Whose India is it anyway?

By AIJAZ ZAKA SYED I ARAB NEWS

Just when you think outfits like Shiv Sena couldn’t get any more disingenuous and meaner, they come up with more of the same. After all, for nearly five decades Sena has done nothing but spewed sweetness and light and you would think it had squeezed the last drops of political mileage out of spreading all round cheer and goodness.

This time around though, it seems Sena and its rabble-rousing chief Bal Thackeray have finally swallowed more than they could chew.

All these years, Sena has fed and grown on divisive and subversive politics. From targeting poor south Indians or the Madrasis as they are contemptuously called to attacking Muslims as “traitors and Pakistani agents”, Shiv Sena has swelled and expanded its ranks the way all such outfits do — by preying and playing on people’s deepest insecurities and complexes.

Of late, north Indian “bhayyas” or people from the Hindi heartland of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh have been the target of Sena’s campaign. From bashing up the north Indian youths appearing for job interviews and tests in Mumbai to attacking poor cabbies from small towns and villages working the city’s crowded streets, Shiv Sena has not just terrorized the city but has held the whole of India hostage to its brute power.

A great deal has been said about Mumbai’s infamous underworld and its stranglehold over the nation’s financial and cultural capital. But indeed it is Shiv Sena — and now its other franchise headed by Bal Thackeray’s nephew Raj Thackeray — that rules Mumbai’s streets. For years, from Bollywood’s most popular Khans to the powerful industrialists and billionaires, just about everybody who’s somebody has been cowering in their pants and paying obeisance to the deity at Matoshri from time to time.

No one could survive in Mumbai by getting on the wrong side of the Sena. Ramgopal Verma captured it rather well in his dark and brooding blockbuster, “Sarkar”, even though one couldn’t quite accept the redoubtable Amitabh Bachchan in Thackeray’s avatar. Big B succeeds in conveying the quiet menace of his character in his measure style, even glamorizing the legend of Thackeray in the process.

Lately, there have been increasing signs that Mumbai, one of the greatest and most vibrant cities, wants to move on. It is showing signs of revolt against the kind of venomous politics the Sena and its allies have been playing all these years. This week, Mumbai and India sent a loud and clear message to the Thackerays, and everyone else who cared to pay attention, that they aren’t prepared to take any more baloney in the name of Marathi people and the so-called son of the soil.

Shiv Sena’s tyranny is being challenged by Mumbai wallahs and ordinary Indians on two fronts: Its campaign against the so-called outsiders and its endless bashing of Muslims and Pakistan.

IT was this changing mood that may have emboldened and encouraged Bollywood megastar Shah Rukh Khan and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi to defy the Sena toughies. It was curiously uplifting to see Shah Rukh stiffen his spine and stand up to the terror tactics of the Thackerays.

By refusing to eat his words criticizing the exclusion of Pakistani cricketers in the Indian Premier League matches, Shah Rukh may have made up for the moral spinelessness of the world’s biggest film industry all these years. The actor refused to give in and go down on his knees, as many before him repeatedly have, even when the Sena threatened to prevent the screening of his much-awaited movie, “My Name is Khan”. (As I write this, there are reports of Sena vandalizing cinemas across the state.)

For his part, Rahul Gandhi, the scion of the nation’s most celebrated political dynasty and probably future leader of the world’s largest democracy, showed rare political and moral courage that has been lacking in the governing Congress for some time. Rahul not just took on the Sena for its campaign against north Indians by declaring that every inch of India belongs to all Indians but he traveled to Mumbai to take the local train to Dadar, right into the heart of Sena territory.

LIKE a simple, ordinary guy confronting neighborhood bully in a Bollywood production, Rahul defied and vanquished the Sena in a manner not seen in years. Am I being sentimental here? Maybe. Perhaps, it was a routine populist gesture — the kind that comes naturally to our politicians. But there was something quintessentially Gandhian about Rahul taking that trip in the face of threats and dire warnings and peacefully but resolutely confronting the folks who only speak and understand the language of violence and force.

This is the way to go. If India has to attain the heights of greatness that it aspires to and deserves to achieve, it can do so only by following in the footsteps of Gandhi and other visionaries of modern India. If India is respected and admired around the world, it’s because of emulating that vision, not because of the hate-fueled politics as practiced by outfits like Shiv Sena, a party that has been repeatedly snubbed by the voters.

India wants to move on. In fact, it has already moved on from the poisoned temple-mosque politics of the 1980s and 1990s. It is evident in the decline of parties like Shiv Sena, BJP and others. This may be why even BJP and its ideological parent RSS have criticized Thackeray, their ally and fellow traveler for years. This may be bad news for the Hindutva alliance but it augurs well for India and its rich, diverse and pluralist society.

With the progressive decline of the United States, China and India are being seen around the world as the next superpower. While China’s pace of growth is far more consistent, I believe it’s India that is more qualified and deserves to be the next world leader. With its stable democratic institutions, genuinely independent judiciary and media and a healthy civil society, India is best prepared to take over the mantle of global leadership from America.

The US has come this far and enjoys the eminence of global leadership not because of its military or economic might but because of its democratic institutions and welcoming nature of its multicultural society. If America is where it finds itself today, it is because it has constantly welcomed dreamers and go-getters and enterprising, talented and hard working people from around the world.

It’s a nation of immigrants and its doors have always remained open for everyone who wants a slice of American pie. It matters not where you come from or who you are. What matters is what you can bring to the table and how you can contribute. This is the secret of American dream. If India has to be a world leader like America, it can do so only by preserving and promoting its all-welcoming, all-embracing culture and attitude, an India where everyone gets his or her due with dignity.

When Indians find themselves unwelcome in their own country in cities like Mumbai, how can this amazing country ever hope to touch the heights of greatness that it seeks to touch? Future belongs to the India of Rahul Gandhi, Shah Rukh Khan and Sachin Tendulkar, and not to the banana republic that parties like Sena want to make out of India.

— Aijaz Zaka Syed is a Dubai-based commentator.
aijaz.syed@hotmail.com

Comments

MOHAMMED SAJID ALI

Report abuse
I am a great admirer of two columnists one was Noora Al kheraiji and the other is Aijaz Ali Zaka. She bring up the social issues the public attention in a meaningfull way where as Aijaz Ali Zaka is versatile in presenting the world issue in an excellant manner to the world public. May God bless both the writers with a more powerful pen, Ameen.

MARIAM

Report abuse
Dear Aijaz Bhai,
HATS OFF TO U MAN..... I really appreciate you for this column....You have wriitten abosoultely 100% correct and i totally agree with you. Mumbai is a part of India....so its a Business hub.....but also its a city of dreams for eveyone....not only for Marathis as Shiv Sena people say or think....Mumbai is for every Indian.....Shiv Sena people think as if they own Mumbai...or they got Mumbai from their ancestral property.....Mumbai...is for everyone...

SYED SHAFIQUL ISLAM

Report abuse
Yes - India is a big country having the so called biggest democracy of the world, have the nuclear power, improving daily the destructive power i.e. nuclear, but the hard truth is - it cannot supply water to its citizens. It will remain as Mr. Zaka dreams in the media, never will reach what he is talking about - period.

SYED SHAFIQUL ISLAM

Report abuse
Mr. Zaka - keep on writing as you say "India is more prepared and deserves to be the next world leader." What I know rather some wise people say "when a lie is repeated 99 times, it remains lie but as soon it reaches 100 times, it becomes true." On the basis of repeating may be Mr. Zaka's dream will come true.

SIDDIQUI

Report abuse
Our Indians specially the Political parties need to be given the best oscar award for hypocrisy ,they talk about Patriotism and they dont raise a word against this sick local party whose patriotism is only have a limited boundry of marathi land . This is all becuase of ourz illiterate and poor public who are easy target for this polticians to play around with them
Post your comment

required

required (email will never be displayed)

Please enter the following characters in the box provided (case sensitive). This helps us prevent automated programs from creating accounts and sending spam.

All comments are subject to approval

Terms and conditions

Latest comments

Russia used veto to avoid civil war in Syria: Ambassador

Wow. This SILENCE IS DEAFENING. Where are all the "muslims" writing letters against this bloo

Dom Sanchez at Feb 9, 2012 07:32

3 comments

Indian ministers quit over porn clip

This is the true face of BJP

open eye at Feb 9, 2012 07:31

3 comments

Afghanistan: A hippie trail or a graveyard?

To Steve and Dave, <br/> <br/>Dave, you are correct regarding the fact that Abdulateef was refe

David at Feb 9, 2012 07:31

10 comments

Tadawul rises to 21-month high

Not only that, but the turnover crossed 10 billion Saudi Riyal - first time after 2007!!! <br/

kishore nair at Feb 9, 2012 07:30

1 comments

Prince Alwaleed, Twitter CEO discuss tie-up

Almighty Allah give you power,success in all your doings,actions,tryings for The Good Work of A

oph.op.dr.nevin kuyumcu at Feb 9, 2012 07:29

1 comments

New leader calls for unity government amid turmoil in Maldives

Democratic Form of Government is becoming a 'JOKE' and 'LAUGHING <br/>STOCK' for the people al

MUBARAK ALI PATEL at Feb 9, 2012 06:10

1 comments