Why Modi’s Thugs Attacked My University

NEW DELHI, INDIA – JANUARY 10: Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union (JNUSU) President Aishe Ghosh and other office bearers speak to the media after a meeting with Human Resource Development (HRD) Ministry officials, at the HRD Ministry, Shastri Bhawan on January 10, 2020 in New Delhi, India. (Photo by Vipin Kumar/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

Jayati Ghosh in Project Syndicate:

NEW DELHI – On January 5, masked men and women stormed the New Delhi campus of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), where I am a professor, and attacked the students and faculty they found there with sticks, iron rods, and scythes. The university administration, security guards, and local police not only failed to protect the innocent victims of this rampage, which included vandalism and trespassing, in addition to the violence; they watched and were complicit in the assault. This is Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s India.

JNU is a highly respected institution. But with India’s leadership promoting an aggressive form of Hindu nationalism – including by enacting the blatantly unconstitutional Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), which has rendered millions of Muslim Indians stateless – the university has come to represent the enemy: the liberalism and tolerance that is supposed to underpin Indian democracy.

This is not an accident, the result of some small group of zealots misinterpreting the Modi government’s message. On the contrary, Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party has been actively cultivating this narrative for a long time, and, since coming to power in 2014, the BJP’s government has been using pliant media to vilify universities, especially those like JNU whose faculty and students have criticized the ruling dispensation.

More here.