Jai Shri Ram[a] (
IAST: Jaya Śrī Rāma) is an expression in
Indic languages, translating as "Glory to Lord
Rama" or "Victory to Lord Rama".[6] The proclamation has been used by Hindus as a symbol of adhering to
Hindufaith,[7] or for projection of varied faith-centered emotions.[8][9][10]
The expression was used by the Indian
Hindu nationalist organisations
Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP),
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and their allies, which embraced the slogan in the late 20th century as a tool for increasing the visibility of
Hinduism in public spaces, before going on to use it as a
battle cry. The slogan has since been employed in connection with the perpetration of
communal violence against people of other faiths.[11][24]
Meaning
Jai Shri Ram means "hail Lord Ram" or "victory to Lord Ram".[6] Ram (or Rama) is a major deity in Hinduism.[25]
Antecedents
Religious and social
"Jaya Sri Ram", along with "Jaya Sita Ram", "Jaya Ram" and "Sita Ram", were used as mutual salutations by
Ramanandi ascetics (called Bairagis).[26][27]
"Ram Ram", "Jai Ram ji ki" and "
Jai Siya Ram" have been noted as common salutations in the Hindi heartland (
Sita or Siya is the name of Rama's consort).[28][6][29]
Photojournalist Prashant Panjiar wrote about how in the city
Ayodhya female pilgrims always chant "
Sita-Ram-Sita-Ram", while the older male pilgrims prefer not to use Rama's name at all. The traditional usage of "Jai" in a slogan was with "Siyavar Ramchandraji ki jai" ("Victory to Sita's husband Rama").[29]
Rama symbolism
The worship of Rama increased significantly in the 12th century, following the invasions of Muslim Turks.[22] The Ramayana became widely popular in the 16th century. It is argued that the story of Rama offers a "very powerful imaginative formulation of the divine king as the only being capable of combating evil".[30] The concept of Ramrajya, "the rule of Ram", was used by
Gandhi to describe the ideal country free from the British.[22][31]
The most widely known political use of Ram began with
Baba Ram Chandra's peasant movement in
Awadh in the 1920s. He encouraged the use of "Sita-Ram" as opposed to the then widely used "Salaam" as a greeting, since the latter implied social inferiority. "Sita-Ram" soon became a rallying cry.[32]
The slogans raised... were never about Ram as an individual, let alone a warrior. They were about the duo: Bol Siyavar or Siyapat Ramchandra ki jai [victory to Ram, Sita’s husband].
1980s and forward
In the late 1980s, the slogan "Jai Shri Ram" was popularised by
Ramanand Sagar's television series Ramayan, where it was used by
Hanuman and the Vaanar Sena (
monkey army) as a war cry when they fought the demon army of
Ravan in order to free Sita.[33] Sagar himself acknowledged his contribution, claiming, "College boys don't say 'Hi' any more, they say 'Jai Shri Ram ki' 'Long live Shri Ram'."[34]
The Hindu nationalist organisation
Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and its militant wing
Bajrang Dal, carried out a campaign saying "Ram-Ram Chhodo, Jai Shri Ram Bolo" ("Stop saying Ram-Ram, Say Jai Shri Ram").[35]
During
L. K. Advani's rath yatra to Ayodhya in 1989, the customary slogan Jai Siya Ram was replaced by "Jai Shri Ram".[36]
The VHP,
Bharatiya Janata Party and their
Sangh Parivar allies used it extensively in their Ayodhya
Ram Janmabhoomi movement.[33][37] Volunteers at Ayodhya at the time would write the slogan on their skin, using their own blood as ink to signify their devotion. The organizations also distributed a cassette named as Jai Shri Ram, containing songs like "Ram ji ki sena chali" (
transl. the army of Rama is on the move) and "Aya samay jawano jago" (
transl. the time has come for the martial youth to arise). All the songs in the cassette were set to the tunes of popular
Bollywood songs.[38]Kar sevaks, led by the Sangh Parivar allies, chanted the slogan of "Jai Shri Ram" when laying a foundation east of the
Babri Masjid in August 1992.[39]
Simultaneously the Rama pictography was changed to projecting a heroic, muscular, and angry Rama.[35][40][41] A muscular Rama, clad in saffron, was shown towering over an imaginary Ram temple in Ayodhya.[42] These images were labelled with the "Jai Shri Ram" slogan (written in the
Devnagari script of Hindi).[43]
A 1995 essay published in Manushi, a journal edited by academic
Madhu Kishwar, described how the Sangh Parivar's usage of "Jai Shri Ram", as opposed to "Sita-Ram", lies in the fact that their violent ideas had "no use for a non-macho Ram."[22] This also mobilised more people politically, since it was patriarchal. Further, the movement was exclusively associated with Ram's birth, which had occurred many years before his marriage to Sita.[44]
It is a "
Blut und Boden" (blood and soil) movement which aims to purify Bharat (the Motherland) from foreign elements.... The damage that the nation sustained is, to a significant extent, the consequence of the gentleness and indulgence that the people showed in the face of the repressive foreigners. The softness and femininity that came to be dominant in Hinduism, a change that was wrought by the cunning machinations of the enemy, now must make place for the original, masculine, powerful Hindu ethos. This explains the warlike, extremely aggressive character of the appeal for a national revival launched by the advocates of Hindutva. An interesting aside here is that the greeting "
Jai Siya Ram" has been transformed into the battle cry "Jai Shri Ram" ("Long live Lord Ram"). The Hindu supreme god has assumed the form of a macho general. In the original meaning, "Siya Ram" had been a popular greeting of welcome in the countryside since time immemorial... The Hindu fanatics have now also banished her from the popular greeting by changing Siya to "Shri" (Lord), thereby suppressing the feminine element in favour of masculine virility and assertiveness.
—
Jan Breman, "Ghettoization and Communal Politics: The Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion in the Hindutva Landscape", Institutions and Inequalities: Essays in Honour of Andre Beteille
An Indian political analyst decried the political use of the slogan in 2019, and said that "it now seems to have official sanction."[46] In December 2022,
Congress leader
Rahul Gandhi while giving a speech in Madhya Pradesh attacked
BJP and
RSS by raising the question "Why they always chants "Jai Shri Ram" and not "Jai Siya Ram".[47][48] Reacting to his question, a minister in Madhya Pradesh and a senior BJP leader
Narottam Mishra replied "I think Rahul Gandhi's knowledge is only limited to children’s rhyme ‘Baa Baa Black Sheep', the name of Ram is prefixed with 'Shri' which is also used for Lord Vishnu's wife Lakshmi and Sita Ji".[48] The BJP's
Amit Malviya also reacted to Rahul Gandhi's attack by posting a video in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi started his Ram Mandir ceremony speech with "Jai Siya Ram".[47][49]
The Wire said in 2023 that "We are yet to see any condemnation of the 'misuse' of the sacred name Ram by any religious leader or body."[50]
Usage
The BJP advocates using Jai Shri Ram as a greeting.[51]
In 1992, during riots and the
demolition of the Babri Masjid, the same slogan was raised.[54][55] Former
BBC Bureau Chief
Mark Tully, who was present at the site of the Masjid on 6 December, recalls the usage of the slogan "Jai Shri Rama!" by the Hindu crowds rushing towards the mosque.[5]
In January 1999, the slogan was heard again when Australian
missionary doctor
Graham Staines was burned alive with his two children in Manoharpur,
Orissa.[15]
In the events leading up to the
Godhra train burning of February 2002, supporters of the Gujarat VHP and its affiliated organisations like the
Bajrang Dal forced Muslims to chant "Jai Shri Ram" on their journey to Ayodhya,[56] and on their return journey, they did the same at "every other station", including at
Godhra. Both journeys were taken in the
Sabarmati Express for the ceremony at the Ram Janmabhoomi.[57][58] During the
2002 Gujarat riots that followed, the slogan was used in a leaflet distributed by the VHP to encourage Hindus to boycott Muslim businesses.[59]
"Jai Shri Ram" was also chanted by the mob responsible for the
Gulbarg Society Massacre.
Ehsan Jafri, a former Member of Parliament from Ahmedabad, was forced to chant the slogan before he was brutally murdered during said massacre.[60]
The slogan was also heard from the mob during the
Naroda Patiya massacre.[61] People living in mixed-religion neighborhoods were forced to put up Jai Shri Ram posters and wear armbands to ward off the rioters.[62]
Tabrez Ansari was forced by a mob to chant "Jai Shree Ram" and "Jai Hanuman" during
his lynching.[4]
During the
2020 Delhi riots, rioters were reported to have kept chanting "Jai Shri Ram" while beating their victims and whenever a building went up in flames.[64][65][66] The police were also found to join in the chant while siding with the Hindu mobs. The Muslims were told Hindustan me rehna hoga, Jai Shri Ram kehna hoga (
transl. "If you want to stay in India, you will have to chant Jai Shri Ram").[67] Indian journalist
Rana Ayyub, writing in Time, commented that the slogan had become a "racist
dog whistle" against Muslims during the riots.[68]
After the
BJP's victory in the
2022 Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, a 25 year old Muslim man, Babar Ali from UP's Kushinagar district was lynched and killed by the members of his own community for supporting BJP. His family members said that Babar was returning from his shop when he chanted ‘Jai Shri Ram’ and was attacked by some local Muslims.[69][70]
On 15 April 2023, while
Atiq Ahmed was being escorted for a court-mandated medical checkup in
Prayagraj, a pistol was fired at Ahmed and his brother's head. Both Atiq and his brother Ashraf Ahmed were killed in the shootout, which was filmed and broadcast live. After shooting attackers started chanting 'Jai Shri Ram' as they were being apprehended.[71][72]
There have been some reports of violent incidents being associated with the slogan, in which the allegations were later found to be false.[78] In June 2019, a group of 49 artists, academics and intellectuals wrote a letter to
Prime MinisterNarendra Modi, requesting him to put a stop "to the name of Ram being defiled" as a war cry. They demanded that strict action be taken against using the slogan for violent purposes.[79]
Politics
In June 2019, the slogan was used to heckle Muslim
MPs as they proceeded to take their oath in the
17th Lok Sabha.[80] In July that year,
Nobel laureateAmartya Sen stated in a speech that the slogan was "not associated with the Bengali culture",[81] leading to some unknown groups publishing his statement on billboards in
Kolkata.[82] The slogan has also been used to heckle
West BengalChief MinisterMamata Banerjee on multiple occasions, triggering angry reactions from her.[82][83][46]
The slogan was used by lawyers to celebrate the
2019 Supreme Court decision to allow a Ram temple to be built on the disputed Ayodhya site where a mob had demolished the Babri Masjid mosque in 1992.[84] In August 2020, following the ground-breaking ceremony of the
Ram Temple, Ayodhya, the slogan was used as a chant in celebrations in New York.[85]
It is used as a salutation in the 2015 film Bajrangi Bhaijaan. The director states that he grew up hearing "Jai Shri Ram" as a benevolent expression, "rooted in our culture", but that the words have become aggressive.[28] A 2017
Bhojpuri film, Pakistan Me Jai Shri Ram depicts the hero as a devotee of Ram who enters Pakistan and kills terrorists while chanting the slogan.[44] Stickers stating Hello nahīṃ, bolo Jaya Śrī Rāma (
transl. "Don't say hello but say Victory to Rama") became popular on the vehicles and telephones of people running small businesses.[38] A 2018 song, "Hindu Blood Hit", features
psychedelic repetitions of the slogan and goes on to warn Indian Muslims that their time is up.[87] Another song from 2017, "Jai Shree Ram DJ Vicky Mix", hopes for a time in the future in which "there will continue to be a Kashmir but no Pakistan".[7] The song "Jai Shree Ram" is part of the film music in the 2022 action-adventure Ram Setu.[88][89] The 2023 film Adipurush had a song with the same name.[90]
In 2022, Jujaru Nagaraju, a handloom weaver in Andhra Pradesh weaved a 60 metre long silk sari with "Jai Sri Ram" written over 30 000 times in 13 Indian languages.[91]
See also
Deus vult (God wills it), Christian motto and battle cry
^
abEngineer, Asghar Ali (14 November 1992). "Sitamarhi on Fire". Economic and Political Weekly. 27 (46): 2462–2464.
ISSN0012-9976.
JSTOR4399118.
Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021 – via
JSTOR. Kalam Husain, an eyewitness told us that a mob consisting of brahmins, bhumihars, rajputs, kurmis and chamars (SC) looted and burnt all the houses of 150 Muslims belonging to 36 families living in Ashogi. They were shouting slogan 'Jai Sri Ram'.
^Dasgupta, Amlan (2006). Bakhle, Janaki (ed.). "Rhythm and Rivalry". Economic and Political Weekly. 41 (36): 3861–3863.
ISSN0012-9976.
JSTOR4418675.
^"In India, hate-filled songs are a weapon to target Muslims". AP News. 22 April 2022. Similar songs that called for Hindus to kill those who do not chant "Jai Shri Ram!" or "Hail Lord Ram," a slogan that has become a battle cry for Hindu nationalists...
^Jaffrelot, Christophe (4 January 2003).
"Communal Riots in Gujarat: The State at Risk?"(PDF). Heidelberg Papers in South Asian and Comparative Politics (17).
Heidelberg University: 3.
doi:
10.11588/heidok.00004127.
ISSN1617-5069.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 4 December 2013. Retrieved 16 February 2021. They chanted Hindu nationalist songs and slogans throughout the entire voyage, all the while harassing Muslim passengers. One family was even made to get off the train for refusing to utter the kar sevaks' war cry: "Jai Shri Ram!" (Glory to Lord Ram!). More abuse occurred at the stop in Godhra: a Muslim shopkeeper was also ordered to shout "Jai Shri Ram!" He refused, and was assaulted until the kar sevaks turned on a Muslim woman with her two daughters.
^Breman, Jan (17 April 1993). "Anti-Muslim Pogrom in Surat". Economic and Political Weekly. 28 (16): 737–741.
ISSN0012-9976.
JSTOR4399608.
Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021 – via
JSTOR. Through a hole in the wall he had seen how adults and children were beaten and kicked to death. The hunters forced their catch to shout 'Jai Shri Ram'. "I can't hear you. Louder, say it louder...". "Oh, merciful Allah, Jai Shri Ram". And then came the last kick, final cut or was the body, soaked with petrol, set alight.
^Sarkar, Sumit (30 January 1993).
"The Fascism of the Sangh Parivar". Economic and Political Weekly. 28 (5): 163–167.
ISSN0012-9976.
JSTOR4399339.
Archived from the original on 7 December 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021 – via
Academia.edu. The Bajrang Dal thugs often openly declare that anyone who criticises the destruction of the Babri Masjid will have to go to Pakistan, while in the selectively curfew-bound Muslim pockets of Seelampur in east Delhi, the police had rounded up all Muslim men in some areas, beaten them up unless they agreed to say Jai Shri Ram, and even pulled out the beard of a Muslim gentleman.
^Ghassem-Fachandi, Parvis (1 August 2009). "Bandh in Ahmedabad". Violence: Ethnographic Encounters.
Berg.
ISBN978-1-84788-418-3.
Archived from the original on 14 November 2020. Retrieved 16 February 2021. If mobs successfully entered Muslim compounds, they killed the men, raped the women before killing them and burned the residences to the ground. Surviving eyewitnesses have reported widely that Muslim victims were made to speak Jai Shri Ram ("Hail Lord Ram") and Vande Mataram ("Hail to the Mother") before being killed.
^Salam, Ziya Us (16 August 2019).
""Jai Shri Ram": The new battle cry". Frontline.
Archived from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021. Unlike his first innings, when the cow was used as a political animal to lynch unarmed Muslim and Dalit men, this time Muslim, Dalit and even Christian men have been assaulted and forced to chant "Jai Shri Ram". From Jharkhand to Assam, from Mumbai to Delhi, neither small-town India nor the big metropolises are safe from these lynch mobs.
^"Tensions That Roiled English City Have Roots in India". nytimes com.
Archived from the original on 4 October 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2022. "[On 17 September 2022] more than 300 people gathered for an unplanned demonstration [in Leicester, England] ... Some chanted, 'Jai Shri Ram'"
^Jain 2007, pp. 320–321: "... a figure that began to appear in Indian bazaar prints in the late 1980s in confluence with the Hindu nationalist Ramjanmabhumi movement: that of the god Ram as a muscular, aggressive, dynamic warrior.".
^Pinney 2004, p. 204: "The angry Rama image, for instance, was first produced by the Vishva Hindu Parishad in the late 1980s and, following the publication by S. S. Brijbasi of a commissioned copy by the Bombay artist Ved Prakash and then by Rajan Musle, several other companies produced similar images.".
^"Janmorcha Report".
Crime Against Humanity(PDF) (Report). Vol. 1. Concerned Citizens Tribunal - Gujarat 2002. p. 253.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 7 September 2020. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
^"What's Next for India's Muslims After Delhi Riots?". Time. 3 March 2020. Whenever a building went up in flames, mobs responded with loud chants of "Jai Shri Ram" ("Victory to Lord Ram" — a deity who has become an icon to Hindu nationalists).
^Ghosh, Shohini (2000). "Hum Aapke Hain Koun...!: Pluralizing Pleasures of Viewership". Social Scientist. 28 (3/4): 85.
doi:
10.2307/3518192.
ISSN0970-0293.
JSTOR3518192. The characters enter and exit the house by first paying respects to the mandir whose walls are inscribed with "Jai Shri Ram"... This is undoubtedly a 'feelgood' scenario for the Sangh Parivar.