Let us build a Secularism Garden at Ayodhya. Let us build a place of
beauty, growth and change, to remind ourselves daily that DEMOCRACY
is a journey, a process as well as a destination, that SECULARISM
is a journey, a process as well as a destination.
If we can agree that Secularism is a process, then we can
understand that all processes involve trial and error. Sometimes we try
and we fail. Sometimes we try and we succeed. We failed when we
destroyed the Babri Masjid. We failed when we burned to death innocent
Hindu women and children and reportedly abducted girls traveling on the
Sabarmati Express, ironically named for Gandhiji’s sanctuary of peace
by the river of the same name. We failed again when when we torched and
stabbed hundreds of inncocent Muslims in
Ahmedabad, Halad, Vijaynagar, Navaseshan and other places.
The Prince
of Peace would have been saddened by the Godhra events and the multiple
retaliations thereafter. He would have been aghast at the deaths of 500
plus and counting. He would have begun a fast. He would have traveled
into the riot-torn areas. He would have reawakened our conscience. He
would have shamed the perpetrators. He would have comforted the
survivors. Perhaps he may have even considered the building of a
Secularism Garden at Ayodhya.
Secularism is a constitutional guarantee. Secularism is mentioned in
the Preamble, in the very first words of our Constitution. It is a
legally binding provision on the elected leaders to uphold the
constitutional protection of support for the way in which each Indian
chooses to love her or his God. The RSS, BJP and the VHP attacked that
constitutional guarantee when they colluded in 1992 to destroy a Muslim
place of worship. Every Indian, regardless of religious or political
affiliation should have felt threatened by that attack.
Now, all Indians should exercise their constitutionally protected
RIGHT TO SECULARISM by throwing out of office every elected official
from the Prime Minister on down, who threatens our hard-fought,
hard-won, secular society. Similarly, we should reject every unelected
person whether he pretends to speak for all Hindus, like Parmahans, or
like Bukhari, to speak for all Muslims from Delhi’s Juma Masjid. These
rabble-rousers are holding us Indians back from progress towards a fully
participatory and progressive civil society. Their agenda of hatred,
bias and intolerance is a danger to our secular ideals. Let us celebrate
Secularism in the midst of hatred and intolerance of the beliefs of our
fellow citizens. Let us see the VHP, the Sangh Parivar and their
adherents for who they really are -- Hindu Nazis. Let us condemn the
Muslim extremists who climbed onto the Sabarmati Express with hate in
their hearts and gasoline and lighted torches in their hands. We are
their victims, whether we were train passengers on the Sabarmati Express
or living in New York or in the Gulf.
Today, I am a victim of anti-secularist hatred and intolerance. And
I am fighting back. With Peace and Love as my answer to the murder and
mayhem of the past week. I know hundreds of Indians and South Asians who
feel this way. We can agree to disagree on many points. But we cannot
compromise on the ideal, the goal, the practice of Secularism. More than
being an Indian and a Hindu, I am a Secularist.
The Garden of Secularism in Ayodhya. What will it look like?
Assuredly, there will be flowers blooming in beauteous profusion, trees,
plants, grasses and shrubs. There will be fountains playing. There will
be benches for people to sit and reflect on the worthy goal and the
difficult path of Secularism. There will be grassy knoll where families
can picnic. School children will visit with their families and with
their teachers.
What else will there be in the Garden of Secularism at Ayodhya?
There will be an Interactive Museum with stirring multimedia
presentations, re-living the tumultuous days leading to Independence.
Partition was
every Indian’s first test of Secularism. Partition is a wound
that we Indians must bear. We cannot carry resentment about it. We will
celebrate the fact that we as Indians chose Secularism over narrow and
bigoted notions of religious identity in the making of a modern State.
The Museum will venerate the architects of Secularism -- Gandhi, Maulana
Azad, Nehru and others. We will tell the stories of ordinary Indians who
championed Secularism by sheltering their terrified Hindu, Muslim, Sikh
and Christian neighbors and protecting their places of worship. Those
same laughing schoolchildren, now suddenly somber, will make notes as
they listen to the audio presentations and watch wide-eyed the
videotapes depicting historic and contemporary moments in the struggle
for Secularism. Visitors will sign the Guest Book and write their
heartfelt thoughts.
The Interactive Museum on the grounds of the Garden of Secularism
at Ayodhya will be uncompromisingly and brutally honest. Indians
will be reminded that on many occasions they have failed to appreciate
and foster Secularism. Free speech, even hate speech are essential
processes in the struggle for Secularism, the struggle to create a just
and equitable civil society. But physical violence, such as the pogrom
against Muslims in Mumbai and now the several incidents at Godhra,
Ahmedabad, Danta and others cannot be condoned. Perhaps there will be
pictures of the murder of Gandhi, that sweet Prince of Secularism, by a
Hindu extremist. There will be a searching critique of the fanatic group
that fostered the anti-Muslim hatred of Godse and the contemporary
Godses of the Sangh Parivar. There
will be montage of the razing of the Babri Masjid as well as the carnage
at Godhra and Ahmedabad. Did we think Secularism was going to be easy?
Now we know!
Perhaps, as we stroll through the leafy pathways or sit under the
tamarind, guava and mango trees or watch the parrots, butterflies and
peacocks in the Garden of Secularism, we will learn that Democracy is
not an easy endeavor. Perhaps we will learn that Secularism is a road
filled with rocks and boulders and that we will have to lift each one
and set it aside as we move towards a genuine respect for the beliefs of
others. Our South Asian neighbors will learn that India is a place where
we will never, never, NEVER (!) give up the struggle for Secularism. We
will ensure that the Godhra innocents and the Banaskantha innocents have
not died in vain. Perhaps each visitor to the Garden will re-dedicate
herself or himself to the ideal of Secularism.
Perhaps each Hindu will seek out a Sikh or Christian or Muslim or
Buddhist or Jain friend and try to grasp the complexity of that
person’s spiritual quest. Perhaps each Muslim will endeavor to do the
same, as will all the others of all the gloriously varied creeds in the
mosaic that is India.
Let us defeat the hatemongers who think their religion is superior.
Let us support all those Secularists who think that India’s greatness
lies in her continuing, unconditional support for the spiritual
aspirations of each of her billion plus citizens.
The Garden of Secularism cannot be built by only one group of
Indians. It will take the sincere effort of every Indian no matter
whether s/he lives in Kanyakumari or Kargil, Abu Dhabi or Ahmedabad, Silicon
Valley or Singapore.
Let the Garden of Secularism bloom in Ayodhya through the love and
the hard work of each and every one of us.
Write your opinion on this column on our forum 'column'
Chithra
KarunaKaran
New York, NY, USA perceiver00@calicutnet.com
March 04, 2002