By Saswat Pattanayak
There is no reason why Vande Mataram,
the Indian national song, should be in controversy
any longer. This song should be now scrapped and
deleted from its current status.
Ever since India’s ‘independence’, this song has
created controversies, and for obvious reasons.
However, just as the ‘secular’ leadership of India
had tried to suppress the skeletons in its cupboard,
the opportunistic media had also vociferously
supported the need for the song to go on in its
truncated form.
And India, mostly kept ignorant about the damaging
consequences of having such a song was lulled into
believing that everything was well so long as we
could come to a consensus. For the consensus, however
the four power estates of Indian democracy utilized
a) the voices of Hindu seculars approving the song’s
first two paragraphs, b) the voices of Muslim
seculars approving the same paragraphs, c) the voices
of Hindu fanatics demanding the whole song to be made
compulsory, and d) the confusion of the vast majority
of Indians who had no clue whatsoever of any
possibility of controversy over a ‘patriotic’ song.
But the structure deliberately left out a segment of
public which had from the beginning staged protest
against the song.
Since the mainstream premise of such a song begins
with unquestioned patriotism, anyone who opposes an
element within that realm is at once accused of being
anti-national. Hence, the remaining group of people,
the fifth group which fervently opposed the song
everytime, unfortunately most of the time comprised
radical Muslims, were denounced to the extent of
being silenced by the media.
Bankim Chandra as a Patriot: The lies my teacher told
me
In matters of social concerns, half-truths are
synonymous with blatant lies. This is so, because
half-truths promote biases, prejudices and
stereotypes. The text books that most of us studied
during our school days were full of the half-truths.
This is nothing surprising or exceptional, though.
Every government under a popular democracy has to
resort to lies in order to sustain its power base.
Hence the dominant Congress with its pseudo-Gandhian
philosophy also worked towards integrating its lies
by to projecting a reconciled difference and reaching
a “consensus”.
There is nothing wrong in reaching a consensus, but
in this attempt, the critical voices should not be
silenced systematically either. And in this case,
Vande Mataram should not have been allowed to triumph
in a land that should have had it banned subsequent
to pursuance of its ideals of secularism. Rajendra
Prasad whose fanaticism with Hindutva is well known,
of course wanted the song to be given equal status
with national anthem. This was unfortunate, although
not entirely unexpected of him, considering that the
rabid religious elements still wanted to declare
India as a Hindu Rashtra. But the condescending
statesmen of the time also acquiesced to the demand,
albeit in the truncated form.
The future generations of India were not to be told
of the lies and deception that went behind projecting
Vande Mataram as a national song. As a result, today
most people do not even think twice before
patronizing the song. Even the ardent Hindu fanatics
forgave a Muslim composer making tunes and money off
the obsession.
The colonial crisis?
The demands by the rightist brigade to make the song
compulsory in educational institution has raised
eyebrows. In this case, again, the criticism has
mostly come from religious minorities, even at the
expense of being categorized as anti-national. We all
know it too well how the Hindu fanatics are running
to any extent to blame the Muslims of India as
instigators of terrorism instead of looking within
for managing a society based on complete anarchy and
making living off the institutional ignorance. And
now, the Hindu supremacists, whose ideological
forefathers were infamously hands in gloves with the
imperialists (and which is why they were banned from
contesting polls in secular India) have picked up
sensitive threads of patriotism.
In the classic case of ignorance, the mainstream
media propaganda, clearly overlooks certain facts
that people of India have right to know and act upon.
Here they are in a nutshell:
1. Anti-Muslim: Bankim Chattarjee,
the man who wrote this song Vande Mataram was a rabid
Hindu fundamentalist whose goal was not emancipation
of India from the clutches of the colonialists,
rather to establish a Hindu Rashtra by any means. His
stress on Islam corruption of India is not only
devoid of the highly secular past of India during the
Moghul rule, but also smacks of religious chauvinism
targeted against Muslim freedom fighters of the
colonial period.
Historian R.C. Majumdar writes, “Bankimchandra
converted patriotism into religion and religion into
patriotism”. In fact Anand Math, the work from which
Vande Mataram is derived, is a text of Hindu
nationalism, and not Indian nationalism. The work is
selectively targeted against Muslims all over the
texts. Anand Math is a Hindu temple where there are
scenes of Jivananda calling Muslims names: “We have
often thought to break up this bird's nest of Muslim
rule, to pull down the city of the renegades and
throw it into the river - to turn this pig-sty to
ashes and make Mother earth free from evil again.
Friends, that day has come.”
A
G Noorani (Frontline, January 2-15, 1999) quotes
M.R.A. Baig’s analysis of the novel in which the song
finds exclusive place:
“Written as a story set in the period of the
dissolution of the Moghul Empire, the hero of the
novel, Bhavananda, is planning an armed rising
against the Muslims of Bengal. While busy
recruiting, he meets Mahendra and sings the song
'Bande Mataram' or 'Hail Mother'. The latter asks
him the meaning of the words and Bhavananda, making
a spirited answer, concludes with: 'Our religion is
gone, our caste is gone, our honour is gone. Can
the Hindus preserve their Hinduism unless these
drunken Nereys (a term of contempt for Muslims) are
driven away?'... Mahendra, however, not convinced,
expresses reluctance to join the rebellion. He is,
therefore, taken to the temple of Ananda Math and
shown a huge image of four-armed Vishnu, with two
decapitated and bloody heads in front, "Do you know
who she is?" asks the priest in charge, pointing to
an image on the lap of Vishnu, "She is the Mother.
We are her children Say 'Bande Mataram'" He is
taken to the image of Kali and then to that of
Durga. On each occasion he is asked to recite
'Bande Mataram'. In another scene in the novel some
people shouted 'kill, kill the Nereys'. Others
shouted 'Bande Mataram' 'Will the day come when we
shall break mosques and build temples on their
sites?””
2. Pro-British: If there ever was a
piece of Indian literature that was most pronouncedly
pro-colonialists, then it was Anand Math.
Interestingly, and naturally enough, the right wing
political parties have picked up their ideal role
model in Chatterjee since their ideologues were
themselves allies of the British rulers in India.
Anand Math is replete with anti-Muslim slogans, no
doubt. But it also celebrates the British rule in
India. It in fact goes to the extent of saying that
British were friends of India, and it was only the
Muslim people against whom the Hindus should fight
against.
In the last chapter of the work, the author speaks
through the supreme character:
“Your task is
accomplished. The Muslim power is destroyed. There is
nothing else for you to do.
Your vow is fulfilled. You have brought fortune to
your Mother. You have set up a British government.
Give up your fighting. Let the people take to their
ploughs. Let the earth be rich with harvest and the
people rich with wealth.
There are no foes now. The English are our friends as
well as rulers.”
This is the context of the song that goes on to
celebrate Hindu religious deities entirely and
exclusively.
Baahute tumi maa shakti
hR^idaye tumi maa bhakti
tomaara i pratimaa gaDi
mandire mandire
TvaM hi Durgaa dashapraharaNadhaariNii
kamalaa kamaladala vihaariNii
vaaNii vidyaadaayinii namaami tvaaM
Its target is the Muslim people of India and their
tradition which has been blatantly misrepresented in
the work. And its ally in the vicious hatred campaign
is the British rule in India. The mothers in Bande
Mataram are the Hindu goddesses and there is no
reason why people of other religions should be forced
to sing their praises. Just because certain Bengal
revolutionaries used this slogan and popularized it,
and some more Bengali intellectuals upheld Bankim
Chatterjee as an iconic litterateur, it does not mean
the great peoples of India will forget the rich
multi-cultural tradition that has been in existence
in the country since centuries now and in the name of
Hindu chauvinism, people should not be misled any
further to denounce Moghul rule and celebrate British
Raj.
Knowingly or unknowingly, people have believed in the
mainstream history of India from almost a harmless
angle. They believe that Gandhi was the ‘father of
the nation’, that Congress was the party that gave
freedom to India, they believe that Hindus contribute
the most to the country’s cultural landscape, and
they celebrate Saraswati and Sivaji. People are
apparently content with the reservation policies
working against the Dalits, with nominal celebrations
of Islam culture, with not paying reparation to the
tribal peoples for having snatched their dear lands.
Even as these acceptances come as mediocre consensus
of some form to carry on with a liberal democracy,
these have been still in a Gandhian tradition of
positive compromises. Our objections should not be
towards the social fiber of Indian constitution which
is secular, democratic and socialist in its spirit.
But if anyone tries to enforce their religious ideals
down the future generations of the country, one and
all of us must stand in solidarity to oppose the
vicious steps. Once and for all, it must be declared
that India is not a Hindu country and no Hindu
glorifications can take place at an official level,
not even if some right wing fanatics come to power
once in a while.
We have had many a dramatic stands of consensus in
the past. Indeed, this has been the policy of Indian
‘nation’ since its very birth. Although the country
is composed of different nation-states, we declared a
consensus that we were almost one nation. Although
India had distinctly different language groups we
declared Hindi as the adopted core. Despite numerous
tribal and distinctly exclusive peoples historically
inhabiting the country, we agreed that it was a
country of the Aryas.
Need to oppose the reactionaries:
But what’s missing from the discourse is not the
sense of agreement, but the sense of disagreement. We
never studied anything where the genuine
disagreements were brought forth for healthy
dialogues. We agreed India was the most ancient
civilization, that Paravati and Laxmi were goddesses,
that Hindus needed more festivities than any other
religious groups, that New Delhi needed to be the
capital city and Vande Mataram was the national song.
The problem is not in the ultimate acceptance of
something as official policy. This is needed for
sound governance. The issue at stake is the manner in
which the officiating agencies of India never propose
the need for the measures that would seriously dwell
upon critical issues at stake. Everywhere, regional
and national chauvinistic forces are at work in
India. The conservatives are creating vandalisms all
over with their openly racist and primitively
backward views, starting from setting up Saraswati
Vidya Mandirs which goes unchallenged even though
separation of education from religion should be the
spirit of secularism, to install statues in parochial
terms. They go on to disrupt Valentines Days, link
Muslim cricketers and filmstars with underworld, even
as they have formed the most pernicious underworld
themselves, only operating wide open in the corridors
of political power. They go on to revise history to
celebrate Shivaji and claim a Gujarat civilization
named after a Hindu goddess. And as their wont, they
go on to celebrate their fellow hindu fanatic, one
Nathuram Gadse, the killer of Gandhi by revising text
books to omit the assassination incident.
We have been taking all these lying down even as the
rightist brigade, safely harbored by the domestic
business houses of India continues to celebrate the
absurd. And now they want the rest of the country to
celebrate these sectarian crimes as well, and hence
there is a need for the rest of us to resist and
desist the temptation to fall into the opium trap.
The trap works variously. At times, the
enlightened people just assume that its alright if
things are
this way or that way. Thats the Hindu privilege
some people enjoy since
their
feelings do not get hurt, as long as the hymn
remains as the national song.
And if the secular Hindus and religious Muslims of
India have not denounced the song in such a serious
manner to seek its withdrawal as India’s national
song, it speaks of their
great tradition of tolerance to Hindu bigotry.
This should
not be misconstrued as an organic weakness and
allowed to be taken advantage of any further.
Tags: Saswat, Literature, India, Islam, Hinduism, Colonialism