Mob Justice

The Indian Supreme Court has fallen way short of the expectations of the Muslims of India. Its verdict in the Babri Masjid-Ayodhya Mandir case has sanctioned mob justice carried out by fanatics who believed in imposing their faith over others.

By HAFIZ INAM | January 2020

Acountry that won freedom from the British on the premise of adding secular colour to its social fabric and rejected the religion-inspired politics of the All India Muslim Leagu, has now started shedding its secular skin. While deciding the long-awaited title suit vis-à-vis. the Babri Masjid, the Supreme Court of India has finally acquiesced to the demand of right wing Hindu nationalists of converting India into a Hindu Rashtra. The apex court has sanctioned the construction of the Ram Lalla temple on the historical site of Ayodhya which was once cherished by Muslims as a great symbol of their faith. Not only has the verdict endorsed a wrong notion of impunity amongst the perpetrators but also stirred fear among Indian Muslims of relegating them to second-class citizens as envisaged by the Hindu supremacists.

The dispute between Hindus and Muslims for the ownership of the site goes back to centuries. It all started when Mir Baqi, a commander in Babur’s army, built a mosque in the name of the emperor in 1528. Later, the Hindus disparaged the mosque as they believed it was built on the ruins of a temple that was put up to commemorate the birthplace of their deity – Ram Lalla. After the fall of the Mughal Empire and dawn of the British rule in 1857, communal differences between the Hindus and Muslims grew further. Consequently, a suit was filed in vain by Mahant Raghubar Das in 1885 seeking permission to erect the Ram Temple at the disputed site. However, the partition in 1947 changed the overall spectrum of the region, especially post-independence India, where the Hindu nationalism mantra was creeping into the society. This culminated in a communal quarrel when a mob secretly placed Ram’s idols inside the mosque in 1949 leading to the closure of the mosque for any kind of worship. In response, both the Nimrohi Akhara (a Hindu religious denomination) and the Sunni Waqf Board filed cases seeking control of the site. Since then, the matter had become a bone of contention between Hindus and Muslims in India.

The legal battle for the ownership of the site continued unnoticed inside courts until the emergence of the Bharatiya Janata Party on the national political scene in the 1980s. The BJP, which was founded by L. K. Advani and Atal Bihari Vajpayee who were inspired by Hindu nationalist ideologues, was championing the cause of the temple’s construction. Then BJP president L. K. Advani began the Rath Yatra on September 25, 1990 from Somnath to Ayodhya, demanding construction of the temple. His incendiary speeches, the ultra-nationalist politics of the BJP and the connivance of the ruling party – the Indian National Congress – eventually led to the demolition of the Babri Masjid on December 6, 1992 at the hands of thousands of Karsevaks (Hindu devotees). This was followed by a planned pogrom that engulfed 2000 lives, mainly Muslims. Hundreds of Muslim women were raped and a systematic campaign was launched to strike fear amongst Muslim ranks across India in the wake of the massacre. Since then the Babri Masjid has been in the limelight of national politics.

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The writer is associated with the Research Team at Maritime Study Forum, a think tank based in Islamabad, and writes frequently on political and social affairs surrounding the region. He can be reached at inam7118@gmail.com

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2 thoughts on “Mob Justice

  • January 24, 2020 at 12:48 pm
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    This just shows that the Hindutva philosopy has steamrolled all institutions in India and the Supeme Court too has lost impartiality.

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    • February 18, 2020 at 3:14 pm
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      Yeah. Unfortunately, this is true.

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