Mumbai: A Price too High?
By
Swati Parashar
I shall not waste time by
giving details about the Mumbai horror
that still continues as I write this. Like
you, I await familiar media headlines:
appeals to communal harmony and to stay
calm by our so called ‘leaders’; Mumbai’s
resilience and how quickly life returns to
‘normalcy’ in the city; how our state and
society endures such attacks bravely and
‘defeats’ the aims of terrorists; how we
need to stand together as a ‘nation’ etc.
Like you, I too am disgusted and there is
seething anger, rage rather, at this blatant
attack on my people and my nation. I feel
shaken, violated and have to stifle my
screams (being far away from the country at
this time!). There have been attacks
before, but this one has sent a strong
message that we are perhaps not a failed
state as yet, but a failed nation, maybe
yes.
This time, let us recount
the successes of this terrorist
operation/war. Tourists and foreigners have
been attacked in an unprecedented manner
sending a message of how vulnerable our
country is. We cannot protect our citizens,
we cannot protect our visitors. Our premier
hotels and heritage sites have been
attacked, again sending a message that we
are vulnerable in the most high profile and
‘secure’ of places. The indiscriminate
firing coordinated along with blasts and
grenade attacks and hostage taking shows we
have nothing like an intelligence system, no
law and order and that anarchy and chaos can
be easily unleashed by a band of amateur but
committed youth. A lot of planning has gone
into it, and clearly arms, ammunitions and
committed cadres have made this a successful
terrorist operation/war. I dread to think
of how the perpetrators, planners and
patrons might be laughing at this very hour
at our expense. This is not even a terrorist
attack but an open war which has resulted in
unprecedented mobilisation of our security
forces; has brutally exposed the weaknesses
of our security system, our intelligence
services and our crisis management. We are
all clueless as to what is exactly going on
as fires continue to ablaze in the two
hotels (Taj and Oberoi) and we still do not
know how many people have died, are held
hostage and how many terrorists have carried
this out or are still roaming freely in the
city.
If the neighbouring state
is involved (as the PM has suggested), they
have proved to us that they can have our
entire security machinery – police, army,
navy, air force, NSG, RAF, all engaged in a
war within our own territory, and bring the
country to its knees. They have caused so
much damage that it will take a while to
just recover to even think of the future
course of action. They have proved that a
military attack is not necessary and a group
of armed and committed men can take on our
security forces and damage our morale and
spirit while making a mockery of our
national security apparatus. If these are
indeed the jihadi terrorists,
motivated by a fanatical and narrow
understanding of their religion, and if
their aim is to carry out jihad in
India, as price the country has to pay for
having the second largest Muslim community
in the world, albeit as minorities, they too
seem to have succeeded in getting their
message across. They are prepared to die for
their religion, they are prepared to kill
and be killed in this ‘war of
civilisations’. Reports have started
trickling in that some of the arrested
terrorists are from Pakistan, but if these
are also people from our own country
avenging Gujarat, Babri Masjid demolition or
avenging the ill treatment of their people
or their community especially in Kashmir, I
am afraid they too are having the last
laugh. They have proved that ‘revenge’ can
be well planned and that they will not stop
at anything.
Terror experts have
always told us terrorism is a strategy or
even tactics towards some given ends. Groups
or individuals indulge in terrorism because
there are political motivations, and that
there are always ‘root causes’ behind such
acts of terror. We have had hostage crises,
political assassinations, sniper and grenade
attacks and bomb blasts in the past where
groups have made political demands. But with
the kind of terror we have seen in the last
few years in India, the epoch of which is
visible in Mumbai, we are forced to claim
that terrorism, seems to be an end in
itself. The terrorists do not warn us or
tell us what they want, what they are here
for, and where we might have failed them for
them to resort to such mayhem and mindless
violence. If terrorism has no reason and
logic and no ‘root causes’, if the
terrorists carry out these operations to
cause destruction, if we are all enemies
without any discrimination, if the innocent
citizens are to pay the price for perceived
atrocities of the state, it is time to do
away with the traditional definitions of
terrorism and recognise that this terror is
there simply for destruction, to destroy and
destabilise the country and to inflict
psychological damage on us, the ‘enemies’.
We did not wish to be ‘enemies’, but since
we have been constructed that way, should
not we take our roles as ‘enemies’ a bit
more seriously? I cannot speak the language
of peace and love anymore. If the war is
forced upon us, we will have to accept it.
And since our state is too inept to handle
it on our behalf, let us debate ways in
which we can all participate in this ‘war’,
through words, wisdom or actions.
I am afraid it will not
soothe my senses anymore by being told again
and again that religions stand for peace and
‘some people’ are misusing religion and
misquoting scriptures. The problem is that
the supply of ‘some people’ seems to be
never ending. These ‘some people’ are not
just a few people but like amoeba they keep
multiplying. I am afraid I will not feel
calmed tomorrow when I hear that we should
try to understand the ‘root causes’, the
injustices and anger that force people on
the path of terror. I ask today, as I rage
at these terrorists who may not even be
citizens of my country, how dare you speak
for people of this country? And if it is
Babri Masjid and Gujarat that you avenge,
how many times should we apologise as a
nation and justify your barbarity with heads
hung in shame and guilt written on our
faces? If we are paying the price for being
a tolerant and democratic (although not
perfect) nation (there are many dissenting
voices tolerated in this country including
the voices that speak of hatred against
communities of all kinds, voices that talk
of revenge and exclusion and voices that are
overtly seditious against the state), I
reject the guilt, shame and tolerance today
for it makes me your ‘enemy’. You punish our
innocent people for crimes of a few; and
scream hoarse when the ‘innocent’ in your
community are held up because of your
barbarity. You reject our diversity (of our
opinion and politics as well that has
defended you and stood for you always), you
do not like it when we have spoken with
different voices. I, therefore, accept the
‘national identity’ you have bestowed on me
as your ‘enemy’, an identity that I had
always questioned in order to understand you
and your problems. Thank you for reminding
us, Indians (those who consider themselves
one), once again that we are all equal
‘enemies’ in your war and that we need to
think of an equal and befitting response.
I find some inspiration
and comfort in the words of the famous poet
Faiz Ahmed Faiz:
Rakht-e-dil baaNdh lo dil
figaaro chalo
Phir hameeN qatl ho aa.eN
yaaro chalo
Pick up the burden of the
heart, let us go heartbroken ones;
We are the ones to be
murdered my friends!!
*Swati Parashar is a PhD
Candidate at the Department of Politics and
International Relations, Lancaster
University, United Kingdom. She can be
contacted at
swatiparashar@hotmail.com