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Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Don’t trade in fake political correctness: Indian Muslims don’t deserve hypocrisy, Islam,Terrorism and Jihad, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam,Terrorism and Jihad
Don’t trade in fake political correctness: Indian Muslims don’t deserve hypocrisy
The Indian Express
Sep 20, 2008
Friday's gun battle between security forces and terrorists in Delhi’s Jamia Nagar must force a shift in general and political thinking on internal security. This statement is of course an admission of national failure — there has been enough evidence already demanding such a rethink, but our habits have proved to be regrettably resilient. Maybe the fact that the Jamia Nagar incident brings into sharp relief some truths national discussion has wanted to shy away from, will help break the status quo. The locality, almost exclusively Muslim-populated, is gentrified. Urban professionals are the typical residents. And here’s therefore demonstration of an extremely worrying and sad truth — that extremism is not a product of the nurturing of poor neighbourhoods that offer few opportunities for young men. Indeed, it can be said that terrorism’s domestic projects in India have been more or less led and executed by members of social classes who are hard to categorise as have-nots materially. This is not a staggering sociological fact given that the murderous, “class enemy” liquidating Naxalites of the ’70s and not a few of the Khalistanis of the ’80s were from literate, white-collar classes. But what makes violence in the name of Islam by educated Indian Muslims especially problematic is that India’s Muslims are 15 per cent of the country’s population and, more important, the idea of India loses an extraordinary amount of vitality and meaning if its largest minority is seen and sees itself as the Other. Therefore the political project following the admission that there’s a serious domestic terrorism problem has to have two agendas.

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