With the storming of BORI by hooligans, the monster of fascism no longer growls at the gate - it has crossed the threshold, into the house that Gandhi built. Are we prepared to defend acts of violence perpetrated in the name of our identity, our beli
Let us look back over the past three decades, roughly the entire period post-Emergency. Let us think for amoment of the trans-national (Bangladeshi / Bengali) novelist Taslima Nasreen, the critic Nancy Adajania andthe painter M. F. Hussain from Bombay, and the slain theater activist from Delhi, Safdar Hashmi. The personal,sometimes fatal, experiences of these persons, and the fate of the writings, artifacts and projects that theyattempted to put into the public domain ought to make it clear that the climate of political opinion andpractice enveloping us is not a tolerant one.
The fact that all of these individuals belong(ed) to minority communities or, in one case, are not even Indian by nationality, is even more alarming. When we assert the right of Indian citizens (aswell as of those who are not literally citizens but nonetheless contribute actively to the social and culturallife of this nation), to work in this country without fear or favor, we cannot make our assertion on the basisof an assumed atmosphere of tolerance that would be disturbed if such a right were violated. Rather, we haveto make the argument that if people want to live, they must let others live, and letting live takes as muchdoing as living itself.
As Arundhati Roy said, using the present continuous, in her speech at the opening of the World Social Forum (Goregaon,Mumbai, January 16, 2004), we are at war. Ironic as it may seem, we must do battle – a satyagraha, if youwill – to iteratively achieve as close an approximation of a tolerant society as is humanly possible.
Forms of self-expression, more or lesscreative and aesthetic, more or less dissenting and critical, will come up all the time in a living culture,regardless of the nature of the state, and regardless of the might of the forces of oppression and repression.Attacking a given institution or individual might address, in this case for the militant Marathas, aparticular sore-point, but it will not take away the feeling of outrage and the stance of victimization thatfascists repeatedly and routinely use as the drivers of all their political actions. If we buy into them,these can lead to no place – promises about the revival of golden pasts or the creation of utopian futuresnotwithstanding – other than the end-point of national self-destruction.
In the public debate that has ensued in the weeks since January 05 (the day BORI was sacked), many people,while condemning the attack on a venerable scholarly institution, have accused the liberal intelligentsia –or what’s left of it – as well as the secularist sections of the press – minute though they are now, inthe Indian mediascape – of expressing concern only at certain kinds of attempts to undermine civilliberties, namely, those that come from the political right. What about the violence that groups on thefar-left have done and continue to do with impunity in different parts of the country? How come no one in theEnglish-language establishment cries foul when Naxalites and Maoists kill humans and destroy property in thename of their ideologies of social transformation or total revolution? This is an entirely fair question.
Rhodes Scholar Ananya Vajpeyi is at the University of Chicago, in the Department of South Asian Languages and Civilizations.