*The Tragic Innocence of Being Faisal Khan*
India cannot take its syncretic tradition for granted. A culture of
communal amity has to be rebuilt from the ground up.
Subhash Gatade <https://www.newsclick.in/author/Subhash%20Gatade>

06 Nov 2020 (https://www.newsclick.in/The-Tragic-Innocence-Being-Faisal-Khan
)
[image: Fasial.]

Irony died a thousand deaths on Monday, 2 November, when 48-year-old
non-violent activist Faisal Khan, a founder member of a revived Khudai
Khidmatgar, was arrested by the Uttar Pradesh police. The charge against
him is that he spread disharmony and hurt religious sentiment, by offering
namaz at a Krishna temple in Mathura. He and three other members of his
organisation, whose name roughly translates to “servants of god”, have been
charged by the police, though Faisal is the only one arrested so far.

Faisal was arrested at “Sabka Ghar”, a centre for communal harmony he has
established near Ghaffar Manzil. People of all faiths can stay at this
centre and celebrate festivals of all religions together. He had revived
the historic Khudai Khidmatgar, an organisation established by the
legendary Abdul Ghaffar Khan
<https://www.newsclick.in/who-was-frontier-gandhi>, also known as Frontier
Gandhi, whose role in the anti-colonial struggle has been documented in
South Asia and the world.

Faisal himself is well-regarded for his deep knowledge of Hindu and Islamic
religious traditions and scriptures, and it is for promoting harmony within
India, and between India and Pakistan, that he is most recognised. He and
his team have also provided relief to people devastated by communal riots
or natural disasters.

Faisal and his group had completed an 84-kilometre parikrama or circuit of
Braj in Mathura between 25 and 29 October. The aim of the journey was to
foster communal amity. They visited a number of temples along their route,
met with priests and holy men, and held discussions with them. What seems
to have irked those who filed the FIR was a stopover of the group at the
Nand Baba temple in Mathura, during the last leg of their tour. Here, too,
they are known to have discussed with the priest the “oneness” of all
religious messages, among other things. This is where, on 29 October, two
members of the visiting team offered namaz, with the willing permission of
the priest.

Now that a case has been registered, it is expected that the judiciary will
take a more nuanced view of this case. Faisal has invested his entire life
to building bridges between communities. As a number of prominent
religious, social and political figures said in a recent statement, there
is a contradiction in the charges that have been slapped on him and the
other members of Khudai Khidmatgar by the police. “Faisal Khan is doing
important work of an antidote to the poison that communal forces are
spreading in the society…How can those who are taking out a parikrama for
peace and communal harmony have the objective of inciting religious
sentiments?” the statement says.

Recently, the Supreme Court quashed a similar criminal complaint filed
against cricketer Mahendra Singh Dhoni. According to the complainants,
Dhoni “hurt religious sentiments” when on the cover photo of a magazine he
was shown as a multi-faceted talent, in the form of the Hindu god Vishnu.
This complaint was filed in an Andhra Pradesh court. A three-judge Supreme
Court bench of Justices Dipak Misra, AM Khanwilkar and MM Shantanagoudar
said it would be a “travesty of justice
<https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/sports/supreme-court-quashes-complaint-against-mahendra-singh-dhoni/articleshow/58279220.cms?from=mdr>”
if prosecution proceeded in such a “frivolous” case.

What matters here is the deliberate criminalisation of the episode
involving Faisal and his comrades at Nand Bala temple. It once again
signals efforts to erase India’s heritage of syncretism, where the mazars
of Sufi saints are regularly visited by Hindus and Muslims and where Sayyid
Ibrahim, a Kabul-born Pashtun from the 16th century, became a devotee of
Krishna and wrote verses eulogising him (using the name Ras Khan). Then the
earliest translations of the Ramayana and Mahabharata into Bengali were
commissioned <http://ganashakti.com/english/news/top_story/31920> by Muslim
rulers and the core team of the last independent nawab of Bengal, Siraj
ud-Daulah, consisted of four Hindus and two Muslims.

The extent of toxicity that pervades India today can be gauged from what
Prof Anil Singh, a noted Hindi poet who teaches Hindi at Saket Degree
College, Ayodhya, recently told a journalist
<https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/even-tulsidas-wouldnt-have-been-safe/cid/1796497>
sarcastically.
He said that even Tulsidas, the 16th century author of the Ramcharitmanas,
would have been a “culprit in the eyes of mentally bankrupt politicians”,
for they would have seen his verses as guilty of the crime of nurturing
amity. “Tulsidas is the fittest case to be booked, for he openly challenged
fanaticism in his couplets,” the author said, citing one of his verses.
“Tulsidas had said... he could be called a Hindu or a Muslim, and that he
wouldn’t mind sleeping in a mosque as he did not care for fanatics,” Singh
explained.

Though the saga of Faisal’s arrest is not over yet, they bring into focus
the limitation of a world-view that many still hold dear in India. A
section of people still want to usher in communal amity, and they sincerely
believe invoking India’s composite culture is an antidote to the growing
weaponisation of religious identities. What they forget is that the idea of
a composite heritage has a context and history. The anti-colonial struggle
faced the arduous task of uniting a population which had never ever
participated in any national movement, which is spread over a vast
landmass, and is divided into castes and communities, against a more
advanced enemy. In his introduction to Ramdhari Singh Dinkar’s four
volumes, *Sanskriti Ke Chaar Adhyay*, published in 1956, the first prime
minister Jawaharlal Nehru wrote: “...culture of Indians is composite and
has developed gradually”. He mentioned its “amazing ability” to integrate
and internalise new things it encountered. “Until it had this quality, this
culture remained alive and dynamic. But later it lost this dynamism due to
which this culture atrophied and all its aspects became weak,” Nehru wrote.

Of late, though, critical questions are being raised to unpack the
phenomenon of a composite heritage. Recently, journalist and writer Kapil
Komireddi, in his book Malevolent Republic, questions the “airbrushing” of
India’s pre-colonial past and questions the wish to “bypass awkward
questions” about the past. Historian Upinder Singh says in her book *Political
Violence in Ancient India*, “The idea of a peace-loving, non-violent India
exists, persists, as part of a selectively constructed and assiduously
cultivated national self-image in the midst of a society pervaded by social
and political violence...” According to her, the pioneers of the
independence struggle were instrumental in creating this “myth of
non-violence in ancient India which obscures a troubled, complex heritage”.

It is important to extend this debate to the present time, so as to find a
way to fight the intermixing of religion and politics in India. What new
slogans could further the anti-communal struggle and secularisation of
society? What means can ensure that the Indian republic emerges as a truly
secular state? These issues confront all Indians today. But right now the
most important message is what the National Alliance for People’s Movement
said after Faisal Khan’s arrest: “Prison is no place for messengers of love
and brotherhood.”

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