Democracy and Indian Muslims — Tufail Ahmad
DAILY TIMES (PAKISTANI NEWSPAPER) Saturday, March 16, 2013
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The
organising principles of Indian polity and society are the same that
define a western country: a multi-party system, individualism, liberty, a
free press and rule of law
Hafiz
Muhammad Saeed, the self-confessed leader of the banned outfit
Lashkar-e-Taiba, may think that Pakistan is the best Islamic nation for
the Bollywood star, Shahrukh Khan to move to, but
it is India that is
arguably the best Muslim country today. Muslims in India enjoy complete
political and religious liberty, a free legislative environment to
undertake economic and educational initiatives, a vibrant television
media and cinema that teach liberal coexistence, and access to a vast
number of universities and institutes of modern education. There is
absolutely no Muslim country that offers such a vast array of freedoms
to its people. India is able to offer these freedoms to its citizens because it is a successful democracy. It
was good for India to lose the 1857 war; if the British had lost,
Indians would have continued to be governed by kings and nawabs, and
under shari’a courts that existed during the Mughal era. At the time of
independence, the British left behind a justice system that was blind to
religious and caste inequities in Indian society, an
inclusive democracy that guaranteed equal rights and religious and
political freedoms for all; English language that opened doorway to
enlightenment and scientific education; and a civil service that treated
everyone as Indians rather than Muslims, Hindus or Christians. Muslims
in India enjoy these freedoms because India is a thriving democracy,
unlike Pakistan that chose a discriminatory constitution, barring its
own citizens from holding top positions such as the president of
Pakistan because they are Hindus or Christians. Over the past half
century, hundreds of millions of Dalits and women have found political
empowerment and social freedoms in Indian democracy. Religion cannot be a good model of governance for modern times because
it fails to imagine situations in which non-Muslim citizens could be
trusted to govern a Muslim country.
Conversely, democracies trust their citizens irrespective of their
faith. In a democracy like India, any citizen could compete to be the
elected ruler. As democracy matures,
India has appointed its Muslim citizens to top positions, currently
Hamid Ansari as vice president, Salman Khurshid as foreign minister,
Justice Altamas Kabir as Chief Justice, and Syed Asif Ibrahim as the
chief of the Intelligence Bureau. It is also true that Muslims lag
behind in India’s collective life, but this is because they are under
the influence of orthodox ulema or because Muslim politicians fail to
imagine themselves as leaders of all Indians. A Muslim politician will
be the country's prime minister the day Indian Muslims begin to view
themselves as leaders of all Indians and not only of Muslims, much like
Barack Obama who imagined himself as a leader not only of blacks, but of
all Americans. Effectively,
India is a ‘western’ country. In the popular imagination, the west is
viewed as a geographic concept, covering mainly the United States,
Britain and parts of Europe. However, the ground realities are
otherwise. Several countries, notably Australia, New Zealand, Japan and
South Korea, are situated in the east, but in terms of their values and
politics are firmly part of the west. Conversely, countries such as
Russia and some in Latin America are geographically in the west but
cannot be called a western country as their citizens do not enjoy the
social and political freedoms available to free people in the west. The
organising principles of Indian polity and society are the same that
define a western country: a multi-party system, individualism, liberty, a
free press and rule of law. As in a western country, consensus about
governance, politics and society is moderated by
media and political parties and is derived from differences rather than
similarities of religion and ideology as in Saudi Arabia or North
Korea.
Early
this year, Shahrukh Khan wrote a long article in which he discussed how
“stereotyping and contextualizing” determine the way societies treat us
as individuals as we interact with others. Khan narrated that he is
loved as a Bollywood star in every country, but is also questioned by
officials at US airports over links to terrorists, as his surname is
shared by an unknown terrorist. Khan also observed: “There have been
occasions when I have been accused of bearing allegiance to our
neighbouring nation [Pakistan].” Hafiz Saeed reacted to this statement,
suggesting that Khan, and presumably all Indian Muslims, should move to
Pakistan. If Khan were to move to
Pakistan, think of the images he would
witness everyday: the genocide of Shia Muslims; the Taliban bombers
shooting girls and namazis; Karachi up in flames and Pakistani
businessmen leaving the country; plight of Hindus and Christians and
lawlessness everywhere.
Saeed
and his cohorts must bear in mind that terrorism that affects Muslims
in India originates from Pakistan: the jihad in Kashmir through the
1990s or the attacks by Indian Mujahideen collaborating with their
controllers in Pakistan. Like any country, India has its own share of
extremist Hindus as well as Islamic and naxalite militants, but the
courts are taking care of them.
Indian
democracy is a model for all Islamic countries. It is the only country
where Muslims have experienced democracy solidly for more than half a
century;
the other countries where Muslims have had some democratic experience
are Indonesia and Turkey but their experiences have been limited to just
a few decades. Democracies trust their citizens and are accountable to
them. Democracies also bring freedom and economic prosperity for their
people. In his book, Development as Freedom, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen
demonstrated that famines have occurred only in countries governed under
authoritarianism while freedom available to people in democracies has
ensured economic welfare of their entire populations. Indian
democracy has a large Muslim population, about the same as in Pakistan.
As democracy matures and economy prospers, Muslims in India are
beginning to benefit from a sea of economic and educational
opportunities opening before them. Islamic
and authoritarian countries like Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and
North Korea do not trust their own people. Islamic terrorists,
jihadists like Hafiz Saeed and other Taliban-like Islamists think of
defending their religions and ideologies rather than the interests and
welfare of their people. It is due to such thinking that 180 million
people of Pakistan are today literally buried under the weight of a
failed education system, a rapidly collapsing Pakistani economy that is
forcing business leaders to move their money to countries such Sri
Lanka, lawlessness that makes common Pakistanis insecure in their own
homes and a future that fails to offer hope. The Inter-Services
Intelligence, a friend of Saeed that imagines itself as the ideological
guardian of the Islamic state of Pakistan, could do a favour by trusting
the Pakistani people and letting them decide their own course of life
and governance.
The writer is a former BBC
Urdu Service journalist, is Director of South Asia Studies Project at the Middle East Media Research Institute, Washington DC.
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