SACW | April 15-17, 2007 | Bangladeshi Generals / Pakistan: Mullah Muscle / India: India: Morality - Culture police; Kashmir; Minorities, Nationalism, Faith
Harsh Kapoor
aiindex at mnet.fr
Mon Apr 16 20:42:27 CDT 2007
South Asia Citizens Wire | April 15-17, 2007 | Dispatch No. 2389 - Year 9
[1] Bangladesh in the Generals' Grip (Editorial, The New York Times)
[2] Pakistan: Reaping what we sowed (Irfan Husain)
[3] "Climate change will devastate India" (Daphne Wysham and Smitu Kothari)
[4] Morality and Culture Police:
- Kashmir's Islamist puritans
- Clinching evidence for morality mob
- Morality police chasten young lovers in India
[5] India: BJP's Kashmir position - Count the zigzags (AG Noorani)
[6] India: Defining Minorities (Ram Puniyani)
[7] Sociological Study of Religion: Colonial Modernity and 19th
Century Majoritarianism (Sujata Patel)
[8] History and Hindu nationalism: A call to arms (Andrew Leonard)
[9] India: Keeping the Faith (Suhasini Haidar)
[10] Books:
- Lines of the Nation: Indian Railway Workers, Bureaucracy, and the
Intimate Historical Self by Laura Bear
- Dreams, Questions, Struggles: South Asian Women in Britain. Edited
by Amrit Wilson
[11] Events:
A Public Discussion: Who sets the faith agenda in Britain? (London,
May 10, 2007)
____
[1]
The New York Times
April 15, 2007
Editorial
BANGLADESH IN THE GENERALS' GRIP
Promoting democracy, especially in Islamic countries, is supposed to
be a major goal of President Bush's foreign policy. But his
administration has raised little protest as Bangladesh - until
January the world's fifth most populous democracy - has been
transformed into its second most populous military dictatorship.
Washington is being dangerously shortsighted. Democracy can be messy,
and in Bangladesh it was extraordinarily so. But military rule offers
no answers to the grievances that fuel Islamic radicalism, as can be
seen from nearby Pakistan (the world's most populous military
dictatorship). By stifling authentically popular mainstream parties
and their leaders, military regimes often magnify the political
influence of religious extremists.
This year's democratic eclipse in Bangladesh did not follow the
classic script for a military coup. A civilian caretaker has been
nominally in charge since January, after troubled national elections
were indefinitely postponed. Meanwhile, the generals consolidated
power behind the scenes and began harassing and jailing many of the
country's top civilian political leaders.
Last week, Sheik Hasina Wazed - who served as prime minister from
1996 through 2001 - and top leaders of her 14-party alliance were
charged with murder in connection with violent pre-election protests.
Her longtime rival, Khaleda Zia, who both preceded and followed her
in office, is now under virtual house arrest. More than 150 other
senior politicians have been detained on corruption charges and the
timetable for new elections keeps receding.
This concept of a militarily guided democracy without democrats is
familiar in South Asia. Gen. Pervez Musharraf has followed the same
script in Pakistan and his countrymen are still waiting, with
increasing impatience, for the real democracy he promised them nearly
eight years ago. Both former Bangladeshi prime ministers have much to
answer for, including tolerance for corruption and a bitter personal
rivalry that kept the country in permanent turmoil. But the answering
should be done to Bangladesh's voters and, if called for, to an
independent civilian judiciary - not to an unaccountable military
dictatorship. And President Bush, if he truly cares about democracy
in the Islamic world, needs to say so.
______
[2]
Dawn
April 14, 2007
REAPING WHAT WE SOWED
by Irfan Husain
ALTHOUGH I am used to getting my share of fan mail and hate mail from
total strangers, I was a bit taken aback to get an email from Maulana
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the head honcho of Lal Masjid in Islamabad.
Thoughtfully, the good cleric informed me that the mosque's website
was now operational again at www.lalmasjid.com.
He went on to complain that it had earlier been blocked by the
government, and that this step was "against the freedom of
expression." I savoured the delicious irony of this complaint as I
watched televised images of zealots from the Jamia Hafsa and the
Jamia Fareedia - both involved in the long-running standoff with the
government - burning DVDs and CDs in Islamabad. Ghazi, in a recent
interview with Declan Walsh, the Guardian correspondent, expressed
his opposition to democracy thus: "Democracy is about elections.
Islam is about selection." He went on to elaborate that ignorant
people did not know what was good for them, and therefore the
educated elite had to show the way.This was in response to the
reporter when he remarked that Islamic parties in Pakistan had never
won over 13 per cent of the popular vote. And this is the paradox:
fundamentalists benefit from democratic freedoms wherever they are
available to them, and use them to impose their reactionary agenda on
society. And wherever they do not get their way, they complain that
they are being denied their democratic rights. If and when they
achieve power, they deny their opponents these very rights at the
first opportunity. For them, as Maulana Ghazi was frank enough to
admit, democracy is irrelevant.
For weeks now, the drama of the two madressahs in Islamabad and their
takeover of a children's library has gripped the country. Images of
burqa-clad young women clutching staves are shown daily. For the
West, this absurd situation is further proof of Pakistan's slide into
violence and mediaeval anarchy. But for us, the standoff reveals the
faultlines in our society, and the inherent contradictions that
remain unresolved in a state created in the name of religion.
The price being demanded by the madressah students and their patrons
is nothing less than the imposition of Shariah law, and the instant
abolition of all "dens of vice". The fundamentalist definition of
this term is a wide one, and includes all shops selling music CDs,
videos and DVDs. Thus far, Musharraf's government of enlightened
moderation has caved in on several other demands, including the
reconstruction of all seven mosques that were illegally built on
state land, and rightly demolished by CDA.
While the dictates of the law and plain sanity demand tough and swift
action to end this open rebellion, Musharraf's political interests
lie elsewhere. The fact is that this is an election year, and the
general realises that he needs the support of the clerics and their
reactionary parties to survive. And when it comes to choosing between
survival and the national interest, we know all too well what the
choice will be.
Among the many emails I have received on the subject are a
substantial number supporting the demands of the Jamia Hafsa women.
They ask why Shariah should not be the basis of the law of the land
since Pakistan was created in the name of Islam. The authors of these
diatribes are not interested in Jinnah's sophistry of Pakistan being
a 'home for the Muslims of the subcontinent', rather than an Islamic
state.
In truth, this is a tough argument to rebut. Perhaps the mullahs have
it right. Maybe the demands that are being voiced by religious
fanatics, seen in the context of the partition of India along
religious lines, should be considered. Clearly, a return to the
seventh century, something the zealots are adamant about, would be
disastrous for the country. But that's a separate argument. If you
are convinced that our brief stay on earth is transient, and that we
will be rewarded or punished for the rest of eternity for our actions
in this life, then obviously what happens in the here-and-now is
unimportant.
Things like GDP, life expectancy and literacy rates become
irrelevant. What truly matters is that we obey the divine rules, as
interpreted by various schools of Islamic jurisprudence. In this
worldview, manmade laws, ethics, and boundaries are all of secondary
importance. If our destiny is pre-ordained, we can only submit.
Within this narrow frame of reference, it makes perfect sense for our
cricket team to spend more time at prayer than at the nets. And if
the team is sent crashing out of the World Cup in the first round,
clearly this was the will of God.
It is easy to see that with this mindset, no society can progress.
Countries that have blindly followed rigid dogmas have either had to
relax their governing beliefs, as China has done, or implode, much as
the Soviet Union did. India, for all the decades it stuck closely to
the Fabian socialism of its founding fathers, limped along.
Pakistan today is in the grip of a fundamental contradiction that it
seems incapable of escaping. On the one hand are the modernising
impulses of a dynamic, striving people who flourish when they leave
the stifling environment of their country. On the other is the
retrogressive pull of a small minority of fanatics whose only claim
to power and influence is the grip they exercise on an uneducated and
conservative community. But since Pakistan was created in the name of
religion, most politicians and generals feel they have to pay lip
service to its form, if not its substance. Each time the mullahs
increase their demands, the establishment makes concessions.
Nobody in power has had the courage to take the bull by the horns and
tell the mullahs that while obviously, Islam is the faith of the
majority, Pakistan will be governed as a democratic, secular country.
Musharraf, instead of building a consensus around this central plank,
has curried favour with the mullahs, while driving secular
politicians into the wilderness. The current standoff with the Jamia
Hafsa is the logical outcome of these self-serving policies.
Tailpiece: I still haven't been able to understand why the government
has not cut off the electricity, water and gas to the entire Lal
Masjid complex, with its two radical madressahs. Given the onset of
the warm weather, the stifling head-to-toe clothing of the chicks
with sticks, and the absence of deodorants, it wouldn't take long for
the students to call it a day.
______
[3]
The Hindu
April 09, 2007
"CLIMATE CHANGE WILL DEVASTATE INDIA"
by Daphne Wysham and Smitu Kothari
In South Asia, millions of people will find their lands and homes
inundated, according to a draft report of the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change.
A FINAL draft of a report leaked from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) to the authors lays out shocking scenarios for
India and the rest of South Asia. The summary for policy makers that
was released by the IPCC on Friday is a call for urgent action
globally. While shocking, the fuller final draft version of the
Second Working Group of the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report, which
may be watered down before final publication, makes for even more
sobering reading: It lays out in explicit detail what lies ahead for
India and the rest of Asia. It also presents an opportunity for the
country to take the lead in defining a more secure and sustainable
future for itself.
Here are some of the devastating consequences detailed in the
provisional February 16, 2007, IPCC report on Asia: Sea levels will
rise by at least 40 cm by 2100, inundating vast areas on the
coastline, including some of the most densely populated cities whose
populations will be forced to migrate inland or build dykes - both
requiring a financial and logistical challenge that will be
unprecedented. In the South Asian region as a whole, millions of
people will find their lands and homes inundated. Up to 88 per cent
of all of Asia's coral reefs, termed the "rainforests of the ocean"
because of the critical habitat they provide to sea creatures, may be
lost as a result of warming ocean temperatures.
The Ganga, Brahmaputra, and Indus will become seasonal rivers, dry
between monsoon rains as Himalayan glaciers will continue their
retreat, vanishing entirely by 2035, if not sooner. Water tables will
continue to fall and the gross per capita water availability in India
will decline by over one-third by 2050 as rivers dry up, water tables
fall or grow more saline. Water scarcity will in turn affect the
health of vast populations, with a rise in water-borne diseases such
as cholera. Other diseases such as dengue fever and malaria are also
expected to rise.
Crop productivity will fall, especially in non-irrigated land, as
temperatures rise for all of South Asia by as much as 1.2 degrees C
on average by 2040, and even greater crop loss - of over 25 per cent
- as temperatures rise to up to 5.4 degrees C by the end of the
century. This means an even lower caloric intake for India's vast
rural population, already pushed to the limit, with the possibility
of starvation in many rural areas dependent on rainfall for their
crops. Even those areas that rely on irrigation will find a growing
crisis in adequate water availability.
Mortality due to heat-related deaths will climb, with the poor, the
elderly and daily wage earners and agricultural workers suffering a
rise in heat-related deaths.
This grim future awaits India in the coming century. The irony is
that much of this damage will be self-inflicted, unless the country
is prepared to make a radical, enlightened change in its energy and
transportation strategies.
We are truly at a crossroads: Either we can be complacent or wait for
leadership from a reluctant United States, the largest greenhouse gas
emitter in the world, or begin to take action now, regardless of what
other countries do.
The path that India has taken thus far, of waiting until wealthy
countries take action on global warming, is understandable if viewed
in isolation. The U.S., the U.K., and other countries in the wealthy
North, have developed their economies largely thanks to fossil fuels.
It is only fair that India be allowed to attain the same standard of
living before curbing its emissions.
But as the IPCC report makes clear, while it may be "fair" to do so,
it is also suicidal for India to pursue any strategy but the least
carbon-intensive path toward its own development. Wealthy, less
populous countries in the North are very likely - and very unfairly -
going to suffer fewer devastating blows to their economies, and may
actually benefit with extended growing seasons, while India and other
South Asian nations will dramatically and painfully suffer if action
is not taken now.
Today, much of India's energy comes from coal, most of it mined in
the rural areas of Orissa, Jharkhand, and Bihar with devastating
consequences. Tribals and small and marginal peasants are being
forced to resettle as these mines grow wider by the day. Inadequate
resettlement plans mean more migration of landless populations to
urban slums. The environment is being destroyed by these mines and
their waste products - among them fly ash laced with heavy metals and
other toxic materials. But the biggest irony of this boom in
coal-fired power is that much of the power is going to
export-oriented, energy-intensive industry. Look at Orissa's coal
belt and you will find a plethora of foreign-owned and Indian
aluminium smelters, steel mills, and sponge iron factories - all
burning India's coal, at a heavy cost to local populations - then
exporting a good share of the final product to the China, the U.S. or
other foreign markets.
Volatile mix
Add to the problem of export-oriented, energy-intensive industry the
problem of carbon trades, and you have a volatile mix. India is one
of the top destinations globally in the growing carbon market. In
exchange for carbon trade projects in India, wealthy polluters in the
North are able to avoid restrictions on their own emissions. Rather
than financing "clean development" projects as promised, many of
these trades are cheap, dirty, and harmful to the rural poor.
Fast-growing eucalyptus plantations are displacing farmers from their
land and tribals from their forests. Sponge-iron factories are
garnering more money from carbon trades earned by capturing "waste
heat" than from the production of the raw material itself. Toxic fly
ash from coal-fired power plants is being turned into bricks, and the
carbon that would have been released from traditional clay-fired
brick kilns, is now an invisible commodity that can be sold as carbon
credits. These carbon trades are not helping finance clean energy and
development for India's rural poor.
Add to this the special economic zones or SEZs - forcing people off
their land, where blood, often of the most vulnerable, is shed at the
altar of development.
Global warming will tighten this growing squeeze to a noose, as huge
areas of Bangladesh go underwater and environmental refugees flood
across India's borders. The leaked final draft of the IPCC report
shows that Bangladesh is slated to lose the largest amount of land
globally - approximately 1000 square km of cultivated land - due to
sea level rise. Where will all of those hungry, thirsty, landless
millions go? Most will flock to the border looking for avenues to
enter, exacerbating an already tense situation not only in the States
contiguous to Bangladesh but in cities as far off as Mumbai and Delhi.
Undoubtedly, global warming is not fair. It is exacting the highest
price on those least responsible for the problem. But India can show
the world that there is another way forward: A self-interested,
self-preserving way, focussed on clean energy such as solar and wind;
on energy efficiency; on providing for its own population's energy
needs ahead of foreign corporations; on public transportation plans
that strengthen India's vast network of rail and bus transportation
routes, rather than weakening it with public subsidies to massive
highways and to automakers. The IPCC final draft report urges India
and other Asian countries to prepare for the coming climate
apocalypse with crop varieties that can withstand higher
temperatures, salinated aquifers, and an increase in pests. It also
advises better water resource management and better disease
monitoring and control. While important, prevention is always the
best medicine.
The IPCC final draft report should be seen as a conservative
assessment of what lies in store. It clearly implies that incremental
or palliative responses to reduce vulnerability are not the answer.
India and the other countries of the region need to take a
preventative approach by moving their economies away from fossil
fuels and toward clean, renewable forms of energy. This is the only
way of preserving a sustainable way of life that could be a model for
the world. If it pursues what is "fair" in a warming world by
continuing to argue that industrialised nation are to blame and need
to take urgent action, it will be placing the noose around its own
neck while the hangman looks on.
(Daphne Wysham is a Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies, Washington
and Smitu Kothari is Director, Intercultural Resources, Delhi and
Visiting Professor, Princeton University.)
______
[4] MORALITY & CULTURE POLICE :
The Economist
Apr 12th 2007 | SRINAGAR
Kashmir
Lock up your daughters
KASHMIR'S ISLAMIST PURITANS
Reuters - Andrabi pulls a face
"IF MY son would kill Mr Bush," says the burqa-wearing head of an
all-female Islamist organisation, "it would be a great honour for
Asiya Andrabi." Those who threaten the leader of the free world and
refer to themselves in the third person tend to be crackpots or
dictators. Asiya Andrabi may be a bit of both. But Dukhtaran-e-Millat
(Daughters of the Faith), which she founded in Indian-administered
Kashmir in 1981, is no joke. Older than al-Qaeda and the Taliban,
Dukhtaran supports terrorists, and was banned by the Indian
government from 1990 until 2004.
One consequence of the 17-year-old insurgency against Indian rule
that still simmers in Kashmir is that the region's centuries-long
tradition of a moderate, tolerant Islam with its roots in Sufi
mysticism, has been under threat. Many liberal Kashmiris blame
Pakistani-financed militant outfits for blurring Islam and
nationalism, and trying to turn the conflict into a jihad. Throughout
the 1990s militants tried to enforce moral rectitude, bullying local
women, for example, into wearing burqas. They had limited success.
But now the puritans are on the march. Last month, for instance, a
furious mob beat up customers and smashed furniture in a hotel in
Srinagar, accusing the owners of operating a sex ring. A week later
conservatives forced the black-out of "vulgar" English-language
cable-television channels.
The turning-point was an earlier sex scandal, which shocked Srinagar
last year. Civil servants and policemen were linked to a prostitution
ring in which teenage girls had been drugged and abducted to a
brothel. The scandal prompted days of mass protests, and the torching
of the home of the accused brothel-keeper.
Leading the campaign against licentiousness, Dukhtaran helped found a
Forum Against Social Evils. Its burqa-wearing members wrecked beauty
parlours and liquor shops, ransacked dimly-lit restaurants for
encouraging smooching and celebrated Valentine's Day by burning
cards. Their cause has been bolstered by the uncovering of two more
"sex rings". In one, young women were lured by a fake charity. In
another, policewomen were allegedly coerced by male superiors.
Yet Kashmir's liberal traditions are proving stubborn. Kashmiri women
continue to pursue further studies, hold professional jobs and move
about alone, some without headscarves. Shutting cinema halls has led
to a boom in satellite dishes and video-rental shops. Progressive
locals winkingly refer to Ms Andrabi as the "Angel of Death" and on
the streets of Srinagar burqas and long beards are still rare.
"Islam came to Kashmir not by the sword but through teaching,
preaching, Sufis and saints," points out Umar Farooq, a separatist
politician and mirwaiz, a hereditary spiritual leader. "You can't
threaten people with Islam," he argues. "You have to educate them."
Dukhtaran, however, is trying to do just that. It runs 75 part-time
madrassas in Kashmir.
o o o
Hindustan Times
April 17, 2007
Editorial
CLINCHING EVIDENCE FOR MORALITY MOB
Hugs and kisses are suddenly evoking much passion in the
subcontinent. Shilpa Shetty's self-appointed Big Brothers - mainly
members of her fan club in Varanasi and the Shiv Sena - are in a
frenzy over the kiss-and-tell show, featuring the actress and Richard
Gere, that took place at an Aids awareness function for truck drivers
in Delhi on Sunday. While Shetty was swept off her feet, her fan club
is brandishing the broom to clean the supposed blemish on a "rich
Indian culture". Meanwhile, in neighbouring Pakistan, Tourism
Minister Nilofar Bakhtiar is the latest recipient of a fatwa from her
country's clerics for apparently falling under the immoral Western
spell and hugging a male paraglider in Paris. (It wasn't too long
ago, you'll remember, that their malice was directed towards the
Pakistan High Commissioner's daughter, who received a grandfatherly
peck on her cheek from Khushwant Singh.) Does it surprise anyone that
all three incidents brought out the patriarchal fervour of these
self-appointed custodians of our morality?
In the Gere-shifts, they saw Shetty's new-acquired 'Goody' image
crumbling. In Miss Bakhtiar, a defiance that needed to be broken
down, never mind how innocent her action. And in condemning Khushwant
Singh, they showed themselves to be possessed of petty, frustrated
minds.
Now, if they would only stop playing with their effigies and focus on
making the streets a safer place for women. That is the kind of
policing that we would really appreciate.
o o o
reuters.com
MORALITY POLICE CHASTEN YOUNG LOVERS IN INDIA
Wed Apr 4, 2007 12:42 PM IST14
by Krittivas Mukherjee
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Police in India's most cosmopolitan and liberal
city are cracking down on young lovers enjoying passionate embraces
in public in a drive to instil moral values.
Acting on complaints made by residents of a smart seafront
neighbourhood, police in Mumbai are hauling up embarrassed young
lovers caught doing anything from kissing to having sex behind trees
and on beaches.
India, a traditionally conservative country, is becoming more open
about sex and dating, with attitudes changing fastest among young
people living in cities.
But having romantic liaisons before marriage is often frowned upon
and talk of sex in public is considered rude. Even holding hands or
kissing in public can draw stares and jeers.
At least 40 couples have been fined on charges of public immorality
and indecent exposure, or had their parents called in by the police
over the past week, and hundreds have been warned and given a lecture
on moral values.
"We are not cultural vigilantes," said Vinay Kumar Choube, the police
officer overseeing the drive against indecency. "We are acting on
specific public complaints."
Residents of the posh Bandra locality say they are not against
"decent lovers", but are worried when they see many couples doing
things that they say should be done in the bedroom.
"It is nothing short of watching an adult film," said an elderly
resident, who said he is distracted by the amorous sights on his
evening walks.
Mumbai, India's business and entertainment capital, is considered to
be one of the most liberal cities in the country. It's known for its
nightclubs, fashion shows and glamorous parties as well as
jet-setting Bollywood stars.
But local officials declared war on risque nightlife in 2005,
shutting hundreds of popular dance bars and saying they bred crime
and prostitution.
Some hardline Hindu groups, part of a growing band of cultural
vigilantes opposed to what they see as increasing mimicry of the
West, also often try to chasten couples.
Such groups have stopped young people from celebrating Valentine's
Day and prevented the screening of films dealing with homosexuality,
saying they denigrated India's ancient traditions.
Mumbai police say "decent lovers" have nothing to fear from the new
moral crackdown.
But one couple, who refused to give their names, said their al fresco
trysts were a necessity.
"We can't meet at home. We can't go to restaurants everyday. So we
come to Bandra," said the young man. "Didn't any of these police men
ever love in their life?"
______
[5]
Hindustan Times
April 15, 2007
COUNT THE ZIGZAGS
by AG Noorani
There is no precedent in history for an Opposition party to ask a
foreign State not to settle a dispute with its own country's elected
government but await the party's return to power. Yet, on February
20, LK Advani, and the next day, AB Vajpayee warned Pakistan's
Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmud Kasuri against "any haste" in the
peace process. Advani explained that while Indian politics revolve
mainly around domestic, and not foreign, policy, issues relating to
Indo-Pak relations were "totally different". He had boasted on March
14, 2004, "The BJP alone can find a solution to our problems with
Pakistan because Hindus will never think whatever we have done is a
sell-out." Admittedly, the BJP is a communal party. It invests
Indo-Pak relations with communal colours.
It can neither absorb the shock of its defeat in the Lok Sabha polls
in May 2004 nor that of the visible success of Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh's policy. He not only rules out J&K's "secession" and
"redrawing boundaries", but has secured Musharraf's concurrence to
these. The BJP is disturbed by his success and goes about screaming
'sell-out' and 'cross-border terrorism'.
Both Vajpayee's letter to the PM on June 16, 2005, and Advani's
letter to the PM on March 13, 2007, were leaked to the press by the
BJP, as were their remarks to Kasuri. The subtext is: "Wait till we
return to power and settle with us." Vajpayee successfully wrecked
I.K. Gujral's initiative, on June 23, 1997, to set up working groups
with Pakistan. He revealed on May 24, 1998, that Gujral's offer at
Dhaka on January 14, 1998, to discuss all subjects in one go in order
to avoid discussing Kashmir specifically, was worked out in
consultation with him. This had been on for over a year. Vajpayee
wrecked the 1997 accord. Singh is of stronger moral fibre than
Gujral. But Vajpayee cannot forget the taste of the blood he drew in
1997-98.
The BJP will act dirty everywhere - in Parliament, at the polls and
on foreign policy. Its own zigzags when in power would make a drunk's
walk seem an exercise in fidelity to a straight line. At the very
outset, it revived the UN's concern for Kashmir. On May 18, 1999,
immediately after Pokhran II on May 11 and 13, Advani threatened "hot
pursuit" across the LoC and spoke of a "qualitative new stage in
Indo-Pak relations, particularly in finding a lasting solution to the
Kashmir problem". Its existence was admitted; but the 'solution' was
to be based on superior force. And the people of the state mattered
not. Pakistan's tests followed on May 28 and 30, 1998.
The UNSC passed on June 6, 1998, Resolution 1172, urging the two
countries "to find mutually acceptable solutions that address the
root causes of those tensions, including Kashmir". Its last
substantive Resolution (211) on Kashmir, passed on September 20,
1965, had a weaker formulation - "a settlement of the political
problem underlying the present conflict". The harsher 1998
formulation was based on the P-5's joint statement on June 4 and was
adopted by the G-8 on June 12, 1998. This was the BJP's first
'achievement' after it came to power in March 1998.
Thrown off balance, Jaswant Singh was instructed to offer an accord
on the basis of the LoC; not to Pakistan but to the US. The Shimla
commitment to bilateralism was abandoned. It was offered to US Deputy
Secretary Strobe Talbott on July 9, 1998, repeated to Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright in Manila on July 26 and at the State
Department the next month.
Vajpayee met PM Nawaz Sharif in New York on September 24, 1998, and
agreed on "operationalising" the 1997 mechanism for a composite
dialogue, which he himself had wrecked. Accordingly, foreign and
defence secretaries met in New Delhi in November, when, abandoning
the basis accepted by both sides for over a decade, the BJP regime
rejected the agreed principle of withdrawal of troops from Siachen.
The Lahore summit, conceived in New York, was held on February 21,
1999. Officials were rushed to Lahore to drum up accords. A hilarious
back channel was set up - Niaz Naik and R.K. Mishra. Kargil followed.
Vajpayee rightly told Sharif on June 13, "You withdraw your troops
and we are prepared for talks." Pakistan's troops quit but New Delhi
refused to hold direct talks. It suppressed from the public the US'
active mediation and the 'Kashmir-centric' talks in the back channel
even while Pakistan's troops were in Kargil.
Keep counting the zigzags. On July 24, 2000, the Hizbul Mujahideen
declared a unilateral ceasefire in Kashmir, which India accepted
immediately. Called off on August 8 by the HM, Vajpayee nonetheless
offered "non-initiation of combat operations" on November 19, 2000.
He ended it six months later. On May 24, 2001, he suddenly invited
Musharraf for talks though he had ruled out talks with Pakistan the
year before. Documents of the Agra summit in July 2001, published in
2005, exposed the falsehoods the BJP had retailed in Parliament. On
July 17, 2001, the public was told that the "threads" would be picked
up from where they were left. As in 1999, the very next day, the
government insisted on a total end to "cross-border terrorism".
Capitalising on the US mood after 9/11, it launched Operation
Para-kram on December 18, 2001, only to call it off on October 16,
2002. Vajpayee told the three service chiefs on December 18, when
they asked for a directive, "Woh baad mein batayengey" (that will be
told later). It cost Rs 8,000 crore, 387 lives and colossal damage to
equipment. It was intended to pressure the US to put pressure on
Pakistan. Paramvir Das, former DG, Defence Planning Staff, criticised
the "vested political interests sadly using the armed forces as a
conventional pawn".
The Opposition, like the Democrats in the US, hesitated to censure,
fearing the charge of 'unpatriotic' behaviour. To his credit, Pranab
Mukherjee publicly censured the operation at its height: "We are not
in 1914... They shouldn't have created this war hysteria. Both India
and Pakistan are nuclear weapon States".
As before, the West chipped in. "We don't want to go through this
again," the US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, said in June 2002.
His Deputy Richard Armitage said on June 10, "The recent crisis has
put Kashmir on the international agenda in a way it has never been
before." Another BJP achievement.
On March 27, 2003, the US and Britain laid down a roadmap in a public
statement that Vajpayee followed - "a ceasefire and... active steps
to reduce tension, including moves within the Saarc context".
Vajpayee attended the Saarc summit in Pakistan, after a ceasefire
went into force on November 25, 2003, on the LoC, the international
border and in Siachen.
The Vajpayee-Musharraf joint statement of January 6, 2004, after the
Saarc summit, revived the composite dialogue and recorded Musharraf's
assurance not to "permit" Pakistan's territory "to be used to support
terrorism in any manner", a formulation Musharraf had offered two
years earlier. But Vajpayee dropped his condition - "wind up
terrorist camps".
Defeat in the May 2004 polls and progress in the talks since have
unsettled the BJP. Advani is desperate. The year 2009 will be the
gambler's last throw. He will try to wreck the talks consistently
with the BJP's incompetent and insincere Pakistan policy. But the
country is aware that for the first time in the six-decade-old
dispute, Kashmir can now be settled in a manner acceptable to all -
India, Pakistan and the people of the state.
It is also aware of the fact that while on New Year's Day, 2001,
Vajpayee promised to depart from "the beaten track of the past", not
once did he make any creative proposal. He could not. The RSS would
never let its child, the BJP, settle with Pakistan. Unable to
deliver, he decided to leave. A Mumbai phrase aptly describes his
technique - Haath par chand batana (show the moon in the hollow of
the palm).
______
[6]
Issues in Secular Politics, April 2007
Defining Minorities
by Ram Puniyani
Allahabad High Court ruling (April 2007) that Muslims have ceased to
be a minority in UP as their percentage in population is 18.5%
totally defies the logic of Indian Constitution, the legislatures
understanding and the pronouncements of the Supreme court on the
issue. No wonder it has been stayed by a two judge bench. This
verdict gave a lot of ammunition to many to feel jubilant, and pen
pushers of right wing ideology got extra boost to spew their anti
minority sentiments. It is argued that by retaining the concept of
minority these sections are reminded about their being 'different'
and that sows the seed of divisiveness. They even point out that
Africans-Americans were/are considered a minority as there was
systematic injustice against them, they were discriminated against.
But in India there is no such case for Muslims so they should not be
considered as minorities, neither should there be any affirmative
action for them.
There have been similar sentiments by a large section of ideologues
that belong to Right wing politics. It is also noteworthy, that these
are precisely same sections who celebrate when the quota for OBC is
questioned and reservations against dalits are opposed.
Is there a place for minority concept in democracy, and who should be
called a minority? These questions were settled by the Constituent
assembly and samples of the debates around these issues indicate the
national thinking on that. The attitude of the founders of Indian
Constitution, who were themselves echoing the values of freedom
movement, indicates a lot on the matter. It was pointed out in
Constituent assembly debates that numerical weakness and
soci-economic vulnerability should be the major criterion in defining
the minority. Even the United Nations charter of Human rights went on
to recommend the affirmative action towards minorities of all types.
India is a signatory to many a UN declarations on minority rights.
All minorities are not disadvantaged. We can see that Brahmins are
also a minority within Hindu religion, but the prevalent caste system
gave them inherent advantage. There are people who try to find a
'poor' Brahmin as a ground to show that caste based reservations are
not valid. But surely the social connections of Brahmin minority,
ensures that poor and deprived Brahmins, is more a matter of
exception. In India the minority generally boils down to religious
minority. This is more of a legacy of the India's the policies and
politics which were prevalent before Independence, and this, while
prevalent all through, has got re-strengthened after the rise of
religion based politics from the decade of eighties. This identity
politics has rolled back many a conceptual developments which were in
progress during the decades immediately after the independence.
The affirmative action for dalits and OBC itself has come under heavy
criticism from the same social sectors. Also the thought of
development programs for Muslim sends shivers of discomfort amongst
many. We have witnessed that a particular ideology which is solidly
against this affirmative action for dalits and minorities, was at the
root of riots against dalits and OBCs, in Gujarat in the decade of
1980s. This ideology suits those whose children are in the category
of 'economic reservation' as they can openly 'buy' education,
knowledge and degrees by shelling out the bagfuls of money.
One wonders how the condition of Indian Muslims is different from
that of African Americans for whom affirmative action is being
accepted and recommended. Have Muslims found a decent, tolerant
atmosphere here? Let's recall that 'social common sense' has been
against them all through. The policy of subtle discrimination against
them was in operation all through. Private sector dominated by the
non Muslims kept them out deliberately. As communal violence was
unleashed from sixties, it went on rising and went to critical limits
from the decades of 80s. Various statistics coming from Home ministry
Government of India, compilation of data on riot victims shows that
over 80% of riot victims are Muslims. The violence has ghettoized
large section of this community. The progressive norms which were
being picked up by the community despite economic odds got a set back
after the Babri demolition and massive anti Muslim violence which
followed. Later after the Gujarat carnage, this process of
ghettoization got intensified. Today irrespective of whether
communalism, communal violence is visible or not, most of the states
are witnessing an atmosphere where minorities feel intimidated and
stifled.
It is true that minorities should not perpetuate their condition and
try to come out of minority psyche and feel like anybody else. But
what happens if the political climate is very adverse to your
progress. What happens when the social thinking demonizes you times
and over again, in every aspect of social existence, on any or every
pretext? The earlier slogan of Jan Sangh, the previous avatar of BJP,
had launched campaign called "Indianize Muslims"; giving a clear
message that they are not Indians and so they must be Indianized.
This is a 'catch twenty-two'. On one hand minorities are excluded
from the process of social development, as they are the 'other' and
at the same time a demand is made to them to subordinate to the
dictates of dominant political stream which is trying to assert as to
what should be the social norms. This exclusionary religious tendency
is presenting their religious symbolism as the national symbolism.
Every study and data has been pointing to the worsening position of
Muslim community. First the Gopal Singh Committee and now the Sachar
Committee has shown this marginalization and exclusion. How does one
become part of so called mainstream when one feels excluded and
jeered upon? And if for bringing them on par with others, if some
efforts are undertaken to protect their interests, to support them
breathe freely, is it divisive factor or is it only way to strengthen
our society? Some ideologues are used to the image of society in the
past 'glories' where the Shudras, in their ghettoes, lived to serve
the upper caste masters. Is it that which is being presented as the
ideal nation? The tendency which is trying to dominate in the name of
religion, essentially wants to bring back that state of society and
so the opposes the efforts which will empower the ghettoized masses.
The criticism against Sachar committee is that it is creating myth
that Muslims are disempowered, and so this committee report should be
ignored and bypassed. What are the parameters for assessing the level
of empowerment or otherwise of a social group? Surely the socio,
economic and political representation should be the main parameter.
One knows that not only that Muslim community has seriously been
excluded from the development process, they were also forced into low
level self employment, that's why some surveys may find that rate of
their employment is better than others. Here the definition of
employment has to be kept in mind. As such the type of self
employment which a large section of Muslim community had to resort to
was the last option and not a preferred choice. It has become the
norm because of the exclusionary policies adopted by the sections of
society, who have a powerful say in the matters, and in the running
of the state. It by no means is a symbol of empowerment of minorities.
One is sure that the two judge bench's superseding the 'Muslims are
not a minority judgment' will be upheld by the due process of law. In
the overall political scenario and the economic perspective, a
radical change has to take place where suitable employment for every
person is the norm. The size of cake is also a problem. The type of
economic development being pursued has to be superseded by one which
aims at giving employment to all, and in the interregnum the
affirmative action for different disadvantaged sections has to be
pursued to unite the society. The definition of minorities needs to
be recalled from the Indian constitution and understood in the
context of constituent assembly debates.
______
[7]
Economic and Political Weekly
March 31, 2007
SOCIOLOGICAL STUDY OF RELIGION: COLONIAL MODERNITY AND 19TH CENTURY
MAJORITARIANISM
This article explores and critiques the semblances between the
discourse on sociology of religion and that of ideology of Hindu
majoritarianism. Both were fashioned in late 19th century and drew
from the binaries inherited through colonial modernity. Sociologists
of religion in India have asserted similar propositions regarding the
discrete cultural practices of groups in India, and thereby
implicitly propounded a theory of majoritarianism. We need to develop
an alternate sociological language and free ourselves from the
language of colonial modernity in order to evaluate the processes
that make majoritarianism a dominant ideology today.
by Sujata Patel
http://www.epw.org.in/showArticles.php?root=2007&leaf=03&filename=11233&filetype=pdf
______
[8]
http://www.salon.com/
April 11, 2007
HISTORY AND HINDU NATIONALISM: A CALL TO ARMS
by Andrew Leonard
On Monday, India's Supreme Court ordered the Maharashtra state police
to drop all charges of inciting "racial hatred" against an American
professor of religious studies, James W. Laine, author of a book
about the 17th century Maharashtra warrior-king Shivaji. (Thanks to
the wonderfully named Pass the Roti on the Left Hand Side blog for
the alert.)
In Maharashtra, home to the Indian cities Mumbai and Pune and about
90 million people, Shivaji is a figure of near demi-god status,
revered by Hindu nationalists for establishing an independent kingdom
in a region dominated by Muslim rulers. His portrait is ubiquitous
and his life story a staple of children's history textbooks.
The Oxford University Press published Laine's book, "Shivaji: Hindu
King in Islamic India," in 2003. It was initially well-received,
generating a few "bland and positive" reviews, according to Laine's
own account. But then some Hindu nationalist firebrands, possibly
seeking a campaign issue to rally voters around, seized upon one
specific sentence, in which Laine recounted, presumably from his
personal experience, that Maharashtrians occasionally joked about
Shivaji's parentage, speculating as to whether the person
historically known as Shivaji's father was in fact his biological
parent.
It is no understatement to say that from that point on, all hell
broke loose, kind of like the recent
http://www.salon.com/opinion/walsh/misc/2007/03/29/chocolate_jesus/index.htmlchocolate
Jesus debacle in New York, only amplified by about a trillion orders
of magnitude. Laine's book became ammunition in a multifronted war
that crossed caste, ethnic, political and religious lines. Scholars
who had been thanked in Laine's acknowledgments were physically
attacked by Hindu fundamentalist extremists -- one had his face
blackened with tar. A group calling itself the Sambhaji Brigade
ransacked the research library in Pune where Laine had spent years,
destroying, in the process, irreplaceable historical documents and
artifacts.
Laine's own account of the turmoil, published in the Los Angeles
Times in 2004, stated, somewhat plaintively:
The vast majority of Indians are appalled at what happened in
Pune. And yet no one has stepped forward to defend my book and no one
has called for it to be distributed again. Few will read it for
themselves. Instead, many will live with the knowledge that India is
a country where many thoughts are unthinkable or, if thought, best
kept quiet.
In this light, the decision of the Indian Supreme Court is to be
applauded, at least by anyone who believes that scholarly inquiry
should be combatted with battling footnotes, and not mob violence.
But perhaps the most fascinating part of the whole story is how the
reaction to Laine's book can be seen as an integral part of the very
narrative he was trying to explicate.
Laine's goal was not a traditional biography, but a deconstruction of
how "the Shivaji story" had evolved over 300 years; how the facts of
his historically verifiable existence had been manipulated and
massaged and morphed in ways that served emerging political,
ideological and religious needs. It should go without saying that in
a country where "communal" tensions are as intense as they are in
India, such an investigation, by an outsider, of one of India's most
legendary Hindu "heroes" could be inflammatory. Indeed, it seems
almost as if Laine expected something to happen. Witness these words
from the introduction to "Shivaji":
The task I have set myself is not that of providing a more
accurate account of Shivaji's life by stripping away the legends
attributed to him by worshipful myth makers or misguided ideologues,
but rather to be a disturber of the tranquility with which synthetic
accounts of Shivaji's life are accepted...
The italics are mine. Laine succeeded. Tranquility was disturbed. The
reaction to the book serves as a perfect afterword flowing directly
from the main narrative, as the very same cultural impulses that
shaped the evolution of Shivaji's cultural significance also formed
its critical reception.
For example: One pair of reviewers could barely contain a mounting
sense of outrage as they deconstructed Laine's deconstruction. They
called it "vicious," "willful, calculated sensationalism," and "an
exercise in skullduggery" that "might well qualify as yet another
attempt at fragmentation of the steadily developing strength of a
society that is waking up to a realization of the many historical
frauds perpetrated on itself for centuries."
For them, any attempt to recontextualize the popular conception of
Shivaji betrayed a profound misunderstanding of how important the
warrior king was to Hindu Maharashtrian identity.
The learned author, in spite of his protracted contact with the
region since 1977, failed to realize that the "Shivaji story," as
narrated in every Maharashtrian home, has far more significance and
enjoys immensely greater credibility than all history taught in
academia...
But another reviewer, revealing his own antipathy to the politics of
Hindu fundamentalism by noting that Shivaji is "a key cultural idol
in the chauvinistic repertoire of contemporary Hindu nationalism,"
applauded Laine for raising "fundamental questions about a range of
identities -- religious, linguistic, economic, caste, moral,
regional, national and political -- relevant to contemporary
Maharashtra, India and Hindus." Moreover, the reviewer lambasted "a
myopic state that has routinely created purist superhuman icons out
of historical figures for the sake of particular populist ends. In
the process, the state, in deference to the radical end of the
citizenry, has produced a socio-political culture accommodative of
violent public displays of disregard for scholarly plain-speak about
those icons."
This is identity politics on a mind-boggling scale. The telling of
history is often -- some cynics might say always -- an exercise in
propaganda, shaped as much by the attitude and ideology the scholar
brings to the archives as by the facts and data unearthed there. And
it is certainly not unusual for a work of history that explores a
politically and religiously fraught topic to be caught up in those
currents itself.
But when scholars thanked in acknowledgments are physically attacked
and research libraries are ransacked and historians are brought up on
charges of inciting racial hatred, the stakes seem a bit greater than
with your run-of-the-mill monograph. And that brings out its own
moral imperative: The singular intensity of "the Laine controversy"
is a call to arms, a clear mandate for the practice of more history,
more deconstruction of how identity is inculcated and manipulated in
the modern world, and more unraveling of the threads that make up the
warp and woof of contemporary Indian society.
______
[9]
IBN Blogs > Head to Haid-ar
April 15, 2007
KEEPING THE FAITH
by Suhasini Haidar
"I wish to inform you that your daughter is registered to marry a
Muslim" said the postcard addressed to my father, "If you are aware
of it, please accept my congratulations. If you aren't please take
necessary action." Other letters we received in the run-up to my
wedding weren't as polite.
It's a well known fact that the moment an inter-religious (read
Hindu-Muslim) couple registers an intention to marry under the
special marriages act at the local court- and their names go up on
the board, a series of organizations go into action. United in the
belief that an inter-religious marriage is about much more than the
couple involved, and a destruction of religion itself, they find ways
of contacting and intimidating the bride and groom to be, their
families, and anyone else they can find.
We were lucky to get just letters of intent- a cameraman friend of
mine and his wife faced goons at their own house on the day of their
wedding.
So Priyanka and Umar's case was predictable in everything but the
fact that they conducted a Hindu ceremony after the civil wedding- a
fact that ensured they upset the Majlis-e-shoora of the All India
Muslim Tyohar Committee (AIMTC) as well as the Hindu Kanya Suraksha
Samiti, the Sindhi Panchayat, and the local chapters of the
RSS-VHP-Bajrang Dal.
The act spurred violent agitations from the saffron brigade- and
spurred the Sindhi Panchayat into a new code of conduct for Sindhi
girls- no driving two wheelers, no covering your face, no using cell
phones (not far from the Saudi no driving cars, enforcing the hijab,
and barring the use of many other things by women).
And despite a Bombay High Court order protecting them from police
harassment (funny that it should even be required), it is the young
couple and siblings who are on the run, especially after the
detention of Umar's brother Shakeel by police in Bhopal. Clearly all
the men in uniform working very hard on protecting the religion. All
of them great repositories of faith.
It was on my first out of town assignment exactly twelve years
ago,though, that I figured out what it was really all about. I was
covering angry reactions to the film 'Bombay', Mani Ratnam's
hindu-muslim love story, a film that had been previewed and censored
by Bal Thackeray- and was now under fire from Muslim groups. The
film's release had been put off several times already by threats of
violence. And as I interviewed a Bohra leader on a rooftop several
floors above the narrow and bustling alleyways near Mohammed Ali
Road, I waited to hear what I thought would be his reasons for being
offended by the Manisha Koirala- Arvind Swamy starrer. That Muslims
are shown starting the 1992 riots, that Koirala's Muslim character
stereotypically has a butcher for a father, even that the Holy text
is seen being flung in the air. But here it was. "We would not
object," he said, "If the film showed a Hindu girl marrying a Muslim
boy- why must it always be the other way around?"
And that's all it ever comes down to- it's why the letters to came to
my family not to my husband's, or the clampdown on covering your face
is effected by the Sindhi panchayat on Sindhi girls.
The outrage over faith is more about control and domination of the
female. It isn't about the religion being subsumed- anyone can tell
you they learn their concept of ethics, honour, and yes religion from
their mother.
It's about keeping women in their place- as immovable as property-
leased or sold only by those that own her. Its one more excuse to
keep the girl child from getting an education (or as the case may be,
a two-wheeler and a cell phone). And it's about keeping status quo-
with men firmly on top.
It isn't a question of faith after all- the opposition to an
inter-religious marriage is just plain feudal.
______
[10]
PUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENTS:
(i)
Lines of the Nation:
Indian Railway Workers, Bureaucracy, and the Intimate Historical Self
Laura Bear
"Lines of the Nation is a beautifully crafted ethnographic
history, steeped in personal and railway archives and in the oral
accounts of Anglo-Indians who live the racial predicaments of
colonial and contemporary India. Laura Bear shows deftly the
potencies of a colonial past that emerges in the pedigrees they seek
to establish and in the intimate interstices of Anglo-Indians
families whose anxieties about national and racial belonging shape
the ways they draw on colonial differences as they draw away from
them. This is a story of an unruly colonial past that permeates their
relationship to the documentary state and to the living archives
through which they make their precarious place in the present."
-- Ann Laura Stoler, Willy Brandt Distinguished University
Professor of Anthropology and Historical Studies, New School for
Social Research
Indian railway institutions have had a profound effect on the
political and domestic lives of railway workers. Drawing on
historical and ethnographic research in the company town at Kharagpur
and at the Eastern Railway headquarters in Kolkata (Calcutta), Laura
Bear recasts the history of India's railways, long regarded as
vectors of modernity and economic prosperity. In its classification
of workers by caste, race, gender, and nationality, railway
bureaucracy played a pivotal role in the creation of idioms of family
history, kinship, and ethics, and its special categorization of
Anglo-Indian workers still resonates today. From the design of
carriages to the architecture of stations, racial employment
hierarchies, and the construction of employee housing, Bear traces
the impact of the railways on the formation of Indian nationalism,
intimate sentiments, and popular memories.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1
1. The Indian Railways and the Management of the Material and Moral
Progress of Nations, 1849-1860
2. An Indian Traveling Public, 1850-1900
3. Governing the Railway Family, 1860-1900
4. Industrial Unrest and the Cultivation of Railway Communities, 1897-1931
5. An Economy of Suffering: The Ethics of Popular Nationalism in
Petitions from Railway Workers, 1930-1947
6. Public Genealogies: Anglo-Indian Family Histories and the Railway
Archive, 1927-1950
Part 2
7. Uncertain Origins and the Strategies of Love: Portraits of
Anglo-Indian Railway Families
8. Traces of the Archive: Documents, Bodies, and Nations in
Anglo-Indian Family Histories
9. Railway Morality: Status and Authority in the Postcolonial Railway
Bureaucracy
10. Ruins and Ghosts: The Uncanny and the Topography of the Colonial
Past in the Railway Colony
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Laura Bear is lecturer in anthropology at the London School of
Economics and Political Science.
From the series The Cultures of History
June, 2007
cloth
416 pages
ISBN: 978-0-231-14002-7
Columbia University Press
o o o
(ii)
JUST PUBLISHED by ORIENT LONGMAN PVT LTD
Title: Dreams, Questions, Struggles: South Asian Women in Britain
Editors: Amrit Wilson
About the book:
This book testifies to a multiplicity of struggles, individual and
collective, through which South Asian women, across divisions of
class, community, age and religion, are seeking to take control of
their lives. It looks at the role of the British state, of relentless
pressures of the market, and of the politics of South Asia on shaping
gender relations over the last thirty years; and discusses how South
Asian masculinities have been reconfigured by multicultural policies
and by politicised religion.
It explores the interaction of institutionalised racism and South
Asian patriarchy in the context of immigration policy, state
interventions such as Forced Marriage Initiative, and psychiatry. It
analyses the experiences of low-paid Asian women workers in the
global market; deconstructs contemporary British South Asian
weddings; and looks at how dominant representations of South Asian
women have and have not changed.
The author:
Amrit Wilson is writer and activist on issues of gender and race in
Britain and South Asian politics. Her books include Finding a Voice:
Asian Women in Britain which won the Martin Luther King award. She is
currently a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of
Huddersfield.
Table of Contents:
1. Introduction
2. The New 'Good Woman': Reconstructing Patriarchal Control
3. A Thing of Beauty and a Boy Forever - Changing Masculinities
4. 'Mercy and Wisdom of a Government'? Race, Culture and Immigration Control
5. Making a Spectacle of Oneself - South Asian Weddings in Britain
6. Psychiatry, Violence and Mental Distress
7. Contesting (mis)Representations
8. Still Fighting for Justice - Low-paid Workers in a Global Market
9. Dreams, Questions and Struggles - Reflections on a Movement
Notes
References
Index
(Paperback/ pp 200/ ISBN 81-250-3196-0/Rs 325/-)
Rights: India, Pakistan, Bhutan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka,
Myanmar and the Maldives only
Distributed by: Orient Longman Ltd
Also available through
The Bookpoint <the.bookpoint at gmail.com>
Manohar Books <manbooks at vsnl.com>
DK Publishers and Distributors <dkpd at del3.vsnl.net.in>
Ram Advani Bookseller <radvani at sancharnet.in>
Contact us on <the.bookpoint at gmail.com>
Orient Longman Pvt Ltd.
3-6-752 Himayatnagar,
Hyderabad 500 029
Telephone number: +91-40-2766-5446/5447
Facsimile number: +91-40-2764-5046
email: <the.bookpoint at gmail.com>
______
[11] UPCOMING EVENTS:
WHO SETS THE FAITH AGENDA IN BRITAIN?
An Awaaz - South Asia Watch Public Forum
10 May 2007
Registration 6.30pm
7.00pm - 9.00pm
Room B102, Brunei Gallery Building
School of Oriental & African Studies
University of London
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square
London, WC1H 0XG
Nearest tube
Goodge Street / Russell Sq
You have to register online for this event at: www.awaazsaw.org
. Has Britain's multiculturalism become multi-faithism?
. How are Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Muslim and other fundamentalist groups
influencing government policy?
. How is the faith agenda affecting communities?
. Is there anything in the faith agenda for progressive politics?
Speakers
Dr Ghayasuddin Siddiqui, Muslim Parliament
Sukhwant Dhaliwal, Working Lives Institute
Julia Bard, Jewish Socialist Group
Arun Kundnani, Institute of Race Relations
Respondents
Prof. Nira Yuval-Davis, University of East London
Dr Emma Francis, University of Warwick
Ansar Ahmed Ullah, International Forum for Secular Bangladesh
Awaaz - South Asia Watch is a project of The Monitoring Group, 14
Featherstone Road, Middlesex, UB2 5AA, 0208 843 2333
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Buzz for secularism, on the dangers of fundamentalism(s), on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
Asia. SACW is an independent & non-profit
citizens wire service run since 1998 by South
Asia Citizens Web: www.sacw.net/
SACW archive is available at: bridget.jatol.com/pipermail/sacw_insaf.net/
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