(Now that the Annual Conference of the American Academy of Religion is only a few days away, let me present the abstract plus explanation I sent in for last year's conference. It was written in February 2015 and draws attention to an important phenomenon with a strong and hitherto unrefuted predictive power, viz. the BJP variety of secularism. The AAR's "experts" were not interested, preferring their prestigious delusions to the hard facts.)
AB Vajpayee's NDA Government (1998-2004)
heavily disappointed the experts who had predicted "all Moslims into the
Indian Ocean" or similar doomsday scenarios -- or rather, it put them
squarely in the wrong. Hindu "fascism" as a threat to democracy? When
Vajpayee narrowly lost a confidence vote, he meekly stepped down. War against
Pakistan? Though Pakistan unilaterally invaded India (Kargil 1999), Vajpayee
forbade the Army to strike at the invaders' base across the border, and later
opened a peace process, making symbolic concessions which Congress had always
refused. Isolationism? He threw the Indian media market open to foreign media
ownership, a move opposed by India's entire political spectrum. The only
"Hindutva" thing the NDA ever did was HRD Minister MM Joshi's clumsy
overhaul of the recommended history schoolbooks, changing nothing dramatic and
easily reversed. When the Government created a Chair for Indic Studies in
Oxford ("saffronization!"), it selected an outspoken opponent for the
job, in the vain hope of receiving a pat on the back from its declared enemies.
With the hindsight knowledge of historical
reality, it would be embarrassing to reproduce the predictions by Indian and
foreign experts. Today, anti-BJP discourse is less shrill, but still
confidently classifies the BJP among the "Hindu Right". This implies
a prediction that once in power, the BJP would pursue distinctly pro-Hindu
policies. However, in the light of our experience with the Vajpayee Government,
it is no surprise that the present Government led by Narendra Modi fails to
live up to this learned prediction, at least for now. (Of course, this paper
will be updated by November as new developments take place.)
In spite of having a more homogeneous
majority, it is reluctant to do anything pro-Hindu or perceivable as
anti-minority. On the contrary, one of its first acts was to decree a new
subsidy to Islamic schools. The stray Hindutva statements by loose cannon
(Akshay Maharaj, Jyoti Niranjan) were followed by retractions, condemnations by
Government spokesmen, and indignant innuendos by Modi-friendly journalists
(Tavleen Singh, Swapan Dasgupta). Public reconversions by the allied VHP,
heavily publicized and demonized by the media, were promptly discouraged by the
Government. Having learned from Vajpayee's 2004 defeat, though, Modi does “keep
the pot boiling”, does regularly throw crumbs of inconsequential Hindu
symbolism to his support base, all while not formally changing anything.
However, if many BJP workers are
disappointed with this Government, is not for what it does but mainly for what
it persistently fails to do. Thus, it inducted no figures with a strongly
ideological profile (Arun Shourie, Subramanian Swamy). Likewise, some public
figures who had crossed the floor (e.g. Madhu Kishwar) were conspicuously not
rewarded -- a fact not considered here for disgruntled ego reasons but for
illustrating the BJP's lack of strategy: it doesn't put people who have
actually sacrificed for the BJP to any use, while awarding positions of
influence to unreliable newcomers motivated by sheer opportunism. While some
things on the Hindu agenda are either useless to Hinduism (e.g. declaring a
"Hindu Rashtra") and others would arouse violent protests for which
the media are sure to blame Modi (e.g. a Common Civil Code, though
"secular" par excellence), others are perfectly feasible and,
moreover, turn out to be the most consequential for the flourishing of
Hinduism.
In particular, the amending of
Constitutional Articles 28 and 30, which (de facto c.q. formally) discriminate
against Hinduism in education, does not take away any rights from the minorities,
yet lifts an enormous burden from Hindu organizations investing in education
and eliminates a major reason for Hindu sects (Arya Samaj, RK Mission,
Lingayats, Jains) to have themselves judicially declared non-Hindu minorities.
Similarly, eliminating the legal basis of the discrimination against Hinduism
in temple management, with rich temples (but not mosques or churches)
nationalized and their income pocketed by politicians or diverted to non-Hindu
purposes, would give an enormous boost to Hindu religious and cultural life,
without impinging upon the rights of the minorities. It has to be noted,
however, and it buttresses my case for "BJP secularism", that temple
management is partly a competence of the States, and that BJP State Governments
have not made the difference. At any rate, there are meaningful things a BJP
Government could do specifically for Hinduism without endangering its
non-religious agenda (development, cleaning India etc.) or its international
standing, yet it chooses not to do them.
As for the Hindutva fits and starts of some
BJP members, now considered extremists but in fact only representative of what
the erstwhile Jan Sangh (1952-77, predecessor of the BJP) stood for, it should
be easy to bring them in line around a more reasonable but still credibly
pro-Hindu programme. It is here that the BJP is most conspicuously failing --
conspicuous at least to insiders, for 99% of the outside literature about the
BJP never mentions this phenomenon. Contrary to a consensus among academic and
journalistic India-watchers, the supposed “Hindu extremist” party has no Hindu
agenda. It relies on pro-Hindu workers to do the campaigning legwork, but once
in power it cold-shoulders them, it publicizes and pursues an agenda of
economic development only, and it tries to curry favour with the secularists.
The main reason is the long-standing
deliberate lack of investment (pioneered by MS Golwalkar) in an intellectual
and strategic vision of its own, the spurning of any analysis of the forces in
the field and of the potential and limitations of the situation. It therefore
also lacks competent personnel for the ideological struggle, e.g. for a
textbook overhaul or, now, for nominating politically friendly new
Vice-Chancellors. Consequently, most BJP leaders have an enormous inferiority
complex vis-à-vis the secularists and, even when in office, try to live up to
the norms laid down by their opponents.
This is hardly the impression created by
most experts; but the primary data, the only source to which this paper pledges
loyalty, tell a clear story: the present BJP is only termed a Hindu party in
deference to the distant memory of its initial orientation.
Abstract
Like the previous BJP Government, the
present one fails to live up to the oft-heard predictions of strident pro-Hindu
and anti-minority policies. This is due to a phenomenon insufficiently realized
by most India-watchers: a desire to live up to the norms upheld by the
secularists and an interiorization of the disinterest in "outdated"
Hindu concerns, not just among the numerous opportunists who have flocked to
the new party in power, but even in the loyal core of the BJP's personnel.
Based on insider sources, this paper enumerates the data establishing the
reality of "BJP secularism" and analyses the reasons for this
emerging phenomenon.
By now, it is clear that BJP will not promote any pro-Hindu agenda. Not even amendment of Articles 25, 28 and 30 of the Constitution, or repeal of Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Act, which are purely the concern of Hindus. I am quite certain that even if NDA were to come to power, or BJP were to come to power with better majority, it will do nothing for Hindu causes. BJP is simply not capable of defending itself against the onslaught of secularist brigade.
ReplyDeleteWhat a bunch of bullshit. What Bjp does has nothing to do with secular onslaught. It simply is because the BJP trash in power simply dont care about hindu agenda. Stop giving pathetic excuses.
Deletenice written post about "The Modi Government as an Exponent of BJP Secularism"
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