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The minorities landscape
MINORITIES COMMISSION - Minor Role In Major Affairs: Tahir
Mahmood; Pharos Media & Publishing Pvt. Ltd., P.O. Box: 9701, D-
84, Abul Fazal Enclave I, Jamia Nagar, New Delhi-110025. Rs. 300.
TILL 1996 the National Commission for Minorities was a sleepy,
largely ignored organisation which seldom made media headlines.
Its reports were seldom submitted to Government and almost never
on time. Until Professor Tahir Mahmood - then Dean of Law
Faculty, Delhi University - was appointed as its chairman by the
then Prime Minister Mr. Deve Gowda.
For next three years, the commission undertook an activist role,
making its presence felt in no uncertain terms. Whether it was
the humiliation of Father Christudas in Dumka, Bihar or the
alleged rape of nuns in Madhya Pradesh or an assault on
missionaries in Haryana and Orissa or the blatantly communal
census launched in Gujarat and Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the
commission refused to be a sleeping dog. It took up the matter in
earnest with the State and Central Governments concerned. And
soon the commission which did not have the weapons to hurt those
responsible for the indiscretions - the commission does not have
a Constitutional status - made adequate use of the tools at its
command to put the fear of the law in the minds of the guilty.
Incidentally, Prof. Mahmood has been involved with legal research
for nearly four decades and is an acclaimed authority on the
Hindu and Islamic laws.
Not that the panel was reduced to majority rabble rousing only.
Its ever-expanding role meant that the commission's advice and
good offices were sought even by those not covered by the
umbrella of the word ``minority'' as defined by Indian laws.
Hence, some South Indian Brahmins once made a plea to the panel
to consider them as minorities within the religion! Similarly,
some Jains wanted their voices heard. But the most salutary of
its recommendations was the one involving national majority which
is in a local minority. That is Hindus who form a majority
according to the Census reports but are in a minority in places
like Kashmir, Lakshadweep and the North-East. The Commission
wanted to confer the status of minority on these people. Its
suggestion is still pending with the Government.
Throughout his three-year tenure Prof. Mahmood, who has just
authored his reflections on the commission, had to go through
fire. And like those whom fire fails to burn but never fails to
harden, he has gathered courage and patience to pen together the
tale of the National Commission for Minorities ever since it was
established by the first non-Congress Government in 1978 under
Morarji Desai. The book is a laborious exercise. It is based on
painstaking research, intensive documentation and steadfastness.
It carries his distinct stamp - it is alternately a must read and
difficult to read, depending on the glasses you wear. For those -
now a part of the ruling dispensation at the Centre - it is an
eyesore which they would like to wish away. More so, because the
author makes no bones about the viewpoint of some of these
leaders at the time when a Constitutional status was sought to be
provided to the Commission in early 1990s.
He quotes the present Home Minister and the then Leader of the
Opposition, Mr. L. K. Advani as having opposed the move tooth and
nail. ``I hold myself guilty for having been party to the
creation of the Minorities Commission, even though on an
administrative level without any statutory back-up.'' Mr. Advani
reportedly said, adding that he was expected by some Congressmen
to scuttle the move. ``These very people used to tell us why did
you accept it. You should not have accepted it. You have
committed such a grave mistake. This kind of Bill is addressed in
name to the Christians, to the Parsis, to the Sikhs, etc... but
actually it is addressed only to one section.... I can only warn
you.'' The author true to his style, has pulled no punches and
exposed the identity of views when it came to the Commission
between the Congress and the BJP.
The book goes on to detail all the Commissions which have assumed
office for last two and a quarter decades. While separate
chapters have been devoted to the commission in the pre-statutory
days and the first statutory commission, it is the role of the
second commission, headed by the author which makes for
interesting reading. For instance, the experience of the
Commission in setting up a regional office in Bombay after the
State Minorities Commission was dissolved by the Shiv Sena-BJP
Government in Maharashtra. The panel failed to set up an office
in the city despite the Supreme Court's approval of the same. The
authorities had apparently stonewalled all attempts at finding
official accommodation in Bombay and the commission was not
allowed to open a regional office elsewhere.
He has also written about the inadequate representation of the
minorities in police and allied services, quoting extensively
from official figure to buttress his contentions. For instance,
the minority population in Delhi is more than 15 per cent but the
representation of the minorities in the police is less than six
per cent. He notes with anguish the rejection of the proposal for
``special consideration'' for the minorities under the 15-Point
Programme of the Prime Minister.
The book will apprise readers of the developments on the minority
landscape over last 20-odd years. Do not look for subtleties or
niceties in the book whose author pulls no punches. However,
while doing so from Prof. Mahmood's book, just ignore more than a
few typographical mistakes and a few inadvertent printer's
devils.
The book has great value for those inclined towards history and
not keen to rewrite historical wrongs like sundry politicians.
And some value for those concerned with the pluralist soul of our
polity.
ZIYA US SALAM
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