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Combating communalism
KHOJ is a search, a journey, that helps children to explore
different realities. It is an attempt to dissolve prejudices that
can flourish even in very young minds. Khoj is part of a larger
effort which is built on the simple faith that hate hurts,
harmony works.
Khoj is about people, different kinds of people. Some brown
people, some not so brown. Some Hindu, some Muslim, some
Christian, some Sikh. Some Dalit, some Jat... It's about asking
how all these people are different: Do they have a God? Who is
he? Or she? Are they all different Gods? What do we know about
them? Would we like to know more? What does God mean to us?
Asking such questions in the abstract is easy but futile. But how
can school children be engaged in actually exploring these
questions? One of the most lively ways to do it is to bring them
into contact with people and places they do not otherwise
encounter in their everyday life.
For example, a bus load of children from one of Mumbai's most
elite schools is taken on a field trip to a predominantly Muslim,
working-class area of the city. Most of the children have never
been to that part of the city before. They are amazed at the
sight of a goat's carcass hanging in a butcher's shop. They are
accustomed to seeing only neatly packaged pieces of meat in the
freezer at home.
A guided tour of the local mosque proves fascinating for the
children. Some of them murmur about the sparkling cleanliness of
the mosque. They are evidently surprised about this. Later,
perhaps some of them wonder why they did not expect the mosque to
be so clean.
Khoj is part of a larger endeavour which was a response to the
traumatic communal tension and violence which erupted all over
India after the demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992. It was a
period of deep despair for all those who had spent years working
for communal harmony. For some of them, the only possible
response was to plunge more intensely into anti-communal work.
It was in this context that two journalist-activists, Teesta
Setalvad and Javed Anand, decided to devote themselves to this
mission on a full-time basis. They launched a magazine called
Communalism Combat which soon became compulsory reading among a
wide-range of people. The magazine, now in its eighth year of
publication, concentrates on countering communal propaganda,
highlighting the deeply rooted traditions of co-existence among
different communities and reporting on a wide variety of
initiatives for communal harmony.
From the very outset, this team was clear that though the
magazine serves a vital function, the most crucial work must be
done at the ground level. By 1993, there were signs of deep
prejudice even among students of schools which prided themselves
on having a tradition of strong liberal values. In some schools
there were cases of Muslim students being ostracised in their own
classrooms.
Thus, Khoj is an attempt to tackle different kinds of prejudice
through intensive, non-formal interaction with children aged 10,
11 and 12 years. Seven years after it was launched, Khoj is
working in 35 schools all over Mumbai. Over the years, Khoj has
involved teachers in critiquing the history syllabus for gender,
caste and communal biases. It has now prepared an alternative
syllabus kit for history and social studies, which will soon be
ready for distribution all over India.
Since 1996, two pages of most issues of Communalism Combat have
been devoted to the activities and journey of Khoj. It sometimes
includes a quiz which disseminates important historical
information through its questions. For example, it asks for the
name of the Mughal emperor who was sent a rakhee by a Rajput
queen since she wanted his protection.
Sometime in 1996, Khoj sprouted "an olive branch" called Aman.
This initiative is a response to the fact that most school
children have little knowledge about India's neighbors. The
primary focus of this effort has been a Peace Pals program for
Indian and Pakistani children who write letters to each other.
So 12-year-old Harsh Ashar of India replies to Faryal Faheem in
Pakistan saying, "it gave me great pleasure that you want to
forget the enmity between India and Pakistan...Imagine if India
Pakistan merge their (cricket) teams. We would beat any other
team..."
Aman-Peacepals also has an Address "bank" for children who wish
to make a penpal across the border. Children can write in with
their age and hobby details and the Address Bank finds them a
matching address in Pakistan. Together, the Khoj and Aman efforts
have also created posters and greeting cards with paintings in
which children express their vision of peace and harmony. Teesta
feels that the Aman process has far more potential than has so
far been realised and there is a need to extend the reach of the
Peace Pals program.
Meanwhile, the work of Communalism Combat remains a steep uphill
battle. "I feel extremely worried that behind the surface calm, a
huge storm is building", says Javed Anand. This, he feels, is
because most people are partly cognizant but partly complacent
about communal prejudices and tension.
However, the combined efforts of many peace activists in Mumbai
have ensured that the Srikrishna Commissions Report is still a
live political issue. This is the commission which investigated
the communal violence in Mumbai in 1992-93 and severely indicted
the police and the Shiv Sena. Citizens' groups are still
clamoring for the implementation of the Srikrishna report and
prosecution of the guilty.
The Communalism Combat team are also members of the Pakistan-
India Forum for Peace and Democracy which was founded in 1994.
This is a citizens' effort to go beyond borders and forge direct
links between like-minded people in both countries. The Forum
organises a convention once in about two years. Javed and Teesta
feel that even this effort has far more potential than its
limited success so far. "For example," they say, "at the time of
Kargil we felt helpless. Individual voices were raised but the
Froum ought to have been able to contain some of the hysteria
over Kargil."
"Then again," says Teesta, "it's easy to enlist the gloomy side
but seven years ago the communal bias of the police was not a
debated issue, while it is today. Schools are also doing debates
on communalism in the school syllabus."
It is the work among children that provides the nourishment for
the work in Communalism Combat , says Javed. "If educational
programs could be more creative and encourage children to
articulate their feelings about God and other communities - then
prejudices come out and get discussed."
The outcome of this work is likely to be largely invisible. Yet
there are some tangible manifestations in the peace-posters and
cards created by children. There are lots of paintings with the
expected smiling faces, hearts, white doves, peace signs, flowers
and butterflies. But perhaps the card which says it all is
painted by 14-year-old Sumrina Ahmed of Pakistan. It shows a
healing band-aid lovingly holding together the symbols of India
and Pakistan.
RAJNI BAKSHI
For more information about Khoj and Aman, write to: Post Box No.
28253, Juhu Post Office, Juhu, Mumbai - 400049.
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