*The reviewer's brief on the supposed radicalisation of Jamaat-e-Islami
suffer from an ideological bias. The actual facts clearly prove that Jamaat
has very deliberately kept itself away from any attempt towards
radicalisation. Jamaat's break with SIMI is further proof that Jamaat
actively condemned radicalisation. SIMI's supposed radicalisation is more
paper and a myth floated by the joint efforts of L. K. Advani (BJP's Union
Home minister) and Chaggan Bhujbal ( Shiv Sena's Maharashtra Home Minister),
who needed a bogey to demonise Muslims. A vicious crackdown followed the
banning of SIMI. However, the record of convictions of those wrongly
arrested is so dismal, that the propaganda image of SIMI is not
substantiated by facts. One hopes Irfan Ahmed's book is not as facile as the
review by A.G. Noorani. To club Jamaat with SIMI is not an honest exercise.*
*
*
*Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai*


http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/thscrip/print.pl?file=20100312270508300.htm&date=fl2705/&prd=fline&;

*BOOKS*

*The switch to jehad*

A.G. NOORANI

*An authentic documentation of the process of radicalisation of the
Jamaat-e-Islami.*



*A Democracy proves its vitality by absorbing in its processes far-out
dissent, and dissent shows its maturity by taking the democratic path.
Indian democracy is a success story. The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, no
longer secessionist, is a respected participant in Indian politics as are
the Communist Party of India and the Communist Party of India (Marxist). The
Calcutta thesis of 1948 has long been discarded. The Rashtriya Swayamsewak
Sangh floated a political front, the Bh aratiya Janata Party; but, for all
their professions, neither sincerely believes in a secular democracy.*

*The Indian state has followed a strange policy towards the Jamaat-e-Islami,
equating it with the RSS whenever it took action against the latter. But the
Jamaat has no private army, like the Bajrang Dal; no record of violence
during the riots and no sign of the obscene affluence of the Sangh Parivar.
It has a reactionary, and an utterly bigoted worldview, abhorrent to most
Muslims. Even in Kashmir, it made a poor showing at the elections. The
Jamaat in Pakistan fared poorly in the 2009 general elections.*

*Irfan Ahmad is an anthropologist and Assistant Professor of Politics at
Monash University in Australia, where he helps to lead the Centre for Islam
and the Modern World. This book, his first, is a work of thorough research
and rigorous analysis.*

*The Jamaat was founded in 1941 by Abdul Ala Maududi, whose gifts in
polemics impressed many to the point that they considered him erudite. The
truly erudite Fazlur Rehman judged him correctly: “Though not an **alim** [an
erudite man], nonetheless a self-taught man of considerable intelligence and
had sufficient knowledge of Arabic to have access to the classical Arabic
literature of Islam. He was by no means an accurate or a profound scholar,
but he was undoubtedly like a fresh wind in the stifling Islamic atmosphere
created by the traditional madrassas….*

*“But Maududi displays nowhere the larger and more profound vision of
Islam’s role in the world… for the faithful, Maududi’s statements
represented the last word on Islam – no matter how much and how blatantly he
contradicted himself from time to time on such basic issues as economic
policy or political theory” (**Islam & Modernity;** page 116).*
*“Newsman & Agitator”*

*He imparted a comforting certitude and his influence spread. The famous
Egyptian journalist Mohamed Heikal called him “a newsman and agitator” whose
ideas were taken up by Syed Qutb of the Muslim Brotherhood. He opposed the
Muslim League as a **Jamaat-e-jahiliyat** (a party of the pagans). Two weeks
after Partition, he left for Lahore.*

*The author traces the Jamaat’s origins and its chequered career in India,
including its breakaway faction, the Students Islamic Movement of India
(SIMI), taking in his stride politics in the Aligarh Muslim University in
Deoband, the role of madrassas and concepts like jehad. He discusses in
context the role of the Sangh Parivar and the shortcomings of our democratic
process. Field work, access to works in Urdu, tables of statistics and
documentation make this a dependable work of reference. It is by far the
best book on the Jamaat-e-Islami; thorough, courageous and honest.*
*Saffron wave*

*It describes how the Jamaat came to accept enthusiastically secularism and
democracy, concepts it had earlier rejected, as it had participated in
elections.*

*Since Muslims did not respond, the Jamaat was isolated. An Islamic state
was its main objective. It was India’s secular democracy that brought about
the change. “My argument so far that secular democracy catalysed the
moderation of the Jamaat, one may point out, fails to explain the
radicalisation of the SIMI. But far from weakening my argument, I hold that
the SIMI’s radicalisation strengthens my contention. In Chapter 6, I showed
that the SIMI radicalised in response to the saffron wave; that is, the SIMI
began to radicalise with the rise of Hindutva following the Ayodhya campaign
that left a trail of brutal violence throughout India, costing thousands of
lives (mostly Muslims) and leading to the demolition of the Babri mosque.*

***P.V. SIVAKUMAR **

A protest near Charminar in Hyderabad, in the wake of the demolition of the
Babri Masjid in Ayodhya.*

*“Until the late 1980s the SIMI’s prime concern was moral and educational.
Neither jehad nor a caliphate were on its agenda (see the 2003 interview of
its founding president, Siddiqui). The SIMI’s radicalisation from the 1990s
on – centred around the Babri mosque – was expressed in three issues; the
call for jehad, the declaration of India as **dar al-harb,** and the
installation of the caliphate. All these matters were intimately linked to
state practices.*

*“The point is that Hindutva’s agenda of the Hindu state and its fierce
anti-Muslim nature spurred SIMI’s radicalisation. Worth noting is that over
fifteen per cent of its total members came, according to an ansar (worker)
of SIMI, only from the state of Maharashtra where the Shiv Sena, a
constituent of the Sangh Parivar, had been in power and involved in one of
the worst riots ever in Bombay. This also explains SIMI’s diatribe against
polytheism and Hindutva.*

*“As long as the Nehruvian project of a plural, non-monopolistic, secular,
and democratic India (Khilnani 1997) was hegemonic, Islamist radicalisation
was almost non-existent. Even a party as rigid as the Jamaat underwent
moderation. This is not to say that the Congress was divinely secular. The
state under its dispensation also practised communal policies, but its
communalism was pragmatic. By contrast, the communalism of the Sangh Parivar
was programmatic.”*

*This thesis is fully established by the author’s authentic documentation.
It should make all secularists sit up and ponder.*

*-------------------------------------------------------------*

*
*

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