Being external to the
circumstances in which original fascism arose, South Asians have often been
claimed to 'borrow' a political idiom without partaking in its original
historical appliance and meaning. However this line of of
dismissing the subject (a distinction between an original and a derivative
discourse) immediately suggests that this is not an enquiry of true historical importance.Terming it neo-Fascism here, in S. Asia
expressing a will to power, it was an unhappy consciousness born out of defeat,
where anti-societalism identifies the emergence and
autonomy of a new form of politics.
When they spoke of
the 'nation', they did not mean a country mobilized for the purpose of
achieving a new status accorded by international law, but the total merger of
all individual bodies and souls into a collective organism ready for the
glories of apocalyptic battle; a total unity, in the context of which even the
slightest sign of individual weakness and deviance would amount to existential
failure. Finally, when the activists and prophets of self-expression engaged in
rigid regimes of corporeal control, they did not simply do so in order to
create a new citizenry fit for the modern state, or in order to maintain clear
lines of political control, but because they viewed acts of political masochism
as cathartic experiences that got them closer to their cherished goal of a life
without societal constraints.
The emphasis on
individual states of elation and depression facilitated the supersession and
amalgamation of any amount of individual grievances. The results were great and
very visible upheavals in the streets of the North Indian cities. Paramilitary
movements with relatively few members - for instance the Khaksars
- could unnerve the security services and enthrall the imagination of large
urban populations. If the aim of the new politics was the demonstration and
_expression of inner states of feeling, its activists did very well on both
accounts. Their actions were witnessed and contemplated over and over again in
the press, in public deputations and political speeches. Theirs was a politics
fit for the society of the spectacle a point that the last two chapters of this
book will argue out in some detail. But the very source of success - the
ability to allow every participant in collective action to associate their own
private miseries and joys with a large collective also made the politics of
self-expression singularly ineffective in terms of any form of politics other
than itself. It could demonstrate but they could not develop a very clear sense
of what exactly they were demonstrating for. In a sense, the answer to such a
question was obvious to them - the desire for empowerment of a national
collective; but this is a far cry from the more clear-cut objectives of other
forms of collective action - working class or peasant politics with their
protocols and conventions for instance . The fatal flaw in these politics
however, was its striking individualism, although it was usually subsumed into
a rhetoric of organic nationalism. Precisely because there was such an easy
transition between the collective and the individual soul, it was possible for
the activists to understand their own inner worlds as synonymous with the
larger collective. The erasure of the individual will that most forms of
self-expressionist political practice advocated, was really a totalization of
individual self-hood to the point where it literally contained the entire
world. The individualistic streak in their politics can be attributed to the
social being of its most ardent adherents: the marginalized middle classes in
the 'advanced' provinces of India. The very concept of class is impossible in
political thought that refuses to recognize the importance of the societal. And
as we shall see, this anti-societal vision of the politics was the result of an
obsessive focus on the inner worlds of individuals, and of the conflation of
these worlds with an imagined universe of meta-historical collectivities.
In this context
covered earlier by us, Hindutva-Savarkar's vision of the world and his sense of what it means to be a
Hindu can only really exist in what his contemporary, the German political
theorist Carl Schmitt has called 'ausnahmezustand' -
an exceptional state of being in which everybody recognizes who is collective
friend or collective foe with such an intensity that all other considerations
become mute. (Schmitt, The Concept of the Political,translated
by G.schwab, 1976, pp. 25-7, the term 'ausnahmezustand' is used in the German original.)
Or as Schmitt further
argues, “there would not be a meaningful antithesis whereby men could be
required to sacrifice life, authorized to shed blood, and kill other human
beings.” (Ibid., p. 35.)
The anti-societal
orientation of this political vision however was expressed most clearly and
overtly in the thought of another political prophet who embarked on his mission
in the mid-1920s: Inyatullah Khan (1885-1965) alias
'Allama Mashriqi' ('The Sage of the East'). Born in the Punjab in a village
near Amritsar, he was from a family of moderate wealth but high-status
pretensions and a long history of service in the colonial government. Mashriqi
himself received a scholarship to study in Cambridge and subsequently pursued a
successful career as civil servant and headmaster in various colonial
institutions in the North West of India. (M.A. Malik, Mashriqi biography OUP
Pakistan, 2000, pp. 1-22.)
Although the first
volume of Mashriqi's self-acclaimed magnum opus AI-Tazkira
was published as early as 1924, his political career only really took off after
his retirement from colonial service, with the foundation of the Khaksar
paramilitary started off with only a few members in Punjab and Western UP,
mostly from university-educated, lower-level salariat or artisan backgrounds.
All members of the movement were required to participate in weekly exercises in
uniform, involving paramilitary training and so-called 'social work'. Mashriqi
openly acknowledged his debt to foreign models, particularly the German SA and
SS, but also the Czech Sokol (25 January 1936).
The Khaksar trademark
was the spade (belch a) which was used as a symbolic stand-in for a gun in
parades, but also as a real weapon in street fights and as a tool. The first
foray into all-India politics came in 1938, when Mashriqi sent batches of
volunteers to the UP capital Lucknow where a longstanding dispute between the
Sunni and Shia 'communities' had degenerated into a series of bloody riots. The
stated aim of the Khaksar 'invasion' was to resolve what they saw as an
internecine struggle between Muslims. If need be - Mashriqi announced publicly
and with characteristic flourish - peace was to be restored by assassinating
the most quarrelsome' community leaders'. As the colonial authorities were
quick to realize, the real aim of the invasion was to give the Khaksars an opportunity to impress small-town populations
all over North India with paramilitary displays and processions and to provoke
the government into repressive measures that would further enhance the
movement's prestige. Although Mashriqi was arrested and his stand-off with both
the sectarian leaders and the government came dangerously close to a farce, the
Lucknow operation did have considerable success in making the Khaksars widely known. Rich businessmen began to join the
movement and the geographic reach expanded to include units in Central India
and Bengal. (Malik, Mashriqi Biography, p. 196.)
Encouraged by all
this, Mashriqi decided to embark on an even larger confrontation with Sir
Sikandar Hayat Khan's government in Punjab, which would coincide with the
famous 1940 All India Muslim League session in Lahore. Once again a strategy of
deliberate confrontation with the authorities was adopted. Mashriqi made
demands that were largely symbolic and guaranteed not to be met - the creation
of a Khaksar corps in the British army and the provision of a Khaksar radio
station. He then issued an impossible ultimatum to the authorities and ordered
his men to stage provocative demonstrations in streets and in mosques. The
Lahore police responded with indiscriminate and lethal force, with thousands of
Muslim League delegates from all over the country witnessing events. Several
delegates gave damning eyewitness accounts of the 'massacre' to the press.
(Zamindar Newspaper, 21 March 1940.)
In sympathy and
appreciation of Khaksar courage and sacrifice, Muslim children began to call
themselves 'Khaksar'. Preachers in mosques, students and the Muslim press all
began to pay homage to Mashriqi and turned him, at least temporarily, into one ofthe most prominent (and most reviled from the Government
point of view) Muslim leaders in India. (Zamindar, 21 March 1940.)
Mashriqi's overall
mission however was very similar to Savarkar's. He too believed that a
merciless battle for the survival of the fittest would ultimately lead to the
betterment of humankind in general; furthermore that his own nation, the
worldwide community of Muslims (ummat), would have to
get ready to secure its own existence in a terrifying world of never-ending
warfare. There is some difference in emphasis between the two writers, however.
For both, the unity of their respective religious nations was of paramount
importance and in neither case was this unity uncontested. But for Savarkar's
Hinduism the creation of unity required a whole new theoretical approach to the
very question of 'Who is a Hindu?' Mashriqi, in contrast, could take at least a
minimal sense of Muslim-ness for granted. Whereas the anti-social thrust of Who
is a Hindu? is often hidden behind questions of boundary definition, Mashriqi
was much more open about the destruction of society as a key objective in his
formulations.
Like Savarkar and
other RSS ideologues, Mashriqi was deeply influenced by radical nationalisms in
Europe and German National Socialism. He claimed to have met Hitler
personally and came to share the typical Nazi distaste for the world of the
everyday. After arriving in Germany in 1926, Mashriqi was deeply shocked that
such a model of a warlike nation could have sunk so low as to detest militarism
and war altogether. Wherever he went - as he wrote in his 1935 introduction to
an edited and abridged Urdu translation of Hitler's Mein Kampf-people were
talking about 'peace and prosperity'; instead of taking the fanatical pride in
the Kaiser that he had encountered just before the outbreak of the First World
War. (p. 221.) He could not comprehend how the 'terrifying world-conquering
power of the German nation' could be rejected in favour
of a comfortable petty life. With particular ire he recalled a housewife who
rejected war on the grounds that she could get no sugar and meat for her
family. (p. 222.) According to Mashriqi, God's greatest and most important
command, as revealed and elaborated in the Qur'an, is the willingness to endure
hardship in pursuit of military glory. (L. Mashriqi, 'Islam ki ‘ Askan Zindig', Al-Islah , 29 May 1936, p. 408.)
Assuming the role of
a universal lawgiver for himself, Mashriqi formulated this idea in terms of
'Ten Principles' which later became the core ideology of the Khaksar movement.
The first and most important (the others are all variations on industriousness,
scientific curiosity and martial organization) is the age-old Islamic core
doctrine of tawhid, or absolute belief in one God. Any person who did not
maintain this Unity of Godhead in his mind for any length of time, who, in
contravention to God's trouble-giving commandments accepted the ease-giving
commandments of his wicked inner self, i.e. the Devil, who worshipped the idol
of wealth, the idol of a comfortable house, the idol of wife and family, the
idol of his personal desires and selfish passions, was, for a length of time an
unbelieving person, an Infidel, a Kafir [heathen], a Mushrik
[polytheist] in the terminology of the Quran. (Malik, Mashriqi Biography, p.
240.)
Mashriqi's programme was a sustained and radical attack on the world
of the everyday which he saw as the main impediment to a martial identity.
Any attachment to
things other than the grand battle for survival between nations and races was
seen as an affront against Islam. The only true believer is one who is willing
to sever all ties with society at large and ready to become a soldier. In a lengthy
and programmatic article in Al-Islah, the Khaksar organ, Mashriqi argued that
all the practical obligations of Islam were methods to increase the
organizational and collective power of the Muslim community, thus giving rise
to a 'magnificent strength'. It was exactly this strength that enabled the
Muslim community to acquire political dominance, which in turn took care of all
other aspects of life in the Muslim community and ordered them to best possible
effect. (Mashriqi, ‘Askari Zindigi', vol. 118, no.
126, pp. 393-4.) 132)
As for most Muslims,
Mashriqi's ideal was the earliest period of Islamic history. But what he
cherished was not so much the sense of righteousness and correct guidance that
came from close proximity to the Prophet, as the magnificent military exploits
of the early Muslims, their 'forcefully acquired imperial sovereignty'. He
wrote in the above, al-Islah,
If our ancestors came
to take possession of India after establishing their rule, having marched
thousands of miles and having fought countless battles, if the Muslims of the
first centuries [Muslim calendar] conquered 36 thousand [sic] cities and
fortresses in twelve years, if Islam's first activists conquered without
respite nine new cities and castles in one day, then there is a difference of
day and night between their Islam and the Islam of today. Do you think that the
conquest of states was possibly without relentless and unending action of hand
and feet? Do you think that our forefathers could have conquered even the
smallest of castles without heroism, fearlessness, complete comradely love and
trust, complete obedience to their superiors, accomplished sword skill; without
the readiness to travel thousands of miles on foot; without endurance in the
face of hunger and thirst; without the burning wish to die and kill on the
battlefield, in short without a readiness to live a completely martial way of lift?!
In comparison to this
lofty ideal, contemporary Muslim society was regarded as sick to the core, and
as the following-list demonstrates, it was again the institutions and practices
of everyday life that were seen as the root causes of decay:
Do you think that the
Muslims of that glorious age had even a minute left to discuss some tract on
the intricacies of religious doctrine or to found a school or [social reform]
association? Or did the Arabs, when they brought the world to its knees, first
study in some school or university? ( ... ) Didn't they make it their day and
night obsession to conquer lands for the glory of Allah, sword in hand, once
they had fulfilled their religious obligations? Did they love their wives in
such unhealthy ways as is the case today? Did their sons cling to the necks of
their fathers as is common in every household nowadays? Did their business
ventures, worth crores of Rupees, make these men as lazy and indolent as the
income from a single grocery shop makes Muslims lazy and indolent today?
(Ibid., p. 395)
Particularly
pronounced was Mashriqi's antipathy towards the family - social institution par
excellence and foundation stone of religious conservativism the world over -
which he sees as the root cause of all evil. Following the previous quote
Mashriqi described the lifestyle of the eighth-century Muslim scholar Malik b.
Arras as an example that all Muslims should follow. (Ibid., p. 397.)
Malik's father is
eulogized as a man who engaged in warfare far away from home for years on end
and left the upbringing of his illustrious son to his wife. For Mashriqi this
was not neglect, but the legitimate claiming of a space for self-fulfilment
(albeit disguised as service for the nation). All three - father, mother, son -
respectfully allow each other to pursue their own missions in life and each
contribute in their own different ways to the success of Islam. For Mashriqi
this is the ideal and in stark contrast to current practice: 'In the Muslim
family of today, all members strangle each other with inappropriate love and
end up crippled.' 135 If the members of a nation end up strangled by their
daily entanglements and obligations, this can ultimately only lead to the death
and decay of the nation as a whole. This is precisely why the Muslims of today
are a 'dying' nation. Unlike other 'living nations' Who follow God's eternal
commands and nothing else, Muslims have chosen to love worldly things instead
of God. The same idea is expressed in al- Tazkira in
terms of the conventional Islamic charge against heathenism: ... all else
beside Him were idols, which, if worshipped by a nation for any length of time,
would stunt its very vigour and suck its very life
out of it in the shortest possible time and, would make it totally incapable of
coping with the great struggle for existence which it has to face.The chief evil in this context is 'cash profit' and
'comfort in cash' which not only makes individuals lazy, but 'takes away the
very life of Nations .. .' (Al-Tazkirah, summarized
and translated by Sahibzada Aftab Ahmad Khan and included in Letter to Nobel
Prize Committee, 3 January 1925; reprinted in Malik, Mashriqi Biography, p.
241.)
This is a metaphor
only too well known from the context of European cultural pessimism; capitalism
as the 'life-sucking' vampire that occurs both in Marx, and later, in an
anti-Semitic context, in the discourse of the extreme Right. Behind a clear and
unequivocal denigration of the concerns of the everyday, stood a principled
rejection of capitalism. For Mashriqi, as for many other thinkers of his time,
economics was a matter of co-ordinated planning,
based on sound scientific principles, and aimed at securing collective rather
than individual goals. Mashriqi's radicalism came out most clearly in his
willingness to push social Darwinist lines of argument beyond the religiously
acceptable. He made it very clear that sin and virtue have nothing to do with
the correct observance of religious rules and regulations. (Mashriqi, ‘Askan Zindigi, pp. 404-6.)
The value of an
action was determined solely by its impact on the collective survival of the
national group. As the following quote demonstrates, this logic was taken to
its ultimate conclusion - a complete inversion of Islamic identity: Mere
ceremonial worship of a stone idol of a few minutes daily cannot make a nation
infidel in the divine sense, as long as they keep the devil [defined as sloth
and self interest] out of the door. Nay, a nation can
be a real God-worshipper, while it formally worships idols; while a community
of people who merely say that God is One may in reality and in deed be the
greatest idol-worshipping nation that has ever existed on the face of the
Earth. (AI-Tagkirah; reprinted in Malik, Mashriqi
Biography, p. 242.)
What he is saying
here is that all those who believe themselves to be Muslims are not really
Muslims at all, but infidels; while those who do not even officially profess
Islam may actually be true Muslims. To make matters worse, he mentions stone
idols, which is an allusion to Hinduism and Buddhism. Some Young Turk thinkers
had re-labeled Buddhism as proto-Islam in appreciation of the Japanese military
success against Russia in 1905. (N. Berkes, The Development of Secularism in
Turkey, 1998, p. 342.)
But the idea that
Hindus may actually be better Muslims than the Muslims themselves was an
affront of almost unimaginable magnitude in the communalized context of
colonial India. Behind such shock tactics stood, of course, the desire to
restore Islam to its proper glory. There is little doubt that Mashriqi has his
own religious community in mind when he proclaimed,
A persistent
application of, and action on these Ten Principles is the true significance of
'fitness' in the Darwinian [sic] principle of 'Survival of the Fittest', and a
community of people which carries action on these lines to the very extremist
limits has every right to remain a predominant race on this Earth forever, has
claim to be the ruler of the world for all time. As soon as any or all of these
qualities deteriorate in a nation, she begins to lose her right to remain and
Fitter people may take her place automatically under the Law of Natural
Selection. (AI-Tagkirah; reprinted in Malik: Mashriqi
Biography, p. 243.
The motif of worship
points to a crucial source of anti-societalism in the
politics of self-_expression: for Mashriqi both nations and individuals
'worship', and both can be guilty of the sin of shirk, or polytheism. This
implies that nations and individuals are ontologically analogous. Both are seen
as un-networked and un-connected monads in possession of some inherent
essential being that had to be expressed. What is entirely ignored here is the
ground between individuals that is society. By conceptually assimilating
individuals to nations the impression is created that individuals like
international bodies live in an empty, lawless and unregulated context. It is
highly revealing that the rules constituting political ethics - for instance,
the 'Ten Principles' of the Khaksar movement - were of such a nature that they
could apply in equal measure to individuals and groups. Both had to toughen-up
and be purified in order to survive in a universe ruled by survival of the
fittest.
Mashriqi's attack on
society was phrased in unequivocal terms and contained a range of radical ideas
that his contemporaries found hard to stomach. Although he was clearly against
self-fulfillment if understood as the pursuit of personal career options or
personal wealth, the Khaksar founder was always ready to absolve his followers
of conventional social duties in the name of national or racial interest. No
institution of Islamic society remained outside the purview of condemnation.
Mashriqi hated the religious establishment and their (in his eyes)
hair-splitting attempts to bring Islamic doctrine in line with modern
requirements. But he had as little time for Islamic mysticism or the many
customs and traditions that formed the flesh and blood of Muslim community
life. Festivals and traditional foods were all part of the devil of ease and
distractions from war. Modernists like Sir Sayed Ahmad Khan and Muhammad Iqbal
were also savagely criticized. In a manner which is at least surprising for a
retired headmaster, Mashriqi declared that education was irrelevant for the
supreme duty of military organization and the contemporary discussion about the
merits of female education nothing more than a waste of time. Social reform was
a futile exercise in association-mongering (' anjumansazi'),
and literary activity an outburst of elegiac self-pity. (Mashriqi, ‘Askan Zindigi, p. 392.)
Unsurprisingly,
Mashriqi's hunger for all-out controversy ultimately undermined the
considerable ideological clout that some of his ideas enjoyed in the Indian
Muslim middle-class milieu. Unlike Savarkar, Mashriqi was not a good tactician
ready to absorb prevailing political and religious norms under the umbrella of
his own ideology. Despite their close resemblance in organizational set-up,
ideological orientation and political style the subsequent histories of the two
respective movements that the two men helped to found was radically different.
After the Khaksars' 'Finest Hour' in 1940 the British
security forces could make substantial dents into Khaksar influence by
encouraging more orthodox voices to dismiss Mashriqi as a non-Muslim. (Malik:,
Mashriqi Biography, pp. 40-51.)
Jinnah's All India
Muslim League - which Mashriqi bitterly opposed - managed to absorb many
disgruntled Khaksar activists, bringing them back into the fold of
acceptability, as it were, albeit without much moderating their militarist
opinions. From more than 5,000 members in 1939, the membership of the movement
declined to 600 in 1946, and reached near extinction in 1947. (Both numbers
from documents at the National Archives of India NAI, File Home Political-
92/39 and 28/5/46.)
Although the Khaksars maintained a certain presence in the United
Provinces after Partition, it became all but eclipsed in Pakistan where
Mashriqi continued to live until his death. The Sangh Parivar, meanwhile,
easily survived a phase of government repression after Gandhi's assassination
in 1948, has remained a powerful presence in Indian politics.
This is because in
the period between the early 1930s and the early 1950s, many elements of
anti-societal politics were absorbed into the political mainstream. Muslim
ideas of self-expression were taken up by middle-class activists, who became
increasingly influential in the mainstream All India Muslim League, as it
transformed itself from a 'communalist' lobby group into a 'national' movement
from 1937 onwards. Some years older but broadly similar in outlook and function
to the early Hindu Mahasabha, the League had started off in 1906 as an ethno religious lobby group of the land-owning and
professional elite within the context of the politics of interest. The main
political concerns were the securing of special representation of Muslims
within the various institutions of limited self-rule and the defense of Muslim
privileges, particularly in UP. In other respects political opinions within the
League varied a great deal, and in the case of some individual members, often
changed dramatically over time - from 'secular' to 'religious', pro-Khilafat to
anti-Khilafat, loyalist to nationalist. During those early years, Muslim
Leaguers were often also members of other political organizations such as the
All India Congress, the, then recognized umbrella organization of Indian
nationalism. Ideological inconsistency and conflicting interests, however, led
to many splits within the League and by the early 1930s, rendered it largely
ineffective.
By that time, Muslim
participation in Congress had fallen to an all-time low following several years
of religious conflict in many parts of India and a perceived unwillingness of
Hindu Congress politicians to take Muslim demands seriously. This left many
nationalist Muslims anxious, insecure and in search for a new organizational
and ideological home. With the creation of wider electoral politics at the
provincial level in the 1935 Government of India Act, effective organization
with a mass base had become imperative for political survival. Muhammad Ali
Jinnah, freshly returned from several years of self-imposed exile in Britain,
responded to this crisis by radically revamping the League into a Muslim
nationalist - and increasingly separatist - mass organization. His problem was
that this had to be done largely from scratch. The League had no experience of
mass mobilization, hardly any power base at the grass-roots level and not even
a semblance of ideological unity. Jinnah had no choice but to cut corners. The
anti-societalism that flowed naturally from this
persuasion was politically useful for the League. By re-orientating the aims
and substance of politics towards celestial goals against and above society,
self-expressionist nationalism could help to avoid hard and potentially
divisive questions about the League's relation to concrete political interest.
Muhammad Ali Jinnah's
official pronouncements are a good indication for a widespread slide into
anti-societal militarism. By virtue of his old-style liberal background he has
to be regarded as something like a moderate. But ever willing to welcome any prospective
group of followers into the League, he spoke with several voices: when
addressing peasant meetings in Bengal he promised the removal of socio-economic
grievances; when conducting his protracted negotiations with the British and
the Congress he acted as a liberal lobbyist with a creative and acute awareness
of legal compromise. When addressing members on the university campuses of
Lahore and Aligarh, however, Jinnah espoused a martial sense of politics and
harped on the tragedy of Islamic decline. (Presidential Address to Punjab
Muslim Student Federation, 2 March 1941, Yusufi (ed.), Quaid Speeches, p. 1328,
and at the Punjab Muslim Student Federation 18 March 1944, Quaid Speeches, p.
1857.)
In his famous address
to the Lucknow session of the League in October 1937, commonly regarded as the
transition point from communalism to nationalism he exhorted the Muslims of
India: Organize yourself, establish your solidarity and complete unity. Equip
yourself as trained and disciplined soldiers. Create the feeling of an esprit
de corps and of comradeship amongst yourselves. ( ... ) [As a result] ... a
nation will emerge worth of its past glory and history and will live to make
the future history greater and more glorious not only in Indian but in the
annals of the world. (15 October 1937, Yusufi (ed.), Quaid Speeches, p. 657.)
The motif of the
'political soldier' recurred throughout the Qaid-e-Azam 's speeches from then
on. The fact that most observers would find this passage a common-place
expression of nationalism indicates just how widespread military metaphors and
the appeal to the 'world' as ultimate audience and reference point had become
at the time. Others of Jinnah's pronouncements were direct paraphrases from
Mashriqi; for instance, when he proclaimed on All India Radio that 'This
discipline of Ramazan [the holy month of fasting] was designed by our prophet
to give us the necessary strength for action' since Islam 'as you all know,
really means action'. Past military glory such as the Muslim conquest of Spain
and India were frequently mentioned to boost middle-class morale in the North
Western regions. (Message broadcast on All India Radio, 13 November 1939,
Yusufi (ed.), Quaid Speeches, pp. 1060.)
At the same time,
Jinnah often quoted anti-Muslim statements by Hindu nationalists in order to
conjure up a military threat that implicitly required, if not a military then
at least a paramilitary response from the Muslim side; for instance Savarkar's
invitation to the Sikhs to 'develop into a great military force in Punjab' in
order to keep Muslims down; or the assertion that the Hindu Mahasabha's aim was
to 'militarize and industrialize the Hindus' as to drive the Muslims out of
India; These (not at all groundless) references fed into his more general
invocations of a dangerous world and of Muslim helplessness that constituted
the staple of Jinnah's rhetorical repertoire. Explicit Social Darwinism which
is so noticeable in both Savarkar and Mashriqi is largely absent from this, but
the main function of the central emphasis on war remains the same as in their
prophetic a deliberately provocative contribution to the debate about the
future constitution of India, which was going on in the Muslim League in the years
before the landmark Lahore session of 1940. Although this is not the centre of interest here, the pamphlet was amongst the first
to argue for a territorial solution to the problem of Muslim nationhood. The
Scheme received a mixed response at the time, but was later used as a
propaganda pamphlet in support of Pakistan. Niazi and Chishti were both
religious scholars from a small town provincial background (after 1942 Niazi
taught Islamiyyat at Islamia College, Lahore) and
made political careers, periodically falling in and out of favour
with the far-right fringes of the post Partition Pakistan Muslim League. The
Scheme itself refers to reactions of the press, Chishti thanked Jinnah for his
allegedly 'favourable consideration' of the Scheme in
a letter dated 15 February 1940. Reprinted in Mirza, The Punjab Muslim Students
Federation, 1937-1947: a Study of the Formation, Growth and Participation in
the Pakistan movement, p. 11., Niazi and Chishti were both arrested during the
1953 clampdown.
Mian Muhammad Shafi
became a well known journalist under his pen name
'Meem Sheen' who joined the left-leaning Pakistan Times group of newspapers
after Partition. The central concern of the Scheme was to provide both a
constitutional blueprint and a strategy for action to re-establish the world
domination of Islam, beginning with a reconquista of
Hindus tan. In order to achieve this aim, the pamphlet argues, the Muslim
community had to stop their reliance on constitutional politics, which implied
an undue dependence on outsiders. Instead, they had to begin a quest for
internal unity and discipline that would, in due course, produce a 'God Man' or
'Ubermensch' (Khuda mard), who would lead a renewed military struggle for world
domination. Napoleon and Hitler are depicted as saviours,
whom the Muslims of India and elsewhere should emulate. Victory in world
history was interpreted not as the outcome of superior administrative,
technological or economic power, but as the result of superior will power (imani taqat) alone. In order
to attain this will power, both spirit and body had to be cleansed from any
weakness and impurity, which could only be achieved through military and
religious training. Initially this training would be imparted by a vanguard
party (jamaCat), made up of pure individuals, and
later, when a Muslim state was established in a section of India, by the
proposed Caliphate of Pakistan itself. Throughout the pamphlet the purifying
role of radicalism, violence and armed struggle was emphasized and juxtaposed
to both Congress non-violence and the 'accursed system of Western democracy'.
(File 790D.00/3-2653. WEEKA 166, Lahore, 26 March 1953; File 790D.00/4-3053
WEEKA 181, Lahore, 30 April 1953.)
This pattern of
argumentation incorporates all the hallmarks of the politics of negotiation and
bargaining with others that is sharply criticized; instead the purpose of
politics is reduced to seeking salvation through the expression of a purified
inner self; the destruction of society is advocated in the guise of preparing
for the ausnahmezustand - the total mobilization and
military organization of the nation for never-ending battle. The Scheme
operates within a global universe, in which might is right, and dominance per
se is the goal of all combatant nations. The value of military might is taken
as self-explanatory, whereas the value of civilization or economic prosperity
are downplayed or ignored. As a result leadership and foreign policy, rather
than the balancing of internal differences of interest receive the most
attention in the actual constitutional blueprint of the Scheme. The actual
'constitution' (dastur) of the prospective Caliphate
of Pakistan is dealt with on one page, which includes little more than a vague
reference to an advisory council of notables, who were to represent all the
interests of society in subcommittees. This is a corporatist vision typical of
the time period. Since interests were seen as non-political givens and were
believed to be resolvable by administrative action alone, no thought is spared
on what procedures should be adopted to resolve political conflict between the
envisioned representatives of interest. Symbolic matters were seen as much more
important than institutional mechanisms. It is highly revealing for the overall
orientation of the pamphlet that a description of the proposed flag of the new
state is given nearly the same space as its 'constitution'. Flags are an
important instrument of self-expression that can be effortlessly incorporated
into a militaristic sense of politics. Flags can be used to signal possession
or control over specific areas while at the same time making a visible
statement about the historical identity of their owners. For the student authors
of the Scheme, the prospective flag was a visual representation of what it
meant to be a Muslim; with the delight of schoolboys preparing for a
full-costume re-enactment of an ancient battle, they devised an intricate
multi-colored design, which appropriated the flags of earlier (Arab) Muslim
empires such as the Abbasids and Umayyads. The national symbol of the Caliphate
of Pakistan was to be the date palm, because it stood for the Muslims' ultimate
origin, the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula. All symbols with sectarian
connotation were either to be avoided, or to be used simultaneously in order to
express national unity.
The Scheme is
important because it indicates a fundamental formal difference between the
politics of self-expression and earlier forms of politics based on processes of
communication and negotiation. This was not about arguing the case of a new
politics in order to convince a sceptical audience -
a stylistic orientation and rhetorical perspective that is still visible in
Savarkar's mystico-biological reasoning about
Hinduism, and leaves a distinct didactic aftertaste in Mashriqi's oeuvre.
Niazi, Chishti and Shafi did not want to change opinions, they merely wanted to
express how they themselves felt as Muslim activists and hoped that similar
feelings would be induced or evoked in their readers. The Scheme was designed
to stimulate an affective emotional state of empowerment in the reader while
simultaneously humiliating an imaginary opponent. The acts of reading and
writing themselves produced the kind of ausnahmezustand
in which the difference between friend and foe had come into sharp relief. As
people sat down to study the pamphlet, or assembled in small groups to hear it
being read out aloud, they were transported into a different sphere of
existence where they could contemplate images and emotions that everyday life
did not normally permit. Within their fleeting worlds, the political dreamers
possessed the ability to rip the fabric of society to shreds. Many passages in
the Scheme were deliberate inducements to engage in power fantasies of this
kind. In a particularly bone-chilling section the authors asserted that the
difference between Hindus and Muslims was the same as the difference between
humans and animals. The obvious technical and political achievements of
non-Muslims, it is argued, do not alter this basic fact, since many animals can
perform tasks which are superior to human capabilities, but nevertheless remain
animals. As a result, even the lowliest and meanest of Muslims is by definition
superior to the best non-Muslim. Although non-Muslims can expect to be treated
with the same care with which a considerate person would treat a domestic
animal, the Scheme argues, their lives and possessions can be sacrificed if
Muslim interests demanded that, just like a chicken would be slaughtered in the
case of hunger.181 In a remarkable pseudo-biologist formulation, the authors
argue that a Hindu killed in a communal riot undergoes an ontological
improvement in the same way as a goat 'molecule' improves when it is turned
into a human 'molecule' through the process of digestion. Until Muslim
supremacy is again established in all of India, non-Muslims should be
identified as targets of hatred and violence, not so much because of a fault of
their own, but because such an identification would unite the Muslim community
in the same way as antiSemitism and the attack on its
neighbours had united Hitler's Germany.
Much of this was said
in order to provoke potential Hindu readers into a test of strength that could
easily degenerate into a real ausnahmezustand on the
streets of North Indian cities. In August 1946 a Hindu magazine demanded the
proscription of the Scheme on the grounds that it was inciting communal hatred.
(NAI: File-Home Political- 37/2/47 Khilafat Pakistan Scheme.)
The colonial
authorities were now faced with the choice of giving extra recognition to the
authors by banning the publication, or of ignoring the proscription request
which in Hindu eyes would make them look like Muslim stooges. In either case,
political movements in the ground had an opportunity to mobilize their
supporters for or against a ban. Since this was a typical zero-sum issue there
cannot really be any compromise between banning and not banning a pamphlet
containing deliberate insults - a battle that could be pursued indefinitely,
leading to ever-growing hostility between friend and foe and to an ever
increasing destruction of society as it existed.
Such disciplinary
regimes were a way of controlling and thereby utilizing the power of the
subaltern classes that made up the majority of India's population. The Khaksars, Muslim League National Guards and Congress
volunteers (less so the RSS and the Communists) did attract members from the
lower orders of society urban artisans, farmers and peasants who were easily
swayed by the sense of dignity that a uniform bestowed on its wearer. Their
subjection to disciplinary regimes in volunteer training camps was a way of
extirpating their unkempt and unruly 'subaltern' nature and to remodel them
according to middle-class ideas of 'proper' behavior. The need for hygiene,
punctuality and thrift - all highlighted in every volunteer organization - is
an obvious point in case.
The problem with such
explanations is that they revert back into the instrumentalist logic of the
politics of interest, according to which all political action happens for
specific aims formulated by an elite leadership. This may well be correct in
the case of wider nationalist movements under the sway of organizers who were
on their way to becoming stake-holding politicians of interest. As far as the
politics of self-expression is concerned, the 'discipline and mobilize'
argument imputes too great a conventional will to power on the part of
middleclass activists. This ignores the fact that - although middle-class
ideologues may have noisily invoked the wish to discipline the entire world -
it was really the middleclass activists themselves who were the most
enthusiastic recipients of their own regimes of self-castigation. We are
dealing with an obsession with discipline that was not the response to a lack
of discipline in middle-class life, but connected to the hatred for societal
forms of restraint. Middle-class people longed for states of de-societalization that replicated much of the 'naturalness'
and 'authenticity' of the lower social orders that disciplinary regimes would
destroy. Put more bluntly, the interesting point about people like Mashriqi
(and his willing victims) is the flogging rather than the punctuality that
would result from such 'punishment'. Discourses of disciplining the body were
appropriated by the self-expressionists because they could become a stimulant
of the 'inner struggle' that was needed to connect a political vision based on
social Darwinism with individual psychosomatic symptoms. Regimes of discipline
became magic rituals because they could be made to encapsulate simultaneously
what being middle class was all about and the frenzied struggle to exorcise the
very same middle class-ness from the activists' bodies.
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