Jamiat lends silent support to BJP as govt. continues its crackdown on PFI and initiates madrasa survey
The country’s oldest Muslim organisation has maintained studied silence over the arrests of PFI members. Meanwhile, its general secretary had supported the CAA after it was passed in Parliament and never joined protest against the Act
United stance: Representatives of 200 madrasas participated in the September meet in New Delhi. Special Arrangement
Ziya Us Salam New Delhi
Quietly, unobtrusively, the oldest Muslim organisation in the country, Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind, is warming to the BJP. Without making any formal announcement about it or lending explicit support at the time of elections, the Jamiat has been happy to support the BJP, be it the recent ban on the Popular Front of India or the Uttar Pradesh government’s decision to start a survey of non-regular madrasas. Much of the support is hush-hush though.
When countrywide raids were conducted on the PFI premises and over a hundred leaders arrested, the Jamiat went into silent mode, much like, as a Jamiat official says on condition of anonymity, “Mohammed Shah Rangeela of the latter Mughal days”. Even as the Jamaat-e-Islami asked for fairness and transparency in the action, the Jamiat washed its hands of the affair entirely with the spokesman limiting himself to saying, “We are neither with them nor against them. Let the law take its own course.”
Even more stark was the Jamiat support to the madrasa survey launched by the Yogi Adityanath government. In a case of a quick somersault, Jamiat president Arshad Madani not only lent the survey support but also promised that from the next year, only those students who have completed matriculation from the CBSE will be admitted to Darul Uloom, Deoband. “So far the picture of the survey that has come out, there is nothing to fear or be apprehensive about,” Mr. Madani stated. His statement in favour of the survey came days after Jamiat had held a meeting in New Delhi where over 200 representatives of various madrasas in Uttar Pradesh participated. At the meeting, the organisation pledged “to safeguard madrasas at any cost” and dismissed the survey as smacking of “evil intention”.
The quick turnaround of Jamiat on the issue reminded one of the stand taken by its general secretary Mahmood Madani immediately after the Citizenship Amendment Bill was passed in Parliament in December 2019. Mahmood Madani extended support to the Bill, reiterating the words of the Home Minister, Amit Shah, that the Bill had nothing to do with Indian Muslims.
However, within a week of the Bill being passed by Parliament, the Shaheen Bagh protest started, accompanied with great agitations in Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University. The community was outraged, and Mahmood Madani was quick to read the writing on the wall. He did a quick turnaround to join the intellectuals who raised their voice against the CAA. Among them, incidentally, were two of the intellectuals who met RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat recently.
Earlier, Arshad Madani had come in for flak for meeting Mr. Bhagwat at the RSS office. The meeting bore fruit with Mr. Arshad stating, “Those who are affected by the NRC include both Hindus and Muslims.” The new political tone of the Jamiat comes as a surprise, considering the body has been softly but consistently aligned with the Congress since Independence though in recent years in U.P. at least, it has never been too far from extending support to the Samajwadi Party.
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