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Indian Muslims 'worried' after Mumbai attacks
Indian Muslims are trying to distance themselves from extremists who carried out the Mumbai attacks (AAP)
Mumbai's Muslims are doing all they can to dissociate themselves from last week's attacks.
From peace marches to calls for a toned-down religious celebration, Mumbai's Muslims are doing all they can to dissociate themselves from last week's attacks carried out in the name of Islam.
Even though dozens of the 172 dead were Muslim, community leaders have expressed concerns that Hindu nationalists could exploit the attacks either for political gain -- or could target Muslims directly.
The city's Muslims, who make up about 15 per cent of Mumbai's estimated 19-million-strong population, were to take to the streets after Friday prayers in a peace march.
Celebrations may be affected
Leading figures in the community have called for Eid al-Adha celebrations to be limited only to those rituals that are strictly necessary.
Eid-al-Adha commemorates the prophet Ibrahim's obedience to God through his willingness to sacrifice his son and is marked by the ritual slaughter of animals.
A number of Islamic organisations are also categorically refusing to have those responsible for the deadly attacks buried on Indian soil.
"An Indian Muslim is as much worried, shocked or disturbed as his neighbour," said Bollywood scriptwriter Javed Akhtar, a self-declared atheist who nonetheless still considers himself part of the Muslim community.
"In a perfect world it would not be necessary to say it. The attackers are pretending to hold the flag of Islam and acting in the name of 'jihad' (holy struggle).
"Anybody who is a Muslim has to distance him or herself who are giving this diabolic face of Islam."
'Unfounded' accusations
Religious leader Moulana Mustaqueem A. Azmi said that Indian Muslims "have been saying for the last five or six years that they have nothing to do with this but are struggling to defend themselves from accusations against them."
Azmi, the secretary of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Maharashtra, the body of Islamic scholars in Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, said that Muslim groups were weaker in India than those representing the majority Hindus.
But Akhtar is against the idea that Islam in India should have a united voice.
"The very concept that Muslims should have a leadership, that Hindus should have a leadership, that Christians should have a leadership, would divide India along religious lines," he said.
'Conspiracy'
For Moulana Mustaqueem A. Azmi, the Mumbai attacks smacked of a conspiracy between the Israeli secret service, Mossad, and the right-wing Hindu nationalist organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
"All the attacks in India in recent years, wherever they've happened, have been blamed on Muslims but that's changing and they don't like it," he added, referring to two fatal bombings in Maharashtra and neighbouring Gujarat state.
Both blasts in September happened in predominantly Muslim areas, including outside a mosque, and have since been blamed on Hindu extremists, allegedly outraged by a string of attacks directed against middle-class Hindus.
Right-wing Hindu groups, which have a bedrock of support in Mumbai and the state, have not spoken out publicly against Muslims in the wake of the attacks.
Muslim leaders hope it stays that way and there is no repeat of the deadly communal violence between Hindus and Muslims in 1992-93, sparked by the razing of a mosque in north India and retaliatory attacks in Gujarat.
"Political parties that make statements likely to create divisions among religious lines should be banned," said Mohammed Mansoor Ali Qadami, head of the powerful All India Sunni Jamiat-ul-Ulema coalition, clearly referring to Hindu nationalists.
On Tuesday, the coalition told a meeting of 50 Islamic organisations that political parties should not try to take advantage of the tragedy as general elections approach next year.
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