Skip to main content

Safdar’s death can’t be undone, heavens don't give salvific dignity to a 'gruesome' killing

By Yanis Iqbal* 

On January 2, 1989, a 34-year old Safdar Hashmi, while performing the street play “Halla Bol” in a labour colony at Jhandapur, was beaten to death allegedly by Congress goons. Thrashed at least twenty times on his head with iron rods, he was brought to the hospital with brain fluid leaking out of his nose.
Less than 48 hours after his death, Mala, his wife, and the other actors returned to the place where the daylight murder had taken place and performed the interrupted play. One of the songs that the song squad “Parcham” sang that day was “Tu zinda hai”:
"Tu zinda hai, tu zindagi ki jeet mein yaqeen kar
Agar kahin hai swarg to utar la zamin par."
(You are alive, so trust in the triumph of life
If there’s a heaven somewhere, then bring it to earth)

As a remembrance of Hashmi’s death, these lyrics strongly affirm the mortality of human life. The total earthliness proclaimed in the above lines emphasizes that Hashmi is absolutely lost with the loss of his material life and that is why we are mourning him.
Whereas a religious worldview would diminish the importance of death by making the believer find consolation in the heavenly glory of eternity, secular reason points to the abruptness of death, the irrevocable absence opened by the loss of an irreplaceable finite life. Whereas religion considers death to be a transitional stage in the union towards god, secular reason considers death to be a closure.
If one truly believed in the moral superiority of afterlife, the death of a finite individual won’t invite mourning. Secular reason, by conceding the density of death, allows us to come to terms with its emotional weight.
To use the words of the Swedish philosopher Martin Hagglund, the comradely love for Hashmi would mean "that I ought to be utterly bereaved in the face of… [his] death. This sense of responsibility is intelligible only from the standpoint of secular faith, since it is devoted to a life that is recognized as mortal and places demands on us precisely because it is mortal.”
By registering the death of Hashmi without taking any recourse to theological abstractions, we maintain that he ought to live on in our memory and that we ought to suffer the pain of mourning his death. Such pain is possible only when we acknowledge that the dead person is an existentially unrepeatable singularity who can be honored not through theological immortalization but through worldly fidelity. This fidelity reminds us that the value of the dead depends upon the active efforts of the living, not upon the automatic guarantees of eternality pronounced by God.
When we consign Hashmi to a faraway religious abode, we implicitly refuse to be responsible for the normative ideal that he embodied. Believing in the existence of eternity, we don’t truly mourn his experiences. Instead of commemorating his particular existence, we make him just another abstract soul journeying towards a God. Furthermore, we delude ourselves into believing that God is taking care of him, that his death has been redeemed by the promise of eternity.
Secular reason asks us to own our responsibility for the kind of service we are rendering to the dead
“A secular consolation,” writes Hagglund, “does not have to redeem death. On the contrary, it can admit that there is an irredeemable loss at the heart of what happened. A secular consolation can thus focus on the social commitments that sustain our mourning, recognizing the love that is intrinsic to grief, extending it to care for others, and motivating us to try to prevent similar tragedies from taking place”.
When we come to realize that Hashmi’s death can’t be undone, that there is no heaven that has given some salvific dignity to his gruesome killing, the task of dignifying his death through political remembrance comes down to us. Rather than delegating this task to divine or karmic laws, secular reason asks us to own our responsibility for the kind of service we are rendering to the dead.
Indeed, eternal life is an immobilizing force. In such a theological vision, nothing happens since everything is decided by God-given permanency. An eternal heaven is completely sealed from unpredictability and vulnerability, which means that we don’t have any necessity and/or motivation to pursue any course of action.
When the memory of the dead, as we have seen, is proclaimed to be etched in the dwelling of God, the living don’t feel any need to mourn the deceased person. Since everything is eternal, impervious to the vagaries of temporality, the actions of human beings don’t carry any rationale – what counts is the divine power of God. Thus, immortality is death.
In opposition to this, secular reason foregrounds how any existential project has to be precarious: “That it not be given as a fact but must be upheld by conviction and fidelity. You have to believe in the value of the project, but you also have to believe that the project may cease to be and needs to be sustained.”
Whereas religion uses the banner of immortality to declare that death doesn’t matter, secular reason says that death does matter, that the finitude and fragility of life is what provides the urgency for taking actions. What motivates “me to keep faith with a person, a project, or a principle is my apprehension that it can be lost or compromised and thereby requires my fidelity.”
Hence, confident in the “triumph of life,” secular reason does not glorify immortality. On the contrary, “if there’s a heaven somewhere,” it wants to “bring it to earth”.
---
*Studying at Aligarh Muslim University

Comments

TRENDING

Gujarat's high profile GIFT city 'fails to attract' funds, India's FinTech investment dips

By Rajiv Shah  While the Narendra Modi government may have gone out of the way to promote the Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City), sought to be developed as India’s formidable financial technology hub off the state capital Gandhinagar, just 20 km from Ahmedabad, a recent report , prepared by Tracxn Technologies suggests that neither of the two cities figure in the list of top FinTech funding receiving centres.

A Hindu alternative to Valentine's Day? 'Shiv-Parvati was first love marriage in Universe'

By Rajiv Shah*   The other day, I was searching on Google a quote on Maha Shivratri which I wanted to send to someone, a confirmed Shiv Bhakt, quite close to me -- with an underlying message to act positively instead of being negative. On top of the search, I chanced upon an article in, imagine!, a Nashik Corporation site which offered me something very unusual. 

Why Ramdev, vaccine producing pharma companies and government are all at fault

By Colin Gonsalves*  It was perhaps Ramdev’s closeness to government which made him over-confident. According to reports he promoted a cure for Covid, thus directly contravening various provisions of The Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act, 1954. Persons convicted of such offences may not get away with a mere apology and would suffer imprisonment.

Malayalam movie Aadujeevitham: Unrealistic, disservice to pastoralists

By Rosamma Thomas*  The Malayalam movie 'Aadujeevitham' (Goat Life), currently screening in movie theatres in Kerala, has received positive reviews and was featured also on the website of the British Broadcasting Corporation. The story is based on a 2008 novel by Benyamin, and relates the real-life story of a job-seeker from Kerala tricked into working in slave conditions in a goat farm in Saudi Arabia.

Decade long Modi rule 'undermines' people's welfare and democracy

By Ram Puniyani*  Modi has many ploys up his sleeves when it comes to propaganda. On one hand he is turning many a pronouncements of Congress in the communal direction, on the other he is claiming that whatever has been achieved during last ten years of his rule is phenomenal, but it is still a ‘trailer’ and the bigger things are in the offing as he claims to be coming to power yet again in 2024. While his admirers are ga ga about his achievements, the truth lies somewhere else.

Belgian report alleges MNC Etex responsible for asbestos pollution in Madhya Pradesh town Kymore: COP's Geneva meet

By Our Representative A comprehensive Belgian report has held MNC Etex , into construction business and one of the richest, responsible for asbestos pollution in Kymore, an industrial town in in Katni district of Madhya Pradesh. The report provides evidence from the ground on how Kymore’s dust even today is “annoying… it creeps into your clothes, you have to cough it”, saying “It can be deadly.”

Plagued by opportunism, adventurism, tailism, Left 'doesn't matter' in India

By Harsh Thakor*  2024 elections are starting when India appears to be on the verge of turning proto-fascist. The Hindutva saffron brigade has penetrated in every sphere of Indian life, every social order, destroying and undermining the very fabric of the Constitution.

Can universal basic income help usher in sustainable egalitarianism in India?

By Prof RR Prasad*  The ongoing debate on application of Article 39(b) in the Supreme Court on redistribution of community material resources to subserve common good and for ushering in an egalitarian society has opened new vistas wherein possible available alternative solutions could be explored.

Ahmedabad's Muslim ghetto voters 'denied' right to exercise franchise?

By Tanushree Gangopadhyay*  Sections of Gujarat Muslims, with a population of 10 per cent of the State, have been allegedly denied their rights to exercise their franchise in the Juhapura area of Ahmedabad.

Press freedom? 28 journalists killed since 2014, nine currently in jail

By Kirity Roy*  On the eve of the Press Freedom Day on 3rd of May, the Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha (MASUM) shared its anxiety with the broader civil society platforms as the situation of freedom of any form of expression became grimmer in India day by day. This day was intended to raise awareness on the importance of freedom of press and to pay tribute to pressmen who lost their lives in the line of duty.