Worshipping Intolerance: A Warning India Cannot Ignore
Worshipping Intolerance: A Warning India Cannot Ignore
How many civilized cultures
celebrate intolerance as divine? Most of us would like to say none. Yet history
and present-day India tell a different story. From mythologies that sanctified
vengeance to leaders who weaponize it today, violence has too often been
justified as justice. What was once ritualized in temples is now normalized in
politics, and the danger of this legacy can no longer be dismissed.
Kali, the goddess of destruction,
has long been revered for her violence against demons. Her garland of severed
heads, once symbolic of evil destroyed, also became a justification for
violence in human hands. The Thugs of central India invoked her name as they
killed hundreds of thousands over centuries, embedding the idea that brutality
could be sacred. This was not just mythology; it was a cultural imprint. In a
society otherwise celebrated for logic, debate, and non-violence, there
remained a deep undercurrent of sanctioned violence, ready to be summoned when
the system of justice faltered.
The problem is that this imprint
never left us. Even today, India’s most beloved festivals reinforce the
normalization of violence. On Dussehra, across the country, effigies of Ravan
are set ablaze, celebrated as the symbolic triumph of good over evil. Days
later, Diwali marks Ram’s return after Ravan’s destruction. On the surface,
these festivals appear harmless, joyous, cultural, and unifying. But beneath
the fireworks and festivity lies a repeated lesson: that burning your enemy,
destroying them completely, is the highest form of justice. Year after year,
generation after generation, such rituals leave impressions that condition people
to cheer not just the defeat of an enemy, but their annihilation. What appears
cultural becomes political psychology.
This is why, when a leader like
Yogi Adityanath demolishes homes with bulldozers or eliminates alleged
criminals in custody, the public instinct is not outrage but applause. The
ground has already been prepared by centuries of myth and ritual that glorified
annihilation as justice. What is presented as “decisive governance” is in fact
a political re-enactment of cultural symbols that have been normalized for
centuries. And this is what makes it so dangerous: because when violence
becomes ritualized, people stop questioning whether it is just.
The gravest offense lies not just
in demolishing homes of the poor and marginalized without due process, but in
the killings of those branded as mafia leaders inside prisons, men who,
regardless of their crimes, were under the state’s custody and entitled to
trial. When a government eliminates its prisoners instead of presenting them to
courts, it does not prove efficiency; it proves contempt for the rule of law.
The responsibility of the state is not to act as executioner, but as guarantor
of justice. By violating this, Yogi has not only eroded public faith in courts
but has dangerously normalized the idea that rulers themselves can decide guilt
and punishment.
The silence of the judiciary is
even more alarming. Judges, entrusted as guardians of the Constitution, have
looked away as executive power mocks due process. Their inaction echoes a
historical pattern: for centuries, when kings or rulers carried out biased
justice, the people mythologized it rather than challenged it. But in a modern
democracy, such normalization is catastrophic. It signals to every citizen that
institutions meant to protect them can be bypassed, and that the state has no
obligation to fairness once it decides they are guilty.
This normalization is not
uniquely Indian it is part of a dangerous global pattern. Nazi Germany turned
entire communities into scapegoats, convincing ordinary people that violence
was justice. Fascist Italy glorified “strongman” leaders who took law into
their own hands, eroding institutions in the name of order. Even in the United
States, the legacy of lynching shows how communities once viewed mob violence
as legitimate justice when courts failed to protect white supremacy. In every
case, societies that normalized violence as virtue collapsed into
authoritarianism, leaving behind only shame and scars.
India now stands at the same
crossroads. It can continue to excuse Kali’s shadow in its politics, tolerating
bulldozers and prison killings as “tough governance,” or it can confront the
truth: that a democracy cannot survive if rulers are allowed to act as gods of
vengeance. To accept Yogi’s methods is to accept that the law no longer applies
equally, that minorities can be targeted without defense, and that tomorrow,
anyone could face punishment without trial.
For centuries, India lived with
the contradiction of worshipping peace while sanctifying violence. That
contradiction may have had its place in a fractured past. But in a nation that
aspires to modernity, equality, and the rule of law, it is poison. The
normalization of intolerance is not a strength it is rotting away at the
foundations of democracy.
And here lies the warning to all
who still believe in the rule of law: the dangers of this governance are not
theoretical; they are historical. Time and again, societies that normalized
vengeance over justice collapsed into authoritarian regimes that devoured their
own people. Today’s burning of Ravan may seem like a harmless celebration, but
it leaves impressions that prepare the ground for bulldozers, prison killings,
and silent courts. If India continues to worship intolerance as justice, the
risk is not abstract. The risk is that a culture that once ritualized destruction
will allow destruction itself to become governance. And when that happens,
harmony will no longer be possible, not for the guilty, not for the innocent,
not for anyone.
Very well said. Once violence is normalized as justice, it stops being questioned, and that’s the real danger.
ReplyDeleteFrom Gandhi to today’s opposition, Modi and the BJP normalize violence as justice, turning tyranny into tradition.
DeleteFew realize that Gandhi’s assassination was normalized when newspapers equated him with Ravan. Today, Modi and the BJP use the same propaganda against Congress and opposition leaders. This is not politics; it is the rule of extremists. Decades of conditioning have numbed the public to violence; when it happens, people shrug and say, “It was bound to happen.” That normalization is exactly what keeps tyranny alive, and it is the BJP’s most dangerous weapon against democracy.