Vipin Tripathi - The Behror (Alwar) Killing: A Grave Challenge

NB: Professor Vipin is one of India's staunchest activists for communal harmony and social integrity. He never fails to arrive wherever people are in pain and does his utmost to restore people's faith in humanity. India's rulers seem to be hell-bent upon destroying traditions of togetherness & inculcating fear among religious minorities along with impunity among hooligans. It is a crying shame that the government of the day finds communal hatred and violence to be the only means of retaining political power. Neither conscience nor compassion may be seen among the leaders and ideologues of the RSS/BJP. If untrammelled cruelty and defiance of law is what we may expect of this government, let us be very clear - they will poison the Indian polity for decades to come.  We must be grateful that we have persons like Professor Vipin amongst us. 

वैष्णव जन तो तेने कहिये // जे पीड परायी जाणे रे ।
पर दुःखे उपकार करे तो ये // मन अभिमान न आणे रे ॥

Thank you sir - DS

Letter from Professor Tripathi
Friends, Yesterday I visited Behror (the town in Alwar district where Pehlu Khan, his two sons and two other youths were brutally thrashed on April 1) again to spot like minded people and exploring ways to arouse conscience  In six hours of my stay, I visited St. Xavier's school, Behror PG College and talked to a cross section of people including the SHO. Only a few people reflected pain of lynching.  Others had taken out a  Shanti March  on April 12, urging the administration not to arrest the innocents. In this scenario we are deferring our 4-day campaign. Rather I am going to Tauru tomorrow to meet local people and seeking their advice.
Samar Halarnkar - India's ruling party is sponsoring an assault on the Indian state / Tavleen Singh - Is this Hindutva ?

Khadeejah Farooqui has come out with a simple proposal: We begin Sunday gatherings (7-9 AM) in a park, sing a few sufi ghazals, bhajans and talk about men like Buddha, Socrates, Jesus Christ, Prophet Mohammad, Chisti, Nanak, Gandhi who stood for truth under adverse conditions. This way we connect to youth, common men as well as educated people. She also feels that in due course we may introduce charkha also as a symbol of nonviolence and physical labour. I will talk to Indu Behan (Sannidhi, Rajghat) to teach us spinning on charkha.

Please send your suggestions. We wish to begin from Sunday, April 23, 2017 in a park in Vasant Kunj (near Fortis Hospital). The weekly meeting of Sadbhav Mission at JMI will be held tomorrow, April 15, 2017 at the Ansari Auditorium lawns at 4-6 PM.

Please bring in your friends
Best regards

Vipin Tripathi 
Khadeejah Farooqui

Behror (Alwar) Killing: A Grave Challenge V.K. Tripathi
April 1, 2017 was a dark day when Pehlu Khan, a farmer from Jaysinghpur village in Mewat district, Haryana was thrashed to near death by a mob at 6 PM in Behror town of Alwar District, Rajasthan on Delhi-Jaipur highway. His two sons Irfan (23) and Arif (20) and two other youths Ajmat (24) and Rafiq (22) were brutally beaten and critically injured. They had purchased cows in Jaipur bazaar and were carrying them to their village/ relatives in two vans when Cow Vigilante Group activists, riding motor bikes, stopped their vans, pulled them out, aroused a mob and thrashed them with lathis and sticks. Police came half an hour later, took these five people to Kailash Hospital. On April 3 Pehlu succumbed to injuries while other 4 returned home.

I visited Behror on April 7 and Jaysinghpur on April 9. For Behror, I took an Alwar bound bus at 10:45 AM from Dhaula Kuan, Delhi. The conductor was compassionate. I gave him my book, Soch swavlamban aur Sanskritik Punarjagaran. Following his advice I got down at Kishangarh  at 2 PM and took a tempo to Khairthal. A young school teacher walked with me to the bus stand and got me into the Kotputli bus. I got down at a town where I got the bus to Behror. By my side was sitting an young man Amit Kumar Yadav. He gave me fairly objective description of the incident and offered to take me to the site on his motor bike in Behror.

At 4:30 PM I reached Behror. Amit took me to the flyover on Delhi-Jaipur highway. Afterwards I sent him home and began talking to nearby shopkeepers, vendors, barber, cobbler. Most people said they were not there on that day. One shopkeeper reflected sensitivity and said that mob gathered on both the ends of the flyover. The nearby end where I was standing was the one where a van was stopped and mob surrounded it. The mob thrashing took place on the other end. A driver said that these were the Bajrang Dal and Gau Rakshak Dal activists who did this. A few other people also said that. Fertilizer firm owner Omvir Yadav said Bajrangdal activists didn’t mean to kill the cow smugglers, only wanted to teach them a lesson and hand them over to police, by chance one person died in public beating. It was a lapse on the part of police who did not intervene in time. From there I went to DSP (Deputy Superintendent of Police). He offered me seat and talked for 20 minutes.

DSP said, police stopped the van and found that they didn’t have the necessary papers. I said that according to media reports these people were stopped by the cow vigilantes and they had the receipts of purchase of cows. He said cow rakshaks provided the information and police stopped them. Transferring cow from one state to another required permission from collector that was not there. I was unable to understand how could the people in police custody be beaten up by mob. He said 3 people had been arrested under section 308. He mentioned that cow smuggling had been an issue in the region. Last year 36 cow heads were found in Firozpur Jhirka. I said I had not heard of that from any one. Rather, a gruesome incident took place on August 22, 2016 when Zaheeruddin’s family was brutally attacked, his son Ibrahim and daughter in law were thrashed to death and daughter and son in law were critically injured in Deengerhedi. To this he said it was a very sad thing. I left in sorrow.

On April 9, I left home at 7:30 AM, took metro to  Gurgaon, tempo to Subhash Chowk and bus to Nunh. Jan Mohammad and his son met me there at 10:30 AM and took me to Jaysinghpur. Pehlu’s home had a sad look and his family in deep pain. Pehlu’s sons Irshad and Arif looked very young and innocent. So was Rafiq, a thin fellow. They had suffered deadly blows and reached the /verge of death, yet they had no sectarian feelings. Irshad said that they had only two vans, which were stopped by the Cow Vigilantes and thrashed. They lost consciousness, only remember some people saying burn them alive. Police arrived half an hour later and they were taken to hospital. What happened at the other end of the flyover, they had no idea as they had only two vans. When I enquired where were their cows now, he said he didn’t know.

We went to Azmat home. He was lying on a cot, in almost un-movable condition. His father came from Mathura where he is maulvi in a mosque. He was in pain but had no bitterness, rather recalled an incident of Jawaharlal Nehru. He explained Azmat’s plight and said that he was bringing cow for his sister who lived in a village in Rajasthan near the state border.

The incident reflects unmatched terrorizing power of Cow Vigilantes groups, their networking and close liaison with the Police. The cow protection laws have made minorities vulnerable to humiliation, thrashing and killing. They are frightened to keep cows in their homes which is the only source of milk for many of them. Over 99.9% percent Muslims have never killed a cow or a bull. They take as good care of them as any Hindu would do. The tragedy of cows (specially bulls) is not slaughtering but starvation death. Due to the arrival of tractor, harvester and truck, bulls have been rendered jobless. Poor farmers have no strength to feed useless bulls, while their own children are hungry.  Nor there are forests left to feed the bulls. Hence most bulls and old cows are dying of starvation. No middle class or high class family keep useless bulls in his/ her home.

Coupled with this tragedy is the brute display of muscle power by organized youth on Ashtami and Ram Navmi. On April 4 at 5 AM I was waiting for an auto-rickshaw near IIT to go to Delhi Railway Station to catch a train to Aligarh. I saw herds of motorbikes. In quick succession, carrying three people each at a speed of 100 km per hour. On my return at midnight  also I saw similar youths in tens of motor bikes. I checked with the auto drivers, they said that numerous such groups were moving around from temple to temple on 8th and 9th days of Navaratri. I realized these riders were part of a well organized network like Bajrangdal. They would create a frightening atmosphere for every one. These mobilizations pose a very serious challenge to our culture and polity. A grassroots cultural movement must develop to counter them.

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