“G

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*“Gandhi’s Assassins*

*Subhash Gatade*

*sub**It is far too early to dismiss the possibility of a future Hindu
State in India. However, the possibility does not appear a strong one. The
secular state has far more than an even chance of survival in India”*

* (India as Secular State, 1963). *


 It was the early sixties when American political scientist Donald Eugene
Smith commented about the “possibility of a Hindu state in India”.


Today, even to a layperson, the secular state in India seems to be standing
on very weak foundations, and the possibility of a Hindu State is far
stronger than it was half a century ago, in 1963.


Perhaps, a pertinent expression of this transformation of India is the
metamorphosis we witness in the image of Nathuram Godse – the assassin of
Mahatma Gandhi, as part of a conspiracy which was hatched by many bigwigs
of the Hindutva Supremacist movement. The makeover in the image is for
eveyone to see: from a murderer, a conspirator, terrorist to a ‘martyr’ who
supposedly ‘deserves’ a temple in his name everywhere. We also learn that
after the ‘successful’ run of a drama in Marathi called Me Nathuram Boltoy
(I Nathuram Speak) for the last few years, plans are afoot to have a movie
made on him, supposedly to communicate his ‘viewpoint’. With the changed
political situation, where even the censor board of the country is
populated by rightwing people, one can guess that it won’t have any
difficulty in release. And with an ambience which is more prone to
illiberal ideas, one can as well prophesy that it will have a good run.


Few people have noted it, but attempts have always been on to rationalise
the killing of Gandhi, to justify it in convoluted terms. To blame it, for
instance, on the issue of ‘Rs 55 crore’ which Gandhi had insisted to be
given to Pakistan after partition, thus making the killing appear as a
spontaneous reaction of a ‘patriot’. This effort tried to obfuscate the
fact that there had been five attempts on Gandhi’s life since the mid
thirties, which involved the Hindutva Supremacists (and even a sixth one,
according to Chunnibhai Vaidya, a Gandhian from Gujarat – you can read more
on this here). It has always involved obliterating the fact that the
conspiracy to assasinate the Mahatma was hatched by what Justice Kapoor had
concluded in 1969: “All these facts taken together were destructive of any
theory other than the conspiracy to murder by Savarkar and his group”
(source). The selective amnesia, which one witnesses vis-a-vis Godse, also
misses the fact that he was associated with the RSS at the time of the
assasination, even though he tactically avoided mentioning his allegiance
to it at the time of his trial. Gopal Godse, his younger brother and part
of the terror module which had hatched the conspiracy, in a detailed
interview to Frontline a few years before his death, had shared all these
aspects.


One can see that the continued ‘glorification of Godse’ and the
government’s turning a blind eye towards these attempts, supposedly by the
‘lunatic fringe’ of the Hindutva brigade, serves a double purpose. First,
it creates a legitimacy for the ‘ideals’ of a Hindu Rashtra, which Godse
espoused and worked for. Secondly, it communicates a message to the core
constituency willing to carve out this Hindu Rashtra from a
Secular-Democratic India: that they should not get confused by the
‘democratic pretensions’ of the new regime and all the talks of ‘the
Constitution as the most sacred book’ or the calls for a ‘moratorium on any
anti-minority violence’ from the ramparts of the Red Fort made by the
elected Premier of the country – a man who still carries the baggage of the
2002 genocide in his homestate Gujarat.


The ambiguity of the Hindutva Right vis-a-vis Gandhi’s assasination – its
poor attempts to co-opt him and its continued silence over the conspiracy
to kill him – also facilitates the ‘sanitisation’ of the great leader. It
would not be surprising if tomorrow we witness selective, out of context or
at times even dressed up quotes from his volume of writings,
misrepresenting Gandhi having no qualms about the Hindutva project or
legitimising the exclucivist agenda of the Parivar.


The evolution of Godse’s image invites us to look back, and go in for a
deep introspection about the way we imagined secularism, why its reduction
to the discourse of the ‘Sarv Dharm Sambhav’ (‘All Religions Being Equal’)
is insufficient, and why it is high time that we understand and practice it
as separation of religion from state. There is no denying the fact that we
clearly lack a social foundation for secularism. The question arises why
more than sixty years after we embarked on a secular path, it has remained
so weak. But one should remark that the emphasis has always been on
maintaining the secularity of the state, while forgetting or neglecting the
important aspect of the secularisation of society. Perhaps, this has to do
with the emphasis of the progressive/transformative movements on
political-economic struggles and their neglect of intervention in the
social-cultural arena.


State institutions have also missed occasions to ensure secularism. India
has witnessed hundreds of communal riots since independence, which saw
thousands of people dead. Judicial commissions appointed after such
bloodletting have pointed fingers at heads, leaders of communal
organisations and the laxity of the police but none of them – barring a few
footsoldiers – have ever been punished. Post the 2002 riots, we have also
become aware of how the state has slowly abdicated the role of providing
relief and rehabilitation to riot affected people and victims of communal
violence, and the vacuum has been filled by different community
organisations. One could witness this not only in Gujarat, but even in a
state like Assam – ruled by the Congress consecutively for three terms –
when there was violence in the BTAD areas. According to a journalist, most
of the relief camps set up for the internally displaced people were run
either by Jamaat-e-Islami or Jamiat-Ulema-i-Hind, making the victims and
other affected people more amenable to their agendas.


Those risks exist across India, and also beyond our borders. It is really a
strange coincidence that while we are debating the ascendance of the
Hindutva Right here, the rest of South Asia looks very similar, where
majoritarian forces owing allegiance to a particular religion or ethnicity
seem to be on the upswing. Myanmar, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, the Maldives,
Pakistan: you name a country and find democratic forces being pushed to the
margins while majoritarian voices gain a new voice and strength.

What is noticeable in this picture is that the perpetrator community
changes as you cross the national borders. In Burma, the Buddhists seem to
be the perpetrators, and the Muslims seem to be at the receiving end. In
Bangladesh, there is reversal of these roles. It is disturbing to note, in
such a volatile situation, how one type of fanaticism feeds on the other.
The Buddhist extremists in Myanmar strengthen Islamists in Bangladesh, who
in turn further add strength to the Hindutva supremacists in India. The
first half of the 20th century, this area had been witness to anti-colonial
struggles, which had strengthened one another’s emancipatory aspirations.
In the first quarter of the 21st century, we have all been witnesses to the
explosion of majoritarian movements trying to put all the achievements of
democracy and secularism on the back-burner.


If we move out of the theatre of South Asia, the situation looks equally
grim. One definitely perceives a global context which is much more
favourable to the ascendance, everywhere, of rightwing, chauvinist
movements. The left movement had acted as a bulwark against Fascist
reaction in the 1920-30s, but its general decline (barring a few countries)
is only further complicating the picture. The situation as it exists today
around us and elsewhere does not seem hopeful. All of us yearning and
struggling for peace, justice, progress seem be on the receiving end of an
unholy alliance between fanaticism, religious extremism of various kinds
and the capitalist behemoths. But that should not deter us from moving
ahead, forging new solidarities, envisioning a better future for humanity.


Perhaps, in these dark times, it would be worthwhile to remember how
Rabindranath Tagore asked people in one of his memorable poems to “go your
own way alone, if no one responds to your call” – “Jodi tor dak shune keu
na ase tobe ekla cholo re”. A song much liked by Mahatma Gandhi, who fell
to the assasins bullets exactly 67 years ago.state in

((Originally published on LILA Inter-actions (
http://www.lilainteractions.in/fascism/)  the online medium of translocal
dialogues by LILA Foundation) India seems to be standing on very weak
foundations, and the possibility of a Hindu State is far stronger than it
was half a century ago, in 1963.

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