mmmThe 1947 Partition
of India
mmA paradigm for
Pathological Politics
mmmmm in India and Pakistan
mmmmmmm(prepublication
version)
This article seeks to shed light on the role
a particular historical event can play in conferring legitimacy
to the politics of communal and national animosities and hostilities.
The Partition of India in 1947 was, on the one hand, a gory consummation
of a long process of mutual demonising and dehumanising by Hindu
and Muslim extremists. On the other, in the post-independence
era, it became a model of violent conflict resolution invoked and
emulated by ethnic and religious extremists and the hawkish establishments
of India and Pakistan.
The paper argues that the Partition
of India epitomises the politics of identity in its most negative
form: when trust and understanding have been undermined and instead
fear and insecurity reign supreme, generating angst at various levels
of state and society. In the process, a pathological socio-political
system comes into being. I try to show how such a system functions
within the domestic sphere as well as in India-Pakistan political
interaction.
Introduction
The Partition of
British India in 1947, which created the two independent states
of India and Pakistan, was followed by one of the cruellest and
bloodiest migrations and ethnic cleansings in history. The religious
fury and violence that it unleashed caused the deaths of some 2
million Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs. An estimated 12 to 15 million
people were forcibly transferred between the
two countries. At least 75,000 women were raped.[1]
The trauma incurred in the process has been profound. Consequently
relations between the two states, between them and some of their
people, and between some of their groups have not normalised even
after more than half a century; on the contrary they have consistently
worsened with each passing year. Ethnic conflict currently pervades
the domestic politics of the two states and the hawks in their defence
establishments have been calling the shots for quite some time.
The two states have been on the verge of a nuclear war since May
1998, when both demonstrated their ability to explode nuclear devices.
Such a war would in all probability seriously jeopardise human existence
and civilisation in this region. Currently, South Asia is undoubtedly
the most dangerous nuclear flash point in the world.
My contention is that this potential
for self-destruction derives from a paradigm for pathologically
ethnicised politics that informs the behaviour of the involved actors.
In this paper, I try to shed light on the way a pathological socio-political
system comes into being. Such a system needs to be distinguished
from the normal type of socio-political system in which ethnic groups,
besides voluntary associations such as class-based or ideology-oriented
parties and organised pressure groups, serve as bases for peaceful
competition for power over goods and services in society. Even in
peaceful situations, ethnic groups maintain their boundaries and
both insiders and outsiders are in some sense aware of them. Some
degree of tension may also exist between them, but their leaders
and spokespersons are usually able to resolve such problems peacefully.[2]
By contrast, pathological politics thrive on the logic of rejection,
exclusion, subordination and the threat or use of force and violence.
The significance of ethnicity
as a variable in social analysis is far from satisfactorily theorised,
although the current period has seen an unusual flurry in the literature.
This study seeks to advance the theoretical frontiers of current
understanding of ethnicity in a special, though by no means unusual
situation: that in which tension and conflict, involving organised
and recurrent violence, have become endemic. The main argument set
forth in this study is that in the formation of a pathological socio-political
system, a particular happening or event can sometimes be identified
clearly and unambiguously as the determinant pivot. Its force or
intensity is of such proportions that it sets in motion processes
that in due course begin to liken a paradigm which, in a path-determinant
manner, produces and reproduces pathological, ethnicised behaviour
patterns. Rational ideas, policies and solutions, which may also
be present, are set aside, rendered ineffective or eliminated by
force. The pathological paradigm continues to inform and affect
politics till such time that it ceases to be efficacious and useful
for its practitioners, or it is undermined by a revolutionary new
paradigm.
The expression pathological
politics is used here to indicate that individuals not only
prefer people of their own ethnic stock, culture, religion, language,
nationality and so on, but dislike and despise those belonging to
other groups. This derives not from some natural propensity, but
because a host of negative historical, socio-economic and cultures
facts converge to create a hostile milieu in which individuals and
groups, embedded in thick social webs and networks, get trapped.[3]
Very often such situations give birth to the politics of reaction.
Here, reaction is used in a double sense: as a mechanical action-reaction
relationship as well as an unenlightened mode of thinking and behaving
towards one another by two or more ethnic groups or states. It may
result from conflicts within state boundaries or as reactions to
happenings in another state. Typically minoritiesethnic, religious,
sectarian or linguisticbecome the main targets of state-tolerated
or state-sanctioned discrimination and violence. In terms of relations
between two or more hostile states, pathological politics manifests
itself in state-sanctioned ultra-nationalism, promotion of terrorism
across borders, and bellicose postures.
The typical causes of ethnic
tension and conflict are fear and anxiety, real or imaginary, that
ethnic groups experience when confronted by an uncertain present
and future, and concomitant perceived threats to survival posed
by rival groups. During periods when state authority may be
waning and the future framework for power sharing cannot be worked
out, apprehensive groups become even more suspicious thereby exacerbating
the lack of mutual trust. Consequently, agreements, where they exist,
are broken or ignored and violent conflict erupts.[4]
It is impossible to say whether all members of a group automatically
feel such anxiety, or whether a band of ethnic activists in that
group are particularly prone to such angst and play a pivotal role
in expressing it on the group's behalf, or whether political
entrepreneursambitious leaders and intellectuals who
may not share the zeal of the activistexcel in articulating
such feelings.[5]
Suffice it to say that without effective leadership, neither activists
nor ordinary members can convert such fears and anxieties into activities
and movements purporting to combat the perceived threats. This means
that political entrepreneurs have the advantage of exaggerating
and manipulating such fears in the pursuit of their political ambitions.
As a pathological situation develops and takes shape, politics can
be reduced to sheer gut reactions. The enemy becomes
a faceless, indiscriminate lump of individuals, an ethnic mass,
a target requiring and justifying punitive pre-emptive action.
It is argued below that the roots
of pathological politics in the intra-state and interstate politics
of India and Pakistan are to be traced to the bloody division of
the British Indian Empire in 1947. On the one hand, Partition was
a gory culmination of more than fifty years of mutual suspicion
and fear harboured by ethnic ideologues and activists from the three
communities of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs. In the past, communal
tension and conflict occasionally resulted in violent confrontations,
but such events remained small-scale and marginal. Mainstream politics
remained essentially constitutional and peaceful. Partition thus
supplanted the normal model with an extremist model of conflict
resolution. On the other, it became the inevitable backdrop of post-independence
politics of India and Pakistan. Thus for more than fifty years now
it has served as the implicit or explicit rationale of anti-minority
politics in the two countries and has driven them to belligerent
interaction many times. In this particular sense, Partition epitomises
pathological politics. It has operated as an ideology of menacing
majoritarian nationalism. However, despite the overall growth of
a pathological socio-political system, the trajectories along which
the two states and their societies have travelled in the last fifty-three
years have been quite different. Such difference derives from the
attitudes towards Partition of the erstwhile leaderships in the
two countries, the national self-definition that the two movements
were premised upon, and the constitutional formula adopted by each
country upon which to ground their politics. The present enquiry
therefore seeks answers to the following questions:
·
how and why has the Partition of India bequeathed
a legacy of pathological politics?;
·
what are the similarities and differences in the profiles of the
Indian and Pakistani ethnicised identities and politics, and how
do we explain them?
Conflicting Nationalisms
and Communal Apprehensions in Colonial India
Under the leadership of Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi, the Indian National Congress (1885) embarked
from 1915 onwards upon a protracted freedom movement, combining
peaceful civil disobedience and mass action into an effective strategy
of resisting colonial rule. Muslims were to be found at all levels
in the Congress, but it was predominantly upper-caste Hindus who
were its mainstay. Congress leaders and cadres were incarcerated
several times. However, the movement remained confined to the limited
question of self-rule and later independence. The Gandhian vision
of a nation was communitarian-pluralist comprising the various religious
communities of India. The second major leader, Jawaharlal Nehru,
empathised with Fabian socialist ideas. His vision of an independent
India was that of a modern secular nation-state based on universal
citizenship and individual rights, sustained by progressive economic
development and expanding modern education under a planned and centrally
directed system. Many other leading members of Congress were sympathisers
or members of Hindu cultural movements and nationalist parties.
The Congress wanted to keep India united, but for a number of reasons
failed to convince the Muslim League that its brand of nationalism
would not mean the permanent majoritarian rule of Hindus.[6]
Although the Congress Party was
Hindu-dominated, the stronghold of Hindu cultural nationalism was
the Hindu revivalist movements and parties. In 1921, Balkrishna
Shivram Moonje expressed regret that Hindus were divided into watertight
compartments with hardly any sense of community between them. On
the other hand, the Muslims formed one organic community, religiously
well organised and disciplined.[7]
This observation exaggerated Muslim unity, but the caste divisions
among Hindus were indeed proverbial. Hindu ethno-nationalist leaders,
most of who came from the upper castes of Brahmans or Kshatryias,
were deeply worried that lower-caste Hindus might convert to Islam
or Christianity.
One of the leaders of the Hindu
Mahasabha movement (founded 1915), Vinayak Damodar Sarvarkar, presented
in 1923 the idea of Hindutva. It was an ethno-cultural
category purporting to bring Hindus of all castes within a communitarian
fold. Non-Hindus had to assimilate into it by accepting Hindu culture
and India as their object of prime loyalty. They could, however,
retain their religions as personal beliefs.[8]
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), founded in 1925 by Keshwar
Baliram Hedgewar adopted semi-military styles of organisation to
instil martial arts among Hindus. Both the Hindu Mahasabha
and RSS looked upon Muslims as the main threat to Indian unity.
Hi successor Madhav Saashiv Gowalkar wrote in 1938:
The foreign races in Hindustan must either
adopt the Hindu culture and language, must learn to respect
and hold in reverence Hindu religion, must entertain no ideas
but those of the glorification of the Hindu race and culture,
or may stay in the country, wholly subordinated to the
Hindu Nation, claiming nothing, deserving no privileges, far
less any preferential treatment noteven citizen's rights.[9]
It is interesting to note that
the term race was used to denote religious communities;
most Hindus and Muslims are otherwise of the same mixed ethnic stock.
In volume 1 of his four-volume study, History of Partition of
India, the Pakistani historian K.K. Aziz argues that the Hindu
revivalists in Punjab had in the 1920s already suggested the partitioning
of India on religious lines.[10]
It is, however, important to point out that before the Partition
of India, rightwing Hindu ethno-nationalism remained a marginal
tendency.

The sizeable Muslim minority of
India related to the question of Indian nationalism from a position
of disadvantage. It was not only smaller in numbers as compared
to the Hindus, but also economically and educationally less advanced.
The Muslim League founded in 1906, largely in reaction to the growing
power of the Congress, remained a moderate communal party of the
modern, educated gentry until 1936. It confined its activities to
ensuring Muslim representation in the various consultative and legislative
bodies through separate electorates (granted in 1909 whereby Muslims
elected Muslim members of the various representative bodies) and
to pleas for greater employment quotas for Muslims in the services.
In 1930, at the annual session of the Muslim League at Allahabad,
Sir Muhammad Iqbal put forth the idea of a separate Muslim state
to be created in the Muslim-majority zone of north-west India. He
based his argument on a novel two-nation theory, according
to which India consisted of two separate and distinct nationsHindus
and Muslims. In his scheme, complete separation from the rest of
India was not, however, an absolute requirement.[11]
Nonetheless, it is important to note that although
the top leaders of the Muslim League did not propagate the creation
of a theocratic state, such an idea was not entirely foreign to
some. For example, Raja Sahib Mahmudabad, one of the most trusted
lieutenants of the Muslim League's leader, Mohamed Ali Jinnah, wrote
a letter in 1939 to the historian Mohibul Hassan in which he said:
When we speak of democracy in
Islam it is not democracy in the government but in the cultural
and social aspects of life. Islam is totalitarianthere is
no denying about it. It is the Koran that we should turn to. It
is the dictatorship of the Koranic laws that we wantand
that we will havebut not through non-violence and Gandhian
truth.[12]
Jinnah, acclaimed by his followers
as the Quaid-i-Azam (Great World Leader), excelled as a political
strategist rather than as an ideologue. It is therefore problematic
to attribute a consistent position to him on the type of Muslim
state he wanted, although creating a theocratic state was foreign
to his constitutional sensibilities. However, without his relentless
eloquence Muslim nationalism and the demand for Muslim self-determination
could not have been set forth so authoritatively.
The main Muslim ideologue of pathological
nationalism was a mysterious figure, Chowdhary Rahmat Ali. Rahmat
Ali enrolled as a student at Cambridge University in his mid-thirties.
In 1933 he wrote a pamphlet Now or Never in which he
presented the idea of a separate Muslim state, Pakistan, to be created
in north-western India.[13]
He started lobbying conservative British politicians to support
his various political schemes. The kernel of his litany was that
Hindus and Muslims were two different nations with entirely irreconcilable
worldviews, sense of history and destiny. Under no circumstance
could they live together in peace in one country.[14]
Later, he began to advocate the creation of a pan-Islamic superstate.
The greater Pakistan was to include Punjab, Afghania (consisting
not only of the North West Frontier Province but also Afghanistan),
Kashmir, Iran, Sindh (including Baluchistan), and Turkey (and other
Turkish speaking areas of central Asia, once know as Turkestan).[15]
The word Pak means pure or chaste in Urdu. Thus such
a state suggested the creation of pure Muslims, pure Islam and a
pure state. He also wanted several smaller Muslim states to be created
in different parts of India, where Muslims, although in a minority
within a larger Hindu-majority region, were nevertheless concentrated
in pockets within them.[16]
It is intriguing to note that Rahmat Ali was despised and rejected
by the Muslim League leaders who found his ideas unsophisticated
and drastic. He was never welcomed into its fold and died a broken
man in Cambridge in 1950.[17]
One should bear in mind that the
Islamic clerics, the various ulama, were not major players
at that time. The radical Sunni Deobandis (founded 1867) worked
out an equation with Congress and joined the struggle for a united
India.[18]
The future ideologue of Islamic fundamentalism or Islamism in Pakistan,
Abul Ala Maududi (1903-79) rejected both the territorial-secular
nationalism of the Congress and the ethno-cultural nationalism of
the Muslim League. For him, an Islamic polity could only be based
on faith.
The Sikh community, rooted essentially
in Punjab, was nowhere in a majority. The main Sikh party, the Akali
Dal, and other minor tendencies allied with the Congress in the
latters opposition to the Muslim Leagues demand for
a separate Pakistan.
According to the 1941 census, the total population
of India (including that of British India and the Indian princely
states and agencies) was 383,643,745. It consisted of 206,117,326
caste Hindus, 48,813,180 scheduled castes (so-called untouchables)
and 25,441,489 scheduled tribes Hindus; 92,058,096 Muslims; 5,691,477
Sikhs (concentrated in Punjab); and all the rest. As for British
India, the total population was 294,171,961, comprising 150,890,146
caste Hindus; 39,920,807 scheduled castes and 4,165,097 scheduled
tribes Hindus; 79,398,503 Muslims; 4,165,097 Sikhs; and other groups.[19]
Only about 10 per cent of the population of British India was enfranchised.

Partition and Preceding Events
After World War II the
British were in a hurry to leave India. The elections of winter
1945-46 were thus in point of fact about the future political shape
of an independent subcontinent. Congress sought a mandate to keep
India united while the Muslim League stood for a separate Pakistan.
Emotive and sensationalist slogans such as Pakistan Ka Naara
Kaya? La Illaha Il Lillah (What is the Slogan of Pakistan? It is
that there is no God but Allah) and Muslim Hai to League
Mein Aa (if you are a Muslim then join the Muslim League)
were raised. Hindus and Sikhs were demonised as infidels and exploiters.
Muslims who opposed the Muslim League were portrayed as renegades
to Islam. In some cases fatwas (religious rulings) were issued to
the effect that such persons should be denied a proper Islamic burial.[20]
On the other hand, support was solicited from Sunnis, Shias, the
Ahmadis, Muslim Communists and anyone who was registered in the
census records as a Muslim. The election results vindicated the
contradictory claims of both parties. Congress secured 905 general
seats out of a total of 1,585 while the gains of the Muslim League
were even more impressive. It won 440 seats out of a total of 495
reserved for Muslims. It is to be noted that Muslims in the Hindu-majority
provinces also voted massively in favour of the Muslim League.[21]
The Cabinet Mission of 1946 sent
by the post-war Labour Government of Clement Atlee failed to convince
the two rival parties to agree upon a formula of power sharing within
a united India. The factor that sealed the fate of unity was the
eruption of large-scale communal violence following Jawaharlal Nehrus
ill-considered press statement of 10 July 1946 in Bombay declaring
that Congress would enter the Constituent Assembly completely
unfettered by agreements and free to meet all situations as they
arise.[22]
On 29 July 1946, Jinnah gave the
call to direct action to Muslims to protest the alleged anti-minority
attitude of Nehru. 0n 16 August 1946, communal massacres, initiated
by hotheads despatched by the Muslim League chief minister of Bengal,
Hussain Shaheed Suhrawardy, took place in Calcutta, which left thousands
of people, mostly Hindus, dead and homeless. The Hindus retaliated
with great ferocity. More Muslims died in the counter-attack.[23]
The Calcutta killings proved a contagion, and communal riots broke
out in many parts of India. The real explosion, however, originated
a few months later in the key Punjab province, where the Muslim
(57.1 per cent), Hindu (27.8 per cent) and Sikh (13.2 per cent)
groups maintained an uneasy peace until the beginning of 1947.[24]
In the third week of January 1947, the Muslim League started its
direct action in Punjab against the non-Muslim League
government of Khizr Hayat Tiwana.
On 3 March, the Sikh Akali Dal
leader, Master Tara Singh, gave what in effect was a call for an
all-out confrontation with Muslims.[25]
It resulted in immediate clashes between Hindu-Sikh and Muslim demonstrators.
The first large-scale, organised communal clashes took place in
the Rawalpindi area. On the night of 67 March, Muslim gangs
attacked a number of Sikh and Hindu villages, the campaign continuing
until 13 March.[26]
It left more than 2000 mainly Sikh and Hindu men, women and children
dead. Muslim League cadres were identified as the culprits behind
it.
At that point, the Sikh leaders
demanded that Punjab be also divided on communal lines if Pakistan
was granted to the Muslims. On 6-8 March, the All-India National
Congress Committee passed a resolution demanding the division of
Punjab into two provinces so that the predominantly Muslim
part may be separated from the predominantly non-Muslim part.[27]
Congress also demanded the partition of Bengal. The British Government
announced the partitions of India, Bengal and Punjab on 3 June 1947.
Congress, the Muslim League, representatives of the Sikhs and the
various other minor religious and caste groups negotiated the actual
demarcation of the Pakistan-India border before the Bengal and Punjab
Boundary Commissions. These deliberations served as the basis for
the Radcliffe Award of 17 August 1947 (Pakistan and India had already
become independent on 14 and 15 August, respectively). The Radcliffe
Award did not satisfy any of the major contestants, and has subsequently
been criticised and even condemned by various disgruntled actors.[28]
The riots and pogroms, which accompanied
Partition, were most harrowing in the Punjab and effectively led
to the first successful post-war experiment in massive ethnic cleansing
in the world. At that critical moment Muslim League, the Sikh Akali
Dal, RSS and Congress cadres became vicious killers.[29]
However, some 3035 million Muslims stayed on in other parts
of India while in East Pakistan some 23 per cent of the population
continued to be Hindu. Some half million Hindus stayed behind in
Sindh in West Pakistan (since December 1971 the only part which
constitutes Pakistan).
  
India
The failure to keep India united left the Congress
ideal of a composite Indian nation in shambles. Millions of Hindu
and Sikh refugees were devastated by that traumatic experience.
Many objected to the Muslim presence and wanted Muslims driven away
to Pakistan. At that critical movement, Gandhi, Nehru and many other
stalwarts of the freedom struggle became a bulwark against the forces
of reaction and revenge, and although attacks on Muslims continued
for some time in many parts of India, they were small-scale occurrences.
When discussion began on the constitution, the
notion of a modern individual-rights-oriented civic and composite
nation prevailed. The Hindu ethno-nationalist lobby argued in favour
of a Hindu cultural hegemony in terms of national identity, but
was overruled. It can be asserted, however, that the trauma of Partition
made everybody in the Congress High Command overly sensitive to
the question of unity.[30]
The Constitution and Education System
The high point of the Nehruvian model was the
enshrinement of universal values and norms in the Indian Constitution,
which came into force on 26 January 1950. Its declarations on human
rights and freedoms were quite radical. Universal citizenship was
granted. Public office was open to all citizens. Some 23 percent
of jobs (i.e. the ratio of those groups in the Hindu population)
were later reserved by law for the so-called untouchable castes
and tribes. In 1955 the Untouchability (Offences) Act, was passed.
It criminalised the practice of untouchability. The constitution
therefore clearly sanctioned a secular-democratic model of the polity.[31]
Although various amendments were subsequently made, the basic structure
has remained unchanged.
The rational-modernising elite
chose the educational system to gradually foster a democratic national
identity. Liberal and Marxist scholars (many of Muslim origin) dominated
until recently prestigious Indian social science and humanities
university faculties and institutes. Their interpretation of the
freedom movement was largely imbued with the emancipatory ethos
of the European Enlightenment. Not surprisingly, the Hindu communal
organisations and parties were very critical of such a foundation
of Indian nationalism. The current BJP-led government seems to have
decided to promote an educational agenda that will project a pro-Hindu
bias in the production of knowledge and education. At the provincial
level, such changes have already been introduced, typically identifying
former Muslim rulers as responsible for all the ills of society.[32]
Hindu Nationalism and the
Growth of Hostility to Minorities
Congress had completely sidelined
rightwing Hindu ethno-nationalists during the freedom struggle and
alienated them from the state in the early years. Consequently they
had to devise strategies to advance the project of Hindutva from
outside the state. The loss of life and property and expulsion from
their ancestral homes left in Pakistan were blamed on the Congresss
willingness to concede Partition. Muslims as a whole were held responsible
for the vivisection of the motherland. Such propaganda did boost
the fortunes of the rightwing parties somewhat. For example, in
1943 the total membership of the RSS was only 76,000. In 1948 it
had soared to 600,000.[33]
In electoral terms, however, such gains did not mean that a major
challenge to Congress could be mounted. Rather, initially a major
set back resulted from the involvement of the RSS in the assassination
of Gandhi. The Hindu ethno-nationalists were infuriated over Gandhis
insistence that the Indian government pay 550 million rupees to
Pakistan as compensation for losses incurred during Partition.[34]
Accordingly, he began a fast unto death to put pressure on the government.
On 31 January Nathu Ram Godse, a member of the RSS, murdered Gandhi.
Nehru decided to deal firmly with the Hindu ethno-nationalists.
The RSS was banned, although it reappeared in 1952 in the form of
Jana Sangha.
In the 1960s some other avenues
for a Hindu political revival were tried. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad
(VHP) was founded in 1964 ostensibly as a cultural movement purporting
to inculcate pride among Hindus in their great culture and civilisation.
Initially the VHP identified the proselytising activities of Christian
missionaries as a major threat. It is intriguing to note that the
VHP movement was sustained with considerable assistance from the
Hindu diaspora, especially the large Indian/Hindu population of
North America consisting of successful professionals and other upwardly
mobile groups. Support from the UK has also been significant.[35]
The VHP and its various student and labour affiliates have been
able to acquire political clout and infiltrate the state machinery
and important cultural and media institutions.
However, the most significant
boost to Hindu great nation chauvinism came initially from another
quarter: the Congress government led by Mrs Indira Gandhi. In December
1971 India defeated Pakistan in the latters eastern wing,
where a rebellion had been going on since March of that year. In
1974 India exploded a nuclear device. Mrs Gandhi began to be hailed
as a great stateswoman. Sycophants began to raise slogans such as
India is Indira and Indira is India. However, in 1974
popular strikes, demonstrations and agitations broke out in protest
against price rises, unemployment and bad government. The government
retaliated by suspending many of the normal parliamentary practices
and civil liberties. The Hindu ethno-nationalists made capital out
of the situation by joining the democratic opposition. On 5 April
1980, some of them came together and founded the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP).[36]
A shift in the Congress electoral
strategy could also be noticed. Instead of relying upon its traditional
supporters, the so-called vote-banks comprising the various social
and religious minorities such as the Dalits and Muslims, Mrs Gandhi
began to cultivate the more traditional upper caste voters. In the
1980s, the BJP, RSS, and the rabidly anti-Muslim Shiv Sena in Mahrashtra
and several other such parties and organisations began to evolve
a martial discourse based on the mythical Mahabharta Epic and other
heroic tales with a view to instilling militancy and a sense of
collective nationalism. The idea of Hindutva or Hindu nation, first
propounded by Sarvarkar in the 1920s, was revived. It asserted that
only Hindus were trustworthy and loyal citizens of India; and further,
that Nehruvian secularism had been harmful to Hindus, while it pampered
the minorities.[37]
In particular, hostility was directed against the Muslims, who constitute
some 13 per cent of the total Indian population.
It is important to note that
the vast majority of Indian Muslims are converts from the poorest
sections of Hindu society. They have been the main sufferers of
the Partition Syndrome. They are grossly underrepresented in education
and employment. Discrimination is therefore institutionalised in
practice if not in theory. It is, however, their portrayal as a
fifth column and therefore a security threat that makes them most
vulnerable to hostile propaganda. Thus, even the liberal mass media
gave sensational coverage to a report that some Dalits had converted
to Islam in Tamil Nadu in 1981. Exaggerated reports of Arab money
donated to Islamic organisations and the alleged rapid growth rate
of the Muslim population also figured prominently in media discussions.[38]
The galloping Hindu cultural revival
struck terror among the minorities. Anti-Muslim attacks became larger,
more frequent, and more gruesome. The xenophobia and paranoia, which
typifies such a pathological frame of mind, proved to be a self-fulfilling
prophecy. However, Muslims did not mount the first challenge. It
was the Sikhs of Punjab who were attracted to the idea of a separate
Sikh state, Khalistan. The Khalistanis argued that Partition gave
India to the Hindus and Pakistan to the Muslims therefore Sikhs
should be given Khalistan. The Khalistan conflict came to a head
in June 1984 when Mrs Gandhi ordered the Indian army to flush out
the Sikh leader Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and his militants
who had been occupying the holiest Sikh shrine, the Golden Temple
at Amritsar since 1982. The military action was successful but it
cost a great deal in human lives. On 31 October 1984, Mrs Gandhi
was assassinated by two of her Sikh bodyguards. Immediately Hindu
gangs began to hunt down Sikhs all over India. In the capital Delhi
alone at least 3,000 Sikhs were butchered.[39]
The Sikhs had barely been crushed
when another major separatist movement emerged in the predominantly
Muslim-majority Indian-administered Kashmir. India and Pakistan
had inherited the Kashmir dispute at the time of Partition. Its
resurgence proved even more difficult for India to bring under control.
The Kashmir conflict continues to claim lives almost every day and
India has not been able to bring the situation under control despite
extreme repression and the deployment of hundreds of thousands of
soldiers and security forces.[40]
Indias worries have been compounded further by the re-emergence
of separatist insurgency among a number of different Christian tribal
peoples in the smaller north-eastern border states (provinces of
India). The Indian government and mass media have been alleging
that the Pakistani secret services, especially the Inter-Services-Intelligence
(ISI) help the Sikh, Kashmiri and other separatist movements in
India with training, arms and other facilities.[41]
From time to time some Indian Muslim is arrested on charges of working
for the ISI. This undoubtedly helps portray all Muslims as pro-Pakistan
and a subversive factor in Indian society.
While the anti-minority polices
of the Hindu right have been steadily growing, a major worry for
the BJP, which seeks power through the electoral process, has been
the alienation of a significant number of Dalits and the so-called
Other Backward Castes (OBCs), a rather large segment of peasant
and other castes, which occupy a position between the upper castes
and Dalits. The BJP had been seeking ways and means of enveloping
such social strata into its fold of Hindu cultural nationalism.
An emotive cause or symbol was found in the long, drawn-out dispute
between Hindus and Muslims over the site of the Babri mosque in
Ayodhya. It was alleged that the god Rama had been born there
and a temple existed on that spot before the mosque was built in
1528. Consequently in the 1980s the BJP, VHP and other communal
entities launched a campaign to dismantle the mosque. The Bajrang
Dal (established in 1984), a youth wing of the VHP, employed mainly
for agitation purposes and demonstrations, played the leading role
in mobilising mass action and other activities in favour of the
campaign.[42]
In early December 1992, the BJP and its supporters the VHP, Bajrang
Dal, Shiv Sena and other fanatical groups finally arrived in Ayodhya
after a long countrywide march in which thousands of people joined,
including OBCs and other traditionally alienated sections of Hindu
society. The mob easily overpowered the rather small police force,
climbed onto the top of the mosque and demolished it in a few hours.
The Congress government under
Narashima Rao seemed to have let the event take place mainly for
opportunistic electoral reasons. The demolition of the mosque was
accompanied by mob attacks on Muslims all over India and several
thousand were killed. Suddenly India was in the midst of perhaps
the most serious communal conflict since the partition. There was
a fierce reaction in Pakistan and the old temples in Punjab were
razed and some Hindus were also killed. The Hindu ethno-nationalists
have plans to destroy some 3000 other mosques built allegedly on
Hindu temples and holy places.[43]
Building the Ram Mandir is part of the BJP's election manifesto.
The BJP has subsequently been increasing its electoral support and
is currently the biggest party in a coalition government of 25 parties.
Thus far it lacks parliamentary support for realising such a project.
In fact moderate sections of the BJP have been trying to woo the
Muslim vote bank and have made some gains. However, the Shiv Sena
leader, Bal Thackerey, has recently demanded that Muslims should
be disenfranchised.[44]
The 20 million-strong Christian
community had most of the time escaped the type of animosity faced
by Muslims since they had played no role in bringing about the division
of India. Some conversions to Christianity had continued to take
place, mainly among the aborigines. Attacks upon churches and mission-run
schools had been taking place, but after Sonia Gandhi (Italian-Catholic
by birth) became the leader of the Congress Party in the late 1990s,
the Hindu Right has been peddling a Christian conspiracy to annexe
India. The last couple of years have witnessed a dramatic increase
in church burning, killing of Christians and a countrywide campaign
against missionaries. Thus on the night of 22 and 23 January 1999,
the Australian missionary Graham Stuart Staines and his two sons
were burnt alive in Monouharpur in Orrissa.[45]
Finally, the most enduring cleavages in Hindu society remain as
deep as before: those between the twice-born upper castes, the assertive
OBC groups and the Dalits. Attacks against Dalits continue to take
place frequently all over India.
Pakistan
A notorious ambiguity about the
purposes for which Pakistan was createdwas it to be simply
a national state of Muslims or a theocratic Islamic state based
on Sharia (dogmatic Islamic law)?characterises its travails
with national identity. Jinnah had never provided any clear answer
to this question. Pakistan can therefore be described as an unimagined
nation. The elite that came to power in Pakistan lacked political
vision and preparedness. It did not allow democracy to be institutionalised.
Recurrent military-bureaucratic take-overs and a host of bizarre
decisions contributed to the fostering of a pathological political
culture at all levels of state and society. Such a tendency was
aggravated by the traumatic loss of East Pakistan in late 1971 through
a popular local rebellion backed by an Indian military intervention.
The Constitutional and
Legal Structure
However, the first authoritative
statement made on 11 August 1947, that is only three days before
independence, in the Pakistan Constituent Assembly by Jinnah deviated
from the main thrust of the Muslim Leagues propaganda in favour
of cultural nationalism. To the utter surprise of many, he made
the following observation in a long address:
You are free; you are free to go to your temples,
you are free to go to your mosques or to any other place of worship
in this State of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste
or creedthat has nothing to do with the business of the
State
. We are starting with this fundamental principle that
we are all citizens and equal citizens of one State
I think
we should keep that in front of us as our ideal and you will find
that in due course Hindus would cease to be Hindus and Muslims
would cease to be Muslims, not in the religious sense, because
that is the personal faith of each individual, but in the political
sense as citizens of the State.[46]
This patently secular and territorial idea of
nation contradicted the rationale for the creation of Pakistan as
a state for a cultural nation. The controversy that it caused has
been generating ever more confusion as time goes by. While the fundamentalists
usually dismiss it as irrelevant and an aberration, mainstream Muslim
modernists argue that he was actually operating within an ideal
Islamic framework of tolerance and justice for non-Muslims within
an Islamic state.[47]
Marginalised secularists, leftists and oppressed minorities, however,
raise it to the level of a sacred covenant that his successors have
allegedly broken.
It seems that Jinnahs wording
reflected his usual political sagacity rather than a firm ideological
position. Communal violence was at its worst at that time. The Radcliffe
Award was about to be announced and one could guess that it would
result in population movement on a gigantic scale. The speech probably
purported to discourage mass migration, uprooting and further communal
violence. However, it is doubtful whether in the wake of the communal
riots such a prescription enjoyed any real credibility in Muslim-Pakistani
society, Jinnahs prestige and authority notwithstanding. In
this regard, it is significant to bear in mind that Jinnah never
again reiterated such a commitment although he lived for another
year. After his death on 11 September 1948, the idea of a secular
state never again received much attention in mainstream Pakistani
politics. Rather, Islamic idiom became a central feature of official
rhetoric.
One can even argue that once the
initial euphoria was over and a framework for national identity
and nation building had to be found, the Pakistani leadership felt
constrained to distinguish itself from India. There were undoubtedly
other issues to be dealt with by the government of Prime Minister
Liaqat Ali Khan (d. 1951) but maintaining distinctiveness from Congress
and secular India must have been an important consideration. Thus
the Objectives Resolution moved in the Pakistan Constituent Assembly
by Prime Minister Liaqat Ali Khan on 7 March 1949 proclaimed the
novel idea that sovereignty over the entire universe belonged to
God. Democracy was to be practised, but within Islamic limits.
The minorities were assured that their legitimate interests would
be safeguarded, and that provisions would be made for them in accordance
with Islam freely to profess and practise their religions and cultures.[48]
Although such proclamations sounded like innocuous boasts,
in the longer run they proved to be constraints that facilitated
the politics of exclusion of different religious minorities and
deviant sects from the category of nation.
Thus the first constitution of
Pakistan adopted in 1956 contained a commitment to bringing all
laws into conformity with Islam. In 1973 the third constitution
was adopted. Unlike the first two constitutions that only required
the president of the republic to be a Muslim, the third also required
the prime minister to be a Muslim. It further obliged them to take
an oath testifying their belief in the finality of Prophet Muhammads
mission.[49]
The Educational System
The invention of a distinct historical
past for the so-called Muslim nation of India justifying its separate
existence within the boundaries of Pakistan has been felt to be
necessary for conferring legitimacy and authenticity on it. Attempts
to imagine such a nation have unsurprisingly resulted in distortion
and exaggeration of facts on a massive scale, resulting in mythogenesis.
The main concern has been to foster
a Pakistani-Islamic identity defined negatively, as a contrast to
India. In his book The Murder of History a leading Pakistani
educationalist and historian Prof. K.K. Aziz has scrutinised 66
textbooks used for teaching history, Pakistan studies and social
studies in Pakistani schools, colleges and universities. Pakistan
studies deal largely with the Muslim nationalist/separatist movement.
It is a compulsory subject from 1st grade up to university and not
only all students of humanities and social sciences but also scientists,
doctors and engineers must gain a pass.
The author alleges that Islamisation
by the government of General Zia-ul-Haq vitiated the general academic
environment in Pakistan. He cites extensively factual errors, logical
fallacies, inconsistencies, falsifications, mythologisations and
crass propaganda from books used both in the Urdu and English-medium
schools and colleges. The military and the long military rules are
presented in positive terms while hostility towards India, Hinduism
and Hindus is their hallmark. For example, Congress is described
as a Hindu party. That there were many Muslims among its members
and that some held leading positions is not reported. India is described
as the state of Hindus, although there are as many Muslims or more
living in India as in Pakistan.[50]
Furthermore, a grossly exaggerated
role is assigned to Muslims in the anti-colonial struggle. The Muslim
League is declared as the party of the Muslim masses that successfully
resisted both British colonialism and Hindu domination. Only Muslims
are mentioned as victims of the partition riots and massacres, which
are alleged to have been begun by Hindus and Sikhs. Any comment
on the loss of lives among Hindus and Sikhs during that period is
conspicuous by its absence. He sums up this approach in the following
words:
It is declared that the Muslims
of India made tremendous sacrifices to win their freedom.
The fact is that, apart from the brief years of 1858-60 and 1920-22,
Muslims suffered little hardship between 1857-1947. It is forgotten
by everyone that the Muslim Leagues search for protection
and safeguards (in the early years) and its struggle for an independent
state (in the later years) were strictly constitutional efforts,
peaceful campaigns and political fights, conducted through parliamentary
debates and negotiations
No Muslim League leaders languished
in prisons. No Muslim masses faced British bullets. The many people
who died or suffered horribly in 1947 were running away from their
homes because their life was in danger, not because they were
fighting for the creation of Pakistan. They were casualties of
communal riots, not of anti-British warfare.[51]
He comments further, A
sane educational system does not train students in hate. Whatever
the justification for it or the compulsions of patriotism, hatred
corrupts the mind, more so if it is still tender, and retards its
healthy growth.[52]
Islamisation , Confessionalism
and Hostility to Minorities
States founded on religious and
ethnic nationalism invariably discriminate against atypical minorities.
Ethnocracies can be a more apt description of such states, even
when they practice democracy. Israel is a case in point. However,
Pakistan has the rather unenviable distinction of extending the
logic of confessionalism to its ultimate limits. In Pakistan, not
only non-Muslims but also deviant sects within the broader category
of Muslims who were mobilised in support of the 1945-46 elections
have been alienated over time. Also, women as a whole have been
victims of the so-called Islamisation process.
In 1953, violent anti-Ahmadiyya
riots took place in Punjab in which several hundred lives were lost
and considerable Ahmadiyya property was destroyed. The masterminds
behind those riots were politicians from the ruling Muslim League
seeking to challenge the ruling faction within the party.[53]
In 1974, the Islamic socialist Zulfikar Ali Bhutto played the anti-Ahmadiyya
card again in the hope of extending his populist constituency into
the stronghold of the doctrinal-minded Islamic parties of Pakistan.
Consequently, when General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq seized the reigns
of power in July 1977 by toppling Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in a bloodless
coup, a long tradition of relying on Islam to define national identity
and the rights of citizens was already in place.
Upon coming to power in 1977,
General Zia announced an ambitious programme to Islamise Pakistan.
He expressed his political philosophy in a succinct manner: I
have a mission, given by God, to bring Islamic order to Pakistan.[54]
His main source of inspiration for an Islamic order was the ideas
of the arch fundamentalist Abul Ala Maududi. The latter had set
up headquarters in Lahore after Partition, from where he had been
propagating his idea of a totalitarian Islamic state. The pre-Partition
tradition of exploiting Islamic slogans to rouse Muslim fears against
Hindus had been converted into a Machiavellian art by Pakistani
politicians that involved damning their opponents as renegades to
Islam and enemies of Pakistan. The various governments used it to
slur the oppositions call for democracy and elections, while
the various fundamentalist parties and factions pushed all governments
into a corner with allegations of insincerity in their commitment
to Islam. An Islamist political discourse evolved incrementally,
each addition supplanting modernistic vagaries with puritan certainty.
It bore the hallmarks of Maududism.
Thus in 1979, the government
announced the imposition of the Hudud Ordinance, i.e. traditional
Islamic punishments for the offences of adultery, false accusation
of adultery, drinking alcohol, theft, and highway robbery. In 1984,
a new Law of Evidence was adopted which reduced the worth of the
evidence give by a female witness in a court of law to half the
value of that given by a male witness. It was also a period when
Islamic scholars notorious for their misogynist views appeared on
television to advocate strict segregation between men and women
and the confinement of the latter to the private sphere. In subsequent
years the incidence of honour killings has increased
sharply. The victims are wives and daughters killed by their own
families for allegedly defiling the family honour by demanding divorce
or refusing to marry a man chosen for them by their elders. The
courts have generally been very lenient to the culprits.[55]
Also in 1984, many new restrictions
were imposed on the Ahmadiyya group. They were prohibited from using
Islamic nomenclature in their religious and social activities and
may no longer call their places of worship mosques. In 1985, separate
electorates were reintroduced (they were abolished in 1956), whereby
non-Muslims were to constitute a separate body of voters, being
thus entitled only to elect non-Muslim legislators to the various
assemblies. Consequently their right to take part in normal law-making
is severely restricted. It was followed by the adoption of the Blasphemy
Law in 1986. It reads as follows:
Use of derogatory remarks etc.
in respect of the Holy Prophet: Whether by words, either spoken
or written, or by visible representations, or by any imputation,
innuendo or insinuation, directly or indirectly, defiles the sacred
name of the Holy Prophet (peace by upon him) shall be punishable
with death, or imprisonment for life, and shall be liable to fine.[56]
General Zia died in a plane crash
in August 1988. The elected governments of Benazir Bhutto (198890,
199496) and Nawaz Sharif (199093; 199799) did
not dare question the validity of the laws passed during the time
of General Zia. It seems that once a law has been adopted in the
name of Islam no politician is willing to attempt to rescind it.
In October 1997 retired Lahore High Court judge Arif Iqbal Bhatti
was shot down by unidentified members of extremist religious groups.
His death was believed to be linked to his role in the acquittal
in 1995 of two Christians, Salamat Masih and Rehman Masih, charged
with blasphemy.[57]
The Pakistan Human Rights Commission has been providing details
of the increasing terrorisation of minorities. Charges of blasphemy
have been framed against many Ahmadis and Christians. Forced conversions
of Hindus have also been reported.[58]
The military government of General Pervez Musharraf, which came
to power through a coup détat on 12 October
1999, initially presented a progressive position on Islam, but it
had quickly to withdraw from such a position under pressure from
the extremists.
Shia-Sunni Terrorism and
the Emergence of the Jihadis
During Gen. Zias regime
Sunni-Shia doctrinal differences erupted into open conflict. The
difficulties were compounded further when in the late 1980s powerful
external actors began to cultivate their lobbies in Pakistan. Thus
Saudi Arabia and Iran were believed to be sending large sums of
money, books, leaflets, audio and video cassette-tapes and other
propaganda material to Pakistan. Such propaganda offensives were
backed by the inflow of firearms and other weapons. Sunni and Shia
militias began to menace and terrorise society; the assassinations
of several rival Sunni and Shia ulama and regular gun battles
and bomb explosions have been taking place in Pakistan in recent
years.[59]
An international Islamic guerrilla
movement comprising Sunni militants, aptly described as Jihadis
(holy warriors), has been establishing its headquarters in the northern
Pakistani city of Peshawar in recent years. The Jihadis have declared
war on India and want to liberate Kashmir through violent means.
The United States is another enemy, as are Israel, secular Turkey
and the central Asian republics. In some pronouncements, all non-Muslims
have been declared enemies of Islam.[60]
The coming into power of the arch-fundamentalist Talebans in neighbouring
Afghanistan has once again revived the old pan-Islamic project of
Chowdhary Rahmat Ali. In a recent interview, a leading American
South-Asia expert Selig Harrison claimed that General Zias
involvement in Afghanistan was meant to promote a pan-Islamic superstate
in the region. He also alleged that such a scheme has powerful backers
in the Pakistani military establishment.[61]
It can be assumed that Iran (because of its deviant Shia Islam),
Turkey (secular) and the central Asian republics (also secular)
will have no interest in such a project. Instead what is more likely
is that the totalitarian, obscurantist, anti-modernist, medieval
type of state and society created in Afghanistan could envelope
Pakistan.
Separatist Movements
Although the Muslim League was
successful in presenting a broad Muslim unity against Congress,
after Partition it quickly dissipated and the centre became a stronghold
of mainly Punjabi-Urdu-speaking groups. Recently the equation has
been changed and it is a Punjabi-Pukhtun ruling axis which dominates
Pakistan. Separatist movements have emerged several times. The Pukhtun
nationalists seeking to create a separate Pukhtunistan in the north-western
province of Pakistan were contained by a policy of carrot and stick
during the 1950s and 1960s. The people of the former East Pakistan
seceded to form their independent state of Bangladesh in 1971. It
cost, however, between 1.5 and 3 million lives.[62]
The Pakistan army especially targeted the Hindus. A bloody guerrilla
war raged in Baluchistan during the early 1970s, which was defeated
by forceful military action. However, a virulent ethnic conflict
that has claimed several thousand lives has been going on in the
Sindh province, mainly as a confrontation between the native Sindhi-speakers
and the Urdu-speaking refugees (both primarily Sunni Muslims) who
settled in the urban areas of that province after Partition. Military
action has been undertaken several times to restore law and order.
In addition, hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees have settled
in Karachi, where armed militias run lucrative businesses in drugs
and arms smuggling.[63]
The India-Pakistan Interaction
Everyday at dusk, animosity between
India and Pakistan is elaborately, ostentatiously and with unmistakable
pathological overtones manifested during the flag-lowering ceremony
at the Wagah-Attari Border, situated between Lahore on the Pakistani
side and Amritsar on the Indian side. Before Partition, some people
daily travelled by the early bus or train from either of these cities,
did their job or business in the other, and returned. The distance
between them is some 30 miles. Now, the soldiers symbolically seal
the border by ramming the iron-gates with a fierce bang to indicate
that an impassable barrier exists between the two countries and
their peoples. There are usually large crowds on both sides who
watch this awe-inspiring spectacle. They add zest to the ceremony
by nervous clapping and other gesticulations. Despite being neighbours
who share a thousand miles or more of common border, the same languages
and cultural patterns, the people on both sides hardly ever meet.
Getting permission to visit the other country is almost impossible
for most people. Moreover, trade between India and Pakistan is negligible.
Both states have been raising
their defence expenditures over time. Although China should worry
the Indian defence planners more than Pakistan, most of Indias
actual armed encounters and wars have taken place with the latter.
Pakistans defence planning has always been based on the assumption
that the main threat to its security comes from India. During 1948,
India and Pakistan fought an undeclared small-scale war in Kashmir.
The United Nations-based cease-fire came into operation in January
1949. A line of control constitutes an unrecognised border between
them. There is enough evidence to suggest that India did not give
Pakistan its proper share of the common military assets inherited
from the colonial state and generally adopted an unfriendly posture
towards the latter, exacerbating its sense of weakness and vulnerability
vis-à-vis the bigger and more powerful neighbour.[64]
Pakistan began already in 1948
to seek closer relations with the West, while India adopted a neutralist
foreign policy posture. In the 1950s, India became an important
player in the non-aligned movement while Pakistan sought membership
in the western defence pacts of the Southeast Asian Treaty Organisation
and Central Treaty Organisation. India cultivated closer ties with
the Soviet Union in the 1960s; Pakistan reached an accommodation
with the Peoples Republic of China during the same period.
In 1962, China inflicted a humiliating defeat on India in a border
conflagration. India requested American military intervention, but
was provided arms instead. Britain and France also rushed arms to
India. The West in general increased its military and economic aid.[65]
During September 1965, India and
Pakistan fought a major border war for 17 days over Kashmir. In
December 1971 India and Pakistan fought their third war, when the
Indian army intervened in behalf of the East Pakistani Bengalis
fighting the Pakistani army. It resulted in a crushing military
defeat for Pakistan and the loss of East Pakistan, which became
the independent state of Bangladesh. In 1974 India exploded a nuclear
device. In Pakistan, Prime Minister Z.A. Bhutto vowed that Pakistanis
would acquire their own bomb even if it meant eating grass. During
the 1980s and into the 1990s both states spent huge sums of money
to brace their military capabilities. Both sides have provided military
training and bases to secessionists.
On 11 and 13 May 1998 India
detonated altogether five nuclear devices. Pakistan followed suit
a few days later with its own series of six test explosions on 28
and 30 May. The most alarming aspect of this hostility is that large
numbers of people on both sides were jubilant when their governments
conducted the tests. Since then, the governments in the two countries
have vastly expanded their expenditure on armaments, intensified
cross-border terrorism, connived, some would say, patronised the
ultra-nationalist extremists parties and movements in their own
societies. In addition, they have fought a limited war at prohibitive
heights in the Kargil region of Kashmir in May 1999, which many
feared could end in a nuclear confrontation.[66]
The main concern of this study
has been the elaboration of a pathological socio-political system.
My thesis has been that in the formation of such a system the Partition
of India has played the primary or pivotal role. A socio-political
system is not something that can simply be contrived at will by
ethnic activists or political entrepreneurs. Nor is it intrinsic
to human nature to exercise ethnic preference for their own group
in the form of aggression against others. Rather individuals and
social groups are embedded in historically determined circumstances
that circumscribe their choices. In circumstances where uncertainty,
anxiety and fear prevailas when the colonial system terminated
in India and power had to be handed over to the indigenous leaders
and the various groups could not agree on how to share itupheavals
such as Partition aggravate those original fears and anxieties.
However, such situations become endemic if the original problems
persist and no dramatic transformation takes place. In such circumstances,
ethnic activists continue to appeal to the sense of insecurity of
their group and political entrepreneurs make use of such a constituency
in their power games. A vicious circle comes into being and is produced
and re-produced over time.
It is not difficult to conclude
that the Ghost of Partition stalks South Asia, haunting the minds
and souls of many of its people. Its ideological fallout benefited
right wing forces in both India and Pakistan. It bequeathed a negative,
aggressive and violent mode of thinking, behaving and realising
a political objective. It also conferred, in a perverted sense,
legitimacy on the ethnic or cultural model of nationalism, which
currently pervades politics in both states. Driven to the extreme,
it would mean the creation of ethnically homogeneous
India and Pakistan in some bizarre sense and consequently a balkanisation
of these states and/or genocide of unwanted minorities.
However, at the time of Partition
even drastic measures of ethnic cleansing did not result in the
complete elimination of diversity. Unwanted ethnic individuals and
groups survived in both societies. Especially India inherited large
non-Hindu minorities and therefore a bigger problem of consolidating
a cohesive and coherent nation. The western wing of Pakistan inherited
minuscule religious minorities, but since its foundations were immanently
confessional, not only were these minorities adversely affected
but also sects considered deviant from true Islam have
also been on the receiving end of doctrinal fastidiousness. Overall,
rejection of pluralism and diversitythe leitmotif of the Partition
Syndrome has been demonstrating increasingly pathological
tendencies with the passing years. It has become the implicit or
explicit reference for the subsequent anti-minority politics in
the two countries. Ethnic activists were to be found on both sides
before the actual division of India, but previously they were marginal
to politics. After Partition they began to gain influence and support
on the levers of state powerquite early in Pakistan but in
India from the 1990s onwards.
Although one can reasonably
argue that the founding fathers of modern India tried to institutionalise
a universal, civic type of citizenship and a concomitant ideal of
a composite nation, Indian secularism has been under considerable
pressure from those forces that see Muslims and Pakistan as threats
to Indian safety and national consolidation. Hindu fears of a non-Hindu
conspiracy to subvert its culture and existence now include not
only Muslims but also Christians and some Sikhs. Thus, not in constitutional
terms but in actual behaviour, the state has been exploiting the
communal card in its politics, especially during elections. The
BJP has actually come to power by exploiting such a theme. In the
long run, constitutional guarantees may not suffice to protect the
secular, democratic character of the state.
In the case of Pakistan, hostility
to minorities is no longer confined to the conventional Muslim/non-Muslim
divide. Rather the perennial concern of Pakistan to distinguish
itself from secular India has meant investing considerable time,
energy and prestige in constructing a Muslim identity for itself.
Islamic can easily be substituted for Muslim since in the Islamic
heritage the two have been understood as inextricable and indeed
interchangeable. Consequently the constitution was based on Islamic
principles, and a commitment to Islamise all existing laws unavoidably
involved a search for an answer to the question: what is true Islam
and who is a true Muslim? Given the legacy of bitter doctrinal and
theological disputes present in the Islamic heritage, the logic
of such a line of enquiry ultimately exposed the divisions amongst
the various Muslim sects. Politicians more often than not found
such divisions useful for scoring political points and governments
for legitimating their rule. The exclusion and marginalisation of
groups found holding beliefs contrary to strict orthodox standards
has been the net result of such politics. The purgatorial thrust
of ethnicised (sectarian, to be more correct) politics has inevitably
enveloped women, since traditional Muslim society was always segregated
on a gender basis.
Thus, in contrast to the Indian
state, which still offers constitutional and legal resistance to
pathological politics, the Pakistani state has itself been the initiator
of various types of discriminatory and exclusionary policies. That
extremist parties do not secure an electoral majority should not
be surprising because the state bases itself on a fundamentalist
ideology, which is less extreme that the most rabid Jihadi groups.
On the other hand, the Indian state continues to be grounded on
liberal-secular values, but politicians in increasing measure deviate
from such ideals in the interest of realpolitik. The Hindu ethno-nationalists,
however, have begun to question it increasingly.
One can even assert that the domestic
politics of one country have been affected by the domestic politics
of the other. Thus the politics of action-reaction have been gaining
cumulative menacing affect. For example, Hindu ethno-nationalists
have pointed out that Pakistan maintains discriminatory policies
towards non-Muslims, including the Hindus, so in recent years they
have questioned why India should not follow suit and disenfranchise
Muslims. In Pakistan a reaction to the attack on the Babri mosque
in Ayodhya was immediately followed by attacks on the old Hindu
temples. In an ideological sense, the extremism of the Hindu ethno-nationalists
and Chowdhary Rahmat Ali has been vindicated. The self-fulfilling
prophecy of the forces of fear, hate and aggression has been confirmed
at least five times (bloody division in 1947, wars in 1948, 1965
and 1971 and the nuclear blasts of 1998) in just over fifty years:
that those on the Other Side are inveterate enemies who pose a lethal
threat to the identity and survival of those on This Side and therefore
have to be crushed before it is too late. At the bottom of the hectic
and escalating efforts of the two states to acquire the capacity
to hit first and hit hard is the fundamental problem of security.
The security syndrome classically drives enemy states to spend more
on acquiring more and better arms. Each such step results in a reaction
from the other side. As a consequence, instead of security being
enhanced insecurity is accentuated.
How far the ruling elites and
the hawks in the two establishments will pursue confrontational
politics is difficult to say. It is possible that in the long run
both sides may be fatigued by the high cost of such an undertaking,
or one of them gives up such a path realising that it cannot win
the competition. A clear and strong message from the Security Council
of the United Nations and major states outside it to India and Pakistan
to abandon the path of conflict may also help. However, the chances
that the paradigm of pathological politics will be abandoned because
both or one side comes to a rational calculation that it is no longer
efficacious seem remote at the moment.
The leadership in both countries seems to believe
that they can defy the major powers of the world, since both states
possess nuclear weapons capability. There is also a belief that
because both sides are armed with such weapons, no major war can
take place between them. It has been noted that small-scale military
showdowns along the Line of Control in Kashmir have increased, maybe
as an alternative to major confrontation. It is quite possible that
a nuclear war will break out in the region, perhaps accidentally.
If some people survive the massive devastation it is likely to inflict
perhaps then an atmosphere conducive to building a lasting peace
may finally emerge. Western Europe could extricate itself from the
grip of pathological politics only after two world wars and the
holocaust had demonstrated the utter futility of pursuing ethno-nationalism,
colonialism and racism. Perhaps societies do not learn to forgo
a pathological socio-political paradigm unless they are forced to
pay a heavy price in blood for their lack of foresight. Alternative
paradigms offering a peaceful way out of the current predicament
do not seem to be gaining support of the two establishments, although
a vigorous peace movement has been evolving between Indian and Pakistani
intellectuals in the region and in the diaspora. The world community
seems content with giving conventional calls from time to time for
restraint and dialogue. Perhaps a process of forgiveness for the
crimes committed during Partition initiated by intellectuals from
both sides can miraculously lead to reconiliation and mutual acceptance.
Notes and references
[1]
Urvashi Butalia, The Other Side of Silence: Voices from the
Partition of India, (Hurst & Company, London, 2000), p.
3.
[2] Nathan
Glazer and Daniel P. Moynihan, Introduction in Nathan
Glazer and Daniel P. Moynihan (eds.), Ethnicity: Theory and
Practice (Harvard University Press, Cambridge., Massachusetts,
1975), pp. 126.
[3] David
A. Lake and Donald Rothchild, Spreading Fear: The Genesis
of Transnational Ethnic Conflict, in David A. Lake and Donald
Rothchild (eds), The International Spread of Ethnic Conflict
(Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1998),
p. 6.
[4] Ibid.,
pp. 718.
[5] Ibid.,
pp. 1823.
[6] B.N.
Pandey, The Break-up of British India (Macmillan, London,
1969). See also H. M. Seervai, Partition of India: Legend and
Reality (Emmanem Publications, Bombay, 1989). See also Ayesha
Jalal, The Sole Spokesman (Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, 1985).
[7] Christophe
Jaffrelot, The Hindu Ethno-nationalist Movement in India
(Viking, Penguin Press, New Delhi, 1996), p. 20.
[8] Ibid.,
pp. 2545.
[9] Ibid.,
quoted on p. 56.
[10]
K.K. Aziz, History of Partition of India, Vol. 1 (Atlantic
Publishers and Distributors, New Delhi, 1995), pp. 13876.
[11]
Syed Sharifuddin Pirzada (ed.), Foundations of Pakistan: All-India
Muslim League Documents, 19061947, Volume 2 (19241947)
(National Publishing House Ltd., Karachi, 1970), p. 159.
[12]
Mushirul Hasan, Legacy of a Divided Nation (Hurst &
Company, London, 1997), pp. 578.
[13]
G. Allana (comp.), Pakistan Movement: Historic Documents (Islamic
Book Service, Lahore, 1977), pp. 11517.
[14]
Stanley Wolpert, Jinnah of Pakistan (Oxford University
Press, Karachi, 1993), pp. 1312. See also K. K. Aziz, History
of Partition of India, Vol. 2 (Atlantic Publishers and Distributors,
New Delhi, 1995), pp. 3569.
[15]
See the original article of Chowdhary Rahmat Ali, Pakistan
or Pastan Destiny or Disintegration, published by
INFORMATION TIMES (Internet): http://www.InformationTimes.com,
12 February 2001.
[16]
Wolpert, Jinnah of Pakistan, , pp. 2334.
[17]
Ibid., p. 175.
[18]
Ziya-ul-Hasan Faruqi, The Deoband School and the Demand for
Pakistan (Progressive Books, Lahore, 1980).
[19]
Allana (comp.), Pakistan Movement, p. 259.
[20]
Hasan, Legacy of a Divided Nation, pp. 9199; 10320.
See also G. D. Khosla, Stern Reckoning: A Survey of Events
Leading up to and Following the Partition of India (first
published in 1949, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1989), pp.
934. See also Khalid bin Sayeed, Pakistan: The Formative
Phase 18571948 (Oxford University Press, Karachi, 1978),
pp. 196206. See also Ian Talbot, Khizr Tiwana, the Punjab
Unionist Party and the Partition of India (Curzon, Richmond,
1996), pp. 1335.
[21]
Ishtiaq Ahmed, State, Nation and Ethnicity in Contemporary
South Asia (Pinter, London and New York, 1998), pp. 901.
[22]
Abul Kalam Azad, India Wins Freedom (Orient Longmans,
Bombay, 1959), p. 155.
[23]
Sir Francis Tucker, Indias Partition and Human Debasement
(Akashdeep Publishing House, Delhi, 1988), Book I, pp. 15665.
See also Larry Collins and Dominque Lapierre, Freedom at Midnight
(Ayon Books, New York, 1975), pp. 356.
[24]
Allana (comp.), Pakistan Movement, p. 261.
[25]
Ishtiaq Ahmed, The 1947 Partition of
Punjab: Arguments put forth before the Punjab Boundary Commission
by the Parties Involved, in Ian Talbot and Gurharpal Singh
(eds.), Region and Partition: Bengal, Punjab and the Partition
of the Subcontinent (Oxford University Press, Karachi, 1999),
p. 142.
[26]
Butalia, The Other Side of Silence, pp. 15671. See
also, Ritu Menon and Kamla Bhasin, Borders and Boundaries:
Women in Indias Partition (Kali for Women, New Delhi,
1998). See also Talbot, Khizr Tiwana, p. 161.
[27]
Satya M. Rai, Legislative Politics and the Freedom Struggle
in the Punjab 18971947 (India Council of Historical
Research, New Delhi, 1984), p. 326.
[28]
Ishtiaq Ahmed, The 1947 Partition of Punjab, pp. 15961.
[29]
K.L. Tuteja, Hindu Consciousness, the Congress and Partition,
in Amrik Singh (ed.), The Partition in Retrospect (Anamika
Publishers in association with National Institute of Panjab Studies,
New Delhi, 2000), pp. 234.
[30]
Ahmed, State, Nation and Ethnicity, p. 102.
[31]
Ibid., pp. 1023; 1078. See also, D. E. Smith, India
as a Secular State, in Rajeev Bhargava, Secularism and
Its Critics (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1999), pp.
22230.
[32]
Harsh Kapoor, South Asian Citizens Wire, Dispatch
1, 23 January, email: aiindex@mnet.fr;
website: http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex.
>[33]
Jaffrelot, The Hindu Ethno-national Movement in India,
p. 75.
[34]
Ibid., p. 867.
[35]
Eva Hellman, Political Hinduism: The Challenge of the Visva
Hindu Parisad (Department of History of Religions, Uppsala,
1993).
[36]
R.C. Frykenberg, Hindu Fundamentalism and the Structural
Stability of India, in M. E. Marty and R.C. Appleby (eds),
Fundamentalisms and the State: Remaking Politics, Economics
and Militance (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1993),
pp. 2445.
[37]
D. Gupta, Communalism and Fundamentalism: Some Notes on
the Nature of Ethnic Politics in India, Economic and
Political Weekly, vol. 6, nos 11 and 12, 1991. See also, Asghar
Ali Engineer, Secularism in India Theory and Practice,
in Asghar Ali Engineer and Uday Mehta (eds), State Secularism
and Religion: Western and Indian Experiences (Ajanta Books
International, Delhi, 1998), p. 197.
[38]
Mizan Khan with Ted Robert Gurr, Muslims in India and the
Rise of Hindu Communalism, in Ted Robert Gurr, Peoples
Versus States: Minorities at Risk in the New Century (United
States Institute of Peace Press, Washington, D.C., 2000), pp.
26672. See also George Mathew, Politicisation
of Religion: Conversions to Islam in Tamil Nadu, in Moin
Shakir (ed.), Religion, State and Politics in India (Ajanta
Books International, Delhi, 1989), pp. 271306.
[39]
Ahmed, State, Nation and Ethnicity, pp. 11362.
[40]
Ibid., pp. 13762. See also, Victoria Schofield, Kashmir
in Conflict: India, Pakistan and the Unfinished War (I. B.
Tauris, London, 2000).
[41]
Manoj Joshi, The Lost Rebellion: Kashmir in the Nineties (Penguin
Books, New Delhi, 1999), pp. 163206.
[42]
Jaffrelot, The Hindu Ethno-national Movement in India, pp. 45081.
[43]
Sarvepalli Gopal (ed.), Anatomy of a Confrontation: The Babri-Masjid-Ram
Janmabhumi Issue (Viking, Penguin Books, New Delhi,
1991), p. viii.
[44]
Hindustan Times (Internet Edition), 19 December 2000.
[45]
Shamsul (email message), Urgent Press Statement,of 23 January
2001 issued by Dr Richard Howell, General Secretary, Evangelical
Fellowship of India and John Dayal, Secretary General, All India
Christian Council, and, National Vice President of the All India
Catholic Union, shamsul [shamsul@bol.net.in].
[46]
Speeches and Writings of Mr. Jinnah, Vol. II (Sh. Muhammad
Ashraf, Lahore, 1976), pp. 4034.
[47]
Dr. Nasim Hasan Shah, The Myth of Jinnahs belief in
Secularism, in Dawn (Internet Edition), 14 August,
1998.
[48]
Ishtiaq Ahmed, The Concept of an Islamic State: An Analysis of
the Ideological Controversy in Pakistan (Frances Pinter, London,
1987), pp. 2189.
[49]
Ibid., pp. 21921.
[50]
K.K. Aziz, The Murder of History (Vanguard, Lahore, 1993),
pp. 1935.
[51]
Ibid., p. 197.
[52]
Ibid., p. 195.
[53]
Report of the Court of Inquiry Constituted under Punjab Act II
of 1954 to Enquire into the Punjab Disturbances of 1953 (Government
Printing Press, Lahore, 1954), pp. 26186.
[54]
Omar Noman, The Political Economy of Pakistan (Kegan Paul,
London, 1988), p. 141.
[55]
Mannens heder, kvinnans död (The Honour of Man but the Death
of a Woman), Swedish Television channel 2, 21 May 2000. See also,
the Murder of Samia Sarwar: http://saxakali.com/southasia/honor.htm:
35).
>[56]
Ian Talbot, Pakistan. A Modern History (Hurst & Company,
London, 1998), p. 282.
[57]
State of Human Rights in 1998 (Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan, Lahore, 1999), pp. 545.
[58]
Ibid., pp. 78.
[59]
Ahmed, State, Nation and Ethnicity, pp. 78.
[60]
Robin Wright, The Chilling Goal of Islams New Warriors
Religion: In Pakistan, Todays Militant Faithful See
the Entire World as the Battlefield for Their Holy War,
Los Angeles Times, Thursday, 28 December 2000, in Harsh Kapoor,
South Asian Citizens Wire, Dispatch 2, 2 January,
email: aiindex@mnet.fr;
website: http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex.
See also Hassan Gardezi, The Islamist and Hindutva Politics:
Identities of Outlook and Objectives, in Harsh Kapoor, South
Asian Citizens Wire, 25 December 2000, email: aiindex@mnet.fr;
website: http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex.
[61]
Maqbool Aliani sent an email on 8 March, 2001, which included
an interview with Selig Harrison entitled, CIA Worked in
Tandem with Pak to Create Taliban, published in Times
of India (Internet edition), ttp://www.timesofindia.com/today/07euro1.htm.
[62]
Case Study Genocide in Bangladesh, http://www.gendercide.org/case_bangladesh.html.
>[63]
Ahmed, State, Nation and Ethnicity, pp. 169216.
[64]
Brian Cloughley, A History of the Pakistan Army: Wars and Insurrections
(Oxford University Press, Karachi, 2000), pp. 432.
[65]
Ibid., pp. 601.
[66]
Ibid., pp. 37594.
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