Sunday, 28 December 2014

EDITORIAL



Nationalism as antonym of communalism

(the hindu editorial).....

Since Independence, secularism is increasingly opposed to communalism, with the nation no longer central to its definition. Does this
indicate the failure of the nation to demonstrate its plurality, and therefore secularism?
One of the peculiarities of Indian political debate is that everyone claims to be secular while accusing others of not
being so. Secularism’s hegemony as an idea was made clear by L.K. Advani, when he coined the now famous term
“pseudo-secular” to describe his political enemies. But if secularism is so dominant an idea, this is because it is and
has always been deployed as a polemical category as much as a constitutional principle, and indeed its insertion into
the Constitution by Indira Gandhi was itself a partisan act. In colonial times, for example, Congressmen identified
secularism with nationalism, which was in turn held to be the real antonym of communalism. In other words it was
the pluralism and popularity of the Congress, compared with the supposedly sectarian appeal of Hindu and Muslim
parties, that was seen as defining its secular credentials, and this in a demographic rather than constitutional way.
On secularism
Since Independence, however, secularism is increasingly opposed to communalism, with the nation no longer central
to its definition. Is it therefore being separated from a strictly populist logic to assume a purely juridical character —
and does this indicate the failure of the nation to demonstrate its plurality and therefore secularism, which must
instead be sought in the pre-modern past? Even in the days of its alleged dominance under Nehru, secularism could
hardly be said to possess its own history or even existential reality, given that its membership included both the
religious and irreligious. Indeed, secularists had to lay claim to explicitly religious precedents, such as bhakti or Sufi
forms of devotion, and the pluralistic festivals with which these were often associated. In other words, thecondescending reference was invariably to the “folk” devotions that had never, in fact, been part of the “culture” of
self-professed secularists.
And so both the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) continue to invoke a populist and indeed
majoritarian logic to define the secular, but the changing nature of the Indian polity has given this rhetoric a quite
different meaning. For the folk elements of its demographic logic have been replaced by varieties of ostensibly highculture
religiosity that no longer needs to display any pluralism, as long as it is assumed to be “tolerant”, a term that
in the nationalist past had been used for another kind of high culture, that of royalty and aristocrats like Asoka or
Akbar. Nehru himself preferred this form of the secular, which also served as a historical mask for the Congress’s
quasi-colonial vision of itself. Before Independence, after all, its claims to hold the demographic middle ground
between religious extremes had mirrored British attempts to constitute the colonial state as a neutral third party
between Hindus and Muslims, itself a classically liberal position, despite the fact that it was deployed in an illiberal
political system.
By making such a claim while not yet in control of the state, the Congress signalled its intention of taking it over, and
in the meantime creating an alternative structure of governance in Indian society. But like the colonial state and its
inappropriately liberal model of rule, the Congress also sought to delimit the political arena by circumscribing it
within certain linguistic and institutional conventions, thus depoliticising everything outside these as “irrational,”
“superstitious” and the like. And yet it was this very Congress, especially under Gandhi’s influence, that had always
subjected both the “neutrality” of British rule and even that of the state as such to criticism, of which the theory of
“divide and rule” was perhaps the most common manifestation. What did it mean, then, to claim a neutrality that
was at the same time denied, one that in addition was made outside the state whose capture was simultaneously
being anticipated?
State of politics
We might argue that secularism remains a polemical category because it is deployed in order to capture the state
while never fully inhabiting it. For as in colonial times, during which its exclusion from state power made for a
nationalism grounded in society and its cultural and religious languages, Indian politics today continues to be divided
between state and society. This is nowhere more evident than in the way in which even the most powerful of India’s
governments have never been able or indeed willing to monopolise the use of violence in the classical form, as defined“The absence of a
distinctive theory
of state repeatedly
casts Hindu
nationalism back
into a social
movement, one
that can only make
claims on cultural
and demographic
rather than
constitutional
grounds.”
by Max Weber, that is meant to characterise nation states. On the contrary, they
tolerate and even rely upon what we might describe as “social” violence, whether or
not it is encouraged and even organised by agents of the state.
This inability or unwillingness to monopolise the use of violence in its own name, I
want to argue, illustrates neither the weakness nor backwardness of the Indian
state, but instead constitutes its dynamic structural logic, one that has again come
into its own after India’s liberalisation in the 1990s, when society, in the form of the
private sector and informal economy, re-emerged as an important site of political
contestation. In this sense the non-Weberian character of the Indian state is as
linked to neoliberalism today as it had been in the colonial past to the anticipatory
politics of a nationalism based in society. And it is the BJP that is now in the
position of traversing the path from social to state power, and wrestling, as the
Congress once did, with the problem of striking a balance between the two, if one
can indeed be found.
Hindu nationalism
Hindu nationalism, which in the form of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)
has repeatedly been banned, and thus deprived of a political life in public
institutions, has for a long time now represented the quintessential form that social
power takes in India. For by the time Indira Gandhi’s premiership came to an end,
the once formidable social base of the Congress had been whittled away, as the party
chose to concentrate its power in the institutions of the state. Of course it continued
to rely upon non-state actors, most violently during the anti-Sikh pogroms of 1984,
but these did not represent the kind of mass base that the Congress had possessed in colonial times. Hindu
nationalism, on the other hand, augmented its social power while keeping it separate from the fortunes of the BJP as
a political party, though this relationship has been placed under strain whenever the latter has been in government.
More interesting than the shifting balance of power between the BJP and its “family” of non-state Hindu
organisations, however, might be the fact that Hindu nationalism has never possessed a theory of state. Unlike thevision of an Islamic state, for instance, with its distinctive if non-egalitarian constitutional structure, Hindu
nationalism has no alternative political model, apart from an insistence on the dominance of majoritarian culture and
concerns. And this is its triumph as much as tragedy, since the absence of a distinctive theory of state repeatedly casts
Hindu nationalism back into a social movement, one that can only make claims on cultural and demographic rather
than constitutional grounds. And in this sense it is the most appropriate heir of a concept of secularism that had
always been populist in its argumentation. If anyone has recognised this, it is, unsurprisingly, the Muslim
“fundamentalists” who support secularism in India, but want an Islamic state where they are in a majority. They deny
the hypocrisy of this position by arguing that since Hindu nationalism has no theory of state, and so no critique of
secularism, it might be oppressive but is still capable of being secular.
But the fact that Hindu nationalism possesses no theory of state also means that it carries the non-Weberian logic of
Indian politics to its conclusion, by refusing to depoliticise social life or condemn its concerns as “irrational” and
“superstitious”. In doing so, it is not only heir to the whole history of nationalism in colonial India, but at the same
time is also best placed to capitalise on the importance of “civil society” activism in our own neoliberal times.
Commentary on both secularism and communalism in India has tended to focus too readily on plots and conspiracies
that are meant to illustrate the coming together of sinister caste, class and other interests with popular prejudice and
fear. But while accurate in some ways, these modes of understanding may be too superficial in others. We should
attend instead to the structural and historical factors that define Indian politics, which appear to show a much
greater continuity between parties and politics than is usually recognised to be the case.  
                                                           by,  Faisal Devji

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