Here is a pretty good piece by Bikash Sarma in the Sentinel. He raisessome 
salient issues on the need for a uniform civil code in India.
Secularism should also mean that sometimes people ought to beprotected from 
their own religions. Personal laws (Religious) that areunfair have no place in 
a secular society.
--Ram
------------------------------Killing a Woman TwiceBikash Sarmah
In the wake of the rising Mullah's voice in India and the terror thatsome 
claustrophobic Hindu bigots want to strike in the name of RamRajya, one would 
have enough reasons to decry the secular garb thatIndia dons. We will surely 
talk about Hindu bigotry — as opposed tothe austerity of the Hindu ethos — at 
some other time ; in fact, wecan take some time for that because we have not 
only a whole lot ofeducated and progressive Hindus to take care of Hindu 
bigotry but alsoa whole lot of pseudo-secular gurus in politics who would 
hardlyhesitate to exaggerate Hindu bigotry so as to raise some sort of 
aninternational alarm. Therefore, at the moment, we would deliberate onthe 
Mullah's voice and the increasing legitimacy of Islamicobscurantism in a 
so-called secular India.
Let us first assure ourselves that we are not hawks in an Islamiccountry. One 
must have heard about the Mukhtar Mai episode inPakistan, an Islamic country. 
Just recall that this 33-year old womanwas gangraped in June 2002 on the orders 
of an Islamic villagecouncil. Her 'crime' was that her brother had an affair 
with a girlbelonging to a powerful rival clan. After three excruciating 
years,Mukhtar is back in the limelight after the Pakistan Supreme Courtordered 
the re-arrest of all the accused — a total of 13 bestial'human beings'. We do 
not want to dwell on this episode here. This isjust to kickstart the big 
debate. One does have the right to invokeMukhtar Mai here, because many sane, 
secular minds are scared intoday's India, thinking that a Mukhtar Mai-type 
fatwa could haunt theIndians too! And there is a reason for such a scare.
Recently, the Islamic seminary Darul Uloom Deoband passed an edict —an 
extremely obscurantist one in a modern nation-state — that Imrana,who was raped 
by her father-in-law in Muzaffarnagar in Uttar Pradesh,cannot live with her 
husband anymore. This is so because, according toBegum Naseem Iqtedar Ali Khan 
who is a member of the All India MuslimPersonal Law Board (AIMPLB), "as per the 
Quran, Imran's conjugalrelationship with her husband stands dissolved, since 
she has beenraped by the latter's blood relative". In the Begum's view, had 
shebeen raped by "anyone other than a blood relative, she could havestayed with 
her husband as in the Bilkis case of Gujarat". So,according to the Islamic law, 
a sacred relationship has been violated,"the consequences of which have to be 
borne by Imrana and her husbandNoor Ilahi".
Nothing could be more absurd and obscurantist than this. Though it isanother 
matter that Imrana and her husband have agreed to abide by theDeoband's edict, 
what moves a progressive mind, whether Hindu orMuslim, in a secular country is 
that in the absence of a uniform civilcode — the most important hallmark of 
secularism — a bunch ofirrational mullahs have begun to step into the domain of 
law and,hence, into the domain of civilization. Castigating the 
Deoband'sdecision to deny the rape victim her right to continue her marriedlife 
which she would want to do, CPI (M) Politburo member Brinda Karatsaid that it 
is a "shocking example of how the thekedars of religioncan bulldoze the 
constitutional rights of a citizen". Absolutelyright. The thekedars of religion 
— in the instant case, the mullahsmanning the Deoband — have not only lowered 
the dignity of theirreligion by killing an innocent woman twice but also 
disturbed themaking of a just, egalitarian and secular society by meddlin!
g with apurely criminal offence committed by a lecherous father-in-law 
againstwhom there is no fatwa (wonder of wonders!).
The Imrana episode is a chilling one that reminds us of the need of auniform 
civil code — an area that the Directive Principles stress soclearly but which 
fails to be realized due to the pseudo-secular orderof the day. Other things 
apart, in the absence of a uniform civilcode, the worst sufferers have been 
innocent women doomed to lead arepudiated life so full of insecurities. This 
gives the religiousbodies and the "messengers of the Almighty" that the Deoband 
mullahsmight claim to be, the right to throw away an innocent woman 
anytime,anywhere.
And all this happens in the name of religion which never really tellsa woman, 
who has been brutally raped by a fatherly figure, thefather-in-law (father in 
law), to walk out of her marriage justbecause there has been a sexual 
relationship with the blood relativeof the husband. The most ridiculous thing 
is that the Deoband's edictcalls it a "sexual relationship". Dear religious 
gurus, it is not arelationship; it is rape — forced sexual intercourse — that 
too, by afather-in-law. Had the Shariat been really invoked, the 
father-in-lawshould have been stoned to death, because this is what would 
actuallyhappen in a purely Islamic country. If you do not believe, have 
aholiday in Saudi Arabia to see Shariat in action.
CPI (M) General Secretary Prakash Karat is right (the Left sometimestalks 
sense) when he says: "If the personal law of any communityinfringes upon the 
genuine rights of women, the law of the land shouldtake centre stage and impart 
justice." Let this be said here in nouncertain terms that if the personal laws 
of any community, Hindu orMuslim or otherwise, begin to betray the cause of 
law, thusundermining all secular efforts to establish an egalitarian 
societywhere women will have as much space as men, and if these 
obsoletepersonal laws attack the whole secular fabric of a progressive nationin 
the making, one would do God (if one believes Him) a bit of favourby throwing 
away such distorted personal laws. Personal laws that killa woman twice 
contribute to the making of a greater crime, because noreligion tells ordinary 
men to imagine a few laws, write them downfoolishly, and then attack the very 
fact of womanhood.
Naeem Hamid, a member of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board,seems to have 
mustered enough courage to decry the Deoband's edict.Hamid says: "Deoband 
should have kept quiet on this issue as India isnot an Islamic country. They 
have no right to issue a fatwa on acriminal offence. What is the logic behind 
giving a decision in whichone party (Imrana) is penalized when it has no power 
to punish theculprit?" Yes, this is what should move us. If the Deoband 
cannotpunish the guilty father-in-law, what authority it has to punish 
theinnocent rape victim? Absolutely none. And this is not even religion.If it 
is, the world would be a far better place without any religion.
But fundamentalists would not agree. How could they? In a so-calledsecular 
country, if the political leaders use religion as a tool tograb power, 
resorting to the mischief of religious appeasement, onewould always have a 
situation where religious fundamentalists couldstorm into politics anytime, 
thus hindering all progressivepropensities. This is clear as one analyses the 
unsavoury Imranaepisode. Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mulayam Singh Yadav says 
thatthe Imrana fatwa is right. According to him, the fatwa was ordered 
by"religious leaders who are learned people". He further said that itwould be 
better "to leave such issues to religious leaders". Thisshows very clearly to 
what extent our 'secular' politicians go. Infact, politicians like Mulayam 
Singh Yadav have a 'secular' obligation— they never mince a word against the 
mullahs, the "learned people",because these people represent the religious 
minority, and secularism,in Mulayam's view, must pamper these thekedars of 
religi!
on. WhatMulayam does not know is that these Deoband leaders do not 
representIslam in the real sense. Nor would he care to know the voice of 
theliberal Muslims in India, because that would snatch away his 
'secular'vote-bank.
This brings us to a very important fact of secularism. Irfan Habib, anoted 
historian who is also a protagonist of the liberal Muslim'svoice in India, once 
said that secularism must necessarily mean"relying on reason". A country held 
to ransom by religious bodies andreligious leaders who do not know even a bit 
of the spiritual aspectof religion — like our gaggle of fake mullahs and sadhus 
— can neverclaim to be secular. To put it the other way, a country that does 
nothave a uniform civil code in place cannot claim to be secular. Themost 
surprising thing is this: Muslim personal law in India requiresShariat to be 
applied only in civil cases and absolutely not incriminal cases, which is a 
double standard, and this double standardis within another double standard 
which is the fact that there arepersonal laws in a secular country.
Who would fight for a uniform civil code? The Congress? The Left? TheBJP? The 
Congress will never do it because any such fight willcontradict its policy of 
religious appeasement. The Left can do it butagain it would run the 'secular' 
risk of it being dubbed anti-Muslim.How could the Left sing the BJP's song? The 
BJP can definitely do itbut here also it would run the risk of it being dubbed 
'communal'.Strange, India is still secular without being really so! And that 
iswhy a woman is killed twice here. Only a uniform civil code can saveher. Is 
it not the duty of modern India to see that a woman is notkilled twice?
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