NON-FICTION: THE MUSLIM ‘SUSPECT’
Every state has had an uneasy relationship with its minorities. This is true for India as well. Neyaz Farooquee’s memoir, An Ordinary Man’s Guide to Radicalism: Growing up Muslim in India, is an account of one such turbulent relationship between the Indian Muslims and the Indian state — at one moment this relationship is accommodating; at others, exclusionary. Building on these lines, the young author shares his experiences of living as a Muslim minority in Hindu-majority India. The book covers a span of more than 30 years, starting with Farooquee’s childhood and moving on to his adulthood. In reading about the author’s journey, the book comes across as a work that is shocking and familiar at the same time, depending on the vantage point of the reader.
Revolving around the theme of Muslim vulnerabilities in India, Farooquee’s book opens up a Pandora’s Box, raising questions on crucial issues of power and class, identity and suspicion, nationality and citizenship and, importantly, the rhetoric of political ‘appeasement’ and actual deliverance. Growing up in the land of the mystical poets Kabir and Rahim, Farooquee candidly shares anecdotes that show the religious syncretism that came to define the early decades of independent India. Unfortunately, with increasing religious polarisation, the culture of unison was brutally sabotaged, leaving behind imprints of riots after riots that scarred lives forever.
While the book throws up these issues, it is essentially written against the backdrop of the police ‘encounter’ of Sept 19, 2008, of two Muslim youth in the congested by-lanes of a popular Muslim ghetto in the Jamia Nagar locality of New Delhi. Farooquee describes this area as “a small ghetto, packed with people like sticks in a matchbox. That the world for most of us in Jamia Nagar revolves around a few hangouts, a few masjids, a university and about half-a-dozen haphazard colonies...”
Exploring what it means to be a Muslim in today’s India through the lens of a vilified Delhi neighbourhood
This incident, popularly known as the Batla House encounter and believed to be a fake encounter, defined the psyche of the targeted community belonging to a particular social class, and also created and popularised the narrative of a neighbouring Muslim ‘suspect’. Beginning with his story as a young boy from an ordinary Muslim family hailing from rural Bihar who migrates to Delhi to pursue education and eventually finds permanent accommodation in this ghetto, the author shows how a poorly executed operation endangered the entire community that, thenceforth, came to be seen in simplistic binaries of ‘good’ Muslim and ‘bad’ Muslim.
While narrating the arduous tale of the ‘encounter’, Farooquee unravels the insecurities that come with one’s identity — in this case, the insecurities of being a Muslim in India. Following the 2008 Batla House fake encounter, there was fear among the locality’s residents. Farooquee and his friends stopped venturing out after sunset. Several of Farooquee’s friends went back to their semi-urban hometowns, carrying with them this persistent feeling of insecurity that had come to grip them in the metropolitan city of Delhi. Sharing his extreme paranoia about his own identity and that of his Muslim friends, neighbours and well-wishers, he writes: “I was scared that night, too scared to really sleep. This was true, I am sure, of people across Jamia Nagar ... I wanted to erase traces of every connection that could even remotely cause suspicion to fall on me. I un-joined all the communities — sort of like Facebook pages — that might cast me as a Terrorist disguised as a Normal Human Being. I un-joined every community that I thought might even remotely appear like a jihadi influence: Islam, Quran, Urdu poetry ... It kills me to admit to this, but I had even become suspicious of close friends.”
“The encounter shadow has not left Jamia [Millia Islami],” writes Farooquee, revealing the attitude of outsiders who would refer to it as “that terrorist university!” This warped sense of seeing an educational institution from the outside was one development that was apparently brutal in a post-encounter environment in the city. Internally, the obsession with identity cards grew to no measure. Impinging upon the psychological impact of the encounter and its repercussions on identity, Farooquee narrates an incident about his friend Reyaz, who was advised by his father to carry an ‘authentic’ ID card, not that of the Jamia, but his passport. On this advice from his father, writes Farooquee: “Reyaz laughed. His passport was the scariest ID he possessed. Just a few months ago, he had been to Pakistan on a college trip, representing India at a cultural festival. The first visa stamped on his passport was that of Pakistan!”