Much Ado About A Song

There is something mysterious about the current furore around the compulsory singing of Vande Mataram in schools. No mystery of course about why the BJP has enthusiastically taken up the issue, and already made it compulsory in Chhattisgarh, specifically mentioning that it has to be sung in madrassas.

It likes nothing better than to provoke possible riots, and the issue enables it to avoid far more important questions that one would expect a normal opposition party to take up, like farmers' suicides or soaring prices. But it was the HRD ministry that had started it all, by calling for the observance of September 7 as some kind of centenary occasion for the song.

Vande Mataram was written in 1875, and published for the first time as part of Bankimchandra's novel Ananda Math in 1882.

The surprising thing is that nothing relevant to the song happened on September 7, 1906 (or 1905). The Congress did not take any decision then about its national status for the simple reason that it always met in the last week of December.

The Benaras session of December 1905 did hear the song sung by Sarala Debi, in what had become a common practice since the beginning of the anti-Partition movement in Bengal a few months back.

But there was no discussion or decision about a national anthem, there or in the session held exactly a year later in Calcutta in 1906.

I can make these statements with some authority, as I spent 10 years of my life researching nationalism in Bengal during 1903-08, and wrote a book about the Swadeshi movement in 1973 that is still widely read.

Clearly the HRD ministry had been wrongly advised, and has handed over an issue on a platter to the BJP, as part of the repeated Congress efforts to steal the sangh parivar's thunder.

One more effort at appeasement that every time proves harmful for secularism.Vande Mataram was certainly often used as a slogan or song in the freedom struggle. But there were many other rallying cries.

Let me cite two memorable instances. Bhagat Singh and his comrades threw a bomb in the Central Assembly in 1929 to protest an anti-labour law, raising the slogan 'Inquilab Zindabad', and Subhas Bose made Jana Gana Mana the anthem of his Azad Hind Fauj and Jai Hind its greeting, not Vande Mataram.

The slogan and song, Vande Mataram, were quickly appropriated also by Hindu communalists, most evidently of course by the RSS.

It has been often used as a war cry during riots, as counterpart to a similar misuse of Allah-ho-Akbar.

Muslims have objections to the deification of any entity except Allah, but what has vastly enhanced the problem is the way that the song ultimately becomes an evocation of a particular Hindu divinity.

The discussions in the Congress in 1937 about the status of the song turned around the way what begins in the first two stanzas with an unexceptionable evocation of the beauty of the motherland then collapses the country into Durga.

This was the point made by Tagore when Nehru asked his opinion that year, and the Congress then decided to adopt only the first two stanzas.

Sabyasachi Bhattacharya has recently described this debate in his book on Vande Mataram.

Vande Mataram, further, is an integral part of a novel that has been much translated and read. Ananda Math is set in a Bengal ravaged by the famine of 1770, where the Company had already become the ruler, reducing the nawab to a puppet after the battle of Plassey in 1757.

There were anti-British peasant revolts, sometimes led by Hindu and Muslim mendicants, sanyasis and fakirs, and Bankim was well aware of these facts.

His novel, however, made the nawab and Muslims real tyrants, the British merely their compliant agents, and the whole story becomes one of aggression, brutality and violence by Muslims.

The fakir rebels disappear, and the sanyasis and peasant mobs mobilised by them call for anti-Muslim vengeance in luridly communal language: "We want to exterminate all the Muslims on this land as they are enemies of God — kill, kill, kill the Muslim wretches... Brother, will that day ever come when we will demolish their mosques to build temples for Radhamadhav?"

It has been suggested that Bankim was merely using Muslims as surrogate for the British, to evade censorship and trouble as a government official.

Not perhaps an entirely convincing plea, for censorship, except on the public stage, was not really very stringent before the Swadeshi days.

In any case, one needs to separate the possible intentions of the author, from the likely responses of readers. Is it really irrational for Muslims — and by no means Muslims alone — to object to the compulsory imposition of a song that collapses the country into a specific Hindu deity, and forms part of a novel full of apparently communal passages?

The writer is a former professor of history, Delhi University.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1941070,curpg-1.cms
 
I also read the article in the editorial section...I also side with the author that it should not be made compulsory in schools....it will only result it the students just singing it out of compulsion rather than out of respect...patriotism cannot be induced in this manner and rather the people should be given time and space to nuture the feeling by themselves....i also cannot figure out why is it the cenetenary year celebration ?
 
This is India at its best..

Stupid politicians fighting over a song and passing STUPID quota bills when they should be trying to canalise advancements in technology and moulding India into a super power.
 
kartik said:
This is India at its best..

Stupid politicians fighting over a song and passing STUPID quota bills when they should be trying to canalise advancements in technology and moulding India into a super power.
The opposition needs a topic to disrupt the parliament on... otherwise for the next elections all that would be said would be that they did nothing other than beating flies in the parliament.

But its a pity there are so many other useful topics that need to be touched and these nitwits are taking up such a meaningless topic on hold.
 
Muslims may sing along minus the word Vande


A day ahead of the planned centenary celebration of Vande Mataram, Muslim bodies seem to have come down on their earlier stand to not to sing the national song on its 100th birthday, saying Muslims can recite Vande Mataram if they felt it was not tantamount to worshipping the country. Noted Shia scholar and All India Muslim Personal Law Board vice-president Maulana Kalbe Sadiq on Tuesday tried to explore a midpath between national pride and religion, when he tried to delve deeper into the actual meaning of the word 'Vande'. "Does it mean salutation or worship?" he asked, adding that Muslims should have no problem if the word means ‘saluting or paying respect to the country’.

Criticising the fatwas issued indiscriminately by clerics, he said: "If 'Vande' means saluting or paying respect to the country, there is nothing wrong in its recitation by Muslims."

"According to the dictionary, 'vande' means to worship and as such it is not right for Muslims to recite it," he pointed our and asked for a right interpretation of the word.

He said eminent Sanskrit and Muslim scholars could work together to ascertain the correct Urdu translation of the word 'vande', he said.
Earlier, the Darul Uloom Deoband -- a leading centre of Islamic learning -- had steered clear of the issue, saying it has no 'role to play' in the controversy and it has been dragged into it 'unnecessarily'.

The Darul Uloom Deoband categorically stated that it had not issued any fatwa (decree) on Vande Mataram and nor directed Muslim children to skip classes on September 7 to protest against its mandatory recitation in the BJP-ruled states.

A Central Government directive on the issue saying Vande Mataram should be recited in educational insitutions on September 7 to mark the national song's centenary had sparked the controversy, with Muslim groups opposing the move.

Sadiq suggested that Muslim children could join the recitation of Vande Mataram but omit the word 'Vande'.

Sadiq termed the controversy over the national song as a 'non-issue' created by the BJP, which was desperately looking for an issue for its survival. He urged the BJP to restrain its Muslim leaders from issuing reckless statements on the issue.

He said some clerics had been harming the cause of Islam by issuing reckless fatwas at regular intervals on practically every issue and making it appear as if they were religious diktats.

"The opinions of such ulemas are outdated and not in conformity with the modern situation," Sadiq said. "A fatwa is an individual opinion. It cannot be construed to be the opinion of Islam in which there are as many as 73 sects," he said.

Sadiq also criticised a recent fatwa that said insurance was 'anti-Islamic', saying insurance helps those in need. In reply to another question, he said madrasas or seminaries would have to change their approach if they wished to provide quality education to Muslim children.
 
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