Naghma
Sahar
By
Rasheed Kidwai and Naghma Sahar
12 July,
2020
Elisabeth
Kubler-Ross’s seminal work, Death and Dying, describes the five distinct stages
of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. While the
Swiss-American psychiatrist was speaking about the series of emotions
terminally ill patients go through, the first of the five stages that she
postulated possibly holds true for a section of India’s people when the country
was trying to come to terms with COVID-19 in the initial days of the pandemic.
A Delhi court Saturday granted bail to 75 foreign nationals from Thailand and Nepal, who were charge-sheeted for attending a Tablighi Jamaat congregation here allegedly in violation of visa norms, indulging in missionary activities illegally and violating government guidelines issued in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.
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The spread
of the virus in the early months had then exposed the country’s second-largest
religious group to a vulnerability born out of denial. Indiscretion and
reckless behaviour by members of the Tablighi Jamaat had purportedly led to a
spurt in coronavirus-positive cases, not only in Delhi but also in many other
parts of the country.
The spread
of the virus in the early months had then exposed the country’s second-largest
religious group to a vulnerability born out of denial.
An
international gathering of Tablighis — preachers or a society to spread the
faith —had taken place in New Delhi’s Nizamuddin area in March 2020, drawing
hundreds of foreign nationals from Thailand, Nepal, Myanmar, Indonesia,
Bangladesh, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Kyrgyzstan. Despite a government order
prohibiting large gatherings, more than 4,500 people had assembled at the
Tablighi Jamaat Markaz (headquarters).
Media
reports had quoted government sources as saying that since 1 January 2020, over
2,000 foreigners from 70 countries had arrived in India to participate in
Jamaat activities. As the Covid-19 lockdown came into force on 25 March 2020,
over 1,000 were left stranded in Nizamuddin.
Metropolitan Magistrate Paras Dalal allowed foreigners from China, Morocco , Ukraine, Ethiopia, Fiji, Australia, Brazil, Afghanistan were allowed to walk free on payment of a fine of 5000 each. (Representational)
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Within
days, a state of panic had set in as reports of Covid-19 deaths and positive
cases started coming in from various parts of the country. By early April,
private television news channels had begun insisting that over 30 per cent of
the corona-positive cases had the “Tablighi Virus.”
Political
factors were at play too. The country was already in ferment over the
Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens.
The
Tablighis’ state of alleged ignorance was dubbed a “Himalayan” blunder as a
heavy dose of media onslaught, Islamophobia and blame game followed. As
NajmulHoda, a Chennai-based IPS officer, lamented on his Facebook wall,
Covid-19 looked like a common cold in comparison to the plague of communal
hatred.
File photo for representation/Allahabad High Court orders immediate release of Tablighi Jamaat members from quarantine
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Political
factors were at play too. The country was already in ferment over the
Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens. Shaheen Bagh
and its women protesters were making international headlines and the February
2020 riots in Delhi had deepened the sectarian divide, exacerbating religious
tensions. It was in this situation that the Tablighi Jamaat held its
congregation. According to data shared by Equality Labs (a digital human rights
group) with TIME magazine, the hashtag ‘Corona Jihad’ appeared nearly 300,000
times.
The online
attack became more and more vicious as reports of people leaving for different
parts of the country from the Markaz poured in. For days, “Tablighi virus” and
“Corona Jihad” trended on Twitter. Our entire focus shifted from fighting and
containing COVID-19 to fighting the Tablighis and the Muslims, who the general
population started equating as one and the same. Those were the initial days of
our COVID-stricken lives, unsure of what awaited us and we were quick to blame
the Markaz for all our misery.
In the
midst of this Islamophobic onslaught, many articles and tweets expressed fears
of a Muslim apartheid. The usual practice of portraying Muslims as the other
came into play, as did indulging in victimhood.
“Social
media, as ever, remained truculent and toxic. Generally speaking, Muslims
continue to use social media space to indulge in their victimhood addiction,”
observed NajmulHoda.
While the
community needed to address the elephant in the room and could not be absolved
of its responsibility for wrongful acts by the Tablighis, the polarised
discourse that was unleashed in mainstream media impacted the psyche of the
general population. Most Muslims came out against the Jamaat, but the entire
community was still clubbed together and labelled the “Superspreader”.
But the way
the Tablighi Jamaat’s role and, by extension, of the entire Muslim population’s
involvement in the spread of the virus was covered by the mainstream media, it
suddenly felt that Covid-19 had a religion.
The
Tablighis were guilty for sure for the congregation of thousands of people
despite the prohibitory orders, and of not reporting cases, but the wave of
hatred failed to see that the Tablighi Jamaat is not the sole representative of
India’s 170 million Muslims and its actions should not be linked with the
larger community. It is also pertinent to note that the Tablighi Jamaat preaches
a narrow interpretation of Islam to some sections of Muslim society.
But the way
the Tablighi Jamaat’s role and, by extension, of the entire Muslim population’s
involvement in the spread of the virus was covered by the mainstream media, it
suddenly felt that COVID-19 had a religion.
Soon,
stories of discrimination against the poorer sections among Muslims started
coming out. NDTV reported how vendors in Mahoba district of Uttar Pradesh were
allegedly targeted and stopped from selling vegetables by people who accused
them of being members of the Tablighi Jamaat and of spreading the coronavirus.
Old
sociological problems, such as overcrowded ghettos, lack of hygiene and low
levels of awareness, became handy tools again to stigmatise the community.
The Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) MLA from Deoria in Uttar Pradesh, Suresh Tiwari, warned
people against buying vegetables from Muslims. The defiant leader was later
asked to explain his comment by his party chief.
A video
shared widely on Facebook and on Twitter purportedly showed Muslims
intentionally sneezing on each other. It was later debunked by the
fact-checking website AltNews.
Several
video clips purportedly showing COVID-positive members of the Tablighi Jamaat
misbehaving with hospital staff and other patients found space on prime-time
debates. Old sociological problems, such as overcrowded ghettos, lack of
hygiene and low levels of awareness, became handy tools again to stigmatise the
community.
The
reaction from the community was at times defiant, while some took to social
media to counter the hate being peddled with tweets that were either equally
toxic or full of self-pity.
A closer
look at the role the Muslim clergy played reveals a far more constructive
engagement than what has been projected by the mainstream media.
It was at
this point that the Muslim clergy, intellectuals and other community leaders
stepped in. On 2 April, seven signatories — Dr. Zafarul Islam Khan, Chairman,
Delhi Minorities Commission; Prof. Akhtarul Wasey, President, Maulana Azad University,
Jodhpur; Prof. Mohsin Usmani Nadwi, President, Human Welfare Society; Prof.
A.R. Kidwai, Director, K.A. NizamiCenter for Quranic studies, AMU;
MasoomMoradabadi, Secretary, All India Urdu Editors Conference; Zaheeruddin Ali
Khan, Managing Editor, Daily Siasat, Hyderabad, and Prof. IqtedarMohd. Khan,
Deptt. Islamic Studies, Jamia Millia Islamia, Delhi — issued an appeal to the
government to take into consideration the “genuine constraints faced by certain
people.” They argued that it was not a time to find fault. “Any attempt to give
it a sectarian twist would weaken our battle against the deadly virus,” they
said.
A closer
look at the role the Muslim clergy played reveals a far more constructive
engagement than what has been projected by the mainstream media. As early as 6
March, Maulana Khalid Rasheed Firangimahli, Lucknow-based Imam, Eidgah, had
asked mosque-going Muslims to take preventive measures against Covid-19, and
told them to avoid congregations and coughing and sneezing in public.
Firangimahli
was among many religious heads across the country who issued fatwas saying that
the fight against the coronavirus was a religious obligation.
A broad
consensus that was worked out decided against special Eid prayers at Eidgahs
and at mosques, etc. Islamic seminaries, such as the Darul Uloom, Nadwa and
Deoband, issued fatwas asking the faithful to offer Eid prayers at home.
A major
challenge came during the month-long period of Ramadan — that began in the last
week of April — in terms of enforcing social distancing and avoiding guests at
the breaking of fast (iftar) and at community prayers (tarahwih), etc. But
enforcing a sense of discipline among 170 million people sharply divided on
sectarian and linguistic lines was done with remarkable ease and voluntary
compliance.
As Ramadan
is closely followed by Eid, suspension of the customary Eid prayer posed
another hurdle. However, a broad consensus that was worked out decided against
special Eid prayers at Eidgahs (where special Eid prayers are held) and at
mosques, etc. Islamic seminaries, such as the Darul Uloom, Nadwa and Deoband,
issued fatwas asking the faithful to offer Eid prayers at home.
The results
were so good that Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath called up
Firangimahli in Lucknow and congratulated him, saying that Eid prayers
throughout the state had been observed without any incident of the virus
spreading. The state government also issued a letter of appreciation.
Those
members of the Tablighi Jamaat who had tested positive for the virus, and have
since been cured, came forward in huge numbers to donate their blood plasma —
containing anti-viral antibodies — and helped cure many affected people.
Eid ul-Fitr
2020 saw the largest ever participation of women in family prayers. That prompted
Najmul Huda, the IPS officer, to say “thanks” to the virus for bringing gender
equality to every Muslim home. “May it get institutionalised. Corona, I can’t
really say thank you to you, but it’s thanks to you,” he wrote.
There were
other positives too. Charity acted as a great succour as appeals were issued to
channelise Ramadan and Eid shopping for the needy. Maulana Naeem Ur Rahman
Siddiqui, secretary of the Islamic Centre of India, claims that zakat — or
charity — saw a rise of over 50 per cent as compared to the previous year.
Not to
forget, the redemption and acknowledgement that came after all those days of
hate. If the members of the Tablighi Jamaat were guilty of ignorance in the
initial phase of the pandemic, they turned adversity they had wrought upon
themselves into opportunity in the form of penance. Those who had tested
positive for the virus, and have since been cured, came forward in huge numbers
to donate their blood plasma — containing anti-viral antibodies — and helped
cure many affected people.
Some say it
was in keeping with what the Quran teaches — that divine injunction is not for
returning evil with good, but with the best. It says: “Good and evil are not
equal. Repel (evil) with what is best, and you will see that the one you had mutual
enmity with, will become the closest of friends.” (41:34)
Original
Headline: Let’s talk about how Tablighi Jamaat turned Covid hate against
Muslims around
Source: The Print
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/redemption-tablighi-jamaat-donating-plasma/d/122366
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