17. Blaming the Hindu
Victim: Manufacturing Consent for Barbarism,
7
March 2002, Rediff, Rajeev Srinivasan
Now we can add one
more cursed date,
February 27, 2002,
to the black days in the Indian calendar: April 13 (Jallianwallah Bagh,
1919) and the days on which the battles at Panipat and Plassey were
lost. On February 27, a horrific and brutal crime was perpetrated on
Hindus: fittingly, it happened at the birthplace of the most fanatical
and brutal Muslim tyrant in India, Aurangzeb.
The facts are
indisputable:
·
A
regularly scheduled Sabarmati Express was carrying, in a few coaches,
several hundred Hindu pilgrims, including many women and children,
returning from a trip to Ayodhya, where they had participated in some
rituals
·
The
train was leaving the town of Godhra, which has a 30 per cent Muslim
population, when someone stopped it by pulling the emergency chain
·
A mob
of some 2000 people, apparently Muslims, then attacked the train with
firebombs and acid bombs, and burned alive at least 57 people inside the
locked coaches, including a dozen children
The response in the English-language media in
India has been quite
intriguing. The editorials and reports generally blamed Hindus for
provoking Muslims by the act of wanting to build a temple in Ayodhya.
The tone, generally, was: 'We told you that Hindu provocation in wanting
to build a temple will lead to a Muslim backlash. So here it is. It's
the Hindus' fault.'
Here is an excerpt
from an editorial in
The
Hindustan Times:
A number of innocent people have already died and more may suffer
if the Centre, even now, doesn't step in to stop the insanity unleashed
by the VHP. Right from the time when this outfit of Hindu fanatics
announced its provocative plan to begin the construction of the temple
in Ayodhya, it was known that trouble was brewing. But the BJP at the
Centre, perhaps hoping that the VHP's belligerence will consolidate the
Hindu vote behind it, did nothing more than mouth pious platitudes.
Here is an excerpt
from a report in The Washington
Post, with a quote from a well-known Hindu-baiter and Muslim
apologist, whose organisation, for the sake of truth in advertising,
should be renamed 'Hinduism Combat':
Teesta Setalvad, head of Communalism Combat, a group that
opposes religious extremism in India, said that 'while I condemn today's
gruesome attack, you cannot pick up an incident in isolation. Let us not
forget the provocation. These people were not going for a benign
assembly. They were indulging in blatant and unlawful mobilisation to
build a temple and deliberately provoke the Muslims in India.'

Even by the standards
of the Indian English media and its 'secular' 'progressives', known for
their Marxist blinkers, this is astonishing. For they are conveniently
pinning the blame on the victim. If I were to take the usual liberal
position, this is the equivalent of blaming a raped woman for the crime
of wearing revealing clothes, which led to the rapist losing control.
Most civilized people would consider it the fault of the rapist, not of
the raped woman. No 'provocation', most people would argue, justifies
rape. But not so India's media or 'intellectuals'.
This issue of
provocation is quite illuminating. What could possibly provoke the
cold-blooded execution of a large number of people, including women and
children, trapped inside a locked railway carriage and burned alive?
What could their sin have been? It is alleged that there were
altercations between those on the train and Muslim hawkers at Godhra
station. But notice there was no physical violence between them.
So how does this
altercation escalate within a few minutes, and that too in the early
morning before many people are up and about, into a large mob of Muslims
arriving at the scene equipped with Molotov cocktails and acid bombs?
Does this look like a spontaneous response to an act of provocation, or
does it look like a pre-planned, well-thought-out plan for mass murder?
What kind of 'provocation' leads someone to randomly execute women and
children in the most gruesome manner possible, by burning them alive?
This is not a
rational response to any provocation; it is pure terrorism. Premeditated
violence inflicted on civilian populations with the intent to terrorize
them. A good exposition of this is available in
The Quranic Concept of War
(see N S Rajaram's review at
(www.bharatvani.org/reviews/rev-quranic.html).
How does this compare
with the infamous 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Centre? In both cases,
unarmed civilians, going about their daily tasks, were attacked and
murdered by a band of ideologically hardened individuals. What was the
'provocation' by the people in the World Trade Centre? Some fantasy that
they were part of a Jewish-Zionist conspiracy to take over the world's
finances? A recent Gallup Poll shows that 61 per cent of those surveyed
in nine Muslim countries accounting for half the world's Muslims refuse
to believe that it was Arabs who attacked the WTC! There is an element
of denial among Muslims that their co-religionists could be such
barbarians.
It appears as though
it takes very little to provoke Muslims. What was the provocation for
murdering Daniel Pearl? That he was a Jew? After all, he was forced to
say to the camera, 'I am a Jew, my mother is a Jew,' just before his
throat was slit, in the macabre video his captors created. What, then,
was the provocation by the Hindus in the case of the Sabarmati Express?
That they were Hindus? That they were alive? That appears to have been
sufficient 'provocation'.
Consider the
'provocation' for similar acts of Islamic barbarism in Kerala in 1921:
the Moplah Rebellion in Malabar. There was no provocation by Hindus, who
were minding their own business. However, in distant Turkey, Mustafa
Kemal Pasha had abolished the caliphate! This was the reason for the
murder, rape and forcible conversion of thousands of Hindus -- who were
purely convenient bystanders -- and looting, arson and destruction of
much property.
What was the
'provocation' by poor Hans Christian Ostro, the Norwegian tourist
abducted in 1994 by Pakistani terrorists in Jammu & Kashmir, and later
beheaded? That he happened to travel in
India?
What was the 'provocation' for the Shi'ite Muslims murdered by drive-by
terrorists in a mosque in Pakistan recently? What about the 100,000
Algerians massacred, mostly by having their throats cut, by
fellow-Muslim terrorists?
No, it is pretty
clear that there does not need to be any 'provocation' before sections
of Muslims unleash their blood-lust on all and sundry, especially
non-Muslims, and if such have already been extinguished, on
fellow-Muslims. The entire Muslim world has bloody borders, as Samuel
Huntington pointed out. Furthermore, even in their societies, there is
incredible violence.
Liberal Muslims
should ask themselves why this is so: is there something in their
religion that easily turns some people into bloodthirsty barbarians? If
so, isn't this something they need to cleanse from their religion? As
Edmund Burke once said, 'All that is necessary for the triumph of evil
is for good men to do nothing.'
After this latest
bout of bloodletting, I am beginning to wonder if Mohammed Ali Jinnah
was right, after all. Maybe Muslims cannot live with Hindus, or anybody
else for that matter. Maybe the Two-Nation Theory is in fact true. That
is an awful possibility: because it would mean that the pluralistic,
liberal, tolerant world-view that has been the hallmark of Hinduism for
millennia is no longer an appropriate paradigm, and Hindus have to
become like Muslims, Christians and Marxists: dogmatic and intolerant,
just to survive. I would hate to think this is the future. |