People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVI No. 48 December 08,2002 |
People's Democracy Editorial of December 13, 1992
We
bow our heads in shame. The vandals masquerading as religious heads, their
political mouthpieces and their fanatic foot-soldiers have been able to
accomplish the most despicable job of destroying the four and half centuries old
structure known as the Babri Masjid. In order to do it, their religious ethics
did not come in the way of resorting to every conceivable subterfuge, deception
and blatant lies. On December 6, they almost succeeded in killing India. And 6th
of December will be known in the historical calendar of this country as
BLACK SUNDAY.
All
patriots, and the left in particular, have always taken great pride in and stood
as the defenders of a united India, indivisible, and hence indestructible.
In one of his first poems, Rabindranath Tagore, one of the India’s
greatest poets and visionaries, proclaimed how the Shakas, Huns, Pathans and
Mughals had come as invaders, but in time became absorbed into and contributed
another rich segment to the tapestry of Indian culture. Thus was built the glory
and majesty of Indian civilisation.
While
therefore, ethnically, culturally, linguistically, religion-wise and now to a
great extent politically, India has come to consist of divergent groups, all of
them pledged to remaining together in one country called “India, that is
Bharat”. Some two centuries back
a famous English poet had said that when a part of the whole dies, the whole
dies to the extend of the part. Therefore,
“ask not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee”. A part of India was
sought to be murdered on BLACK SUNDAY and because of it the whole of India is
writhing in excruciating pain. Hundreds
of lives, nobody knows for sure the exact number, have already been lost in a
fratricidal war. How many hundreds
are yet to be sacrificed? As Indians, believing in the secular and democratic
destiny of the country, we are forced to bow our heads in shame that such things
could actually be perpetrated. How this dastardly purpose was achieved through
bluster and deceit is now common knowledge, and has been detailed elsewhere in
this issue.
The
BJP, the common mouthpiece of these fanatic outfits, which assured the Supreme
Court, the parliament of India and the country that karseva
would be confined to bhajans and
kirtans only, is not only not repentant or apologetic about what
incalculable harm it has done to the secular and democratic fabric of India’s
body politic, it is stridently justifying what has been done in the name of
faith. When logic and reason fail to dissuade such betrayers, then it is time to
unleash the organised force of the state to bear upon them.
But
who is to perform this job? Obviously, the government. But still two days after
the event the government of India was still seemingly under paralysis and
numbed. Clearly if the BJP was the perpetrator, Narasimha Rao was the abettor.
If he seriously believed that two and a half lakh people were coming to
Ayodhya for ‘bhajan and kirtan, he was a simpleton. And a simpleton cannot be
retained at the helm of affairs of a country.
It was the case that he was afraid to take early action immediately after
the non-BJP secular opposition gave him a carte blanche to do whatever he thought fit to foil the suspected
nefarious designs of the sangh parivar,
he must be deemed to be too timid, to say the least, to occupy the exalted
position of prime minister of a great country as in India.
Internationally,
we are fast becoming a pariah. Pakistan is finding justification for its
misdeeds, and the Arab countries, with whom we had excellent relations, are
reconsidering these relations, perhaps even an oil embargo. Even Bush, despite
his own black record vis-à-vis the blacks and Hispanics in his own country, has
found an opportunity to express his ‘displeasure’. Thus India’s fair name
is being dragged in the mud.
To
keep the secular flag aloft was the duty, obligation and responsibility of
Narasimha Rao. He has failed and failed miserably.
He must go. He no longer
enjoys the moral right to continue. Meanwhile the sternest possible measures
must be immediately adopted to contain the escalating threat of a fratricidal
war. Deterrent punishment should be meted out to those responsible for the
destruction of the structure, with no quarter given to them. This is time to act
with courage, determination and decision.