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Why terrorism cannot be linked to the Gujarat riots

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When we seek a justification for dastardly terrorist acts where none exists, we weaken our resolve and embolden the terrorists, imbuing them with a false sense of righteousness. This is the biggest fallacy of our anti-terror drive, says Vivek Gumaste.

Human beings are logical animals. Rationality has a tempering effect on the human mind; it dents emotional outrage, evokes justification and mitigates the severity of an infraction.

However, attempts to rationalise the recently arrested Abu Jundal's diabolical role in the Mumbai massacre and his descent into terrorism by invoking the Gujarat riots as the raison d'etre is an exercise in warped logic; one that defies human comprehension; more of an intentional obfuscation with a vested agenda that deceptively strives to blur the debate and confer some validity to an atrocity where none exists.

Time and again, a section of the media has emphasised vendetta as the etiology of Islamic terror. However, a meticulous analysis of this charge finds it to be a dubious one.

It is a premise that does not conform to the canons of morality or the logic of sequence.

Human civilisation accepts, albeit grudgingly, the killing of humans only in one situation: war between armed combatants. Terrorism that revels in the massacre of innocent unarmed civilians clearly falls into the nether zone of lawlessness. There can be no mitigating factor, no justification and no place for defence in the moral ledger.

For the sake of debate, let us apply the logic of sequence to ascertain the merits of these polemics. The present reign of terror can be traced back to March 12, 1993, when a series of bomb blasts ripped through India's commercial capital, Mumbai, targeting the stock exchange, prominent hotels and the Air-India building.

Around 300 innocent people lost their lives in this deadly act. Columnists were quick to propound a cause and effect between these blasts and the Babri masjid demolition that took place on December 6, 1992.

Over the next few years this premise became a chanting mantra to justify one act of terror after another.



But is this equation so simple and direct? Hardly so, as Praveen Swami indicates (external link), 'Towards the end of 1991, SIMI began its turn towards terror -- an event precipitated by the Ram Janambhoomi movement, but one for which the ideological foundations had long been laid.'

"SIMI was formed in April 1977, as an effort to revitalise the SIO (Student's Islamic Organisation -- a wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami). Building on the SIO networks in Uttar Pradesh, SIMI reached out to Jamaat-linked Muslim student groups in Andhra Pradesh, Bengal, Bihar and Kerala. SIMI sought to re-establish the caliphate, without which it felt the practice of Islam would remain incomplete. Muslims who were comfortable living in secular societies, its pamphlets warned, were headed to hell.'

So it appears that the seeds of Islamic terror were sown far back in 1977, long before the demolition of the Babri Masjid or any other instigating factor came into play.


The second cardinal event hypothesised by our intelligentsia as an antecedent to terror is undoubtedly the Gujarat riots of 2002.

Our armchair ideologues sidestep the heart-rending atrocity of the gory massacre of 59 unarmed Hindu men, women and children by a Muslim mob in Godhra that provoked the Gujarat riots and expediently focus exclusively on the subsequent event to draw another faulty link between the advent of terrorism and this communal riot.

The Kandahar hijack and the audacious attack on Parliament both preceded Gujarat 2002 and occurred almost a decade after the Babri Masjid demolition. Both events again belie the cause and effect theory.

More recently, terror attacks have been deemed to be a fallout of a supposedly unjust judicial system that is seen to favour Hindus.

Saba Naqvi, writing in Outlook India emphasises (external link) this point: 'The irony, as usual, is that it is only a small number of the educated Muslim that has become radicalised. The e-mail sent by the Indian Mujahideen is worth deconstructing.

'Written in fluent English with several references to the Quran, it does vent ire against Hindus, "the infidels", and mocks at Narendra Modi"s "asmita" (pride). Yet, eventually it is a record of perceived injustice by the courts, lawyers, commissions of inquiry and state governments against Muslims. The group says it is issuing an "ultimatum to all the state governments" but specifically mentions Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharashtra.'


But is this Muslim grievance legitimate and one that reflects ground realities? The facts tell another story. Within its own constraints, the judicial system has acted in an exemplary fashion, stretching its resources and statutes to the limit to ensure justice to the aggrieved.

The Best Bakery case is a standing example of this. First, the case was moved out of Gujarat to a more neutral setting in Mumbai and in February 2006 a Mumbai court convicted nine of the 21 accused. Second, the conviction of Madhukar Sarpotdar, a high-profile Shiv Sena leader, for his role in the 1992 Bombay riots is another testimony to the impartiality of our courts.

The perception of injustice within an insular, ghettoised community is hard to allay even with the aid of objective evidence when a devious coterie has its own nefarious agenda in mind, and that seems to be the case here.

Islamic terror was an event waiting to happen, conceptualised far earlier than what are claimed to be sentinel events. These so-called trigger events only served to accelerate the pace of this monstrosity and force it out into the open.

When we seek a justification for these dastardly acts where none exists, we weaken our resolve and embolden the terrorists, imbuing them with a false sense of righteousness. This is the biggest fallacy of our anti-terror drive: a lack of clear thinking that befuddles our mind, cripples our actions and makes us cut an apathetic picture in the face of evil terror.

This has to change.




link:Why terrorism cannot be linked to the Gujarat riots - Rediff.com News
 
^^ the article is mostly right

a proxy war is has been declared against us and these terrorist attacks are part of it

i condemn those people who have massacred innocent Muslims/Hindus

the people who talk so much about godhra remain quiet about 4,00,000 pundits driven out of their homes by terrorists

surely godhra and babri saga hadn't happened then, in 1980s,so why those terrorists killed and drove out innocent pundits? :angry:
 
^^ the article is mostly right

a proxy war is has been declared against us and these terrorist attacks are part of it

i condemn those people who have massacred innocent Muslims/Hindus

the people who talk so much about godhra remain quiet about 4,00,000 pundits driven out of their homes by terrorists

surely godhra and babri saga hadn't happened then, in 1980s,so why those terrorists killed and drove out innocent pundits? :angry:

Rightly said..
There were no riots in pre independence india communally, still muslims started direct action and massacared thousands of hindus even then gandhi and their congress showed step motherly treatment towards the sentiments of hindus, malabar riots were initiated by muslims and yet again hundreds of hindus massacred .. Actually congress has taken us hindus for granted for their political cause and sadly we hindus still lick their feet.
 
Rightly said..
There were no riots in pre independence india communally, still muslims started direct action and massacared thousands of hindus even then gandhi and their congress showed step motherly treatment towards the sentiments of hindus, malabar riots were initiated by muslims and yet again hundreds of hindus massacred .. Actually congress has taken us hindus for granted for their political cause and sadly we hindus still lick their feet.

lol man these guys dont knw a bloody thing abt history it was the hindus and sikhs who killed those guys who were coming to pakistan tell me a single story when a hindu was leaving pakistan and we got killed and i got million story thats the differnce
 
1. Because Gujarat riots was started by Muslims by burning alive 54 Hindu women and kids.

2. It was not a hindu-muslim riot as riots doesn't happen anywhere in India other then Gujarat.

3. It was a local riot and gujarati people become agitated after seeing 54 Hindu burned bodies.
 
Muslims always justify killing of other religion people on one pretax of other , they will find the reasons ,
 
lol man these guys dont knw a bloody thing abt history it was the hindus and sikhs who killed those guys who were coming to pakistan tell me a single story when a hindu was leaving pakistan and we got killed and i got million story thats the differnce

Time Magazine, 8th September, 1947

"You have full liberty to go the limit. Take revenge as you like, but if there is one Hindu or Sikh left alive in my district after you are through, I swear to kill them myself." - Deputy Commissioner of a Western Punjab District in Pakistan to young muslims

A member of the U.S. Embassy arrived in Lahore from Delhi with another tale of horror. Reaching the small station of Okara, near Montgomery, he found the station platform utterly deserted except for several hundred dead Hindus and Sikhs lying around the platform, apparently slaughtered only a few hours before while waiting for the train to escape. All these people were workers in a textile mill which had been attacked by *******. Their bodies were mostly stripped and in several instances limbs had been torn from the bodies. The wife of a British textile factory manager told how a Moslem mob had attacked the Hindu and Sikh workers in another factory. When ******* broke into the ground floor, the Sikhs slashed the throats of their own wives, and afterwards tried to fight through themselves. All were killed.

At Lahore's Central Station, Sikh and Hindu refugees from North or West Punjab were mobbed on the platform, often stabbed to death and their few belongings looted. A major incident involved a big convoy carrying perhaps 1,000 from Sialkot to Amritsar. The convoy was stopped and attacked at the Ravi River bridge. Hundreds were stabbed to death and other hundreds wounded.

Refugees from Lyallpur in West Punjab say that so many Sikhs and Hindus were murdered and their bodies thrown into the canal that the canal actually had a pinkish color for a day after.
 
I agree that terrorism cannot be linked to one or any instance of riots... After saying this I also must say that there have been instances where Muslims have felt alienated in our society. Issues like MOCCA which was primarily used against Muslims have made Some(I repeat some) Muslims feel that Indian society is not a place where they can live peacefully. However The fact is that nothing can justify killing innocent people. Gujarat Riots or Babri Masjid demolition are big black blots in otherwise secular face of India.But two wrongs cannot make a right. Just because someone somewhere has done something wrong I cant decide to do the same. That will lead to anarchy. And I have no doubts that secularism is the only way a nation can progress. I believe very strongly that there are few Misguided Muslims youth who can be integrated in main stream society. The opportunities are immense. We just need to grab them.
 
I agree that terrorism cannot be linked to one or any instance of riots... After saying this I also must say that there have been instances where Muslims have felt alienated in our society. Issues like MOCCA which was primarily used against Muslims have made Some(I repeat some) Muslims feel that Indian society is not a place where they can live peacefully. However The fact is that nothing can justify killing innocent people. Gujarat Riots or Babri Masjid demolition are big black blots in otherwise secular face of India.But two wrongs cannot make a right. Just because someone somewhere has done something wrong I cant decide to do the same. That will lead to anarchy. And I have no doubts that secularism is the only way a nation can progress. I believe very strongly that there are few Misguided Muslims youth who can be integrated in main stream society. The opportunities are immense. We just need to grab them.

There is no "rationalization" for terrorist acts -- this is what the author emphasizes at the start and end.

Muslims feel alienated...? could be..but are they the only ones who feel alienated ? Hell no.Dalits feel alienated in many places, tribals feel alienated in many places, North Eastern students who come for education feel alienated in some places, Biharis who come to Mumbai sometimes feel alienated and victimized. So can they all resort to terrorism ?

Is gujarat riots the only riots post partition in India ? were only Muslims killed in the riots ? What if the family members of the Hindus killed in the riots go on a terrorist rampage? would that be justifiable...we need to first come to terms with the problem, acknowledge that it exists and then only we can find a remedy. Being politically correct and burying the head will not solve the problem.

p.s.: if 'some' muslims feel they cant live in peace in India, as you said, they can gtfo to Pakistan or Bangladesh...it was precisely for those 'insecure' Muslims that Pk and BD were created over a river of blood in '47.
 

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