Few years ago, I met a person who had pulled out his son from school and had put him in a madrasa. When I inquired why he had done so, he said that his son had to recite prayers in the school, which was un-Islamic. This person of course knew nothing of the contents of the prayers but he was firmly of the opinion that if the Ulama said it was un-Islamic then it must be true. People like him make no distinction between an opinion and an edict and therefore the argument that a fatwa is just an opinion does not hold good for a section of the Muslim community who believe that the Ulama are the spokesperson of Islam. The fatwa, lacking in wisdom, will have the effect of ghettoising the Muslims even further.
The second argument, hardly reported in the English media, was that Vande Mataram had been made into a divisive issue by the RSS-VHP in parts of Uttar Pradesh, where they have been taking out morchas to hammer home the point that since Muslims do not sing Vande Mataram, they are traitors. The latest Deoband fatwa was thus, some argue, a response to the tirade of the Hindu Right. That may be so, but what is the point in making a local issue into a national one? Besides, we should remember the chronology of events. Vande Mataram controversy was resolved satisfactorily way back in 1937. It was inexplicably revived in 2006 by the then HRD minister Arjun Singh and it was only then that the BJP was able to once again make it into a political issue as it fitted well with their designs to paint the Muslims as outsiders.