["Hindutva" - a term popularised by V D Savarkar, its original ideologue,
an Indian shorthand for "Hindu (majoritarian) nationalism", is a political
doctrine which, on the way to its final goal of "Hindu Rashtra", tries to
mobilise the Indian Hindus as "Hindus", drowning out all other identities
linked to class, caste, language, gender etc., in aggressive opposition to
the (supposedly) inimical "others", by fomenting hatred and violence
against them.
Hatred and violence, against the despised "other", is the very defining
marker.

The term is quite often used rather inappropriately, unwittingly by some
and deliberately by others.
Mere affiliation with, or public display or even instrumentalist use of,
Hindu religion, thus does not qualify to be branded as "Hindutva" - whether
"hard" or "soft".
Gandhi is, conceivably, the most graphic illustration.
He used to wear his religion on his sleeve, raised the call of "Ram Rajya".
Yet, no sane one would term him as a Hindutva proponent.
Apart from putting his very life at grave risk, with stupendous courage, on
several occasions to save the Muslims, that he'd eventually fall to the
bullets of a Hindutva activist, arguably, provides the most telling proof.
Similarly, one of his closest and most ardent followers, Khan Abdul Ghaffar
Khan - tagged as 'Frontier Gandhi', raising and leading a volunteer brigade
called 'Khudai Khidmatgar', was no Islamist - "Hard" or "soft".

The term is pretty often bandied about rather loosely with either political
malintentions or out of sheer ignorance or a combination of both.

<<Over the last two years, the Congress has indulged in what some observers
have derisively called “soft Hindutva”. During the recent state election
campaigns in Gujarat as well as Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, Rahul Gandhi
visited dozens of temples and presented himself as a Shiv bhakt.
Beyond optics, the Congress has begun flirting with some of the BJP’s
favourite campaign themes. The party manifesto in MP promised to build
gaushalas (cow shelters), develop commercial production of gaumutra (cow
urine) and cow dung, promote the Ram Van Gaman Path (the path that Lord Ram
took during his exile from Ayodhya), pass laws that would conserve India’s
sacred rivers, and promote Sanskrit. The deputy speaker of the Vidhan Sabha
and manifesto committee chair, Rajendra Singh, admitted that the Congress
was adopting this platform in response to BJP pressures: “The BJP used to
brand us as [a] Muslim party. It’s a conscious decision to shed that tag
thrust on us by our rivals.”>>

It's a sort of a mystery (or really not?) why the caption of the write-up
in the print edition got changed here.]

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/congress-secularism-lok-sabha-elections-2019-5623316/?fbclid=IwAR3IZXngkfO_ItdL4MVLeqokdFxvK6VTsYtBKrCyA4sgBmeY0wlrfwRiYGY

Beyond optics, Congress has begun flirting with some of BJP’s favourite
campaign themes
The acid test for measuring the degree of Congress secularism today has
less to do with symbolic gestures (like temple visits) and the
representation of Muslims in assemblies than with concrete public policy.

Written by Christophe Jaffrelot |

Updated: March 13, 2019 7:46:57 am

Congress president Rahul Gandhi during a rally. (Express Photo)

Over the last two years, the Congress has indulged in what some observers
have derisively called “soft Hindutva”. During the recent state election
campaigns in Gujarat as well as Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, Rahul Gandhi
visited dozens of temples and presented himself as a Shiv bhakt.

Beyond optics, the Congress has begun flirting with some of the BJP’s
favourite campaign themes. The party manifesto in MP promised to build
gaushalas (cow shelters), develop commercial production of gaumutra (cow
urine) and cow dung, promote the Ram Van Gaman Path (the path that Lord Ram
took during his exile from Ayodhya), pass laws that would conserve India’s
sacred rivers, and promote Sanskrit. The deputy speaker of the Vidhan Sabha
and manifesto committee chair, Rajendra Singh, admitted that the Congress
was adopting this platform in response to BJP pressures: “The BJP used to
brand us as [a] Muslim party. It’s a conscious decision to shed that tag
thrust on us by our rivals.”

As a result, the Congress manifesto in the state differed vastly from the
previous one issued in 2013. Five years ago, the party devoted a whole
section to the “Minority Community”, in which it promised to furnish
special economic assistance to provide modern education in madrasas, a new
law to curb communal violence, and the implementation of the Sachar
Committee recommendations.

This trend is partly reconfirmed by the party’s strategy in ticket
distribution. The Congress has recently refrained from fielding large
numbers of Muslim candidates. In 2014, it nominated only 27 Muslim
candidates for the Lok Sabha elections, a paltry 5.6 per cent of its total
candidates. But this underrepresentation of Muslim candidates needs to be
qualified at the state level: The Congress has nominated very few Muslims
in critical states like Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, MP,
Maharashtra, Odisha, Rajasthan, and Tamil Nadu. But in other states, the
proportion of Muslim candidates approximated or exceeded the proportion of
Muslims in the general population, like in Kerala (16 per cent), Assam
(22.9 per cent), Bihar (24.3 per cent), UP (19.2 per cent), and West Bengal
(32.6 per cent). In all these states, except Assam, the percentage of
Muslim candidates fielded by the Congress has increased recently. In fact,
it is only in two-party states where the Congress faces off against the
BJP, that the party likely made a strategic decision on the grounds that
the minority community has no other choice but to vote the Congress for
defeating the BJP.

The underrepresentation of Muslims among Congress candidates needs to be
qualified in two other ways. First, the BJP’s underrepresentation of
Muslims is far more significant. Second, the Congress has never nominated
many Muslim candidates, even under Nehru and Indira Gandhi, largely because
of the steady influence of Hindu traditionalists at the state level. But
under Nehru and Indira Gandhi (at least till the 1970s), this state of
things did not significantly undermine the secular identity of the Congress.

In fact, over the years, the Congress has retained its secular image for
several reasons: The secular credentials of many of its top leaders (often
more secular than party cadres and state-level figures); its propensity to
nominate a large number of Muslims in certain states; its branding, by the
BJP, as a “Muslim party” in order to discredit the Congress in the eyes of
the Hindu majority; and its concern — at the top level — with the
socioeconomic conditions and physical security of minority populations.

The acid test for measuring the degree of Congress secularism today has
less to do with symbolic gestures (like temple visits) and the
representation of Muslims in assemblies than with concrete public policy.
To date, the party has not moved decisively to implement the
recommendations of the Sachar Committee report, at least in part due to
pressure emanating from the Sangh Parivar. Whether Congress-led governments
at the state-level will draw inspiration from this report will be one
important indicator of how resilient Congress secularism is. A second
benchmark is the well-being of Muslim citizens. Whether Congress-run state
governments provide security to minorities and restore their trust in state
institutions, including the police, will be an important measure of the
party’s secular credentials. Here again, the situation varies from one
Congress-ruled state to another, according to the party leaders’ capacity
to resist Hindu nationalists’ pressures.

After the Congress won the 2018 elections in MP, the BJP immediately
accused the state government of discontinuing the mass recitation of “Vande
Mataram” at the Secretariat on the first day of every month — a practice
the BJP had introduced in 2005. The new Congress chief minister, Kamal
Nath, responded by announcing a “bigger Vande Mataram event”. More
importantly, the MP police arrested three Muslims accused of cow slaughter
under the National Security Act (NSA). Interestingly, one of the accused
was arrested under the Bajrang Dal’s pressure.

The Deputy Chief Minister of the Congress government of Rajasthan, Sachin
Pilot, disagreed openly with this attitude: “It is fine to protect animals
that are sacred and I believe in that too, but I think we could have done a
better job by prioritising those issues first [including ‘the dignity of
fellow human beings’] and then taken on the cow issue”. Such discordant
voices offer an illustration of the traditionally multifaceted character of
the Congress regarding secularism.

Not only have state units of the Congress traditionally tended to differ
from each other ideologically, but the contrast between the secular
attitude of the top leadership and the Hindu traditionalism of the local
party bosses was striking as early as the 1950s. This constant has been
illustrated by the Congress attitude in the Sabarimala controversy. Kerala
Congress leaders opposed the Supreme Court’s decision, like the BJP, in the
name of Hindu tradition. But Rahul Gandhi openly contradicted their stand
in the name of equality. However, after months of agitation — mainly by the
BJP’s Kerala unit — he diluted his position saying that he was not “able to
give an open and shut position on this (question)”.

Whether the party leadership will impose a coherent line remains to be
seen, but its ambivalence on the secularism question may not solely depend
on the popularity Hindu nationalism has acquired. Indira Gandhi indulged in
similar ambiguity and the Congress of the 2010s is probably not
compromising its secularism more than in the early 1980s, when Indira
Gandhi inaugurated the VHP-sponsored Bharat Mata Mandir and when some of
its state units remained dominated by Hindu traditionalists (who, for
instance, prevented Urdu from being recognised as a state language in UP
until 1989).

This article first appeared in the print edition on March 13, 2019, with
the title ‘Secular isn’t a label’.

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Peace Is Doable

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