On the Allahabad High Court Verdict

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 There are three obvious problems with the Allahabad High Court judgment on the Babri Masjid issue. Each of them in isolation is potentially damaging for the Constitutional fabric of the country; together they can cause irreparable harm. Professor Prabhat Patnaik writes. 

The first is the obliteration of the distinction between ''fact'' and ''faith'', which represents a serious retrogression to pre-modernity. In medieval times witches were burned because people believed that they engaged in evil deeds. A premise of modernity is that this and other such ''beliefs'' cannot be accepted as ''facts'', that there has to be independent and credible evidence on the basis of which alone a ''fact'' can be established. Hence the verdict of the Lucknow bench that Ram was born at the very spot which was the sanctum sanctorum of the Babri Masjid, because ''people'' believed this to be the case, is as mystifying as it is retrograde. 

There are, to start with, the obvious, but weighty, questions of who these ''people'' are, how many such ''people'' must be there to qualify being called ''the people'', and what evidence the Lucknow bench had, even regarding the views of the ''people'', other than what it might have gathered as a result of the activities, claims and mobilizations of a few Hindu organizations which professed to speak in the name of the ''people''. To take the word of organizations that claim to speak in the name of the ''people'' as the voice of the ''people'' is dangerous enough. But to take the ''beliefs'' of the ''people'', even assuming these are indeed the well-established ''beliefs'' of a very large number of people, as synonymous with ''facts'' strikes at the very root of rationality that must underlie a modern society. 

A large number of ''people'', far more than those believing that Ram’s actual birthplace was below the central dome of the Babri Masjid, used to believe till recently (and many perhaps do even now) that being touched by a Dalit or sharing food with a Dalit brings great misfortune; but to take this belief as a fact and to justify the practice of untouchability on the basis of it defies reason. For a Court of Law, no less, to wipe off the distinction between ''belief'' and ''fact'' therefore sets a dangerous precedent. The BJP had been demanding precisely this, namely that whether Ram was actually born there or not as a matter of ''fact'' is irrelevant; since ''people'' believe that he was born there, that alone is adequate ground for building a temple there on the ruins of a mosque. The Court has implicitly accepted the BJP’s patently irrational and communal-fascist argument. 

The fact that the Court has taken such a position is hardly surprising, given the fact that one of the judges gives expression to his own ''faith'' by claiming that ''He (i.e. Lord Ram) is everywhere'' and treats it as a ''fact''. What Justice Sharma may hold as his private belief is his own business. His choosing to parade his own religious belief in a judgment that should be based on ''facts'' shows the dangerous extent to which even the senior judiciary in our country has become unmindful of Constitutional demands. 

The second disturbing aspect of the judgment is the obliteration of the distinction between ''negotiation'' and adjudication. The outcome of negotiations always depends upon the relative strengths of the protagonists. Hence in any situation of conflict, especially of the ''either-or'' sort, where the relatively stronger protagonist is absolutely intransigent over its claim, negotiations necessarily work to the detriment of the relatively weaker protagonist. In the present context, where the Hindu organizations were intransigent, any process of settlement through negotiations would necessarily have worked against the organizations belonging to the minority community. Since the latter considered this unfair, it went to the court of law. The basic reason of its going to the Court therefore, or even for the matter being referred to the Court, is that the outcome arrived at on the basis of relative strengths is not universally accepted as ''fair''. The Court is supposed to be fair because it does not settle issues on the basis of relative strengths but entirely on the basis of evidence, facts and legal provisions. The picture of justice, depicted as a maiden, typically has her eyes covered for this very reason, namely that justice is blind to the relative strengths, positions, powers, and pulls of the protagonists. The rationale of adjudication lies in the fact that its outcome is decided on principles entirely different from those underlying negotiations. 

This is why the judiciary is different from societal (as opposed to State) institutions like khap panchayats. The latter are pre-modern, and hence anti-democratic, for two distinct reasons: first, the attitudes of such panchayats are pre-modern, based, as mentioned earlier, on ''faith'', ''beliefs'', ''customs'' and practices rather than ''facts''; second, the decisions of these societal organizations necessarily and directly reflect the relative strengths of the protagonists and the power relations existing among them. The ''beliefs'' and power relations no doubt are themselves correlated, but they are not identical. The judiciary, by contrast, being a part of the State, and hence based on a Constitution that guarantees equality before law for everyone, is supposed to function with its eyes closed, uninfluenced by the relative strengths of the protagonists. 

True, in a class society, this is never the case; but that is because a class society constitutes in essence a betrayal of a democratic Constitution. The fact of relative strengths and power relations affecting the process of adjudication, even within the framework of a democratic Constitution that guarantees juridical equality, is a de facto rather than a de jure outcome of a class society. But when the outcome of adjudication itself becomes de jure dependent upon the relative strengths of the protagonists, then that represents a dangerous trend, a retrogression from modernity and democracy. And this is exactly what the judgment has done: it has based itself not on ''facts'' and law but on considerations of what might be acceptable. Since what might be acceptable depends upon the relative strengths of the protagonists, adjudication in this case has ceased to remain adjudication; it has got influenced by the relative strengths of the protagonists. 

It is not surprising that after the verdict the BJP is talking about rapprochement, about peaceful settlement, about negotiated solutions. This is because its ''reservation outcome'', i.e. the ''worst case scenario'' possible from its point of view, as expressed by the Allahabad High Court verdict, is already favourable enough for it; it can only improve upon its position, by buying up the one-third share that the High Court has given to the Waqf Board, and hence getting exclusive rights over the entire disputed land. 

The third problem with the judgment is that it has accepted the demolition of the Babri Masjid, an act that was a direct violation of the law of the land, as a fait accompli; and by remaining silent on this fait accompli while giving a verdict that echoes in essence what those who undertook the demolition were claiming, it has implicitly rationalized post facto that horrendous and unlawful act of demolition. L.K. Advani has quickly seized upon the opportunity to claim that his ''Rath Yatra'' has been validated post facto. And since the slogan ''Mandir Wahin Banayenge'' has now been given a legal clearance, even while the demolition of the mosque that prepared the ground for the implementation of this slogan has gone un-condemned, the BJP and other Hindu outfits feel vindicated and absolved of any blame for their misdeeds. 

True, this Court was not supposed to pronounce any verdict on the demolition; it was concerned with a property dispute. But, the obvious question arises: would it have given the land under the central dome of the Babri Masjid to ''the Hindus'' if the mosque was still standing? If it had done so, then it would have had to implicitly condone an act of demolition since the Hindu outfits then would have been legally entitled to do what they wish, with the land over which they had been given legal rights. And if it had not done so, then it means that the demolition has affected their verdict, i.e. that the legal outcome of a property dispute has been affected by an act of illegal demolition: the Hindu outfits have benefited from their illegal action of demolishing a five hundred-year old mosque. 

The fact that the High Court verdict has been taken in a calm manner by the people of the country is a matter of great gratification. It is symptomatic of the maturity of the people and also of the fact that communal issues are being pushed into the background as more basic issues of material life are becoming the focus of the people’s attention. This is a very welcome development, and in this context many have welcomed the Allahabad High Court judgment as putting an end to the long-standing controversy, so that the country can move on. Many therefore feel that keeping the issue alive by going to the Supreme Court should be avoided; and because of this they are also unhappy with criticisms of the High Court judgment. 

While this is an understandable position, it is erroneous for two reasons. First, any retreat to pre-modernity of the sort that the verdict has displayed is fraught with serious consequences that go beyond the specific issue under consideration, i.e. the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid issue. If ''fact'' and ''faith'' are not distinguished, if adjudication is influenced by the relative bargaining strengths of the protagonists, and if a patently unlawful act brings legal dividends to those who perpetrated it, then it augurs ill for democracy in the country. 

Secondly, issues like this leave behind wounds that fester and can cause damage later even if there is no immediate cause for concern. Justice needs to be done, in a manner that is in conformity with the blindness of the maiden. That is the only firm basis on which a modern State can be built; and the resolution of even specific issues like this lies ultimately in the building of such a modern State. Hopefully, the Supreme Court to which the matter will be referred will be mindful of the pitfalls of quick-fixes and will uphold scrupulously the cause of law.

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Comments

All these Questions must have

All these Questions must have taken into consideration by the court. Article itself is based on many hypothesis and Ifs n Buts. If court - constitutional authority - cant decide who r "people", then what r d grounds writer has to decide so? Hindu word is considered as mere BJP/RSS.

The Existence of Ram

Many secular intellectuals have sought to question the judgement of the Court of Sri Ram's existence and his birthplace. As clever as they are, they are no experts in the law. I can assure them that English law never had any great difficulty when it adjudged similar issues in the depth of time and was happy to attach the label that it was so from time memorial. Why do those intellectuals find it so difficult that Ram whose life and existence was passed down by word of mouth and then put to writing by a people who could not been more meticulous in the preparation of their records than the Hindus? No one can now confirm his specific place of birth, but who is to question the place where it has customarily been honoured. Just take the example of Queen Elizabeth II who has her actual birth date and an official date which is celebrated nationally on another date. What is customary is real to all intents and purposes. Joinder on the issues was thus established and the Court adjudged on it accordingly which is what the parties came to the Court for. There has been such a plethora of issues laid before the Court, and it is massive task to determine what the Court properly and actually decided, the ratio decidendi of the judgement. It could quite easily be that Waqf Board claim was time barred is the ratio. Everything else is obiter dicta. The secular forces confuse the Indian constitution as if it was blind to the country's religious sentiments and thus barring the judges who themselves come with religious convictions of their own from expressing their understanding of the issues before them. That has been the one saving grace of the judgement. What was really decided by the Court was the title suit. There is hardly a Hindu in India who doubts that Sri Ram existed. That religious sentiment endowed him with divinity has never been in issue in the Court proceedings. The judgement of Solomon would pose the question thus: if no building was to be permitted on the site, which of the communities Hindu or Muslim would put the site to use for religious purposes? I have no doubt that for Hindus it would remain a holy site for pilgrimage and darshan as the birth place of Sr Ram. The land as the deity of Ram would suffice for the Hindus. No purpose would be served for the Muslims who would prefer to pray at a mosque at any other site established for the purpose. Of course it would be preferable if Muslims could together with the Hindus build the Sri Ram temple and vice versa for the mosque at a separate site altogether but if sentiment meant that they would build them next to each to each other as a symbol of love and affection that should also be cherished. Nothing could better send the message of amity between all the peoples of India to the world. Can the nation rise to the challenge?

dear shri khandu patel

Law in our country is based on the Indian Constitution and not "sentiments". The Constitution defines India as a "Secular, Democratic Republic". Your problem with "secularists" is actually a problem with the Indian Constitution, which either you have not read or you do not believe in. I am willing to join hands with you to build a Shri Ram temple at Ayodhya provided you join hands with me in rebuilding the Babri masjid. If you are unwilling, let us wait till the Supreme Court decides the fate of the dispute. But please do not rant against the Indian Constitution and those who uphold it.

I agree that the preamble of

I agree that the preamble of the Indian Constitution declares the country a Secular Democratic Republic which expresses a sentiment. That is actually betrayed in the body of the Constitution which deals with all manner of religious questions. The Courts have always been expected to deal with religious questions and the Allahabad High Court was no different in this regard. I expect the Supreme Court to which the parties have appealed would want to guide a settlement that is in accordance with the law. We shall now have to await its verdict. I thank you for your kind offer to join you in the rebuilding of the Ram temple. We should all use our best endeavours to build it as a testament to Sri Ram who stood for all that was good and noble. The building of a mosque for Muslims which has the blessings of Sri Ram would be magnificent testament to the strength of our country.

blessings

Let us rebuild the Babri Masjid with the blessings of Shri Ram and build a Ram temple beside it with the blessings of the Prophet. Let Ram and Rahim coexist in all their grandeur and their followers live with peace and harmony. And for the sake of Ram and Rahim, let us not mix them up with politics.

Political Decision

If the Supreme Court also abdicates it responsibility of upholding the democratic Constitution , the Left and democratic forces should lead the struggle of the affected Muslim minorities demanding an immediate political decision on the Ayodhya issue. If the Supreme Court upholds the democratic constitution and nullifies the unjust HC verdict , then again the Left and democratic forces should join hands with the Muslim minorities to fight politically the fascist Hindutwa forces who would reject such a truly legal resolution of the dispute . Either way , the left led by the CPI(M) should be prepared to form a Historic Bloc of all democratic and secular forces against fascism.

Immediately , the Left and Democratic forces should see that the Supreme Courtcomes up with its verdict expeditiously not allowing the Sangh Parivar and extremist Islamic groups and parties to further foment trouble and divide the people. Any failure of the Left to take a principled fighting position on the issue will be as suicidal as the fond hope of the Indian ruling classes that the trickle down benefits of imperialist led globalization will will stop the fascists and religious extremists from advancing their respective agenda.

NMK

ayodhya verdict

the court in ayodhya judgment has transgressed its borders mandated by the constitution and the historical facts.the history tells us that there is no any possibility of temple destruction at the babri masjid site,at least during the period from babar to akbar(1526-1605).these mughals conquered the north india(where ayodhya is) only from the AFGHANS.obivously no hindu king was defeated and hence no temple desecration or temple demolition.
also one must remember that muslim kings just continued the tradition of royal temple desecration which was cmmon since ancient india.
dr.sanjay dabhade,pune.

@dr. dabhade

the issue is not really whether a temple was destroyed to build a mosque. historical evidence on that is deeply divided. the problem is if we go into that we have demolish thousands of mosques to find out whether they were built on the rubbles of Hindu temples; and demolish thousands of Hindu temples to find out whether they were built on mosques or Buddhist shrines or may be shrines of other sects. Does our society need such a exercise in demolishing mosques and temples and dig up what lies below them in the 21st century? or shall we see whatever existed on the ground at the time of our birth as a modern nation - 15th August 1947 - as a part of our common cultural heritage?

ayodhya verdict

dear tirth
i agree with u that the nation must accept whatever was the position on 15th august 1947.actually the court has committed serious mistake in taking the questions -1)if temple was there at the disputed site?
2)if it is a birthplace of rama?
Entertaining these questions is the fundamental flaw.

dr.sanjay dabhade
pune.