Login | Register News updated at 1:03 AM IST     RSS
Deccan Herald

Wednesday 10 February 2010
Weather
Max: 31.5°C
Min : 16°C
In Bangalore
clear sky
 One killed, Patna students vandalise coaching centres     Pawar responsible for rising prices: Ajit Singh     IDEA Cellular inks sponsorship deal with Deccan Chargers     Gadkari formally elected BJP President     Administration, Akharas gear up for first 'shahi snaan'     Sena activists held for protesting against 'MNIK' release     Andhra Muslims demand constitutional amendment for quota     Kalmadi promises cash incentives for star SAG performers     Paternity suit: HC grants more time to Tiwari to file response     Bureaucrats assets details in MP comes under RTI ambit     BT Brinjal issue: CPI seeks PM's intervention     Pak Taliban confirms Hakimullah's death     Steyn, Harris demolish India     US Senator seeks Pachauri's resignation     Fresh avalanche in Kashmir kills army jawan     Mukesh Ambani and Subroto Roy bidding for Liverpool ?     CCIC plans to make it big at C'wealth Games     Costa Rica elects Laura Chinchilla as first woman president     Militants attack Sopore police station, cop dies     Pak govt places ban on water and medical supplies to A Q Khan     Cold weather continues to cause disruption in US     UK business leaders flay move to close India offices     India may have lost Siberian Cranes for ever     Taliban activist promised a job: detained teenager     Meeting of ICC Board on scheduling under FTP from Feb 10     Indian taxi driver attacked in UK     Car sales jump 32 pc : Industry body     Rahul Gandhi told to marry Dalit girl     Brand Australia suffering from attacks on Indian students: Minister     1947 Partition saga is highlight of Wales festival     Pakistan's ex-minister escapes gun attack     Maoists bomb railway tracks, school building     Amitabh to act in Malayalam film     Sachin Tendulkar to be part of revised version of 'Phir Mile Sur'    
 
Muslims lack an enlightened leadership
By Amulya Ganguli

Indian Muslims continue to suffer from the misfortune of being led by people with a limited vision whose initiatives appear to be aimed at fostering a ghetto mentality instead of encouraging the community to become a part of the mainstream.

As much is evident from the latest resolutions of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind, which can only serve to strengthen the stereotypical images of Muslims being out of step with the rest of the country. This impression is confirmed not only by the familiar objections to the singing of "Vande mataram", the National Song, but also in such mundane matters as watching cinema and television as well as important subjects such as the women's reservation bill.

A perusal of the Jamiat's resolutions can make one wonder whether its members live in the present times or in some bygone age. There is little doubt that if the strange directives of the organisation are seriously followed by India's Muslim population that number 150 million - the second highest in the world after Indonesia, a wide gulf will open up between them and other citizens with the latter looking down on the minorities as incorrigibly retrogressive.

To start with the Jamiat's objections to "Vande mataram", the outfit shows no recognition of the fact that it is with Muslim sensitivities in mind that only the first two stanzas of Bankim Chandra Chatterjee's stirring hymn is regarded as the National Song. The reason is that after praising the beauties and bounties of the motherland, the poem goes on to describe Mother India as a goddess. Since this is known to be unacceptable to Muslims, this portion is not regarded as a part of the National Song.

As  Union Minister for Minority Affairs Salman Khurshid has pointed out, the matter was resolved on these lines half a century ago during discussions in which the Jamiat took part.

Incidentally, in the case of the National Anthem, too, only the first two stanzas are sung although the exclusion of the rest is due to the length of Rabindranath Tagore's song, "Jana Gana Mana".

Yet, by continuing to voice their objections to "Vande Mataram", the self-appointed guardians of  Muslims can only provide grist to the mills of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and other Hindu fundamentalist outfits, which love to portray the Muslim as unpatriotic.

It was to deflate the RSS and others of its kind that the celebrated music composer, A.R. Rahman, sang "Vande mataram" as a salutation to the motherland, "Ma tujhe salaam" (Mother, I salute thee). But this evocative rendering does not seem to have made any impression on the Jamiat, as it didn't on the Darul Uloom seminary, a congregation of clerics, which also described the song as anti-Islamic. As long as such backward-looking elements issue their retrograde edicts to guide Muslims, the chances of their joining the mainstream seem remote.

Arguably, the primary (and unfortunate) aim of these organisations is to keep the separate identity of Muslims alive so that they would continue to be able to influence the community via mean-minded tactics. But the process cannot but be damaging to the national fabric.

The same retrograde purpose can also be discerned in the directives against cinema and television lest these modern innovations undermine a Muslim's moral sense. It may not be besides the point to say, however, that these diktats sound too much like the fatwas of the Taliban to be dismissed as the antics of small-minded people. The same holds true for the directive to Muslim youths to say "salaam" instead of "hello".

If these follies relate mainly to the community, the Jamiat's opposition to the women's reservation bill has a wider connotation, for it virtually seeks to prohibit Muslim women from taking advantage of these measures which are already in force in the panchayats. What is disconcerting about the Jamiat's objection is its view that the proposed bill will bring "women into the mainstream and create social problems and issues including their security".

However, the argument gives the game away, for the Jamiat is admitting that it does not want members of the community to enter the mainstream. Although the context is the women's bill, the entire thrust of the various resolutions is aimed at encouraging separateness by rejecting issues which have a wide measure of national consensus.
Besides, the arguments themselves are pointers to an antediluvian mindset. For instance, the reference to "social problems" is a clear hint that the Jamiat wants women to remain confined to the kitchen. It believes that if they leave the shelter of their homes, the women may endanger their own "security" and create "social problems" by being at odds with their men folk.

Equally unacceptable is the Jamiat's advocacy of Islamic teachings as the "best solution" to the problem of AIDS, an idea which is not dissimilar to the Catholic church's resistance to the use of condoms and preference instead for abstinence. Clearly, the clerics of most denominations live in the earlier centuries.

Given the general backwardness of Muslims, directives of this nature can be hugely damaging. The only saving grace apparently is that few members of the community seem to listen to them, for their innate common sense dictates what is good and what is not.
There is little doubt that  Muslims have been ill-served by their leaders. While the Muslim League brought a political disaster on their heads in the subcontinent in 1947 by its divisiveness, organisations like the Jamiat, which is observing its 90th anniversary, and the Jamaat-e-Islami, which is 54 years old, are not exactly known as beacons of progressiveness. It is a pity that an enlightened Muslim leadership is nowhere in sight.

IANS

Go to Top

 User Comments
[ Post Comments ]  
  Page: 1 2
By: SYED Javeed
On: 15 Nov 2009 08:21 pm

Unfortunately, Indian Muslims do not have enlightened leadership to establish and promote the peaceful religion ISLAM. Islam preaches non-violence, to live in harmony with neighbours (Muslims & Non-Muslims alike) teaches to bolster brotherhood. It is never in favour of HATRED. Unfortunately, due to weak Muslim religious leadership, they fail to promote the peace loving Islam among Non-Muslims and usually their statements and views are misinterpreted, confusing to both Muslims & Non-Muslims and antagonising. Coming to worship, it is a personal religious matter which we Muslims perform in our own typical way and pray only to Allah and none other. Singing Vanday Mataram shows nationalist behaviour and should not be interpreted in religious non-conformity Fatwas issued by Muslim clerics does not form constitutional enforcement, it is an independent personal religious view. It should not be interpreted by Non-Muslims to declare Indian Muslims and non-patriotic

Reply |  Report abuse


By: guru
On: 15 Nov 2009 07:20 pm

Good

Reply |  Report abuse


By: Asma
On: 08 Nov 2009 01:12 pm

When will the ilk of Amulya Ganguli understand. Muslims cannot associate a partner to the Soverign God Allah. One cannot be reasonable say that they worship the Creator and also worship the created as god at the same time, which consititutes shirk in Islam. Shirk, ie to associate other entities as partners with God is an unforgivable crime in Islam....and stands to logic of any rational mind.

Reply |  Report abuse


By: Khaleel
On: 08 Nov 2009 12:42 pm

This is a classic example of prejudiced and ignorant writing. It is pointless to debate issue a million times over with mindless bigoted folks. Muslims worship Allah the Creator of beautiful Bharat and the Creator of this beautiful world and also the Creator of poets such Chatterjee and Tagore. So it is time the economically well off and arrogant group sees the greatness of muslim thinking and of Islam which transends mundane thinking and seeks to unify mankind. 1.8 billion people cannot be wrong.

Reply |  Report abuse


By: LION KING
On: 08 Nov 2009 07:50 am

..where is the time for these pigs to learn anything good in life...their whole life is spent on doing the namazas five times, producing piglets in dozens with four wives, few of them have seen the inside of a high school building...their days are numbered with the way they are behaving with their new chemistry of terrorism...their are under watch...it may be Israelies, Indians or the West....

Reply |  Report abuse


[ Post Comments ] Page: 1 2

 
Related News
Vande Mataram: Muslim artistes, academicians criticise Jamiat resolution
Jamiat resolution on Vande Mataram is unacceptable: Khurshid
Vande Mataram: Singhal asks Chidambaram to resign
Muslims defy fatwa
Muslim intelligentsia distances itself from fatwa
Videos
Avalanche kills 15 soldiers in Kashmir
Avalanche kills 15 soldiers in Kashmir
 
Submit your Videos along with brief captions: To the Webmaster.
 
Photo Gallery
Quiz time
Quiz time
blizzard6
blizzard6
View more photos
Cricket
Movie Guide
Sudeep and Ramya in the movie Just Math Mathalli
Just Math Mathalli is an Action - Romance movie. Sudeep and Ramya are in lead roles.
Horoscope