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April
26, 2002
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WIDE
ANGLE
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When history gets Modi-fied
Narendra
Modi does not know that by putting Gujarati Muslims under pressure
he may have activated a powerful and, thus far, very decent, India
friendly global diaspora, which had never seen itself in communal
terms.
Mahatma
Gandhi spent 21 years of his life from 1893 to 1914 in South Africa
largely at the hospitality of and in friendship with Gujarati Muslims.
If we revere Gandhi as the greatest Indian since Buddha, surely
every detail of his life should have been documented by now.
Did
independent India develop deliberate amnesia about Gandhis
extended Muslim association? Except for some popular incidents in
his South African years which Shyam Benegal developed in his film,
based on facts provided by historian Fatima Mir very little work
has been done on the Mahatmas years in Natal and the Transvaal.
I am
not only referring to the hopeless neglect of his ashrams in South
Africa, but the details of his life obtained from people whose parents
lived and worked with Gandhi.
And
an overwhelming majority of these people were Muslims from Gujarat.
Why did Gandhi lovers never document this priceless bit of history?
Pardon me, but the question has occurred to me in the context of
the carnage of Muslims who may, by blood or association, be linked
to Gandhis friends.
The
person who introduced me to Nelson Mandela the day he was released
from Victor Voerster prison was Yusuf Cachalia. Yusuf was a handsome,
large-hearted man, straight as an arrow and a great friend of ANC
leaders like Mandela and Walter Sisulu. He had marvellous anecdotes
of Gandhi too, which his father, Mohammad Cachalia, had told him.
Cachalias
name figures glowingly in Gandhis memoirs. Indeed, he had
come to South Africa at the invitation of Gujarati Muslim businessmen,
the leading spirit among whom was Baba Abdullah, whose legal case
he had come to defend.
Yusuf
had a vast collection of letters and other documents which would
shed light on the Mahatma. He has a theory which he often put across
with some pain, Do you think the Indian Gandhians are
shy of playing up Gandhi in South Africa (except, only selectively)
because every alternate frame would show Gandhi in the company of
a Gujarati Muslim trader? Then he would add,I
thought pictures of his friendships in South Africa would go a long
way in harmonising ties between the two communities. I wonder why
his deep Muslim associations here and in Mauritius are never played
up in India.
Subsequently,
when the battle against apartheid gathered momentum, guess who provided
the leadership? As Mandela put it, remarkable men like
Yusuf Dadoo.
There
is a very elementary reason for the preponderance of Gujarati Muslims
in leadership positions in the battle against apartheid. While an
overwhelming majority of the 1.5 million Indians arrived in South
Africa as indentured labour, Gujarati businessmen predominantly
Muslim came as traders and were able to provide their children
the best education, a large number at the Inns of Court in London.
There
was a sort of logic in the fact that when Mandela constituted his
first cabinet, there were 11 persons of Indian origin in high cabinet
positions eight were Gujarati Muslims; two, Hindus and one,
Parsee. Ahmad Kathrada, another Muslim of Gujarati origin, was the
minister in the presidency.
When
Thabo Mbeki became president, Ahmad Kathrada was replaced by Esop
Pahad, whom many Communist leaders remember because, in the earlier
days of Indian leftism, Pahads regular accommodation in New
Delhi was Ajoy Bhavan the CPI headquarters in Delhi!
Have
we taken advantage of these associations or have we screened off
cabinet ministers like Aziz Pahad, minister in the foreign ministry;
Kader Asmal, minister for water resources; Dulla Omar, minister
for law, because they are Muslim?
Go
through the foreign office files on South Africa during Mbekis
government formation and you will find an answer. Mac Maharaj, Laloo
Chiba, Jay Naidu were also fairly high up in the Mandela-Sisulu
arrangement.
The
sad point, of course, is that neither Mandela nor Mbeki are probably
aware of the religious denominations of the various cabinet colleagues
but some elements in our foreign office are. Modi is only a cherry
on the communal cake which has been baking for quite a while in
the national oven.
There
are influential Gujarati Muslims spread across East Africa and other
parts of the world. What is likely to hit the Indian government
in a most unexpected way are the legal remedies being sought by
the 15,000 Gujarati Muslims settled in the UK, many of whom have
been great assets to the Indian High Commission in London.
Cases
of genocide against Modi are being filed in Britain, the International
Court of Justice at the Hague and some Belgian courts. Reports on
Gujarat compiled by various bodies, including in NHRC and some womens
groups, are only supplementing first hand information collected
by British officials inquiring into the murder of British citizens
in the Gujarat genocide.
It
will be interesting to see how the Indian government mounts a counter
offensive to keep Modi from the fate that caught up with Milosevic.
And, mind you, in Milosevics case, evidence is not so clear
of his having personally organised pogroms.
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