By Rajmohan Gandhi

Illinois: The ABVP young men who alerted the railway police about the “crime” they were witnessing as their train, the Utkal Express, was speeding along clearly thought they were doing a patriotic duty.

When, as a result, two nuns from Kerala plus the two trainees accompanying them were taken off the train at Jhansi, the ABVP vigilantes may have reminded themselves of the heroism of that city’s Rani Laxmibai. Perhaps they even felt glad that in their own small way they had emulated her.

That was on March 19. Three or four days later, Naeem Khan Mansuri, superintendent of Railway Police at Jhansi station, declared in a clear statement that careful investigation ruled out any “crime” of “conversion.” Proof was found, Mansuri said, that the trainee-companions with whom the nuns had been talking were Christians from birth.

All four women, he added, were put on another train for their destination, Rourkela. Mansuri also informed us that the ABVP men who alerted the police (apparently by dialing an emergency number) were returning from a camp in Rishikesh, where the Utkal Express had commenced its run.

On his part, Home Minister Amit Shah has declared that the harassment of the four Kerala women will attract the law of the land. For this statement we have to thank the current election season, and the BJP’s eagerness for a slice of Kerala’s significant Christian vote. At other times, incidents like this are ignored by the country’s leadership. Whether action will follow Shah’s comment is of course a wholly different matter.

Other questions may be even more important. How constructive are laws such as the one against religious conversion by allurement? Is “fraudulent conversion” really one of our country’s most pressing problems? How healthy is a climate where idealistic young men like the ABVP members returning from a training camp turn their minds not to Covid, not to India’s hungry, jobless, neglected, or oppressed, but to alleged designs to make Christians or Muslims out of supposedly gullible young Hindus?

If X alleges that Y is fraudulently converting Z, then Y and Z must get off the train and prove that any conversion was authentic and legal. X does not have to prove his charge. How fair is that?

Does it behove a great majority community to nurse the sort of victim complex that a beleaguered minority might harbor? I wish I could meet these ABVP members or activists. I want to say to them that this is a time for trust in our compatriots, not for suspicion.

To the young men who dialed the emergency number because they imagined that a criminal activity was taking place, I say: “You should apologize to the four women for the trouble, delay and humiliation caused to them by your suspicion and action.”

“Instead of suspecting them, you could have sought permission to join their conversation on the Utkal Express. Introducing yourselves, you could even have asked, ‘If you don’t mind, can you tell us what you are discussing?’ They might have told you, and it probably would have been not only harmless but interesting too.”

Everyone knows that it is entirely normal on Indian train journeys to converse with strangers, who quickly lose their strangeness and start adding to our knowledge. What a chance the ABVP members lost to get to know something about Kerala from the women! As also the chance to tell them about the BJP and its plans for Kerala. The women and their relatives might even have been influenced in the BJP’s favor for the elections.

On the Indian ground, everyone, whether a Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Sikh or whatever, has mundane things to worry about, including education, health and a job. But young Hindu activists have been brainwashed about alleged designs of conversion by Christians and Muslims. They’ve been conditioned to see Muslims and Christian compatriots not as partners in a great enterprise, but as open or secret enemies, and encouraged to spy patriotically on them.

To the vigilantes, a conversation in a train compartment among four women connected to one another almost like family members becomes an exercise in illegal conversion. The women must be reported, de-boarded, detained, and examined. If they are cleared, if their conversation is passed, they may be allowed to complete their travel.

Explain your conversation. Justify your journey. Hurled by the many on some, by the strong on the weak, this is the demand. A demand made in the name of the nation and the state. In the instant case, the women were travelling from Hazrat Nizamuddin station to Rourkela. But the demand can be made, is being made, on different kinds of journeys in several parts of beloved sad India.

(Rajmohan Gandhi is presently teaching at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Source: ndtv.com)

6 Comments

  1. Leave alone the illegality and immorality of a law called anti conversion , the authority of implementation, investigation and judgment of the same seems to be the goondas and some organisations. When Pakistan enjoys the working of their Blasphemy laws India seems to want to enjoy similar pleasure through the anti conversion laws. Amit Shah found another opportunity to fool Christians of u destruction of some faiths in India ?

  2. HM will only give lip service. It’s high time our girls and women including nuns learnt self-defence by taking help from the Drukpa Nuns or Sr. Nirmalini of Apostolic Carmel order (past Principal of Carmel Convent School Delhi) who introduced in her all girls’ school, “Mission Prahar (attack)”, as a self-defence technique course in the school. (Ref: https://silentmaj.wordpress.com/2014/09/08/catholic-nun-receives-delhis-best-teacher-award/).

    Prevention is better than Cure.

  3. I had commented on the original story on ndtv.com. I fully agree with what Ladislaus has stated above. Take the BJP’s assurances with a huge handful of salt. This is egg on their face just ahead of the Kerala assembly elections.

  4. Leave alone the illegality and immorality of a law called anti conversion , the authority of implementation, investigation and judgment of the same seems to be the goondas and some organisations. When Pakistan enjoys the working of their Blasphemy laws India seems to want to enjoy similar pleasure through the anti conversion laws. Amit Shah found another opportunity to fool Christians of Keralawhile electioneering in Kanjirappally. Will the Catholic hierarchy care to pursue the withdrawal of such inhuman acts while befriending with the owners of the faith in divisiveness and destruction of some faiths in India ?

  5. Mind your own business ABVP. How dare u can think like that? I too was a member of ABVP during my college days from 1984 till 1990 but we never experienced any religious discrimination what we see now a days in this organisation.

  6. I have already made my frank and forthright comment nearly two hours ago but it is yet to appear on this portal.
    Maybe, by the time the comment does appear here, someone will have developed the guts to ask the HM as to what those who intimidated the nuns do for a living. If they are being paid to do their task, what arrest do you expect to take place really?
    Indeed, the greatest weakness of the Church in India is to fall for false promises and so play safe in expressing its views and refraining from posting frank and blunt reactions on its media portals.
    A point that could go terribly against those indulging in such rhetoric is that it was men attacking women. The day may not be far when women are roped in by those concerned to further the goal of the fanatics whose only aim in life is to see India turned into a HINDU RASHTRA. O that bodies like the AICU made a bigger push for the arrest of those concerned, i.e., not merely those young thugs who started the ruckus but also policemen and railway officials.
    I’m now waiting to see whether this comment appears on the MI portal at all.

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