The JNU controversy is showing no signs of abatement. My
Facebook/Twitter is divided into two camps. While the rest of us fling
ourselves into the fray, some of us must take a step back, try to detach
ourselves and analyse the whole episode. The problem is that, as it always
happens with such volatile issues, the core issue gets laid by the wayside, and
the larger debate snowballs into something far removed from the core issue.
The right wing is offended by the seditious slogans shouted
by a bunch of students who are allegedly from the JNU. They demand legal action
against the perpetrators of treason. Because the police were unable to catch
the name-less and face-less people that are seen shouting the slogans in the
video, they go for the easiest and the most obvious target, Kanhiya Kumar, the
student-leader.
The left wing sees this as breach of right to free speech.
They are demanding release of Kanhaiya Kumar and are outraged by the
Emergency-like conditions. They have conveniently forgotten the content of the
slogans and have made the debate all about right to dissent and right to free
speech.
What amazes me is how both the factions are shaping the
debate to suit their own interest.
The issue at hand can be looked at from two perspectives:
macroscopic and microscopic. Most people on my Facebook/Twitter timeline have
chosen to take a macroscopic view of the situation. Everyone is making sweeping
generalisation.
While dissent and debate are crucial, one has to draw a line
somewhere. Sloganeering isn’t an intellectual exercise insofar as I understand.
Even so, one is perfectly entitled to raise anti-Modi, anti-BJP anti-RSS,
anti-ABVP slogans, and such slogans have been raised in the past, effigies have
been burnt, and marches have been taken out, without anyone demanding any
arrests. But “Bharat ki barbadi tak jung rahegi...jung rahegi” or “Bandook ke
dum per azadi”, to my mind, appear to be taking things too far. We must not
lose our sense of balance. By defending Afzal Guru, aren’t we defending
extremism? How is extremism of the Left more valid and less condemnable than
that of the Right? How are we then any the better than Pakistani establishment
which believes that while Jihadis that bomb and attack Pakistan are bad
Jihadis, but the ones that bomb and attack India are good Jihadis.
I am willing to go so far as to even sympathise with the use
violence as a means to achieve your objectives (which could be equality,
liberty, or establishing the hegemony of your religion), but then you will have
to see all of them equally. You then lose the moral right to condemn or vilify
organisations like ISIS or Taliban. Just as you are fighting for your cause,
ISIS too fighting for its cause.
Yes, in an ideal world, we should have the liberty to even
raise anti-India slogan and demand Bharat ki barbadi if we deem it fit; but
then, do we live in an ideal world? In an ideal world there should be no
discrimination positive (reservations) or negative (untouchablity); in an ideal
world everyone should have equal intellectual quotient; in an ideal world
everyone should be perfectly rational. Clearly, by any of these standards, we
don’t live in an ideal world, and thus we are bound to, as I suggested earlier,
draw the line somewhere. Now this line is usually arbitrary, just as the
legally permissible age of drinking, say. But we must draw it nonetheless. Yes,
it could be debated and changed, but until such time a resolution is reached
and it is altered, it has to be respected.
As the hold of religious fervour is wearing off in the
liberal psyche, people are bound to look for ideas/objects wherein they can
anchor their faith. Some people find this anchor in liberal humanism and others
find it in nationalism. Both are social constructs. The concept of “Bharat
Mata” or motherland and the idea of defending its honour is as much a
manufactured idea as is the idea of equality and human-rights. Both are
unscientific and unnatural. In the natural world there’s no motherland, nor is
there any equality or rights. Matsya-nyay, or the rule of the might, works in
the natural world. A quote by Tagore is doing rounds—it essentially says that
humanity should supersede nationalism. What we don’t realise is that both humanity as well as nationalism are imagined realities. How does one then decide which
imagined reality should be valued more than the other? I personally would any
day choose humanism over nationalism, but expecting everyone to toe my line may
be a tad unfeasible, however desirable. Consequently, we will have to work out
an intermediate space where there is mutual sensitivity and mutual respect for
these ideologies. Swinging to either of extreme ends will only result in chaos.
This is by means an attempt to dilute the necessity of
human-rights (including the right to free speech). We must strive to maintain
the sanctity of such principles in order to maintain order and justice in
society. However, we must also not write off other imagined realities, just
because they don’t square with our imagined reality. We are humans and we will
always live by these imagined realities or systems (religious or secular).
Systems are inescapable, if not indelible. When one system is destroyed, there
swoops in another in place of the first. And nationalism, by the virtue of
being secular, enjoys the kind of currency and reach that even religions don’t.
Perhaps that’s the reason that even the people on my Facebook and Twitter who
are otherwise very liberal in their outlook, are taking unkindly to the agitation
by the JNU. Again you may label them as that pseudo-liberals (how can they condone the clampdown?),
but then, they too can turn around and call you pseudo-nationals (how can they condone “Bharat ki barbaadi tak
jung rahegi” slogans?). This mutual name-calling doesn’t take us anywhere
though.
When looked at from a microscopic standpoint, what bothers
me is that hardly any of the teachers or intellectuals leading the protests
came out and condemned the distasteful and objectionable (if not anti-national)
remarks/slogan. Most of the people on my Facebook/Twitter who are outraged over
this episode, did not show any outrage over the “bandook ke dum pe azadi” slogans.
They could turn around and say that these slogans weren’t
mouthed by JNU students in the first place and the JNU students are being
framed. I say, I so ardently wish that is the case. The speeches of Mr Kanhaiya Kumar and Ms Sucheta make me want to believe that they have no anti-India
sentiments whatsoever. However, that should not prevent them from explicitly
condemning and unsubscribing from the objectionable statements made on their
campus, mainly because these very statements are the root of the controversy.
Though universities are hailed as spaces where contrarian
views are allowed to be voiced, we don’t see that happening always. Last year
Baba Ramdev was not allowed to address the students on the JNU campus as some
student groups were opposed to this idea. There was lot of protest when about
three years ago Mr Modi, the then chief minister of Gurjrat, was invited by
SRCC college to speak on matters of economy.
The Right wing has also not left any stone unturned to take
things to the extreme. BJP MLA O. P. Sharma took it upon himself to attack
left-wing activist and journalists. The likes of the infamous Kailash
Vijayvargia have suggested that such ‘anti-national’ people should be shot.
Some lawyers have chosen to brandish their nationalism by walking in to the
court with the national flag in their hands. We see a clear attempt being made
by some lumpen elements to co-opt patriotism bandwagon to settle their
political scores. Such attempts must be thwarted and shamed. Slapping charges
of sedition on a student leader seems as bizarre as wishing for Bharat ki
barbaadi.
But there’s a large apolitical mass of people too that is
not happy with this debate is being shaped. We should call a spade a spade. We
can’t get so blinded and enslaved by our ideological affiliations that we
become unwilling to see things for what they are. When last year Gajendra
Chauhan was appointed as the FTII chairman, film-personalities such as Anupam
Kher, who is Right-leaning, went on record to criticise the move and openly
expressed his dissatisfaction with it.
My appeal to all the stake-holders, especially the teachers
and mentors is to bring back a sense of moderation in the discourse. Don’t let
interest groups stoke the passions for their personal and political motives.
Turn away people like Rahul Gandhi who did not care to express any solidarity
whatsoever when these very students were withstanding lathi-charge ordered by
UPA government because the students demanded justice for Nirbhaya. Ask him to
go away and tell him that you’re perfectly capable of fighting your own battle.
Ask O.P. Sharma to keep his desh-prem to
himself. Tell him we don’t want to lynch people even if we don’t agree with
what they say. The key to stability and healthy debate gets lost between
#ShutDownJNU and #IamWithJNU.
No comments:
Post a Comment