This is the thing, Indians need to pick up a dictionary. Respect and having multicultural friends has nothing to do with secularism. This is the typical Indian excuse, Oh we're so secular look at Shahrukh Khan, Salman Khan, Amir Khan.
Secularism is separation of state and religion.
Your state is siding with Hindus with the destruction of the Babri Masjid
Your state perpetuated the massacre of 2000 Muslims in Gujarat to avenge the deaths of 50 Hindus
For believes in 'ahimsa' you sure massacre a lot of people now and then.
Secularism is separation of state and religion. If you're not even able to prosecute genocidal maniacs due to religious considerations, you're not a secularism. You're a big black mark on secularism for that matter.
I write in response to your mail, not in support of the one you replied. May I add that the intention is to clarify, not to enter into a quarrel.
First, you are perfectly correct in pointing out that secularism, the original western democratic liberal term, was separation of state and religion. It is another thing that Indian political leaders, in the early days after partition, due largely to impulses created by that very Two-Nation Theory that we really ought to be discussing, decided to recast secularism as equal acceptance of all religions by the state. I suspect that there was some genuflection to Gandhian thought implicit in this decision.
Even today, when 'secularism' is used in Indian political discourse, it is this adaptation of the concept that is being discussed, not the western version. So the BJP and the Sangh Parivar accuses the INC and similar of 'pseudo-secularism', on the grounds that the INC, and those parties deriving their idea of secularism from the INC, pamper the minorities, and do not really treat every religion on par. On the other hand, the INC retort is that special policies are needed to bring minorities forward, and quotas and preferential treatment and selection are all part of what today is called elsewhere affirmative action (not in India).
If you spend a little time on the subject, it will be apparent how the Two-Nation Theory, and the controversies swirling around it at the time of Independence, has influenced these stands today. That by itself, btw, is the justification for discussing these long-past subjects today; there is no lack of those who ask with perplexity what bearing the events of the 40s of the last century have to do with us. These aspects are how they affect us.
Second, I learnt early on in interacting with citizens of Pakistan that each Pakistani is an individual, with opinions of his or her own, and that it is insulting and also sloppy thinking to club them together. To say 'Pakistanis think....or say....or do' is lazy and inaccurate. A thought: the same thing applies to the Australians, the Bangladeshis, the Chinese, the Danes, the English, the French, the Germans, the Hungarians - you get the picture, I am sure, that the Icelanders, coming next in the list, are the same, and so on. The radix is after all a limited set of characters.
Third, it is regrettable that you should state that the State colluded in the Babri Masjid incident or that it had anything to do with the Gujarat riots. I am deliberately choosing neutral terms that I am not in the habit of using normally, so as not to give a handle to anyone to say that my words or definitions are incendiary in themselves.
The point is that in the Babri Masjid case, there was actual subversion of the administrative process, and a violation of the law by a party and its affiliates, and sworn by oath to uphold the constitution. This party and its affiliates were in power, having been elected to power. They were soon out of power, having been elected out, to some degree due to the fall-out of this incident. There was no question of the State having participated in this incident; any number of witnesses belonging to the state administration have come forward to record the subversion that took place, and allowed the incident to occur.
In the Gujarat case, too, the position is identical. A set of fascists took over the state machinery, based on deep indoctrination of the people of the state over decades, and managed to ensure that their rampaging mobs were not fired upon by the police, and that the police themselves were withheld.
Your statement that for believers in 'ahimsa', (you) sure massacre a lot of people now and then is unfortunate. I could respond in several ways, none of them including the 'tu quoque' argument that has been defined as " 'Your shirt is torn.' 'So what? Your fly is open.' " I refuse to use that last resort of the intellectually bankrupt.
It is sufficient to say that there have been failures of the state, and that political parties and politicians have not played a glorious role. No Indian, no thinking Indian denies or wishes to deny it; we would rather act to ensure that these do not recur, and move on.
As we write this, there is a dedicated band of Indians prosecuting the highest circles of the political party concerned to bring them to justice for inciting the mobs to break down the Babri Masjid; you will find on examination that all sections of Indian society are represented in that team of prosecutors, and that recently, the most damning evidence was presented in court by the personal security officer of Advani at that time, a Hindu woman police officer. Your words are a presumably unintentional slur on their honour and professional integrity.
So too the case of Gujarat. I am not a rich man, but I have done what I could in my personal capacity for the amelioration of the condition of those affected; it can only be amelioration, no earthly agency can make up to the bereaved the losses that they have suffered. Yet another set of people, Indians all, led by another Hindu woman and a team of lawyers of all persuasions, Teesta Setalvad and her team, and her associates, have been doggedly pursuing the perpetrators. It has come to the stage where the Supreme Court intervened, set up special mechanisms to look into the charges, and has kept an active eye on the proceedings. Teesta Setalvad and all her team have received numerous death threats, but continue without flinching.
I sincerely wish that before allowing your anger to dictate your words, before writing that awful last paragraph, you had thought of these facts.
Fourth, you will say that much time has been taken, and is being taken by the legal process. Yes, it is a fair complaint. I regret it as much as anyone else, having been the victim of the delays in the Indian legal process, as many of my other Indian friends may have been.
These were not delays especially designed to victimise the community you belong to, by the majority community in India. Other communities, other sections of society have been victimised; the law has acted, but it has acted at intervals similar to those seen in these two cases. Over the last one week, there has been a furore in the country over the verdict in the 1984 Bhopal Gas Tragedy being delivered. That's 26 years; it was not intentional, that is the time our courts take, that is the saturation that they have been subjected to. There is a case in the Calcutta High Court that is more than 150 years old. Nobody likes the situation; there are various attempts at improving things. However, the bottom line is that nobody is delaying these deliberately to victimise a particular community.
While I understand that the events that you have mentioned stir deep emotion, I request you to consider things calmly and rationally, irrespective of the stand that is taken against you. It is to no effect to meet anger with anger, incivility with incivility and land up in a welter of curses against each other.