March 29, 2024

Tricity

Massacre of Sikhs in 1984 Originated Today’s Hindutva Fascism

Kaumimarg.com | November 03, 2020 08:05 PM


Chandigarh,   Recalling of 36th year of the genocide of Sikhs in Delhi and other cities/towns in 1984 invariably makes the democratic people realize that the pogrom had initiated the transformation of the Indian liberal democratic polity into a majoritarian regime. In the first week of November 1984, the communalized Hindu gangs hunted the Sikhs on streets, trains, bazaars and everywhere and burnt them alive, raped their women and destroyed their homes/establishments in broad-daylight under the watchful eye of the collusive police and administration. Their gurdwaras were burnt down publically setting ablaze copies of Guru Granth Sahib in the organized ethnic cleansing of the Sikhs. Such killings of the Bosnia Muslims in 1995 has been described as ‘genocide’ and ‘crime against humanity’ by UNO. Around 5000 Sikhs were then slaughtered in three days.
In 1984, the Sikhs suffered two lethal and humiliating blows –first the army attack on the Golden Temple in June and then their massacre after four months as consequent to the assassination of Indira Gandhi. As a face-saving exercise, Congress and BJP regimes instituted a dozen inquiry commissions and committees purportedly to punish perpetrators of the massacre. But none was penalized and no justice was delivered to the victim families with indifferent and collusive state machinery shirking its moral responsibility. Those blows, however, awakened the nationalistic Sikh elite from the deep slumber to rephrase their faulty understanding of the 1947 Partition massacre when Sikhs and Hindus together fought politico-religious campaigns against Muslims. Such apathetic attitude of the Indian State emanated from the fact that since 1947, it has been patronizing the Hindu nationalism which aggressively pushing ahead ‘one religion, one language’ campaign and passing it off as ‘legitimate’ Indian culture. Consequently, minorities have been discriminated against and living in fear.
Viewing the Sikh massacre in political terms, one can easily conclude that after the transfer of power from the British in 1947, the Indian State rather than accommodating the Sikhs embarked upon a project of building a majority community-based Nation-State. Suppression of Sikhs was, in fact, the continuation of the Hindutva’s crusade against the minorities. That is why Hindutva elements and RSS actively associated with Indira Gandhi in the army attack on the Golden Temple and later staging of an organized massacre of Sikhs. That political agenda later saw the massacre of Muslims in Gujarat in 2002 to be followed by the 2020 Delhi riots and lynching episodes. The present majoritarian regime under Narendra Modi has now been inching forward to formally declare India as ‘Hindu Rashtra’.
With hopes of getting justice dashed to the ground, the Sikhs, a tiny minority has been forced to examine their present and future place in the Indian polity. Their survival practically hinges around how they constitute a morally upright and socially egalitarian society as per the ideals of Sikh Gurus and Scripture to fight against ‘manuwaadi’ and morally debunked custodians of the Indian State. The Sikhs need to join the struggles of socially and politically depressed and other like-minded peoples striving to establish a truly federal set-up tuned to pluralism and nationalistic aspirations of different cultural entities living in the Indian sub-continent.
The statement jointly signed by Gurtej Singh IAS, Sukhdev Singh Journalist, Jaspal Singh Sidhu Journalist, Gurbachan Singh, editor Des Punjab, Bhinder Singh (GM Industry), Dr. Kuldip Singh Surgeon Patiala, Rajinder Singh (Khalsa Panchayat), Ajaypal Singh Brar (author), Prof Manjit Singh and Gurpreet Singh, president Global Sikh Council, Rajwinder Singh Rahi.

Have something to say? Post your comment