A Song, a Blast and the Indian Media's 'Secular' Pretensions
Yoginder Sikand
Bias against Muslims is deeply-rooted in large
sections of the Hindu-owned media in India, even in
influential sections of the English press that prides
itself in its claim of being 'secular' and
'progressive'. Two ongoing controversies - the Vande
Mataram affair and the Malegaon bomb blasts — suffice to
confirm this argument.
Some weeks ago, Indian newspapers were awash with
reports about Muslims protesting against the
suggestion that all children studying in schools be
forced to sing the Vande Mataram song, which, numerous
Hindu-owned newspapers, television channels and
politicians declared, was India's 'national song'.
Refusal to sing this song, they claimed, was a
thoroughly 'un-patriotic' act, suggesting, thereby,
that Muslims, by definition, were 'anti-national'.
Consequently, Muslims were forced, as they often are,
to prove their patriotic credentials, and the overall
result of this sordid controversy was to only further
reinforce deeply-rooted anti-Muslim feelings among
many non-Muslim Indians.
Media projection and coverage of the Vande Mataram
controversy was cleverly contrived to put Muslims in
the dock and to defend a certain vision of Indian
nationalism that is framed in 'upper' caste
Brahminical Hindu terms, in which Muslims, Dalits and
other non-'upper' caste Hindu communities have little
or no space for their identities, aspirations and
interests. Few 'mainstream' Indian papers cared to
mention crucial facts of the history of the
controversial song. The Vande Mataram is part of a
novel, the Anandmath, which reeks of anti-Muslim
hatred and is the rallying cry of Brahminical Hinduism
that is premised on an unrelenting hatred of Muslims.
The was the novel written by Bankim Chandra Chatterji,
a late nineteenth century Bengali Brahmin, a major
cult figure in Hindu 'nationalist' circles.
The crux of the novel is an ardent appeal to Hindus to
rally against and slaughter Muslims and drive them out
of India. The Vande Mataram, sung as a war-cry to
rouse Hindu mobs against Muslims, exhorts Hindus to do
all this for the sake of the Mother—India deified as
the Brahminical goddess Kali or Durga. Curiously
enough for a song that is projected by its advocates
as the emblem of Indian nationalism, the novel ends
with the hero welcoming the British take-over of
India. 'Now the British have arrived', the hero
exclaims with ill-concealed glee, 'and our wealth and
lives will be safe'. 'The subjects [Hindus] would be
happy in the English kingdom', he goes on, '[…] [so]
refrain from waging war with the Englishmen […] Your
mission has been successful—you have performed [sic.]
well-being of the Mother—the English reign has been
established'. Now that the Muslims have been killed
and driven out and their place has been taken by the
British, the hero concludes, the Hindus should accept
the British as their 'ally'.
Hardly the stuff that one would expect from a song
that is bandied about as the herald of Indian
nationalism and anti-imperialism. Even more curious in
this regard is the fact, which the 'mainstream' media
probably has deliberately sought to conceal, that
Bankim Chandra Chatterji was hardly the ardent
'nationalist' that he is made out to be. In 1858 he
was appointed to the post of Deputy Magistrate by the
British, the first Indian to enjoy that dubious
distinction in the immediate aftermath of the failed
Indian Revolt of 1857. When he retired from that post
he was conferred with the titles of Rai Bahadur and
Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire by the
British, an 'honor' reserved, of course, only for
pro-British toadies.
From the very start, when Brahminical revivalists in
the Congress and the Hindu Mahasabha began insisting
that the Vande Mataram must be made India's national
song, Muslims and other non-Hindu communities angrily
protested. There was no reason, they argued, why
non-Hindus should be forced to worship a Hindu deity,
even if in the form of 'Mother India', suggesting that
the equation of Indian nationalism with Brahminical
Hinduism was aimed at excluding non-Hindus from the
definition of the 'national mainstream'. The Muslim
argument, which has been repeated ad nauseum and
highlighted in the Urdu press in the course of the
recent controversy, is that the novel of which the
song forms a part is clearly anti-Muslim and,
furthermore, the Vande Mataram's appeal to prostrate
before to and worship the Mother, in the form of Durga
incarnated in the guise of India, is forbidden in
Islam, a fair enough point that any non-Hindu would
make.
However, in the heat and din of the recent
controversy, the 'mainstream' Indian media, some
notable exceptions aside, shamelessly shed all
pretensions of 'secularism' and made it out to be that
by refusing to sing the song Muslims were
demonstrating that they had no love for India and that
they were 'anti-national'. The point of how a mere
song could be the test of Indian nationalism, the
issue of the political context of the song, the
clearly anti-Muslim thrust of the Anandmath and Bankim
Chandra Chatterji's own collaboration with the
British, were all carefully glossed over. Nor did the
'mainstream' media raise the obvious point that
forcible extraction of demonstrations of 'patriotism'
by Muslims unwilling to sing the song were pointless
and completely farcical. And the fact that the
mounting insecurity and threats to their life,
property and identity that many Indian Muslims face
today at the hands of the votaries of the Vande
Mataram, a situation that is hardly conducive to
promote passionate demonstration of love for the
country, was completely lost on the 'mainstream'
media, which was awash with stories of Muslims singing
or not singing the song.
It is not that both the Congress, votary of 'soft'
Hindutva, the hardcore Hindutva lobby and the
'mainstream' media were unaware of the fact that
appealing to or forcing all Indian school-going
children, including Muslims, to sing the song would be
stiffly opposed by most Muslims, for there has been a
long history of Muslim opposition to this. In fact, it
appears that it was hardly the intention of the ardent
advocates of the song to promote patriotism by
advising that all school-children sing it. Rather,
it seems obvious that the brouhaha about the song was
simply yet another stick for Hindutva fascists to beat
Muslims with, to force them to accept their diktats
and to terrorize them with threats of being expelled
from India simply because of their refusal to sing a
song that even most Hindus do not know and which fewer
Hindus know the meaning of, being in highly
Sanskritised Bengali. But this, of course, was a point
that few 'mainstream' newspapers refused to point out,
thus clearly revealing their underlying anti-Muslim
bias and the fact that their perception of Indian
nationalism is firmly within the framework of
Brahminical Hinduism.
Another glaring instance of clear anti-Muslim
prejudice in large sections of the 'mainstream' Indian
media is the coverage of the recent blasts outside a
mosque in Malegaon that claimed almost forty Muslim
lives. While the Mumbai train blasts this July hogged
the headlines for days, the Malegaon tragedy has
received relatively little attention, probably because
the victims in this case are Muslims. The identity of
the perpetrators of the Mumbai train blasts is yet to
be ascertained, but police, intelligence agencies and
the media are insistent on what they claim, was an
'Islamist terrorist' hand. Consequently, hundreds of
Muslims were arrested in the aftermath of the blasts.
The contrast with the Malegaon blasts could not have
been more striking. While it is entirely plausible
that they could have been the handiwork of Hindutva
activists and while the likelihood of Muslims being
behind them extremely remote, if not impossible, the
media is awash with stories that argue the unlikely
thesis of a hidden 'radical Islamist' or Pakistani ISI
hand behind the blasts and the theory that they could
have been the fallout of intra-Muslim sectarian
rivalries. It is as if Hindus could never commit such
an act of terror, the hundreds of anti-Muslim pogroms
in India which thousands of people have lost their
lives in recent decades notwithstanding.
That probably explains why it is that, in contrast to
the massive wave of arrests and harassment of Muslims
in the wake of the Mumbai train blasts, the police
have not deemed it necessary to arrest or question
rabidly anti-Muslim Hindutva activists, who may
possibly have been behind the blasts, on any
significant scale in Malegaon and thereabouts. Nor is
the 'mainstream' media demanding this. Instead, the
Malegaon blasts appear to be fast disappearing from
the screens and pages of the 'mainstream' media, being
replaced now with stories about the court cases
relating to the 1993 serial bomb blasts in Mumbai in
which some Muslims are said to have been involved.
Even here the reporting is obviously biased and
skewed, for few newspapers have cared to view these
blasts, as they should be, in the backdrop of the
widespread anti-Muslim violence in large parts of
India just a year before in the wake of the
destruction of the Babri Masjid, in which thousands of
Muslims were slaughtered in cold blood by Hindu mobs.
Needless to say, the non-Muslim Indian media, by and
large, is supremely unconcerned about justice to the
families of the several hundred Muslims slain by Hindu
gangsters in league with the elements in the police
and the administration in Mumbai itself just weeks
prior to the serial blasts and which must have
provoked the perpetrators of the blasts to do what
they did. Nor is the media talking about justice for
the almost three thousand hapless Muslim victims of
the state-sponsored massacre in Gujarat in 2002 and
their relatives, and the victims of innumerable other
such bouts of bloody anti-Muslim violence that do not
seem to deserve any more than passing mention, if at
all, on television screens and in obscure corners of
some odd newspaper.
So much, then, for the 'secular', 'patriotic'
pretensions of the Indian 'mainstream' media.