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India’s Suppression Of Free Speech

SONIA FALEIRO, The New York Times

 

 

 





In today’s India, secular liberals face a challenge: how to stay alive.

In August, 77-year-old scholar M. M. Kalburgi, an outspoken critic of Hindu idol worship, was gunned down on his own doorstep.

In February, also this year, the communist leader Govind Pansare was killed near Mumbai.

And in 2013, the activist Narendra Dabholkar was murdered for campaigning against religious superstitions.

These killings should be seen as the canary in the coal mine: Secular voices are being censored and others will follow.

While there have always been episodic attacks on free speech in India, this time feels different. The harassment is front-page news, but the government refuses to acknowledge it.

Indeed, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s silence is being interpreted by many people as tacit approval, given that the attacks have gained momentum since he took office in 2014 and are linked to Hindutva groups whose far-right ideology he shares.

Earlier this month, a leader of the Sri Ram Sene, a Hindu extremist group with a history of violence including raiding pubs and beating women they find inside, ratcheted up the tensions. He warned that writers who insulted Hindu gods were in danger of having their tongues sliced off.

For those who don’t support the ultimate goal of these extremists -- a Hindu nation -- Mr. Modi’s silence is ominous.

This is a turning point for India, a country that has made claims to being a liberal democracy and that often adopts a high-minded tone when neighbors fall short of the same standards.

When the liberal Pakistani politician Salman Taseer was assassinated in 2011, the Indian journalist M. J. Akbar, now the national spokesman for the Bharatiya Janata Party, or B.J.P., chided, “If Salman Taseer had been an Indian Muslim, he would still have been alive.”

In the run-up to the 2014 general elections in Bangladesh, India expressed concern over the future of the country’s democratic institutions.

We should be worrying instead about what’s happening in India, and recognize that it could go the way of the very neighbors it criticizes. As Nikhil Wagle, a prominent liberal journalist based in Mumbai, told me, “Without secularism, India is a Hindu Pakistan.”

The murders in India share striking similarities with the killings of four Bangladeshi bloggers this year. But while there was a global outcry over what happened in Bangladesh, India is hiding behind its patina of legitimacy granted by its claim of being the world’s largest democracy.

Like the murdered bloggers, the Indian victims held liberal views but were not famous or powerful. Mr. Kalburgi had publicly expressed skepticism toward idol worship in Hinduism, but he didn’t pose a threat to anyone.

While the authorities are pursuing the culprits on a case-by-case basis, the overarching attack on free speech has not been addressed. The threats and killings have created an atmosphere of self-censorship and fear.

Some of the killers are still on the loose, and while in one hand they wield a gun, in the other they wave a list. On September 20, Mr. Wagle, the journalist, learned from a source that intercepted phone calls had revealed that members of yet another right-wing Hindu group, Sanatan Sanstha, had marked him as their next victim.

The extremists who celebrated the August murder of Mr. Kalburgi were more direct: They used Twitter to warn K. S. Bhagwan, a retired university professor who is critical of the Hindu caste system, that he would be next.

The goal of transforming India from a secular state to a Hindu nation, which seems to be behind the murders, is abetted not just by the silence of politicians, but also by the Hindu nationalist policies of the ruling B.J.P.

Over the past few months, the government has purged secular voices from high-profile institutions including the National Book Trust and the independent board of Nalanda University.

The government is not replacing mediocre individuals: The chancellor of Nalanda was the Nobel laureate Amartya Sen. It is replacing luminaries with people whose greatest qualification is faith in Hindutva ideology. The new appointees are rejecting scientific thought in favor of religious ideas that have no place in secular institutions.

One of the government’s chief targets is the legacy of India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, who laid the foundation for a secular nation. Last month, having nudged out the director of the Nehru Museum and Library in New Delhi, the government announced plans to rename the museum and change its focus to highlight the achievements of Mr. Modi. This is akin to repurposing the Washington Monument as an Obama museum.

In addition to erasing the contributions of long-dead liberals, B.J.P. leaders are busy promoting violent Hindu nationalists.

Sakshi Maharaj, a B.J.P. member of Parliament, described Nathuram Godse, the man who assassinated Mohandas Gandhi, as a “patriot.” Although Mr. Maharaj later retracted his statement, his opinion is shared by many of his party colleagues. Gandhi’s assassin was a former member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (“RSS“), an armed Hindu group, with which Mr. Modi has been associated since he was 8 years old.

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The B.J.P.’s efforts to reshape institutions that embody secular values -- values they dismiss as “Western” -- was certainly anticipated. It came as no surprise when the culture and tourism minister, Mahesh Sharma, recently promised to “cleanse every area of public discourse that had been westernized.”

Mr. Sharma is well aware of the connotations of the word he used.

It’s also not surprising that Hindu fundamentalists would feel empowered in the shadow of a Hindu nationalist government. Still, few expected that freedom of speech would become a contestable commodity and that some who exercised it would lose their lives.

The realization has made for decisions that were once unthinkable.

Last December, the acclaimed author Perumal Murugan informed the police that he’d received threats from Hindu groups angered by a novel he wrote in 2010. Extremists staged burnings of his book and demanded a public apology from him. The police suggested he go into exile. Realizing he was on his own, in January Mr. Murugan announced the withdrawal of his entire literary canon. On Facebook, he swore to give up writing, in essence apologizing for his life’s work out of fear for his family’s safety.

It’s hard to accept what is happening in India. It is easier to ignore or dismiss the attacks and the threats as a liberal persecution complex or a phase that will last only as long as the B.J.P. is in power. But the country is undergoing a tectonic shift that will have long-term repercussions.

The attacks in India should not be seen as a problem limited to secular writers or liberal thinkers. They should be recognized as an attack on the heart of what constitutes a democracy -- and that concerns everyone who values the idea of India as it was conceived and as it is beloved, rather than an India imagined through the eyes of religious zealots. Indians must protest these attacks and demand accountability from people in power. We must call for all voices to be protected, before we lose our own.


[Sonia Faleiro is the author of “Beautiful Thing: Inside the Secret World of Bombay’s Dance Bars” and a co-founder of the writers’ cooperative ‘Deca.’]


[Courtesy: The New York Times. Edited for sikhchic.com]

October 7, 2015
 

Conversation about this article

1: Rup Singh (Canada), October 07, 2015, 4:09 PM.

Well, all governments at the centre and state levels have suppressed freedom of speech to appease the majority in India. As far as targeting PM Nehru's legacy, well, the Nehru Gandhi families went on a spree of naming everything after themselves and have disregarded the true freedom fighters. Also, Nehru was a friend of the British, an opportunist who became PM without sacrificing anything, while the true freedom fighters went to serve life imprisonments or were hanged. Let's not overlook the fact that genocides were committed against minorities and the same family and party made sure the culprits were protected. Secularism is just a word without meaning in India. So, regardless of who is at the Centre, all free thinkers and minorities will continue to suffer and will not be treated as equal to the majority. Unless the world steps in and demands change.

2: Gurteg Singh (New York, USA), October 08, 2015, 11:27 PM.

Cunning and double-faced Modi has effectively fooled the world by hiding under the cloak of India being a so-called largest democracy while being the most violent and criminal country in the world. While abroad, as a matter of Chanakya-style diplomacy, he talks about inclusiveness but in India he is winking at his Hindutava brothers, signalling them that this is their golden chance to saffornize India at ungodly speed and create terror and fear in the minds of the minorities. But the veil is coming off and the world has started to see the truth and the real danger of emerging fascism and dictatorship where all forms of state tools including armed forces will be used to reach well defined goals. In fact it is no secret that RSS fully supported Indira Gandhi's emergency and the genocide of Sikhs. Just yesterday writer Nayantra Sahgal and poet Ashok Vajpayee have returned their Sahitya Academy awards to protest the Government measures against free speech and support of Hindutava groups who are bent upon terrorist activities and violence. "He has uttered no word of condemnation at all at these incidents. The whole country wishes the Prime Minister to make a statement because the situation is getting more and more serious," Ms Sahgal said. "Under Modi we are going backwards, regressing, narrowing down to Hindutva ... there is rising intolerance and lots of Indians are living in fear."

3: Baldev Singh (Bradford, United Kingdom), October 11, 2015, 9:31 PM.

It should be every Sikh's duty in India to show the Saint-Warrior side and tackle these cowards with the mighty teachings of Guru Gobind Singh.

4: Hitpal Singh  (Auckland, New Zealand ), October 11, 2015, 11:21 PM.

Even Akal Takht is no longer free any more. It has started issuing hukamnamas on the instructions of the Badal and the (A)Kali Dal. And the jathedars are now acting as rubber-stamping clerks. Indeed, no freedom.

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