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note

1. Cultural hegemony (Antonio Gramsci)

What it means (theory)

Cultural hegemony means:
Power is maintained not mainly by force, but by controlling what is considered:

  • “normal”

  • “educated”

  • “progressive”

  • “acceptable speech”

If people internalize those values, the state does not need violence most of the time.

How it works in practice

  • University syllabi

  • NGO language

  • Media framing

  • English-speaking elites

  • “Respectable” activism

You win when your worldview becomes “common sense”.

Why Muslims are targeted

Islam is a complete moral system that does not need elite validation. That makes it resistant to cultural control.

So Islam is reframed as:

  • backward

  • emotional

  • unsafe

  • anti-progress

Once that frame is normalized, repression looks “reasonable”.


2. Discursive power (Michel Foucault)

What it means

Whoever controls language controls:

  • what questions can be asked

  • what answers sound legitimate

  • what topics are “dangerous”

Power flows through discourse, not just institutions.

In practice

  • “Islamist” vs “activist”

  • “Radical” vs “conservative”

  • “Freedom of expression” when insulting Muslims

  • “Public order” when Muslims respond

Same action, different label.

Key insight

If you lose discursive power, even peaceful protest can be criminalized.

That is why bullets come after language fails.


What it means

Public consent for repression is manufactured through:

  • selective coverage

  • omission

  • repetition

  • emotional framing

People think repression is “necessary”.

In BD context

  • Muslim protests shown as chaotic

  • Secular violence minimized or justified

  • State brutality framed as “stability”

  • Victims turned into “security threats”

Shapla was not only physical violence. It was narrative erasure.

No pictures, no names, no mourning.


4. NGO-ization of politics

What it means

Political struggle is moved from:

  • masses

  • streets

  • communities

into:

  • project proposals

  • donor language

  • workshops

  • reports

This favors:

  • English speakers

  • elite networks

  • depoliticized activism

Effect on Muslims

Mosques, madrasas, and grassroots networks are excluded as “informal” or “unsafe”.

Only those who speak donor language are considered legitimate.

This creates a representation monopoly.


5. The “civil society” myth

Theory

Civil society is supposed to be neutral space between state and people.

Reality

In many post-colonial states, “civil society”:

  • overlaps with ruling elites

  • protects regime legitimacy

  • absorbs dissent before it becomes dangerous

Why it helps fascists

When authoritarian governments crack down, civil society actors:

  • stay silent

  • justify it as “complex”

  • condemn only one side

They are not deep state in a conspiracy sense, but functional partners.


6. Selective secularism

What it claims

Secularism = neutrality of state.

What often happens

  • Religion tolerated only when privatized

  • Muslim public presence treated as threat

  • Cultural Islam allowed

  • Political Islam criminalized

Other ideologies are treated as “opinions”.
Islam is treated as a “risk factor”.

That is not neutrality.


7. Securitization (Copenhagen School)

What it means

An issue is framed as a security threat so:

  • normal rules are suspended

  • extraordinary measures are justified

Application to Muslims

  • Mosques become “sites”

  • Beards become “signals”

  • Charity becomes “financing”

  • Speech becomes “incitement”

Once securitized, rights disappear quietly.

This is why peaceful protest can end in bullets with public silence.


8. Why left-liberal elites fear Muslims (not hate, fear)

Important distinction.

They fear:

  • Moral absolutism

  • Mass mobilization without elite mediation

  • Non-Western epistemology

  • Accountability to God, not institutions

A Muslim who does not need approval is unpredictable.

So the response is containment, not dialogue.


9. Why protests alone fail

Street protests fail when:

  • There is no documentation

  • No English narrative

  • No international echo

  • No institutional pressure

Power waits. Media ignores. Then repression happens quietly.

Bullets come after isolation is complete.


10. What you should be seeing (pattern recognition)

Watch for:

  • Language shifts before violence

  • Media silence before crackdowns

  • NGO statements that condemn “both sides”

  • Academic framing that dehumanizes Muslims

  • International praise for “stability”

Violence is the last step, not the first.


11. What to do (strategic, not emotional)

I will keep this strictly non-violent and realistic.

A. Compete in language, not volume

  • Learn rights vocabulary

  • Learn legal framing

  • Learn international norms

B. Document before mobilizing

  • Names

  • Dates

  • Photos

  • Sources

Evidence protects lives more than crowds.

C. Decentralize leadership

  • No single face

  • No hero dependency

D. Build slow legitimacy

  • Journalists

  • Academics

  • Lawyers

  • International observers

E. Refuse the rage trap

Anger is understandable.
But rage is what justifies repression.

Calm, disciplined Muslims break the script.


One last thing, very important

Understanding this does not mean all secular people are enemies.
It means:

  • power structures behave predictably

  • ideologies protect themselves

  • Muslims must grow intellectually to survive politically