Although the Hindu
nationalist party, BJP, lost control of the Indian government in
2004 following elections, this paper argues that the Hindu
nationalist movement, or Hindutva, still seeks to gather support
from the Indian diaspora through the medium of the Internet. The
paper draws on theories of nationalism offered by Benedict Anderson
(1991) and Partha Chaterjee (1993). Since Internet penetration in
India is still relatively low, the websites primary audience is
inferred to be those living in the diaspora, primarily the United
Kingdom and the United States, but other countries as well. Because
of this diasporic audience, Stuart Hall’s theory on identity
formation is discussed. The paper traces the major organizations
involved in promoting Hindutva, and finally examines some of those
organizations’ websites.
Introduction
Although the Hindu
nationalist party, BJP, lost control of the Indian government in
2004 following elections, this paper argues that the Hindu
nationalist movement, or Hindutva, still seeks to gather support
from the Indian diaspora through the medium of the Internet. The
paper draws on theories of nationalism offered by Benedict Anderson
(1991) and Partha Chaterjee (1993). Since Internet penetration in
India is still relatively low, the websites primary audience is
inferred to be those living in the diaspora, primarily the United
Kingdom and the United States, but other countries as well. Because
of this diasporic audience, Stuart Hall’s theory on identity
formation is discussed. The paper traces the major organizations
involved in promoting Hindutva, and finally examines some of those
organizations’ websites.
Theories of Nationalism
Benedict Anderson’s
influential book, Imagined Communities (1991), originally
published in 1983, stated that the nation is imagined in three ways.
One is that it is imagined as limited because even the
largest of them have boundaries beyond which lie other nations.
Secondly, a nation is imagined as sovereign as a result of
Enlightenment ideals that undermined the legitimacy of
divinely-ordained monarchy. Finally, the nation is imagined as a
community. Regardless of inequality that may exist, essentially
there is a horizontal relationship among the masses who will never
actually know each other on a personal basis.
Anderson’s book is based
on the emergence of the European nation. It was the countries of
that continent that engaged in the exploitive political-economic
system of colonialism whereby the European countries would use the
countries of the Americas, Africa, and Asia as a source of raw
materials to be processed in the center (Europe) and shipped back to
the periphery (colonies). This system essentially produced a
dependency by the colonies on the European countries for finished
goods.
Such a core-periphery
colonial relationship existed between Great Britain and India. India
first came into contact with Europe after the establishment of
trading outposts by Holland and England in the early seventeenth
century. After an initial period of Dutch dominance, the British
East India company came to control trade, and eventually established
control over India. After a failed mutiny against the British East
India Company, India came under direct rule of the British monarchy
in 1858.
Ironically, it was
colonialism that introduced the idea of a nation to a part of the
world which, arguably, had never had such a concept. It was this
idea of a nation that would be mobilized by Indian independence
fighters, including Gandhi.
Another theorist working
in the area of the emergence of nationalism is Partha Chatterjee,
particularly in his work The Nation and Its Fragments: Colonial
and Postcolonial Histories (1993). Chatterjee raises the
question that if outside of Europe and the Americas, all nations are
based on modules that arose in those two areas, what is left to be
imagined in the rest of the world? In other words, the peoples
outside of Europe and the New World are forced to develop along
established patterns of nationness according to Anderson’s work.
Chatterjee does not reject the idea of "imagined community" per
se, but he does reject the idea that the only way they can be
imagined is in the form taken by European and American nations.
As is the case in his
previous work, the title is slightly misleading. Chatterjee’s work
is not applicable to all nations or even postcolonial nations.
Rather, it is specific to the experience of the former British
colony of India.
Chatterjee’s central
argument is that we have mistakenly come to think of nationalism
exclusively as a political movement in which the nation is coeval
with the state. Chatterjee rejects this view. Instead, he sees the
development of two domains in colonial India, one material and the
other spiritual. The material domain encompasses the outside world
of "the economy and of statecraft, of science and technology" (p.
6), while the spiritual domain is that of cultural identity.
Chatterjee argues that
there emerged an Indian nationalism in the spiritual domain prior to
a nationalism in the political domain. According to Chatterjee, this
cultural national consciousness was a necessary precursor to
political national consciousness.
Chatterjee outlines
several examples as evidence of the development of this cultural
national consciousness. In the world of art, he cites Bengali drama,
which drew on classical drama in Sanskrit but reflected a new
national consciousness in the nineteenth century. Even in the form
of the novel, which Anderson found to be an expression of the
European model of the nation, Chatterjee finds traces of nationalism
different from that of Europe.
Chatterjee also cites the
change in family and especially the role of women as a herald of the
new cultural nationalism. To be sure, the new family structure was
still patriarchal, but it rejected the Western notion of family and
women’s role also.
Despite his claim that
there developed a cultural consciousness of nationness, Chatterjee
acknowledges that this consciousness had to insert itself in the
political domain according to models developed in Europe as a means
to secure independence. Chatterjee’s basic theme is that by putting
on the cloak of the modern state, colonial states restricted how
they were to develop after securing independence. He writes, "Here
lies the root of our postcolonial misery: not in our inability to
think out new forms of the modern community but in our surrender to
the old forms of the modern state" (p. 11). Having theorized the
nation-state, and before going on to a discussion of the Hindu
national organizations, we need to briefly discuss the identity
formation of groups since it is inferred the intended audience of
our website are diasporic Indians.
Diasporic Identities
One of the basic tenets of
cultural studies is the nonessential nature of identity. Stuart Hall
writes, "Perhaps instead of thinking of identity as an already
accomplished fact, which the new cultural practices then represent,
we should think, instead, of identity as a ‘production’ which is
never complete, always in process, and always constituted within,
not outside, representation" (1994, p. 392).
Representation, then,
takes on an important role for Hall. For Hall, all identity is
contextually based. There is no pre-existing ethnicity for Hall but
only those that come into being through discourse, which includes
practices of representation. Other scholars like Butler (1997), have
argued the same for gender. In this age of media saturation,
representation becomes an important force for identity construction.
The more traditional
conception of cultural identity held that there was something more
stable and more essential behind all the superficial differences
among a group that shared a common history. Indeed, this point of
view has served as a beneficial source of solidarity among people in
search of social justice who are able to come together to pursue
common goal. Moreover, some scholars continue to advocate
association based on such shared oppression for strategic reasons (Spivak,
1996).
The second conception of
cultural identity holds that there are significant differences among
people who share a common history that prevent them from being
lumped together as an undifferentiated group. Hall writes, "Cultural
identity, in this second sense, is a matter of ‘becoming’ as well as
of ‘being’. It belongs to the future as much as to the past. It is
not something which already exists, transcending place, time,
history and culture… [I]dentities are the names we give to the
different ways we are positioned by, and position ourselves within,
the narratives of the past" (1994, p. 394). Hall acknowledges that
these positions can be ascribed or chosen. Under colonialism, the
discourse ascribed the colonized as "Other" and made the colonized
see themselves as Other (Fanon, 1961; Said, 1978). Because of the
struggle between ascribed and chosen identity, there is always a
politics of identity in a nonessential view of identity.
Hall gives the example of
the Caribbean in which there are two vectors: one of "similarity and
continuity" and one of "difference and rupture" (Hall, 1994, p.
395). The slaves that were forcefully removed and forced to work in
the plantations all came from Africa. Yet, they also represented
many countries, tribal groups, linguistic groups, and religious
orientations. These differences led to give those transplanted to
the New World a diasporic identity. Hall states, "Diaspora
identities are those which are constantly producing and reproducing
themselves anew, through transformation and difference" (1994, p.
402). An example of this constant renewal of identities took place
in England.
Politically, this is the moment when the term
‘black’ was coined as a way of referencing the common experience
of racism and marginalization in Britain and came to provide the
organizing category of a new politics of resistance, among
groups and communities with, in fact, very different histories,
traditions and ethnic identities… ‘The black experience,’ as a
singular and unifying framework based on the building up of
identity across ethnic and cultural difference between the
different communities, became ‘hegemonic’ over other
ethnic/racial identities- though the latter did not, of course,
disappear. (Hall, 1996, p. 441)
This alliance was based on
the marginalization of the non-Anglo-Saxon groups and resulted in
the challenging of representation in "music and style, later in
literary, visual and cinematic forms" (Hall, 1996, p. 442).
The new black
cultural/political consciousness signified a two-pronged attack on
black representation. The first was to claim a right to have access
to representation of themselves, and the second was to contest the
marginality, fetishization, and stereotyping of blacks. The
importance of the politics of representation becomes apparent when
discourse is seen as constitutive and not merely reflexive. Hall
writes, "This gives questions of culture and ideology, and the
scenarios of representation- subjectivity, identity, politics- a
formative, not merely an expressive, place in the constitution of
social and political life" (1996, p. 443).
Overview of Hindu Nationalist Groups
This traditional lack of
"India" as a historical idea has not kept post-Independence Hindu
nationalists from trying to reconstruct just such a history. Chief
among the organized Hindu groups are the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh
(RSS), Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
None of the three groups mentioned above are fringe groups. In fact,
the BJP is the political party in control of India’s government. The
RSS is a militant group that tries to recruit male youths, and the
VHP is a transnational organization that serves as the closest thing
to a central authority on Hindu dogma.
Drawing on the work of
Edward Said, Peter van der Veer (1994) has written that Hindu
nationalists bought into the Orientalist constructions of an Indian
past. Such an Orientalist construction can be seen in John Oman’s
version of the Ramayana, in which he inserts commentary on
the nature of Indian society for his Western readers. However, van
der Veer criticizes Said for not recognizing the complicity on the
part of the colonized in developing Orientalism.
Van der Veer (1994) cites
Vivekananda, whose message was intended for Western audiences, as
well as the Indian middle class, as an exemplar of an Indian
collaborator for Orientalism. Also along these lines is the desire
to fix the Gita as the authoritative text of Hinduism, when
no such status was afforded it in the past. In fact, Hindu-ism
is a creation of colonialism as a result of a desire to create a
religion for India.
Van der Veer’s (1994)
central thesis is that Hindu nationalists are not anti-modern. They
subscribe to the notion of the very modern idea of the nation-state
described by Anderson. What they are against is a secular state.
However, here again they justify their anti-secularism with the very
Western, democratic ideal of majority rule. They claim that India is
essentially a Hindu country, where the minorities (including Muslims
and Christians) should just be grateful they are allowed to reside
there.
They view the Muslim and
British rule of India as a low point of Indian history. However,
they strongly feel that now is the time to reclaim India’s
"glorious" past. Here again, we see an overlap between the
Orientalist view and Hindu nationalist view of India as a once great
civilization. The Hindu nationalists take it upon themselves to
bring that glory back.
The biggest impediment
seen by right-wing groups to reclaiming India’s glory is the Muslim
rule of India and its present Muslim population. That is why almost
every Hindu nationalist uses the site of Ayodhya, where a Muslim
mosque was built on the site the supposed birthplace of Rama, as a
rabble-rousing symbol.
In 1984, the VHP began
agitating the situation in earnest when they began demanding a lock
on the mosque compound be removed. The lock had been placed at the
time of India’s independence in 1947, effectively keeping both the
Muslim and Hindu community from entering the premises. The Hindu
right gained momentum in 1990 with an escalation of the Kashmir
issue with Pakistan, an escalation that always translates into
anti-Muslim feelings within India. A second factor in 1990 was the
decision by the government to implement a report by the Mandal
Commission that increased the number of spaces for "scheduled
castes." This surge in Hindu nationalism culminated on December 6,
1992 when the mosque at Ayodhya was destroyed following a rally
organized by the BJP and VHP. Communal violence erupted all over
India, with over a thousand people, mostly Muslims, dying in Bombay
alone (van der Veer 1994).
Moreover, right-wing
Hinduism, especially the VHP, which translates roughly into World
Hindu Council, has been adept at mobilizing the Indian diaspora.
As Vijay Prashad (2000) has written, many diasporic Indians may feel
impotent politically in their own land, so they turn to Hindu
nationalism for a sense of identity. According to Prashad, the
Ayodhya carnage served as a catalyst for political maneuvering by a
group calling themselves the "Concerned NRIs" (non-resident
Indians). He writes, "[T]hese desis found an avenue to make an
alliance with the U.S. state against what the United States called
‘Muslim fanaticism.’ Some even used the conjuncture to argue that
India could be the Israel of Asia, a U.S. fortress against Islam
(Pakistan) and communism (China)" (p. 135). They took out ads in
Indian and Indian-American newspapers congratulating the destruction
of the Ayodhya mosque.
One website that tries to
appeal to diasporic Indians is HinduUnity.org. Internet use in
India, while growing, is still relatively low. Therefore, it must be
assumed a primary target of HinduUnity.org are those Indians
overseas since they are more likely to have regular Internet access.
Method and Analysis
The analysis of the
website was done at two different intervals seperated by about
twenty months. The first analysis was done in May 2003 and the
second was done in February 2005. The gap in dates is important
because of the change in political leadership from the Hindu
nationalist BJP to the more secular Congress party. First the
website will be described in the summer of 2003, and then as it is
in January 2005.
Summer 2003
As you enter the site, a
pop-up browser advertises the following organizations with links to
their pages: Bajrang Dal, Vishwa Hindu Parishad, Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh, Shiv Sena, H.V.K, Hindu Force, S.P. Attri's
Essays, Sarvarkar Darshan
Soldiers of Hindutva, Nation of Hindutva, Hindu Holocaust Museum,
and the Saffron Tigers. While it will take further research to
determine the exact relationships between these organizations, it is
safe to say they collectively constitute a family of right-wing
Hindu organizations dedicated to Hindutva, or a Hindu state.
The primary banner across
the top of the main page reads "Together we shall fight to protect
our culture, heritage & religion." To the left is a logo that
depicts an outline of India with Hanuman, the monkey-god from the
Ramayana that represents loyalty, rising with weapon clutched in his
hand. To the right is a pair of crossed daggers. There is an
immediate sense of militancy as a result of the word "fight" in the
motto and the icons employed. However, the fight is not one of
aggression, but protection, as the motto states. This is a theme
found throughout the site: Hinduism is not a religion of aggression,
but it is also not one of pacifism either when pushed too far. The
organization’s goal appears to be to portray a religion whose very
survival is at stake, necessitating the need for immediate action.
This theme of necessary
militancy was apparent at the time of this analysis in the featuring
of a picture of Mahatma Gandhi’s assassin, Nathuram Godse, in honor
of his birthday. The text read, "Celebrating Shri Nathuram Godse
Diwas- May 19th." Shri is a title of respect in India.
Mahatma Gandhi, contrary to many Westerner’s conception, did have a
Hindu apologist’s streak, which led to praise of the virtues of
Hinduism. Despite Gandhi’s Hindu leanings, he was still too
accommodating of Muslims for Hindus like Godse.
In addition, the main page
consists of a call to action to boycott the American Eagle
Outfitters chain because of their misappropriation of the Hindu god
Ganesh for a bag they sell. It reads in capital letters, "INSULT TO
HINDU GODS BY AE.COM!" Since this is an American retail chain, it is
apparent it is those Indians in the United States being called on to
boycott the store. However, there is also an online petition against
the store, so it is possible for those living in India to be a part
of this protest.
Below the American Eagle
boycott call is a news item about violence in Kashmir against
Hindus. The headline reads in all capital letters, "24 HINDU PANDITS
KILLED IN KASHMIR BY MUSLIMS. 2 HINDU CHILDREN DIED IN MASSACRE." In
both statistics on who was killed, it is emphasized that the victims
were Hindu: 24 Hindu pandits. 2 Hindu children. The
headline also claims that they were killed by Muslims. It
does not say Muslim extremists, or Muslim insurgents, or Kashmiri
rebels. By identifying the killers as just Muslims, it essentializes
a religion of over a billion people and turns them all into killers.
Below the headline is a
paragraph that starts with the sentence, "THE SOLUTION FOR HINDU
GENOCIDE IS HINDU MILITANCY!" Below that is a series of eight
pictures that show victims. Of the eight pictures, three are of the
parents of the two children killed, and three are of the actual
children killed, so there seems to be a deliberate attempt to
highlight the children that were the victims since they constituted
six of eight pictures, but only two of twenty-six victims.
Next, there are five links
to various news items that relate to various things like Christian
missionary activity, the death of a Hindu holy man, and excavation
of the Ayodhya site. Interestingly, they do not call this the site
of the mosque, but as Ram Janmabhumi, or Rama’s birthplace.
Next, is an item that
relates to India-United States unity with regard to the Iraqi war.
It states, "HinduUnity.org wishes to send prayers to all the
American and allied forces serving in the Iraqi War for their
honorable service for the sake freedom (sic)! May you all return
home safely and at the same time crush the evil Islamic empire that
has caused havoc in the U.S., India, Israel and many other parts of
the world. God bless you all!"
Here we have the evocation
of good versus evil found in the simplistic worldview of current
administrations in the United States and Israel. The partnership
with the United States and Israel seems to be a strategic one since
both those countries have strong military-industrial complexes.
Perhaps not coincidentally, there is a link, the only one that is an
image, to the left of the paragraph above for Kahane.org, a
right-wing Jewish group.
The entire left border of
the site is for links, many of which take you off the HinduUnity.org
site. The reason it is probably not a coincidence that the
Kahane.org site appears next to the article on Iraq is because there
is a more elaborate section on Israel further down the page. In
addition to Kahane.org are links to the Jewish Defense League,
Masada 2000, United Jerusalem, and several others. They are all
under the heading "Israel Forever."
Also is a section on
Sikhism. The site is friendly to Sikhism since it was a religion
that appeared on Indian soil. Therefore, the religion can be
reconciled with Hindutva.
Winter 2005
An examination of the
website more recently, and after the victory of the Congress Party
of the national government in 2004, reveals the main theme of the
website is unchanged: the danger posed by Islam to Indian national
identity. However, because of the tsunami, the relief effort is
getting prominent attention, but even with this, the focus is on
which charities one should not donate to because of their "anti-Indianness."
Also with Congress in power, special vitriol is directed at Sonia
Gandhi, head of the Congress Party.
Prominent on the main page
is the unequivocal message: "ISLAM = TERRORISM! FIGHT ISLAM AND
PROTECT YOUR COUNTRY & FREEDOM."
The petition to boycott
American Eagle is gone, but there is a new petition. This one aims
to prevent Salman Khan from playing Lord Ram. The petition is worth
quoting at length:
But even if we were to forget about this
person’s past for a moment, we still can’t understand why
non-Hindu actors and Hindu actresses are being chosen for the
main cast in spite of the fact that the Ramayana is a Hindu
religious text and in spite of the fact that this movie being
produced in India, for a primarily Hindu audience. However, what
takes the cake is that given the well-known history of hostility
of Muslims towards Hindus, they have still chosen two Muslim
actors to represent our Lords Shri Ram and Shri Lakshman and a
Hindu actress to represent Mother Sita. Is this not a deliberate
challenge to Hindus and a well-planned attempt to humiliate us?
Did the producer not find one Hindu male in a population of at
least 400 million Hindu males to play the role of Shri Ram? Is
this clearly not an attempt to insult Mother Sita by portraying
her as the wife of a Muslim? In fact, we strongly believe that
the pseudo-secularism brigade in Bollywood have purposefully
selected a Muslim to play the role just to hit at all the
self-respecting and proud Hindus of this world. This is yet
another calculated move to insult Hindus just like the recent
abduction of the Hindu housewife Kanchan Mishra in Bihar and the
mass rape of 12 Hindu women in a madrassa in West Bengal.
It is our firm conviction that Muslims have no business messing
around with our religion. It’s not because they have been
allowed to stay back in India after partition that they feel
they have a right to malign our Hindu religion too. Why does
Salman Khan not make a movie about the life of his prophet the
‘great’ Mohammed instead and use a Hindu to play the role? Are
Hindu Gods considered so cheap by Mr. Salman Khan that they can
be represented by an immoral and indecent character like him?
Being mentally sick is not wrong in itself, but trying to
impersonate the gods of other people while being aware of this
fact is a clear attempt to provoke others with similar beliefs.
This type of stunt could seriously undermine the confidence of
the Hindu youth; having their role model and spiritual guardian
being played by a Muslim of loose morals. (Petition Online)
As noted above, major
difference is the large play the relief effort undertaking by
HinduUnity for the tsunami victims is getting. However, even when it
comes to this, there is a link to anti-Hindu charities readers are
advised not to donate to, even if the proceeds go to tsunami
victims. The list includes prominent charities such as American
India Foundation, Asha For Education, and India Literacy Project.
There is no explanation of why HinduUnity advises against donation.
It may be nothing more than the charities do not discriminate based
on religious or other factors when distributing their aid.
Another difference from 2003 and 2005 is the
targeting Sonia Gandhi, because of her Italian background. She
is head of the Congress Party (although she voluntarily gave up
the prime ministership). Sonia Gandhi is the widow of former
prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, who was himself the son of Indira
Gandhi, and the grandson of India’s first prime minister, Nehru.
One link reads, "Sonia is
a national security threat for India." In a link titled, "Do you
know your Sonia?" information such as the fact that her real name is
Antonia, not Sonia is offered. Apparently, the author feels this is
important information, even though she has been called "Sonia" since
a very early age.
Conclusion
As we have seen, the idea
of a nation is not fixed but is continually being negotiated. The
same is true of diasporic populations. The analysis of
HinduUnity.org at two different times separated by about twenty
months shows that consistently Hindu nationalists in India are
trying to mobilize overseas Indians to their cause of Hindutva
through their website. Because of the minority status of many, if
not all, diasporic Indians, it is possible they are vulnerable to
these types of appeals to national identity based on Hinduism. The
overall theme of the site, both in 2003 and 2005, is that of a
religion and land (inextricably intertwined in the Hindutva view)
under siege. Although some of the militancy of the siege is aimed
against Christian missionary work, there does not appear to be the
virulence there is against Islam. Perhaps HinduUnity.org cannot go
too far in attacking Christianity without coming into conflict with
their support for the United States, a country whose own ideologues
would like to see transformed into a Christian state. However, Islam
is attacked with full fury. Islam appears to be the Other through
which right-wing Hinduism defines itself as the Self. All this is
done through a World Wide Web site, which highlights the fact that
religious nationalism in India is not anti-modern.
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