Hi

Today it is one month since the Mumbai attacks. I am attaching a paper of mine 
which has been published in the London internet journal Living Faith 
(www.livingfaith.org) on December 9. With best wishes

Walter

Dr Walter Fernandes
Director, North Eastern Social Research Centre
110 Kharghuli Road (1st floor)
Guwahati 781004
Assam, India


Bombay Terror Attacks, Religion and Class

The 183 persons including 25 foreigners who died in the terrorist attacks on 
Mumbai belonged to different religions, Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Jewish and 
possibly also others. But an important section of the Indian media and 
political establishment give it a purely anti-Muslim religious colour. It also 
has a class character.

The Class Colour and Mumbai

  Four weeks before the Mumbai terrorist attacks, Assam in North Eastern India 
suffered equally well-organised bomb blasts. Thirteen bombs exploded in five 
districts in a matter of forty minutes. These attacks that were planned with 
precision became national news for a day or two and were ignored after it. The 
Mumbai attacks, on the contrary, continue to take most time of the television 
networks more than a week later. That is not surprising because Mumbai is the 
commercial capital of India. So the attacks on the city can be interpreted as 
attacks on India’s economy.

But the Mumbai reporting also has a strong class bias. The terrorist attacks 
began with the killing of 57 persons at the Chatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST), 
formerly Victoria Terminus of the city railway network. However, in all the 
reporting this station came to be remembered only as the place where the only 
surviving terrorist was captured alive. The 57 dead persons became a footnote. 
Attention shifted to the five-star Hotel Taj Mahal built a hundred years ago. 
It is a landmark no doubt but not as important as CST which is used by hundreds 
of thousands of commuters everyday. But Taj Mahal is the “second home” of the 
upper class, the elite. The city was obviously attacked precisely because of 
its commercial importance. That fact also brought out the class difference. CST 
was forgotten and focus was on the Taj Mahal which was presented as the icon of 
Mumbai. The CST the icon of the common person was all but ignored.

The Role of Religion

More than class, focus today is on religion. In all probability the extremists 
were trained on Pakistani soil. They were probably Muslims though some doubt 
it. Nothing more is known about them or about those who planned the attack. The 
fact that the terrorists tried to isolate American and British occupants of the 
five-star hotel and Israelis in a neighbouring residential building indicates 
that the attack is probably linked to the war in Afghanistan and Iraq and to 
the failure to solve the Palestine issue. However, these causes are all but 
ignored in the effort to focus only on the religion of those who carried out 
the attacks. They are presented as Islamic terrorists, thus blaming a whole 
religious community for the misdeeds of a few members who might even have been 
doing someone else’s bidding. From the near certainty that they were trained on 
Pakistani soil, a case is being made out that the Pakistani government is 
involved in this attack. There are, therefore, demands to attack Pakistan.

It is not different from what happened after 9/11 in New York.  This attack was 
used to create an anti-Muslim religious hysteria the world over and to present 
Islam as a religion of terror. That justified the attack on Afghanistan and it 
was used indirectly also to justify the war on Iraq. The same has happened in 
India. Bombay witnessed serial blasts in March 1993 in reaction to the 
demolition of a mosque Babri Masjid in North India on the unproved assumption 
that it was built on the foundation of a temple that was presumably the 
birthplace of the Hindu god and hero Rama. When a train caught fire in Gujarat 
in February 2002, it was concluded that Muslims had burnt it. Thousands of 
Muslims were killed in that state for a month after it. Other bomb blasts too 
have been attributed to Muslims.

In all these cases the media as well as political leaders try to implicate 
Pakistan as the source of terror and declare Muslims its perpetrators. After 
the Mumbai attacks there are demands that India bomb the terrorist camps in 
Pakistan. Very few ask whether the Pakistani government has control over the 
groups carrying out the attacks. Ignored is the fact that Pakistan is as much a 
victim of their attacks as India. Besides, the Pakistani foreign minister was 
in India when Mumbai was attacked. One would not expect a country to stage such 
attacks during the visit of a dignitary. However, a war hysteria and 
anti-Muslim emotional outbursts are engineered, exactly as was done after 9/11.

Because of the similarities some commentators even ask whether the attacks were 
an US-Israeli conspiracy to provide a pretext for India to bomb Northwest 
Pakistan on the Afghan border where most attacks on NATO troops in Afghanistan 
are said to be originating. This is speculation and one cannot continue it. In 
fact, there are indications that Condoleeza Rice threw cold water on the 
demands for a war. At this stage one can only say that the attacks go beyond 
Indo-Pak relations and belong to a bigger canvas. Whether Al-Qaeda was involved 
or not, the links of the Mumbai event with what Muslim fundamentalists consider 
attacks on their identity and self-respect are clear. At the international 
level they include the Iraq and Afghan wars and the Palestinian issue. They 
also feel, rightly or wrongly, that by signing a nuclear treaty with the USA at 
this juncture, India has taken sides against Muslim countries particularly Iran 
with which an agreement on an oil pipeline is being negotiated but the USA is 
opposing it.

At the national level the issue is growing fundamentalism which is in fact 
Fascism. The destruction of the Babri Masjid on 6th December 1992 by Hindu 
fundamentalists is a turning point in Hindu-Muslim relations. Ever since then 
the minorities in general and Muslims in particular have felt threatened. The 
Mumbai serial blasts of March 1993 that killed more than 300 persons were its 
direct result. After it there have been attacks by Hindu fundamentalists on 
Christians in Gujarat in western India in 1998, Orissa in Eastern India and in 
Karnataka in south India in 2008 and others elsewhere. All of them are states 
ruled by the Hindu fundamentalist party either by itself or in coalition with 
others.

Besides, it was assumed till now that all the bomb blasts mentioned above and 
many more were the handiwork of Muslim extremists. That was used for the 
propaganda against this religious group. However, even in the past there was a 
strong suspicion among some analysts that at least some of the blasts were by 
Hindu extremists. The arrest of some Hindu extremists in recent months adds to 
this suspicion. However, all three senior police officers inquiring into these 
blasts by the Hindu extremists died during the Mumbai encounters. That may slow 
down these inquiries. That has also added to the rumours and conspiracy 
theories of the involvement of the Hindu extremists in the Mumbai blasts. The 
Hindu extremist party supports a US-Israel-India coalition under the Huntington 
theory of Clash of Civilisations and the need for the “Christian-Zionist-Hindu” 
civilisations to join hands against the “Islamic civilisation”.

Thus, rumours abound on the perpetrators of this crime. Of greater importance 
is the link being created with one or the other religion. One hears people 
speaking about “Islamic”, “Hindu” and other “religious” terrorists. The 
extremists do not represent their community but their crimes are attributed to 
the whole religious group. All its members are declared criminals by 
association. That approach is intrinsic to religious fundamentalism that 
divides the country on a religious basis.

Clouds of War

Thus religion has become central to politics in India particularly during this 
year of elections that are being held in five states in November-December. 
Elections to the national parliament have to be held not later than April 2009. 
The Hindu religion based fundamentalist opposition party is exploiting the 
Mumbai attacks with the hope of making electoral gains and it is bound to gain 
from it by taking an anti-Muslim and anti-Pakistani stand. Religion is thus 
being used both in internal and external politics. Pakistan is being presented 
as a Muslim terrorist state. The printed and electronic media in both the 
countries have gone overboard in attacking each other though the two 
governments have taken a moderate stance.

Despite their moderation one cannot rule out a war between India and Pakistan 
both of which are nuclear states. So it is not going to be a simple war. But 
demands keep growing from the right to attack the other country. The voices of 
peace have become weak at this moment of emotional outburst against terrorism. 
That will also mean intervention of foreign powers in the region. At this 
stage, the USA on the Indian side and China with Pakistan have become direct 
partners in their foreign policy formulation. That interference is bad for the 
sub-continent because every country interferes in the affairs of another 
country for its own good.

Moderate Voices Stifled

Also secularism is bound to suffer in both the countries. After two decades of 
a religion-based fundamentalist upsurge, many voices supporting secularism and 
peace were coming together. A people-to-people coalition called Pakistan-India 
Federation for Peace and Democracy formed in 1995 with only around 100 persons 
from each side, was gaining in strength. Many others like groups of teachers, 
workers and retired defence officers have been formed on its model during the 
last decade. The conservative forces used to ridicule them and other supporters 
of peace as the “socialist-secular combine” and call them anti-national.

These voices of moderation are bound to suffer so will the cultural exchanges 
between these countries that were functioning as one more people-to-people 
link. For example, a Pakistani classical singer who used to give concerts in 
India every year was to tour eight cities in December. He has been asked to 
cancel his tour. The peace talks with the Pakistani foreign minister who was in 
Delhi when the attacks began were interrupted.

That is the challenge for India and Pakistan today. Whether there is war or 
not, at a time when Fascism is growing, the Mumbai attacks have added to the 
strength of the fundamentalist forces. They have been trying to build their 
strength on the “Shining India” slogan of India’s identity being linked to its 
military and economic strength. This “Shining India” is presented as Hindu 
India that will save the people. The effort of those who were working for peace 
were both on the side of justice to the poor (as such against globalisation) 
and for secularism. The recent economic crisis was adding to their efforts. The 
Mumbai attacks will strengthen the Fascist forces that depend on religion.

Conclusion

For peace to return, that trend towards extremism has to be reversed both at 
the national and international levels. At the international level the myths 
that have been created since 9/11 in particular, of “Islamic terrorism” have to 
be done away with. At the national level the fight has to be against terrorism 
as such and not against “Islamic” “Hindu” or any other religion-based 
terrorism. Those who indulge in these acts have to be dealt with firmly but 
serious attempts have to be made to solve the problems that push the youth 
towards it.

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