01-06-2008, 04:58 PM
Arun Shourie's awesome series of articles in Indian Express:
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><span style='color:red'>Hindutva and radical Islam: Where the twain do meet</span>
Your Hindutva is no different from Islamic fundamentalismâ â a fashionable statement these days, one that immediately establishes the personâs secular credentials. It is, of course, false, as we shall see in a moment. But there is a grain of potential truth in it â something that does not put Hinduism at par with Islam, but one that should, instead, serve as a warning to all who keep pushing Hindus around. That grain is the fact that every tradition has in it, every set of scriptures has in it enough to justify extreme, even violent reaction. From the very same Gita from which Gandhiji derived non-violence and satyagraha, Lokmanya Tilak constructed the case for ferocious response, not excluding violence. From the very same Gita from which Gandhiji derived his âtrue lawâ, shatham pratyapi satyam, âTruth even to the wickedâ, the Lokmanya derived his famous maxim, shatham prati shaathyam, âWickedness to the wicked.â
In the great work, Gita Rahasya, that he wrote in the Mandalay prison, the Lokmanya invokes Sri Samartha, âMeet boldness with boldness; impertinence by impertinence must be met; villainy by villainy must be met.â Large-heartedness towards those who are grasping? Forgiveness towards those who are cruel? âEven Prahlada, that highest of devotees of the Blessed Lord,â the Lokmanya recalls, has said, âTherefore, my friend, wise men have everywhere mentioned exceptions to the principle of forgiveness.â True, the ordinary rule is that one must not cause harm to others by doing such actions as, if done to oneself, would be harmful. But, the Mahabharata, Tilak says, âhas made it clear that this rule should not be followed in a society, where there do not exist persons who follow the other religious principle, namely, others should not cause harm to us, which is the corollary from this first principle.â The counsel of âequabilityâ of the Gita, he says, is bound up with two individuals; that is, it implies reciprocity. âTherefore, just as the principle of non-violence is not violated by killing an evil-doer, so also the principle of self-identification [of seeing the same, Eternal Self in all] or of non-enmity, which is observed by saints, is in no way affected by giving condign punishment to evil-doers.â Does the Supreme Being not Himself declare that He takes incarnations from time to time to protect dharma and destroy evil-doers? Indeed, the one who hesitates to take the retaliatory action that is necessary assists the evil to do their work. âAnd the summary of the entire teaching of the Gita is that: even the most horrible warfare which may be carried on in these circumstances, with an equable frame of mind, is righteous and meritorious.â
Tilak invokes the advice of Bhisma, and then of Yudhisthira, âReligion and morality consist in behaving towards others in the same way as they behave towards us; one must behave deceitfully towards deceitful persons, and in a saintly way towards saintly persons.â Of course, act in a saintly way in the first instance, the Lokmanya counsels. Try to dissuade the evil-doer through persuasion. âBut if the evilness of the evil-doers is not circumvented by such saintly actions, or, if the counsel of peacefulness and propriety is not acceptable to such evil-doers, then according to the principle kantakenaiva kantakam (that is, âtake out a thorn by a thornâ), it becomes necessary to take out by a needle, that is by an iron thorn, if not by an ordinary thorn, that thorn which will not come out with poultices, because under any circumstances, punishing evil-doers in the interests of general welfare, as was done by the Blessed Lord, is the first duty of saints from the point of view of Ethics.â And the responsibility for the suffering that is caused thereby does not lie with the person who puts the evil out; it lies with the evil-doers. The Lord Himself says, Tilak recalls, âI give to them reward in the same manner and to the same extent that they worship Me.â âIn the same way,â he says, âno one calls the Judge, who directs the execution of a criminal, the enemy of the criminal...â
Could the variance between two interpretations be greater than is the case between the Lokmanyaâs Gita Rahasya and Gandhijiâs Anashakti Yoga? Yet both constructions are by great and devout Hindus. Are ordinary Hindus nailed to Gandhijiâs rendering? After all, at the end of the Gita, Arjuna does not go off to sit at one of our non-violent dharnas. He goes into blood-soaked battle.
The comforting mistake
The mistake is to assume that the sterner stance is something that has been fomented by this individual or that âin the case of Hindutva, by, say, Veer Savarkar â or by one organisation, say the RSS or the VHP. That is just a comforting mistake â the inference is that once that individual is calumnised, once that organisation is neutralised, âthe problemâ will be over. Large numbers do not gravitate to this interpretation rather than that merely because an individual or an organisation has advanced it â after all, the interpretations that are available on the shelf far outnumber even the scriptures. They gravitate to the harsher rendering because events convince them that it alone will save them.
It is this tectonic shift in the Hindu mind, a shift that has been going on for 200 years, which is being underestimated. The thousand years of domination and savage oppression by rulers of other religions; domination and oppression which were exercised in the name of and for the glory of and for establishing the sway of those religions, evinced a variety of responses from the Hindus. Armed resistance for centuries... When at last such resistance became totally impossible, the revival of bhakti by the great poets... When public performance even of bhakti became perilous, sullen withdrawal, preserving the tradition by oneself, almost in secrecy: I remember being told in South Goa how families sustained their devotion by painting images of our gods and goddesses inside the tin trunks in which sheets and clothing were kept. The example of individuals: recall how the utter simplicity and manifest aura of Ramakrishna Paramhamsa negated the efforts of the missionaries, how his devotion to the image of the Goddess at Dakshineshwar restored respectability to the idolatry that the missionaries and others were traducing... The magnetism of Sri Aurobindo and Ramana Maharshi... Gandhijiâs incontestable greatness and the fact that it was so evidently rooted in his devotion to our religion...
Each of these stemmed much. But over the last 200 years the feeling has also swelled that, invaluable as these responses have been, they have not been enough. They did not prevent the country from being taken over. They did not shield the people from the cruelty of alien rulers. They did not prevent the conversion of millions. They did not prevent the tradition from being calumnised and being thrown on the defensive. They did not in the end save the country from being partitioned â from being partitioned in the name of religion...
There is a real vice here. The three great religions that originated in Palestine and Saudi Arabia â Judaism, Christianity and Islam â have been exclusivist â each has insisted that it alone is true â and aggressive. The Indic religions â Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism â have been inclusive, they have been indulgent of the claims of others. But how may the latter sort survive when it is confronted by one that aims at power, acquires it, and then uses it to enlarge its dominion? How is the Indic sort to survive when the other uses the sword as well as other resources â organised missionaries, money, the state â to proselytise and to convert? Nor is this question facing just the Hindus in India today. It is facing the adherents of Indic traditions wherever they are: look at the Hindus in Indonesia and Malaysia; look at the Buddhists in Tibet, now in Thailand too. It is because of this vice, and the realisation born from what had already come to pass that Swami Vivekananda, for instance, while asking the Hindus to retain their Hindu soul, exhorted them to acquire an âIslamic bodyâ.
Instigating factors
We can be certain that his counsel will prevail, our secularists notwithstanding,
⢠The more aggressively the other religions proselytise â look at the fervour with which today the Tablighi Jamaat goes about conversion; look at the organised way in which the missionaries âharvestâ our souls;
⢠The more they use money to increase the harvest â whether it is Saudi money or that of Rome and the American churches;
⢠The more any of them uses violence to enlarge its sway;
⢠The more any of them allies itself with and uses the state â whether that of Saudi Arabia or Pakistan â for aggrandisement.
Nor is what others do from outside the only determinant. From within India, three factors in particular will make the acquiring of that Islamic body all the more certain:
⢠The more biased âsecularistâ discourse is;
⢠The more political parties use non-Hindus â Muslims, for instance â as vote banks and the more that non-Hindu group comes to act as one â âstrategic votingâ and all;
⢠The more the state of India bends to these exclusivist, aggressive traditions.
It has almost become routine to slight Hindu sentiments â our smart-set do not even notice the slights they administer. Recall the jibe of decades: âthe Hindu rate of growthâ. When, because of those very socialist policies that their kind had swallowed and imposed on the country, our growth was held down to 3-4 per cent, it was dubbed â with much glee â as âthe Hindu rate of growthâ. Today, we are growing at 9 per cent. And, if you are to believe the nonsense in Sacharâs report, the minorities are not growing at all. So, who is responsible for this higher rate of growth? The Hindus! How come no one calls this higher rate of growth âthe Hindu rate of growthâ? Simple: dubbing the low rate as the Hindu one established you to be secular; not acknowledging the higher one as the Hindu rate establishes you to be secular!
Or M.F. Husain. He is a kindly man, and a prodigiously productive artist. There is no warrant at all for disrupting all his exhibitions. I am on the point of sensibilities. His depictions of Hindu goddesses have been in the news: he has painted them in less than skimpy attire. I particularly remember one in which Sita is riding Hanumanâs stiffened tail â of course, she is scarcely clad, but that is the least of it: you need no imagination at all to see what she is rubbing up against that stiffened tail. Well, in the case of an artist, that is just inspiration, say the secularists. OK. The question that arises then is: How come in the seventy-five years Husain has been painting, he has not once felt inspired, not once, to paint the face of the Prophet? It doesnât have to be in the style in which he has painted the Hindu goddesses. Why not the most beautiful, the most radiant and luminous face that he can imagine? How come he has never felt inspired to paint women revered in Islam, or in his own family, in the same style as the one that propelled his inspiration in regard to Hindu goddesses?
âIn painting the goddesses, he was just honouring them,â a secular intellectual remarked at a discussion the other day. âIt was his way of honouring them.â Fine. It is indeed the case that one of the best ways we can honour someone is to put the one skill we have at the service of the person or deity. But how come that Husain never but never thought of honouring the Prophet by using the same priceless skill, that one âtalent which is death to hideâ?
âHas Mr Shourie ever visited Khajuraho?,â a member of the audience asked, the implication being that, as Hindu sculptors had depicted personages naked, what was wrong with Husain depicting the goddesses in the same style. Fine again. But surely, it is no oneâs case that the âKhajuraho styleâ must be confined to Hindu icons. Why has the artist, so skilled in deploying the Khajuraho motifs, never used them for icons of Islam? The reason why an artist desists from depicting the Prophetâs face is none of these convoluted disquisitions on style.
The reason is simplicity itself: he knows he will be thrashed, and his hands smashed.
Exactly the same holds for politics. How come no one objects when for years a Muslim politician keeps publishing maps of constituencies in which Muslims as Muslims can determine the outcome, and exhorting them to do so? When, not just an individual politician but entire political parties â from the Congress to the Left parties â stir Muslims up as a vote bank. When Muslims start behaving like a vote bank, you can be certain that someone will get the idea that Hindus too should be welded into a vote bank, and eventually they will get welded into one. Why is stoking Muslims âsecularâ and stoking Hindus âcommunalâ?
And yet perverted discourse, even the stratagems of political parties, are but preparation: they prepare the ground for capitulation by the state to groups that are aggressive. And in this the real lunacy is about to be launched, and, with that, the real reaction.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/254969._.html
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><span style='color:red'>What more is needed to stoke reaction?</span>
The Task Force on Border Management, one of the four that were set up in the wake of the Kargil War, reported with alarm about the way madrassas had mushroomed along Indiaâs borders. On the basis of information it received from intelligence agencies, it expressed grave concern at the amount of money these madrassas were receiving from foreign sources. It reported that large numbers were being âeducatedâ in these institutions in subjects that did not equip them at all for jobs â other than to become preachers and teachers producing the same type of incendiary unemployables. It expressed the gravest concern at the way the madrassas were reinforcing separateness in those attending them â through the curriculum, through the medium of instruction, through the entire orientation of learning: the latter, the Task Force pointed out, was entirely turned towards Arabia, towards the âgolden agesâ of Islamic rule. It pointed to the consequences that were certain to flow from âthe Talibanisationâ of the madrassas. [In spite of what the Task Forces themselves advised, namely that their reports be made public, the reports have been kept secret. Accordingly, I have summarised the observations of the Task Forces in some detail in Will the Iron Fence Save a Tree Hollowed by Termites? Defence imperatives beyond the military, ASA, Delhi, 2005.]
And what does the Sachar Committee recommend? âRecognition of the degrees from madrassas for eligibility in competitive examinations such as the civil services, banks, defence services and other such examinationsâ! It recommends that government use public funds to encourage formation of Muslim NGOs and their activities. It recommends that government provide financial and other support to occupations and areas in which Muslims predominate. It recommends that Muslims be in selection committees, interview panels and boards for public services.
It recommends that a higher proportion of Muslims be inducted in offices that deal with the public â âthe teaching community, health workers, police personnel, bank employees and so on.â It recommends âprovision of âequivalenceâ to madrassa certificates/degrees for subsequent admissions into institutions of higher level of education.â It recommends that banks be required to collect and maintain information about their transactions â deposits, advances â separately for Muslims, and that they be required to submit this to the Reserve Bank of India! It recommends that advances be made to Muslims as part of the obligation imposed on banks to give advances to Priority Sectors. It recommends that government give banks incentives to open branches in Muslim concentration areas. It recommends that, instead of being required to report merely âAmount Outstandingâ, banks be told to report âSanctions or Disbursements to Minoritiesâ. It recommends that financial institutions be required to set up separate funds for training Muslim entrepreneurs, that they be required to set up special micro-credit schemes for Muslims. It recommends that all districts more than a quarter of whose population is Muslim be brought into the prime ministerâs 15-point programme.
âThere should be transparency in information about minorities in all activities,â the Committee declares. âIt should be made mandatory to publish/furnish information in a prescribed format once in three months and also to post the same on the website of the departments and state governments...â It recommends that for each programme of government, data be maintained separately about the extent to which Muslims and other minorities are benefiting from it. But it is not enough to keep data separately. Separate schemes must be instituted. It recommends that special and separate Centrally Sponsored Schemes and Central Plan Schemes be launched for âminorities with an equitable provision for Muslims.â It recommends special measures for the promotion and spread of Urdu. It recommends the adoption of âalternate admission criteriaâ in universities and autonomous colleges: assessment of merit should not be assigned more than 60 per cent out of the total â the remaining 40 per cent should be assigned in accordance with the income of the household, the backwardness of the district, and the backwardness of the caste and occupation of the family. It recommends that grants by the University Grants Commission be linked to âthe diversity of the student population.â It recommends that pre-entry qualification for admission to ITIs be scaled down, that âeligibility for such programmes should also be extended to the madrassa educated children.â It recommends that âhigh quality government schools should be set up in all areas of Muslim concentration.â It recommends that resources and government land be made available for âcommon public spacesâ for adults of â its euphemism â âSocio-Religious Categoriesâ to âinteractâ.
It recommends that incentives to builders, private sector employers, educational institutions be linked to âdiversityâ of the populations in their sites and enterprises. For this purpose it wants a âdiversity indexâ to be developed for each such activity.
It recommends changes in the way constituencies are delimited. It recommends that where Muslims are elected or selected in numbers less than adequate, âa carefully conceived ânominationâ procedureâ be worked out âto increase the participation of minorities at the grass roots.â
It notes that there already are the Human Rights Commission and the Minorities Commission âto look into complaints by the minorities with respect to state action.â But these are not adequate as the Muslims still feel that they are not getting a fair share. The solution? Here is its recommendation, and a typical passage:
âIt is imperative that if the minorities have certain perceptions of being aggrieved,â notice the touchstone â âif the minorities have certain perceptions of being aggrievedâ â âall efforts should be made by the state to find a mechanism by which these complaints could be attended to expeditiously. This mechanism should operate in a manner which gives full satisfaction to the minoritiesâ, notice again the touchstone â not any external criterion, but âfull satisfaction to the minoritiesâ â âthat any denial of equal opportunities or bias or discrimination in dealing with them, either by a public functionary or any private individual, will immediately be attended to and redress given. Such a mechanism should be accessible to all individuals and institutions desirous to complain that they have received less favourable treatment from any employer or any person on the basis of his/her SRC [Socio-Religious Category] background and gender.â
The responsibility is entirely that of the other. The other must function to the full satisfaction of the Muslims. As long as the Muslims âhave certain perceptions of being aggrieved,â the other is at fault...
So that everyone is put on notice, so that everyone who is the other is forever put to straining himself to satisfy the Muslims, the Committee recommends that a National Data Bank be created and it be mandatory for all departments and agencies to supply information to it to document how their activities are impacting Muslims and other minorities. On top of all this, government should set up an Assessment and Monitoring Authority to evaluate the benefits that are accruing to the minorities from each programme and activity...
This is the programme that every secularist who is in government is demanding that the government implement forthwith. And every secularist outside â the ever-so-secular CPI(M), for instance â is scolding the government for not implementing swiftly enough. What splendid evolution! Not long ago, unless you saw a Muslim as a human being, and not as a Muslim, you were not secular. Now, if you see a Muslim as a human being and not as a Muslim, you are not secular!
Consequences
The first consequence is as inevitable as it is obvious: such pandering whets the appetite. Seeing that governments and parties are competing to pander to them, Muslims see that they are doing so only because their community is acting cohesively, as a vote bank. So, they act even more as a bank of votes.
For the same reason, a competition is ignited within the community: to prove that he is more devoted to the community than his rival, every would-be leader of the community demands more and more from governments and parties. When the concession he demanded has been made, he declares, âIt is not being implementedâ. And he has a ready diagnosis: because implementation, he declares, is in the hands of non-Muslims. Hence, unless Muslims officers are appointed in the financial institutions meant for Muslims... With demand following demand, with secularist upon secularist straining himself to urge the demands, the leader sets about looking for grievances that he can fan. When he canât find them, he invents them...
Governments make the fatal mistake, or â as happened in the case of the British when they announced separate electorates for Muslims â they play the master-stroke: they proffer an advantage to the community which that community, Muslims in this case, can secure only by being separate â whether this be separate electorates in the case of Lord Minto or separate financial institutions in the case of Manmohan Singh.
The community in its turn begins to assess every proposal, every measure, howsoever secular it may be, against one touchstone alone: âWhat can we extract from this measure for Muslims as Muslims?âHow current the description rings that Cantwell Smith gave in his book, Modern Islam in India, published in the 1940s, of the effect that the British stratagem of instituting separate electorates for Muslims had had on the Muslim mind. The separate electorates led Muslims, as they had been designed to lead them, he observed, âto vote communally, think communally, listen only to communal election speeches, judge the delegates communally, look for constitutional and other reforms only in terms of more relative communal power, and express their grievances communally.â [Wilfred Cantwell Smith, Modern Islam in India, Second Revised Edition, 1946, reprint, Usha Publications, New Delhi, 1979, p. 216]. Exactly the same consequence will follow from implementing the Sachar proposals â and the reason for that is simple: the essential point about the proposals is the same â that is, the Muslims can obtain them by being separate from the rest of the country.
The reaction cannot but set in. âAs Muslims are being given all this because they have distanced themselves from the rest of us, why should we cling to them?â the Hindus are bound to ask. âOn the contrary, we should learn from them. Governments and political parties are pandering to Muslims because the latter have become a bank of votes. We should knit ourselves into a solid bloc also.â
Do you think they need a Pravin Togadia to tell them this? The genuflections of governments and parties write the lesson on the blackboard. And the abuse hurled by secularists drills it in: by the excellent work that Narendra Modi has done for development, he had already made himself the pre-eminent leader of Gujarat; by the abuse they have hurled at him, the secularists, in particular the media, have enlarged his canvas to the country.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/255484._.html
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><span style='color:red'>The vital difference</span>
So, the first lesson to bear in mind is that every tradition has in it the potential to become extremist. In this sense, our traditions are indeed similar to the Middle Eastern traditions. This similarity should be a warning to governments and parties that keep traducing Hindus, for instance, and pandering to Muslims and the rest just because the latter are aggressive. Everyone learns.
And yet there is a basic, foundational difference â one that points us to what is of inestimable value in Indic traditions; to the priceless pearl that we should preserve, the one that these heedless secularists and the rapacious aggressives do not realise they are pushing Hindus, Buddhists and others to discard. This basic difference is as follows.
When a tradition has the following elements, as each of the three Middle Eastern traditions has, as do the secular traditions of the West â Nazism, Marxism-Leninism â it will invariably be exclusivist, intolerant and aggressive, and it will invariably deploy all means â from propaganda to money to violence:
⢠Reality is simple;
⢠It has been revealed to one man;
⢠He has put it in one Book;
⢠That Book is inerrant as well as exhaustive: so that whatever is in it is true, that it is true for all time; and that whatever is not in it or is contrary to what is in it, is false or useless or worse;
⢠But the Book is difficult to understand; hence, you need a guide, an intermediary, a monitor: in a word, the Church, the ulema, or the Party;
⢠The Book covers, the intermediary must cover every aspect of life: there is no distinction between the private and the public sphere, between the Secular and the Religious, between the State and the Church. These doctrines are totalitarian â in both senses: they insist on governing the totality of life â the Roman Catholic Churchâs minatory insistence against contraception, for instance, and the reams and reams of fatwas that deal with even more intimate matters; they are also totalitarian in the sense that what they prescribe on any aspect just must be obeyed;
⢠The test of piety is adherence to that Book and to the prescriptions of that intermediary â in every sphere of life;
⢠It is the duty of that intermediary, indeed of every believer to ensure that all come to accept and adhere to The Message â there is only one Message;
⢠As the Message is the âTruth, the whole Truth and nothing but the Truth,â as there is no truth beside it, those who do not accept the Message are cussed; worse, they are thwarting the Will of Allah, or its equivalent â the march of History in Marxism-Leninism;
⢠Hence, it is the duty of every believer, and even more so of that intermediary to use all means to make them accept the Message, and if, even after being offered the opportunity to accept it, they refuse, to vanquish them all together.
When these elements are present, the tradition will have one singular objective: dominance. It will become an ideology of power, a dogma that rationalises everything in the pursuit of hegemony. The dogma will necessarily gravitate to, among other things, violence.
Contrast those elements with propositions that are central to the Indic traditions:
⢠Reality is multilayered complexity: both in the sense that there are layers within layers of it, and in the sense of each element mingling into others: the Buddhist master Thich Nhat Hanh refers to the latter as âinter-beingâ;
⢠It has not been revealed exclusively to one person: several have glimpsed it;
⢠They have put down approximate descriptions of that reality as well as hints of how to glimpse it in some books: these are travel guides;
⢠Perceiving that Truth is an overwhelming, incomparable experience; it is the one joy that lasts. This life gives each of us a unique opportunity to bathe in that effulgence. If we donât, the loss will be ours â but that is about it: the Truth is not affected; the guides are not falsified;
⢠It is not just the Book or some singular great figure who can teach us; everything, every event, every relationship can be a teacher guiding us to glimpse the Truth â indeed, our object should be to make everything teach us. The essential points are three: different ways will suit different persons; second, the individual is the one who has to strive â as âan island unto himselfâ; third, the striving, the search is an inner-directed one. It has nothing to do with the state or power or dominance over nature or man;
⢠In pursuing this inner-directed search, indeed in leading oneâs life, the test is not adherence to any of these travel guides, nor obedience to any intermediary, but darshan â the travellerâs own experience: do not mistake the finger pointing to the moon â that is, my teaching â for the moon, the reality, the Buddha counsels.
Every single element in these traditions guides and pulls the believer in the direction that is the exact opposite of the Middle Eastern traditions. Reality is multilayered, hence no description of it is final: tolerance follows as an article of faith. The search is to be an inner-directed one: where, then, is there a case for converting some dar ul harb into some dar ul Islam? The touchstone is not that I am adhering to what some book says or what some person, howsoever worthy, prescribed. The touchstone is my own experience. The consequence of even this single article is immense and radical. The Gita is set in a battlefield. At the end, Arjuna declares that all his doubts are settled. He goes into gory battle. Yet Gandhiji derived non-violence from it. The orthodox berated him. Where do you get the authority to advance such a notion, they demanded. Gandhijiâs answer? From here, his heart. What is written in this book, he says in Anashakti Yoga, is the result of thirty yearsâ unremitting effort to live the Gita in my life. When Mansur speaks to his experience, he is executed. Within Islam, the Sufis were a beleaguered sect . . .
Putting belief into practice
It is entirely possible, of course, to be earnest about oneâs religious beliefs, practices, rituals and not turn to violence or to converting others through allurements or violence. Indeed, we can go further and say that in all traditions, the majority of people in their practice, in their day-to-day life are like each other: each of them has a hard enough time getting through her or his daily struggles to spare time and effort to forcing or even inducing others or even persuading others to his particular way. But when the religion insists that the object is to convert, to âharvest soulsâ for Jesus, when it declares that all of dar ul harb must be converted into the dar ul Islam; when the religion is a doctrine of dominance, being earnest about oneâs religion comes to include as an essential element that the believer assist in spreading that religion, and that he use all means to do so. If a believer does not do so, he is deficient in his belief.
That is why in the hadis, we find the Prophet repeatedly enumerating the boons that accrue to the martyr and his relatives from jihad, from killing and being killed in the cause of Islam. The pre-eminent rewards, of course, accrue to the one who joins in the fighting himself, the Prophet declares in scores of hadis. But even the one who does not do so directly, will be rewarded for every bit of assistance that he gives for the establishment, defence and spread of Islam, the Prophet declares. When a man keeps a horse for the purpose of jihad, âtying it with a long tether on a meadow or in a garden... whatever it eats from the area of the meadow or the garden where it is tied will be counted as good deeds for his benefit, and if it should break its rope and jump over one or two hillocks then all its dung and its footmarks will be written as good deeds for him; and if it passes by a river and drinks water from it even though he had no intention of watering it, even then he will get the rewards for its drinking.â And again, even more generally, âIf somebody keeps a horse in Allahâs Cause motivated by his belief in His Promise, then he will be rewarded on the Day of Resurrection for what the horse has eaten or drunk and for its dung and urine.â [Sahih al-Bukhari, 52.44, 49, 105; similarly, Muwattaâ Imam Malik, 951, Mishkat al-Masabih, Book XVIII, Volume II, p. 822. The hadis compilations as well as books on shariah are filled with scores and scores of such exhortations and promises.]
By contrast âthe one who died but did not fight in the way of Allah,â the Prophet declares, ânor did he express any desire (or determination) for jihad, died the death of a hypocrite.â [Sahih Muslim, 4696.] Again, the Prophet declares, âHe who dies without having fought or having felt fighting (against the infidels) to be his duty will die guilty of a kind of hypocrisy.â And yet again, âHe who does not join the warlike expedition (jihad), or equip a warrior, or look well after a warriorâs family when he is away, will be smitten by Allah with a sudden calamity.â Hence, commands the Prophet, âUse your property, your persons and your tongues in striving against the polytheists.â [Sunan Abu Dawud, 2496-98.]
Such commands follow ineluctably from the propositions that I listed above. We shut this fact out by two blindfolds. We judge a faith by looking at âpeople like usâ â most of the ones we know are âpersons like usâ, they do not live by such commands, but it is precisely because they are âlike usâ that they are in our social circle. Unfortunately, the outcome is determined, not by the millions who lead ordinary lives, lives like ours, but by microscopic minorities: to say, âBut the majority of Muslims did not want Partitionâ may be true but is little consolation â that did not save the country from being partitioned. Similarly, to say âBut millions are living peacefully today, they have not the slightest intention of setting off for jihadâ is true but equally little consolation: the ones who take the propositions seriously and thereby heed the hadis, are the ones who are determining the direction that events are taking.
And the direction that Islam itself is taking. Once they enter the stage, the extremists come to set the standard of fidelity and piety within a community. The tradition metamorphoses in no time: look at the change that has swept Islam in Southeast Asia in just fifteen years.
Second, we often lull ourselves with the thought, âBut so what if someone wears the scarf or burqa? If they want to send their children to madrasas, what business is it of ours?â But there is a technology to all this. The ones steering a community make a point of starting with a completely innocuous demand, by inducing believers to adhere to a practice that does not inconvenience non-believers in any way. The headscarf, for instance, or the new piety-statement in lands as far apart as Egypt and Pakistan, the zebibah â the dark, calloused bump that registers on the forehead when it is repeatedly struck or rubbed on the ground during prayers. [For our own neighbourhood, observe the visitors from Pakistan; for Egypt, see, for instance, Michael Slackman, âMark of piety as plain as a bump on the head,â IHT, December 13, 2007.] Non-believers are not inconvenienced by such signs, and yet the practices go far. They become a device for making the adherent realise that she is not the same as the others, and to make her or him announce that she is not one of the others. Simultaneously, the marks drill into others that the adherents have come to look upon themselves as separate. When the non-believers in turn start treating them as separate, that they are doing so becomes a grievance. And thus another argument is acquired for transiting from separateness to separatism.
Hence, all who are apprehensive of a Hindu reaction should:
⢠Get to know the non-Indic traditions;
⢠Shed denial â from denial of what the basic texts of the non-Indic traditions say to denial of the demographic aggression in the Northeast;
⢠Most important of all, work to ensure a completely fair and an absolutely firm state; and an even-handed discourse.
For their part, the Hindus cannot recline back, confident that the reaction will take care of the current pressures. They too have much to do. In particular, they must
⢠Awaken to the fact that the danger does not come just from violence and money; it comes as much from the purposive use of the electoral system;
⢠And so, they must organise themselves for this challenge as much as for others;
⢠For this, they must vault over internal divisions, in particular the curse of caste;
⢠Be alert not just to assault by others, but also to perversions from within: the commercialisation of the tradition; its becoming a commerce with deities â âPlease get me this contract, and I will . . .â; its becoming ostentatious religiosity; persons setting themselves up as the guardians of the tradition, and then using the perch for self-aggrandisement . . .
⢠Get to know the tradition; and live it.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/255906._.html
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><span style='color:red'>Hindutva and radical Islam: Where the twain do meet</span>
Your Hindutva is no different from Islamic fundamentalismâ â a fashionable statement these days, one that immediately establishes the personâs secular credentials. It is, of course, false, as we shall see in a moment. But there is a grain of potential truth in it â something that does not put Hinduism at par with Islam, but one that should, instead, serve as a warning to all who keep pushing Hindus around. That grain is the fact that every tradition has in it, every set of scriptures has in it enough to justify extreme, even violent reaction. From the very same Gita from which Gandhiji derived non-violence and satyagraha, Lokmanya Tilak constructed the case for ferocious response, not excluding violence. From the very same Gita from which Gandhiji derived his âtrue lawâ, shatham pratyapi satyam, âTruth even to the wickedâ, the Lokmanya derived his famous maxim, shatham prati shaathyam, âWickedness to the wicked.â
In the great work, Gita Rahasya, that he wrote in the Mandalay prison, the Lokmanya invokes Sri Samartha, âMeet boldness with boldness; impertinence by impertinence must be met; villainy by villainy must be met.â Large-heartedness towards those who are grasping? Forgiveness towards those who are cruel? âEven Prahlada, that highest of devotees of the Blessed Lord,â the Lokmanya recalls, has said, âTherefore, my friend, wise men have everywhere mentioned exceptions to the principle of forgiveness.â True, the ordinary rule is that one must not cause harm to others by doing such actions as, if done to oneself, would be harmful. But, the Mahabharata, Tilak says, âhas made it clear that this rule should not be followed in a society, where there do not exist persons who follow the other religious principle, namely, others should not cause harm to us, which is the corollary from this first principle.â The counsel of âequabilityâ of the Gita, he says, is bound up with two individuals; that is, it implies reciprocity. âTherefore, just as the principle of non-violence is not violated by killing an evil-doer, so also the principle of self-identification [of seeing the same, Eternal Self in all] or of non-enmity, which is observed by saints, is in no way affected by giving condign punishment to evil-doers.â Does the Supreme Being not Himself declare that He takes incarnations from time to time to protect dharma and destroy evil-doers? Indeed, the one who hesitates to take the retaliatory action that is necessary assists the evil to do their work. âAnd the summary of the entire teaching of the Gita is that: even the most horrible warfare which may be carried on in these circumstances, with an equable frame of mind, is righteous and meritorious.â
Tilak invokes the advice of Bhisma, and then of Yudhisthira, âReligion and morality consist in behaving towards others in the same way as they behave towards us; one must behave deceitfully towards deceitful persons, and in a saintly way towards saintly persons.â Of course, act in a saintly way in the first instance, the Lokmanya counsels. Try to dissuade the evil-doer through persuasion. âBut if the evilness of the evil-doers is not circumvented by such saintly actions, or, if the counsel of peacefulness and propriety is not acceptable to such evil-doers, then according to the principle kantakenaiva kantakam (that is, âtake out a thorn by a thornâ), it becomes necessary to take out by a needle, that is by an iron thorn, if not by an ordinary thorn, that thorn which will not come out with poultices, because under any circumstances, punishing evil-doers in the interests of general welfare, as was done by the Blessed Lord, is the first duty of saints from the point of view of Ethics.â And the responsibility for the suffering that is caused thereby does not lie with the person who puts the evil out; it lies with the evil-doers. The Lord Himself says, Tilak recalls, âI give to them reward in the same manner and to the same extent that they worship Me.â âIn the same way,â he says, âno one calls the Judge, who directs the execution of a criminal, the enemy of the criminal...â
Could the variance between two interpretations be greater than is the case between the Lokmanyaâs Gita Rahasya and Gandhijiâs Anashakti Yoga? Yet both constructions are by great and devout Hindus. Are ordinary Hindus nailed to Gandhijiâs rendering? After all, at the end of the Gita, Arjuna does not go off to sit at one of our non-violent dharnas. He goes into blood-soaked battle.
The comforting mistake
The mistake is to assume that the sterner stance is something that has been fomented by this individual or that âin the case of Hindutva, by, say, Veer Savarkar â or by one organisation, say the RSS or the VHP. That is just a comforting mistake â the inference is that once that individual is calumnised, once that organisation is neutralised, âthe problemâ will be over. Large numbers do not gravitate to this interpretation rather than that merely because an individual or an organisation has advanced it â after all, the interpretations that are available on the shelf far outnumber even the scriptures. They gravitate to the harsher rendering because events convince them that it alone will save them.
It is this tectonic shift in the Hindu mind, a shift that has been going on for 200 years, which is being underestimated. The thousand years of domination and savage oppression by rulers of other religions; domination and oppression which were exercised in the name of and for the glory of and for establishing the sway of those religions, evinced a variety of responses from the Hindus. Armed resistance for centuries... When at last such resistance became totally impossible, the revival of bhakti by the great poets... When public performance even of bhakti became perilous, sullen withdrawal, preserving the tradition by oneself, almost in secrecy: I remember being told in South Goa how families sustained their devotion by painting images of our gods and goddesses inside the tin trunks in which sheets and clothing were kept. The example of individuals: recall how the utter simplicity and manifest aura of Ramakrishna Paramhamsa negated the efforts of the missionaries, how his devotion to the image of the Goddess at Dakshineshwar restored respectability to the idolatry that the missionaries and others were traducing... The magnetism of Sri Aurobindo and Ramana Maharshi... Gandhijiâs incontestable greatness and the fact that it was so evidently rooted in his devotion to our religion...
Each of these stemmed much. But over the last 200 years the feeling has also swelled that, invaluable as these responses have been, they have not been enough. They did not prevent the country from being taken over. They did not shield the people from the cruelty of alien rulers. They did not prevent the conversion of millions. They did not prevent the tradition from being calumnised and being thrown on the defensive. They did not in the end save the country from being partitioned â from being partitioned in the name of religion...
There is a real vice here. The three great religions that originated in Palestine and Saudi Arabia â Judaism, Christianity and Islam â have been exclusivist â each has insisted that it alone is true â and aggressive. The Indic religions â Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism â have been inclusive, they have been indulgent of the claims of others. But how may the latter sort survive when it is confronted by one that aims at power, acquires it, and then uses it to enlarge its dominion? How is the Indic sort to survive when the other uses the sword as well as other resources â organised missionaries, money, the state â to proselytise and to convert? Nor is this question facing just the Hindus in India today. It is facing the adherents of Indic traditions wherever they are: look at the Hindus in Indonesia and Malaysia; look at the Buddhists in Tibet, now in Thailand too. It is because of this vice, and the realisation born from what had already come to pass that Swami Vivekananda, for instance, while asking the Hindus to retain their Hindu soul, exhorted them to acquire an âIslamic bodyâ.
Instigating factors
We can be certain that his counsel will prevail, our secularists notwithstanding,
⢠The more aggressively the other religions proselytise â look at the fervour with which today the Tablighi Jamaat goes about conversion; look at the organised way in which the missionaries âharvestâ our souls;
⢠The more they use money to increase the harvest â whether it is Saudi money or that of Rome and the American churches;
⢠The more any of them uses violence to enlarge its sway;
⢠The more any of them allies itself with and uses the state â whether that of Saudi Arabia or Pakistan â for aggrandisement.
Nor is what others do from outside the only determinant. From within India, three factors in particular will make the acquiring of that Islamic body all the more certain:
⢠The more biased âsecularistâ discourse is;
⢠The more political parties use non-Hindus â Muslims, for instance â as vote banks and the more that non-Hindu group comes to act as one â âstrategic votingâ and all;
⢠The more the state of India bends to these exclusivist, aggressive traditions.
It has almost become routine to slight Hindu sentiments â our smart-set do not even notice the slights they administer. Recall the jibe of decades: âthe Hindu rate of growthâ. When, because of those very socialist policies that their kind had swallowed and imposed on the country, our growth was held down to 3-4 per cent, it was dubbed â with much glee â as âthe Hindu rate of growthâ. Today, we are growing at 9 per cent. And, if you are to believe the nonsense in Sacharâs report, the minorities are not growing at all. So, who is responsible for this higher rate of growth? The Hindus! How come no one calls this higher rate of growth âthe Hindu rate of growthâ? Simple: dubbing the low rate as the Hindu one established you to be secular; not acknowledging the higher one as the Hindu rate establishes you to be secular!
Or M.F. Husain. He is a kindly man, and a prodigiously productive artist. There is no warrant at all for disrupting all his exhibitions. I am on the point of sensibilities. His depictions of Hindu goddesses have been in the news: he has painted them in less than skimpy attire. I particularly remember one in which Sita is riding Hanumanâs stiffened tail â of course, she is scarcely clad, but that is the least of it: you need no imagination at all to see what she is rubbing up against that stiffened tail. Well, in the case of an artist, that is just inspiration, say the secularists. OK. The question that arises then is: How come in the seventy-five years Husain has been painting, he has not once felt inspired, not once, to paint the face of the Prophet? It doesnât have to be in the style in which he has painted the Hindu goddesses. Why not the most beautiful, the most radiant and luminous face that he can imagine? How come he has never felt inspired to paint women revered in Islam, or in his own family, in the same style as the one that propelled his inspiration in regard to Hindu goddesses?
âIn painting the goddesses, he was just honouring them,â a secular intellectual remarked at a discussion the other day. âIt was his way of honouring them.â Fine. It is indeed the case that one of the best ways we can honour someone is to put the one skill we have at the service of the person or deity. But how come that Husain never but never thought of honouring the Prophet by using the same priceless skill, that one âtalent which is death to hideâ?
âHas Mr Shourie ever visited Khajuraho?,â a member of the audience asked, the implication being that, as Hindu sculptors had depicted personages naked, what was wrong with Husain depicting the goddesses in the same style. Fine again. But surely, it is no oneâs case that the âKhajuraho styleâ must be confined to Hindu icons. Why has the artist, so skilled in deploying the Khajuraho motifs, never used them for icons of Islam? The reason why an artist desists from depicting the Prophetâs face is none of these convoluted disquisitions on style.
The reason is simplicity itself: he knows he will be thrashed, and his hands smashed.
Exactly the same holds for politics. How come no one objects when for years a Muslim politician keeps publishing maps of constituencies in which Muslims as Muslims can determine the outcome, and exhorting them to do so? When, not just an individual politician but entire political parties â from the Congress to the Left parties â stir Muslims up as a vote bank. When Muslims start behaving like a vote bank, you can be certain that someone will get the idea that Hindus too should be welded into a vote bank, and eventually they will get welded into one. Why is stoking Muslims âsecularâ and stoking Hindus âcommunalâ?
And yet perverted discourse, even the stratagems of political parties, are but preparation: they prepare the ground for capitulation by the state to groups that are aggressive. And in this the real lunacy is about to be launched, and, with that, the real reaction.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/254969._.html
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><span style='color:red'>What more is needed to stoke reaction?</span>
The Task Force on Border Management, one of the four that were set up in the wake of the Kargil War, reported with alarm about the way madrassas had mushroomed along Indiaâs borders. On the basis of information it received from intelligence agencies, it expressed grave concern at the amount of money these madrassas were receiving from foreign sources. It reported that large numbers were being âeducatedâ in these institutions in subjects that did not equip them at all for jobs â other than to become preachers and teachers producing the same type of incendiary unemployables. It expressed the gravest concern at the way the madrassas were reinforcing separateness in those attending them â through the curriculum, through the medium of instruction, through the entire orientation of learning: the latter, the Task Force pointed out, was entirely turned towards Arabia, towards the âgolden agesâ of Islamic rule. It pointed to the consequences that were certain to flow from âthe Talibanisationâ of the madrassas. [In spite of what the Task Forces themselves advised, namely that their reports be made public, the reports have been kept secret. Accordingly, I have summarised the observations of the Task Forces in some detail in Will the Iron Fence Save a Tree Hollowed by Termites? Defence imperatives beyond the military, ASA, Delhi, 2005.]
And what does the Sachar Committee recommend? âRecognition of the degrees from madrassas for eligibility in competitive examinations such as the civil services, banks, defence services and other such examinationsâ! It recommends that government use public funds to encourage formation of Muslim NGOs and their activities. It recommends that government provide financial and other support to occupations and areas in which Muslims predominate. It recommends that Muslims be in selection committees, interview panels and boards for public services.
It recommends that a higher proportion of Muslims be inducted in offices that deal with the public â âthe teaching community, health workers, police personnel, bank employees and so on.â It recommends âprovision of âequivalenceâ to madrassa certificates/degrees for subsequent admissions into institutions of higher level of education.â It recommends that banks be required to collect and maintain information about their transactions â deposits, advances â separately for Muslims, and that they be required to submit this to the Reserve Bank of India! It recommends that advances be made to Muslims as part of the obligation imposed on banks to give advances to Priority Sectors. It recommends that government give banks incentives to open branches in Muslim concentration areas. It recommends that, instead of being required to report merely âAmount Outstandingâ, banks be told to report âSanctions or Disbursements to Minoritiesâ. It recommends that financial institutions be required to set up separate funds for training Muslim entrepreneurs, that they be required to set up special micro-credit schemes for Muslims. It recommends that all districts more than a quarter of whose population is Muslim be brought into the prime ministerâs 15-point programme.
âThere should be transparency in information about minorities in all activities,â the Committee declares. âIt should be made mandatory to publish/furnish information in a prescribed format once in three months and also to post the same on the website of the departments and state governments...â It recommends that for each programme of government, data be maintained separately about the extent to which Muslims and other minorities are benefiting from it. But it is not enough to keep data separately. Separate schemes must be instituted. It recommends that special and separate Centrally Sponsored Schemes and Central Plan Schemes be launched for âminorities with an equitable provision for Muslims.â It recommends special measures for the promotion and spread of Urdu. It recommends the adoption of âalternate admission criteriaâ in universities and autonomous colleges: assessment of merit should not be assigned more than 60 per cent out of the total â the remaining 40 per cent should be assigned in accordance with the income of the household, the backwardness of the district, and the backwardness of the caste and occupation of the family. It recommends that grants by the University Grants Commission be linked to âthe diversity of the student population.â It recommends that pre-entry qualification for admission to ITIs be scaled down, that âeligibility for such programmes should also be extended to the madrassa educated children.â It recommends that âhigh quality government schools should be set up in all areas of Muslim concentration.â It recommends that resources and government land be made available for âcommon public spacesâ for adults of â its euphemism â âSocio-Religious Categoriesâ to âinteractâ.
It recommends that incentives to builders, private sector employers, educational institutions be linked to âdiversityâ of the populations in their sites and enterprises. For this purpose it wants a âdiversity indexâ to be developed for each such activity.
It recommends changes in the way constituencies are delimited. It recommends that where Muslims are elected or selected in numbers less than adequate, âa carefully conceived ânominationâ procedureâ be worked out âto increase the participation of minorities at the grass roots.â
It notes that there already are the Human Rights Commission and the Minorities Commission âto look into complaints by the minorities with respect to state action.â But these are not adequate as the Muslims still feel that they are not getting a fair share. The solution? Here is its recommendation, and a typical passage:
âIt is imperative that if the minorities have certain perceptions of being aggrieved,â notice the touchstone â âif the minorities have certain perceptions of being aggrievedâ â âall efforts should be made by the state to find a mechanism by which these complaints could be attended to expeditiously. This mechanism should operate in a manner which gives full satisfaction to the minoritiesâ, notice again the touchstone â not any external criterion, but âfull satisfaction to the minoritiesâ â âthat any denial of equal opportunities or bias or discrimination in dealing with them, either by a public functionary or any private individual, will immediately be attended to and redress given. Such a mechanism should be accessible to all individuals and institutions desirous to complain that they have received less favourable treatment from any employer or any person on the basis of his/her SRC [Socio-Religious Category] background and gender.â
The responsibility is entirely that of the other. The other must function to the full satisfaction of the Muslims. As long as the Muslims âhave certain perceptions of being aggrieved,â the other is at fault...
So that everyone is put on notice, so that everyone who is the other is forever put to straining himself to satisfy the Muslims, the Committee recommends that a National Data Bank be created and it be mandatory for all departments and agencies to supply information to it to document how their activities are impacting Muslims and other minorities. On top of all this, government should set up an Assessment and Monitoring Authority to evaluate the benefits that are accruing to the minorities from each programme and activity...
This is the programme that every secularist who is in government is demanding that the government implement forthwith. And every secularist outside â the ever-so-secular CPI(M), for instance â is scolding the government for not implementing swiftly enough. What splendid evolution! Not long ago, unless you saw a Muslim as a human being, and not as a Muslim, you were not secular. Now, if you see a Muslim as a human being and not as a Muslim, you are not secular!
Consequences
The first consequence is as inevitable as it is obvious: such pandering whets the appetite. Seeing that governments and parties are competing to pander to them, Muslims see that they are doing so only because their community is acting cohesively, as a vote bank. So, they act even more as a bank of votes.
For the same reason, a competition is ignited within the community: to prove that he is more devoted to the community than his rival, every would-be leader of the community demands more and more from governments and parties. When the concession he demanded has been made, he declares, âIt is not being implementedâ. And he has a ready diagnosis: because implementation, he declares, is in the hands of non-Muslims. Hence, unless Muslims officers are appointed in the financial institutions meant for Muslims... With demand following demand, with secularist upon secularist straining himself to urge the demands, the leader sets about looking for grievances that he can fan. When he canât find them, he invents them...
Governments make the fatal mistake, or â as happened in the case of the British when they announced separate electorates for Muslims â they play the master-stroke: they proffer an advantage to the community which that community, Muslims in this case, can secure only by being separate â whether this be separate electorates in the case of Lord Minto or separate financial institutions in the case of Manmohan Singh.
The community in its turn begins to assess every proposal, every measure, howsoever secular it may be, against one touchstone alone: âWhat can we extract from this measure for Muslims as Muslims?âHow current the description rings that Cantwell Smith gave in his book, Modern Islam in India, published in the 1940s, of the effect that the British stratagem of instituting separate electorates for Muslims had had on the Muslim mind. The separate electorates led Muslims, as they had been designed to lead them, he observed, âto vote communally, think communally, listen only to communal election speeches, judge the delegates communally, look for constitutional and other reforms only in terms of more relative communal power, and express their grievances communally.â [Wilfred Cantwell Smith, Modern Islam in India, Second Revised Edition, 1946, reprint, Usha Publications, New Delhi, 1979, p. 216]. Exactly the same consequence will follow from implementing the Sachar proposals â and the reason for that is simple: the essential point about the proposals is the same â that is, the Muslims can obtain them by being separate from the rest of the country.
The reaction cannot but set in. âAs Muslims are being given all this because they have distanced themselves from the rest of us, why should we cling to them?â the Hindus are bound to ask. âOn the contrary, we should learn from them. Governments and political parties are pandering to Muslims because the latter have become a bank of votes. We should knit ourselves into a solid bloc also.â
Do you think they need a Pravin Togadia to tell them this? The genuflections of governments and parties write the lesson on the blackboard. And the abuse hurled by secularists drills it in: by the excellent work that Narendra Modi has done for development, he had already made himself the pre-eminent leader of Gujarat; by the abuse they have hurled at him, the secularists, in particular the media, have enlarged his canvas to the country.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/255484._.html
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><span style='color:red'>The vital difference</span>
So, the first lesson to bear in mind is that every tradition has in it the potential to become extremist. In this sense, our traditions are indeed similar to the Middle Eastern traditions. This similarity should be a warning to governments and parties that keep traducing Hindus, for instance, and pandering to Muslims and the rest just because the latter are aggressive. Everyone learns.
And yet there is a basic, foundational difference â one that points us to what is of inestimable value in Indic traditions; to the priceless pearl that we should preserve, the one that these heedless secularists and the rapacious aggressives do not realise they are pushing Hindus, Buddhists and others to discard. This basic difference is as follows.
When a tradition has the following elements, as each of the three Middle Eastern traditions has, as do the secular traditions of the West â Nazism, Marxism-Leninism â it will invariably be exclusivist, intolerant and aggressive, and it will invariably deploy all means â from propaganda to money to violence:
⢠Reality is simple;
⢠It has been revealed to one man;
⢠He has put it in one Book;
⢠That Book is inerrant as well as exhaustive: so that whatever is in it is true, that it is true for all time; and that whatever is not in it or is contrary to what is in it, is false or useless or worse;
⢠But the Book is difficult to understand; hence, you need a guide, an intermediary, a monitor: in a word, the Church, the ulema, or the Party;
⢠The Book covers, the intermediary must cover every aspect of life: there is no distinction between the private and the public sphere, between the Secular and the Religious, between the State and the Church. These doctrines are totalitarian â in both senses: they insist on governing the totality of life â the Roman Catholic Churchâs minatory insistence against contraception, for instance, and the reams and reams of fatwas that deal with even more intimate matters; they are also totalitarian in the sense that what they prescribe on any aspect just must be obeyed;
⢠The test of piety is adherence to that Book and to the prescriptions of that intermediary â in every sphere of life;
⢠It is the duty of that intermediary, indeed of every believer to ensure that all come to accept and adhere to The Message â there is only one Message;
⢠As the Message is the âTruth, the whole Truth and nothing but the Truth,â as there is no truth beside it, those who do not accept the Message are cussed; worse, they are thwarting the Will of Allah, or its equivalent â the march of History in Marxism-Leninism;
⢠Hence, it is the duty of every believer, and even more so of that intermediary to use all means to make them accept the Message, and if, even after being offered the opportunity to accept it, they refuse, to vanquish them all together.
When these elements are present, the tradition will have one singular objective: dominance. It will become an ideology of power, a dogma that rationalises everything in the pursuit of hegemony. The dogma will necessarily gravitate to, among other things, violence.
Contrast those elements with propositions that are central to the Indic traditions:
⢠Reality is multilayered complexity: both in the sense that there are layers within layers of it, and in the sense of each element mingling into others: the Buddhist master Thich Nhat Hanh refers to the latter as âinter-beingâ;
⢠It has not been revealed exclusively to one person: several have glimpsed it;
⢠They have put down approximate descriptions of that reality as well as hints of how to glimpse it in some books: these are travel guides;
⢠Perceiving that Truth is an overwhelming, incomparable experience; it is the one joy that lasts. This life gives each of us a unique opportunity to bathe in that effulgence. If we donât, the loss will be ours â but that is about it: the Truth is not affected; the guides are not falsified;
⢠It is not just the Book or some singular great figure who can teach us; everything, every event, every relationship can be a teacher guiding us to glimpse the Truth â indeed, our object should be to make everything teach us. The essential points are three: different ways will suit different persons; second, the individual is the one who has to strive â as âan island unto himselfâ; third, the striving, the search is an inner-directed one. It has nothing to do with the state or power or dominance over nature or man;
⢠In pursuing this inner-directed search, indeed in leading oneâs life, the test is not adherence to any of these travel guides, nor obedience to any intermediary, but darshan â the travellerâs own experience: do not mistake the finger pointing to the moon â that is, my teaching â for the moon, the reality, the Buddha counsels.
Every single element in these traditions guides and pulls the believer in the direction that is the exact opposite of the Middle Eastern traditions. Reality is multilayered, hence no description of it is final: tolerance follows as an article of faith. The search is to be an inner-directed one: where, then, is there a case for converting some dar ul harb into some dar ul Islam? The touchstone is not that I am adhering to what some book says or what some person, howsoever worthy, prescribed. The touchstone is my own experience. The consequence of even this single article is immense and radical. The Gita is set in a battlefield. At the end, Arjuna declares that all his doubts are settled. He goes into gory battle. Yet Gandhiji derived non-violence from it. The orthodox berated him. Where do you get the authority to advance such a notion, they demanded. Gandhijiâs answer? From here, his heart. What is written in this book, he says in Anashakti Yoga, is the result of thirty yearsâ unremitting effort to live the Gita in my life. When Mansur speaks to his experience, he is executed. Within Islam, the Sufis were a beleaguered sect . . .
Putting belief into practice
It is entirely possible, of course, to be earnest about oneâs religious beliefs, practices, rituals and not turn to violence or to converting others through allurements or violence. Indeed, we can go further and say that in all traditions, the majority of people in their practice, in their day-to-day life are like each other: each of them has a hard enough time getting through her or his daily struggles to spare time and effort to forcing or even inducing others or even persuading others to his particular way. But when the religion insists that the object is to convert, to âharvest soulsâ for Jesus, when it declares that all of dar ul harb must be converted into the dar ul Islam; when the religion is a doctrine of dominance, being earnest about oneâs religion comes to include as an essential element that the believer assist in spreading that religion, and that he use all means to do so. If a believer does not do so, he is deficient in his belief.
That is why in the hadis, we find the Prophet repeatedly enumerating the boons that accrue to the martyr and his relatives from jihad, from killing and being killed in the cause of Islam. The pre-eminent rewards, of course, accrue to the one who joins in the fighting himself, the Prophet declares in scores of hadis. But even the one who does not do so directly, will be rewarded for every bit of assistance that he gives for the establishment, defence and spread of Islam, the Prophet declares. When a man keeps a horse for the purpose of jihad, âtying it with a long tether on a meadow or in a garden... whatever it eats from the area of the meadow or the garden where it is tied will be counted as good deeds for his benefit, and if it should break its rope and jump over one or two hillocks then all its dung and its footmarks will be written as good deeds for him; and if it passes by a river and drinks water from it even though he had no intention of watering it, even then he will get the rewards for its drinking.â And again, even more generally, âIf somebody keeps a horse in Allahâs Cause motivated by his belief in His Promise, then he will be rewarded on the Day of Resurrection for what the horse has eaten or drunk and for its dung and urine.â [Sahih al-Bukhari, 52.44, 49, 105; similarly, Muwattaâ Imam Malik, 951, Mishkat al-Masabih, Book XVIII, Volume II, p. 822. The hadis compilations as well as books on shariah are filled with scores and scores of such exhortations and promises.]
By contrast âthe one who died but did not fight in the way of Allah,â the Prophet declares, ânor did he express any desire (or determination) for jihad, died the death of a hypocrite.â [Sahih Muslim, 4696.] Again, the Prophet declares, âHe who dies without having fought or having felt fighting (against the infidels) to be his duty will die guilty of a kind of hypocrisy.â And yet again, âHe who does not join the warlike expedition (jihad), or equip a warrior, or look well after a warriorâs family when he is away, will be smitten by Allah with a sudden calamity.â Hence, commands the Prophet, âUse your property, your persons and your tongues in striving against the polytheists.â [Sunan Abu Dawud, 2496-98.]
Such commands follow ineluctably from the propositions that I listed above. We shut this fact out by two blindfolds. We judge a faith by looking at âpeople like usâ â most of the ones we know are âpersons like usâ, they do not live by such commands, but it is precisely because they are âlike usâ that they are in our social circle. Unfortunately, the outcome is determined, not by the millions who lead ordinary lives, lives like ours, but by microscopic minorities: to say, âBut the majority of Muslims did not want Partitionâ may be true but is little consolation â that did not save the country from being partitioned. Similarly, to say âBut millions are living peacefully today, they have not the slightest intention of setting off for jihadâ is true but equally little consolation: the ones who take the propositions seriously and thereby heed the hadis, are the ones who are determining the direction that events are taking.
And the direction that Islam itself is taking. Once they enter the stage, the extremists come to set the standard of fidelity and piety within a community. The tradition metamorphoses in no time: look at the change that has swept Islam in Southeast Asia in just fifteen years.
Second, we often lull ourselves with the thought, âBut so what if someone wears the scarf or burqa? If they want to send their children to madrasas, what business is it of ours?â But there is a technology to all this. The ones steering a community make a point of starting with a completely innocuous demand, by inducing believers to adhere to a practice that does not inconvenience non-believers in any way. The headscarf, for instance, or the new piety-statement in lands as far apart as Egypt and Pakistan, the zebibah â the dark, calloused bump that registers on the forehead when it is repeatedly struck or rubbed on the ground during prayers. [For our own neighbourhood, observe the visitors from Pakistan; for Egypt, see, for instance, Michael Slackman, âMark of piety as plain as a bump on the head,â IHT, December 13, 2007.] Non-believers are not inconvenienced by such signs, and yet the practices go far. They become a device for making the adherent realise that she is not the same as the others, and to make her or him announce that she is not one of the others. Simultaneously, the marks drill into others that the adherents have come to look upon themselves as separate. When the non-believers in turn start treating them as separate, that they are doing so becomes a grievance. And thus another argument is acquired for transiting from separateness to separatism.
Hence, all who are apprehensive of a Hindu reaction should:
⢠Get to know the non-Indic traditions;
⢠Shed denial â from denial of what the basic texts of the non-Indic traditions say to denial of the demographic aggression in the Northeast;
⢠Most important of all, work to ensure a completely fair and an absolutely firm state; and an even-handed discourse.
For their part, the Hindus cannot recline back, confident that the reaction will take care of the current pressures. They too have much to do. In particular, they must
⢠Awaken to the fact that the danger does not come just from violence and money; it comes as much from the purposive use of the electoral system;
⢠And so, they must organise themselves for this challenge as much as for others;
⢠For this, they must vault over internal divisions, in particular the curse of caste;
⢠Be alert not just to assault by others, but also to perversions from within: the commercialisation of the tradition; its becoming a commerce with deities â âPlease get me this contract, and I will . . .â; its becoming ostentatious religiosity; persons setting themselves up as the guardians of the tradition, and then using the perch for self-aggrandisement . . .
⢠Get to know the tradition; and live it.
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/255906._.html
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