Professedly secular vs. conspicuously communal
A quasi-secular ideology remained dominant for much after
independence, but concessions were periodically made in favour of
particular religions
Until the beginning of the 20th Century, India’s war of
independence from foreign rule was fought on the plank of equality of
all faiths and of their followers. The scene changed thereafter and
certain sections of the majority community began projecting their
religion as an inseparable part of the country’s future political
ideology. As a reaction to this, some Muslim leaders began demanding
special arrangements for their community in the nation’s forthcoming
political structure. These competitive aspirations eventually led to the
partition of the country accompanying its independence from British
rule in 1947. During the protracted phase of Constitution-making,
demands were made for the protection of certain religious traditions in
the national charter under preparation, and some of these had to be
accommodated. This gave birth to a peculiar concept of state secularity,
different from how the rest of the world understands it.
No state religion
Adopted
in the third year of independence from foreign rule, the Constitution
of India did not declare any religion to be the state religion or an
otherwise privileged faith tradition. It declared liberty of belief,
faith and worship and equality of status and opportunity to be the basic
ideals of future polity, and non-discrimination on religious grounds to
be one of the people’s Fundamental Rights.
However, it neither erected a
U.S.-type ‘non-establishment’ clause — a ‘wall of separation’ between
state and religion — nor adopted the French doctrine of laïcité
requiring the state to estrange its people from all walks of life. To
put it in concrete terms, the state was not prevented from playing a
role in the affairs of religion, but religion was to have no role
whatsoever to play in state affairs. Twenty-six years later the Preamble
to the Constitution was amended to add the word ‘secular’ to the
prefatory description of the character of the country. It, however, made
no difference, and the concept of secularism remained basically
distinct from its western stereotypes, leaving ample room for the
politicians of tomorrow to play with it as they liked.
A
quasi-secular ideology remained dominant in state affairs for about
half a century after independence, but throughout these years
concessions were periodically made in favour of particular religions.
Towards the end of the 20th Century, the majority community’s
protagonists of a different ideology that they called ‘Hindutva’ — an
ideology which insists on the religio-cultural beliefs and practices of
the majority community being an essential attribute of patriotism,
national culture and social practice — began aspiring to capture
political power. Soon they took over the reins of the nation and their
ideology of ‘cultural nationalism’ remained dominant in the country’s
governance throughout their six-year rule. The professedly secular
political outfits returned to power in 2004 and have ruled the country
for a full decade. There have been severe blows to secularism under both
dispensations — destruction of the Ayodhya mosque in 1992 and the
Gujarat pogrom of 2002 bear testimony to this fact. The difference has
been of a passive tolerance and active support to a gradual decline of
the ideal of state’s secularity and neutrality to religion.
The judiciary and secularism
The
judiciary in India has been generally favouring the ideology of
secularism. A leading case on India’s secular character was decided by
the Supreme Court in 1994. The Court declared that secularism was an
inalienable part of the Constitution and clarified that “secularism is
more than a passive attitude of religious tolerance; it is a positive
concept of equal treatment of all religions… when the State allows
citizens to profess and practise their religions, it does not either
explicitly or impliedly allow them to introduce religion into
non-religious and secular activities of the State” (S.R. Bommai v. Union of India, 1994).
There have, however, been occasional aberrations too, a clear instance
of which was found in the late Justice J.S. Verma’s so-called Hindutva
judgments of 1995. Gravely disturbed by their tenor, his brother judge
K. Ramaswamy hastened to get them referred to a larger Bench for review.
The public outcry against the language used in those rulings, which
seemed to be lending weight to protagonists of political communalism,
forced the learned author to dispel such impressions in a clarifying
decision given in quick succession. He was soon appointed to the Chair
of the National Human Rights Commission, and his policies and
performance there turned into a direction exactly opposite to what his
earlier judgments were made out to be.
Democracy
envisages periodical change of guard, and a time for that has come once
again. The race for taking over the reins of the nation next is
currently on, and is unfortunately fast developing into a tug of war
between professedly secular and conspicuously communal ideologies. The
outcome is anybody’s guess. Neither unbridled political ambitions nor
media speculations will however be decisive. The people of this country
will be the real arbiters of its destiny.
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