A letter to Modi: Why is there such a gap between your wonderful words and 
your actions?The PM has not read the riot act to his Islamophobic 
ministers, legislators and the Sangh even once since coming to power, says 
author Kiran Nagarkar.


Dear Prime Minister Modiji,

On March 17, you outdid yourself on the first day of the World Sufi Forum 
hosted in Delhi. What could one say except “What a speech, how moving.” You 
had done your homework and you obviously have total recall (it would also 
be interesting to find out who your speechwriters are) but the fact remains 
that you are able to reproduce their amalgam of fact and rhetoric into an 
extempore mix.

This is what you said:

“Welcome to a land that is a timeless fountain of peace, and an ancient 
source of traditions and faiths, which has received and nurtured religions 
from the world. Welcome to a people with an abiding belief in Vasudhaiva 
Kutumbakam, the world is one family.” 

Let me not resent the liberties you took with our past but pass it off as 
your version of Indian history. The list of the saints you name and quote 
is like a who’s who in not just the Indian Sufi world but the whole 
international Sufi heritage – the Persian poet-philosopher Sadi, and 
Delhi’s own Mehboob-eh-Ilahi, Hazarat Bakhtiyar Kaki and Hazrat Nizamuddin 
Aulia. You also referred to Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti, Bulleh Shah, Baba 
Farid, Amir Khusrau, Maulana Hussain Madani, Jalaluddin Rumi, Guru Nanak, 
Buddha, the Guru Granth Sahib, Mahavir, and Mahatma Gandhi. And you ended 
with the timeless prayer “Om shanti, shanti, shanti.”

You had some genuinely wise things to say, like: “We must reject any link 
between terrorism and religion. Those who spread terror in the name of 
religion are anti-religious.”

What noble sentiments. Now here’s a prime minister that I felt we could all 
be proud of. And yet there was this low whisper telling me again and again 
something that the British Underground, along with the local train stations 
in Mumbai, have told us for years – mind the gap, mind the gap, mind the 
gap. That is the gap between the trains and the platforms where so many 
fall and are injured or die. In your case, Prime Minister it’s the 
credibility gap – the chasm between your wonderful words and zero action.

Let me quote your very words:

“… It is through openness and enquiry, engagement and accommodation, and 
respect for diversity that humanity advances, nations progress and the 
world prospers.” 

What sane words. You remind me of Bhishma Pitamah from the*Mahabharata* at 
such times. You speak as wisely as the noble son of Shantanu. And just like 
him, when it’s time to take a stand and back your words with concrete 
action, you retreat into silence and let the other leaders do the dirty 
work and take the blame. Or even worse, you pretend what is happening has 
nothing to do with you. You will recall that just a day after you spoke at 
the World Sufi Forum, your Minister of State for Human Resource 
Development, Ram Shankar Katheria, addressed a crowd of 5,000 in Agra. *The 
Times of India* reported 
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/agra/Agra-would-witness-a-different-Holi-if-hate-speech-cases-arent-withdrawn-threatens-Katheria/articleshow/51461135.cms>
 that 
Katheria had demanded the withdrawal of hate speech cases against BJP and 
VHP leaders in Agra. "If these cases are not withdrawn within the assured 
time, then Agra would witness a different Holi," Katheria was quoted as 
saying. If this is the minister for education, the good Lord may not be 
able to help the students of Jawaharlal Nehru University or any other 
university.

The minister was referring to arrests made after several Bharatiya Janata 
Party and Vishwa Hindu Parishad leaders, including Katheria, madeinflammatory 
speeches 
<http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/muslims-warned-of-final-battle-at-sangh-meet-mos-katheria-says-weve-to-show-our-strength/>
 at 
a condolence meeting of a Vishwa Hindu Parishad worker in Agra in February. 
The worker was murdered, allegedly by a Muslim. At the condolence meeting, the 
BJP and VHP leaders equated Muslims with demons. VHP’s district secretary 
Ashok Lavania called for murder. “Revenge for the killing of one brother, 
demands the killing of 10 rakshas,” he said. After protests following the 
hate speeches, FIRs were finally lodged 
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/agra/BJP-leader-arrested-for-hate-speech-gets-interim-bail/articleshow/51499179.cms>
 against 
BJP leader and corporator Kundanika Sharma and three others. There was none 
against Katheria since, like his seniors, he claimed he never said anything 
against the Muslims. It is these cases that Katheria now wants withdrawn.

The American effect

Have you heard *Strange Fruit*, a song that Billie Holiday, perhaps the 
most famous black jazz singer from the United States, sang? And each time 
she did, she broke down. I must confess I had no idea what she was talking 
about for the longest time.

Here are the lyrics of *Strange Fruit*, Prime Minister:

*Southern trees bear a strange fruit,*

*Blood on the leaves and blood at the root,*

*Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze,*

*Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.*


*Pastoral scene of the gallant south,*

*The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth,*

*Scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh,*

*Then the sudden smell of burning flesh.*


*Here is fruit for the crows to pluck,*

*For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck,*

*For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop,*

*Here is a strange and bitter crop.*

She was of course singing a dirge for all those black victims of lynchings 
by white supremacists. Oddly enough, we who are so fond of emulating the 
American way of life – that country’s fixation with free markets and the 1% 
who earn far more than what at least 50% of the population does – seem to 
have now decided to copy some of the worst American values when it comes to 
our minorities.

As you are well aware, earlier this month in Jharkhand, Mohammmad Majloom, 
35, and Inayatullah Khan, 12, were gagged 
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ranchi/Cattle-traders-hanged-to-death-from-tree-in-Jharkhand/articleshow/51459502.cms>,
 
their hands and legs tied and they were hung from a tree after being beaten 
with sticks and strangled.

Majloom was a trader escorting a few cattle to the market with the son of 
another cattle trader. The police think that the duo were murdered because 
the culprits wanted to steal their cattle. But they are also investigating 
the connection 
<http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/jharkhand-latehar-district-muslim-cattle-traders-hanged-five-arrested-section-144/>
 that 
one of the killers had with the Gau Raksha Samiti. If theft was the only 
reason, then one can – by a far-fetched stretch of the imagination – 
understand the murders. But the manner in which the man and boy were 
gagged, their bodies strapped and strung on the trees suggests a vile and 
violent hatred of the two.

Is it possible to talk to you, Modiji? After all you are not the Prime 
Minister of just the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the Bharatiya Janata 
Party and its affiliates but of all the people of India. These people 
elected your party to power. We may not see eye-to-eye on some matters, a 
few of them very sensitive and crucial, but that’s all the more reason for 
us to sit down and have a conversation instead of a one-way *Mann ki baat*, 
or your preferred see-no-evil, hear-no-evil, speak-no-evil stance.

Where does this violence come from? Not just the bloodthirsty violence in 
Muzaffarnagar, Dadri and other places but the violence in speech? Why this 
insecurity when you won fair and square with an overwhelming majority? Why 
this continuous victim-syndrome 
<http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/pm-modi-is-unable-to-handle-his-ministers-says-academic-pratap-bhanu-mehta/1/624914.html>
 as 
Pratap Bhanu Mehta pointed out recently – whether it’s the Finance 
Minister, Arun Jaitley, accusing Sahitya Akademi’s award-winning authors of 
“manufacturing protests 
<https://www.facebook.com/ArunJaitley/posts/417730148415539>” for returning 
their awards or your Human Resources Development Minister Smriti Irani 
insisting that the Jawaharlal Nehru University students were guilty of 
sedition even when she knew very well that the video footage had been 
doctored? What was the need for Rajnath Singh to retweet a fake Twitter 
handle that suggested that Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba chief Hafiz Saeed 
had supported the so-called seditious events at JNU in February?

Why this demand for every Indian to prove his or her loyalty to our country 
by saying Bharat Mata ki Jai? I’m sure, Prime Minister, you don’t want to 
hear these words spoken by all those who have defrauded our country of 
thousands of crores, or have stabbed it in the back, and yet have the gall 
to swear their loyalty to Bharat Mata. Why fear the freedom of thought 
encouraged by the best universities? Why must those who don’t fall in line 
with the tenets and theology of the ruling party be demonised? One thing 
that has bothered me for a long time (and let me clarify quickly that it 
has nothing to do with you) is a legacy of the previous government in 
Maharashtra. Perhaps you can help us in this matter. Here in Maharashtra, 
the national anthem is sung before every film shown in the theatres. Often, 
this happens before the audience is about to watch some dreadful Hollywood 
blockbluster like *Deadpool* or a mindless Bollywood song-and-dance 
extravaganza. If this is not a travesty of our anthem, I don’t know what 
is. Along with the rest of the country I sang *Jana Gana Mana *full-throated 
for the first time on the two most important days in our nation’s history – 
on August 16, 1947, and on January 26, 1950. Let us honour our flag and our 
national anthem and not invoke them so meaninglessly as if we do not 
understand the significance and the history of our unique non-violent, 
freedom struggle.

Surely we can talk about these points without getting defensive or seeing 
some devious traitorous intent behind these questions.

But let me come to an issue that has been on my mind, and that I have 
wanted to share with you for several months. Let me repeat an old adage you 
may be familiar with: every action has a reaction. So far the Bharatiya 
Janata Party, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, the Bajrang Dal, the Rashtriya 
Swayamsevak Sangh and many of its other incarnations have initiated various 
schemes to harass and victimise minority communities like the Muslims and 
Christians through their *love jihad*, *ghar wapsi* 
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ahmedabad/VHP-to-launch-a-major-Ghar-Wapsi-drive/articleshow/51436577.cms>
, *bahu lao, beti bachao* 
<http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/another-idea-from-hindutva-lab-bahu-lao-beti-bachao/>
 tactics.

It is these Hindutva groups that helped fan a frenzy around the slaughter 
of cows and eating beef, often in states where the slaughter of cows and 
consumption of beef had already been banned. Sometimes, this hysteria has 
tragic consequences. Last year, the farm labourer, Mohammad Akhlaq, in 
Dadri near Delhi, was falsely accused of having beef in his fridge. He and 
his youngest son were beaten with bricks by a Hindu mob. Akhlaq succumbed 
to the murderous attack while his son was critically injured. The Bharatiya 
Janata Party-led government in Maharashtra alsobanned 
<http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/dairy-economics-a-ban-most-farmer-unfriendly/>
 the 
sale of old cattle with the result that the already beleaguered Indian 
farming community was driven further into penury and often to suicide.

How come, Dear Prime Minister, you have not read the riot act to your 
Islamophobic ministers, legislators, parliamentarians or the rest of the 
Parivar even once since you came to power? Some folks believe that it is 
because of these tirades and hate-filled actions that the BJP did not win 
the Delhi and Bihar elections, and predict that the elections in the four 
or five states due in the coming months will not be a walkover. I am no 
oracle but I know one thing for sure, your voter base is very strong.

Modiji, you are an astute politician and statesman. Can you not see that 
actions as well as the lack of action have consequences especially in these 
dark times? Surely you are familiar with the proverb “as you sow, so shall 
you reap”. As I said earlier even silence has consequences. I cannot and 
will not believe that you want to alienate our Muslim brothers and sisters 
across the subcontinent and make the country one of the best recruiting 
centres for the Islamic State. So why have you not stopped this persecution 
of our own Muslim citizens?

I have heard many experts opine on television that our intelligence 
agencies are doing a fine job of keeping track of those Muslims who wish to 
join the Islamic State. I am glad to hear that but complacency would be a 
prescription for disaster. I have also heard them say authoritatively that 
our Muslim community will never really join the Islamic State in any 
substantial numbers. That is a marvelously myopic statement. As we have 
seen time and again, including the 26/11 attacks on Mumbai and the latest 
attack in Brussels, you don’t need large numbers, you need just three to 
seven efficient and focused operatives to execute a deadly attack. 
Secondly, anyone with a little common sense will tell us that no community 
however small will have infinite patience and forbearance if continually 
provoked and prodded, and made to live in tension and fear. No, there will 
come a point when it will feel it has nothing to lose and strike back.

But here is the crux of the matter. Why in God’s name and in the name of 
our Constitution are we so hell-bent on offending a huge chunk of India’s 
own citizenry? The most important principle of secularism is to take 
everybody along. Muslims like Dalits, have had a rough deal long enough. We 
have to open the doors to state-of-the-art education for them and make sure 
that they find suitable employment. It is our responsibility to erase the 
ignorance and superstition that Kabir and the other bhakti saints saw as 
the root cause of all our ills. We must welcome an open wide-as-the-sky 
mindset so that no Indian is left behind.

Come, Prime Minister Modiji, live up to your own words and show us the way 
to be together whatever our different faiths, agnosticism or atheism.

Yours truly,

Kiran Nagarkar

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