The cultural and political aspects of the recent communal
situation in the country have been examined at great length. However, it tends
to be overlooked that these factors (along with others) first of all shape
certain general psychological patterns in society, and it is the psychological
makeup of people which is manifested in the way they react to external events.
Post-demolition, there has been a sudden, rather than gradual, shift in the
views of much of the urban Hindu middle-class. A curious pattern of thinking has
emerged, suggesting that somehow Muslims ``deserved it''. They are held guilty,
as a whole, of a massive collection of crimes, plots and treacherous acts. The
factual background becomes irrelevant, and it is increasingly difficult to
reason with one's acquaintances on very basic questions, even when many of the
``facts'' they produce can easily be falsified.
The psychological dimension of this apparently illogical behaviour on the
part of the middle class is not as mysterious as it seems. Similar patterns were
discerned and studied during the rise of Nazism in Germany earlier this century.
We must turn to such studies to illuminate the origins of this behaviour.
A remarkable book was written about Fascism in 1941. Titled ``Escape From
Freedom'', it is an attempt by psychoanalyst Erich Fromm to examine the
psychological basis for the success of Fascist philosophy. Parts of this book
read like a commentary on what has been happening in Bombay (and elsewhere in
this country) in the last few months, and suggest an explanation for the sudden
shift in middle-class perceptions that we have been witnessing.
Fromm's basic thesis is that sometimes human beings find it impossible to
live with freedom. This is not an intrinsic defect of human nature. Rather, it
occurs when human beings become politically free, but are unable to decide what
they should do with this freedom. Being liberated from external constraints can
lead to a feeling of intense loneliness and isolation, unless one is able to
channel one's energies into a socially fulfilling and purposeful life. The
inability to do this (which may be related to economic, political and cultural
forces in the environment) creates a feeling of insignificance, insecurity and
self-doubt.
The result is a kind of desperation, which makes people seek to escape from
their freedom by merging themselves with a monolithic, authoritarian structure.
This solves their problem in a perverse and temporary way: not by providing the
means for them to pursue a meaningful and positive life, but by taking away the
freedom which apparently caused their emotional distress.
On the subject of Nazism, the specific questions which Fromm wished to
examine were the psychological aspects of this ideology which made it so
attractive to a class of people, and the character of the people who became its
followers.
One of his first observations was that Nazism's ``spirit of blind obedience
to a leader and of hatred against racial and political minorities, its craving
for conquest and domination, its exaltation of the German people and the `Nordic
race' had a tremendous emotional appeal'' for certain classes of people. This
made them ``ardent believers in and fighters for the Nazi cause''. The
characteristics of this class which made them so susceptible to this philosophy
are described as ``their love of the strong, hatred of the weak, their
pettiness, hostility, thriftiness with feelings as well as with money ... Their
outlook on life was narrow, ... their whole life was based on the principle of
scarcity -- economically as well as psychologically''.
Many of these characteristics can be observed within our own society. One
important feature is hatred of the weak. Whether we like to admit it or not,
ours is a society where it is acceptable to kick lame dogs, jeer at the
crippled, and beat up poor pickpockets. As for rich thieves in the world of
business, these command our utmost respect, and some are national heroes. The
principle of scarcity is another feature: we seem to believe that the total
wealth in this country will forever be limited, so we have to grab what we can
now. Our collective psychology is unwilling to absorb the opposite idea, that
unlimited material progress for society as a whole is a possibility.
The cultural and economic factors which contributed to the growth of these
psychological characteristics among the middle class in Germany were: a high
rate of inflation, the decline in the social prestige of the middle class, and
the shattering of old middle class morality and of the authority of the father
in the family. There may not be an exact (or even approximate) parallel between
India today and Germany fifty years ago, but these phrases surely display some
resonance with aspects of the present-day situation.
Now we can begin to find out just why ``they deserved it''. Fromm tells us
that ``The essence of the authoritarian character has been described as the
simultaneous presence of sadistic and masochistic drives.'' He describes sadism
as ``unrestricted power over another person, more or less mixed with
destructiveness'', while masochism aims at ``dissolving oneself in an
overwhelmingly strong power and participating in its strength and glory.'' Both
of these have the same cause: ``the inability of the isolated individual to
stand alone and his need for a symbiotic relationship that overcomes his
aloneness.''
Thus, these two behaviour patterns are mutually complementary aspects of the
same thing. The urge to dominate and to be dominated, to persecute the helpless
and to prostrate oneself before the powerful, these are the expressions of the
single psychological drive of sado-masochism. Seen in this unified way, it is
obvious why the hatred of Muslims and the glorification of Lord Ram necessarily
go hand-in-hand in the Fascist process. The one gives us a feeling of strength
through persecution of the weak, while the other gives us the security that
someone much bigger than ourselves is actually in control. The result is an
illusion of power without responsibility.
Most important is the reassuring feeling of this simplified world-view.
Everything fits neatly in place, and one need not bother to think for oneself or
grapple with complex questions. Conversation with the communalized class reveals
that it gets some superficial psychological relief by this means, from the
unbearable tension (and guilt) caused by the demolition of Babri Masjid. Instead
of facing this tension in a logical way, it is much easier to escape from
freedom, blame the helpless and revere the strong.
Of course, not all Muslims are helpless, or innocent of blame for various
things. But mainly the helpless ones have been physically and psychologically
damaged in a systematic way, in the last few months. The Bombay riots caused
serious casualties primarily among slum dwellers. Yet, instead of rising up and
expressing its unconditional horror at this event, much of the middle class
found refuge in the famous ``they deserved it''. Interestingly, the same people
did not show much effective sympathy for Hindu slum dwellers affected in the
riots either. Hatred of the weak is really quite secular in a way.
Of Hitler's propaganda, Fromm says ``He and the German people are always the
ones who are innocent and the enemies are sadistic brutes. A great deal of this
propaganda consists of deliberate, conscious lies.'' Moreover, Hitler ``accuses
his enemies of the very things that he quite frankly admits to be his own
aims.'' We have heard by now that Muslims are cruel people, polygamists,
anti-national elements. Some of the claims being made to support this view are
false and have been debunked in a number of recent articles and pamphlets.
Others are so generic that they are true of some, or many, Muslims -- but they
are also true of many Hindus. The fact is that many Indians are cruel people,
polygamists, anti-national elements. And of course even as the sangh parivar
accuses the minority community of religious intolerance, it is busy promoting
the same thing as one of its avowed aims.
Fascism gains popular support by promising a world in which everyone in
society finds their place -- someone below, to dominate, and someone above, to
submit to. This picture is self-fulfilling. If Fascism is perceived to be
winning, people whose psychology is already ripe for takeover will flock to it
in large numbers. Conversely, if it is seen to be losing, people desert in
equally large numbers. The demolition on December 6 was a signal that the march
of Fascism in India has started in earnest and its success is inevitable. That
is what acted, as if by remote control, on the minds of the middle class in
Bombay, and elsewhere.
It remains to ask whether the victory of Indian Fascism is really inevitable.
It is anyone's guess what will happen. But Erich Fromm made a bold prediction
about the future of Nazism at a time when it was looking rather successful, and
it is only appropriate to conclude by quoting his words: ``The function of an
authoritarian ideology and practice can be compared to the function of neurotic
symptoms. Such symptoms result from unbearable psychological conditions and at
the same time offer a solution that makes life possible. Yet they are not a
solution that leads to happiness or growth of personality. ... The history of
mankind is the history of growing individuation, but it is also the history of
growing freedom. ... The authoritarian systems cannot do away with the basic
conditions that make for the quest for freedom; neither can they exterminate the
quest for freedom that springs from these conditions.''