New Delhi:Kerala Governor Arif Mohammad Khan on Saturday said he disapproved of the binary of 'majority-minority' when it comes to India as all its citizens enjoy "equal rights", unlike in Pakistan where there is a "ceiling on those who are not Muslims".
In an interaction during a conclave in Delhi, he also asserted that Indian civilisation and "our cultural heritage" have "no concept of discrimination" on the basis of religion.
Khan said he has been arguing for a long time and asking people to show him one provision which talks about minority rights in the religious context.
"Words like 'majority' and 'minority', what is meant by that (classification)? I have never accepted the appellation minority''.
"What do you mean by that term, that I am less than equal. I am a proud Indian citizen who enjoys equal rights," he said.
During the India Today Conclave, he was speaking on the segment -- 'Majority, Minority: The Battle of Belonging'.
"Indian civilisation has never been defined by religion, all other civilisations were defined either by religion, mostly by religion, and also before that by race and language," he argued and quoted a few sholkas to back his claim.
On a question of whether Indian politics has moved from resorting to minority appeasement to majoritarianism in the last few decades, Khan claimed the word 'Hindu' is not used in any of our scriptures.
"We were ruled for a long period of time by people who are foreigners, and I do not mean in a negative sense, but in a sense that they were not familiar with Indian ethos and philosophy and viewpoints.
"The thousands of years old Indian civilisation, don't know when this journey began, but it was never defined by religious faith," he said.
"Their (foreign rulers') own attitude was that this civilisation, its background was 'defined by religion'.
Therefore, they have to use a word which symbolised, and used more in the sense of faith, so they used it," he claimed.
But, Indian thought leaders were never satisfied with that appellation, he asserted.