Photo by Azhar Chougle under the Creative Commons License
Mumbai skyline

Mumbai

By Christopher Hitchens
Slate, December 1, 2008
Slate, December 8, 2008

Edited by Andy Ross

On my first visit to India, in 1980, I stayed at the Taj Mahal in Bombay. When Salman Rushdie wrote, in The Moor's Last Sigh in 1995, that "those who hated India, those who sought to ruin it, would need to ruin Bombay," he was alluding to the Hindu chauvinists who had tried to exert their own monopoly in the city and who had forcibly renamed it — after a Hindu goddess — Mumbai.

India is emerging in many ways as our most important ally. It is a huge and officially secular federal democracy that is based, like the United States, on ethnic and confessional pluralism. Its political and economic and literary echelons speak English better than most of us do. Its parliament in New Delhi was viciously attacked by Islamist gangsters and nearly destroyed in December 2001. Since then, Bombay has been assaulted multiple times and the Indian Embassy in Afghanistan blown up with the fairly obvious collusion of the same Pakistani forces who are helping in the rebirth of the Taliban.

Did our nominal ally Pakistan have a hand in the latest atrocity in the heart of Bombay? To get an additional perspective on this mystery, take a look at Joshua Hammer's excellent essay about Syria in the current Atlantic.

If you are a Lebanese politician or journalist or public figure, and you criticize the role played by the government of Syria in your country's internal affairs, your car will explode when you turn the ignition key, or you will be ambushed and shot or blown up by a bomb or land mine as you drive through the streets of Beirut or along the roads that lead to the mountains. The explosives and weapons used, and the skilled tactics employed, will often be reminiscent of the sort of resources available only to the secret police and army of a state machine.

Hammer's article shows just how much trouble the international community will go to precisely in order not to implicate the Assad family in this string of unfortunate events. Might not young Bashar Assad, who managed to become president after the peaceful death by natural causes of his father, become annoyed and petulant and even uncooperative if he were found to have been commissioning assassinations?

In rather the same way, the international community is deciding to be nonjudgmental in the matter of Pakistani involvement in the Bombay unpleasantness. Everything from the cell phones to the training appears to be traceable to the surrogates of an ostensibly banned group known as Lashkar-e-Taiba, which preaches holy war against Hindus, Jews, Christians, atheists, and others. The link is most inconvenient for the government of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, a new and untried politician who may not exactly be in charge of his own country or of its armed forces but who nonetheless knows how to jingle the keys of peace.

The Syrian and Pakistani situations are a great deal more similar than most people have any interest in pointing out. In both cases, there is a state within the state that exerts the real power. In both cases, official secularism is a mask for the state sponsorship of theocratic and cross-border gangster groups.

Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair and the Roger S. Mertz media fellow at the Hoover Institution in Stanford, California.
 

Indian popular religion old and new. Left: Shiva. In Hinduism, the absolute God or Brahman, pure spiritual reality, is suprapersonal, yet manifests on the personal level with a wide array of archetypes, such as Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. For Shaivas, Shiva is the auspicious one who subsumes and becomes all three aspects as the absolute Brahman. Right: Miss Bollywood, Shilpa Shetty (Manchester, 2007)

Behind Mumbai

By Robert D. Kaplan
The Atlantic, November 2008

Edited by Andy Ross

The Mumbai attacks will aggravate a growing divide between Hindus and Muslims within India.

India is home to 154 million Muslims, the third largest Muslim population in the world after Indonesia and Pakistan. India has more to lose from extremist Islam than arguably any other country in the world. The Mumbai terrorists announced themselves as the Deccan Mujahideen. The Deccan is a rugged plateau region in south-central India that Aurangzeb, the fierce Sunni emperor of the Mughals could never subdue before his death in 1707. The Islamic Mughals vanquished all of northern India, Pakistan, and a good part of Afghanistan, but they could never consolidate the Deccan against the Hindu Maratha warriors.

In the early Cold War decades, India's ruling Congress Party, the party of independence, sought to unite both Hindus and Muslims under the umbrella of a shared community and new nation-state. In the 1980s and 1990s, with the opening up of the Indian economy to the outside world, Indians, especially the new Hindu middle class, began a search for roots to anchor them in world civilization.

The Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (Indian People's Party, or BJP) is one of several Hindu nationalist organizations that promotes a revisionist view of Indian history. In their view, the Mughals and other Muslim dynasties of the medieval and early modern era are interlopers in what should have remained a purely Hindu civilization. At the same time, a similar process occurred within parts of the Indian Muslim community, who joined a world Muslim civilization that competed with Indian nationalism for their loyalty.

The divide exploded in full force in early 2002 in the northwestern province of Gujarat. Following the massacre of 58 Hindus on a train, Muslim areas of Gujarat were besieged by Hindu mobs. Hundreds of Muslim women were raped, more than a thousand were killed, and 200,000 were made homeless. The Hindu nationalist BJP government in Gujarat was implicated in the killings. The atrocities have lived on in infamy.

Robert D. Kaplan is a national correspondent for The Atlantic and a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security.
 

AR  Nice to read Chris Hitchens preaching again. As for Bombay or Mumbai, the main thing is to close ranks against the militants and back up words with real solidarity.