By Farah Naqvi
Feb 28, 2012
If we accept Gujarat
2002 as something ‘in the past,' as some would like us to, we threaten the
meaning of our present, and endanger our future.
Dateline: Shah-e-Alam
Relief Camp, Ahmedabad, March 27, 2002:
Among the human debris
scattered around the courtyard of the Shah-e-Alam relief camp in Ahmedabad, the
largest with over 10,000 survivors, are Saira (age 12), Afsana (age 11), Naina
(age 12), Anju (age 12), Rukhsat (age 9), Nilofer (age 10), Nilofer (age 9),
Hena (age 11). They are all survivors from Naroda Patiya. And they have seen
things no child should see. They know words no child should have to learn.
Balatkar (Rape) they
know this word. Mein bataoon didi? (Shall I tell you?), volunteers a nine year
old. Balatkar ka matlab jab aurat ko nanga karte hain aur phir use jala dete
hain” (Rape is when a woman is stripped naked and then burnt). And then she
looks fixedly at the floor. Only a child can tell it like it is. For this is
what happened again and again in Naroda Patiya women were stripped, raped and
burnt. (The Survivors Speak, fact-finding by a women's panel, April 16, 2002.
P. 13)
Nothing was left of
these mutilated women no bodies, no evidence, and no justice. Nothing but the
scars on this little girl's mind. I still remember her face, and today 10 years
later, I wonder where she is, how she is making her way through life, scarred
by this macabre, twisted image of rape. I wonder where those men are, the ones
who butchered so many childhoods and got away with it. I wonder, again and
again, at the State, whose constitutional duty it was to protect, that colluded
in the massacre of its own citizens.
REMAINS A WOUND
Ten years to the
pogrom in Gujarat, I try to look back. But for me, like for thousands of
survivors and activists, it is impossible. How does one look back at something
that is so much a part of one's present? And so, Gujarat remains a wound that
stays with me always, deep and continuous. I cried often in 2002. I still cry.
And I guess that is all right. Because Gujarat should make us collectively
weep. And make us truly ashamed of ourselves as a nation.
What happened 10 years
ago is the kind of upheaval that refuses to be historicised. That cannot be
consigned to the pages of any history book with a full stop at the end. In part
because the violence of Gujarat continued for long after February-March 2002,
and is continuing today in the frightened little lives lived by scores of destroyed
Muslim families; in the lives of thousands of men, women and children still
languishing in ‘resettlement colonies' relegated to the margins of Gujarat's
seemingly flourishing towns and cities. In part, because many battles for
justice are still being bravely waged in the courts, and the narrative is still
unfolding. But in greatest part because the ‘meaning' of what Gujarat did to
India remains contested.
People say move on,
get a life, why do activists keep raking up this ‘unpleasant' past? It's been
10 years. Why? Because if we settle for the past as some would like it
scripted, we threaten the meaning of our present, and endanger our future.
These contestations are not just about many battles in courtrooms that must be
waged. The contestation is about the meaning of citizenship. It is about the
relationship between citizen and State. It is about challenging State impunity.
Gujarat is the battle for collective memory against forgetting because it is
ultimately the battle for the idea of India.
In 1950, India made a
constitutional promise to protect the rights of its minorities to live with
dignity and with full rights of citizenship. Time and again, that sacred
promise has been violated in Delhi,
Nellie, Meerut, Bhagalpur, Hashimpura, Kandhamal, Gujarat and most recently in
Gopalgarh (Sept. 2011). In each case, innocents were murdered, maimed, sexually
assaulted, burnt out of hearth and home, scattered to the winds, simply because
of their minority identity, because of who they were. In each episode of targeted
violence, the officers of the State acted in a biased manner, failing in their
duty to protect, to prosecute, and to give justice. How long can this go on?
How long will those in political power use the might of the State, the guns,
and the police, and sirens against one group of citizens and get away with it?
Institutional biases of the State machinery cannot be acceptable in any
civilised democracy — that is the lesson of Gujarat.
THE CHALLENGES
The massacre in
Gujarat poses many challenges to us as a nation, exposing holes in our hearts,
in our social fabric, as well as in our criminal justice system, laws and
jurisprudence. Now we cannot legislate against communal prejudice and hatred in
the hearts and minds of people. That is a battle that we as a society and a
people must wage in a million different ways at a million different moments in
our collective and individual lives. But we can and we must legislate to ensure
justice to the weak.
ELUSIVE JUSTICE
Unlike any other
violent episode in India's recent history, Gujarat 2002 tested the strength and
resilience of many of our democratic institutions to the fullest. The National
Human Rights Commission, the honourable Supreme Court, and the National
Commission for Minorities each came forward and acted. And yet somehow, that
thing called justice still eludes the victims of Gujarat. These victims and
survivors call upon us to restore equality in the working of the law for all
citizens; to create a legal remedy for institutional bias by the State; to fill
the lacunae in our laws and our jurisprudence that has failed time and again to
ensure criminal culpability for those in command, those who are never caught
with the knives in their hands, but who instruct others to lie, and kill and
misuse the law for electoral gain. These are not very tall orders. For, if we
get this right it will help realise, better than we have so far, the
constitutional promise of justice and equality before law. And without justice,
we cannot move on.
A SURVIVOR'S
COURAGE
On January 18, 2008,
Bilkis Bano, a Gujarat survivor who had the courage to speak of the
unspeakable, withstanding over 20 days of gruelling cross-examination, found a
little justice, when 12 accused who had gang-raped her, murdered and raped 14
members of her family, and smashed her three-year-old daughter to the ground
during the horrifying days of 2002, were finally awarded life sentences by a
Mumbai Session court.
On January 21, 2008,
at a press conference in Delhi, Bilkis made this statement:
For the last six years
I have lived in fear, shuttling from one temporary home to the other, carrying
my children with me, trying to protect them from the hatred that I know still
exists in the hearts and minds of so many people. This judgment does not mean
the end of hatred but it does mean that somewhere, somehow justice can prevail.
This judgment is a victory for not only me but for all those innocent Muslims
who were massacred and all those women whose bodies were violated only because,
like me, they were Muslim. It is a victory because now, hereafter, no one can
deny what happened to women in Gujarat in those terrible days and nights of
2002. Because now it will forever be imprinted on the historical record of
Gujarat that sexual violence was used as a weapon against us. I pray that the
people of Gujarat will someday be unable to live with the stigma of that
violence and hatred, and will root it out from the very soil of a State that
still remains my home.
We give up on the
battle for justice in Gujarat at our own peril. For in giving up on Gujarat, we
give up on hope for a better India an India that is by right home to each one
of us.
The author is a member of the National Advisory
Council. Views expressed here are personal.
Source: The Hindu
URL: https://newageislam.com/war-terror/gujarat-2002-battle-forgetting/d/6741