http://scroll.in/article/812234/lesson-from-gujarat-cow-protection-vigilante-groups-need-to-be-banned

OPINION

Lesson from Gujarat: Cow protection vigilante groups need to be banned

Will Rahul Gandhi and Arvind Kejriwal overcome their upper caste
sensibilities to demand a ban on Gau Raksha Dals operating in several
states?

Image credit:  Twitter/Video Grab

8 hours ago
Updated 6 hours ago

Ajaz Ashraf

The atrocities committed on four Dalits in Una, Gujarat, for skinning
a dead cow has several layers of overlapping meanings. But perhaps
none is as stark as the one that conveys to us the dangers of allowing
anti-cow slaughter vigilante groups to operate with impunity.

These vigilante groups have mushroomed around the country. They are
prone to taking over the role of law-enforcers, and meting out instant
justice to whoever they apprehend ferrying cattle, regardless of
whether these were sold and purchased legitimately. The Una incident
tells us that vigilantism is a contagious disease spread by the
viruses called suspicion and self-righteousness.

Balu Sarvaiya and his sons – who were stripped, tied and beaten
mercilessly in Una – are cow-worshippers. Balu even owned a bovine. It
is their job to dispose of dead cows, to harvest from them the skin
used for leather – for instance, to make cricket balls. It is
traditionally considered a polluting job no high caste would
undertake.

Atrocities were committed on Balu, his sons and two labourers because
Hindutva foot-soldiers presumably suspected the cow had been killed
surreptitiously, or they believed that even skinning a dead bovine was
sacrilege. It is impossible for them to conceive that a person could
worship the cow and yet, on its death, harvest from it body parts for
which there is an industrial demand.

This should tell you about the mindset of activists engaged in cow protection.

Over the last two years, cow vigilante groups have spread terror on
the roads crisscrossing north India. But the police haven’t sought to
curb their activities. Instead, those whom cow-protection groups
injure grievously often find themselves detained and entangled in
police cases.

Killers of the cow should be hanged, says graffiti on the walls of Gurgaon.

Hindutva hardline

Home Minister Rajnath Singh has described the atrocities against
Dalits in Una as a “social evil” which must be tackled and eradicated.
But this social evil will continue until the Gau Raksha Dal is banned,
which is one of the demands Dalit leaders from Gujarat have voiced.

There can be no doubt that Sarvaiya has become the Rohith Vemula of
2016 – the Hyderabad Central University student who committed suicide
in January this year to protest against the alleged discriminatory
policies of the authorities. He is the new symbol of discrimination
and injustice inherent to Hindutva in ascendant. And he will haunt the
Bharatiya Janata Party and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has tried
to assiduously woo the Dalits to ensure they vote for the party in the
Uttar Pradesh Assembly election.

Modi and Singh will rue that all their hard work to win over Dalits
has been thrown into disarray because of the over-enthusiasm of a
handful of cow protectionists. But this diagnosis would be flawed. Not
only does Una underscore the inherent limitations of Hindutva as a
unifying force, but also that it only widens social chasm in the long
run.

Indeed, Hindutva lacks the capacity to paper over caste disparities
because it is sneeringly disrespectful of cultural practices of lower
castes and their economic pursuits. It is a Brahminical imposition.
This is why a vigorous Hindutva sharpens caste contradictions instead
of reconciling them. It rhetorically propagates the idea of equality
among Hindus, but is deeply dividing in practice.

Hindutva’s own sense of its limitations is why its proponents have
invented tools to create the “other”, the “enemy” of Hindus to unify
them. It is as cynical in its use of the cow for this purpose as it is
about history and disputes over places of worship.

For decades, the proponents of Hindutva – particularly those belonging
to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh – have been claiming that since
Hindus revere the cow as holy, its slaughter should be prohibited to
respect their religious sentiments. They made this demand on the
Indian state, which was projected as being disinterested in protecting
the cow to mollycoddle Muslims and, to an extent, Christians, in whose
food culture beef isn’t a taboo.

Supporters of Hindutva wanted a complete ban on cow-slaughter,
regardless of the age of the bovines, even those no longer
economically useful. They also demanded protection for bullocks and
bulls, claiming any conditional ban would encourage illegal selling of
cows to slaughter-houses. In their imagination, the only use of cows
past the age of giving milk is their meat.

>From this perspective, the cow is perceived as a holy but helpless
creature trapped between Hindus who are its protector and Muslims who
have an insatiable appetite for beef. There is thus a perpetual,
unannounced war between Hindus and Muslims over the cow. The intensity
of this war is heightened every time Hindutva grabs power, whether in
states or at the Centre, as has been happening ever since Modi became
Prime Minister.

Busting the myth

Una has busted the myth about the cow that Hindutva has created. For
one, it has portrayed to the nation that the cow has more use than
just providing milk, that there are marginalised Hindu communities
dependent on it for their sustenance. We all know its skin has several
uses, as do its bones and fat.

Priced lower than mutton and chicken, cattle meat is also the cheapest
source of protein for the poor. Balu Sarvaiya has claimed he can’t
think of slaughtering the cow, but there are others who do consume
beef. Social scientist Kancha Ilaiah told Scroll in an interview last
year that during his childhood he remembered Dalits of south India
eating meat of even dead or diseased cattle. He also claimed that
young, urbane upper castes consumed nearly half of beef haleem that
restaurants in Hyderabad prepare during the month of Ramzan.

All this would be known to Hindutva proponents. To impose their
cultural sensibilities on lower caste Hindus, the debate on the
cow-slaughter has been placed in the frame of supposedly
irreconcilable differences between Hindus and Muslims. In other words,
Hindus should refuse to partake of beef not only because the cow is
revered, but also because Muslims – the other – consume it.

Unification of Hindus is a longterm project to be achieved by
triggering communal mobilisation over various issues, including cow
protection. Una is decidedly a setback to Hindutva. It has sharpened
the schism between castes. It has communicated to Muslims and Dalits
that they are united in their suffering because of the rampaging
Hindutva, evident from media reports which claim Muslims joined Dalits
in petitioning authorities at several places to demand justice for the
victims of atrocity in Una.

There is an irony that the caste contradiction has come to the surface
so ferociously in Gujarat, which has been long touted as a veritable
Hindutva laboratory. It is even more ironical that this has happened
over the cow. This is the state where under the chief ministership of
Modi a stringent cattle-protection law was passed, prohibiting the
slaughter of not only cows of all ages but also bullocks and bulls.

Till then, the Supreme Court’s position had been that a total ban on
bullocks and bulls, despite being of old age and no longer
economically useful, amounted to imposing unreasonable restrictions on
the butchers – and was, therefore, ultra vires of the Constitution.
This the Supreme Court reversed in 2005, through a judgement upholding
the Gujarat government’s legislation. It declared bullocks and bulls
are useful even in old age because their urine and dung are
alternative sources of energy.

The judgement inspired both Haryana and Maharashtra to adopt the
Gujarat model and pass stringent laws imposing harsh punishment on
those found guilty of slaughtering cattle, once the BJP came to power
in these states. Obviously, vigilante groups don’t wait for the court
to pronounce an alleged violator guilty – they decide on the evidence
of traders ferrying cattle to mercilessly beat and, at times, lynch
them.

Muslim fears

Most of these victims have been Muslim. In Jharkhand, for instance,
two Muslims, including a minor, were hanged when they were apprehended
on their way to sell cattle in a fair. There wasn’t a squeak to ban
the Gau Raksha Dal then, even from the Muslim community, in contrast
to what we have witnessed following the reprehensible Una episode in
Gujarat.

Nor did the Muslims agitate against the injustices meted to their
community members by vigilante groups, as has been the case in
Gujarat. This tells you about the fears of Muslims, their belief that
an expression of anger even over genuine grievances – and peacefully
at that – will boomerang on them. That it will only enable the
Hindutva brigade to consolidate the Hindus against Muslims.

No doubt, the nation, including the political class, was outraged at
the Dadri incident, in which Mohammad Akhlaq was lynched last year on
the suspicion of consuming and also stocking beef. Different political
leaders made a beeline for Dadri, including Rahul Gandhi.

However, the Congress subtly shifted its stance thereafter, perhaps
apprehensive that a show of support for Akhlaq would alienate the
Hindus. Perhaps this was the reason why Congress leader Digvijaya
Singh tweeted boasting that it was the Congress government in UP,
Bihar, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh which banned cow-slaughter all the
way back in the 1950s!

As Rahul Gandhi and AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal make a beeline for Una,
it has to be seen whether they will demand a ban on vigilante groups
seeking to protect the cow or seek a revision of laws which have
imposed a complete ban on cattle-slaughter. It is perhaps imperative
for the nation to revert to the pre-2005 position on cattle slaughter,
as Una has tragically demonstrated that there are social groups whose
livelihood depends on the cow.

The outrage over Una has seen as many as 17 Dalits attempt suicide in
protest against the despicable activities of cow protectionists. It is
a symbolic action aimed at arousing the conscience of the nation,
particularly those who subscribe to Hindutva. Let us see whether the
conscience of our leaders is pricked and they are able to overcome
their upper caste sensibilities to demand a ban on Gau Raksha Dals
operating in several states.

Ajaz Ashraf is a journalist from Delhi. His novel, The Hour Before
Dawn, published by HarperCollins, is available in bookstores.


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