By Swapan Dasgupta
Last week, while nosing through the stacks of a
library I came across a long-forgotten book, India in Ferment by Claude H. Van Tyne, an American historian and
Pulitzer Prize winner. Published in 1923, it was based on his travels through
India at the height of Mahatma Gandhi’s Non-Cooperation Movement.
Van Tyne was not a starry-eyed American liberal with
a pathological aversion to the idea of Empire. On the contrary, he was broadly
appreciative of the commitment and competence of the British administrators,
particularly those of the Indian Civil Service. He also had a high regard for
India’s ‘moderate’ leadership, particularly individuals such as Sir
Surendranath Banerjee, Lord Sinha and Madan Mohan Malaviya. And while he was
critical of the rhetorical excesses of the foot soldiers of Indian nationalism,
the scale of mass adulation for Gandhi didn’t leave him unmoved.
One incident in particular left a deep impression on
him. In the early days of the campaign for “Swaraj in one year”, Van Tyne was
invited to a small gathering in the large house of a Bombay merchant. The
drawing room had been divided into two sections: on one side sat the stalwarts
of the ‘native’ mercantile community and, behind a screen, sat their wives and
daughters. That the gathering was supportive of Gandhi didn’t come as a
surprise to the American visitor. What did astonish him was the decision taken
by the women in purdah to come out of seclusion and actually participate in the
mass demonstrations. Equally significant was the fact that the husbands and
fathers of the women did not get all worked up over the subversion of social
institutions by politics.
Van Tyne’s account does not state how many of the
women actually took to the streets and how many succumbed to orthodox counter-pressures
and confined their political activism to giving emotional and financial support
to the Mahatma. Other contemporary accounts suggest that India’s struggle for
political independence led to large numbers of women from orthodox Hindu and
Muslim families abandoning the purdah and entering public life. In short, the
national movement provided an additional fillip to earlier attempts by social
reformers to involve women in the public life of India. Although the impact of
Gandhian politics on women’s emancipation was uneven—and complicated by the
Mahatma’s own fads—its effects were revolutionary.
I was reminded of Van Tyne’s evocative description
of the early manifestations of Indian feminism in the context of a strange debate
raging through India over Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi’s use of
imagery. Last week, while attacking the record of the UPA Government at a
meeting in Pune, the BJP’s undeclared prime ministerial candidate asserted that
in times of difficulty the Congress invariably took shelter behind the ‘burqa’
of secularism.
The use of ‘burqa’ as a euphemism for fig-leaf or
cover was promptly attacked by the big guns of the secular establishment. The
imagery was held to be an assault on the Muslim community and the entire
Congress establishment was mobilised to inform TV viewers that Modi’s use of
the language revealed a perverse mindset. In a TV programme, the Minister of
Environment Jayanti Natarajan said that she wouldn’t have taken umbrage if Modi
had used ‘sari’ as a euphemism for cover, but burqa was clearly unacceptable.
Whether Modi’s choice of words was spontaneous or
carefully pre-meditated is not known to me. However, since the critique of
India’s differentiated citizenship is by and large centred on the charges of
Muslim appeasement, Modi was perhaps successful in driving home the point
without any elaboration. Since the art of communication, whether literary or
political, is almost exclusively dependant on using the right word at the right
place and employing appropriate imagery, Modi did hit bull’s eye. No one who
heard him that day in either Pune or on TV could have been left in any doubt of
Modi’s contention that ‘secularism’ is the Congress’ equivalent of crying ‘wolf’.
At a political level, there is bound to be criticism
of the BJP’s distinction between pukka secularism and pseudo-secularism. That
debate has been raging with various degrees of intensity for the past four
decades at least and, frankly speaking, there was nothing intellectually unique
in Modi’s intervention to trigger a fresh debate. Consequently, his critics
honed in on the use of burqa in an apparently pejorative context. Former
minister Ajay Maken suggested that the burqa of secularism was preferable to ‘naked
communalism’ and Shashi Tharoor proffered the view that the burqa was better
than the brown shorts of those who were inspired by Italian fascism—a historical
analogy that, unfortunately, was marred by sartorial inaccuracy.
That an election campaign will be marked by verbal
spats is a given and, consequently, there is no reason to be surprised by this
storm in a drapery. What, however, is fascinating is the shift in political
values. In the 1920s, as Van Tyne experienced with a sense of awe, the
nationalist movement decried the custom of women’s seclusion. In the West of
today, overwhelmed by the hiccups of multiculturalism, modernity, progressive
thought and secularism are invariably associated with attacks on the Muslim
custom of burqa. In Republican France where secularism is taken a bit too far,
the Government has outlawed both the hijab and the burqa from schools and
public institutions; and in the United Kingdom, at least one prominent
politician—former Labour Home Secretary Jack Straw—stipulated that he wouldn’t
deal with anyone who covered her face. In the Islamic world too, the ‘modernists’
like Kemal Attaturk of Turkey and the Shah of Iran outlawed the veil, while the
ultra-radical Taliban made its usage compulsory for women in Afghanistan. The
use of both the hijab and the veil are also the fault lines dividing the Muslim
Brotherhood and the modernists in Egypt.
In India, the attempt to equate the burqa with Islam
and Muslim identity—as opposed to seeing it as a mere social custom—was also a
feature of politics in the 1930s and 1940s. Maulana Mawdudi, the founder of the
Jamaat-e-Islami wrote a tract in 1939 entitled Purdah and the Status of Women in Islam. His injunctions to women
are worth recalling, not least because it explicitly spells out the philosophy
of the burqa: “the real place of women is in the house and she has been exempted
from outdoor duties. .. She has however been allowed to go out of the house to
fulfil her genuine needs, but whilst going out she must observe complete
modesty. Neither should she wear glamorous clothes and attract attention, nor
should she cherish the desire to display the charms of the face and the hand,
nor should she walk in a manner which may attract attention of others.
Moreover, she should not speak to them without necessity, and if she has to
speak she should not speak in a sweet and soft voice.”
It is a commentary on the social values of India’s
aggressive secularists that the burqa and, by implication the institution of
purdah, that were targeted by the social reformers of an earlier age is being projected
as a symbol of Muslim identity. Who is the real communalist: a Modi who uses it
as a symbol of something regressive or the cosmopolitan chic who has imbibed
the wisdom of Maulana Mawdoodi?
Televised, sound bite politics often results in a cacophony.
But amid this chatter, it helps to take a step back and reflect on the
significance of words and imagery. The results are unexpectedly revealing.
The Telegraph, July 19, 2013
The Telegraph, July 19, 2013
3 comments:
How well is that written... Hats off!
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