Vote for justice
Sanjay Kapoor Delhi
In the last week of February, 2008, at a congregation of more than 10,000 clerics, the Islamic seminary of Deoband made a path-breaking declaration: it condemned terrorism as un-Islamic.
Deoband's declaration was important. For long falsely criticised and condemned as the 'nursery' for training terrorists, the famous madrasa near Saharanpur in UP was responding to the methodical witch hunt to which young men from the community were being subjected by the police after every terror attack in the country.
Police investigations that invariably targeted the young were wreaking havoc on middle class families that had invested substantially in their children's education and careers. What was worrisome for many from this community, which has more than 13 per cent population in the country and has important sway on about 105 parliamentary constituencies, was that they were being targeted when one of the most so-called "minority-friendly" governments was in power.
It was this Congress-led UPA government that rode on the insecurities of the Muslims after the 2002 Gujarat killings, which had appointed the Justice Rajinder Sachar Committee to look into their social, economic and educational status. The expectations from this government were immense. But they seem to have got little except a good report.
The Sachar report shook policy planners from their stupor about the abysmal state the minorities were living in this country. On some indicators, they were shown to be performing worse then the scheduled castes. There is a difference of opinion on the exact import of the Sachar report. Hindu fundamentalists say it is a recipe for a second Partition and the fringe elements among the Muslims use the report to indoctrinate the gullible to show how there was no salvation for them in a secular democracy. The saner elements on both sides see it as an end of a state of denial and a starting point for greater integration within the mainstream.
The economic boom and paucity of trained and skilled hands has been throwing up employment opportunities for young Muslims in BPO, retail and media. Young graduates were getting jobs.
Before this process could gather momentum, terror strikes in Hyderabad, Varanasi, Delhi and other places irretrievably derailed it. The central government identified Indian Mujahideen, another avatar of the Students' Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), and began to round up youngsters. The Batla House encounter became a tipping point.Interestingly, the police action was met with organised resistance from the local people, who were doctors, teachers and other professionals. They realised that they needed to take advantage of the democratic instruments to fight police oppression. The protests by the Jamia Teachers Solidarity Group in Delhi marked a rupture in the spell of fear after the encounter when youngsters were being picked up at random. Chartering a train from Azamgarh to protest against the police is an expression of anger and also growing confidence in Indian democracy.
This mood of defiance and hope got further reinforced when the Mumbai police, in an independent probe, found that there were Hindu fifth columnists that were responsible for the blasts at Malegaon and not Muslims as it was made out to be. Led by a professional police officer of high integrity, Hemant Karkare, the investigation unraveled a Byzantine network of Hindu radical organisations that were priming themselves to cause more riots and bloodshed all over the country, and literally, planning a coup.

Comments
Vote for justice.
Sir, this refers to your article which gives insight on the current socio political situation of Indian Muslims.
Indian politics is mixed with peripherals of so-called religiosity. The constitution has declared the state as a secular one. There was once a debate on NDTV titled the Big Fight wherein, Hindi film Lyricist ,Jawed Akhtar, who is also a social activist said these within quotes: " RSS and Jamat-e-Islami should be banned, i condemmn all of them." If more such voices come from mainstream Muslims who are again given the misnomer " Liberal and unorthodox Muslims" by God knows from which quarters then We, the public of India can hope for a new day.
As Gandhiji had once opined in his guest collumn as the editor of the daily, Young India: "Tipu Sultan, the 18th century ruler of Mysore and a staunch opponent of the English rule in India is a sybol of Hindu-Muslim unity, as he listened with equal attention and respect the aazan (call for prayer) from Masjid-e-Ala in his capital as well as the ringing of the bells of the temple Sringeri Mutt which he patronised."
This is the essence of India and we have to live up to it.
Jawed Akhtar, Vaishali, Ghaziabad NCR.
Bukhari wants to destroy
Bukhari wants to destroy India : riots and destruction.
Is that what we want?
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While both Azmi and Bukhari termed the police action as “biased”, Bukhari went to the extent of issuing a warning, “If the government does not take early measures to bring an end to undue harassment of Muslims who were indiscriminately labeled as terrorists, this country is in for another partition, so let us be prepared for nation wide riots and violence.”
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