The Brainwashed Shooters, India’s Anders Breiviks (My Piece in National Herald)
DHIRAJ SINGH
AT THIS YEAR'S JAIPUR LITERATURE FESTIVAL—the first of our
new decade—one of the author-conversations that really pulled me was with Åsne Seierstad. Åsne was talking about her exhaustive biography of Anders
Breivik, the far-right Norwegian terrorist who in 2011 killed 77 people. Most
of these were teenage students at a summer camp on the island of Utoya. Breivik
was, among other things, a violent Islamophobe who felt his country had given
shelter to far too many Muslims for far too long. In her book ‘One Of Us: The Story of a Massacre in
Norway—and Its Aftermath’ Åsne chronicles Breivik’s life from birth till he
was convicted and sentenced to 21 years in jail, the maximum sentence under
Norwegian law.
In her conversation with fellow-author and journalist Christina
Lamb, Åsne spoke about how she had pieced together the life of Anders Breivik
from conversations with his friends, eyewitnesses, his own letters and (often
bombastic) writings and the proceedings of his case in court. Breivik had
refused to give her an interview but since the incident had exploded into the
headlines—many called it Norway’s 9/11—details about his life had for months
been discussed threadbare in the press.
As I sat listening to Åsne on a warmish Republic Day
afternoon thinking how far removed we were from this kind of one-man violence, a
thought began to rise in my mind: what if this happens here? The
socio-political conditions were anyway ripe, as millions of Indians have been successfully
brainwashed by the narrative of the extreme right. However, the thought remained
just that. We had lynchings, yes but Breivik-style shootings we had not known
in India where a member of the majority community became so radicalized so as
to pick up the gun and shoot people. Four days later I was proved wrong when a
lone gunman attacked protesting students outside Jamia University. Two days
later another lone shooter came to Shaheen Bagh threatening protesters there.
At this point Åsne’s book on the Norwegian killer began to make more sense because
now we had our own Breiviks who were not only geared up to fight alone but were
also tacitly supported by the administration.
At one point in her conversation at JLF, the author made a
comparison between Breivik and one of his victims. A teenage boy who was his
killer’s exact opposite. He was, right from the beginning, a boy much-loved by
his parents and friends. He was a student volunteer at an immigrants’ centre where
he helped new arrivals adjust to their new surroundings. During Breivik’s
hour-long massacre at the island this boy was one of the few who did not panic
and thus helped others find safety from the barrage of bullets. Tragically he
was shot in the back while he was carting others off to safety.
Breivik on the
other hand was the product of a broken home. Growing up with a mother who was indifferent
to his needs. He would soon develop into a bully who vented his frustration on
younger kids and their pets. Since it was a summer camp of the socialist Norwegian
Labour Party most of the kids there came from families that were members or supporters
of the Party. It was also a Party much-hated by Breivik and others in the
far-right. Survivors tell of how Breivik shouted: “I will kill you all,
Marxists!” as he methodically hunted and shot down students at the camp. The
shooter at Jamia shouted: “Ye lo azaadi
(take this freedom),” as he waved his gun at a crowd of student protesters. The
shooter at Shaheen Bagh shouted: “Sirf
Hinduon ki chalegi (only Hindus will rule here)”. Both the young men had
read up enough on Hindutva literature to echo thoughts that had often been
repeated from the writings of its founders such as Golwalkar and Savarkar.
Breivik-style attacks as we in India are gradually coming to
realize are not fueled by ignorance but by a great deal of reflection on the
writings of Hindutva’s earliest proponents and on the millions of fake text and
video forwards on Whatsapp. Added to that are speeches of leaders of the ruling
BJP that swing between a spectrum of strategic lies and toxic vilification. Like
Breivik the Jamia shooter of January 30 had been active on the Internet, following
extreme Hindutva sites that called for avenging of ‘Muslim excesses’. The
Shaheen Bagh shooter had tried and tested many political parties until he
comfortably settled in with the current BJP’s warped ideas of a Muslim
overreach.
During the talk Åsne pointed out how it was important to
name a person like Breivik especially in the post-attack scenario when many had
begun to ‘Voldemortize’ him by referring to him as ‘that man’ or ‘him who shall
not be named’. Her book, she said, was her way of creating a cautionary tale of
not just one dangerous individual but also of a society that willy-nilly led
him to be that way.
Dhiraj Singh is a well-known journalist, writer, TV personality and artist who has
shown his abstract paintings and X-Ray works in India and abroad. More about
him can be found at www.dhirajsingh.co.in
National Herald link is HERE
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