Prices of Commercial LPG, Domestic Natural Gas, Jet Fuel Up; Bound To Raise Inflation and Hit Consumers

In August, the Modi government tried to project a small snip in domestic LPG cylinder prices as a ‘Rakhi gift.’ Fuel price hikes feed the inflation chain and heighten all-round hardship.

New Delhi: Public sector oil and gas company Indian Oil Corporation Limited has hiked the prices of commercial LPG or Liquified Petroleum Gas. The price has been increased by Rs 209 per cylinder, with the new prices coming into effect on Sunday, October 1.

There has been no change yet in the price of domestic LPG. The government reduced the price of domestic LPG by Rs 200 on August 29, projecting it as a ‘Rakhi gift’ – but the move instead drew attention to how high the price of domestic LPG was and how the Rs 200 cut was a small fraction of the increase since 2014.

The retail price of 19 kg commercial LPG cylinders in Delhi will now be Rs 1731.50, as per Moneycontrol. The Hindu reports that in Chennai, the new price is Rs 1,898/cylinder. It was Rs 1,685 per cylinder in September.

LPG is used for cooking, as motor fuel, and for heating as well as cooling (refrigeration) purposes and in certain industries.

This is bound to impact inflation rates as the increased cost is shifted to consumers and if connected with items of necessary consumption, it hurts the pockets of all citizens.

There has been a persistent complaint that during the Modi government’s tenure, even though international crude prices have been low, the fuel prices were still high for consumers – with excise duties and cess helping the revenues of the government (mostly the Centre). Now, citing rising international prices, the price rise is still passed on to citizens.

Domestic natural gas prices also up

The price of domestic natural gas has also been raised by the Union government. From $8.60 per metric million British thermal unit (mmBtu), it will now go up to $9.20 per mmBtu, according to a notification issued by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas.

This has happened for the second month in a row. In September, the per mmBtu price was increased from $7.85 to $8.60.

Earlier, the prices of the four big gas trading hubs of the world – Henry Hub, Albany, National Balancing Point (UK) and Russian gas used to decide what the domestic gas price would be. This was fixed for six months in one go. As per the new formula adopted by the government, cited by Hindustan Times, the price of domestic natural gas is now decided on the basis of the price of the Indian crude basket every month. 

Jet fuel up too

The price of jet fuel or Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) was also hiked by 5%. ATF, for domestic airlines, has been “hiked by 5% to highest this year, and may push up airfares in the festive season”, reports Indian Express.

International prices have been going up and this is “the fourth straight monthly increase since July.”

LPG blues

The Modi government’s Ujjwala scheme, centred around affordable LPG for women, was meant to enable a transition from smoke-fired chullahs as well as make it possible for women to cook at affordable prices. But jittery after the comprehensive electoral loss in Karnataka, in some part due to anger over rising LPG prices, as reported by The Wire earlier, the Union government rushed “to salvage its flagship Ujjwala Yojana Scheme”, by reducing prices. The Rs 200 reduction, critics pointed out, was a small fraction of the price increase over the past three years. 

Moreover, the Union government slashed subsidies on LPG to one-sixth since 2018-19.

Across the board, the revised fuel price rises kicked into effect on Sunday, when inflation has been consistently well above the RBI’s acceptable bandwidth of 2-6%, greatly adding to difficulties faced by the majority of people. Selwin, an autorickshaw driver, told The Hindu that the hike was “uncalled for” amidst rising prices of essential commodities. “We are unable to make ends meet. Already CNG and petrol prices are quite high making LPG a better alternative due to its pricing. But if prices keep increasing then it will no longer be viable to be in the business,” he said.

BJP’s Gandhi Dilemma: How To Use the ‘Brand’ While Destroying Its Spirit

While the ideology Gandhi propounded is spreading all over the world, what is happening to the concepts of truth, non-violence, communal harmony in India today?

As we prepare to celebrate the birth anniversary of the father of the nation on October 2 this year, we do need to look back at his teachings and the prevailing situation in the country. His global recognition was manifested when the leaders from different countries assembled on Raj Ghat to pay tribute to him in the aftermath of the G-20 summit in New Delhi. That even those who subscribe to the ideology which put three bullets into his chest could not ignore him was more than obvious. While the ideology Gandhi propounded is spreading all over the world, what is happening to the concepts of truth, non-violence, communal harmony and the idea of formulating policies with the ‘last person’ in mind in India today?

The present dominant ideology in India sees Islam and Christianity as foreign religions. This understanding is one of the foundations of hate against minorities and leads to violence against them. How did Gandhi see the presence of different religions in India? He writes, “Certainly the great faiths held by the people of India are adequate for her people.” He then goes on to list the faiths of India, “Apart from Christianity and Judaism, Hinduism and its offshoots, Islam and Zoroastrianism are living faiths.”

The prevalent dominant ideology presents all the ills of Hindu society as a result of the oppression of Muslim. Gandhi saw history in a totally different light.

“The Hindus flourished under Moslem sovereigns and Moslems under the Hindu. Each party recognized that mutual fighting was suicidal, and that neither party would abandon its religion by force of arms. Both parties, therefore, decided to live in peace. With the English advent quarrels recommenced…Is the God of the Mohammedan different from the God of the Hindu? Religions are different roads converging to the same point. What does it matter that we take different roads so long as we reach the same goal? Wherein is the cause of quarrelling?”

A lot is made of conversion to Islam and Christianity, scattered but serious anti-Christian violence is ascendant. What did Gandhi think of conversions?

“The Two races (Hindus and Muslims) lived at peace amongst themselves during Muslim rule. Let it be remembered that many Hindus embraced Islam before the advent of Muslim rule in India. It is my belief that had there been no Muslim rule, there would still have been Musalmans in India, even as there would have been Christians had there been no British rule. There is nothing to prove that the Hindus and Musalmans lived at war with one another before British rule.”

His great disciple Nehru in his book The Discovery of India points out about India:

“She was like some ancient palimpsest on which layer upon layer of thought and reverie had been inscribed, and yet no succeeding layer had completely hidden or erased what had been written previously.”

Mahatma Gandhi in 1944. Photo: By Unknown author/Wikimedia Commons, Public Domain

Hate is being spread against Gandhi in an intense manner. Through word of mouth and other systematic channels, propaganda is spread that Gandhi did not prevent the hanging of Bhagat Singh. The truth is that Gandhi wrote two letters to Lord Irwin seeking the death sentence to be commuted to life imprisonment or seeking a suspension of the death sentence. Lord Irwin was considering Gandhi’s request but was threatened by British officers working in Punjab of resignation en masse. One should recall that it was Gandhi who drafted the resolution in the Karachi Congress of 1931, criticising the government for Bhagat Singh’s hanging.

They also spread the lie that Gandhi treated Subhas Chandra Bose very badly. The truth is that though there were differences in their approach towards non-violence and driving the British away in the wake of the Second World War, they had great mutual respect. Bose called Gandhi as the ‘Father of the Nation’, and named the first battalion of the Azad Hind Fauz (AHF) after the Mahatma. Gandhi on his part called Bose a ‘Prince amongst patriots’ and paid a visit to the officers of the AHF in jail. It was the Congress which fought the cases of the AHF prisoners.

A similar controversy has been magnified about differences with Babasaheb Ambedkar. While Babasaheb was asking for separate electorates for the Scheduled Castes, Gandhi was for reserved constituencies. This was to keep the society united in the face of the anti-colonial struggle. Babasaheb did recognise Gandhi as the tallest leader of the freedom movement and after his second marriage, an inter-caste one, stated that had Gandhi been alive, he would have been happy. It was Gandhi who ensured that Ambedkar was part of the first cabinet of India and also suggested that Ambedkar should be the chairman of the Drafting Committee of the Indian constitution.

As far as the controversy over who should be the first prime minister of India – Sardar Patel or Nehru, Gandhi did favour the latter. It should be noted that Nehru and Patel were Gandhi’s two closest associates. He favoured Nehru mostly for his grasp of global politics. There may be other unstated factors – like Nehru being the most popular leader among the masses after Gandhi, and as the younger leader, could play a role in the growth of the nation for a longer time. These are just guesses – as far as Patel and Nehru were concerned, they were totally in sync with each other, irrespective of a few differences. Patel said of Nehru that he was not only his younger brother but also his leader.

In today’s scenario, the country needs to reexamine the dangerous path of hate which is stalking the streets. It was Gandhi’s ‘Ishwar, Allah Tero Naam’ which kept all religious communities together in the anti-colonial struggle. Following his message of social reform, struggle against the caste system, and unity across religious lines is the need of the hour. That will be our best tribute to him.

Turkey: ‘Terrorists’ Attack Interior Ministry in Ankara

Turkish media cited the interior minister as saying two “terrorists” blew up a car outside the ministry’s gate. Gunshots were also reportedly heard in the area after the blast.

A blast was heard in the heart of the Turkish capital on Sunday, Turkish media reported, saying it was in the area that houses both the Parliament and the Interior Ministry.

Attackers used a vehicle to carry out the bomb attack at the entrance gate of the Interior Ministry’s General Directorate of Security, minister Ali Yerlikaya said.

“One of the terrorists blew himself up and the other terrorist was neutralized,” Yerlikaya said. He added that two police officers were “slightly injured” in the fire caused by the blast.

Turkish media also reported that gunshots were heard in the same area after the blast.

Bomb squads were seen working near a parked vehicle in the area on television, with Turkish media saying they were inspecting it.

Media also reported extensive security measures, including the closure of traffic and dispatching of special police units, firefighters, and medical teams.

Police warned citizens that they would be carrying out controlled explosions of suspicious packages.

Ankara’s chief public prosecutor launched an investigation into the attack, Turkish media reported. Officials also limited access to the scene and imposed a news blackout on the attack.

This article was originally published on DW.


Bengaluru Police Arrest Man for Sending Threat Letters to Writers in Karnataka

The accused, Shivaji Rao, in his letters, used to sign off as ‘Sahishna Hindu’, which ironically means tolerant Hindu.

Bengaluru police arrested Shivaji Rao Jadhav (41) from Karnataka’s Davanagere district for sending threat letters to more than 15 progressive Kannada authors and thinkers, police said on Saturday, September 30. Jadhav was arrested by sleuths of the Central Crime Branch (CCB). The police said that he was a member of a Hindu group but did not specify which group.

The accused had been writing the threat letters for the past two years, leading to the targeted authors meeting Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on multiple occasions while demanding swift action.

In the letters, Jadhav threatened writers, including K Veerabhadrappa, BL Venu, Banjagere Jayaprakash, BT Lalita Naik, and Vasundhara Bhupathi, for going against Hindutva, saying that they should count their last days. Shivaji used to sign off as ‘Sahishna Hindu’, which ironically means tolerant Hindu.

In June 2023, after writer Dr Vasundhara Bhupathi lodged a complaint at the Basaveshnagar police station in Bengaluru, she received a warning letter from the same individual just three days later. The letter questioned her decision to involve the police and cautioned her against it, implying it was an unwise move on her part. “I had not told anyone about this, it was not reported in the media either, but still this person got the information. This made my family worry even more because it could mean that either I was being tracked closely or even that someone close to the police had leaked the information,” she had told TNM. According to the writers whom TNM spoke to, the timing of the letter always coincided with any public statement made by the writers against communalism.

On August 22, a group of progressive thinkers, writers, and intellectuals met with Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah. The delegation, led by prominent writers K Marulasiddappa and Vasundhara, spoke about the persistent threats they had been facing for over 15 months. Collectively, they lodged numerous complaints, with seven First Information Reports (FIRs) being filed. Despite this, there had been little headway in the case, and the threat letters had persisted. Following the meeting with Siddaramaiah, the first since the Congress regained power, the government entrusted the investigation to the Central Crime Branch (CCB).

The case was handed over to the Special Wing CCB, and experts with the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) found that all letters were written by the same person but were posted from different districts and taluks. As a result of the letters, Home Minister G Parameshwara had directed the police to provide suitable security to the authors.

This article was originally published on The News Minute.

How a Deluge in Kerala in 2018 Brought Out Humanity and Resilience Among its People

‘2018: Everyone is a Hero’, a film about those terrible events, is India’s official entry to the Oscars.

For a state that revels in its monsoon bounty, its 44 rivers crisscrossing the verdant vistas between the sea and the mountains, the events of August 15 in 2018 came like a bolt of lightning: the way Malayalis looked at rain changed that night. What the India Meteorological Department classified as “large excess” rainfall, triggered unprecedented dam openings and river breaches, claiming hundreds of lives and throwing millions of others into jeopardy. But what followed was a glorious saga of survival, where people literally waded to safer shores on the back of exceptional camaraderie.

The film 2018: Everyone is a Hero by Jude Anthany Joseph, selected as India’s official entry to the Best Foreign Language Film category at the 96th Academy Awards, is an adept filmmaker’s take on what Kerala went through those days.

The titles roll with sound bites and newspaper clippings about the ‘deluge of ’99’, harking back to the massive flood of 1924 (Malayalam year of 1099). A TV reporter is heard narrating the destruction of the Kundala Valley Railway of Munnar. Environmental destruction, a fear of looming catastrophe, and confidence in modern-era alert systems are brought up before the fictitious village of Aruvikkulam. A clever play of the words ‘Aruvi’ and ‘Kulam’, meaning stream and pond respectively, the name of the village draws attention to the fact that such place names are aplenty in Kerala, pointing to its water wealth. 2018 has two main storylines that meet when this wealth turns into the scourge of Aruvikkulam. But the film salutes the selfless service of the fishermen community, who came forward with their boats and canoes to rescue over 65,000 people stranded in flood-wrecked areas.

The two-and-a-half hour film with an ensemble cast has Anoop (Tovino Thomas) in the lead, who has abandoned his military job out of fear for his life. Anoop is helping out the visually challenged Bhasi (Indrans) run his tea-shop while waiting for a Gulf visa and meets his fiancée, mistaking her first for an Army investigator out to expose his fake medical certificate. 2018 shows the transformation of Anoop into a courageous jawan, saving lives and risking his own. Just like Nixon (Asif Ali), who comes to value his roots by taking part in rescue efforts by fishermen who were hailed as “state’s own naval force” by the chief minister during the Kerala floods.

The movie has heartrending moments of people losing lives and hopes in the flood fury. Dreadful visuals of anguish and daredevilry are accompanied by an ominous soundtrack, making viewers relive the nightmare: an uprooted tree flowing down the raging waters and getting sucked up by an open dam shutter; a family with small children trapped in their house as a landslide engulfs it with slush; a couple holding onto the rooftop with their injured, autistic child as water lashes menacingly beneath them. Many an instance of resilience and compassion is captured and several of them are based on true events: like a north-Indian vendor donating all of his woolen blankets to a relief camp; the youth who volunteered in thousands to reach relief materials to camps and pass vital information on the stranded; a helicopter airlifting a pregnant woman to safety.

A third track is that of an arid Tamil Nadu village on the other side of the Mullaperiyar dam, a perennial spot of contention between the two states. In a poignant contrast to the “nashicha mazha” (damned rain) on the other side of the border, the village gleefully welcomes the showers. But in its quest to be more wide-ranging, the film has subplots of a couple on the verge of divorce and a foreign vlogger making merry amidst the ravage – serving only to lengthen its running time.

As its name goes, 2018 makes everyone a hero. Even a lizard (which has a divine part to fulfil), a fish and a cat get their due share, reminding viewers of the hapless dog and numerous other animals in legendary writer Thakazhi’s famed story Vellappokkathil (“In the Deluge”). The movie rightly acknowledges the role the media played in relaying not only chaos and tears but also solidarity and kindness [although how is the opening of Idukki dam shutters an exclusive story as claimed by channel head Noora (Aparna Balamurali) when she is seen reporting it with more than a few others?]. The control room official Shaji (Kunchacko Boban) echoes the thought of every Malayali during those days: “rain used to refresh me once; now I just wish for it to end.”

However, 2018 cannot be considered an authentic reflection of what transpired in Kerala in the month of August 2018 when the state received 821 mm of rainfall as against 419.3 mm in normal course. The tragedy still raises pertinent questions about dam management and early warning systems but what shows up primarily is the way the state machinery rose to the challenge when flash floods struck. The remarkable way in which the people’s representatives, transcending party affiliations, coordinated  relief and rescue remains a lesson in democracy which the movie fails to highlight. Just as nothing more is said about the Kundala Valley hill railway swept away by the Periyar despite piquing viewers’ curiosity. Even so, 2018: Everyone is a Hero is a skilful account of humanity’s triumph over a fateful night when rain, instead of delight, spelt devastation in Kerala.

Rasmi Binoy is a journalist and author based in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala.

How Nund Rishi’s Poetry Became an Enduring Mediator Between Cultural Paradigms in Kashmir

‘Nund Rishi: Poetry and Politics in Medieval Kashmir by Abir Bazaz’ serves to unknot some of the complexities that define Nur-ud-Din’s oeuvre.   

In June this year, a group of school students in Kashmir were corralled into the sprawling, granite-overlaid lawns of the mausoleum of Shaykh Nur-ud-Din in the central Kashmir district of Budgam. Dressed in uniforms, the students quickly settled on their individual mats as they repositioned into various asanas or postures as part of observing the ‘International Day of Yoga’ organised by the Army. Of course, the event was part of a series of similar gatherings that have proliferated over the past four years, each one lending itself to manufacture a certain political impression about the region.

Nur-ud-Din was a hermit-mystic of 14th-century Kashmir. His rise as the famous Rishi whose poetic utterances and ascetic lifestyle resonated with a society in flux, turned him into a spiritual touchstone for the region’s people at a time when Kashmir was breaking away from its Hindu past and anchoring itself into new religious philosophy.

Nund Rishi, as Nur-ud-Din is also called, was born in 1378 AD to a tribe of shepherds in what is today the Kulgam district of south Kashmir. He travelled to different parts of Kashmir as his Rishi movement, with its emphasis on monism and austerity, gained large adherence and brought more and more people into the fold of Islam.

‘Hagiopolitics of repression’

The decision to hold an event commemorating yoga at Nund Rishi’s shrine in June did not go down well with large segments of the public in Kashmir, where anxieties over the permanence of cultural and religious peculiarities of the region have been simmering over the last few years.

The Bharatiya Janata Party-led Union government, which directly governs Kashmir, has faced questions over political crackdown, censorship, lack of democracy and everything else that we know but cannot utter. This has begged a question — can the ideological basis behind such a political programme have (or deserve to have) any overlap with the pacifist philosophy that Nund Rishi espoused? A number of commentators on social media have appeared to suggest that it can.

This is what scholar Dean Accardi has termed as the “hagiopolitics of repression” that relies on harnessing the legacies of medieval cultural and religious icons to rationalise distinctly modern, often undemocratic, political ends. Indeed, one of the responses to the opposition to the yoga event was the argument that Nund Rishi was a ‘yogi’ himself — invoking the Hindu connotation of the term — and would not have objected to such an exercise.

Conflicting legacy

Abir Bazaz
Nund Rishi: Poetry and Politics in Medieval Kashmir
Cambridge University Press, 2023

The facts surrounding Nund Rishi’s life and his legacy are deeply contested. For example, while scholars assert that his Rishi movement was instrumental in popularising Islam, they also admit that Nund Rishi’s poetry (as opposed to his hagiographies) did not demonstrate any passion towards evangelism. If affirmation of the creed of Islam reverberates distinctly through his poetry, what also seeps through is the echo of Tantric Shaivism and Mahayana Buddhism.

A new book, Nund Rishi: Poetry and Politics in Medieval Kashmir by Abir Bazaz, thus serves to unknot some of these complexities that define Nur-ud-Din’s oeuvre.

Nund Rishi’s birth is timed with a very crucial moment, when the newly coronated Muslim sultans of Kashmir welcomed an inbound stream of Sufi mystics, many of whom were fleeing the political turmoil occasioned by Timur’s military campaigns against the Ilkhanid Mongol state in Persia. They were looking for newer sources of patronage. Some of them, like Mir Sayyid Ali, brought new ideas and perspectives about Islam to the region that was culturally rooted in Hindu mores.

These interactions became the basis for new conversions and set the stage for a gradual religious reordering in Kashmir. Sayyid Ali was attached to the Kubrawi monastic code that originated in Iran. But there were other Sufi Orders also, like Suhrawardi, Nurbakshi, Qadri and Naqshbandi, that became vehicles for the spread of Islam.

But as Bazaz correctly points out, their activities (barring the Suhrawardi Order) were centred around the royal court in Srinagar, leaving out vast swaths of the Kashmir region for an indigenous new Islamic Order to sweep through. Nund Rishi became the pioneer of this movement, and the principal instrument through which he reached a large audience was not his claim to knowledge of complex Islamic theology, but a mystical form of poetry called shruks.

The synthesis of different cultures

His recourse to these ways, that were more aligned with the pre-Islamic cultural traditions of Kashmir, catalysed tensions (at least initially) between him and the Central Asian Sufis who had a more orthodox approach to Islam.

Yet shruks were exactly what struck a chord with Kashmiris because of their orality and intelligibility with the larger public. They spoke to the anxieties of people in a state of disquiet. The shruks became an arena where the Kashmiri vernacular pivoted away from Sanskrit, and bared itself open to influences from Persian. The shruks is where the Islamic and Sanskritic concepts were fused together to generate a common grammar of religion.

In poems like ‘He Alone is A True Muslim’, the concepts invoked to hash out the attributes of an ideal Muslim are Sanskritic. Nur-ud-Din uses the terms like krodha (anger), moh (attachment) and ahankar (pride) to define vices that a perfect Muslim should stay away from. In ‘My nafs is like a mad elephant’, Nund Rishi likens an Arabic term for self, mostly given to mean ego, to the angry elephant featured in the parables associated with Buddha.

The historic rivalry with Central Asian Sufis

Among the major themes in Rishi poetry is the criticism of mullas, or clergy. But these weren’t necessarily stemming from religious differences. As Bazaz writes, such criticisms “reveal a tension between the settler Sufis and (native) Kashmiri Rishis”.

Rishis’ aversion to theological knowledge was a critique of its capacity to reproduce and reinforce social hierarchies. He also criticises the caste system for the same reasons. And Nund Rishi is hardly an outlier in articulating these apprehensions.

The trope of inauthentic mulla in Islamic mystical poetry predates Nund Rishi, and naturally also outstays him, well into the 20th century. The poetry of Muhammad Iqbal (1877–1938), for what it’s worth, is redolent of such themes. Bazaz observes that these criticisms “must be situated in the intellectual history of Sufism itself, which developed with a view of corruption at the heart of Muslim political centers, and the concomitant idea that a reversal could be effected from the periphery”.

To counter the Kubrawis, who often furnished exalted genealogies linking them to Prophet’s family members or his successors, Nund Rishi invoked Uways Kurani, a Yemeni Sufi who had claimed direct initiation at the hands of Prophet Muhammad. In forging a direct spiritual connection with Uways, who hadiths refer to as having accepted Islam without being conversant with its tenets, Nur-ud-Din elevates the idea of inward piety over the ceremonial observance of the religion. Does this mean that Nur-ud-Din was pitting himself against Islamic Shari’ah?

Abir Bazaz. Photo: Ashoka University website

Far from it, his shruks likened Shari’ah with embankments without which a river would lose its direction. He used a different term sahaja “as a way of translating the political universalism of Islam into the Kashmiri vernacular at a time when the Persian Sufis in Kashmir articulated a Sufi metaphysics inaccessible and alien to the local population,” Bazaz writes. By doing so, he did not undermine Islam but increased its translatability to make allowances for forms of asceticism that descended from Buddhism and Hinduism.

“The legend of Uways clearly suggests the possibility of an Islam beyond doctrine and universal in its appeal,” Bazaz writes. “It opens up Islam to the political demands of the subaltern and makes the question of lineage (race, caste, class, or ethnicity) irrelevant to living and experiencing Islam.” It is this experience of religion that Bazaz refers to as ‘Negative theology’.

This philosophy of Nund Rishi is reflected in his poems that are centred around the idea of death. These death-suffused shruks evoke a horrifying picture of human demise which he contrasts with sanguine descriptions of life in the hereafter. It is poems like these that have made death a centrepiece of everyday Kashmiri vocabulary – marun chunne yaadie (don’t you remember dying?)

The role of Suhrawardi Sufis

Coming back to “hagiopolitics of repression” involving Nund Rishi: The reason for his widespread fame wasn’t because he recycled the older yogic traditions by articulating them in Islamic idiom. As scholar Muhammad Ishaq Khan has noted, Nur-ud-Din’s “movement stood in radical contrast to the pre-Islamic concept of a mystics’s role in a society. The Rishis who lived in Kashmir long before the advent of Islam lived in obscurity as ascetics. The yogi philosophers of Kashmir Saivism as Vasugupta, Somananda, and Abhinavagupta did not have an appreciable influence on the masses.”

It is rather a more peculiar combination of various elements that made Nund Rishi a great emblem of Islam in Kashmir with which people could imagine a spiritual connection. His schtick lay in his poems that his followers used varied methods to reach the masses with. One of his poems Gongal-nama is very illustrative in this case. In the poem, Nund Rishi likens the people who toil the land as the “chosen people of God.” The poem draws on the daily lives of peasant classes of Kashmir and elevates practices associated with farming to the status of religious rituals. Small wonder then that the majority of Kashmiris threw their weight behind his Order.

It is for this reason that Nund Rishi’s philosophy fired the imagination of Suhrawardi Sufis who became the influential vectors of his shruks. The small band of disciples of Hamza Raina, a popular 15th-century abbot of the Suhrawardi monastery on Koh-i-Maran hill in Srinagar, were among the first to compose hagiographic accounts praising Rishis.

Baba Dawud Khaki, a prominent disciple of Raina, invoked Persian literature (from Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh to Hafez Shirazi’s poetry) to justify Rishi practices such as vegetarianism, celibacy, and non-injury to animals. Others like Baba Nasibuddin Ghazi utilised dancers, bhands and acrobats, dambael maet to disseminate the poetry of Nund Rishi to the wider audience across Kashmir.

We later also find that Suhrawardis became intermediaries connecting Kubrawis, the former rivals, with the Rishi Order. Writing in the 19th century, Sir Walter Lawrence, a British officer in Kashmir mentions a procession taking place between the Kubrawi mosque of Khanqah-e-Moula in Srinagar and Nund Rishi’s shrine in Budgam.

What also shines out in Nur-ud-Din’s hagiographies is the important roles he is said to have given women that stand in sharp relief to the popular narratives about Islam. One account speaks of two Persian speaking sisters who were among the disciples of Nur-ud-Din and would do the talking on his behalf to the visiting dignitaries. In another account, a courtesan — who was sent to entice Nur-ud-Din only to get admonished by the saint into the state of repentance — was initiated into the Order and eventually made a mujawir (caretaker) of a shrine.

It is when stories emphasising on altruism, social concern and equality of human beings reached a variegated audience across the region that Islam gained widespread acceptability in Kashmir. Bazaz’s book may not recount some of these stories but it does a good job of decoding Nund Rishi’s shruks and helps us understand better how his legacy became an enduring mediator between different cultural paradigms in Kashmir.

Shakir Mir is a Srinagar-based journalist. He tweets at @shakirmir.

‘Modi’s Promise’ Is BJP’s Strategy for 2024 ― Though Modi Doesn’t Keep Promises

Of late, the prime minister gives too many ‘guarantees’ to all and sundry.

Let down by the domestic industry despite hefty tax cuts and the lacklustre performance of his government, PM Modi has adopted a new campaign style: “This is Modi ki guarantee.

When Modi gives a guarantee, he fully implements it,” the PM said at a Kshatriya function in Haryana. He seems to be keenly aware of the large number of broken promises. And of late, he gives too many ‘guarantees’ to all and sundry.

“India will be among the world’s top three economies in the coming years… This is Modi’s guarantee”, he again thundered from the ramparts of the Red Fort. “When I say this, it is with full responsibility.”

In a virtual address highlighting the role of the tourism sector, Modi repeated the ‘guarantee’ theme: “When I give this guarantee I do it with full responsibility,” the PM said with determination. Tourism, he said, would create 13-14 crore new jobs for the youth.

Referring to the Rs 6.5 lakh crore annual subsidy on fertilisers, a routine budgetary allocation from the pre-reform days, the PM claimed it was “yeh Modi ki guarantee” ― “This is Modi’s guarantee. I am only talking about what I have done, and not promises.”

“When you associate with India’s growth journey, India gives you the guarantee of growth,” Modi said at a business function. Here, he identified himself with the nation.

Now, the PM warns against false guarantees from the Opposition. Addressing a function at Lalpur in Madhya Pradesh, Modi cited many such Opposition promises, like the implementation of the old pension scheme.

At a Bhopal rally this week (on September 25), Modi said that the Women’s Reservation Bill was passed because “Modi means the guarantee of fulfilling his guarantees.” Referring to himself multiple times, he said: “Modi’s mehnat and mission are different from others.”

But the hard fact is that unlike its predecessor, this government does not have a comprehensive economic vision or policy. The PM is always busy with political management, which is his forte. He makes big economic pronouncements, but as part of emerging political needs.

His government takes decisions under pressure from foreign governments and business friends. Now, we are told in graphic detail how his friend Gautam Adani managed to force the controversial farm laws through the NITI Ayog. An NRI businessman suddenly appeared with the bright idea and all wings of the government joined ranks in support of the new farm reform.

In October, the PM said, “First be vocal for local and then foreign”. “This Diwali, you should buy local products,” he said. The Make in Indiaprogramme was launched in September 2014 with great fanfare. “I want to tell the people of the whole world to come and invest in India,” Modi thundered.

Then came his Atmamirbhar Abhiyan in 2020. Sadly for Modi, industries did not spring up everywhere despite lucrative economic packages made available to corporations like the Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme.

This was followed by Modi’s famous slogan, ‘Vocal for local’. Another dream he sold was to make India the world’s ‘factory’. The bravado did not move domestic investors, who do their own calculations.

By that time, crony capitalism was in full play. Corporate tax cuts alone cost the exchequer Rs 1.84 lakh crore during the past two years. The figure for 2021-22 is expected to be over Rs 1 lakh cr.  Despite the largesse, the famous ‘animal spirits’ remained subdued. The story of the great corporate betrayal did not end, but the tax cut spree continued.

Thus, the effective income tax on Modi’s corporate friends was slashed to 25.17% from the highest rate of 34.94%. The minimum alternate tax was lowered from 18.5% to 15%. The tax rate for larger companies was moving even lower and stood at 20.77% by the end of last year. ‘Animal spirits’ remained elusive.

“I believe the government has no business doing business. The focus now will be on minimum government and maximum governance,” said Narendra Modi on May 14, 2014. Explaining his concept of minimum government, Modi boasted: “In just an hour, I have cleared projects worth Rs 12 lakh crore which were dragging on for 30-40 years …What took six months earlier, now takes 15 days.” Those were the days when every pronouncement of the PM enthralled the middle classes and the aspiring youth. Business and trade found a new reform hero who, unlike his predecessor, could act on his own.

With hardly six months left before the general elections, Modi is now called upon to account for his innumerable unkept promises. The middle class and the youth who dreamt of flourishing industries everywhere and 2 crore new jobs every year remain frustrated. Domestic business and trade, which wrested innumerable concessions and packages over nine years, are still not investing.

Despite Modi’s promise of minimum government, his interventions have surpassed the record of all other post-reform PMs. As a major liberalisation measure, on April 1, 2000, the Vajpayee government had at one stroke removed quantitative restrictions on 714 items. In contrast, Narendra Modi has revived the licensing system which was abolished by Manmohan Singh 30 years ago. This has evoked sharp criticism even from pro-government economists like Arvind Panagaria.

The government has repeatedly acted in panic over the past year:

  • Aug 25, 2023: 20% duty imposed on parboiled rice. More curbs on basmati rice.
  • Aug 19: 40% duty imposed on onion exports.
  • July 20: Exports ban extended on non-parboiled, non-basmati rice.
  • June 12: Stock holding limits imposed on wheat.
  • June 2: Stocks limits for arhar and urad dal.
  • Sept 8 2022: Exports of broken rice banned and 20% duty on white variety.
  • June 1: Sugar exports banned.
  • May 24: Further restrictions on sugar exports.
  • May 13: Wheat exports banned.
  • Sept 5: On the eve of US President Joe Biden’s visit, India reduced tariffs on imports of turkey, duck, cranberries and blueberries.

Modi is best at announcing — and forgetting — populist welfare schemes. The first generation was announced in 2014-15. Schemes with the ‘PM’ prefix — like PM Pranam, PM Usha, PM Awas Yojana — alone account for two dozen. Initially, special teams in the PMO monitored each scheme.

Now, most are left to languish. Those like Namami Gange — highly emotional for the RSS — remain works in progress after nine years. The Allahabad High Court described the scheme as a “money distribution machine”. The graveyard of Narendra Modi’s failed promises begins with the assurance to bring back money stashed away overseas “during Congress rule”.  “I will remit Rs 15 lakh in the account of every Indian,” he assured during the 2014 election campaign. What we got instead was the stonewalling of official data since 2014.

The finance ministry told the Lok Sabha that the Centre did not have an estimate of black money stashed away abroad. Instead of bringing back black money, 33 big bank fraudsters, including the PM’s own Mehulbhai, were allowed to escape with their booty.

Among the fugitives were powerful entrepreneurs who have a cosy relationship with the ruling party ― Nirav Modi, Mehul Choksi, Vijay Mallya and Lalit Modi. In eight years, none have been brought back and public sector banks have lost thousands of crores of the taxpayer’s money.

P. Raman is a veteran journalist. He is the author of Tryst with Strong Leader Populism.

Opposition, Ex-Military Personnel Slam Centre’s New Disability Pension Rules

The revised rules will redefine pension and eligibility criteria for disability pension and replace all previous entitlements. They will now fix the percentage of disability and assess the grant of pension accordingly.

New Delhi: The new disability pension rules for retired armed forces personnel have sparked a political row between the Union government and the opposition. Introduced by the Union Ministry of Defence (MoD) on September 21, 2023, the new rules titled ‘Entitlement Rules for Casualty Pension and Disability Compensation Awards to Armed Forces Personnel, 2023’ redefine pension and eligibility criteria for disability pension and replace all previous entitlements.

The revised rules will now fix the percentage of disability and assess the grant of pension accordingly. The MoD has introduced the concept of “impairment relief”, making the previous “disability element” redundant. As a result, armed forces personnel believe that the disability pension is likely to face a drastic cut.

The tightening of the pension rules for armed forces has come under attack both by the veterans and the Congress, which has likened the Union government’s move to a display of the BJP’s “fake nationalism”.

Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge said on X (formerly Twitter), “BJP’s Fake Nationalism is yet again visible in the new disability pension rules for our brave Armed Forces ! Around 40% of Army officers retire with disability pension, and the present policy change shall flout multiple past judgements, rules and acceptable global norms. The All India Ex-Servicemen Welfare Association has strongly protested this new policy by the Modi Govt, which place soldiers at a disadvantage when compared to civilian employees.”

Kharge also took the opportunity to highlight multiple other instances in which the union government allegedly slashed employment benefits of armed forces personnel.

“In June 2019, the Modi Govt had come out with a similar betrayal, when they announced that they will be taxing disability pension,” he said. He added that the Agnipath scheme, the tour-of-duty employment for soldiers, One Rank One Pension -2, withdrawal of ‘non-functional utility (NFU) that ensured time-bound promotion, curtailment in medical benefits, and privatisation of Ordnance Factory Board and rationing of CSD outlets were all instances of “fake nationalism”. He said that the Modi government was a “habitual offender” in working against the welfare of jawans, and veterans.

However, an MoD official refuted the claim and said that the new rules were based on recommendations made by a committee headed by a top military officer, and that those recommendations were implemented in letter and spirit.

“Many soldiers do suffer injuries as well as undergo tremendous stress and strain while serving in high-altitude areas or other tough operations. But it is also a fact that the disability pension was being misused by some officers to claim much higher pensions, with many such cases being filed just before retirement. The new policy tightens the norms,” the official told Times of India.

Although the new rules for the first time accommodate lifestyle diseases like hypertension and Type-2 diabetes, the impairment relief will only apply to those who have acquired disabilities while on active duty in high altitude areas or excessive physical exertion during the period of military service. Officer trainees and cadets, too, have been kept out of the list of eligible beneficiaries but will receive an ex-gratia payment.

The new recommendations were made after a CAG report in March 2023 flagged concerns about almost 36-40% of military officers who retire every year getting disability pensions, while only 15-18% of jawans were receiving the same. The armed forces had set up an inter-services panel chaired by the Army’s Adjutant General.

According to Indian Express, defence pensions saw an uptick in the last five years, rising from Rs 1.08 lakh crore in 2018-19 to Rs 1.38 lakh crore in 2023-24, forcing the Union government to examine the matter.

However, the All India Ex-Servicemen Welfare Association has demanded a repeal of the new rules in a letter to the MoD last week. Bhim Sen Sehgal, chairperson of the ex-servicemen association, said in a statement, “The definition of Invalidation has also been changed in a regressive manner and it has been reiterated that there would be a requirement of ten years of service to earn an Invalid Pension. This requirement was already abrogated for civilian employees in January 2019.”

“The service connection of disabilities has also been altered, belying medical science and common sense. For example, the existing rules and also the CCS (EOP) rules for civilians, provide that all heart diseases are linked with stress and strain of service without any preconditions attached. However, the new rules of the MoD state that heart diseases shall only be considered as linked with service in case the same occurs in high altitude areas,” the statement said, pointing out that the stress and strain of military service could happen irrespective of the area where soldiers are posted.

Watch: Has Jaishankar Been Able to Influence the US Response to the India-Canada Crisis?

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Sadanand Dhume, a Fellow of the American Enterprise Institute and a Wall Street Journal columnist, assesses the Biden administration’s response to Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau’s explosive allegations.

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Saakhi: Hearts Divided by Scripts

Literature travels caravan-like, gathering new words, contexts and sonorous notes through nations. It obeys no rules except its own.

It is always a pleasure to listen to the poet Javed Akhtar speak. His clear diction, his subtle sense of self-deprecatory humour and his flawless accent remind me of conversations in our early years. It was a time when writers full of dreams for their young country met regularly, exchanged notes and familiar banter about publishers and occasionally talked of promising young voices in various vernaculars. For us, the Midnight’s Children of writers, these informal baithaks proved that the Partition was just one incident in a long history of migrations and change. That there were no constants in cultures. Assimilative intermingling of peoples, languages and cultural practices was the rule. 

Mrinal Pande

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

With age, one realised that waves of immigration and gentrification have been passing through the northern plains ever since history came to be written. And the post-partition angst of the northern plains was nothing new. The area had long been witness to bands of migrants looking for shelter and others departing for faraway lands from Punjab, UP, Rajasthan, and Bihar. The local schools and universities we attended in the mid-60s were reflective of this rich and mixed heritage of the Hindi belt. Firaq Gorakhpuri, the celebrity Urdu poet taught postgraduate classes in the English department. Another great Hindi poet and socialist leader V.D.N. Sahi lectured on 18th century England and the beginnings of popular journalistic prose. Comrade P.C. Gupta, his well-known cricket commentator son Skand and his diminutive wife of mixed parentage from Uttarakhand, were all a merry group of dons constantly interacting with students as equals, debating, quarrelling and making up later about questions of political ideology, language and the state of the arts. 

Up until the early 80s, both in schools and universities, the children of the relatively well-off and lower middle classes, speakers of Punjabi or Urdu or Awadhi-laced Hindi kept the essential hybrid variants of Hindi alive. They came from all communities: Hindus, Sikhs, Mona Sikhs, Muslims, Brahmo Bengalis, Vaishnava Bengalis, Catholics, Protestants and what have you. Several of them also had families that suffered awfully during the Partition, but most of them remained, as Javed sahib so beautifully put it that evening, innocent, eager to learn, full of curiosity about the world around them and full of dreams Sahir wrote of: Woh subah kabhi toh ayegi. (That morning will come someday.)  

Each region in North India, even before the Partition, spoke a mixed regional language fed by several local dialects each with a long tradition of oral literature. When Munshi Naval Kishore set up the first major commercial printing press for bringing out vernacular books and tracts, it was these hybridised Urdu and Hindi variants that fed the pool. Even late in the 70s, most major Hindi Urdu publishers like Munshiji himself, traced their roots to pre-Partition Lahore, a multilingual town if ever there was one. Truth be told, a rather fractious political history between the popular variants of Urdu written in Farsi script and Hindi in DevNagari, lay like a deeply buried faultline. However, the hard controversy and bitterness began crystallising only around the late 20th century. 

In the Hindi belt, an extraordinary solipsism began to be visible when the Right made steady inroads as coalition partners with various Samajwadi leaders. Together, both insisted on retaining a Sanskritised elite version of Hindi as the medium of education and official correspondence. In Mumbai, Hindi films still leaned heavily on Urdu writers from Khwaja Ahmed Abbas to Krishan Chander and later Salim Javed, but in Delhi, Lucknow, Bhopal, Patna and Chandigarh, script slowly became a communal symbol and even children whose parents knew Urdu and Gurumukhi, opted out of other scripts and chose Nagari or English instead. Since English medium was available only in private schools that charged a hefty fee, most midnight’s children in the Hindi belt, like this columnist, grew up reading and writing in Hindi.

After 2014, that allowed the question of a common national language to become the collateral damage to a power tussle between India’s regional political parties and the Centre. The word Bhasha that the BJP uses forcefully to mark its Hindu territory, is baffling to the older writers of Hindi. Bhasha or Bhakha, has actually been the term for an inclusive bouquet. The northern plains that covered areas from western UP, Awadh, to Varanasi, Mithila, and Bhojpur right up to Bihar, the Bhakha was arranged and rearranged to suit the area. As Tulsidas wrote in the 16th century, “Bhakha bhanati more mati thori..” I am somewhat handicapped writing in the Bhakha that I know… Any of us Hindi writers will agree. The Bhakha one writes in carries the genetic codes of innumerable tribes and languages, and will not pass muster with the Sanskrit favoured by Pundits still manning the towers.  

The Hindi one writes in, is no different from the Urdu Javed sahib or Gulzar sahib (a Sikh, by the way) write in. It is the Hindi that has been trickling effortlessly slowly down south, through songs and poems from great poets and composers. In the 14th century, it was Amir Khusrau, who wrote the song “Chhap Tilak sub Chheeni re Tosey Naina Milay ke” made famous by a Bollywood film. Again many famous Bollywood songs were retouched a bit by a Bachchanji or Gulzar, like, “Mere Anganey mein tumhara kya kaam hai?”, “Kajrare, Kajrare terey karey karey naina” or “Bareilly kee bazaar mein Jhumka gira re”, are originally old folk songs. Kumar Gandharva similarly brought into the popular repertoire a host of old Nirguna songs by chiselling them a bit. He had heard bands of pilgrims and Sadhus singing these timeless poems of love and devotion in a Khichdi of languages called Sadhukkadi.

So the real takeaway from Javed sahib’s long meandering talk was that literature travels caravan-like, gathering new words, contexts and sonorous notes through nations. It obeys no rules except its own made of Sur (pure notes) and Laya (meter). Like the Elizabethan English, this Hindi-Urdu mix is a liquid bubbling with steam, fumes and a certain fury against the system. To the footloose and fancy-free male and female saints and fakirs who danced to these, caste-based hierarchies and politically favoured or disfavored communities were meaningless. When the Hindi poet Ashok Vajpeyi – leading a band of Hindi writers, playwrights and doyens of Hindustani music – returned their government-given awards as a protest against the persecution and killings of fellow Tamil, Kannada, Bangla and Marathi writers, they were taking this legacy forward in our times. 

Javed Akhtar. Photo: Ramesh lalwani/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0

If there is any true common denominator for popular Hindi writers, musicians, film/TV makers, media men and women, it is this: their Hindi-Urdu must once again cohabit the audio space and translate more and more if they are to contain this gushing river of a composite living culture that thrives on oral language.  

Pity that most of our incisive economists, social historians, philosophers and feminists choose to write their extremely informative and well-researched books exclusively in English. And those who are from the non-Hindi speaking areas and often justifiably talk of Hindi imposition will not introspect either why they have not spontaneously made out well-argued cases for their beliefs in their native Bangla, Tamil, Kannada or Odia.

As for literary historians of Hindi and Urdu, they have remained similarly trapped in writing angry competing historical narratives for Hindi and Urdu. A calm, composite, comprehensive history of Indian literature is yet to be written. One that spans both Hindi and Urdu as peoples’ languages and allows the streams of local dialects to enrich it organically instead of travelling back in time to trace remote streams of Sanskrit or Farsi.

Mrinal Pande is a writer and veteran journalist.