How cruel is the coincidence that the birthday of Mother Teresa, who embodied love for Indian children, should have fallen in the same week of August when two Christian children and their mother were burnt alive by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) at Khandmal district in Orissa?

True, the Naxalites have claimed that they have killed the Hindu mahant (priest), Swami Laxmananda Saraswati, because he had indulged in crimes against the Christians. But the Naxalites' statement is taken with a pinch of salt. The Hindu extremists are said to be the real culprits.

Orissa is the same state where a leading Christian missionary Graham Staines, and his two sons, were burnt alive a few years ago. His brave wife is still working for the amelioration of the poor.

The same state chief minister, Naveen Patnaik, was in power and even then he had failed to take appropriate action against the Hindu extremists. Christian missionaries have been imparting free education and treating patients in this area. But that has not made the Hindu extremists tolerant. They have been attacking the Christians for decades for their evangelical activities.

The central government too has done very little to guarantee the Christians their constitutional rights. A Union Minister has said that the Orissa government has once again failed in its job. Such statements do not bring chief minister Patnaik to book or punish the government which has failed in its constitutional obligation to protect the minorities.

Burnt and destroyed

This time the state did not wake up for five days. The VHP spread its vandalism to Khorapur and some other parts of Orissa. They destroyed and burnt houses. The Christian tribals sought refuge in jungles. According to official figures, some 16 persons were killed and 558 houses and 17 churches burnt. The chief minister refused to hold an inquiry by the Central Bureau of Investigation because he naturally found more at home with his setup.

That the central government failed to dismiss chief minister Narendra Modi in Gujarat after the pre-planned killings of Muslims is understandable because the BJP-led government was at the helm of affairs at New Delhi.

Why has the Manmohan Singh government faltered in dismissing the Patnaik government cannot be comprehended. It is obvious that the centre is afraid of the BJP which supports the Biju Janata Dal government in the state. Probably, the impending general election has enfeebled the Congress, not knowing how to react against the VHP and such other organisations lest there was an adverse impact on the Hindu mind.

Such fears are unfounded and reflect cowardliness. Had the state government been dismissed, the impression would have gone around that the Congress, heading the affairs at New Delhi, was willing to go to any length to uphold the rule of law. This would have rehabilitated the party in the minds of the people, particularly the minorities, who want to refurbish the country's secular credentials which are at present clouded.

The disconcerting aspect of the Indian society is that the sense of tolerance and the spirit of accommodation are wearing thin. They have provided for centuries the glue to the country's ethos of pluralism. This glue should never be allowed to dry up. This keeps the country together. Yet it is unfortunate that there is no political party which sees beyond the next election.

Yet, if the nation is to preserve the fundamental values of a democratic society every person, whether a public functionary or private citizen, must display a degree of vigilance and willingness to sacrifice. Without awareness of what is right and a desire to act according to what is right, there may be no realisation of what is wrong.

Over the years for many, particularly the government servants, the dividing line between right and wrong, moral and immoral has ceased to exist. They are busy amassing wealth and there is not even a routine task that goes through without greasing the palm of an array of government servants. Ministers are also said to be involved in corrupt practices and tax evasion.

If one were to find out the watershed for the deterioration one would woefully conclude it all began with the economic reforms, the craze for acquisition.

The mania of the government on maintaining the growth rate of 3 to 9 per cent has led to the survival of the fittest. The poor and the weak, indeed, have been driven to the wall. The government still has its faith in the trickle theory - the higher the growth rate the more would reach the lowest. This thesis does not seem to hold water.

Huge poverty

The World Bank, the government's mentor, has said in its latest study that India is home to roughly one third of the world's poor. It has also a higher proportion of its population living below $2 a day, than Sub-Saharan Africa, considered the world's poorest region. The progress made in the past 61 years since independence is that the poverty rate - those below $1.25 per day - has come down from 59.8 per cent to 51.3 per cent. This means that nearly 500 million people still live on Rs40 (Dh3.50) to Rs50 a day.

If India is to mean anything to people within the country and in the neighbourhood, it has to go back to its original ideal of a welfare state. In his first letter to chief ministers, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru said: "Government policies in the immediate future should be geared to meeting requirements of the common man."

In the same way, the measures for enforcing secularism should be implemented. Secularism does not mean that Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs or Christians cease to pursue their religion.

It only means that religion will not be allowed to play a part in civil affairs. We cannot afford to let the traders of hatred to have their way. The minorities are the nation's trust, not for consignment to the laboratory of hate.

Kuldip Nayar is a former Indian High Commissioner to the UK and a former Rajya Sabha MP.


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