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Perspective
Fortunately or unfortunately a similar tendency does not exist in the case of History. Most of the students of History look only for the obvious conclusion. We cannot think of a better example of this than the case of Hitler and his infamous Nazism. It is almost certain that Hitler will always remain in history, stamped as an unscrupulous dictator who killed millions of people on the basis of his wrong beliefs and ideology. Even his most sympathetic biographers will not dare to look closer at the reasons for an ordinary Hitler turning into an extra-ordinary villain in his last few years. Historians and biographers will always tend to conclude with the obvious reason of Hitler being a born villain. There are leaders who have caused the death of more people than Hitler. What makes Hitler utterly hopeless is because he turned against one of the most powerful communities in the world. The displaced Jewish community had settled in many parts of the world and Germany happened to be one of their abodes. What they did and how they behaved in Germany was totally different from how they lived in India. The case of Jews and Parsis in India is an all time favourite model for religious minorities anywhere in the world. We are still proud about India being one of the very few places where none of them were ever persecuted. But it was not the case in Germany before the advent of Hitler. The richer and more powerful among the minority community were aggressively into the risky business of financing.
It is
easy money and accumulation of wealth through easier means always leads
to resentment. The situation is all the more risky if such resentment is
building up within a majority community against a minority of migrants.
How migration, encroachment and illegitimate accumulation of wealth can
invite hatred towards communities is something our historians have
always over looked. In the absence of such historical warnings, many
such communities are busy digging their own graves in several parts of
the world.
Encroachments are not always limited to land alone. Desire for anything
that is outside the realm of legitimacy is greed and attempting to get
them by any means is encroachment. In India we can see this happening in
many fields such as education, business, health services etc., etc.
There is an organised attempt by organised communities to establish
monopoly status in some of these key areas with an agenda to dominate
others. The garb of social service for such shady attempts is an age old
technique introduced by the missionaries in Africa and Asia. It was no
doubt successful for a long time but not any more. The net effect of
such dubious social service is the spread of same disease among other
communities as well. Service with strings attached is no more paying for
the monopolisers of charity. They are beginning to realise that sowing
hatred will only result in harvest of more hatred. June 2, 2007 |
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