terrorist
strikes in the United States and most recently, the highly
incendiary Gujarat burning — but on no occasion was the peace
breached in Mumbai.
The
toughest test, so far, has been the provocation from Gujarat
and the run-up to the VHP’s show of obstinacy on March 15.
Even 48 hours before the D-day, as the Supreme Court made
its mind clear, peace held out against all else. Sure, there
is anger among Muslims and aggressiveness among Hindutvawadis
but both have been kept in check in hundreds of little pockets
across the city, especially the mixed areas. Mumbaiites who
have been involved in the mohalla committee process believe
that if March 15 passes off without an incident, it would
be like Graduation Day for them.
What is the mohalla committee that has suddenly gained respect
and become the subject of dissertation study? More importantly,
why does the concept mostly work?
It’s
simple: Give people some power and make them responsible for
their well-being. Every mohalla committee — and there are
20-odd in the city — has a sizeable number of people from
the area who are regarded as elders, or have a standing of
their own, or have the charisma to make others listen to them.
The primary task of the mohalla committee is to maintain more-than-cordial
relations between the two communities, largely Hindus and
Muslims.
Mohalla
committee members intervene in disputes, even personal or
domestic quarrels if need be, organise little meetings or
the cliched variety programme and liaise with the nearest
police station all in the effort to maintain peace. If trouble
breaks out, they broker peace too. If rumours go around, they
go around killing the rumours before the rumours can kill.
In troubled times, such as the present, these people-next-door
have become the quintessential diplomats.
Going on an evening hike with a mohalla committee in say Nagpada
or Dongri is an education in human resources management. Committee
members assume the role of arbitrators, have a glass of chai
and a little chat with an unusually angry person on an issue
that no one has bothered to address that day, walk around
with a cop or two spreading word that these men in khaki can
be trusted in times of trouble and so on. Intervening in paan
shop and street-side discussions that young men had on the
Ahmedabad pogrom helped as much, if not more than the march
of the khaki did.
Farid Shaikh, one of the earliest mohalla committee members,
says, ‘‘The method we use to build confidence or bhaichara
depends on the area and the mood that day. Some days we have
to do some tough-talking, on other days we sit around with
as many people as possible and just chat. The idea is: let
the leaders create a bad situation, we won’t react to it.’’
Mohalla committees get into top gear action when there is
a good reason to do so. At other times, they are just around.
The more enterprising ones have members meet regularly, organise
cricket matches like the one in JJ Marg near Dongri did a
day after Godhra and Ahmedabad with an equal number of Hindus
and Muslims in the teams, involve themselves in civic affairs
like getting a water connection closer to a cluster of houses
or interface with civic officials for better access to the
main road and so on.
Who are these people? Farid Shaikh or businessman Nafis Sardar
who organised the match or customs official Uday Deshpande
or lawyer Yasmin Shaikh are real people like us but willing
to walk that extra mile for peace, people who will not just
tch-tch about the deteriorating communal relations in their
drawing rooms but who are willing to even take a small cut
in their businesses to help the cause of peace.
What helps them is the presence of retired senior police officials
like J F Ribeiro and Satish Sahney among others in the Mohalla
Committee Movement Trust that networks with the current crop
of police officials who, in turn, put pressure on senior inspectors
of police stations to work closely with mohalla committees.
At their worst, members of a mohalla committee have been accused
of being informants of the police and the infamous Memons
of the blasts fame were part of the Mahim Committee, but that
is the odd one out. Top cops like Police Commissioner M N
Singh and Joint Commissioner (law and order) V N Deshmukh
readily acknowledge the role of the mohalla committees in
the last few troubled months, how committee members have helped
the police do proactive policing and keep peace.
If Mumbai is on even keel right through March, may be mohalla
committees of Mumbai have a lesson or two for the rest of
the nation.
|