Home-grown jehad

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| To say this is not to demonise a whole community of something like 150 million people. But it would be equally foolhardy to shut one's eyes to the issue. The sources of the problem have to be identified, and wise solutions applied. The Sangh Parivar has already jumped to the conclusion that the answer is legislation that dilutes the standards of evidence and proof ordinarily required, and to reduce the protection available in the area of civil liberties. But this standpoint is born out of prejudice, not logic, for India has had such draconian legislation in one form or another for many years, and the manner in which those laws were used do not give comfort. Also, to the extent that such special legislation has been used in the past to target people from the Muslim community, it only makes the situation worse. As is the case so often, the real solutions lie in the unspectacular but long-term issues. |
| People think of extreme action when there is alienation. The way to prevent alienation is to achieve full participation by a community in a country's economy and polity, to have social exchange between communities, and to bring everyone into the education mainstream. On all these fronts, there is much to be done. The problem is that the Congress brand of secularism and the BJP brand of communalism both end up ghetto-ising the Muslims, who have not had the benefit of very wise community leaders, either. The preference for education in madrassas rather than in mainstream schools, for instance, points to a problem with basic choices. The national effort should be to make sure that, even if Pakistan does its damnedest to plant evil seeds in this country, it must not find hospitable soil. |
First Published: Jul 24 2006 | 12:00 AM IST