[sacw] SACW #2 | 17 August 02
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex@mnet.fr
Sat, 17 Aug 2002 09:29:07 +0100
South Asia Citizens Wire, Dispatch #2 | 17 August 2002
__________________________
#1. Wasting a big chance? (Praful Bidwai)
#2. Poetry, Power and Blood (Mahesh Rangarajan)
#3. Holy Cow a Myth? An Indian Finds the Kick Is Real (Emily Eakin)
#4. Book Review: The routes of Partition (Sukumar Muralidharan)
__________________________
#1.
The News International (Pakistan)
Saturday August 17, 2002-- Jamadi-us-Sani 07, 1423 A.H.
Wasting a big chance?
Praful Bidwai
The writer is one of India's most widely published columnists.
Formerly a Senior Fellow of the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, he
is a winner of the Sean MacBride Prize for 2000 of the International
Peace Bureau
After the respective Independence Day addresses by President Pervez
Musharraf and Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, India and Pakistan
again seem to be lurching towards a confrontation over Kashmir.
Musharraf declared the coming Jammu and Kashmir elections "farcical"
and reaffirmed support to the Kashmiri "freedom struggle" as a
"sacred trust". And Vajpayee was back harping on the "atoot ang"
(inalienable part of India) theme, even while admitting past
"mistakes" on India's part.
Following the sparring, how does the picture look from India? The one
significant new -- and somewhat hopeful -- element is New Delhi's
offer of "unconditional" talks to the All-Party Hurriyat Conference
through the Kashmir Committee, an ad hoc NGO headed by former law
minister Ram Jethmalani.
The Hurriyat has agreed to the talks -- with many disclaimers and
qualifications. The most important: it will not participate in the
elections, the talks must focus solely on the "future dispensation"
of Kashmir, they must be "on a principle and for a cause", and they
must soon involve Pakistan.
The Hurriyat is making much of the fact that it has only agreed to
talk to an Indian non-governmental organisation, not an official
body. But such distinctions are largely imaginary and reflect the
Hurriyat's fear of being identified as "pro-India". The Kashmir
Committee is very close to the hawkish home minister, LK Advani.
Jethmalani himself announced last week that "Advani authorised and
requested the Committee to declare publicly that he would welcome
anyone ... who has any relevant issues to discuss with him ...".
In truth, this is the first time in 13 years that the Hurriyat has
agreed to talk to an Indian NGO which has a line of communication to
the government. So has Shabir Ahmed Shah. Earlier, the Hurriyat had
refused to meet New Delhi's nominee, KC Pant. Significantly, neither
group threatens to campaign for a boycott of the Assembly elections.
The move towards a dialogue is welcome in and of itself. But whether
it is truly productive will be determined by the interplay of three
factors. There is reason to be sceptical about these. Should they
fail to reinforce one another positively, the post-September 11
opportunity, which has opened up in Kashmir thanks to a realignment
of the region's political-military forces, will be lost. The problem
will fester.
The three factors are: the motives, compulsions and calculations of
the Hurriyat; the Indian government's plans to seek legitimacy for
the coming elections while hedging on a dialogue on Kashmir with
Pakistan; and the attitude of the Pakistan establishment, in
particular the agencies that shape the Kashmir policy, to the
possibility of a relatively free and fair election in J&K.
It is clear that the Hurriyat opted for talks with Jethmalani largely
out of pressure from the United States, Britain and the European
Union (which last week sent a delegation to Srinagar explicitly
asking for its electoral participation). The generally pro-Pakistan
conglomerate looks more divided after the moderate Abdul Gani Lone's
assassination. Its popularity has never been tested. But now it is
called upon to show it believes in democratic processes and peaceful
resolution of disputes.
A senior Hurriyat leader is quoted as saying it would have been
"suicidal" to equate Jethmalani with Pant -- with his inflexible
brief and his extraordinarily bureaucratic approach -- and to reject
talks. But the Hurriyat is under equally strong pressure from jihadi
militants and from sections of the Pakistan government to refuse
reconciliation with New Delhi, especially through elections.
Many Hurriyat leaders are aware that Kashmiri popular sentiment has
changed in recent weeks. According to numerous reports from the
Valley, many more people favour inclusive and free elections than
they did six years ago. An opinion poll by "The Week" says 54 percent
feel the Hurriyat should contest the elections, although 73 percent
think Pakistan "will try to disrupt them".
Few Hurriyat leaders are likely to stick their necks out, including
some who want to return to "normal" electoral politics. The result of
these contradictory pressures is the Hurriyat's latest, awkward,
pro-talks decision. Its leadership cannot approach the talks from a
position of strength in today's "anti-terrorist" global climate. It
is unlikely to take them particularly seriously.
The Indian government has gone through many gyrations. Aware of
international concerns, it recently replaced Pant with former RAW
chief AS Dullat and sent him to open exploratory talks with Kashmir's
non-parliamentary groups. But then, it arrested the JKLF's Yasin
Malik and Jamat-i-Islami's Syed Ali Shah Geelani. This was a crude
attempt to isolate Hurriyat "hardliners" from "moderates". The
opposite happened.
A month ago, the government agreed to negotiate "autonomy" for
Kashmir with Farooq Abdullah's National Conference as part of a deal
on a spell of Governor's Rule in Kashmir just prior to the elections.
Such a spell will be a welcome confidence-booster. It has already
become the demand of most political parties, including the Congress.
In reality, the "autonomy" talks are a charade. They could at best
help Abdullah claim the NC has not given up on its trademark demand.
Abdullah does not trust New Delhi not to promote some ex-militants
and even pro-separatist leaders at the NC's expense. He is unlikely
to quit unless there is a dramatic breakthrough.
The elections won't be easy to rig. There is a tough, impartial and
credible Chief Election Commissioner in James Lyngdoh, who has
publicly warned the security forces against coercion. Besides, there
will be some election observers from abroad. Indeed, there is a
powerful case for a full-scale monitoring group, not limited to South
Asians. This can only enhance the election's credibility.
But New Delhi bristles at and desperately resists the suggestion
because it wrongly sees it as the thin end of the "external
interference" wedge. It should know that Kashmir's
internationalisation became inevitable after Pokharan-II with the
highlighting of the issue's potential as a flashpoint for a nuclear
catastrophe.
One major premise informing all recent Indian moves is the strategy
of holding relatively free and fair elections in Kashmir, and
negotiating with the winners, but refusing a dialogue with Pakistan.
This may not be viable in the long run, but could work so long as the
present balance of forces in the "anti-terrorism" campaign holds,
favouring India.
Needless to say, this means squandering an opportunity for regaining
the Kashmiri people's confidence and reaching reconciliation with a
neighbour. The Pakistan government too faces a historic choice. It
can agree to support the J&K elections, albeit with international
observers, and seize the diplomatic initiative by inviting India to
the negotiating table. Or it can opt for worn-out, clandestine
military "solutions": disrupt elections, deny them legitimacy, and
thus keep the Kashmir pot boiling.
It is the easiest thing in Kashmir to hire or recruit killers who
will target candidates. But that strategy won't produce either
goodwill for Pakistan or political energies which can take Kashmir
out of the present morass, to which New Delhi has undoubtedly
contributed. It will take wisdom and statesmanship to reject such
short-sighted, counter-productive approaches. It is doubtful if
either government has these. Without wisdom, they could make an even
bigger mess of Kashmir--endangering their own security, and the lives
of the Valley's beleaguered people.
_____
#2.
The Telegraph, Wednesday, 14 August 2002
Poetry, Power and Blood
Mahesh Rangarajan
It is interesting to reflect on how the race for power can be viewed
through the lens of poetry. A Hindi poet once wrote, " To those who
try to reach/ the throne of power/ over mounds of dead bodies of
innocent children/Old women/Young men/I have a question/Did nothing
bind them to those who died?"
It is no great secret who wrote these lines. It was a BJP Member of
Parliament, who has, since 1998, been the head of government: Atal
Bihari Vajpayee. The poem entitled 'Satta' or 'Power' prominently
features in collections and has been reproduced with a translation in
the book, 21 Poems translated and edited by noted civil servant and
author, Pawan K Varma.
Neither the author nor the editor informs us about the context or
moment when the lines were written but it is ironical how relevant
they seem in the fracas around the timing of the Gujarat Assembly
elections. The Central Election Commission has gone about its work
with due diligence, including on-site visits first by its officials
and then its members. Even before it has announced when it intends to
hold the polls, the ruling party has decided to launch a full scale
offensive.
Nobody knows what prompted former Cabinet minister and newly
appointed General Secretary of the ruling party, Arun Jaitley to go
on the offensive against the Central Election Commission. Perhaps,
having banked on early polls following the dissolution of the State
Assembly in Gujarat, the party was banking on easy polls to take
advantage of the prevailing polarisation among the voters. The
comments mark the beginning of a possible war of words between the
Union government and the election authorities.
At stake is a major constitutional question: who has the right to
decide when polls may be held? In support of the view that early
polls will help provide a healing touch, many ideologies and
spokesmen have quoted the precedents from other states.
Jammu and Kashmir and Punjab were states hit by insurgency and the
holding of the polls was widely seen as essential to give a message
to armed groups who were trying to inflict serious damage to the
country's integrity and unity. Even here, and it is interesting how
the fact is being brushed aside, the Jammu and Kashmir elections were
not held in 1995, following on the spot inspection by the Election
Commission. They were instead held as late as October 1996.
As for the Assam elections of 1983, certain simple facts are being
ignored. One BJP Rajya Sabha MP who is a former journalist went so
far as to say that poling was only of the order of 2 to 3 per cent.
But the official record shows a turnout of 33 per cent: not healthy
or large but over ten times the figure that has been claimed.
There is still a point here. India of 2002 has one fortunate legacy
of a decade of political turmoil, a politically neutral and
independent Central Election Commission. The change can be traced
back tot the TN Seshan era but the tradition was further strengthened
by his successor Dr MS Gill. Not so long ago, elections across north
India were accompanied by open intimidation and booth capturing,
while procedures laid down for verifying the identity of voters were
openly flouted by powerful rural elites an their henchmen. The fact
the body was earlier a weak kneed one is no excuse for it to go back
to its supine past and let politicians dictate the rules at poll time.
It is a measure of the maturity of Indian democracy that all
concerned admit that a strong and autonomous CEC is not only in
keeping with the spirit and letter the Constitution but also a
necessity in a state like Jammu and Kashmir. It is indeed myopic of a
regime that has put so much store on free and fair polls in the state
of Jammu and Kashmir to now question the Commission's actions in
another state even before it has arrived at a decision on how to
proceed further. Such attempts at browbeating a constitutional body
do not bode well for democracy.
Gujarat's is a society that has been scarred by violence. Beyond that
any comparison with other states bears little meaning. The reason is
obvious. Even Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was constrained to
remark on a visit to the camps that there was a need to conform to
the principles of fair play in statecraft. The expression he used was
an orthodox Sanskrit one, raj-dharma, and the idea that the ruler
ought to be even handed, just and equable in his dealings with all
sections.
Just how the Modi regime handled the issue can be seen in comparison
with the firm policing of the state after the Dariapur riots under
his predecessor. Keshumbhai Patel even publicly warned that no one
was above the law, provoking a sharp retort from an ally, the Shiv
Sena. Senior Sena ministers from the Union government even criticised
his actions in arresting not only Muslim but also Hindu miscreants.
This is not to say that the state government was even-handed in every
case, but there was a difference if only of degree. Unlike Keshubhai
Patel who is a veteran in the State Assembly, having been a minister
as early as 1974 in the Janata Front government, Modi is a new comer
to electoral politics. He also spent over ten years away form the
state as an office bearer at the national level.
The politics of polarisation was and is as much aimed at his rivals
within his party as at the opposition. Lacking a rapport either with
the Patels or the kshatriyas, the Godhra issue and its aftermath is
means to project him as the sole leader of the new Gujarat. Hence,
the unseemly haste with which he claimed normalcy had returned.
Unless he makes haste, his own adversaries within will cut him to
size.
This is not the only reason why the BJP is going hammer and tongs at
all those who oppose early polls. There is a deeper reason. It is an
open secret that the core ideological agenda of the party has been in
cold storage for much of the last four years in office. After a
string of electoral reverses and following a shuffle of personnel
within the party, it is testing the waters in Gujarat. As long as the
party stays within the bounds of the law, it is free to preach
whatever ideology it wants.
The ruling party would do well to heed the message of the times and
abide by the Election Commission's verdict, whatever it is. There are
times a nation ranks first, and a party second.
The comments about how well the Modi regime handled the violence
bring back memories. Rajiv Gandhi had remarked that, "The earth
shakes when a big tree falls", made at a rally to commemorate his
mother seemed deeply insensitive to Sikhs who were killed in
massacres in Delhi. The image never quite left him, despite his
reputation of being Mr Clean.
But why go so far back in history, when the poet who is Prime
Minister put it so well himself. If his government does not watch its
step, its own leader's verse will come back to haunt it.
Acts of violence against women and children can not be counted as
'badges of patriotism' or 'certificates of culture'. And as for power
acquired through the politics of hate, he writes, "A throne smeared
with the blood of the innocent/ ranks lower than the dust of a
cemetery."
_____
#3.
The New York Times
August 17, 2002
Holy Cow a Myth? An Indian Finds the Kick Is Real
By EMILY EAKIN
oly Cow: Beef in Indian Dietary Traditions," is a dry work of
historiography buttressed by a 24-page bibliography and hundreds of
footnotes citing ancient Sanskrit texts. It's the sort of book, in
other words, that typically is read by a handful of specialists and
winds up forgotten on a library shelf.
But when its author, Dwijendra Narayan Jha, a historian at the
University of Delhi, tried to publish the book in India a year ago,
he unleashed a furor of a kind not seen there since 1989, when the
release of "Satanic Verses," Salman Rushdie's novel satirizing Islam,
provoked rioting and earned him a fatwa from Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini.
As Mr. Jha's book was going to press last August, excerpts were
posted on the Internet and picked up by newspapers. Within days the
book had been canceled by Mr. Jha's academic publisher, burned
outside his home by religious activists and - after a second
publisher tried to print it - banned by a Hyderabad civil court. A
spokesman for the World Hindu Council called it "sheer blasphemy." A
former member of Parliament petitioned the government for Mr. Jha's
arrest. Anonymous callers made death threats. And for 10 months Mr.
Jha was obliged to travel to and from campus under police escort.
After months of legal wrangling, Mr. Jha's lawyers succeeded in
having the ban lifted this spring. And now his book has been
published in Britain and the United States by Verso, with a new
preface and a more provocative title: "The Myth of the Holy Cow." But
though copies have been shipped to India, few bookstores there are
likely to stock it.
His offense? To say what scholars have long known to be true: early
Hindus ate beef.
Mr. Jha says his book has become a casualty of the culture wars that
have plagued India since the hard-line Hindu nationalist Bharatiya
Janata Party took office five years ago. "The battle lines are drawn
very clearly," he said. "On one side of the barricade are the ideas
of cultural pluralism, rationality and democratic values. On the
other side are Hindu fundamentalism and cultural nationalism."
Under this government, scholars and journalists say, history books
have been rewritten and occasionally censored. Two years ago, for
example, a multivolume project on the history of Indian independence
sponsored by the Indian Council of Historical Research was scuttled
by government officials who apparently deemed its scope too liberal.
In a telephone interview from his home in New Delhi, Mr. Jha said,
"The prohibition on beef-eating has been made a mark of Hindu
identity, but this is historically not true."
Anyone who has tried to navigate India's cow-choked streets knows the
special status conferred on the beast by Hindus, who make up more
than 80 percent of the population. Gandhi referred to the cow as "our
mother," calling cattle protection "the central fact of Hinduism."
And in several Indian states killing a cow is against the law.
But while cow veneration and vegetarianism may be the hallmarks of
Hinduism today, Mr. Jha compiles copious evidence that this has
hardly always been the case. Citing sources ranging from the ancient
sacred scriptures, the Vedas (circa 1000 B.C.), to Sanskrit epics
like the Ramayana and the Mahabharata (200 B.C to A.D. 200) as well
as data from archaeological digs, Mr. Jha contends that "the
`holiness' of the cow is a myth and that its flesh was very much a
part of the early Indian nonvegetarian food regimen and dietary
traditions."
Not only were oxen and other animals offered as sacrifices to the
Vedic gods, he writes, they were routinely eaten by mere mortals as
well.
One religious text declares meat to be quite simply "the best kind of
food," while another captures Yajnavalkya, a revered Vedic sage who
lived around 500 B.C., confessing to a particular weakness for beef.
"Some people do not eat cow meat," he is quoted as saying. "I do so,
provided it's tender."
Meanwhile, the Mahabharata recounts the story of King Rantiveda, who
earned his renown by slaughtering 2,000 cows a day in his royal
kitchens and distributing beef along with grain to apparently
grateful Brahmins, the Hindu priests.
Even the Buddha, on record as opposing animal killing for either food
or sacrifice, was apparently not above the occasional carnivorous
nibble. Mr. Jha cites passages from early Buddhist texts suggesting
not only that the Buddha ate meat but that a meal of contaminated
pork may ultimately have been what did him in. (Mr. Jha dismisses a
dissenting interpretation that the offending food was not pork but
mushroom.)
None of this, scholars say, is news. In a recent review in The Times
Literary Supplement, Wendy Doniger, a professor of the history of
religion at the University of Chicago, called Mr. Jha's book "a dry,
straight academic survey . . . proving what every scholar of India
has known for well over a century."
"This is not `Satanic Verses,' " Ms. Doniger added in a telephone
interview. "This is just a relatively intelligent, academic book. It
doesn't depict Hindus as horrible people."
Indeed, until the Bharatiya Janata Party came to power, said Michael
Witzel, a professor of Sanskrit at Harvard University, much of the
history Mr. Jha records was taught in Indian schools.
"It's very much a reality of the culture here in India that scholars
have to face harassment and intimidation," said Sukumar Muralidharan,
the Delhi bureau chief for Frontline, a biweekly news magazine. "The
Hindu nationalist lobby is trying to force a kind of polarization in
terms of a singular cultural inheritance on one side and all the rest
on the other side. And their idea of the inheritance is very much
their own construct, not a full reading of history."
In this context, even food has become politicized as Hindu
nationalists use their vegetarianism to distinguish themselves from
the nation's beef-eating and implicitly immoral Muslim minority.
Mr. Jha's book, Ms. Doniger wrote in her review, "contradicts the
party line, which is that we Hindus have always been here in India
and have Never Eaten Cow; those Muslims have come in, and Kill and
Eat Cows, and therefore must be destroyed."
>From a scholarly point of view, she said, what's shocking about
ancient Indian history is not that some people ate meat but that some
did not: "Since the human species is by nature carnivorous, what is
surprising is that there ever were vegetarians."
Beginning around A.D. 500, Mr. Jha writes, killing cows became
increasingly taboo - according to the religious texts, a sinful
practice associated with the lowest social order, the untouchables.
In part, he speculates, the change in official attitude may have
coincided with the explosion of agriculture. The cow, on whose
strength (for plowing), dung (for fuel) and milk the community
depended, was just too valuable to slaughter.
Other scholars, however, say the taboo probably owed more to factors
increasingly integral to Hindu, Buddhist and Jainist thought: the
belief in reincarnation, which blurred the lines between humans and
animals, and the doctrine of ahimsa, or nonviolence.
"The feeling that people have about killing animals and taking lives,
that's the basis of it," Ms. Doniger said. "Obviously, people were
feeling guilty. Anytime you eat beef, that meant someone had
slaughtered a cow."
Mr. Witzel says that the word cow was frequently a metaphor in Vedic
texts, most notably for the poetry composed by Brahmin priests. When
one Vedic poet writes, "don't kill the innocent cow," he really means
"don't make bad poetry," Mr. Witzel said. Ultimately, he speculated,
both figurative and literal connotations may have contributed to the
prohibition on cow slaughter. "As soon as you identify cow with
poetry, you cannot do anything to that cow. Step by step, this
becomes concretized."
Of course, these are just the kind of explanations likely to
infuriate Hindus who are determined to have the cow's sacred status
enshrined in Indian law.
"Only two days ago, I saw the news that they are trying to get the
cow declared a national animal," lamented Mr. Jha, a Hindu who says
he is a vegetarian purely for health reasons. "In Delhi, cows should
best be treated as a safety hazard. You cannot drive safely for the
cows that stray around."
_____
#4.
Frontline (Chennai, India)
Volume 19 - Issue 17, August 17 - 30, 2002
BOOKS
The routes of Partition
SUKUMAR MURALIDHARAN
Pangs of Partition, Volume I: The Parting of Ways and Volume II: The
Human Dimension, edited by S. Settar and Indira B. Gupta; Manohar and
the Indian Council of Historical Research, Delhi, 2002; Rs.700 (each
volume), pages 368 & 358.
THE lapse of more than half a century has not rendered historical
constructions of the partition of India any less contentious. The
strain of Hindutva or "cultural nationalism", which purports to see a
primordial Hindu identity as the basic cement of the Indian nation,
has been active in recent times, establishing its dominance over a
large swathe of political territory. In candid moments, as in recent
depositions before the Commission of Inquiry into the demolition of
the Babri Masjid at Ayodhya, the leading lights of Hindutva are apt
to suggest that Partition had pronounced a final verdict on the
character of the Indian nation.
Hindutva spokesmen have with little subtlety argued that with the
Muslims of South Asia having carved out a homeland for themselves,
the population that remained behind in independent India had no
justification to profess a faith that set them at variance with the
majority. Partition has remained in this rendition an incomplete
project, since the Islamic faith continues to exist in India and the
followers of the faith continue to have a measure of political
influence.
This rhetoric has eerie parallels across the border, where a
programme of territorial acquisition in Kashmir is cast in terms of
the "unfinished agenda" of Partition. Those who have been engaged in
seeking a sane political response to rival variants of extremism have
rightly sought to re-examine the historical record and identify the
political fault-lines that led to the cataclysm of Partition. This
has been an inescapable component of the effort to address
contemporary political schisms and to assuage the wounds that
continue to fester.
The Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR) commissioned this
reappraisal of the historical record on Partition 50 years after the
event. Their purpose, as the editors say in their introduction, was
to "focus attention on a wide array of individual and collective
experiences of migration, trauma and the intense nostalgia of the
displaced for the undivided past". In reviewing "some of the
established theories concerning Partition" from this avowedly
humanistic perspective, the editors lay down crucial guidelines for
the contributors: the purpose of these volumes is not to relive the
rancour of those turbulent times, but to catalogue the political
failures that contributed to an epic tragedy whose human costs have
never really been reckoned.
This effort to transcend political (and religious) segmentation is
evident in the opening essay by V.N. Datta, which focusses on the
Radcliffe Award and the anomalous rulings it handed down on the
Punjab boundary. Pakistan has never tired of ventilating its supposed
grievance over the allotment of Gurdaspur district to India. In the
construction that prevails across the border, the intent of the
Gurdaspur award was fairly transparent: to ensure India a route of
access to the State of Jammu and Kashmir. In tampering with the
objective criteria that had been devised for determining the
disposition of various tracts, Pakistan has held Lord Mountbatten,
the last Viceroy of British India, singularly responsible.
The Indian response has been that the Gurdaspur award had little to
do with the incipient dispute over Kashmir, and everything to do with
Sikh religious sensibilities. It was all about ensuring that
Amritsar, a city with deep emotional resonances for the Sikh
community, was not transformed into a solitary abutment within
hostile territory. Datta examines this rationale in the light of
another of Radcliffe's decisions, on the allotment of Ferozepur
district. He finds no consistency between the two decisions and
little sustenance in the historical record for pleas that Mountbatten
remained loftily unconcerned with the Boundary Commission's work.
B.R. Nanda and Chittabrata Palit provide subtle and sympathetic
accounts of Mahatma Gandhi's role in the days leading to Partition.
Palit in particular reconstructs with minute attention to the
Mahatma's fluctuating public utterances, how the man who had worked
through his life to bridge differences, was rendered virtually
helpless in understanding the complexities of the transfer of power.
He was unprepared for the rush of events following the proposals of
the Cabinet Mission and he ended up a "political discard of the
Congress" and in the perception of the Hindu extremists, as "the
stepfather of Pakistan".
As high politics plunged towards a final parting of ways, key figures
at the helm remained fairly oblivious of the manner in which the
fabric of daily life was being ripped apart for millions of people in
the communally sensitive regions. In her contribution on the Congress
and Partition, Sucheta Mahajan points out how Sardar Patel was till
as late as May 1947 insisting that he would "never be guilty of
such... cowardly advice" as asking Hindus to migrate. And Jawaharlal
Nehru was declaring in meetings with Mountbatten in June that he was
"opposed to the principle of population transfers".
IT is impossible to dodge the inference that the leaders who were
bargaining over the merits of the Cabinet Mission's plan relative to
an outright partition, and debating how desirable a strong centre
would be, were dealing in abstractions rather than concrete
realities. The second volume in this set presents an evocative
interview with the eminent Hindi literatteur Bhisham Sahni, who lived
through the experience of Partition as a young man in Rawalpindi.
Sahni tells Alok Bhalla, his interviewer, that even when the
inevitability of Partition was beginning to bear in on all,
politically innocent people such as his parents could never conceive
of leaving the environs that they had spent their lives in. Even if
"regimes changed", they imagined, "populations do not".
Sahni's father was not alone in this belief. And though aware of the
turmoil that was brewing, the political leaders were unable to
provide credible counsel. Sahni recalls that senior Congress leader
Acharya Kripalani, who visited his troubled city on the eve of
Independence, was in turns evasive and brusque in dealing with
questions from ordinary people on what the advisable course would be
for them.
Mahajan's analysis suggests that there was within the Congress a
strain of opinion which believed that mass struggles could be
initiated, uniting communities sundered by religion into a common
endeavour. Such had indeed been the purpose of the Muslim mass
contact programmes launched in earlier years. But curiously, as
another contributor points out, the Congress' effort to recruit the
Muslim masses to its cause only deepened suspicions. And in the
atmosphere of estrangement and violence that prevailed following
1946, no party could conceive of initiating a mass agitation.
WHERE did the roots of the estrangement lie? Khwaja A. Khalique
provides the broad historical perspective on the combined and unequal
development of the communities through the colonial period. Other
authors focus on the shorter time span following 1946, when the
orchestrated violence of Direct Act Day compelled the Congress to
bring the Muslim League into a coalition government at the Centre.
The hesitant embrace soon turned into mutual recoil, with the
Congress seeing in Finance Minister Liaqat Ali Khan's budget
proposals a deliberate design to impair the interests of its business
constituencies.
Over a medium-term perspective, Salil Mishra takes up the question of
the provincial government experiment that began in 1937. There is a
fairly well entrenched view that the Congress intransigence in
denying the Muslim League any role in the government of the United
Provinces accelerated the momentum towards Partition. An
accommodation between the two parties in this interpretation would
have dampened the ardour for separation among the Muslim
intelligentsia in the United Provinces and provided useful guideposts
to a future power sharing arrangement at the Centre.
Mishra finds from an examination of the historical record that this
picture is overly simplified. There were a variety of political
tendencies in operation in the United Provinces, and the advocacy of
a coalition arrangement remained a fairly isolated strain. Coalition
formation was a strategic decision to be made by the leadership of
the two parties in the context they found themselves in. Neither
party could have foreseen then that their decisions would culminate
in Partition a decade later. And the overwhelming majority on either
side saw their strategic advantage in remaining distinct, rather than
in seeking a mutual accommodation.
Other contributors to this volume look at the regional configuration
of forces in the North-West Frontier Provinces, the princely states,
the Oriya region and the Central Provinces and Berar. B.M. Pandey
rounds off Volume I with a critique of British imperialist
historiography on the Partition, clearing the way for an entry into
Volume II, which in exploring the "human dimensions" illumines the
terrain of literature and language, education, art and film.
In analysing how Partition figures in the school curricula, Krishna
Kumar points out an oddity of the history textbook: unlike other
subjects, it does not invite the student to acquire the tools of
learning, but only to partake of what is ostensibly, already
crystallised wisdom. There is also in India and Pakistan, he says, a
peculiarly reverential attitude towards the textbook, typified in the
approach of "prescribing" rather than "recommending" a textbook,
which is then seen as embodying some variety of final truth,
consecrated by the authority of the state. This diminishes their
utility in an objective understanding of the event, rendering the
curriculum a mere extension of reasons of state.
The cursory treatment of Partition in textbooks, Krishna Kumar
argues, could also be understood in terms of the inability of modern
historiography as a discipline to bring the concerns, needs and
aspirations of ordinary people to the foreground of study. Anodyne
shorthand references, such as "millions lost their homes and
thousands were killed" - typical of textbook treatments of Partition
- are symptomatic of this failure to represent the real pain and
suffering of the uprooted. This makes it incumbent on the teaching
process to go beyond history as a catalogue of facts crammed into
textbooks, to a wider consideration of the literature of particular
periods as a "source of support material" for the study of history in
schools.
Mrinal Pande examines the broad canvas and life and literature on
both sides of the divided sub-continent and finds a gross failure to
internalise fully the lessons of the tragic event. Xenophobic
right-wing groups, she points out, have sought to keep all the
rancour alive as an ideological prop of their divisive politics.
Neither country has chosen to erect a monument to the hundreds of
thousands of people killed, in the manner that Germany has for the
victims of the Holocaust or Japan has for those who perished in the
nuclear bombing of two of its cities. This silence has been breached
in recent times by scholars and activists working along diverse axes,
as for example, in Urvashi Butalia's meticulous and compassionate
documentation of the trauma of women uprooted by Partition.
The linguist R.K. Agnihotri suggests that among the many innocent
victims of Partition was "the shared language and literature of the
people of pre-Partition India". If the contention between rival
interpretations of the country's linguistic and literary inheritance
were to be considered, then says Agnihotri, Partition could be dated
to several decades before 1947. Linguistic separatism continues to
exert a baneful influence. Word stocks in the mass communication
media on both sides of the border have been impoverished by a
deliberate design to disregard popular usage and rely upon perceived
classical forms. This "linguistic engineering" done by a "select
elite trying to appropriate political power or to maintain the status
quo", has been "disastrous both for mass participation in the process
of social change and for literary excellence".
Satish Gujral provides a narrative of the horror and trauma of the
days when he and his family had to leave Lahore, and in turn has his
art dissected as historical documentation by Keshav Malik. Partha
Chatterjee delves into the films of Ritwik Ghatak to shed light on a
unique sensibility that drew creative sustenance from Partition but
was yet, never quite at peace with itself afterwards. Other
contributors analyse the landmark works of Partition fiction from
Saadat Hasan Manto, Amrita Pritam, Khushwant Singh, K.S. Duggal and
Attia Hossein, filling in the yawning gaps in historical memory,
redressing the evasions of formal historiography. These two volumes
represent a valuable addition to contemporary literature from the
ICHR.
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