*Goodbye Secularism! Enter Theocracy!!*

*Understanding the yet unfolding ‘Dietary Fascism’ *

- subhash gatade



To the question whether the Hindus ever ate beef, every Touchable Hindu,
whether he is a Brahmin or a non-Brahmin, will say ‘no, never’. In a
certain sense, he is right. From times no Hindu has eaten beef. If this is
all that the Touchable Hindu wants to convey by his answer there need be no
quarrel over it. But when the learned Brahmins argue that the Hindus not
only never ate beef but they always held the cow to be sacred and were
always opposed to the killing of the cow, it is impossible to accept their
view...

-          B. R. Ambedkar*1*





"Did the Hindus never eat Beef?" Dr Ambedkar has dealt with this specific
issue holistically in his various writings and has also tried to link it
with emergence of 'untouchable' castes.

At a time when the saffrons are keen to appropriate Ambedkar  - who had
time and again cautioned his followers about the dangers of Hindu Raj*2 *and
appealed to them to fight the twin enemies of  Brahminism and Capitalism -
and present him as someone who not only endorsed the Hindutva project but
also opposed beef eating as cow was sacred to Hinduism, it would be
opportune to pose this question afresh before them.

You may encounter either complete silence or sudden eruption supposedly to
'drown' the question itself. Either way they would demonstrate that they
very well understand that getting into debate over this issue has the
possibility and potential of subverting the very edifice built by them
which blames 'outsiders' especially Islam or Muslim rulers for many of the
ills of our society. They very well know that there is a world of
difference between the idea of Hindutva promoted by them and what Ambedkar
thought.

Taking into consideration this complete dissonance in both viewpoints and
keen to lure Dalit masses in their dubious project of Hindu consolidation,
the saffrons have devised a clever strategy of carving out a sanitised
version of Ambedkar devoid of his revolutionary vision and bracketing him
in its pantheon of leaders - comprising of Hedgewar, Savarkar, Golwalkar
etc – whom it considers as '*Pratah Smaraniya*' (worth remembering in the
morning) . And glossing over his direct attacks on Hinduism and his
declaration in mid-thirties that 'he may be born a Hindu but would not die
a Hindu' and implementing it ultimately by accepting Buddhism along with
lakhs of his followers few months before his death, they are keen to
project him as a Hindu social reformer to befool the Dalit masses.

For a politics which is based on exclusion and hatred of 'others' one
cannot expect anything better. Selective amnesia vis-a-vis his
contributions is an integral part of their project of adopting or
assimilating Ambedkar to suit needs of their divisive politics.

Interestingly this approach of selective appropriation or remembrance of
leaders who were not quite amenable to the project of Hindu Rashtra is not
limited to them only. It is extended even to those personalities/leaders
also whose worldview largely converges with the saffrons themselves.

Take the case of Swami Vivekanand, who is much celebrated and glorified in
the Hindutva circles as one of their own. Not a day passes when Sangh and
the plethora of affiliated organisations forget to lay claim to his legacy.
While the RSS shies away from probing the past Vivekanand is more objective
in revisiting it and thus one discovers that he is also not on the same
page on the issue of beef eating with them.

While speaking to a large gathering at the Shakespeare Club, Pasadena,
California, USA (2 February 1900) on the theme of "Buddhistic India" he is
reported to have said:

“You will be astonished if I tell you that, according to old ceremonials,
he is not a good Hindu who does not eat beef. On certain occasions he must
sacrifice a bull and eat it.” *3*

Ram Puniyani tells us in his write-up "Beef, Pink Revolution and Identity
Politics" (
http://www.carvaka4india.com/2014/05/beef-pink-revolution-and-identity.html)
that this is corroborated by other research works sponsored by the
Ramakrishna Mission established by Swami Vivekananda himself. One of these
reads:

 “The Vedic Aryans, including the Brahmanas, ate fish, meat and even beef.
A distinguished guest was honoured with beef served at a meal. Although the
Vedic Aryans ate beef, milch cows were not killed. One of the words that
designated cow was aghnya (what shall not be killed). But a guest was a
goghna (one for whom a cow is killed). It is only bulls, barren cows and
calves that were killed.” *4*

Savarkar, Pioneer of the concept of 'Hindutva' seems more blunt where he
emphasises ‘the cow is neither God nor mother but purely a useful animal.
We should not worship it but we must breed and nurture the animal because
we can reap the best advantages from it’.*5* In his Marathi book 'X kirane'
he also lambasts cow worship by  saying that if someone from the animal
kingdom is worth worshipping, then why not start worshipping pig also as
among the nine lives/avatar of Vishnu , there is one which is *Varahvatar*
(Varah stands for pig) also. He also mentions that there are references
even in 'Vedas when cow was slaughtered' (..'*gomedhhi vedadikat
turalakpane ullekhile aahet'* X- kirane,(Savarkar,Marathi book, Page 16)
Interestingly he also hints that at its 'destruction' when it 'ceases to be
worthy of sustenance'

Animals such as the cow and buffalo and trees such as banyan and peepal are
useful to man, hence we are fond of them; to that extent we might even
consider them worthy of worship;!.. Does it not follow then that when under
certain circumstances, that animal or tree becomes a source of trouble to
mankind, it *ceases to be worthy of sustenance* or protection and as such
its *destruction is in humanitarian or national interests *and becomes a
human or national dharma?*6* (emphasis mine)

It is an open secret that the saffrons while eulogising Vivekanand,
Savarkar etc prefer to keep mum about many such aspects of their
'explosive' observations.

For them '*Maunam sarvatra sadhanam*' (Silence serves the purpose)

0 0

 “My brief was to prevent any ban on cow slaughter. It was important for us
in the dairy business to keep weeding out the unhealthy cows so that
available resources could be utilised for healthy and productive cattle. I
was prepared to go as far as to allow that no useful cow should be killed.
This was the point on which the Shankaracharya and I invariably locked
horns and got into heated arguments. I constantly asked him, ‘Your
Holiness, are you going to take all the useless cows which are not
producing anything and look after them and feed them till they die? You
know that cannot work.’ He never had any answer to my query.”

(V Kurien, 'Father of White Revolution,' in his autobiography)

A valid question at this juncture could be why does one wants to 'rake up'
such uncomfortable questions, which can provoke the band of
'self-proclaimed defenders of faith and culture' rather the 'brigade of
hurt sentiments'.

The immediate context to look into this aspect has to do with the
Presidential assent to a bill lying with his office for around twenty years
which pertained to banning beef. It was mid-nineties when Shiv Sena-BJP
government was holding reins of power in the state of Maharashtra for the
first time, when it had passed this bill called 'Maharashtra Animal
Preservation (Amendment) Bill, 1995 which proposed blanket ban on the
slaughter of bulls, bullocks and calves, in addition to cows. With the
changed dispensation at the centre and state, the Phadanvis government lost
no time in pursuing the bill, which has finally got clearance.

Definitely Maharashtra does not happen to be the first state to issue a
ban. Many Indian states have already passed laws which ban or regulate
slaughter of cows but the Maharashtra bill has gone one step further than
them. It has also banned sale of beef products also. And the punishment
suggested for violation of this law is draconian to say the least. Mere
possession of beef or beef products will then be punishable by a fine of
Rs10,000 ($160) or five years in prison. In other states such meat can be
consumed if it is brought in from other states where there is no such ban
but there is no such possibility in Maharashtra.

With the passage of the bill Maharashtra has become a state where eating
beef is more dangerous than sexually harassing a woman. A perpetrator of
sexual harassment would get a maximum sentence of two years whereas if the
police spot you holding piece of beef in your hand, then you can be
interned for five years. One rather discovers that there seems to be a
competition for more stringent punishment especially among BJP ruled states
when it comes to banning cow slaughter. Few years back M.P. government had
passed *Gauvansh Vadh Pratishedh ( Sanshodhit*) Act which had duly received
Presidential nod where the punishment for 'slaughtering cow or its progeny,
transporting them for slaughter or storing beef was up to seven years in
jail.

This move to 'criminalise food habits of people' has been rightly
criticised for its economic, social and dietary impact. Perhaps the hardest
hitting comment about the ban came in from rather unexpected quarters.
Famous writer Salman Rushdie tweeted to say:

'Congratulations Maharashtra: it is now safer to be a cow than a woman,
Dalit, Muslim in the state.'

One can easily imagine the economic impact this move may have on the lives
of lakhs of people engaged in this work at various levels. According to a
report which appeared in 'Mint'

'[3]0,000-35,000 animals (buffaloes and bulls) are slaughtered in
Maharashtra every day and on average each animal gives 150kg of meat.
Around 1.5 million people are directly employed by the industry and are
involved in transportation of animals, butchering them, processing meat and
transporting beef to either domestic or international markets.*7*

Looking at the fact that the state plays a pivotal role in supplying hide
to tanneries in Kolkata and Chennai it would spell a doom for leather trade
in the state as well. e.g. The Deonar slaughterhouse based in Mumbai
supplies 450 animal hides a day, mainly buffaloes to these tanneries.

This move would also adversely impact the farmer community as it will have
to continue spend water and fodder for bullocks that are useless for farm
work. In a country where we are still far away from meeting the basic
hunger of people, the upkeep of bullocks, buffaloes that cannot be sent to
slaughterhouses will fell on the farmer, which will further impoverish
them. As can be envisaged it will have a negative impact on the economies
of poor households and would also affect milk production.

An important fallout of this move would be its negative impact on the
intake of cheap proteins by a vast majority of people - dalits, adivasis,
Muslims, Christians etc - for whom beef happens to be the cheapest source
of protein as it costs nearly one-third of mutton or *gosht* and forms
important part of traditional food habits of people. As of now the overall
per capita consumption of meat in India is among the lowest in the world.
According to a FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations) report in in 2007, India logged in last in a total of 177
countries. Its annual consumption of meat per person was just 3.2 kg at a
time when Americans were eating as much as 125 kg per head and the world
average was 38. 7 kg. *8*

If we go for further break-up of the meat consumed, another FAO report
titled 'Livestock Information, Sector Analysis and Police branch'*9* tells
us that the 'largest consumed meat in India is beef. The per capita
consumption of beef is 26 lakh tonnes as compared to 6 lakh tonnes mutton
and 14 lakh tonnes of pork.

The low consumption of meat has nothing to do with the fact that majority
of Indians are vegetarian. In fact, as the well-known 'People of India
project' undertaken by late Kumar Suresh Singh had demonstrated that nearly
88 per cent of India's communities count themselves among the meat-eaters,
though they are not particular about the type. (1993) This mammoth project
involving over 500 sociologists and 3,000 researchers studied more than
4,000 communities over eight years, which  produced a report which had
exploded the stereotype of every community.

0 0

Perhaps a first step to galvanise resistance to this motivated move by the
people in power which directly impinges on the food habits of people,
impacts the availability of cheap proteins to them, burdens the farmers
further with livestock which is practically useless for them, severely
attacks livelihoods of lakhs of people, has the possibility of furthering
inter-communal divide and is an attempt to force-feed Brahminical ideas
about diet to the broad masses of people would be to explain the great
hiatus which exists between what the BJP led NDA government seems to preach
and practice.

People very well remember when Narendra Modi was leading the campaign of
BJP against UPA II government last year he had made speeches that the
government was subsidising slaugherhouses and was engaged in promoting meat
exports. He had used the word "pink revolution" alluding to beef exports in
his speech supposedly to exploit majoritarian sentiments. In one of his
meetings in Bihar in April 2014 he had said :

“This country wants a Green Revolution but those at the Centre want a Pink
Revolution,” .. “When animals are slaughtered, the colour of their flesh is
pink.” (
http://www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2015/1/06_01_15-metro1c.jpg)

At another pre-parliamentary poll meeting he said :

“The (UPA) government is not willing to provide subsidy to a person who
keeps a cow but if a person wants to set up a slaughterhouse, he gets
assistance,”(-do-)

One of his blog entry shared his ‘agony’:

 “It saddens me, that present UPA Government led by Congress is promoting
slaughtering of cows and exporting beef to bring ‘Pink Revolution’”.

Women and child development minister Maneka Gandhi in her election meetings
in September 14 even alleged that illegal slaughter and export of animals
in the country was funding terrorist activities.

It is a different matter that once they were in power choosing 'pragmatism
over politics' was their *mantra*. It was not for nothing that during the
first eight months of this fiscal one witnessed quantum jump in meat
exports.

India sold meat and meat products worth $3.3 billion during April-November
2014 compared to $2.8 billion in the same period the previous year,
registering a 16.74% jump. Buffalo meat constituted about 97% of the total
livestock products exported from the country as the export of cow meat is
banned in India. (do)

According to the reporter who filed the above story, neither Nirmala
Seetharaman, Cabinet minister in Modi government was available for comment,
nor four spokespersons of the BJP bothered to respond to 'explain' this
quantum jump. And it was left to Congres leader Manish Tewari to 'expose
their duplicity and sanctimoniousness'. He said :

“While in Opposition the Prime Minister is at the forefront of slamming the
purported pink revolution and when in government he is at the forefront of
promoting it as evidenced by the rise in export figures,”..“This nation
needs to know where the PM and his government stand on it. If they were so
against it, why has it not been banned? ..

Discussing this issue of how 'politicians manipulate Hindu sentiments
around cow slaughter' Shoib Daniyal rightly concludes : *10*

This contradictory approach to the issue of cow protection shows that it is
treated more as a political rather than religious matter. Cow protection
sentiments are exploited by the state and politicians to mobilise people
and catch votes, targeting poor Muslims and Dalits by accusing them of cow
slaughter. Of course, since other factors are clean ignored (as a result of
economic considerations), these laws do nothing to actually improve the lot
of cattle in the country.

0 0

My question is, how can the state impose a certain food culture on people?
The state has nothing to do with food. They can give certain food to people
depending on the market, but cannot impose that you can or cannot eat
certain food items. If beef eating is bad for Brahmins or Baniyas or
certain upper castes, then the state is imposing that on the rest of the
society. So the state is actually becoming a theocratic state. This is how
the RSS ideology is being pushed. *11*

This move by Maharashtra government about banning beef evoked strong
protest in different universities of Hyderabad  - EFLU (English and Foreign
Languages University), Central and Osmania Universities of Hyderabad -
where a ‘Beef Festival’ was organized as indication of protest. The
students marked it as a protest against the attempts of 'the RSS driven NDA
Government to impose its Hindutva cults and the Manu culture', express
'their freedom to eat food of their choice'. Terming it a 'suppression of
the food culture by the "fascist forces" of India', it was emphasised that
it is a mode of discrimination against the already marginalized communities
and would badly impact the livelihood of communities whose economy is
associated with leather and meat.*12*

One also witnessed protest against the ban on beef in Maharashtra in
Chennai also where a group of lawyers held a beef eating protest. There is
no law banning cow slaughter in Tamil Nadu, there is fear that Tamil Nadu
may also clamp down on beef.

According to newspaper reports The Democratic Youth Federation of India,
the youth wing of the Communist Party of India Marxist, has decided to hold
a nationwide ‘Beef Festival’ to protest the ban in Maharashtra, DYFI
national president, M.B. Rajesh said in Kozhikode. He called the decision a
“fascist move” and  also resolved to join hands with all pro-democracy
forces to hold protest programmes against the ban on beef.

Few years back when then the BJP led government in Karnataka had enacted
similar law the state had witnessed widespread protests which saw coming
together of different groups including Rajya Raitha Sangha (state farmer
organisation), Komu Souharda Vedike (Communal Amity Forum), the Dalit
Sangharsha Samiti, which fights for the rights of Dalits, and the Beef
Merchants Association and many civil liberty activists and intellectuals.
One rally in Bengaluru drew more than 20,000 people where the late U R
Ananthmurthy, well known Kannad author and professor, tore up a copy of the
bill and lambasted the then state government for a communally motivated
bill. In his brief speech he emphasised how this move would make criminals
out of ordinary dalits, Muslims and Christians, and would put farmers in
distress because they would not be able to sell off their cattle.

One can foresee that we may witness similar 'criminalisation' on the
streets of Maharashtra in the days to come with the Hindutva zealots aiding
the police in their attempts to discipline people. Interested people can
refer to an earlier piece of mine which describes impact of any such
majoritarian move on innocents.*13*

There are reports that the association of meat traders is planning to move
the courts to challenge the ban, but one does not know whether people,
formations, organisations who are working for the betterment of different
sections of society or political parties are coming together to challenge
this 'communally motivated' move  on streets or not. Looking at the fact
that an ally of the ruling dispensation in the state - Swambhimaani
Shetkari Sangathana - which has base among peasants and farmers has
expressed apprehensions over this law, it would not be out of place to plan
some intervention and slowly gather voices of opposition.

It should be kept in mind that other BJP ruled states - which have not yet
passed similar laws e.g. Haryana- are also contemplating similar moves and
it is of key importance that Maharashtra which wears its ‘progressive’ tag
on its sleeves should break new grounds in resisting this move and create
such an ambience that the people in power in the state are compelled to
revisit the decision.

We should bear in mind that it is not a question of those thousands of
traders and their associates who are engaged in meat trade, it is a
question which touches every cross-section of society. It is therefore high
time that right from nutrition experts, right to food activists, civil
liberty activists and intellectuals to dalit, farmer as well as
anti-communal organisations everybody should join hands to oppose this move
which is essentially a very organised albeit concealed attack on people’s
right to food under the specious argument that their choice of food
supposedly hurts sentiments of a privileged few.

It is high time that India, which yearns to become an economic superpower
in the 21st century, took a radical rupture from all such remnants of
‘jurassic park’ mentality centering around the logic of ‘purity’ and
‘pollution’ which have proved to be its bane all these years.



(References :

1.       ‘Did the Hindus never eat beef?’ in The Untouchables: Who Were
They and Why They Became Untouchables? in Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Writings
and Speeches, vol. 7, (Government of Maharashtra, Bombay, 1990, first
edition 1948) pp. 323-328.)
http://www.countercurrents.org/ambedkar050315.htm

2.        “If Hindu Raj does becomes a fact, it will no doubt, be the
greatest calamity for this country. No matter what the Hindus say, Hinduism
is a menace to liberty, equality and fraternity. On that account it is
incompatible with democracy.

Hindu Raj must be prevented at any cost.”

Ambedkar B. R., Pakistan or the Partition of India, in Vasant Moon
(compiled), Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar : Writings and Speeches, Vol 8, Education
Deptt, Govt of Maharashtra, Mumbai, 1990 p. 358



3.       Swami Vivekananda, The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, Vol.
3, Calcutta: Advaita Ashram, 1997, p. 536.



4.       C. Kunhan Raja, ‘Vedic Culture’, cited in the series, Suniti Kumar
Chatterji and others (eds.), The Cultural Heritage of India, Vol 1
(Calcutta: The Ramakrishna Mission, 1993), 217.

5.       Savarkar, Vinayak Damodar. *Samagra Savarkar Vangmaya*, Vol. VI,
p. 107. 37 Savarkar, Vinayak Damodar. *Samagra Savarkar Vangmaya*, Vol. VI,
p. 37

6.       Veer Savarkar *(Samaj Chitre* or portraits of society, Samagra
Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 2, p.678,
http://www.savarkar.org/en/rationalism/cow-protection-and-cow-worship)

7.
http://www.livemint.com/Politics/WKpEtRGyTi3G19LXKKR2OM/Maharashtra-beef-ban-stokes-debate.html?utm_source=copy

8.       http://www.downtoearth.org.in/content/meaty-tales-vegetarian-india

9.       quoted in 'Cow on Indian Political Chessboard' Ed. Ram Puniyani,
Page 93,  Black Pepper, Jan 2014

10.
http://scroll.in/article/711064/Maharashtra%E2%80%99s-beef-ban-shows-how-politicians-manipulate-Hindu-sentiments-around-cow-slaughter

11.   'Maharashtra's beef ban is not merely communal, it is theocratic' :
Kancha Ilaiah, DNA, Wednesday, 4 March 2015 - 9:55pm IST | Agency: dna

12.
http://www.thehansindia.com/posts/index/2015-03-05/Why-is-our-*beef*
-targeted-by-Modi-ask-students-135523

13.   http://caravandaily.com/portal/what-gujarat-does-today-subhash-gatade

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