www.sacw.net > Communalism Repository
January 7, 2006

Incursions of Hindutva

by Harsh Mander

(Published earlier in
The Times of India, January 7, 2005)

Tribals in the forested interiors of India today face a grave, new
threat. Already dispossessed of land and forest, grappling with debt,
hunger, exploitation and bondage, the tribals now face incursions of
radical Hindutva, systematically propagated by front organisations of
the Sangh, threatening to divide and communalise tribal communities and
further distance them from justice.

For the majority of tribals, the Muslim is invisible. The enemy invented
for them instead by the Sangh is Christianity, demonised as a dangerous
foreign conspiracy to destabilise India, propagated by inducement and
fraud by missionaries, pastors and nuns. Healthcare and education
provided by them are dismissed as bribes for conversion.

In Gujarat, the epicentre of the war against Christianity is the Dangs
district, with 92% tribal population, mainly Bhils and Warlis.

This impoverished district gained notoriety in 1998, when 38 acts of
violence were recorded against a population of a few thousand and the
pastors in the district.

 Independent investigations established that these attacks were a
result of hatred and suspicion systematically introduced by activists of
Sangh organisations like Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram and Hindu Jagran Manch.

With the Sangh planning a Shabri Kumbh in Dangs in February 2006, there
are fears of a repeat. There have been several such gatherings organised
by Hindutva activists in the region in recent years, including a Vishal
Hindu Mahasangam in Jhabua in MP in 2002, and another Kumbh in Bhilwada
in Rajasthan in 2004.

Each gathering was preceded by intensive mobilisation by Sangh activists
in tribal households, distribution of lockets and statues of Hindu
deities like Hanuman, and doorstep propaganda against Christians.

The choice of Hindu icons for adivasi areas is also telling: Hanuman and
Shabri, revered as loyal servants rather than masters like Ram. There
are numerous programmes, called 'ghar vapsi' or homecoming, or alleged
reconversions of tribals to Hindu faith.

 Each of these gatherings left a trail of violence and fear among
Christian adivasis, and expansion in support for the BJP.

However, as both anthropologists and district gazetteers testify,
adivasis are not originally Hindu, especially not of the narrow
Brahmanical version purveyed by the Sangh.

Their worship is animistic: They pray to tigers, cows, and serpents, the
moon, hills, forests, wind and rain. Their gods are appeased by animal
sacrifice and home-brewed liquor.

The modus operandi of Hindutva activists is to adopt and gradually
co-opt these tribal gods. The gods are gradually converted to
teetotallers and vegetarians and reinvented as local versions of Hindu gods.

Temples are built to these gods, and Hindu festivals introduced. In the
run-up to the Shabri Kumbh, it is being claimed that Ram encountered
Shabri and ate the berries tasted by her in Dangs.

 As in Ayodhya, Hindutva activists claim precise knowledge of the exact
location where Ram encountered Shabri — the spot where the Kumbh is
being organised.

Traditionally, there can only be four Kumbhs at fixed locations in
12-year cycles, and this has been unchanged through the millennia.

Plans for the new Shabri Kumbh are thus a manipulation of mythology for
sectarian objectives of terrorising the few thousand adivasi Christians,
and to promote a false majoritarian Hindu identity in violent opposition
to them.

What is even more dismaying is the state's open support. Development
funds in one of the country's poorest districts are being diverted for
building roads, platforms and dams for the Kumbh reservoir.

The local administration refuses to act against the Sangh pamphlets and
CDs, which make repeated venomous references to the church, and ignores
the mounting terror among the Christian adivasis, as well as the
destruction of the fragile environment.

Instead, the district collector defends these as legitimate religious
activities, with the added benefit of development. This openly partisan
support of the state government needs to be combated, and the safety of
minorities secured.

Else, the tribal regions of India, already dispossessed and
impoverished, will be flooded with the bitter blood of sectarian hatred.

The author is a researcher on Gujarat.


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