The Age of Intolerance in South Asia/ Ali Riaz
[Following is the text of the keynote lecture delivered at the South Asia Conference of the Pacific
Northwest (SACPAN) on 5 February at University of Oregon, Portland].
My deepest gratitude and heartfelt thanks to the organizers of the South Asia Conference of the
Pacific Northwest (SACPAN) and the University of Oregon for inviting me and providing me
the opportunity to be a part of the Jeremiah Lecture Series. Thanks to the co-organizers of the
conference. I am particularly thankful to Professor Lamia Karim for this invitation. Thanks to
Jonathon Campbell for taking care of all the logistics and his warm hospitality.
The topic of my presentation, as you can understand, has been driven by recent events in
South Asia, particularly in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Violence, extremism, civil war, and
insurgency are not alien to the region. Yet, in recent years, the region seems to have entered into
an age of intolerance. Unwillingness to accept the beliefs, opinions, behavior, practices of
someone different seems to have become dominant. It is not the fringe elements of the society
who are displaying these characteristics, but instead increasingly this feature is becoming an
integral part of the society and mainstream politics.
Discussion on intolerance is challenging, because it evokes passion and has the risk of
being misunderstood. Questions such as - how would you define intolerance? Intolerance by
whom and of whom? can be raised. For our understanding, I define intolerance in the minimalist
sense —the unwillingness to put up with disagreeable ideas and groups. While all of us would
like to understand why the intolerance has persisted and has grown enormously in recent days,
neither can I nor do I intend to offer a definitive answer. Instead I would like to demonstrate how
complex the issue has become.
The epidemic of intolerance
The year 2015 is marked by great concerns with respect to the ‘communal’ relationship in India.
According to the Home Affairs data available to the press, there was a 25% increase in incidents
of communal violence,1 or to quote India Today, “a surge in communally charge incidents in BJP
led states.”2 Indeed, lynching, brutal shooting, merciless burning and rampant killing of Indian
citizens have been reported in the press.
Three kinds of incidents have taken place India throughout 2015 and before, which
indicate a pattern showing a sharp declining trend of tolerance. The first one can be described as
The Economic Times, “Communal violence in the country up by 25% in first five months of 2015”, The
Economic Times, 21 July 2015 http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2015-0721/news/64683114_1_communal-incidents-clashes-ministry.
1
Abhishek Bhalla, “Communal Violence on Surge under in BJP-led States,” India Today, 2 December
2015.
2
the ‘beef controversy.’ It began with the ban on the sale of meat during the Jain festival of
Paryushan in September 2015,3 followed by the lynching of Mohammad Akhlaq by a Hindu mob
in Dadri for allegedly consuming beef,4 followed by a scuffle between legislators in the state of
Jammu Kashmir in October after ruling party legislators attacked a Muslim legislator for holding
a party where beef was served.5
The second kind of violence was perpetrated against critical voices. In February 2015, the
communist leader Govind Pansare was killed near Mumbai.6 In August, M.M. Kalburgi, a 77
year old scholar, and an outspoken critic of Hindu idol worship, was gunned down on his own
doorstep.7 In September, a leader of the militant organization Sri Rama Sene, Siddalinga Swami
told reporters in Karnataka that Hindus were hurt by the comments of the litterateurs like
Professor KS Bhagwan and Chandrashekhar Patil, who allegedly spoke ill of Hindu epics, the
Ramayana and the Mahabharata. "The epics are followed by millions of Hindus as sacred texts.
People will not tolerate the belittling of Ramayana characters, who are worshipped. They will cut
off the tongues of writers if they do not stop insulting Hindu gods," he said.8 K S Bhagwan, a
retired professor and critic of the Hindu caste system was threatened via twitter that he will be
the next victim. Two years ago, activist Narendra Dabholkar was murdered for campaigning
against religious superstitions.9 Vice-President Hamid Ansari was accused of speaking like a
"communal Muslim leader" by RSS mouthpiece 'Panchjanya' despite the fact that the VicePresident while referring to issues relating to Muslim identity and security also urged Muslims to
think along plural, secular and democratic lines.
The third kind of violence was intended to force conformity with the dominant political
discourse. The Shiv Sena in October compelled Pakistani Singer Ghulam Ali to cancel his
concerts in Mumbai and Pune.10 The members of the organization manhandled former Bharatiya
Janata Party ideologue Sudheendra Kulkarni for going ahead with former Foreign Minister of
Pakistan Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri’s book launch in Mumbai.11 As if these incidents were not
India Express, “Four-day meat ban in Mumbai during Jain festival”, India Express, 8 September 2015.
http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/4-day-meat-ban-in-mumbai-during-jain-festival/ .
3
Aditi Vasta, “Dadri: Mob kills man, injures son over ‘rumors’ that they ate beef,” India Express, 25
December 2015.
4
Toufiq Rashid, “J-K: BJP MLAs thrash legislator who hosted ‘beef party’,” Hindustan Times, 8
October 2015.
5
6
Rumi Runiyani, “Who killed Govind Pansare?” Indian Express, 11 March 2015.
7
Sonia Faleiro, “India’s Attack on Free Speech”, The New York Times, p. SR 7, 4 October 2015.
India Today, ‘Will cut off tongues of writers for insulting Hindu gods: Sri Rama Sene’, India Today, 22
September 2015, http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/will-cut-off-tongues-of-writers-for-insulting-hindugods-sri-rama-sene/1/479760.html
8
9
Faleiro, ‘India’s Attack’
10
Alok Deshpande, “Ghulam Ali concert called off after Shiv Sena threars,” The Hindu 8 October, 2015
Jason Burke, “Protesters vow to disrupt India launch of book by former Pakistan minister,” The
Guardian, 12 October 2015
11
enough, when a significant number of writers, artists, scientists condemned these actions, they
were vilified. Reputed film star Amir Khan was described as ‘anti-Indian’ and dropped from
being one of the brand ambassadors of the government’s campaign called the ‘Incredible India’
after his remarks on the growing intolerant environment.12
In Pakistan, sectarian violence has continued to cost hundreds of lives of non-Muslims,
and minorities within the Muslim community. This was in addition to the institutional violence
routinely perpetrated through the infamous Blasphemy law. In November 2015, an enraged mob
set an Ahmadi place of worship on fire in Punjab's Jhelum district;13 in May 2015 Christian
homes and churches were attacked after blasphemy allegations were made against a Christian
man.14 In July 2014, a mob killed three members of the Ahmadi community after an alleged
“blasphemous” picture posted on Facebook by a member of the Ahmadi community named Aqib
Salim;15 members of their community have been arrested on charges of blasphemy; a Christian
couple was set ablaze at a brick kiln by a mob accusing them of blasphemy.16 Asia Bibi, the first
woman on Pakistan’s death row, awaits a hearing on her death sentence after being accused of
blasphemy in 2009. The assassinations in 2011— of Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab, and
Shabhaz Bhatti, the Christian federal minister of minority affairs—for opposing the nation’s
draconian and much abused blasphemy laws illustrate the extent of the toxic environment.
Lawyer Rashid Rehman and former Justice Arif Iqbal Bhatti faced a similar fate.
As for sectarian violence, a recent study by an Islamabad-based think tank disclosed that
between 2012 and 2015, some 19,000 Shi’a Muslims have been killed in bomb blasts and
militant attacks.17 This includes the attacks on Shia’s such as the killing of 61 Shias in bomb
blasts in a Shia mosque in Shikarpur in Sindh in January and the killing of over 45 Shias in an
attack on their bus in Karachi in May.
In Bangladesh, deteriorating climate for tolerance is discernable as extremist rhetoric and
actions by state and non-state actors are on the rise. Tension between commonly referred to
‘secular’ and ‘religious’ forces have redoubled, and persecution of nonconformist voices has
The Hindu, “Aamir no longer face of ‘Incredible India’,” The Hindu 7 January 2015
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/aamir-no-longer-face-of-incredible-india/article8073625.ece
12
Amir Kayani, “Ahmadi place of worship set ablaze in Jhelum, riots erupt after blasphemy allegations,”
Dawn 21 November 2015
13
Friday Times, ‘Christian neighborhood attacked after blasphemy allegation’ Friday Times, 29 May
2015, http://www.thefridaytimes.com/tft/christian-neighborhood-attacked-after-blasphemyallegation/#sthash.ZgM1ueKI.dpuf
14
Waqae Gillani, “3 Killed in a Facebook Blasphemy Rampage in Pakistan,” The New York Times, 28
July 2014.
15
Asad Hashim, ‘Blasphemy in Pakistan: Anatomy of a lynching’, Aljazeera, 20 June 2015,
http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/6/20/blasphemy-in-pakistan-anatomy-of-a-lynching.html.
16
17
S.C Kohli, “Religious Violence in Pakistan,” MeriNews 27 November 2015
increased. The rising tide of intolerance is visible in activities such as extrajudicial killings,
murders of bloggers and writers, and abuse of laws for political interests. To date, at least five
bloggers and a publisher have been brutally murdered since 2013. An Islamist militant group has
claimed the responsibility for these killings. ‘Bloggers’ of all shades have been labelled as
atheists, portraying them as ‘enemies of Islam’ to justify these murders. Conservative Islamist
groups have demanded punishment for bloggers who have allegedly criticized Islam or the
Prophet. They also demanded the introduction of an anti-blasphemy law with provision for the
death penalty and exemplary punishment to all who "insult Islam."
On the other hand criticisms of the government has become perilous. The government has
used the Information and Communication Act, particularly Article 57, to silence its critics. The
law has been used against officials of a Human Rights Group, and a number of individuals.
Media have been muzzled, in more than one way. Credible allegations that members of law
enforcement agencies are abducting political opponents of the regime have grown in recent
years. At least 55 incidents have been reported in the press. Additionally, the number of
extrajudicial killings, euphemistically called the ‘crossfire’, wherein law enforcing agencies kill
individuals after picking them up from streets, homes or work have become normal. According
to a Human Rights group the number was as high as 192 in 2015. Public lynching has increased
significantly in the past years.
We have also seen the rise of violence against the members of religious and ethnic
minorities. Human Rights Groups have recorded destructions of 104 homes and 197 temples or
monasteries or deities in 11 months in 2015. Hindus have become targets of persecution and in
many instances lost their properties which have forced them to migrate to neighboring India.
Who is to be blamed?
Apparently the nature of these incidents and the identities of the victims vary across the countries
and within the countries. Yet, in case of phenomenon like this, we tend to look for perpetrators.
Or simply stated, we ask the question - who is to be blamed?
There is a usual suspect. Whenever there is an issue of intolerance, there seems to be the
temptation to blame the ‘religious fundamentalists.’ As Pankaj Mishra has noted, ‘it seems well
founded: self-proclaimed Hindu and Muslim chauvinists, after all, lead and cheerlead the
violence.’18 While this is apparently true, it does not sufficiently explain the growing intolerance
in the region Mishra has recognized. Blaming the usual suspect may provide us comfort, but it
will hardly provide a complete picture. The phenomenon is far more complex and warrants our
attention to larger issues.
I suggest that we begin at the most common element in these incidents: the role of the
state. Either through direct involvement or through absolute inaction the states in South Asia
have acquiesced to the growing intolerance. Take, for example, the blasphemy law in Pakistan;
although a colonial vestige, it has been strengthened between 1980 and 1986. Despite the demise
of the military regime which strengthened it decades ago, the law has remained intact and being
18
Pankaj Mishra, ‘Beyond India’s Beef with Beef’, Bloomberg View, 8 October 2015.
used on an everyday basis, primarily against religious minorities. The proactive implementation
of the blasphemy law shows that the state has vested interests in maintaining a toxic
environment. Often being accused of blasphemy is all it takes; many accused have been
murdered even before they were tried. Lawyers have been intimidated and killed for defending
people accused of blasphemy. One can recall that a Justice at the Islamabad High Court
embraced the self-proclaimed assailant of Salmeen Taseer.
Pakistani state’s attitude towards sectarianism is another example of the state’s
acquiescence. The state has not prevented the proliferation of the militant sectarian groups – both
Sunni and Shia; instead, it has made ample use of these conflicts to justify the militarization of
society and state.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s indifference and long silence to the lynching of
Muhammad Akhlaq, and Haryana Chief Minister’s comment that "Muslims can continue to live
in this country, but they will have to give up eating beef" are indicative of the attitude of the
ruling BJP leadership. Concurrently the state machinery remained oblivious to the killings of the
authors such as Govind Pansare and was unresponsive to the protests by the scholars, authors and
artists to the growing trend of intolerance. The militant organizations such as the RSS, connected
to the ruling party, continue to enjoy impunity. The most glaring example of providing impunity
to the perpetrators is the case of Vivek Premi, the leader of the Bajrang Dal. He was arrested in
June 2015 for beating up and parading a Muslim man through a market for allegedly stealing a
calf in Shamil, Lucknow. But central government’s actions in January 2016 led to his release.19
In Bangladesh, although the current government continues to claim that it is ‘fighting the
extremism’ it has not only failed to protect the bloggers but also suggested that the writers should
exercise restraint while discussing religion. One can hardly fail to notice that the ruling party’s
position has shifted from openly embracing the “atheist bloggers,” to maintaining a safe distance
from them, to being critical of them, to warning them of consequences. For example, in 2013
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina spared no time in visiting the parents of Rajib Haider and
described him a “martyr” when he was hacked to death, whereas she only made a call to the
father of Avijit Roy, another blogger brutally murdered in 2015 and it was not made public. In
May 2015, the Prime Minister’s son and her Information and Communication Technology
Affairs Adviser Sajjib Wazed said that “the political situation in Bangladesh is too volatile for
her [the Prime Minister] to comment publicly [on Avijit’s killing].”20 He also said, “We don’t
want to be seen as atheists.” Two days after the murder of Niladry Niloy, the Inspector General
Manish Sahu, ‘Bajrang Dal leader Vivek Premi, who beat up & paraded Muslim, is out of NSA net’,
Indian Express, 7 January 2016, http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/bajrang-dalleader-vivek-premi-who-beat-up-paraded-muslim-is-out-of-nsa-net/
19
Dhaka Tribune, “Joy: Situation was too volatile to comment on Avijit murder”, Dhaka Tribune, 11
May 2015, http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2015/may/11/situation-too-volatile-comment-avijitmurder#sthash.UVfE8Gpu.dpuf.
20
of Police advised the bloggers not to write blogs that may hurt religious sentiments.21 The Home
Minister stated that “actions as per the existing law of the country will be taken against those
who will write anything on blogs or any other media hurting religious sentiment.”22 The Prime
Minister essentially echoed the position when she said that, the government “won’t allow
anybody to hurt religious sentiments.”23 Additionally, a wing of the ruling Awami League,
demanded capital punishment for hurting religious sentiment.24
South Asian states and the exclusivist discourses
However, these pale compared to the deep-seated problem associated with states in South Asia.
South Asian states are continuously engaged in producing a homogenized discourse of
patriotism, national identity, purity and danger. These together create a very narrowly defined
exclusivist nationalism. In such an environment diversity and multivocality succumb to
nationalist frenzy, and violent rhetoric becomes naturalized.
The primary objective of exclusivist nationalism is to create a binary frame: us versus
them. This endeavor results in what Amin Maalouf has described as a “deadly identity”25 and
Arjun Appadurai has described as “predatory identities.”26 The defining characteristics of the
deadly identity are ‘negative, antagonistic and chauvinistic.’ Importantly, this identity fears
multiplicity. In Appadurai’s formulation, predatory identities’ “social construction and
mobilization require the extinction of other, proximate social categories, defined as [a] threat to
the very existence of the same group, defined as we.”
The construction of the “them” that is the “collective other” -- within and outside of the
country -- serve as one of the fountains of the growing intolerance. In India, the “other” within
the country has been characterized by anti-Muslim sentiment as well as the unequivocal
supremacy of Hindutva ideology, the external other remains Pakistan. Similarly, creating the
“other” is necessary to endure the dominance of the majority group in Pakistan. Ahmadis and
Shia communities have been portrayed as “the other” within Islam and Christian and other
Bdnews24, ‘IGP suggests Bangladesh bloggers to not ‘cross the line’, not write blogs that may hurt
religious sensitivities’, bdnews24, 9 August 2015, http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2015/08/09/igpsuggests-bangladesh-bloggers-to-not-cross-the-line-not-write-blogs-that-may-hurt-religious-sensitivities.
21
Bdnews24, ‘Home Minister Kamal warns against writing anything that hurts religious sentiment,’
bdnews24, 11 August 2015, http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2015/08/11/home-minister-kamal-warnsagainst-writing-anything-that-hurts-religious-sentiment.
22
Daily Star, ‘Bangladesh PM says govt won’t allow anybody to hurt religious sentiments’, Daily Star, 4
September 2015, http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/hurting-religious-sentiments-wont-be-toleratedpm-137617.
23
Prothom Alo, ‘Awami Ulema League in communal politics’, Prothom Alo, 10 August 2015.
http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/74927/Awami-Ulema-League-in-communal-politics.
24
25
Amin Maalouf, In the Name of Identity: Violence and the Need to Belong, (London: Penguin Books,
2000).
26
Arjun Appadurai , Fear of Small Numbers, An Essay on the Geography of Anger, (Durham and
London: Duke University Press, 2006).
religious groups have been “the other” beyond Islam. One can describe these as ‘pseudoreligiosity.’ These narratives are constructed by the state, and legitimized through laws and state
encouraged social practices. In the context of Bangladesh, a linear nationalist grand narrative of
the history of Bangladesh, particularly of the independence war of 1971 has been created in the
recent years. Questioning and /or critical examination of the narrative is portrayed as unpatriotic. Borrowing from Neera Chandoke we can say, ‘this genre of nationalism .. dismisses
those who question the shape of this nationalism as anti-national.’27 These discourses are laced
with the rhetoric of violence, which in turn create the environment within which the real violence
not only becomes legitimate but an integral part of the perception of the nationhood.
From exclusivity to majoritarianism
The exclusivist nationalism that I have referred to is not benign. “Narrow in scope, chauvinistic
in content, stereotypical in form, and constructed around the homogenizing impulse, cultural
nationalism attempts to accomplish fetes. It seeks to construct majorities and minorities out of a
plural, heterogeneous and loosely articulated society, and it seeks to institutionalize fissures
between two constructed groups on the basis of stereotypes and stigmata.”28
In this majority-minority discourse, numbers are used to create an epistemic insecurity
(i.e., the survival of the community is at stake). In South Asia, it is the numerically larger
community which continues to argue that the “minority” constitutes the threat. In the case of
Bangladesh the exclusive Muslim identity allows the Islamists to go after the Hindu community
as the ‘enemy within’ and the exclusive Bengali identity paves the way for attacking other ethnic
groups. In India, the Hindutva ideologues and activists insist that the minority Muslim
community poses the threat to the “Hindu nation,” the Christians are the mortal threat according
to Islamists and the Pakistani state. These arguments are framed as the arguments of the
majority. In India, the BJP’s rhetoric of democracy is based on a simplistic majoritarian
principle. The proponents of majoritarian arguments assert that they are not only speaking for the
“majority”, but also for the nation. Religion, ethnicity, nation and majority have been merged
into one and the same.
Often this majoritarianism is based on a constructed notion of the ‘nation’/‘community.’
Take for example the notion of the Hindu majority in India. As Appaduarai has aptly noted, ‘the
Hindu majority is a double fiction in contemporary India; first because the category “Hindu” is
unthinkable in contemporary politics apart from its birth in colonial ethnographies and census
categories and second, because the deep divisions between upper and lower castes, always a
feature of life in agrarian India, has grown into one of the most important fissures in the politics
Neera Chandoke, ‘The “Civil” and “Political” in Civil Society: The Case of India’, in Civil Society in
Democratization. Ed. Peter Burnell and Peter Calvert (London: Frank Cass, 2004), p. 154.
27
28
Chandoke, ‘The Civil and Political, p. 154
of North India in the past two decades.’29 Deshpande has expressed his doubt ‘whether the
people talked of themselves as Hindus before the colonial phase of our history’30
Beyond state and politics: Culture and civil society
To think that the intolerance is bred within the political discourse and reproduced in the arena of
explicit contestation for power is a folly. If one source of the phenomenon is top-down – that is
inextricably connected to the state’s agenda and imposition of certain practices that allow them
to internalize violence, the other part is definitely bottom-up and emerges from the grassroots,
from the civil society. The intolerance that we are witnessing in South Asia is also a result of the
daily public culture which not only construct “us” but also a generalized abstract “other.” The
broader public culture, ‘the public space, in which a society and its constituent individuals and
communities imagine, represent, and recognize themselves through political discourse,
commercial and cultural expressions’31 is the place where intolerance is nourished. Perhaps the
best example in this regard is the sudden outburst of patriotism or nationalist resurgence within
the civil society in the wake of an event. Although such ‘patriotic fervor may appear
spontaneous, [often] its genealogy suggests otherwise.’32
In this respect we should take a look at the role of the civil society. It is well to bear in
mind that in South Asia, particularly in Pakistan and Bangladesh, “domineering (dominant, not
hegemonic) presence of the state has sharply curtailed civil society.”33 Such robust presence and
manipulating capacity of the state have made the civil society ‘a site of the reproduction of statist
projects.’34 Additionally, the political parties – both ruling and opposition – have tried to
establish control over the civil society; in so doing these parties have weakened the autonomy of
the civil society and its ability to mount a resistance against the virulence. In many instances, the
civil society has furnished the principal elements of constructing the exclusionary nationalism or
narrowly defined secularism – either as a statist project or as agenda of the political forces.
By way of conclusion
The foregoing discussion does not provide a complete picture, I must admit. Perhaps, there are
other equally important factors that we must take into account in understanding the causes of and
conditions for the presence of the culture of intolerance in South Asia. But I hope I have made a
29
Arjun Appadurai , Fear of Small Numbers, An Essay on the Geography of Anger (Durham and London:
Duke University Press, 2006), p. 74.
30
G. P Deshpande, ‘The Plural Tradition’, Seminar, no 3131 (September 1985), pp.18-25 (25).
31
Thomas Blom Hansen, The Saffron Wave: Democracy and Hindu Nationalism in Modern India,
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999). p. 4.
Mustapha Kamal Pasha, ‘Symbiosis and Fracture: Civil Society and Weak States in South Asia’ in T V
Paul edited South Asia’s Weak States: Understanding Regional Insecurity Predicament. (Stanford:
Stanford University Press, 2010), p. 138
32
33
Pasha, ‘Symbiosis and Fracture’ , p. 124.
Mustapha Kamal Pasha, ‘Security as Hegemony’, Alternatives, 21 (3), July-September 1996, pp. 282302 (p.284).
34
case for revisiting the commonly held perception that there is a clear-cut picture. Understanding
the intolerance in South Asia demands thinking outside the box. Perhaps Steven Salaita’s point
on violence will be of some help to us. He said, “We should work to better understand how the
elite apportion discourses of violence into categories of good and evil, civilized and savage,
rational and unreasonable. Who creates these binaries? Who suffers their finality? Who profits
from their endurance?"35 On the issue of intolerance, my question is somewhat simple: are we
ready to question our own preconceived notions?
Thank you all for your patience.
5 February 2016
Steven Salaita, “Syed Farooq Is an American: Let’s Stop the Muslim vs. Christian Debate and Take a
Look at Ourselves” alternet.3 December 2015, http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/syed-farooqamerican-lets-stop-muslim-vs-christian-debate-and-take-look-ourselves
35