The violence against the Hindu minority in Bangladesh is an ominous development. But it is also a reminder of one cardinal truth: All of South Asia is “tied together in a single garment of destiny,” to borrow Martin Luther King’s phrase from a different context. Violence in one place will spill over to another; freedom endangered in one place will inevitably corrode the freedom of others. We have tried to act as if this was not true. But that modus vivendi has been unravelling for a while.
Anti-Hindu violence in Bangladesh is not new. The current violence is strategically timed. It is surely not a coincidence that the violence coincides with targeted attacks on Hindus in Kashmir. The intent is not just local ethnic terror, but a deepening of the communal divide in India. It is tempting to say that this violence is a strategic act by particular organised groups, perhaps with transnational links. It is not organically embedded in society. This is a comforting thought, and can empower us to the extent that it is still important to recognise forces that do not condone such violence. But in South Asia the link between strategic communal violence and organic embeddedness is always a tricky one. Such violence inevitably transforms the fabric of social relationships itself. ..
More posts on Bangladesh
Books reviewed – Deb Mukharji: 1971, Bangladesh and the Blood Telegram
Deb Mukharji – A Himalayan lesson, and about time
An Open Letter to the world on the Bangladesh crisis of 1971
Bharat Bhushan: A hanging in Dhaka, courtesy Delhi
Snigdhendu Bhattacharya: How Bangladeshi Bloggers Paid The Price For Protesting Religious Fanaticism
Conversation with Lawrence Lifschultz: The American reporter who investigated the assassination of Mujibur Rahman
Syed Badrul Ahsan – In Dhaka, return of a spectre
Imtiaz Alam Khan – History: the fall of Dhaka from Bihari eyes
Bangladesh to Exile 100K Rohingya Refugees to an Island “Prison”
Exiled Bangla poet Daud Haider refused India visa
Bangladeshi communist writer Shahzahan Bachchu gunned down
Haunted by unification: A Bangladeshi view of partition
Prominent Kashmiri Pandit businessman shot dead in Srinagar
P. B. Mehta: What the attacks against minorities in Kashmir reveal
