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Rapid urbanization has uprooted individuals from their previous occupations
and communities and placed many in competition for new livelihoods. Newcomers
who succeed frequently arouse resentment, and many riots have targeted
successful Muslim merchants, business owners, and Muslim returnees from the
Persian Gulf states, where they often earn incomes many times higher than they
would have earned in India. High-caste Hindus, fearing the loss of their social
prestige, have provided an important social base for Hindu militancy.
Hard-pressed members of these high-caste groups have been an especially
receptive constituency for appeals to curtail the "special privileges of
pampered minorities." In addition, the economy was unable to provide jobs
for all who wanted to enter the labor market, and the 1980s and early 1990s saw
an increase in the ranks of the unemployed. Some of the unemployed have become
involved in gangs whose strong-arm tactics are used by politicians wishing to
intimidate or incite communal tensions. Other unemployed youths join militant
religious organizations like the Bajrang Dal (Party of the Adamani
[Diamond]-Bodied, a reference to Bajrang, a Hindu god) and Shiv Sena. The
militant groups provide security for temples and members of their religion but
are also sources of communal violence.
Changes in the nature of India's political process also have contributed to
the rise of religious tensions. Analysts from a variety of perspectives have
commented on the increasing willingness of India's politicians to exploit
religious and ethnic tensions for short-term political gain, regardless of their
longer-term social consequences. Political scientist Rajni Kothari, for example,
charges that there has been a general decline in the morality of Indian
politicians. He alleges that politicians play a "numbers game," in
which they appeal to chauvinistic caste and religious sentiments to win
elections, despite the longer-term social tensions that their campaigns create.
The support of the Congress for Article 370 in the constitution, which provides
a special status for the Muslim majority state of Jammu and Kashmir, and the
measures taken to provide India's Muslim community with distinctive rights have
contributed to the popular resonance of the BJP's charges that the Congress (I)
stands for minority appeasement and "pseudo-secularism." The violence
of religious militants in Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir has also contributed to
sentiment among the Hindu majority that religious minorities employ aggressive
tactics to win special concessions from the government...
Shortly thereafter, in a ploy that Rajiv Gandhi may have misguidedly
conceived to placate Hindu militants, the courts ruled that the doors of the
Babri Masjid should be opened to Hindu worshipers. The VHP was joined by the BJP
in a campaign to reclaim the disputed birthplace of Ram. In 1989 the VHP
launched a campaign encouraging Hindu devotees from across India each to bring a
brick from their villages to Ayodhya. Outbreaks of violence between Hindus and
Muslims spread as the campaign progressed, and the BJP successfully prevailed
upon the VHP to withdraw the campaign before the 1989 elections. Tensions heated
up again in the summer of 1990 when BJP leader Advani embarked on a
10,000-kilometer tour of the country in a Toyota van decorated to resemble the
mythological chariot of Ram. Advani's arrest did not prevent clashes at Ayodhya
between paramilitary forces and Hindu activists; the clashes sparked a wave of
communal violence and left more than 300 dead.
The Ramjanmabhumi Temple mobilization appeared to pay substantial dividends
in terms of the BJP's remarkable growth of support in North India in the 1991
elections, and the VHP and BJP kept the issue alive despite the fact that their
actions put tremendous pressure on the newly elected BJP state government in
Uttar Pradesh. Its July 1992 kar sewa (mass mobilization force work
service) to build the temple ended peacefully only through last-minute
negotiations with Prime Minister Rao; Rao had been promised by BJP leader L.K.
Advani that the December 6, 1992, kar sewa would also be peaceful.
Despite Advani's promise, thousands of Hindu activists broke through a police
cordon and destroyed the Babri Masjid (see Public Worship, ch. 3). This event
and the subsequent riots throughout the country left no doubt that tensions
between Hindus and Muslims had reached a high pitch.
During the following week, riots spread throughout the countryside, killing
some 1,700 people. Riots broke out again in Bombay from January 9 through
January 11, killing 500 more people. In March 1993, the Bombay Stock Exchange
and other prominent places in the city were shaken, and some 200 people were
killed by bombs that the central government alleges were placed by members of
India's criminal underworld at the behest of Pakistan's intelligence service.
The manipulation of India's religious tensions by militants, criminals, and
politicians highlighted the extent to which religious sentiments in India had
become an object of exploitation. Religious tensions eased somewhat and
incidents of communal violence declined during the remainder of 1993 and through
1994, but the persistence of the social conditions that gave birth to violence
and the continued opportunism of India's politicians suggest that the relative
peace may be only an interlude...
The limits of the BJP's Hindu nationalist strategy were further revealed by
its losses in the November 1993 state elections. The party lost control over the
state-level governments of Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh
while winning power in Gujarat and the National Capital Territory of Delhi. In
the aftermath of the Hindu activists' dismantling of the Babri Masjid in
December 1992, the evocative symbolism of the Ramjanmabhumi controversy had
apparently lost its capacity to mobilize popular support.
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