Editorial January 30, 2013
From footnote to F.I.R.
As an intellectual, Ashis Nandy is known for his idiosyncratic views.
But the eminent psychologist and social theorist, who has always marched
to the beat of his own ideological drum, is anything but the casteist
his detractors now claim he is. Whether one agrees or not with what he
said during a lively and heated discussion at the Jaipur Literary
Festival (JLF), there can be no justification for the thoughtless
character assassination and harassment he has been put through. Cases
have been registered against him under the Scheduled Castes (Prevention
of Atrocities) Act in Rajasthan and elsewhere. And heavyweight
politicians such as former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati and Lok
Janshakti Party leader Ram Vilas Paswan have demanded that he be
arrested immediately for ostensibly maligning Dalits and Other Backward
Classes. Quite outlandlishly, the latter has demanded that Prof. Nandy
be held under the National Security Act, a draconian preventive
detention law that empowers the police to detain people considered
security risks without charge-sheeting them for up to one year. Rather
than treat the intolerant chorus of outrage with the contempt it
deserves, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot has spoken of Prof.
Nandy’s “mental bankruptcy”; as if on cue, the police have swung into
needless overdrive by directing that JLF organiser Sanjoy Roy remain in
Jaipur until the probe in the case is over.
If it is depressing that those outraged by Prof. Nandy’s remarks have
failed to read them in context, it is truly annoying that they haven’t
even taken note of his explanation of what he really meant; his
clarification that it was never his intent to hurt any community and
that he was sorry if he had unintentionally done so has also failed to
assuage his detractors. This should have been enough to set the
controversy to rest. But in a country where there is a flourishing
outrage industry — helped by a slew of laws that takes the feelings of
easily offended individuals very seriously — there is a great deal of
publicity and even political capital to be acquired in claiming that
sentiments are hurt. The hallmark of an open society is an environment
where competing views exist and where disagreements are addressed, or
resolved, through the medium of reasoned debate. Such dialogue is
impossible when angry groups try to silence differing views through
vehement protests or by harassing others through a misuse of the law. It
is one thing for Prof. Nandy’s remarks to be the subject of criticism,
satire, disparagement or censure. It is quite another to perpetuate a
culture of intolerance by using the police to settle a scholarly debate.
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