Saturday 31 August 2019

Text of Vajpayee's Controversial Goa Speech, April 2002

'Wherever Muslims Live...': Text of Vajpayee's Controversial Goa Speech, April 2002
The speech generated a huge controversy in April 2002 not just because of its inflammatory contents but also because Vajpayee tried to mislead parliament by claiming an edited version issued by the PMO was the actual text.

'Wherever Muslims Live...': Text of Vajpayee's Controversial Goa Speech, April 2002
File photo of Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Credit: PTI

The Wire Staff
The Wire Staff
COMMUNALISMPOLITICS
17/AUG/2018
Speech delivered by Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Goa, April 12, 2002

I was in Cambodia just recently. It is the Kamboj state of the past, where magnificent temples that kissed the sky were built in the tenth and the eleventh centuries. It had Hindu states ruled by Hindu kings. There were others too among the citizens, but there was justice towards all. Sometimes the kings also used to fight among themselves. The wheel of victory and defeat rolled on. But during their centuries’ long history there isn’t a single instance of a Hindu king destroying temples or breaking idols when he attacked another Hindu king. The kings who were victorious used to build a new temple. If Vishnu was being worshipped there earlier, later Shiva began to be worshipped. If Shiva was being worshipped at one time, then other deities began to be worshipped later. Nevertheless, no king destroyed a temple or damaged the deities’ idols at the time of attacking another king. This is our culture. This is our outlook, which treats all faiths equally.

Yet, accusations are being hurled today that secularism is under threat. Who are these people accusing us? What is the meaning of secularism for these people? India was secular when Muslims hadn’t come here and Christians hadn’t set foot on this soil. It is not as if India became secular after they came. They came with their own modes of worship and they too were given a place of honour and respect. They had the freedom to worship God as per their wish and inclination. No one thought of converting them with force, because this is not practiced in our religion; and in our culture, there is no use for it.

Today the 100 crore people of India are engaged in creating their future on the basis of their own culture. Sometimes, minor incidents do take place here and there sometimes they take the form of major incidents. But if you go to the root of these incidents, you will find intolerance, you’ll find them to be a manifestation of growing intolerance. What happened in Gujarat? If a conspiracy had not been hatched to burn alive the innocent passengers of the Sabarmati Express, then the subsequent tragedy in Gujarat could have been averted. But this did not happen. People were torched alive. Who were those culprits? The government is investigating into this. Intelligence agencies are collecting all the information. But we should not forget how the tragedy of Gujarat started. The subsequent developments were no doubt condemnable, but who lit the fire? How did the fire spread? Ours is a multi-religious country, a multi-lingual country, we have many different modes of worship. We believed in peaceful and harmonious co-existence. We believe in equal respect for all faiths. Let no one challenge India’s secularism. I have read somewhere in newspapers that the Congress Party has decided not to try to topple my Government. Shall I thank them for this? Or shall I say that the ‘Grapes are sour’? How will the Government fall? Once they did topple it, but they couldn’t form one themselves. Then a fresh mandate from the people was called for, and the people once again gave us an opportunity to serve them.

For us the soil of India from Goa to Guwahati is the same, all the people living on this land are the same. We do not believe in religious extremism. Today the threat to our nation comes from terrorism. Wherever I went around the world, the heads of state or of elected governments complained to me that the militant Islam is sowing thorns along their paths. Islam has two facets. One is that which tolerate others, which teaches its adherents to follow the path of truth, which preaches compassion and sensitivity. But these days, militancy in the name of Islam leaves no room for tolerance. It has raised the slogan of Jehad. It is dreaming of recasting the entire world in its mould.

You will be surprised to hear this—indeed, I too was surprised—that some terrorists belonging to Al-Qaeda were arrested in Singapore. The rulers of Singapore couldn’t even have imagined that Al-Qaeda would be active in their country, too; that Al-Qaeda would hatch a conspiracy in Singapore too. Some fifteen or sixteen persons were arrested, an investigation is underway, which will reveal the truth. The same is happening in Indonesia. The same is happening in Malaysia.

Wherever Muslims live, they don’t like to live in co-existence with others, they don’t like to mingle with others; and instead of propagating their ideas in a peaceful manner, they want to spread their faith by resorting to terror and threats. The world has become alert to this danger.

As far as we are concerned, we have been fighting against terrorism for the past 20 years. Terrorists have tried to grab Jammu and Kashmir through violence, but we have countered them. Jammu and Kashmir is an integral part of India, and will forever remain so. No other country’s dream will ever, come true. Now other nations in the world have started to realize what a great mistake they did by neglecting terrorism. Now they are waking up, and are organizing themselves. They are putting together an international consensus against terrorism.

We tell them through our own example that a large number of non-Hindus live in our country, but there has never ever been religious persecution here. We have never discriminated between ‘our people’ and ‘aliens’. The modes of worship may differ, but God is one. Only the paths to reach Him and realize Him can be different. It is for this reason that India’s prestige is growing, India’s reputation is rising. I have also had an occasion to visit many other countries. Everywhere Muslims live in large numbers. And the rulers in those countries are worried lest those Muslims embrace extremism, We told them that they should educate people on the true tenets of Islam, that they should also teach other subjects in madrasas. Islam too should be taught, but emphasise that people should live together and that it is necessary to accept that faith cannot be propagated on the strength of the sword.

Note: This is the English text of the speech delivered in Hindi, by Atal Bihari Vajpayee in Goa on April 12, 2002, checked against the audio original. This text was published in Gujarat: The Making of a Tragedy (Penguin, 2002), edited by Siddharth Varadarajan.

The official English version released by the PMO which added the word “such” after “Wherever” and before “Muslims”  in the first sentence of the third last paragraph may be accessed here.




Let Us Not Forget the Glimpse We Got of the Real Vajpayee When the Mask Slipped
Like Rajiv Gandhi in November 1984, Vajpayee will go down in history as a prime minister who preached the virtues of tolerance even as he turned a blind eye to the massacre of innocent citizens.

Let Us Not Forget the Glimpse We Got of the Real Vajpayee When the Mask Slipped
File photo from 2002 of Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Narendra Modi, chief minister of Gujarat at the time. Credit: YouTube

Siddharth Varadarajan
Siddharth Varadarajan
POLITICS
18/AUG/2018
Perhaps the most significant elaboration of the Golwalkar-Savarkar thesis of India as a Hindu nation beset by Muslim trouble-makers in recent times was that provided by Atal Bihari Vajpayee in his speech to the BJP national executive meeting in Goa on 12 April 2002.  The speech is remarkable for the manner in which a prime minister attempts to justify the murder of Muslim citizens in Gujarat by referring to Godhra and contrasting the supposed ‘traditional tolerance’ of Hindus with the alleged ‘intolerance’ of Muslims.

Like Golwalkar, who believed only Hindus were true Indians, Vajpayee uses ‘us’, ‘our’, ‘Hindus’ and ‘Indians’ interchangeably throughout his speech. He begins by making an observation about Hindu kingdoms in ancient Cambodia.

“No king destroyed a temple or damaged the deities’ idols at the time of attacking another king. This is our culture. This is our outlook, which treats all faiths equally.’ India, he said, was secular before Muslims and Christians set foot on her soil. Once they came, they had freedom of worship. ‘No one thought of converting them with force, because this is not practiced in our religion; and in our culture, there is no use for it.”

Here, Vajpayee was trying to contrast the ‘tolerance’ of Hindus and Hinduism, which he described as ‘our religion’, with the supposed intolerance of Muslims and Christians. The reference to the destruction of idols and conversion ‘with force’ is a standard part of the RSS arsenal. At the root of major incidents of violence, he said, was ‘growing intolerance’. Since Hindus are, by definition, tolerant, the obvious inference is that this ‘growing intolerance’ is on the part of the Muslims. Turning immediately to the burning issue of the day, he asked:

“What happened in Gujarat? If a conspiracy had not been hatched to burn alive the innocent passengers of the Sabarmati Express, then the subsequent tragedy in Gujarat could have been averted. But this did not happen. People were torched alive. Who were those culprits? The government is investigating into this. Intelligence agencies are collecting all the information. But we should not forget how the tragedy of Gujarat started. The subsequent developments were no doubt condemnable, but who lit the fire? How did the fire spread?”

Here, in as unsophisticated a fashion as Narendra Modi had stated it earlier, we find Vajpayee presenting his own version of Newton’s Third Law. There is no remorse about the killing of hundreds of innocent people, no apologies for the failure of the government to protect its citizens. He makes no attempt to distinguish between the criminal perpetrators of the Godhra attack and the innocent victims of the ‘subsequent tragedy in Gujarat’. For him, Muslims are an amorphous, undifferentiated lot who collectively ‘lit the fire’. They were to blame, not his party men who took part in the ‘subsequent developments’.

Going from the specific to the general, Vajpayee then launched a frontal attack on Muslims. He asserts that ‘For us, the soil of India from Goa to Guwahati is the same, all the people living on this land are the same. We do not believe in religious extremism. Today, the threat to our nation comes from terrorism’.

Who is this we and where exactly does this ‘threat to our nation’ come from? The Hindi text provides a clue. Vajpayee deliberately uses the Urdu word mazhabi for ‘religious’ (rather than the Hindi word dharmik) when he says ‘religious extremism’. We do not believe in religious extremism; it is the Muslims. His exact words were ‘Hum mazhabi kattarta mein vishwas nahin karte’. The fact that mazhabi is the only Urdu word used in the sentence is not accidental. In Sangh parivar literature and propaganda, whenever a positive reference to religion is made, the word used tends to be dharm, implying Hinduism; when the reference is negative, the word used tends to be mazhab. And terrorism, of course, is synonymous with Islam, or ‘militant Islam’, as Vajpayee chose to put it. But having first made a distinction between militant Islam and tolerant Islam, he then makes a sweeping generalisation about all Muslims:

“Wherever Muslims live, they don’t like to live in co-existence with others, they don’t like to mingle with others; and instead of propagating their ideas in a peaceful manner, they want to spread their faith by resorting to terror and threats. The world has become alert to this danger.”

The statement is classic hate speech, but after it generated a huge controversy, Vajpayee claimed his remarks were aimed not at all Muslims but only ‘militant Muslims’.

The Prime Minister’s Office subsequently issued a doctored version of the speech in which the word ‘such’ was inserted between ‘Wherever’ and ‘Muslims live’. Many newspapers subsequently printed this version. It was not until a privilege motion was raised in Parliament — for Vajpayee had made the mistake of claiming on the floor of the House on May 1, 2002 that the doctored version of the speech was the true version — that he was forced to admit the word ‘such’ had been deliberately interpolated.  However, he reiterated that ‘no one who reads my entire speech and takes note of the tribute I have paid to the tolerant and compassionate teachings of Islam, can be in any doubt that my reference . . . is only to the followers of militant Islam’.

The allegation of Muslims not living in co-existence with others and not mingling with others is such a standard trope in RSS propaganda that Vajpayee’s claim of intending to refer only to militant Muslims does not seem very convincing. Earlier in his speech, he had equated militant Islam with terrorism. ‘Not mingling with others’ is a peculiar charge to level against terrorists. In any case, it was a bit odd for the prime minister to talk about terrorism and militancy as if they were the preserve of the adherents of Islam— especially at a time when his own Sangh parivar was heavily involved in acts of terror in Gujarat. But there was a deeper level of dishonesty in the charge against Muslims, for it is precisely the policy of the RSS to ghettoise and isolate the Muslim community. As sociologist Dhirubhai Sheth has argued, it was not accidental that the Muslims who bore the brunt of the Sangh parivar’s violence in Gujarat were those who chose to live in Hindu-majority areas. The communal killings in the state, he says, have exposed the dishonesty of the ‘Hindutvavadis’ who reproach Muslims for not entering the ‘national mainstream’ but then beat them back into their ghettos whenever they do emerge.

In another attempt to soften the impact of his Goa remarks, Vajpayee told parliament that he was as opposed to militant Hinduism as he was to militant Islam. ‘I accept the Hindutva of Swami Vivekananda but the type of Hindutva being propagated now is wrong and one should be wary of it.’ Having said this, however, he went back to square one by adding that although there were laws to deal with such an eventuality, he was confident no Hindu organisation would become a danger to the country’s unity.  In other words, only Muslim (or Christian or Sikh) organisations have the potential of endangering the country’s unity. After maligning Vivekananda — who never spoke of Hindutva but of Hinduism — Vajpayee went straight back to the teachings of Golwalkar and Savarkar.

Apart from reverting to the usual chauvinist line of the Sangh parivar, Vajpayee was also diverting the debate into a dead end. The issue is not whether he personally opposes militant Islam or Hinduism but whether, as prime minister, he is prepared to defend the constitutional rights of all Indians. Regardless of his own views and beliefs, a prime minister cannot speak for only a section of citizens. Do the Muslims of Gujarat have the right to physical security? Is he prepared to punish those who have committed crimes regardless of their political or ideological affiliation? Rather than dealing with these questions, Vajpayee is trying to cover up his own political failure and culpability.

Survivors of the Gulberg Society visit their building. Credit: Reuters/Ahmad Masood/Files
Survivors of the Gulberg Society visit their building. Credit: Reuters/Ahmad Masood/Files

It is remarkable that Vajpayee’s first televised address to the country was only on March 2, 2002 — after the seventy-two hours of apparent freedom enjoyed by the Sangh parivar in Gujarat expired — and even then, all he could do was appeal for calm and tolerance.  In fact, his attempt to blame the ordinary people of Gujarat — and their supposed lack of ‘harmony ’— for the mass killings in their state was a disingenuous manoeuvre aimed at absolving himself, his party colleagues and the state machinery they control, of any responsibility for the crimes. Like Rajiv Gandhi in November 1984 and Narasimha Rao in January 1993, Vajpayee will go down in history as a prime minister who preached the virtues of tolerance even as he turned a blind eye to the massacre of innocent citizens. Instead of using national television to tell the people of Gujarat that the genocidal mobs would be put down with a firm hand — and that policemen failing to protect the life and liberty of all would be punished — Vajpayee delivered a sermon on the need for religious sadbhavna.

There was little passion or feeling in what he said, no words of succour for the victims, no anger or opprobrium for the killers. He said the violence was a ‘black mark on the nation’s forehead’ but he couldn’t bring himself to say that retaliatory attacks on Muslims for what happened at Godhra would attract the same punishment as the burning of the train. Here was a violent disturbance that had made a mockery of state power as it is supposed to operate, yet the prime minister issued no dire warnings to those who were challenging his authority and power as chief executive. In the US, President George W. Bush and his senior aides publicly warned citizens against attacking Muslims, Arabs and other immigrants following the World Trade Centre terrorist strike. In less than a year since 9/11, a man in Texas was sentenced to death for the ‘retaliatory’ murder of a Sikh immigrant. To date, however, Vajpayee has yet to even publicly acknowledge that Muslim citizens of India were victimised in Gujarat or to threaten the attackers with the severest consequences.

Indeed, Vajpayee was later to demonstrate that he was so loyal to his party and parivar that he didn’t mind undermining the majesty of the state and his own office. On April 17, 2002, he said that if only parliament had condemned Godhra, the subsequent massacres would not have happened. The fact is that he is leader of the House and could have ordered a discussion and condemnation of Godhra on the day it happened — instead of the scheduled presentation of the budget.

In early May, he made another curious statement, this time on the floor of the Rajya Sabha: That he had decided to remove Modi in April but didn’t act fearing a backlash in Gujarat. ‘I had gone to Goa making up my mind on changing the ruler in Gujarat but according to my own assessment, I felt that the change in leadership will only worsen the situation.’  At the time, the only people opposed to a change in leadership were the RSS and VHP. Removing Modi may or may not have provided temporary relief for Gujarat’s beleaguered Muslims but it was odd for the prime minister to admit being held hostage to the threats of criminals and goons. “Vajpayee,” wrote B.G. Verghese, “placed the diktat of the mob above his oath of office . . . the emperor has no clothes, stripped of the last shred of moral authority.”

Excerpted from the the author’s Introduction to the book, Gujarat: The Making of a Tragedy (Penguin, 2002). Edited by Siddharth Varadarajan

Union Territories of J&K and Ladakh to Come into Existence on Sardar Patel's Birth Anniversary

Union Territories of J&K and Ladakh to Come into Existence on Sardar Patel's Birth Anniversary

The Parliament had given its nod to the legislation for bifurcating the state, a bold and far-reaching decision that seeks to redraw the map and future of a region at the centre of a protracted militancy movement.

PTIUpdated:August 10, 2019, 8:50 AM IST facebookTwitterskype

Union Territories of J&K and Ladakh to Come into Existence on Sardar Patel's Birth Anniversary File photo of President Ram Nath Kovind.

 

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New Delhi: President Ram Nath Kovind on Friday gave assent to legislation for bifurcation of Jammu and Kashmir, and two Union Territories — Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh — will come into existence on October 31 — the birth anniversary of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.


The Parliament had earlier this week given its nod to the legislation for bifurcating the state, a bold and far-reaching decision that seeks to redraw the map and future of a region at the centre of a protracted militancy movement.



The President has given assent to the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019, a home ministry official said.


"In exercise of the powers conferred by clause (a) of section 2 of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019 (34 of 2019), the Central Government hereby appoints the 31st day of October 2019, as the appointed day for the purposes of the said Act," a home ministry notification said.


Three days after the far-reaching decision to abrogate the special status given to Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 and bifurcate the state, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in a nearly 40-minute televised address to the nation on Thursday, sought to assuage concerns of the people saying Jammu and Kashmir will not remain Union Territory for long.


"As Jammu and Kashmir will see more and more development, I do not think it will remain Union Territory for long. Ladakh will remain a Union Territory," Modi said. According to the legislation, the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir will have a legislature like Puducherry and Ladakh will be a UT like Chandigarh, without legislature.


In both the Union Territories, key subjects such as law and order will be with the Centre.


The UT of Jammu and Kashmir will have a Lieutenant Governor and the maximum strength of its assembly will be of 107 which will be enhanced to 114 after a delimitation exercise. Twenty-four seats of the Assembly will continue to remain vacant as they fall under Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).


The current effective strength of the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly is 87, including four seats falling in Ladakh region, which will now be a separate UT without a legislature. The UT of Ladakh will have Kargil and Leh districts. The Act said Jammu and Kashmir UT will have reservation in the assembly seats.


The Lieutenant Governor of the successor UT of J-K may nominate two members to the Legislative Assembly to give representation to women if in his opinion, women are "not adequately" represented in the Legislative Assembly.


It also said that the Lok Sabha will have five seats from the UT of J-K, while from Ladakh the Lower House of Parliament will have one seat.

The Birth of the Ram Mandir Agitation, a Ticking Communal Time Bomb

Past Continuous: The Birth of the Ram Mandir Agitation, a Ticking Communal Time Bomb
A fortnightly column reflecting on chapters of India’s political past that are relevant today.

Past Continuous: The Birth of the Ram Mandir Agitation, a Ticking Communal Time Bomb
A violent mob mobilised by the Bharatiya Janata Party and Sangh parivar demolished the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya on December 6, 1992.

Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay
Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay
HISTORYLAWPOLITICSRELIGION
06/NOV/2018
The Ayodhya issue has roared back to life in recent weeks. Various wings and members of the Sangh parivar, including those in the government, are threatening to precipitate the construction of the Ram temple. It is thereby apt to recall, on the 30th anniversary, the process leading to the momentous Shilanyas ceremony of November 9, 1989 – paradoxically also the day when the Berlin Wall was brought down.

§

In 1989, the Sangh parivar successfully put the Ayodhya dispute, or the Ram Janmabhoomi agitation, on the nation’s political centre stage. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) was then its public spearhead and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was a marginal party with just two members in the Lok Sabha.

The year began ominously. On January 31, the Muslim protectionist outfit – All India Babri Masjid Action Committee – announced the formation of hifajati dastas, or ‘defence squads’, for the Babri Masjid.

In retaliation, the Kumbh mela in Allahabad was used, for the first time, to mobilise the Hindu clergy and canvass for the Ram temple. The VHP-organised Sant Sammelan concluded on February 1, and its leaders announced plans to lay the foundation of the temple on the day of devuththan ekadashi (the day Vishnu rises according to the Hindu almanac) in Ayodhya. The festival traditionally drew pilgrims in huge numbers to the tranquil temple-town and the VHP tactically chose this day because thousands of them would flock to it.

Also read: The Return of Ayodhya Rhetoric Is BJP’s Attempt to Salvage Its Waning Popularity

To mobilise public support, the VHP also announced the to-be electrifying twin campaigns – the Shila Pujan and Shila Yatra programmes. These entailed manufacturing and consecrating bricks with Shri Ram embossed on them. After ritual pujas in lakhs of villages, towns and cities, these were taken in processions to Ayodhya. The bricks were intended to be used for constructing the temple. Joining rituals, or travelling with processions, provided people with a sense of participation in something momentous.

From a marginal strife, the Ayodhya conflict was transformed into a mass movement. Communal riots, including clashes in Bhagalpur and Bijnore, were triggered when processions provocatively passed through Muslim-majority areas.

By now, the Sangh parivar, too, was functioning like a well-oiled machine, each affiliate playing its part to perfection. The RSS was preparing for the final stages of the Hedgewar birth centenary celebrations and canvassing against the “continuous appeasement of minorities”. The BJP, after dabbling with secularism and Gandhian socialism, returned to its original Hindu moorings.

Atal Bihari Vajpayee, long considered the ‘right man in the wrong party’, declared at the Hedgewar centenary rally – held in April in New Delhi – that the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid issue was an election issue. Besides voicing support for the Hindu Rashtra, he warned minorities to either give away their distinct identity, or face the worst.

Also read: ‘Wherever Muslims Live…’: Text of Vajpayee’s Controversial Goa Speech, April 2002

Two months later, on June 11, 1989, the BJP held its regular quarterly national executive meeting in Palampur, Himachal Pradesh. It was no ordinary meeting as it incorporated demands for the Ram temple in its agenda. The BJP demanded that the disputed shrine be “handed over to Hindus” and that the Congress and other political parties had displayed “callous unconcern” towards the “sentiments of the overwhelming majority in the country – the Hindus”. Significantly, the party resolution declared that the “nature of the controversy is such that it just cannot be sorted out by a court of law”.

Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Credit: Facebook/Atal Bihari Vajpayee
Atal Bihari Vajpayee. Credit: Facebook/Atal Bihari Vajpayee

It recalled Somnath temple’s reconstruction and Sardar Vallabhai Patel’s role. This kickstarted the campaign to project Patel as a ‘true nationalist’ in place of Nehru because he promoted secularism which “had come to be equated with an allergy to Hinduism, and a synonym for Muslim appeasement”.

After Palampur, the agitation was no longer just for ‘temple in place of mosque’. Instead, it assumed ideological proportions. The BJP affirmed that till the dispute remained unresolved to the satisfaction of Hindus, the nature and content of Indian nationalism would remain contentious. The Palampur resolution was the turning point in the Ram temple agitation. Hereafter, the Ayodhya movement reached a point in Indian polity when it was no longer possible to ignore its effect on politics and elections.

Driven solely by anti-Congressism and corruption charges against the Rajiv Gandhi government, other opposition parties overlooked the BJP’s post-Palampur stance and worked at creating a nationwide anti-Congress alliance. The Left parties too agreed, although they did not directly tie-up with the BJP. Eventually, the 1989 election provided legitimacy to the BJP and it stopped being politically ostracised. Its bench strength in the Lok Sabha also rose dramatically from two seats to 85 in the ninth Lok Sabha.

Also read: The Untold Story of How the Rama Idol Surfaced Inside Babri Masjid

The Congress failed to block Shilanyas and Shila Pujan for fear of offending Hindu sentiments. It hoped to limit the damage to its electoral prospects if Shilanyas was allowed, provided that no law was violated and Babri Masjid was protected. The Congress presumed that it could get the votes of both Hindu and Muslim fundamentalists. Likewise, the National Front believed that an alliance with the BJP would secure hardline Hindu support while the Janata Dal could deliver minority support, especially in north India. Yet, it was the BJP which gained the most. Additionally, it repurposed the ‘pretentious’ jargon of the past and unabashedly unfurled the flag of political Hinduism.

While the political ground for BJP’s ascendance was laid, the VHP planned its twin programmes. Union home ministry figures indicated a quantum jump in communal clashes from September 30 onwards –  when the Shila Pujan began. The Congress had little political will. Moreover, the government was short of police personnel as elections were due in November. Home minister Buta Singh was deputed to find a way out to allow the government to claim it had let “things happen according to the law of the land”.

On October 13, a unanimous resolution passed by non-BJP parties in the Lok Sabha requested the government to not permit Shilanyas and ask the VHP  to “cancel the programme”. This advice went unheeded. Within the government, Singh’s hands were tied because P.V. Narasimha Rao headed the group of ministers on Ayodhya and was disinclined to prevent the programme. All efforts were restricted to providing Shilanyas with a semblance of legality.

This became tougher after the Allahabad high court’s order in August which directed that the status quo of the disputed shrine and lands around be maintained. The question was whether the spot, identified unilaterally by the VHP for Shilanyas, was within the contested plot(s) or outside. From November 2, the VHP took physical control of the spot and Congress leaders merely parleyed to get the VHP to shift to a non-disputed spot.

Also read: Will Start Building Ram Temple in December By ‘Mutual Consensus’: VHP Leader

Eventually, the Indian State’s helplessness was stamped a day before the Shilanyas – when Buta Singh arrived with several others in tow. They included representative Muslim groups, the sub-registrar of the Allahabad high court, the advocate-general of the state and others. They spoke to local revenue officials with the only objective of being told that the site selected for Shilanyas was undisputed. Eventually, Singh spoke to Rajiv Gandhi. “Only after he was satisfied that the land was outside the purview of the disputed land, did it happen. That is how it was done,” he said later. But, the map on the basis of which the advocate-general opined that the selected site was not a part of the disputed property, was not to scale and there was no way of ascertaining on its basis if the spot was disputed or not.

Moreover, the Shilanyas ceremony had no clearance from the Ayodhya special development authority. The decision was taken with electoral considerations and every party hoped to gain, but only the BJP benefitted. On November 9, hours after the Shilanyas ceremony, VHP leader Ashok Singhal said what was witnessed was “not a simple ceremony to lay the foundation of a new temple. We have today laid the foundation stone of a Hindu Rashtra”.

Significantly, Buta Singh was not the only non-Sangh parivar leader to visit Faizabad-Ayodhya before Shilanyas. Rajiv Gandhi launched his party’s election campaign and Kamalapati Tripathi, C. Rajeshwar Rao, V.P. Singh and Syed Shahabuddin were among those who returned after being informed that the Babri Masjid was not threatened. They accepted assurances at face value, little realising that the programme was a major watershed which would totally alter Indian polity in the years to come.

Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay is a writer and journalist. His first book, The Demolition: India At The Crossroads was published in the aftermath of the demolition of the Babri Masjid. He has also authored Narendra Modi: The Man, The Times and Sikhs: The Untold Agony of 1984.

ఎన్ఆర్‌సీ జాబితాలో లేని మాజీ రాష్ట్రపతి కుటుంబీకుల పేర్లు

ఎన్ఆర్‌సీ జాబితాలో లేని మాజీ రాష్ట్రపతి కుటుంబీకుల పేర్లు
31-08-2019 19:27:31

న్యూఢిల్లీ: కేంద్ర ప్రభుత్వం శనివారం విడుదల చేసిన అసోం ఎన్ఆర్‌సీ జాబితాలో భారత మాజీ రాష్ట్రపతి దివంగత ఫకృద్దీన్ అలీ అహ్మద్ కుటుంబసభ్యుల పేర్లు చోటుచేసుకోలేదు. తుది జాబితాలో మొత్తం 19 లక్షల మందికి పైగా స్థానం కోల్పోయారు.

ఫకృద్దీన్ ఆలీ అహ్మద్ భారత దేశానికి ఐదవ రాష్ట్రపతిగా 1974 నుంచి 1977 వరకూ పనిచేశారు. ఫకృద్దీన్ సోదరుని కుమారుడు జియాఉద్దీన్ అలీ అహ్మద్ పేరు ఎన్ఆర్‌సీ తుది జాబితాలో చోటుచేసుకోలేదు. దీనిపై జియావుద్దీన్ మాట్లాడుతూ, తన పేరు ఎన్ఆర్‌సీ జాబితాలో లేదని, తన తండ్రి పేరు 'లెగసీ డాటా'లో చేటుచేసుకోకపోవడం తమకు బాధ కలిగించిందని చెప్పారు.

Friday 30 August 2019

భిన్న దృక్పథాల మధ్య చర్చ జరగాలి

భిన్న దృక్పథాల మధ్య చర్చ జరగాలి
31-08-2019 02:21:52

భిన్నాభిప్రాయాలకు చోటు ఉండాలి
నిర్మాణాత్మక విమర్శలను ఆహ్వానిస్తా..
‘మనోరమ’ సదస్సులో మోదీ
న్యూఢిల్లీ, ఆగస్టు 30: నిర్మాణాత్మక విమర్శలను తాను స్వాగతిస్తానని ప్రధాని నరేంద్ర మోదీ అన్నారు. శుక్రవారం ఆయన కోచిలో మలయాళ మనోరమ నిర్వహిస్తున్న ‘న్యూస్‌ కాంక్లేవ్‌’ను ఉద్దేశించి వీడియో కాన్ఫరెన్స్‌ ద్వారా మాట్లాడారు. తాను తనలాగా ఆలోచించే వ్యక్తుల మధ్య సౌకర్యంగా ఉంటానని, అదే సమయంలో భిన్న దృక్పథాల వ్యక్తుల మధ్య చర్చ జరగాలని కోరుకుంటానని చెప్పారు. దేశంలో చాలా మార్పులు వచ్చాయని, యువత ఇంటి పేరు తోకను పట్టించుకోవడం లేదని, తమ పేరు నిలబెట్టుకోవడానికి సామర్థ్యాన్నే నమ్ముకుంటున్నారని అన్నారు.

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‘ఆయు్‌ష’కు ప్రామాణికత తెస్తున్నాం
వేల సంవత్సరాల క్రితమే భయంకర వ్యాధులకు చికిత్స చేసిన చరిత్ర భారతదేశానికి ఉందని, నాటి వేద విజ్ఞానాన్ని నేటి పరిస్థితులకు అనుసంధానం చేయడంలోనే విఫలమవుతున్నామని మోదీ అన్నారు. సంప్రదాయ, ఆధునిక వైద్య విధానాలను మేళవిస్తేనే దేశ వైద్య వ్యవస్థ కొత్తరూపు సంతరించుకుంటుందని చెప్పారు. పురాతన వైద్య పరిజ్ఞానాన్ని పరిశోధనాలయాల్లో పరీక్షిస్తూ, ఆధునిక శాస్త్ర పునాదులు కల్పించే కార్యక్రమం ఐదేళ్లుగా సాగుతోందని వెల్లడించారు. శుక్రవారం ఆయన హరియాణాలో పది ఆయుష్‌ కేంద్రాలను వీడియో కాన్ఫరెన్స్‌ ద్వారా ప్రారంభించారు. ఈ సందర్భంగా ప్రధాని మాట్లాడుతూ, దేశవ్యాప్తంగా లక్షన్నర ఆరోగ్య కేంద్రాలను నిర్మిస్తున్నట్లు ప్రకటించారు. వాటిలో ఆయుష్‌ వైద్య విధానాలకు కూడా చోటు ఉంటుందని చెప్పారు. విడిగా మరో 12000 ఆయుష్‌ ఆరోగ్య కేంద్రాలను నిర్మిస్తున్నట్లు తెలిపారు.

5-10 నిమిషాలు యోగాపైనే చర్చ
ప్రపంచంలో తనను కలిసిన ప్రతీ దేశాధినేతా తనతో కనీసం 5-10 నిమిషాలు యోగా గురించి మాట్లాడారని మోదీ చెప్పారు. ఈసారి భూటాన్‌కు వెళ్లినపుడు మాత్రం తను పాల్గొన్న ‘‘మ్యాన్‌ వర్సెస్‌ వైల్డ్‌’’ టీవీ కార్యక్రమం గురించే ఎక్కువగా అడిగారని నవ్వుతూ అన్నారు. ప్రపంచమంతా భారత యోగ విద్య గురించి నేర్చుకోవాలని అనుకుంటోందన్నారు.

రోజుకో పదం నేర్వండి ప్రధాని సవాల్‌... స్వీకరించిన థరూర్‌
భారతదేశాన్ని ఏకం చేయడానికి భాషను పనిముట్టుగా వాడాలని ప్రధాని మోదీ పిలుపునిచ్చారు. స్వార్థపర శక్తులు దేశాన్ని విడదీయడానికి భాషను ఉపయోగించుకుంటున్నాయని ఆవేదన వ్యక్తం చేశారు. విభిన్న భాషల ప్రజల మధ్య మీడియా అనుసంధానంగా పని చేయాలని మోదీ పిలుపునిచ్చారు. రోజుకో పదం చొప్పున పరాయి భాషా పదాన్ని మీడియా ప్రచురించాలని కోరారు. అప్పుడు సంబంధిత భాషా ప్రజలు ఏడాదిలో 300కి పైగా పరాయి భాషా పదాలను నేర్చుకుంటారని చెప్పారు. తమ మాతృభాష కాకుండా మరో భారతీయ భాషను నేర్చుకుంటే మన భిన్నత్వంలోని ఏకత్వాన్ని అర్థం చేసుకోగలరన్నారు. ప్రధాని భాషా సవాల్‌ను మలయాళ మనోరమ సదస్సులో పాల్గొన్న కాంగ్రెస్‌ ఎంపీ శశి థరూర్‌ స్వీకరించారు. ఇక నుంచి తాను రోజూ ఇంగ్లిష్‌, హిందీ, మలయాళంలో ఒక పదాన్ని ట్వీట్‌ చేస్తానన్నారు. ప్లూరలిజం, బహుళవాద్‌, బహువాచానం అంటూ మూడు భాషల్లో బహుళవాదాన్ని ట్వీట్‌ చేశారు.

కశ్మీర్‌: కట్టు కథలు, కఠోర వాస్తవాలు

కశ్మీర్‌: కట్టు కథలు, కఠోర వాస్తవాలు
31-08-2019 01:51:48

కశ్మీర్‌కు స్వయం నిర్ణయాధికారం, స్వయం పాలన అన్నవి రాజకీయ డిమాండ్స్. వాటికి రాజకీయ పరిష్కారమే మార్గం. ఆర్టికల్ 370, స్వయం పాలన, స్వతంత్ర ప్రతిపత్తి భావనలను సమర్థించిన వారిలో కమ్యూనిస్టులే కాక, జనతా నాయకులు జేపీ, లోహియా, ఫెర్నాండెజ్ వంటివారు; కృష్ణయ్యర్, తార్కుండె, రాజీందర్ సచార్ వంటి సుప్రీం కోర్టు జడ్జీలు; అమర్త్యసేన్, కుల్దీప్ నయ్యర్, బల్రాజ్ పురి వంటి మేధావులూ ఉన్నారు. వీరందరినీ జాతి వ్యతిరేకులుగా ముద్రలు వేస్తారా? వేస్తే ఆయా ఉద్యమాలు ఆగుతాయా?

‘దేశమంటే మట్టికాదోయ్‌, దేశమంటే మనుషులోయ్‌’ అన్న గురజాడ ‘దేశభక్తి’ తాత్వికతను తలకిందులు చేసే భావజాలం మన జాతి జీవనంలో నేడు చాపకింద నీళ్ళలాగా వ్యాపిస్తోంది. మానవ విలువలను ప్రశ్నిస్తూ ‘దేశభక్తి’ పేరిటనే వ్యాపిస్తున్నది! కశ్మీర్ విషయమై అభిప్రాయాలు ఎలా ఉన్నా, కొన్నిఅబద్ధాల, విష ప్రచారాల వెల్లడికే పరిమితం ఈ వ్యాఖ్య.

సర్దార్ పటేల్ 1950 డిసెంబరులోనే చనిపోయారు. అది మరిచి, నెహ్రూ,-పటేల్ చర్చలు చేస్తున్నారు. పాలివారిమధ్య యుద్ధమే మన ‘మహా’భారతం’ ! పాక్ దాయాదులతో తగవు అలాటిదే. సైనికచర్య ద్వారా గోవా విలీనం 1961లో జరిగింది. పాండిచ్చేరి వశమయింది 1954లో కాగా చట్టపర విలీనం 1962 ఆగస్టులో. అప్పటిదాకా మన ‘ఉక్కు’ నేతలు పోర్చుగీసు, ఫ్రెంచి వలస వాదులను ఏమీ అనలేకపోయారు! మన వీర దేశభక్తులూ వాటి గురించి కిమ్మనరు. దాయాది తగువు ముఖ్యం కదా!

‘కశ్మీర్‌లో 45 వేల మంది పౌరుల (టెర్రరిస్టులు కాదు) చావుకి కారణం మీరు కాదా’ అని హోంమంత్రి అమిత్ షా పార్లమెంటులో కాంగ్రెస్‌ని సూటిగా ప్రశ్నించారు. నిజానికి ఈ సంఖ్య లక్ష అని అంచనాలున్నాయి. ఇంకా వేలమంది ‘గల్లంతయ్యార’ని సుప్రీం కోర్టులో ప్రస్తావించారు. అందువల్ల ఆర్టికల్ 370 రద్దుతోనే ప్రజాస్వామ్యం రద్దనటం కపటం. అలాగని పార్లమెంటులో జరిగింది ప్రజాస్వామ్యమూ కాదు. సమస్యని గురజాడ చెప్పినట్టు చూడాలి.

పాకిస్థాన్ వల్ల, ముస్లిముల వల్లే కశ్మీర్ సమస్య అనటం అబద్ధం. భారత్-, పాక్‌ల పుట్టుకకు ముందే బీజాలు పడ్డాయి. బ్రిటిషు వారి విభజించి పాలించు రాజకీయాలు, వాటితో ఇరుదేశాల పాలకవర్గాల నిర్వాకం విషఫలితాల్లో ఈ సమస్య ఒకటి. మతప్రాతిపదికన దేశవిభజన, దానికై సృష్టించిన మతకల్లోలాలు నేటికీ ఇరుదేశాలనూ వెంటాడుతున్నాయి. అధికారమార్పిడి జరిగిన రెండు నెలల్లోనే జరిగిన మొదటి కశ్మీరు యుద్ధాన్ని దేశభక్తితో ముడిపెట్టటం దగా. ప్రపంచ చరిత్రలోనే విడ్డూరంగా ఇరుదేశాల సేనానులూ బ్రిటిషువారే: భారత్ కి లాక్ హార్ట్, పాకిస్థాన్‌కి మెసర్వీ. ఇద్దరూ రోజూ ఫోనులో యుద్ధం ‘పొజిషన్’లను చర్చించేవారు! తర్వాత మార్చుకొన్నా ఇద్దరూ మళ్ళీ బ్రిటిషు వారే: రాయ్ బుచర్, డగ్లస్ గ్రేసీ. వారి పైన మౌంట్ బాటన్! ఈ దేశభక్తి హాస్యాస్పదం కాదా?

సమస్య నెహ్రూవల్ల, అతడి ‘ముస్లిం’ స్నేహితుడు షేక్ అబ్దుల్లావల్ల అనటం మరో కట్టుకథ. వారిద్దరి తొలి పరిచయం 1937లో. కాంగ్రెసు ఉద్యమాన్ని దేశంలోని 565పైగా సంస్థానాలలోకీ విస్తరించాలన్న కొత్త అఖిలభారత నిర్ణయ పర్యవసానమే వారి భేటీ. దాని ఫలితమే ‘జమ్మూ-కశ్మీర్ ముస్లిం కాన్ఫరెన్స్’ రద్దు. ‘నేషనల్’ కాన్ఫరెన్స్ ఏర్పాటుకై 1938 జూన్ 24 నాటి తీర్మానం. అలా అబ్దుల్లా, ఆయన సహచరులూ మతాలకు అతీతంగా రాచరికానికి వ్యతిరేకంగా పోరాడారు. పండిట్ సుధామసిద్ధ్ధ, కశ్యప్ బంధు, సర్దార్ బుధీసింగ్ వంటి వారితోకలిసి, నయా కశ్మీర్ మేనిఫెస్టొ రూపొందించారు. దాంతో వారికి రాజు 1938లో ఆరునెలల జైలుశిక్ష విధించారు. అనేక సంస్థానాలలో వలెనే హైదరాబాద్‌లో కూడా తొలి సత్యాగ్రహం 1938 అక్టోబర్‌లోనే జరిగింది. హైదరాబాదులో లాగే అక్కడా గాంధీ ఒత్తిడితో దాన్ని విరమించాక 1939 ఫిబ్రవరి 24న షేక్ అబ్దుల్లాను విడుదల చేసారు.

షేక్ అబ్దుల్లాకు నెహ్రూ ఒరగపెట్టిందేమీ లేదు. 1947 అక్టోబర్ లో యుద్ధం. భద్రతా సమితిలో పాకిస్థాన్‌కు వ్యతిరేకంగా 1948 ఫిబ్రవరి 5న కశ్మీర్ ప్రధానిగా అబ్దుల్లా ఉపన్యసించారు. ఆయనను 1953లో పదవినుంచి తొలగించి బక్షీ గులాంను నియమించారు. షేక్ అబ్దుల్లాని 11ఏళ్ళు జైల్లో పెట్టింది నెహ్రూ ప్రభుత్వమే. చైనాయుధ్ధంలో ఓటమి, పాకిస్థాన్‌తో రాయబారం, 1965 యుద్ధానికి సన్నాహాలలో భాగంగా ఆయనపై బనాయించిన ‘కశ్మీర్ కుట్ర’ కేసు ఆరోపణలన్నిటినీ ఉపసంహరించుకొని, 1964 ఏప్రిల్ 8 న విడుదల చేసారు. షేక్ అబ్దుల్లా పాకిస్థాన్‌కి వెళ్ళి చేసిన రాయబారం ఫలితంగా 1964 జూన్ లో అయూబ్ ఖాన్‌తో సమావేశం నిర్ణయమైంది. నెహ్రూ 1964 మే 27న మరణించారు. అవసరం తీరగానే షేక్ అబ్దుల్లాని మళ్ళీ 1965–-68 మధ్య జైల్లో పెట్టారు. బంగ్లా యుధ్ధకాలంలో ఏడాదిన్నరపాటు ఏకంగా కశ్మీరు నుంచే బహిష్కరించారు. నెల్సన్ మండేలా వలె ఆయన్ని 14ఏళ్ళు జైలు పాలుచేసింది నెహ్రూ, ఆయన తర్వాతి ‘ప్రజాస్వామిక, సెక్యులర్’ కాంగ్రెస్ నాయకత్వమే. అందులో పటేల్‌కి, సంఘ్ పరివార్‌కి వాటా ఏమీ లేదు. వారు నిరంకుశ వారసులు మాత్రమే.

విలీన వ్యవహారాల హోంమంత్రిగా పటేలుకి అబ్దుల్లాతో ప్రమేయంలేదని ఎవరనగలరు? మహరాజా హరిసింగ్ భారత్‌లో విలీనంగురించి గవర్నర్ జనరల్ మౌంట్ బాటన్‌కి 1947 అక్టోబర్ 26న రాసిన లేఖలోనే తమ మధ్యంతర ప్రభుత్వంలో ‘మా ప్రధానితో కలిసి బాధ్యతలు నిర్వహించమని’ షేక్ అబ్దుల్లాను కోరుతున్నానని రాసారు -అబ్దుల్లాదే పైచేయని తెలిసే. దాన్ని హర్షిస్తూ మౌంట్ బాటన్ జవాబు, సైన్యంరాక రెండూ 1947 అక్టోబర్ 27 నాడే! మహారాజు, ఆయన ప్రధాని మహాజన్ భారతసైన్యం అడుగుపెట్టే నాటికి అక్కడలేరు. పలాయనం చిత్తగించారు. లేఖరాయగానే ‘ప్రవాసంలోకి పోవాల్సివచ్చింద’ని యువరాజు కరణ్ సింగ్ చెప్పారు. ఇలాటి వివాదాలున్న చోట్ల అనుసరించే విధానం ప్రకారం కల్లోలం ముగియగానే విలీనం విషయాన్ని ప్రజాభిప్రాయం ప్రకారం ‘సెటిల్’ చేయాలని కూడా పై జవాబులో రాసారు. 1947 అక్టోబర్ 30న అబ్దుల్లా అత్యవసర ప్రభుత్వ బాధ్యతలు స్వీకరించారు. దురాక్రమణ మూకలను ఎదుర్కోటానికి అబ్దుల్లా ఏర్పాటు చేసిన వలంటీరు దళాలు శ్రీనగర్‌లో డ్యూటీచేసాయి. యుధ్ధం ముగిసాక, భారత సేనలు వెళ్ళిపోయాక ఈ దళాలే కశ్మీర్ భవిష్యత్ సేనలకు ‘న్యూక్లియస్’గా ఉంటాయని అబ్దుల్లా 1948 అక్టోబర్ 7న పటేలుకి రాసిన లేఖలో ప్రస్తావించారు. అది చాలావరకు అమలైంది కూడా. ఆ రోజుల్లో షేక్ అబ్దుల్లా, పటేల్‌ని కలిసారు. 1953లో తనను అరెస్టు చేసినప్పుడు, ఆ సేనల్లో ఉన్న ముస్లిములను నెహ్రూ ప్రభుత్వం తొలగించి అరెస్టు చేసిందని అబ్దుల్లా ఆరోపించారు. ఈ దళాలను బంగ్లా యుధ్ధం తర్వాత 1972 డిసెంబర్ 12న భారతసైన్యంలో జెకే లైట్ ఇన్ఫాంట్రీ పేరిట చేర్చుకున్నారు.

చైనా, రష్యా కూడా తమ సరిహద్దు దేశాలనీ, అందువల్ల తాము స్వతంత్రంగా ఉంటే అందరికీ మంచిదన్న అభిప్రాయాన్ని కూడా పై లేఖలోనే హరిసింగ్ రాసారు. 1947 తర్వాత పేరుకి ‘ప్రధాని’ పదవి అబ్దుల్లాకే కాదు, మరికొందరికీ ఉండేది. ఉదా: ఒరిస్సా హరేకృష్ణ మహతాబ్, మధ్యప్రదేశ్ రవి శంకర్ శుక్లా. హిందూ రాజ్యాలైన తిరువనంతపురం, మణిపూర్ వంటివి కూడా 1949 తర్వాతి భాగంలో కానీ విలీనం కాలేదు. 1956 దాకా అనేక చోట్ల రాజుల అధికారం కొనసాగింది. నిజాం నవాబు వంటి రాజులంతా స్వతంత్రభారత్‌లో రాజ్ ప్రముఖ్(గవర్నర్)లుగా కొనసాగారు. ఈశాన్య భారత్‌లో నేటికీ మిలిటరీ పాలనే గ్రౌండ్ రియాలిటీ. తమిళనాడులో 1962 దాకా డీఎంకే ప్రత్యేక ద్రవిడదేశం కావాలన్నది. అసోం, పంజాబ్, నాగాలాండ్, మిజోరంలో నేటికీ వేర్పాటువాద ఉద్యమాలున్నాయి. ఇవేవీ ముస్లిం ప్రాంతాలు కావు. ఈశాన్యంలో 5 లక్షల సైన్యాలున్నాయి. నేడు కశ్మీర్‌లో 9.5 లక్షల సైన్యాలున్నాయని ‘డెక్కన్ క్రానికల్’ లో ఈ నెల 18న వెలువడిన ఒక వార్త వెల్లడించింది. 4000 మంది అరెస్టు. స్వయం నిర్ణయాధికారం, స్వయంపాలన అన్నవి రాజకీయ డిమాండ్స్. వాటికి రాజకీయ పరిష్కారమే మార్గం.

ఆర్టికల్ 370, స్వయంపాలన, స్వతంత్ర ప్రతిపత్తి భావనలను సమర్థించిన వారిలో కమ్యూనిస్టులే కాక, జనతా నాయకులు జేపీ, లోహియా, ఫెర్నాండెజ్ వంటివారు; కృష్ణయ్యర్, తార్కుండె, రాజీందర్ సచార్ వంటి సుప్రీంకోర్టు జడ్జీలు; అమర్త్యసేన్, కుల్దీప్ నయ్యర్, బల్రాజ్ పురి వంటి మేధావులు, ప్రొఫెసర్లు వందలాదిగా ఉన్నారు. వాజపేయి ప్రభుత్వమూ భిన్న వైఖరి తీసుకున్నది. వీరందరినీ జాతి వ్యతిరేకులుగా ముద్రలు వేస్తారా? వేస్తే ఆయా ఉద్యమాలు ఆగుతాయా?
సరిపడినంత చర్చ జరగలేదన్నది అంత పసలేని వాదన. ఏళ్ళుగా చర్చ సాగుతూనే ఉన్నది. చాలా ధర్మ సూక్ష్మాలపై చర్చ తర్వాతే ద్రౌపదీ వస్త్రాపహరణం జరిగింది. కురుక్షేత్రమూ సాగింది. చర్చే ప్రజాస్వామ్యం కాదు.
ఎం.జయలక్ష్మి

Thursday 29 August 2019

Tschandala - Nietzsche

Tschandala
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Tschandala (old German transcription of chandala) is a term Friedrich Nietzsche borrowed from the Indian caste system, where a Tschandala is a member of the lowest social class. Nietzsche's interpretation and use of the term relied on a flawed source but was used by some interpreters to connect him to Nazi ideology.


Contents
1 Nietzsche's use of the term
2 Nietzsche's flawed source
3 Descendant uses
3.1 Nazi Germany
3.2 Literary influence
4 Further reading
5 References
Nietzsche's use of the term
Nietzsche uses the term "Tschandala" in the Götzen-Dämmerung (Twilight of the Idols)[1] and Der Antichrist (The Antichrist).[2] Here he uses the "law of Manu“ with its caste system as an example of one kind of morality, of "breeding", as opposed to the Christian version of morality which attempts to "tame" man.

At first, Nietzsche describes methods of Christian attempts to "improve" humanity. As a metaphor, he uses a trained beast in a menagerie which is said to be "improved", but which in reality has lost vitality and is only weakened. In just such a way, Nietzsche says, has Christianity "tamed" the Teutonic races.

The law of Manu, on the other hand, tries to "improve" humanity by creating 4 castes of people, while ostracizing and making life miserable for the Tschandala, the untouchables. Nietzsche deplores this type of morality, that of the "breeder," just as he does the (Christian) "animal tamer", as he is opposed to all 'morality'. However, he much prefers it to the Christian "slave-morality." In his view, the humiliating and oppressive edicts against the Tschandala are a defensive means of keeping the castes pure:

Yet this organization too found it necessary to be terrible—this time not in the struggle with beasts, but with their counter-concept, the unbred man, the mishmash man, the chandala. And again it had no other means for keeping him from being dangerous, for making him weak, than to make him sick—it was the fight with the "great number.[3]

According to Nietzsche, Christianity is a product of Judaism, the "Tschandala-religion". By this he means that Judaism and Christianity after it are the morality born of the hatred of the oppressed (like the Tschandala) for their oppressors:

Christianity, sprung from Jewish roots and comprehensible only as a growth on this soil, represents the counter-movement to any morality of breeding, of race, privilege:—it is the anti-Aryan religion par excellence. Christianity, the revaluation of all Aryan values, the victory of chandala values, the gospel preached to the poor and base, the general revolt of all the downtrodden, the wretched, the failures, the less favored, against "race": the undying chandala hatred as the religion of love...[3]

In The Antichrist, Nietzsche again cites the law of Manu, and favors it in a relative sense to the morality of Judeo-Christianity. Nietzsche describes the "most spiritual" and "strongest" men who can say "yes" to everything, even the existence of the Tschandalas; and opposed to this is the envious and revengeful spirit of the Tschandalas themselves (cf. master-slave morality). Nietzsche also uses the term Tschandala for some of his opponents, e.g. socialism.

Nietzsche's flawed source
Nietzsche's source for the law of Manu was the book Les législateurs religieux. Manou, Moïse, Mahomet (1876) by French writer Louis Jacolliot. According to Annemarie Etter, this translation of the Manusmriti is not reliable and differs widely from other sources.[4] For example, the high respect it gives to women, which Nietzsche quotes in opposition to "Christian misogyny", is in fact not contained in any of the usual texts.

In his description and interpretation of the "Tschandala", Nietzsche may have followed a long footnote by Jacolliot, which gives an "unbelievable, abstruse and scientifically completely untenable" (Etter) theory. According to Jacolliot, all Semitic peoples, especially the Hebrews, are descendants of emigrated Tschandalas. Although Nietzsche never directly says this, it seems plausible that he believed in Jacolliot's theory at least to some extent, even though, as Etter points out, Nietzsche would have easily been able to falsify several of Jacolliot's pseudo-scientific claims. In so doing, he may have increased the impact of Jacolliot's "effusive admiration for ancient Eastern wisdom and civilization with a more or less open and pronounced antisemitism and antichristianism" (Etter).

Descendant uses
Nazi Germany
Terms like "race", "breeding", "Aryan" and others Nietzsche used in his later works were employed by Nazi polemicists who referenced his theories.

Though Nietzsche did use the term Übermensch, nowhere in his works he used the contrary Untermensch that in the 20th Century became a concept in Nazi ideology, that was used for races and individuals that it perceived "inferior".

Literary influence
Inspired by Nietzsche, August Strindberg wrote a novel called "Tschandala" in 1889.

How the Nazis Hijacked Nietzsche, and How It Can Happen to Anybody

How the Nazis Hijacked Nietzsche, and How It Can Happen to Anybody
Nietzsche's ideas were used by the Nazi's to justify their atrocities, but did Nietzsche actually support Fascism?
SCOTTY HENDRICKS
16 December, 2017
If there was one philosopher the fascists of the mid-20th century loved, it was Nietzsche. He was so adored by them that Hitler gifted Mussolini the complete works of Nietzsche for his birthday. The Nietzschean ideals of anti-egalitarianism, the Superman, and the will to power inspired them to act, and millions died because of it. They adored his ideas, and anointed him as the prophet of their ideology.

And most of it was due to misunderstandings and willful changes.

Nietzsche’s philosophy is purposefully difficult to read. His criticisms of the “Slave Morality” he credits the Jewish people with inventing can seem like an anti-Semitic rant from time to time. When in reality, he saw the Jews as a powerful people with a fine culture, his attacks are on their ideas: not on the people. His idea of the Superman was not a racial concept but rather a spiritual one.




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He claimed that the Germans were great because of the “Polish blood in their veins”, and saw German nationalism as a dangerous joke. He ended relationships over his disapproval of anti-Semitism, including ones with his sister and the composer Richard Wagner. After he went mad, he wrote letters urging the great powers of Europe to attack Germany before it was too late.

Then, how did he become the Nazi Philosopher?

How Nietzsche was hijacked is a curious story, and a powerful warning. It begins with his sister, Elizabeth Förster-Nietzsche. She was reportedly an unintelligent woman; when she asked philosopher Rudolf Steiner to help her understand her brother’s philosophy he was forced to give up after several excruciating attempts to educate her. He sent so far as to write that she, “lacks any sense for fine, and even for crude, logical distinctions; her thinking is void of even the least logical consistency; and she lacks any sense of objectivity.” Her husband was a famed anti-Semite who Friedrich couldn't stand.

She took over her brother’s estate after his descent into madness. She was then able to selectively edit new versions of his works, and created the entire book The Will to Power with his unused notes, in a way as to emphasize the bits that fit in with her political ideology. She withheld his work Ecce Homo from publication for years as it had a great deal in it that would derail her attempts to frame him in her image. In conversation, she developed a remarkable ability to remember conversations with her brother that supported her ideology.

To put not too fine of a point on things, she even met Hitler in the early 1930s when he visited the Nietzsche museum she operated. Hitler attended her funeral in 1935.



Adolf Hitler at the Nietzsche museum.

How did Nietzsche get used by the Nazis?

Just as American politicians like to reference the ideas of dead American heroes like Washington and Jefferson, the Nazis sought great Germans to reference when justifying their new regime. Nietzsche, with the tweaks made to his philosophy by his sister, became the primary thinker for those Nazis looking to justify their beliefs with philosophy.

German universities taught Nietzsche as part of courses on the new order, references to soldiers being the Ubermensch were common, and the will to power was adopted by the Nazis as a key psychological insight. The philosopher Alfred Baeumler claimed Nietzsche had prophesied the rise of Hitler and fascism in Germany.

After the war, the warping of his ideas to suit the ideologies of his sister and later of the Nazis was corrected in large part due to the works of Jewish-American philosopher Walter Kaufmann. The notion that Nietzsche was a proto-fascist can be said to be long debunked.

So, Nietzsche was really a kind and nice philosopher who gave out candy to children?

To give the devils their due, Nietzsche did have incredibly reactionary views on women, viewing the ideal women as little more than a broodmare for potential Ubermenschen. This was a point where the fascists could just run with what they had. Similarly, Nietzsche did reject egalitarianism, democracy, and occasionally ventured into rhetoric that verged on “let’s eat the poor”. He was no saint, but he wasn’t a Nazi either. If reading Nietzsche doesn’t shock you, something went wrong.

Nietzsche’s philosophy is easy to misunderstand and almost as easy to purposefully misinterpret. Even today, the far right is still using bad readings of it to justify their politics. Nietzsche was anti-nationalistic, considered the Jews worthy opponents, despised Christianity, and mass movements of all kinds; it takes a bad reading to consider him a goose-stepping fascist instead of the champion of individual genius that he was.

So, what does this mean for us today?

Almost any philosophy can be hijacked liked this. It’s really not that hard. Examples come to mind without having to try. Every Marxist would claim that at least one of the communist regimes of the last century had twisted the philosophy in a way to promote selfish goals. Utilitarianism can be used to argue that every action imaginable is for the greater good. It might go without saying that the Bible has been used to justify pretty much everything; slavery, abolitionism, war, peace, and so on ad infinitum.

The real thing you should take away form this story is how easy it was to do it. Elizabeth Förster-Nietzsche was able to pull it off without understanding the ideas involved; all she had was the proper legal rights and some convenient events working for her. All of it happened despite Nietzsche’s friends objecting to it, and people who had lectured on his works before he went mad did nothing. It could happen to any school of thought, and that should terrify you. Always make sure you get the full story before you make any decisions, philosophically speaking. 

Wednesday 28 August 2019

Ambedkar Had Supported A Plebiscite (Vote) On Kashmir Issue, Not Military Use

Dr Ambedkar Had Supported A Plebiscite (Vote) On Kashmir Issue, Not Military Use
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(Dr Ambedkar had supported a plebiscite (vote) on Kashmir issue, gave examples where the plebiscite had taken place effectively to solve similar issues and was unhappy with the government spending so much money on the military. As a true democrat, he was a firm believer that people should have the choice to decide on their future. The following text is from BAWS Vol. 15, page 849. The whole text below is in one paragraph in original. Text separated into paragraphs to make reading easier. – Velivada Editor)

Then, Sir, on our part we never seem to be able to realise that the sooner we settle this Kashmir problem the better for us, because if the excuse for this enormous is increase in our Defence Budget is to be attributed to the Kashmir tangle, is it not our duty to do something, to contribute something, positively in order to bring that dispute to an end?

I cannot expatiate on the subject, but so far as I have been able to study the part played by the Government of India in connection with the negotiations that have been taking place on the settlement of the Kashmir issue, I am sorry to say that I have not read a single word which I can describe as a positive and not a negative suggestion on the part of the Government of India to settle this question.

Read also -  Bhakti Movement, Caste and Begumpura
All that they are dealing with is the question of military allotment. The question of plebiscite is in no way new in the history of the world. One need not go back to the ancient past to find precedents for settling questions of this sort by plebiscite.

After the First World War, I certainly remember there were two questions to be settled by plebiscite. One was the question of Upper Silesia and the other was the question of Alsace-Lorraine. Both these questions were settled by plebiscite, and I am sure that my hon. Friend Shri Gopalaswami Ayyangar, with his mature wisdom and sagacity, must be knowing of this.

It is not possible for us to borrow something from the line of action taken by the League of Nations with regard to the plebiscite in Upper Silesia and Alsace-Lorraine which we can usefully carry into the Kashmir dispute and have the matter settled quickly so that we can release Rs. 50 crores from the Defence Budget and utilise it for the benefit of our people?

Fascism Quotes


Fascism Quotes
Quotes tagged as "fascism" Showing 1-30 of 329
Mahatma Gandhi
“What difference does it make to the dead, the orphans and the homeless, whether the mad destruction is wrought under the name of totalitarianism or in the holy name of liberty or democracy?”
― Mahatma Gandhi
tags: democracy, fascism, liberty, loss, politics, society, totalitarianism, war 1839 likes Like

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Christopher Hitchens
“[Said during a debate when his opponent asserted that atheism and belief in evolution lead to Nazism:]

Atheism by itself is, of course, not a moral position or a political one of any kind; it simply is the refusal to believe in a supernatural dimension. For you to say of Nazism that it was the implementation of the work of Charles Darwin is a filthy slander, undeserving of you and an insult to this audience. Darwin’s thought was not taught in Germany; Darwinism was so derided in Germany along with every other form of unbelief that all the great modern atheists, Darwin, Einstein and Freud were alike despised by the National Socialist regime.

Now, just to take the most notorious of the 20th century totalitarianisms – the most finished example, the most perfected one, the most ruthless and refined one: that of National Socialism, the one that fortunately allowed the escape of all these great atheists, thinkers and many others, to the United States, a country of separation of church and state, that gave them welcome – if it’s an atheistic regime, then how come that in the first chapter of Mein Kampf, that Hitler says that he’s doing God’s work and executing God’s will in destroying the Jewish people? How come the fuhrer oath that every officer of the Party and the Army had to take, making Hitler into a minor god, begins, “I swear in the name of almighty God, my loyalty to the Fuhrer?” How come that on the belt buckle of every Nazi soldier it says Gott mit uns, God on our side? How come that the first treaty made by the Nationalist Socialist dictatorship, the very first is with the Vatican? It’s exchanging political control of Germany for Catholic control of German education. How come that the church has celebrated the birthday of the Fuhrer every year, on that day until democracy put an end to this filthy, quasi-religious, superstitious, barbarous, reactionary system?

Again, this is not a difference of emphasis between us. To suggest that there’s something fascistic about me and about my beliefs is something I won't hear said and you shouldn't believe.”
― Christopher Hitchens
tags: adolf-hitler, albert-einstein, barbaric, catholicism, charles-darwin, darwin, darwinism, einstein, evolution, fascism, fascistic, freud, fuhrer, germany, hitler, jewish, mein-kampf, nazi, nazism, pope, science, separation-of-church-and-state, sigmund-freud, superstitious, united-states, vatican 339 likes Like
Franklin D. Roosevelt
“The liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerated the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than the democratic state itself. That in its essence is fascism: ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or any controlling private power.”
― Franklin D. Roosevelt
tags: capitalism, democracy, fascism 250 likes Like
Albert Einstein
“Nationalism is an infantile thing. It is the measles of mankind.”
― Albert Einstein
tags: fascism, irresponsibility, nationalism 207 likes Like
Michel Foucault
“The strategic adversary is fascism... the fascism in us all, in our heads and in our everyday behavior, the fascism that causes us to love power, to desire the very thing that dominates and exploits us.”
― Michel Foucault
tags: fascism, love, power 192 likes Like
Upton Sinclair
“Fascism is capitalism plus murder.”
― Upton Sinclair
tags: capitalism, fascism, upton-sinclair 166 likes Like
Jonah Goldberg
“If there is ever a fascist takeover in America, it will come not in the form of storm troopers kicking down doors but with lawyers and social workers saying. "I'm from the government and I'm here to help.”
― Jonah Goldberg, Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left from Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning
tags: conservatism, fascism, government, liberalism, political, politics, socialism 131 likes Like
Simone Weil
“Whether the mask is labeled fascism, democracy, or dictatorship of the proletariat, our great adversary remains the apparatus—the bureaucracy, the police, the military. Not the one facing us across the frontier of the battle lines, which is not so much our enemy as our brothers' enemy, but the one that calls itself our protector and makes us its slaves. No matter what the circumstances, the worst betrayal will always be to subordinate ourselves to this apparatus and to trample underfoot, in its service, all human values in ourselves and in others.”
― Simone Weil
tags: bureaucracy, democracy, fascism, military, police 124 likes Like
Benito Mussolini
“Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power”
― Benito Mussolini
tags: corporate, corporatism, fascism, mussolini, state 119 likes Like
Friedrich A. Hayek
“Fascism is the stage reached after communism has proved an illusion.”
― Friedrich von Hayek
tags: communism, fascism 103 likes Like
Christopher Hitchens
“When the Washington Post telephoned me at home on Valentine's Day 1989 to ask my opinion about the Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwah, I felt at once that here was something that completely committed me. It was, if I can phrase it like this, a matter of everything I hated versus everything I loved. In the hate column: dictatorship, religion, stupidity, demagogy, censorship, bullying, and intimidation. In the love column: literature, irony, humor, the individual, and the defense of free expression. Plus, of course, friendship—though I like to think that my reaction would have been the same if I hadn't known Salman at all. To re-state the premise of the argument again: the theocratic head of a foreign despotism offers money in his own name in order to suborn the murder of a civilian citizen of another country, for the offense of writing a work of fiction. No more root-and-branch challenge to the values of the Enlightenment (on the bicentennial of the fall of the Bastille) or to the First Amendment to the Constitution, could be imagined. President George H.W. Bush, when asked to comment, could only say grudgingly that, as far as he could see, no American interests were involved…”
― Christopher Hitchens, Hitch 22: A Memoir
tags: atheism, bastille, bullying, censorship, demagogy, dictatorship, enlightenment, fascism, fatwa, first-amendment, free-speech, friendship, george-hw-bush, hate, humor, individualism, intimidation, iran, irony, khomeini, literature, love, principles, religion, rushdie, satanic-verses, stupidity, theocracy, united-states, united-states-constitution, washington-post 92 likes Like
Hannah Arendt
“Before mass leaders seize the power to fit reality to their lies, their propaganda is marked by its extreme contempt for facts as such, for in their opinion fact depends entirely on the power of man who can fabricate it.”
― Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism
tags: 1968, adolf-hitler, big-lie, donald-trump, fascism, post-factual, post-truth, propaganda, reality-control, totalitarianism 88 likes Like
Franklin D. Roosevelt
“The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is fascism -- ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power.... Among us today a concentration of private power without equal in history is growing.”
― Franklin Delano Roosevelt
tags: fascism 79 likes Like
Henry A. Wallace
“If we define an American fascist as one who in case of conflict puts money and power ahead of human beings, then there are undoubtedly several million fascists in the United States.”
― Henry Wallace
tags: fascism, greed, money, politics, power 78 likes Like
Henry A. Wallace
“A fascist is one whose lust for money or power is combined with such an intensity of intolerance toward those of other races, parties, classes, religions, cultures, regions or nations as to make him ruthless in his use of deceit or violence to attain his ends.”
― Henry Wallace
tags: fascism, politics, tolerance 74 likes Like
Henry A. Wallace
“Still another danger is represented by those who, paying lip service to democracy and the common welfare, in their insatiable greed for money and the power which money gives, do not hesitate surreptitiously to evade the laws designed to safeguard the public from monopolistic extortion.

Their final objective toward which all their deceit is directed is to capture political power so that, using the power of the state and the power of the market simultaneously, they may keep the common man in eternal subjection.

They claim to be super-patriots, but they would destroy every liberty guaranteed by the Constitution.

They are patriotic in time of war because it is to their interest to be so, but in time of peace they follow power and the dollar wherever they may lead.”
― Henry Wallace
tags: big-business, fascism, greed, patriotism, politics, wealth 69 likes Like
Chris Hedges
“The split in America, rather than simply economic, is between those who embrace reason, who function in the real world of cause and effect, and those who, numbed by isolation and despair, now seek meaning in a mythical world of intuition, a world that is no longer reality-based, a world of magic.”
― Chris Hedges, American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War On America
tags: atheists, christianity, dominionism, dominionists, evangelists, fascism, humanism, religion, sceptics, science 67 likes Like
Henry A. Wallace
“The obvious types of American fascists are dealt with on the air and in the press. These demagogues and stooges are fronts for others. Dangerous as these people may be, they are not so significant as thousands of other people who have never been mentioned.

The American fascist would prefer not to use violence. His method is to poison the channels of public information.

With a fascist the problem is never how best to present the truth to the public but how best to use the news to deceive the public into giving the fascist and his group more money or more power.”
― Henry Wallace
tags: fascism, fox-news, media, politics, press, propaganda 46 likes Like
Ernest Hemingway
“Are you a communist?"
"No I am an anti-fascist"
"For a long time?"
"Since I have understood fascism.”
― Ernest Hemingway, For Whom the Bell Tolls
tags: civil-war, communism, fascism, spain, war 45 likes Like
Helmut Newton
“The term "political correctness" has always appalled me, reminding me of Orwell's "Thought Police" and fascist regimes.”
― Helmut Newton
tags: censorship, fascism, ideas, language, orwellian, political-correctness, thought-police, words 38 likes Like
Norman Mailer
“I really am a pessimist. I've always felt that fascism is a more natural governmental condition than democracy. Democracy is a grace. It's something essentially splendid because it's not at all routine or automatic. Fascism goes back to our infancy and childhood, where we were always told how to live. We were told, Yes, you may do this; no, you may not do that. So the secret of fascism is that it has this appeal to people whose later lives are not satisfactory.”
― Norman Mailer
tags: democracy, fascism 37 likes Like
Jonah Goldberg
“The government cannot love you, and any politics that works on a different assumption is destined for no good.”
― Jonah Goldberg
tags: fascism, government, jonah-goldberg, liberal, politics 36 likes Like
Stefan Molyneux
“The world, viewed philosophically, remains a series of slave camps, where citizens – tax livestock – labor under the chains of illusion in the service of their masters.”
― Stefan Molyneux
tags: anarcho-capitalism, anarchy, ancap, collectivism, communism, countries, delusion, democracy, evil, fascism, freedom, government, knowledge, libertarian, liberty, mafia, nationalism, nations, nazis, patriotism, philosophy, politics, psychopath, rationality, religion, self-esteem, self-knowledge, socialism, states, statism, superstition, taxation, theft, voluntaryism 28 likes Like
“No school can supply an anti-liberal education, or a fascist education, as these terms are contradictory. Liberalism and education are one.”
― George Seldes
tags: education, fascism, liberalism 27 likes Like
Philip K. Dick
“Am I racially kin to this man? Baynes wondered. So closely so that for all intents and purposes it is the same? Then it is in me, too, the psychotic streak. A psychotic world we live in. The madmen are in power. How long have we known this? Faced this? And—how many of us do know it?”
― Philip K. Dick, The Man in the High Castle
tags: 1962, fascism, future, german, government, nazism, power, psychosis, totalitarianism 26 likes Like
Winston S. Churchill
“If I had been an Italian I am sure that I should have been whole-heartedly with you from the start to finish in your triumphant struggle against the bestial appetites and passions of Leninism."

(Speech in Rome on 20 January, 1927, praising Mussolini)”
― Winston Churchill
tags: england, fascism, history, italy, lenin, politics 24 likes Like
Jon Stewart
“1. Society needs laws. While anarchy can often turn a humdrum weekend into something unforgettable, eventually the mob must be kept from stealing the conch and killing Piggy. And while it would be nice if that "something" was simple human decency, anybody who has witnessed the "50% Off Wedding Dress Sale" at Filene's Basement knows we need a backup plan—preferably in writing. On the other hand, too many laws can result in outright tyranny, particularly if one of those laws is "Kneel before Zod." Somewhere between these two extremes lies the legislative sweet-spot that produces just the right amount of laws for a well-adjusted society—more than zero, less than fascism.”
― Jon Stewart, America (The Book): A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction
tags: 2004, anarchy, congress, fascism, legislature 22 likes Like
Madeleine K. Albright
“We cannot, of course, expect every leader to possess the wisdom of Lincoln or Mandela’s largeness of soul. But when we think about what questions might be most useful to ask, perhaps we should begin by discerning what our prospective leaders believe it worthwhile for us to hear.

Do they cater to our prejudices by suggesting that we treat people outside our ethnicity, race, creed or party as unworthy of dignity and respect?

Do they want us to nurture our anger toward those who we believe have done us wrong, rub raw our grievances and set our sights on revenge?

Do they encourage us to have contempt for our governing institutions and the electoral process?

Do they seek to destroy our faith in essential contributors to democracy, such as an independent press, and a professional judiciary?

Do they exploit the symbols of patriotism, the flag, the pledge in a conscious effort to turn us against one another?

If defeated at the polls, will they accept the verdict, or insist without evidence they have won?

Do they go beyond asking about our votes to brag about their ability to solve all problems put to rest all anxieties and satisfy every desire?

Do they solicit our cheers by speaking casually and with pumped up machismo about using violence to blow enemies away?

Do they echo the attitude of Musolini: “The crowd doesn’t have to know, all they have to do is believe and submit to being shaped.”?

Or do they invite us to join with them in building and maintaining a healthy center for our society, a place where rights and duties are apportioned fairly, the social contract is honored, and all have room to dream and grow.

The answers to these questions will not tell us whether a prospective leader is left or right-wing, conservative or liberal, or, in the American context, a Democrat or a Republican. However, they will us much that we need to know about those wanting to lead us, and much also about ourselves.

For those who cherish freedom, the answers will provide grounds for reassurance, or, a warning we dare not ignore.”
― Madeleine K. Albright, Fascism: A Warning
tags: corruption-politics, democracy, fascism, leadership, politics 17 likes Like
Christopher Hitchens
“As the cleansing ocean closes over bin Laden's carcass, may the earth lie lightly on the countless graves of those he sentenced without compunction to be burned alive or dismembered in the street.”
― Christopher Hitchens, The Enemy
tags: 2011, death-of-osama-bin-laden, fascism, mass-murder, obituary, osama-bin-laden, september-11-attacks 11 likes Like
Timothy Snyder
“As observers of totalitarianism such as Victor Klemperer noticed, truth dies in four modes, all of which we have just witnessed.

The first mode is the open hostility to verifiable reality, which takes the form of presenting inventions and lies as if they were facts. The president does this at a high rate and at a fast pace. One attempt during the 2016 campaign to track his utterances found that 78 percent of his factual claims were false. This proportion is so high that it makes the correct assertions seem like unintended oversights on the path toward total fiction. Demeaning the world as it is begins the creation of a fictional counterworld.

The second mode is shamanistic incantation. As Klemperer noted, the fascist style depends upon “endless repetition,” designed to make the fictional plausible and the criminal desirable. The systematic use of nicknames such as “Lyin’ Ted” and “Crooked Hillary” displaced certain character traits that might more appropriately have been affixed to the president himself. Yet through blunt repetition over Twitter, our president managed the transformation of individuals into stereotypes that people then spoke aloud. At rallies, the repeated chants of “Build that wall” and “Lock her up” did not describe anything that the president had specific plans to do, but their very grandiosity established a connection between him and his audience.

The next mode is magical thinking, or the open embrace of contradiction. The president’s campaign involved the promises of cutting taxes for everyone, eliminating the national debt, and increasing spending on both social policy and national defense. These promises mutually contradict. It is as if a farmer said he were taking an egg from the henhouse, boiling it whole and serving it to his wife, and also poaching it and serving it to his children, and then returning it to the hen unbroken, and then watching as the chick hatches.

Accepting untruth of this radical kind requires a blatant abandonment of reason. Klemperer’s descriptions of losing friends in Germany in 1933 over the issue of magical thinking ring eerily true today. One of his former students implored him to “abandon yourself to your feelings, and you must always focus on the Führer’s greatness, rather than on the discomfort you are feeling at present.” Twelve years later, after all the atrocities, and at the end of a war that Germany had clearly lost, an amputated soldier told Klemperer that Hitler “has never lied yet. I believe in Hitler.”

The final mode is misplaced faith. It involves the sort of self-deifying claims the president made when he said that “I alone can solve it” or “I am your voice.” When faith descends from heaven to earth in this way, no room remains for the small truths of our individual discernment and experience. What terrified Klemperer was the way that this transition seemed permanent. Once truth had become oracular rather than factual, evidence was irrelevant. At the end of the war a worker told Klemperer that “understanding is useless, you have to have faith. I believe in the Führer.”
― Timothy Snyder, On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century

30 Ambedkar Quotes That May Surprise The BJP

30 Ambedkar Quotes That May Surprise The BJP
"Hindu raj must be prevented at any cost," wrote Ambedkar.
By Shivam Vij
BJP National President Amit Shah and Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh paying floral tributes to the...
HINDUSTAN TIMES VIA GETTY IMAGES
BJP National President Amit Shah and Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh paying floral tributes to the Portraits of Pandit DeenDayal Upadhyaya, Bhimrao Ambedkar and Shyama Prasad Mukherjee before party workers'convention at Gandhi Maidan on April 14, 2015 in Patna.
The Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Narendra Modi-led government have plans to celebrate Dalit hero Bhim Rao Ambedkar's 126th birthday with great fanfare. It is surprising that they are doing so, because the BJP's Hindutva agenda is at odds with what Ambedkar wrote on Hinduism, Hindu nationalism, even beef-eating. Here are 30 Ambedkar quotes that may actually surprise the BJP.

On Hinduism and caste

"The first and foremost thing that must be recognised is that Hindu Society is a myth. The name Hindu is itself a foreign name. It was given by the Mohammedans to the natives for the purpose of distinguishing themselves [from them]. It does not occur in any Sanskrit work prior to the Mohammedan invasion. They did not feel the necessity of a common name, because they had no conception of their having constituted a community. Hindu Society as such does not exist. It is only a collection of castes. Each caste is conscious of its existence. Its survival is the be-all and end-all of its existence. Castes do not even form a federation. A caste has no feeling that it is affiliated to other castes, except when there is a Hindu-Muslim riot. On all other occasions each caste endeavours to segregate itself and to distinguish itself from other castes."
"The world owes much to rebels who would dare to argue in the face of the pontiff and insist that he is not infallible. I do not care about the credit which every progressive society must give to its rebels. I shall be satisfied if I make the Hindus realise that they are the sick men of India, and that their sickness is causing danger to the health and happiness of other Indians."
"Each caste not only dines among itself and marries among itself, but each caste prescribes its own distinctive dress. What other explanation can there be of the innumerable styles of dress worn by the men and women of India, which so amuse the tourists? Indeed the ideal Hindu must be like a rat living in his own hole, refusing to have any contact with others. There is an utter lack among the Hindus of what the sociologists call "consciousness of kind." There is no Hindu consciousness of kind. In every Hindu the consciousness that exists is the consciousness of his caste. That is the reason why the Hindus cannot be said to form a society or a nation."
"Anyone who relies on an attempt to turn the members of the caste Hindus into better men by improving their personal character is in my judgment wasting his energy and bugging an illusion."
"The Hindus criticise the Mohammedans for having spread their religion by the use of the sword. They also ridicule Christianity on the score of the Inquisition. But really speaking, who is better and more worthy of our respect--the Mohammedans and Christians who attempted to thrust down the throats of unwilling persons what they regarded as necessary for their salvation, or the Hindu who would not spread the light, who would endeavour to keep others in darkness, who would not consent to share his intellectual and social inheritance with those who are ready and willing to make it a part of their own make-up? I have no hesitation in saying that if the Mohammedan has been cruel, the Hindu has been mean; and meanness is worse than cruelty."
"To put the matter in general terms, Hinduism and social union are incompatible. By its very genius Hinduism believes in social separation, which is another name for social disunity and even creates social separation. If Hindus wish to be one, they will have to discard Hinduism. They cannot be one without violating Hinduism. Hinduism is the greatest obstacle to Hindu Unity. Hinduism cannot create that longing to belong which is the basis of all social unity. On the contrary Hinduism creates an eagerness to separate."
Images of Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar known as Babasaheb, India's first minister of law and justice and a...
BLOOMBERG VIA GETTY IMAGES
Images of Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar known as Babasaheb, India's first minister of law and justice and a social reformer who inspired the Dalit Buddhist Movement, top left, and gods and godesses are displayed outside a house in in Sambhal, Uttar Pradesh, India, on Monday, Aug. 22, 2016. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is seeking to woo Dalits in order to win the state's legislative elections, which would give him greater momentum to push his economic agenda at the national level. While the BJP dominated Uttar Pradesh in the 2014 national elections, Modi faces a tough fight for Dalit votes against several caste-based parties -- in a state where caste is the most important factor for voters. Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg via Getty Images
"In the Hindu religion, one can[not] have freedom of speech. A Hindu must surrender his freedom of speech. He must act according to the Vedas. If the Vedas do not support the actions, instructions must be sought from the Smritis, and if the Smritis fail to provide any such instructions, he must follow in the footsteps of the great men. He is not supposed to reason. Hence, so long as you are in the Hindu religion, you cannot expect to have freedom of thought."
"It must be borne in mind that although there are castes among Non-Hindus, as there are among Hindus, caste has not the same social significance for Non-Hindus as it has for Hindus. Ask a Mohammedan or a Sikh who he is. He tells you that he is a Mohammedan or a Sikh, as the case may be. He does not tell you his caste, although he has one; and you are satisfied with his answer. When he tells you that he is a Muslim, you do not proceed to ask him whether he is a Shiya or a Suni; Sheikh or Saiyad; Khatik or Pinjari. When he tells you he is a Sikh, you do not ask him whether he is Jat or Roda, Mazbi or Ramdasi. But you are not satisfied, if a person tells you that he is a Hindu. You feel bound to inquire into his caste. Why? Because so essential is caste in the case of a Hindu, that without knowing it you do not feel sure what sort of a being he is."
On Food

"One can quite understand vegetarianism. One can quite understand meat-eating. But it is difficult to understand why a person who is a flesh-eater should object to one kind of flesh, namely cow's flesh. This is an anomaly which calls for explanation."
"The Census Returns show that the meat of the dead cow forms the chief item of food consumed by communities which are generally classified as untouchable communities. No Hindu community, however low, will touch cow's flesh. There is no community which is really an Untouchable community which has not something to do with the dead cow. Some eat her flesh, some remove the skin, some manufacture articles out of her skin and bones."
"The Touchables, whether they are vegetarians or flesh-eaters, are united in their objection to eat cow's flesh. As against them stand the Untouchables, who eat cow's flesh without compunction and as a matter of course and habit."
"...no one can doubt that there was a time when Hindus, both Brahmins and non-Brahmins, ate not only flesh but also beef."
NEW DELHI, INDIA - APRIL 14: People pay tributes during the floral tribute ceremony of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar...
HINDUSTAN TIMES VIA GETTY IMAGES
NEW DELHI, INDIA - APRIL 14: People pay tributes during the floral tribute ceremony of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar on his 125th birth anniversary at Parliament House, on April 14, 2016 in New Delhi, India. Born on April 14, 1891 to Bhimabai Sakpal and Ramji in Madhya Pradesh, Ambedkar was the Chief Architect of India's constitution. He died on December 6, 1956. (Photo by Arvind Yadav/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
"People are not wrong in observing Caste. In my view, what is wrong is their religion, which has inculcated this notion of Caste. If this is correct, then obviously the enemy, you must grapple with is not the people who observe Caste, but the Shastras which teach them this religion of Caste."
"That the object of the Brahmins in giving up beef-eating was to snatch away from the Buddhist Bhikshus the supremacy they had acquired is evidenced by the adoption of vegetarianism by Brahmins."
"The sovereignty of scriptures of all religions must come to an end if we want to have a united integrated modern India."
"In Hinduism, conscience, reason and independent thinking have no scope for development."
"Caste may be bad. Caste may lead to conduct so gross as to be called man's inhumanity to man. All the same, it must be recognised that the Hindus observe Caste not because they are inhuman or wrong-headed. They observe Caste because they are deeply religious."
On democracy

"In India, Bhakti or what may be called the path of devotion or hero-worship, plays a part in its politics unequalled in magnitude by the part it plays in the politics of any other country in the world. Bhakti in religion may be a road to the salvation of the soul. But in politics, Bhakti or hero-worship is a sure road to degradation and to eventual dictatorship."
"I do not want that our loyalty as Indians should be in the slightest way affected by any competitive loyalty whether that loyalty arises out of our religion, out of our culture or out of our language. I want all people to be Indians first, Indian last and nothing else but Indians."
On Hindu nationalism and Pakistan

"If Hindu Raj does become a fact, it will, no doubt be the greatest calamity for this country. No matter what the Hindus say, Hinduism is a menace to liberty, equality and fraternity. It is incompatible with democracy. Hindu raj must be prevented at any cost."
"But it is right to ask if the Musalmans are the only sufferers from the evils that admittedly result from the undemocratic character of Hindu society. Are not the millions of Shudras and non-Brahmins, or millions of the Untouchables, suffering the worst consequences of the undemocratic character of Hindu society?"
BHOPAL, INDIA - APRIL 14: Followers celebrate the 125th birth anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, on April...
HINDUSTAN TIMES VIA GETTY IMAGES
BHOPAL, INDIA - APRIL 14: Followers celebrate the 125th birth anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, on April 14, 2016 in Bhopal, India. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, popularly known as Babasaheb, is considered as the Father of Indian Constitution, the biggest and the most complex constitution in the world. The United Nations for the first time observed the 125th birth anniversary of Dr. BR Ambedkar, also dubbed 'Ambedkar Jayanti', at the UN headquarters in New York. Born on April 14, 1891 to Bhimabai Sakpal and Ramji in Madhya Pradesh, Ambedkar was the Chief Architect of India's constitution. He died on December 6, 1956. (Photo by Mujeeb Faruqui/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
"The Muslims are howling against the Hindu Maha Sabha and its slogan of Hindudom and Hindu Raj. But who is responsible for this? Hindu Maha Sabha and Hindu Raj are the inescapable nemesis which the Musalmans have brought upon themselves by having a Muslim League. It is action and counter-action. One gives rise to the other. Not partition, but the abolition of the Muslim League and the formation of a mixed party of Hindus and Muslims is the only effective way of burying the ghost of Hindu Raj."
"This attitude of keeping education, wealth and power as a close preserve for themselves and refusing to share it, which the high caste Hindus have developed in their relation with the lower classes of Hindus, is sought to be extended by them to the Muslims. They want to exclude the Muslims from place and power, as they have done to the lower class Hindus. This trait of the high caste Hindus is the key to the understanding of their politics."
"Strange as it may appear, Mr. Savarkar and Mr. Jinnah instead of being opposed to each other on the one nation versus two nations issue are in complete agreement about it. Both agree, not only agree but insist that there are two nations in India—one the Muslim nation and the other Hindu nation."
"Nor should the formation of a mixed party of Hindus and Muslims be difficult in India. There are many lower orders in the Hindu society, whose economic, political and social needs are the same as those of the majority of the Muslims and they would be far more ready to make a common cause with the Muslims for achieving common end than they would with the high caste of Hindus who have denied and deprived them of ordinary human right for centuries."
"If the Musalman will not yield on the issue of Pakistan, then Pakistan must come. So far as I am concerned, the only important question is: Are the Musalmans determined to have Pakistan? Or is Pakistan a mere cry? Is it only a passing mood? Or does it represent their permanent aspiration? On this there may be difference of opinion. Once it becomes certain that the Muslims want Pakistan there can be no doubt that the wise course would be to concede the principle of it."
On Buddhism and conversion

"Though I was born a Hindu, I solemnly assure you that I will not die as a Hindu." - Before converting to Buddhism
"I will not believe in Brahma, Vishnu and Mahesh. Neither would I worship them." - In 22 vows administered while converting to Buddhism
"The teachings of Buddha are eternal, but even then Buddha did not proclaim them to be infallible. The religion of Buddha has the capacity to change according to times, a quality which no other religion can claim to have... Now what is the basis of Buddhism? If you study carefully, you will see that Buddhism is based on reason. There is an element of flexibility inherent in it, which is not found in any other religion." - In his speech while converting to Buddhism
"The history of India is nothing but a history of a mortal conflict between Buddhism and Brahminism." - From B.R. Ambedkar: Writings and Speeches, vol.3, p.267 (in the chapter, "The triumph of Brahminism: regicide or the birth of counter-revolution")