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Note: In October 2003, DV contributing writer Angana Chatterji wrote a
report on Orissa for
Communalism Combat about the political economy of Hindutva in the Indian
state. In this article, she continues to map the entrenchment of the Sangh
Parivar, the umbrella group comprised of various Hindu communalist
organizations. Information used in this article is derived from multiple
sources, including interviews with persons affiliated with Sangh
organisations. As relevant, quotations are anonymous or pseudonyms have been
used, and place names changed, listed or omitted, at the request of the
contributor. Insertion(s) within [] in the quotations are the author's.
‘Your
god has no eyes. He cannot have a soul. Your god is violent, just like you
are.’ A Hindu neighbour charges Hasina Begum. With her technician husband,
Hasina's is the only Muslim family in a housing society in a small town in
Orissa. They relocated in 2003. Hasina and her husband are isolated with few
acquaintances in the area. Geeta, a Hindu woman, befriended Hasina only to
be confronted by others about such association with Muslims. Geeta slowly
withdrew, saying. ‘We like you but we have to live in society here, do we
carry you with us, or carry them? What choice do we have?’ Geeta and Hasina
do not speak any more.
Hasina Begum tells me, "We know that many Hindus hate Muslims and I know
that Hindus are in power. I am afraid for my daughter. I want her to stay at
home with me. She does not listen. So many times I am afraid for her, I beat
her to make her stay at home. She has marks on her back from my beating her.
I am ashamed. I feel isolated. If something happens to us, if someone
attacks us, robs us, who will be with us? We are asked, ‘You have no idols,
so who is your god? Are you godless?’ I know that we are not welcome here.
There are stories about us 'Pathans' that circulate in the market place. We
have heard about Gujarat." People tell Hasina that nothing has really
happened, that she has not been attacked, that she is overreacting. She
replies, "Fear is attacking me. I feel that they are watching me."
Subash Chouhan, state convenor for the Bajrang Dal, the paramilitary wing of
Hindutva, claims, "In the country, Orissa is the second Hindu rajya [state].
Today, Sai [Christian] missionary and Islam, they both want to convert the
entire pradesh [state] into Sai and Islam. In the tribal belt they have been
planning to convert the people into Christians and Harijans into Muslims.
This work is moving with force in Orissa. This is the reason the Bajrang Dal
and VHP [Vishwa Hindu Parishad] have taken up the task of consolidating
Hindu shakti in Orissa. In the entire state we have selected some [key]
districts, such as Sai based Sundargarh district, Gajapati zilla, Phulbani,
Keonjhar, Mayurbhanj, Koraput, Nabarangpur districts -- we are undertaking
seva [service] work here, hospitals, one teacher schools, Hari Katha Yojana,
orphanage, these types of jojona and seva work are being undertaken all over
the state."
A secular activist responds, "The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh [RSS] and
Sangh Parivar sailed in with the cyclone [in 1999], we are now drowning in
their midst. They are too many and everywhere. They are kind and giving to
people who abide by them, even as they are watchful and intolerant of people
who disobey them. They do more than the government, they work hard and say
that they are against corruption. But at what price? They are for a 'clean'
Orissa, they are cleaning out the filth, and Christians and Muslims are the
filth they want to sweep out."
Citizen's groups have formed various campaigns to combat communalism in the
state. Since 2002, secular meetings and marches have taken place in
Beherampur, Cuttack, Balesore, Bhadrak, Bhubaneswar, Sambalpur. Community
and citizen's leaders speak of alliance building. They warn about the
futility of partnerships with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Sangh
Parivar vigilantes, cautioning that alliance building requires shared
commitments. They urge for rallying progressive, democratic forces across
the state.
Throughout Orissa, lands reform movements, adivasi and dalit organisation
for self determination, and resistance movements confronting the devastation
of dominant development and globalisation, act as a bulwark against the
escalation of the Sangh Parivar. Adivasi and dalit self determination exists
in opposition to the state. Adivasis and dalits, within politicised
contexts, do not identify as Hindus and resist their incorporation into the
Brahminical (and elite) social order. In a Hindu majority state in India,
Brahminism enforces the supremacy of 'Hinduness', and defines norms, values,
ethics and morality. Ethnic, minority and marginalised groups are subject to
the political and economic violence of Brahminism via which they are forced
to frame their political and cultural aspirations.
The secular activist continues, "[In retaliation] the Sangh Parivar is
consolidating its position in the mining belt and in all sensitive and
tribal areas in Orissa, where there are popular dalit or adivasi struggles
for self determination, trying to undercut them. Several developments are
taking place on the mining front, where the Sangh divides poor people, who,
driven out by corporations, are organising to resist." In Nayagarh district,
dalit communities watch Hindutva's voracious march. They speak of malignant
fictions circulated by the Hindutvadis that Christian missionary activity is
placing Hinduism at risk. Dalits, adivasis, Christians, Hindus and Muslims
speak of how their villages and watersheds intertwine, and how crops are
dependent on the run-off water from each other's lands. They say that they
cannot afford to hate each other.
In a massive mobilisation drive in the mid 1980's the Jaganath Rath Yatra
passed through Hindu, Christian, dalit and adivasi villages across Orissa.
The Yatra traversed a thousand sites between March 1986 and May 1988,
drawing 3-4,000 people in each place. Local people met expenses totalling
2-4 million rupees. As an outcome of this process, 1,600 permanent
mobilisation units managed by 500 committees were set up. The VHP and
Vanavasi Kalyan Ashrams run these units, carrying out their mission via
Kirtan Mandals, Satsangs and Yuvak Kendras.
Today, the annual Jaganath Yatra and other Hindutva organised religio-nationalist
spectacles continue across the state. Muslims, and adivasi and dalit groups
connected to self determination movements in dissent to the Sangh Parivar,
are afraid as thundering mobs engulf their villages. On April 11, 2003,
communal tensions spiralled in Rajgangapur, an industrial town 400
kilometres from Bhubaneswar, during a procession for Hanuman on Ramnavmi.
Two people were killed in police firing.
Over the last decade, the Sangh has amassed 30 major organisations including
political, charitable, militant and educational groups, trade and students
unions, women's groups, with a massive base of a few million, the largest
volunteer enlistment in the state. The Prakalpa Samanvaya Samiti is a
pivotal Sangh organisation synchronising the activities of various faith and
welfare outfits. The Prakalpa Samiti operates a school at Chakapad, 3
student hostels, 20 weekly balwadis, and 300 night schools. It attends to
20,000 patients each month through medicine distribution centres and three
mobile vans. The Prakalpa Samiti acts to drive Christians to Hinduism.
In Orissa, the RSS charges that hostile Hinduisation is a 'rational' and
necessary response to, among other factors, the growth of missionary
activity leading to an increase in the Christian population. Numerous groups
are conflicted about the need to direct 'equal' energy in assessing Hindutva,
Christian missionisation and Islamic fundamentalism in India. Violent
Islamic fundamentalism certainly requires deep scrutiny in South Asia, even
as Hindutva must command particular emphasis in India. Hindu nationalism is
linked to a state that authorises Hindutva's actions, lending it dangerous
legitimacy.
Fundamentalist Christianity, linked to the United States, is endorsed by the
current Bush administration. Evidence suggests (American) evangelist
participation in intelligence operations in Latin America and elsewhere.
Such activity and its relationship to India should concern us only as it
actually takes place. Christians constitute less than 3 percent of the
population in Orissa, with a one percent increase since 1981. Neither does
the Christian population in India record any appreciable increase from 2.6
percent in 1971, to 2.43 in 1981, 2.34 in 1991, and 2.6 in 2001.
The Sangh Parivar converts minorities to dominant Hinduism without
distinguishing between forcible conversions and the right to proselytise,
and uses the converted for sadistic ends. The Sangh does not acknowledge
that tribal and dalit conversions to Christianity are rarely coercive and
occur in response to oppressive and entrenched caste inequities, gender
violence, and chronic poverty. The Sangh's claim that Christians in India
are anti national facilitates violence against them. Dalit Christian
activists seek empowerment and understand 'decastification' as necessary to
fighting Hindutva. They also speak of challenging inherent inequities that
are often reproduced through the church, where, they say, pews are filled on
Sunday mornings with compliant people sitting in rows ordered along caste
hierarchies.
The Sangh's voracious assault organises the disenfranchised into a vicious
political economy structured by the caste system. RSS cadres working in
Sambhalpur district stress how critical it is that adivasis and dalits be
converted into Hinduism. They organise adivasi rallies where 'Garbh se kaho
hum Hindu hai' (say with pride that I am a Hindu) pierces the air. Badal
Satpaty, an RSS office bearer, stresses the importance of adivasi
conversions for Orissa. "Vanavasis [derogatory term for adivasis] are given
land by the government. If vanavasis see themselves as outside Hinduism,
then their lands too are non Hindu lands that are anti development and
cannot be used for the betterment of the nation. Bharat is a Hindu nation,
and these people and their lands are anti national."
Whose nation? Adivasis are 8.01 percent of the nation's inhabitants, yet 40
percent of the displaced population. The Transfer of Immovable Property (by
Scheduled Tribes) Regulation of 1956 provides against land transfers in
Scheduled Areas. Outside Scheduled Areas, the Orissa Land Reforms Act of
1960 and subsequent amendments, guard against tribal land alienation. In
practise, an extensive 'land grab' has resulted from debt bondage and
indenturement related to land leasing and mortgage of adivasi and dalit
lands to large farmers and moneylenders, consolidation of land holdings,
strategic marriage alliances and corruption.
Adivasis living in forest villages are often evicted, their right to land
dismissed by the state's insistence on 'evidence' of ownership and
residency. Such demands evince the betrayal of old claims with new
boundaries, maps, roads, checkposts that insert violence into the everyday
life of the adivasi. Tribal testimonies are converted into 'lies' by the
apparatus of the state. A Gond adivasi elder testifies, "We live in the
village in the forest. We have lived here for generations. Our houses are
made of local mud, our roofs from local leaves from the forests. Our diet,
our thoughts, our language tells you that we have been living here. You can
see the shadows of our ancestors reflected in the pond, our songs mimic the
birds, they tell stories of the forest, our feet walk these lands over and
over. These [imprints] are our land records. The forester does not believe
us. Our lives are lies to them."
In India today, about 86 percent of dalit families are landless or marginal
landholders, and 63 percent subsist on incomes from daily wage labour.
Social violence against dalits remains institutionalised. Legitimation of
adivasi and dalit rights has been a process laden with inequities, and the
notification and denotification of tribes is often used as a political tool
to undermine adivasi self determination by not recognising their status,
claims and rights vis-à-vis the state. The amputation of adivasi tenure on
forest lands has contributed to cultural genocide in Orissa that supports
the consolidation of national territory, corporate liberalisation and the
ethic of conservation inherent to modern nation states.
In July 2003, the Orissa government permitted the unconstitutional transfer
of lands in Schedule V areas for mining and industrial use. Orissa's
decision contradicts the 1997 Samata versus Andhra Pradesh judgement, where
the Apex Court had ruled against the government's lease of tribal forest and
other lands in Scheduled Areas to non tribals for mining and industrial
operations.
Beginning January 23, 2004, four adivasi villages, Borobhota, Kinari,
Kothduar, Sindhabahili, and their agricultural fields, in south east
Kalahandi district, have been razed by Sterlite industries, a multinational
corporation building an aluminium refinery near Lanjigarh, adjacent to
Kashipur. Sterlite's finances are generated from its partner company,
Vedanta Resources. Non resident Indians operate Sterlite and Vedanta,
launched in London in December 2003. Sterlite has a controversial history.
Company chairperson and managing director, Anil Agarwal, has denied
knowledge of the Samata judgement in the past. The Lanjigarh project will
mine bauxite at 4,000 feet from the north west rim of the Niyamgiri
mountains. The villagers, forcibly evicted, without requisite compensation
or rehabilitation, are living in camps under police 'guard', their right to
life placed on hold.
State sponsored development in Orissa forces the incorporation of the poor
into the dominant order. The Sangh Parivar conspires with the Biju Janata
Dal-BJP coalition government in Bhubaneswar to enable this inequitable
amalgamation. Sangh activists have infiltrated deep into state run
development agencies such as the Council for Advancement of People's Action
and Rural Technology (CAPART), an autonomous institution that works to
create rural development partnerships between voluntary organisations and
the government. CAPART supports numerous RSS activities in Orissa diverting
funds for Hindutva.
Badal Satpaty of the RSS says, "It is because these people [dalits, adivasis]
refuse to integrate that all these problems arise. Why do they ask for
special rights? The motherland is good to us all. These people are lazy,
they live in filth, they are illiterate. How can we take them seriously
without civilising them? The RSS seeks to help in this mission, for the
betterment of the poor. The RSS is working with, first, the Hindu dalits to
mobilise them and tell them about the dangers of defection. Then, we are
bringing Christian dalits and adivasis back to the Hindu fold through
education and reconversion. We are also helping them economically."
Where conversions to Hinduism are acquiescent and occur with the complicity
of non Hindus, acquiescence is produced by its intimacy with the dominant.
For non dominant groups, the landscape of Hindu supremacy shapes fear (of
the dominant), desire (to acquire privileges), hope (for 'acquittal', to
'pass' as non other) and internalised oppression. These complex forces
create agency on the part of the marginalised. Such agency is manufactured
in relation and response to Hindu ascendancy.
I spoke with a dalit RSS worker who said: "The RSS is helping us build a
Hindu samaj. We are poor, we have no assistance, we are fighting Christians
and Muslims for development money. The Christians, they have foreign
missionary money, what do we Hindu dalits have? The Sai [Christians] are
also converting our people to their religion. They eat meat, they touch
leather, they have bad morals. I am scared for my children. We are thankful
that the RSS has sworn to protect us." AC: "Have you seen these Christian
missionaries?" Dalit RSS worker: "No, but I have heard that they are
nearby." AC: "How many Hindus have been converted in your village, or in any
of the neighbouring villages." Dalit RSS worker: "Nobody yet, but the RSS
tells us that they [the missionaries] might come soon. That is why we go to
the RSS meetings, to become informed about the troubles facing us, and how
we can be strong and protect ourselves, to become an army against these
foreigners." Dalits continue to suffer social ostracization and economic
deprivation. They are manipulated into joining the very Hindutva forces that
have historically deprived dalits of equity in order to use them against
other mistreated communities.
At a 15,000 strong Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram organised rally in Bhubaneswar in
December 2003, Dilip Singh Bhuria, Chairperson, National Commission for
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, commended the BJP for its pro-adivasi
policies. Adivasis have historically voted for the Congress Party in Orissa
and have not benefited from this loyalty. Mr. Bhuria said, "We are passing
through a governance similar to Ram rajya," posing Ram as the god, and BJP
as the party, of adivasis. Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram President Jagadev Ram Oram
insisted that adivasis converting to Christianity should not be allowed to
access the benefits of reservation. Through espousing another religion, he
said, adivasis no longer retain their tribal status. Speakers condemned
Christian conversions declaring 'all tribals are Hindus'.
Adivasis are taught by Ekal Vidyalayas about the 'origins' of Jaganath in
Hinduism, as Jaganath, the famed tribal god of Orissa, is Hinduised. Since
the inception of Saraswati Sishu Mandirs, the Janata Dal, Congress, and
other political parties have endorsed the Sangh Parivar's network of
educational organisations, interpreting Hindutva education as secular.
Consecutive governments have abdicated state responsibility in building a
quality education system in the state. High levels of illiteracy among
dalits and adivasis proliferate simultaneous to the denigration of non Hindu
traditions and cultures.
In the absence of viable educational institutions, Hindutva education offers
a free, widely available and rigorous curriculum. Students from these
schools succeed in state board examinations. Hindutva schools, runs
primarily by RSS organisations, are complemented by organisations that
facilitate cultural regimentation. The facticity of hate in this curriculum,
the dismissal of minorities, the assertion of Hindu supremacy is overlooked
by many Hindus.
In the current climate, many Muslims retreat to madrasas. These institutions
often teach orthodoxy, deliberately mischaracterised by the majority
community as uniformly 'fundamentalist'. Hasina Begum offers, "My daughter
is in a good school but with those other children who do not like her. She
wants to play with the neighbours but they curse at her. They physically
push her around. Now we think we should find a madrasa for her. The madrasa
is orthodox, but they will protect us. The education is better in the school
but what if something happens to her?"
The adverse affects of the Sangh Parivar on the social and economic health
of Muslim communities are apparent. Samshul Amin, a Muslim man from Bhadrak
says, "We trade in leather. We always have. The RSS and Bajrang Dal tell
lies about how we slaughter cows to shame Hindus. That we kill and send the
cows to Muslims in Bangladesh." A Muslim businessman in Jagatsinghpur town
confirms, "They threaten and at times beat Muslims on the road, starting
from Bhadrak, from Balesore, onwards up to Calcutta, where the Bajrang Dal
has a strong presence, there they are violent. They stop cow transportations
on Jajpur road."
Subash Chouhan, Bajrang Dal State Convenor, indicts, "There is so much cow
slaughter, for example in Sundargarh, Bhadrak, thousands of cows. Every day
about 200 trucks leave with cows for Bangladesh. We believe that the cow is
our mother, but they want to kill the cow. Also, if the cow stays it is a
financial security for the home. So, if necessary we will use a suicide
squad. To save the country and its sanskriti [culture], we will do whatever
is necessary."
In Pitaipura village, in Jagatsinghpur district, a disturbing event occurred
in the winter of 2001 after Muslim graveyard lands were placed in dispute.
According to Hakim Bhai, a resident of the village, "The land record for the
village divides the 25 acres into two plots, one listed as a kabarstan
[graveyard] and another as 'gorostan' [also graveyard]. But villagers insist
that 'gorostan is 'gaochar' [grazing land] not a kabarstan. We were harassed
when funeral processions arrived or we read Namaz during Id. We sat down
together to resolve the dispute without any success. Then we filed a case in
court. The court did not resolve the case for the longest time. The court
then began mediating and declared a part of the land as a graveyard, and
held the rest as disputed. Once, the night before the official was coming to
measure the land, Hindus from the village stole into the graveyard and
placed a murti [idol] to mark it as their land. We found out and went inside
and took it out. The next morning when the official arrived Hindus were
angry that we had taken the murti out. They threw stones at us, we threw
stones back at them. The crowd ran from the graveyard pelting each other. We
were near the Ma Durga temple. The Hindus started accusing us of throwing
stones at the temple. Then it began. "
Another resident inserts, "Perhaps our stones had fallen on the temple
compound. But we were not destroying the temple, we were responding to each
other. Once the word spread that we were destroying the temple, RSS youth
arrived from Bhubaneswar and mobilised people from surrounding villages.
They went around with loudspeakers to 20-30 Hindu villages accusing us of
destroying the temple. Our basti [hamlet] is in the middle of the village,
between Hindu hamlets. Five Muslim homes were burnt in our basti and men
were beaten. The police could not do anything. For three days during that
time we were very afraid, some hid in the forests. A peace rally came to our
village. They have not returned. The case is pending. No resolution has
happened. If we are left alone things might escalate. Then what?" Hakim Bhai
responds, "The RSS continues its meetings in the Hindu hamlets regularly
since the incident. These meetings are not publicised, they spread through
word of mouth. We Muslims have now made our own shops in the basti, we have
retreated to ourselves. Our women are afraid and they do not want to go out
of the basti. When we go out Hindus call us names. Call us 'Pathans'. We are
becoming isolated." Shazia, a woman, adds, "Even our dead cannot rest in
peace."
The extent to which violence is inscribed disproportionately on women's
bodies and memories is rarely named or languaged. A Muslim woman in another
district requests anonymity. She says, "We came from Chhota Nagpur,
displaced from a mining town. Our village is surrounded by the RSS. We live
like moles, I teach my children to be unseen. If we are quiet people will
leave us alone. The men, it is not easy for them. Last month there was
violence in our village. Bajrang Bali's called us names, they threatened we
would never work again. Said we were dirty, that when we kill cows, we do
violence to Hinduism. They said they were watching us. My husband came back,
shaken. He brought fear with him into the house. He forced me to have
intercourse. It was not about intimacy, it is about power, about feeling
helpless and wanting control. So, here it is, in our kitchen, in our
bedroom, in our home. Even as we wait for it to strike, it already has."
The violence that accompanies Hinduism is not new. Hindutva is its variant.
It is not about groups and peoples, but about the country, who belongs and
who doesn't. The imbrication of state disregard for adivasi and dalit human
rights with the grassroots mobilisation of Hindutva make Muslims,
Christians, dalits, adivasis, women's rights volatile in Orissa.
Hindutva corroborates the impairment of women's rights that are already
structurally limited in Orissa, together with women's access to land,
livelihood and well being resources. A host of xenophobic women's
organisation are in place, including the BJP Mohila Morcha and the Rashtriya
Sevika Samiti. Established in 1936, the Rashtriya Sevika Samiti has been
active in the crusade against cow slaughter in Orissa. The Samiti organises
state and district level meeting, as well as daily and weekly sakha and
prayer meets in villages, towns and cities "to encourage physical education,
intellectual development, mental acumen".
Bidyut Lata Raja, leader of Rashtriya Sevika Samiti, says that the Parivar
helps discipline the mind and wean people from 'pointless' activity. She
says that the Parivar functions as a family, each taking care of the other.
"The Parivar seeks to create unity. Dalits and adivasis say that Hindus are
outsiders. How can that be? We must create consciousness that we are all
one." They seek to complement economic development with building moral
character to unite India through shared nationalism. The Samiti supervises
Balmandirs and Udyog Mandirs, celebrates the anniversaries of influential
Sangh leaders and religious festivals, hosts classes on culture and ethics,
organises Bhajan and Kirtan recitals, and runs women's schools and hostels.
The Samiti concentrates its volunteer based social work services in adivasi
areas, seeking to bring 'enlightenment'.
The Rashtriya Sevika Samiti seeks to organise and train women in self
defense, "to increase their physical and mental capacity to encourage them
to protect their nation, dharma and culture." Stringently heterosexist and
mired in sexism, the Samiti is dedicated to supporting women in their youth,
in marriage and motherhood, work, and leadership, indoctrinating the
practise of Hindutva as patriotic, the saffron flag as the national emblem,
insisting on the loyalty of its followers to their husbands, families and
the Hindutva leadership.
The Sangh Parivar asserts that relations between higher caste, dalit and
adivasi groups have improved in rural Orissa. It ignores that lower class
and caste and adivasi people are seldom acknowledged as social equals. In an
interesting display, while all residents of a particular village, including
adivasis, may contribute financially to the major annual Hindu pujas
(prayers), higher caste people control the preparations and ceremony. It may
be appropriate for a member of the dalit or Muslim community, if invited, to
eat at a general caste home usually seated in a demarcated space, and
internalise the invitation as demonstrative of the 'charity' and 'tolerance'
of the upper caste toward 'lower caste' people. The reverse is nearly
impossible. Inter-caste alliances, marriage between non comparable social
castes, are more evident even while often socially ostracised.
Associations among Hindus and non Hindus remain strained in the state and
frequently prohibited. In upper caste rural Orissa, poor Muslim communities
are as socially unacceptable as adivasis, and constitute a 'lower' social
strata than dalits. Gender and ethnicity are central to how resources and
power are allocated and rights disbursed, both nationally and locally, and
are salient to the organisation of legal, cultural, economic and political
infrastructure and institutions. The imposition of Brahminical language,
ritual and memory seeks to incorporate the marginal into the dominant polity
simultaneous to segregationist arrangements for water use, food and forest
resource sharing.
BJP and Sangh Parivar organisations have a significant strategy of
manoeuvring Muslims in middle class neighbourhoods and villages by forming
alliances with the local leadership. In Banamalipur and Jadupur village,
neighbouring Bhubaneswar in Khurda district, Muslims leaders spoke of their
alliance with the BJP. Poor communities in these villages say this allows
local Muslim politicians access to electoral seats leaving the
disenfranchised without trustworthy representation. Minority resistance is
frail with few options, progressive Muslims say. A Muslim activist from
Bhubaneswar states, "We are isolated. We do not want to identify with the
madrasas and we do not have a mass movement that accepts us."
The actions of Sangh organisations are often triangulated, with parallel
components for edification, mobilisation and service. For example, Vidya
Bharati (known as Shiksha Vikas Samiti) directs 391 Saraswati Shishu Mandir
schools in Orissa. Sangh students are inducted into the cadre via a formal
curriculum that emphasises Hindu nationalism, along with informal training
in cultural values and defense. In addition, these students and their
families are expected to volunteer in mobilisation and developmental work,
in local fundraising. They are even expected to participate in temple
inaugurations.
Religion, development, polity and education are used by Sangh Parivar
organisations to facilitate recruitment into Hindu extremism. An army of
Parivar organisations fundraise abroad as registered charities to support
sectarian development in India. Funds from the US and UK amounting to
millions of dollars were raised by Sangh organisations during the Gujarat
earthquake and Orissa cyclone, substantially aiding the expansion of Sangh
networks in both states.
The US Commission on International Religious Freedom recently designated
India as a 'country of particular concern', asking for US investigations
into RSS organisations registered as charities in the US. India Development
Relief Fund is one such organisation that, post cyclone, raised $90,660 for
Sookruti, $23,255 for Orissa Cyclone Rehabilitation Foundation, and $37,560
for Utkal Bipanna Sahayata Samiti, as documented in the report 'Foreign
Exchange of Hate' in 2002.
In the United Kingdom, the Seva International UK (fundraising wing of the
Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh, RSS equivalent in UK and US) sent a majority of the
£260,000 raised for cyclone relief to Utkal Bipannya Sahayata Samiti, an RSS
organisation in Orissa, detailed in the report, 'In Bad Faith? British
Charity and Hindu Extremism' by Awaaz, 2004. Currently, Utkal Bipannya
Sahayata Samiti undertakes sectarian disaster relief work, and has been
working with approximately 50,000 beneficiaries after the floods of 2001,
funded by RSS organisations abroad.
RSS cadre mobilise sakhas around minority villages in Orissa. Each sakha
begins with an organiser and a few members who meticulously monitor the
area, teaching people to describe themselves as 'communal’, a new identity
that denotes Hindu cultural pride. Minorities worry as, under the watchful
eye of the RSS, cricket conflicts, harmless fracas between children's
winning and losing teams, turn into communal skirmishes. Green flags of
stars and crescent used by madrasas are depicted as adhering to Pakistan,
linked to terrorism and the Inter Services Intelligence.
VHP, RSS and Bajrang Dal leaders and their cadre in Orissa reiterate that
charges of fundamentalism cannot apply to Hindutva. It is not an ideology,
they say, but integral practise, a lifestyle for nationhood. Hindutva
functions as a meta narrative in manufacturing foundational truths to build
and govern the nation. Hindutva assimilates the plural traditions within
Hinduism to create a narrow centralized code that promises to unite Hindus.
These principles are universalistic, in action segregationist. This strategy
thwarts the complex search for cultural identity that confronts the vast
diversity of peoples in India living at the pre and post modern
intersections of nation making and globalism.
Hindutva justifies practices of domination in ways that ignore the power
dynamics of its discourse. There is no pluralism in its agenda -- Hindutva
is the only 'right' way to be human within its specified territory, any
other must be annihilated. Hindutva invokes difference and plurality in the
name of domination. What are the effects of Hindutva's discourse? Hate.
Cruelty. Terror. To realize its mission, Hindutva, anathema to democracy,
defines minority interests as oppositional to Hindu, and therefore national,
interest. The struggles for justice of marginal groups organized around
ethnicity, religion, class, caste, tribe, gender, or culture become hostile
to national unity.
Elite aspirations in nation making, the annexation of territory and
resources from the disempowered, the imposition of violent ideologies and
alienating identities, and subaltern resistance, have produced contested
meanings and practices of democracy. Through the amassment of identity
politics, reinvention of history, the normalisation of difference, the
extension of its power into private and social life, Hindu majoritarianism
exhibits scorn for those its finds unincorporable and inassimilable into its
governing imaginary. Hindu nationalism is aided by the state as it operates
as legatee to its imperial coloniser, inheriting and modifying its
biopolitics.
What are the reasons for Hindutva's conquest in rural and urban Orissa? What
prevents a resonant secular counter-response? Praveen Togadia, International
Secretary of the VHP, visited Jajpur on February 16 and Beherampur on
February 29 continuing his seditious campaign for Hindutva, amidst rousing
protests from local groups. Since the assembly elections the BJP has gained
in strength. As Orissa gears up for the next round, the BJP is using the 'jal,
jungle, zameen' (water, forest, land) platform, appropriated from land
reform movements, to persuade adivasis in Orissa. The Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram
is the key strategist and organiser for the BJP in the tribal belt. Having
won Chhattisgarh, the BJP is confident. Tribal culture is being glorified as
artefact, objectified, made distant from its political reality while the
relentless decimation of these very cultures continues.
Subash Chouhan of the Bajrang Dal resumes, "We in the VHP believe that this
country belongs to the Hindu's. It is not a dharamsala [guesthouse] and
people cannot just come here and settle down and do whatever they want. That
is not going to happen. We will not let that happen. Whatever happens here
will happen with the consent of the Hindu's. If you come to another's house
and live as a guest and then start doing what you please, that is not going
to happen. What ever happens here, say politics happen, it will have to be
Hindutva politics, with Hindutva's consent. India is a world power, what is
in India is nowhere else, and we want to create India nicely in the image of
Ram Rajya."
Hindutva's production of culture and nation escalates, celebrated by
breakdown, rupture, violence. As I write this, the second year closes on
Gujarat. Justice remains beyond reach for Muslim minorities in the complex
duplicity of state negligence, judicial oversight, and the deep
fragmentation of political community in India. Gujarat represents an end and
a beginning, a marker in Hindutva's malevolent reach for a Hindu state. The
end of lives, the culmination of brutality. I am reminded of a dalit boy,
age 8, in a decimated colony in Ahmedabad, in June 2002, who said, "I am not
afraid of death. I am frightened by life. Look what happens in life," as
Muslim and dalit women stared each other into silence across a boundary
wall.
Angana Chatterji
is associate professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the California
Institute of Integral Studies. She is currently completing a book on this
subject, titled, Violent Gods. Hindu Nationalism in India's Present,
forthcoming from Three Essays Press Collective in Delhi. This article first
appeared in Communalism Combat, February-March 2004, Issue No. 96.
Other Recent Articles by Angana Chatterji
*
Learning in Saffron: RSS Schools in Orissa
*
Orissa: A Gujarat in the Making
*
State Repression in the Narmada Valley
*
Orwellian Fantasy
*
Under Siege in the Narmada Valley
*
Liberation at Gunpoint
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