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Book folder - acharya - 01-16-2004 Nationalism without a Nation in India John Hickman. Contemporary South Asia. Abingdon: Mar 2000. Vol. 9, Iss. 1; pg. 77, 2 pgs What explains the failure of Indian nationalism to deliver an Indian national identity? Given the recent electoral triumphs of the Hindu communal nationalist BJP and allied parties, efforts to provide a cogent answer to this question have assumed a new importance. India's extraordinary social diversity continues to find expression in an extraordinary diversity of political movements. <span style='font-size:14pt;line-height:100%'>In the absence of the political symbols and values that comprise a single national identity, the resulting political conflicts are probably more intense and difficult to resolve. What went wrong?</span> Although it is written in the often `gummy' language of post-modernism, this work by G: Aloysius offers an interesting answer derived from an analysis that owes much to the theoretical work of Ernest Gellner and Benedict Anderson on nationalism. Aloysius employs what he describes as the historical sociological method to explore and ultimately extract meaning from the ambiguous terminology used in the ideological articulation of Indian nationalism. Basic to this analysis is a definition of the nation as a modern form of society characterised by a homogeneous culture or an `equitable' political community which `precedes nationalism at least logically if not historically' (pp 11-12). The nation is thus understood to be more real than any nationalism(s) used to describe it or legitimate the authority of its government. Aloysius begins his investigation in the century before British rule, a period in which the dominant Brahminic hierarchy and varna ideology were subject to widespread and increasing contestation inside and outside the community of Hindu believers. British colonial rule turned back these challenges by upholding caste segregation, guaranteeing the property rights of largely upper caste rural elites, permitting a near monopolisation of modern English educational opportunities by Brahmins, and recruiting much of the bureaucratic personnel of the colonial state from among the upper castes. `Viewed in the context of the slow erosion of pre-colonial social structure that had been taking place, the impact of colonialism was to arrest the social progress, economic diversification and emergence of culture-based polities and revert to an environment and climate of pan-Indian Brahminical feudal consolidation ...' (p 51). Immediately before and after independence, these upper caste elites legitimated their power with an ideology that fused both religious and secular elements, and at least partially masked their caste and class hegemony. Indian nationalism is thus indicted as a device employed to secure succession to state power from the British by the upper caste elites who had been their collaborators in colonial rule, a device that was also employed to overwhelm various regional nationalisms and populist movements, which might have contested that succession to state power. In the penultimate chapter of the book, the focus shifts to M.K. Gandhi. After offering obligatory praise for Gandhi as person and politician, the author presents a harsh appraisal of Gandhian ideology and political practice for using religion in the service of upper caste interests. The religious language used in Gandhian discourse `meant religion for the lower caste masses and politics for the upper caste nationalists' (p 182). Exploiting Cow Protection and the Khilafat as issues not only resulted in the `vertical mobilization of Hindu and Muslim communities' but also `submerging the struggling discourse of social mobility, education, diversification of occupation for the lower castes' (p 185). Partition and even deeper social division within the northern states of independent India were the consequences of these efforts. <span style='color:red'>The author concludes that Indian nationalism delivered a state but not a nation because it was simply the ideological vehicle for upper caste hegemony. By implication, this basic failure would explain the success of a contemporary Hindu communal nationalism less adulterated by egalitarian hypocrisies and of the multiple regional nationalisms that challenge the unity and territorial integrity of India.</span> The reader should be cautioned that Aloysius repeatedly makes the heroic assumption that members of social groups share common consciousness. Shared religion, language, caste, or class are all assumed to generate not only consciousness of group identity but also agreement about common interests. [Author Affiliation] John Hickman Berry College, USA ========= Nationalism without a Nation in India (by G. Aloysius) Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1998 ISBN 0-19-564653-3 Book folder - acharya - 01-16-2004 Book Review Nationalism without a Nation Reviewed By Yoginder Sikand Name of the book: Pakistan-Nationalism without a Nation Editor: Christophe Jaffrelot Publisher: Manohar, New Delhi Year: 2002, Pages: 352 ISBN: 1-84277-116-7 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pakistan, the first country in the modern world to have been created in the name of religion, has, since its inception, been faced with the daunting task of nation-building and coming to terms with its diverse ethnicities. Much has already been written on the dilemmas that Pakistan faces, as it seeks to balance what often seem to be the mutually conflicting demands of Islamic universalism, on the one hand, and ethnic particularism, on the other. This collection of essays provides a broad account of the problems of nation-building in contemporary Pakistan. As the book's title suggests, the task of creating a nation on the basis of a universal religious ideology has not been easy, for Islam and nationalism seem to be at odds with each other. Christophe Jaffrelot's opening essays deals with the basic problem afflicting Pakistan: a perennial search for identity and unifying symbols seeking to bring together a diverse collection of peoples who share little in common other than their religion. The 'two-nation' theory, on which the Muslim League under Jinnah based its project for a separate Pakistan, has meant, Jaffrelot says, that Pakistani nationalism has always sought to define itself against the Indian/Hindu other. In other words, it is a negative self-identity, premised essentially on an unrelenting anti-Indianism. This has not proved an effective way of uniting the various different ethnic groups in the country, however. Jaffrelot shows how, increasingly, groups such as the Mohajirs, the Sindhis and the Baluchis, following the example of the Bengalis of the erstwhile East Pakistan, have been increasingly resentful of what they see as Punjabi domination, with the Punjabi-dominated bureaucracy and army employing Islam as a tool for keeping other ethnic groups in their place. Four incisive articles that follow the introduction, each dealing with various aspects of the ethnic question in Pakistan. Ian Talbot discusses the notion of the 'Punjabisation of Pakistan', arguing that although in the decades after independence Punjabi domination has clearly increased, not all regions and social classes in Punjab have actually stood to gain, as the benefits of economic development have largely accrued to certain social and economic classes concentrated in a few districts of the province. Yunas Samad describes the chequered history of the Mohajirs of Pakistan, Urdu-speaking refugees and their descendants, concentrated, for the most part, in urban Sind. He shows how Mohajir identity has undergone a radical shift over the years, with the community having been, in the first years of Pakistan, a dominant factor in the country's bureaucracy and polity, and now being increasingly pushed aside by Punjabis and Pathans. Alongside this, Mohajir self-perceptions have also been dramatically transformed. <span style='color:red'>From being vociferous champions of the 'two nation' theory and Islamist politics, they are now among its most bitter critics. </span>This process of reformulation of ethnic identities in Pakistan cannot be separated from the process of sectarianism, as S.V.R.Nasr and Mariam Abou Zahab show in their contributions. They argue that as the Pakistani state has increasingly sought to use Islam as a tool of legitimation, the <span style='color:red'>official version of Islam has been challenged by rival versions, thus giving rise to extreme sectarian strife, as between the Shias and the Sunnis, and, among the Sunnis, between the Deobandis and the Barelwis. The principal dilemma that Pakistan faces today in seeking to fashion a coherent national identity is the challenge of seeking to reconcile Islamic internationalism with Pakistani nationalism.</span> Increasingly, the Pakistani state has sought to use Islamist groups to serve its own internal and external interests. As an inevitable consequence, militant Islamist factions have mushroomed, and today threaten to drown the country in civil strife. Saeed Shafqat's essay deals with the shift from what he calls 'official Islam' to 'militant Islamism', focusing in particular on the Lashkar-i-Tayyeba, the armed wing of the Ahl-i-Hadith. Oliver Roy's essay deals with the Taliban, tracing Pakistan's role in bringing the Deobandi student militia to power in Kabul to serve its own interests, a project that has now ended in miserable failure. Gilles Dorronsoro's piece deals with the same issue and makes largely the same observations. The take-over of the Kashmiri struggle for self-determination and independence by pro-Pakistan Islamists, sponsored and armed by the Pakistani state, exhibits how Islam has become a convenient tool for pursuing strategic objectives, Sumit Ganguly argues in his paper titled 'The Islamic Dimensions of the Kashmir Insurgency'. As in the case of Afghanistan, Pakistan's deliberate use of Islam as a weapon has not only wrought tremendous destruction in Kashmir, but has also meant a radical negation of the indigenous Islamic ethos, based as it is on a generous tolerance and acceptance of diversity. Linked to the Islamic question is the manner in which Pakistan has sought to negotiate its own foreign policy. Mohammed Waseem's article traces the links between Pakistani domestic and foreign policies, focusing in particular on the Islamic dimension. The use of Islam as a means for pursuing Pakistan's own objectives in Kashmir, sidelining the pro-independence Jammu and Kashmir Liberation front and, in its place, propping up a plethora of pro-Pakistan Islamist outfits, has had, as Amelie Blom writes, crucial unintended consequences for Pakistani civil society, leading to sharp sectarianism and general instability. Ian Talbot rounds off the discussion with a general discussion on the role of the army in moulding Pakistani foreign policy. If the general tenor of the articles is depressing, Pierre Lafrance's piece, the last in the volume, suitably titled 'And Yet Pakistan', ends on a more cheery note. Despite the manifold and increasing challenges that Pakistan is beset with, it has still managed to survive. But between mere survival and thriving there is more than a world of difference. q Book folder - acharya - 01-16-2004 Saffron Book Excerpts Awake and Unite! After centuries, a unique opportunity has come our way. The current can be the Indian century provided we Indians amalgamate as metals in an alchemy. Combined to create a national synergy so that the efforts of four Indians lead to the result of five or six. That is the only way we can generate surpluses in order to leapfrog across lost centuries. For the greater part of history, brawn has dominated brain, muscle has overruled mind. World War II was an epic example of the resulting brutality. Now, at last, a time has come when the brain is beginning to ride the body. The greed of nations no longer covets the territory of other countries. Colonialism ended decades ago as land ceased to be the principal source of wealth. In the process, trade has replaced war as the instrument for centuries to enrich themselves. The Indian generally, and the Hindu in particular has preferred trade to war. At the dawn of this millennium, there are high hopes and many expectations. With the advent of the computer revolution, we are set to play a big role in information technology. Five million or more Indians are likely to get rich as a result. That is a matter not only of hope but also honour. But India is a nation of a hundred crore. What about the rest of our people? Just as a chain is as weak as its weakest link, a society is as woeful as its poorest section. Unless we enable all our people to have a chance to be well off, India will not be united enough to seize the opportunity. Apart from the difference between the poor and the rich, there are several obstacles in the path of Indian unity. The Muslim contempt and the Hindu hatred must be overcome. This is the deepest and the wildest schism in our society. Without removing or bridging it, India cannot be truly one nation. I have therefore devoted a great deal of space to this syndrome. Many leaders ranging from Emperor Akbar to Bhakta Kabir to Mahatma Gandhi have all failed to bridge the schism except temporarily or in a few sectors. Their approach was to placate whereas mine is to be open and frank. Unless everyone is enabled to express oneself freely, no true dialogue, or understanding can come about. After all, there can be no true friendship without frankness. How can there be a true friendship unless the two speak up the truth about each other? Women must get their equal place in society. Casteism must go. There should be no need for anyone to feel like a dalit or a neglected tribal. This book shows how these gulfs can be bridged. Unless every region of the country makes equable progress, national unity will be difficult to sustain. The backward region would have a grievance while the prosperous area would consider the poor an economic drag. The vast difference in the employment prospects of those educated in English and the rest has to be removed, if ours is to be a united society. A bane of our country are the anti-Hindu Hindus who enjoy all the legitimacy of their Hindu pedigree including names such as Sitaram, Harkishan and yet spend all their lives trying to divide our society by inciting the poor without reducing their poverty, instigating the Muslim without redressing his grievance. In fact, they form a perennial fifth column. Are they not a symptom of a masochistic trait? Or, are they a cancer that destroys the pride and self-confidence of Indians as a nation? Or else how can India tolerate a street in the middle of New Delhi that commemorates Aurangzeb? http://www.prafullgoradia.com/saffron-book/excerpts.html Book folder - acharya - 01-16-2004 ANTI HINDUS About The Book Anti Hindus has been an attempt by Prafull Goradia to highlight the contempt towards the Hindu ethos that prevails amongst the intelligentsia in India. Anti-Hindus, Prafull Goradia says, consists of sadists, like painter Maqbool Fida Hussain, who harbour contempt for the Hindus; as well as masochists, like S. Gopal, who derive gratification by flagellating their own people. Anti Hindus talks in detail about M F Hussain's paintings and draws a comparison between Hindu and Muslim subjects. Ironically, Muslim and Christian subjects have been portrayed as fully clothed decent people while Hindu subjects have been dealt in an embarrassing manner in his paintings. To make the readers fully aware of the corrupt ideas of Hussain, Anti Hindus has 32 colour photographs of his paintings that describe him as a sexually perverse person whose revolting paintings of Hindu Goddesses and women copulating with animals are bound to throw any normal person into a state of frenzy. There can be no greater perversity than shown by the portrayal of deities in union with animals in Hussain's paintings and also the anti-Hindu features written by Hindus themselves, Goradia writes. Men like Hussain were sadistic in drawing satisfaction by hurting the sentiments of Hindus, Goradia feels. Anti-Hindus also focuses on how Gandhi, a devout Hindu, slowly started getting more and more anti-Hindu as his public life progressed. Goradia feels that Gandhi was so obsessed by the belief of Hindu-Muslim unity that he was ready to sacrifice or sell out Hindu interests, Hindu honour and Hindu blood. Anti-Hindus further describes India's first Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru as an anti-Hindu. The book talks about how Nehru, being Gandhi's favourite, was chosen over Sardar Patel as the Congress president in 1946. In fact, none of the members of the provincial committee had voted for Nehru for the post. So Nehru was a leader without any followers at that point of time. Afraid of Hindu nationalism and looking around for allies, he soon found support in the Muslims who had not emigrated to Pakistan. Internationally then, the Third World was largely pro-Soviet, one whose leader was Nehru. So at home, the communists sided with Nehru making him a pro-Muslim, a pro-communist and an anti-Hindu. In this manner, Anti Hindus, packed with various news paper articles, writings, excerpts from books and photographs tries to do justice to the analysis of the prevaling anti-Hindu sentiments in India. http://www.prafullgoradia.com/anti-hindu/about-the-book.html Book folder - acharya - 01-16-2004 Muslim League's UNFINISHED AGENDA About The Book The Hindus of Nehruvian India bent over backwards to placate the Muslims. Section of the Constitution, for example Articles 29 and 30, which were proposed early in 1946 in order to try to persuade the Muslims to withdraw their insistence on partition, remained in the supreme statue even after 1947. The reactionary Muslim Women's Bill was passed to overturn the Supreme Court judgement in the Shah Bano case. Yet the Community, by and large, has been unhappy. In the midest of such hopelessness, patriotic citizens search for solutions, anywhere and everywhere. One obvious solution lay in the vision of Qaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah who had demanded not only territorial vivisection of India, but also an exchange of population whereby all non-Muslims would migrate to Hindustan and all Muslims would inhabit Pakistan. UNFINISHED AGENDA is the story of this unfulfilled dream. Review of the book by Priyadarsi Dutta in the Pioneer of March 30, 2003: Within half a year of his magnum opus Hindu Masjids, Praful Goradia is back with Muslim League's Unfinished Agenda. Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf during his July 2001 visit to India spoke of Kashmir as an unfinished agenda of Partition. Then President KR Narayanan blunted him by saying that peaceful co-existence between the two dominions, India and Pakistan, was an equally unfinished agenda. Evidently, both missed, or dared not speak about, the original unfinished agenda of Partition set by the Muslim League. It is to the credit of Prafull Goradia, ex-MP and former editor of BJP Today, to redeem it. Exchange of Population was the `Unfinished Agenda' of the Muslim League as envisaged by the father figures of Partition. Book folder - Hauma Hamiddha - 01-26-2004 Pioneer 27th January 2004 Demeaning Shivaji, denigrating dharma By Sandhya Jain Having purchased and read James Laine's Shivaji: Hindu King in Islamic India only after it was officially withdrawn by the publishers, I cannot view the events at the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute (BORI) as totally unjustified. Certainly, attacks on centres of learning have no place in Hindu ethos and must not recur. Yet, having gone through 105 pages of shoddy polemics posing as historical research, I am constrained to state that Oxford University Press needs to re-examine its commissioning policy if it hopes to retain credibility as a publishing house. Moreover, the BORI scholars acknowledged by Laine must honestly inform the nation of the extent to which they are responsible for the unwarranted assertions â we cannot call them conclusions, as no evidence has been adduced or offered â in the impugned book. Far from being a meticulous scholar who has uncovered unpalatable truths about a revered historical figure, Laine is an anti-Hindu hypocrite determined to de-legitimize India's ancient civilizational ethos and its grand rejuvenation by Shivaji in the adverse circumstances of the seventeenth century. BORI is not generally associated with substandard scholarship, and should explicitly declare its position on the actual contents of the book. Laine exposes his agenda when he foists the unnatural concept of South Asia upon the geographical and cultural boundaries of India; this is awkward because his discussion is India-centric and specific to the Maharashtra region. He is also unable to disguise his discomfort at the fact that Shivaji withstood the most bigoted Mughal emperor, Aurangzeb, and established political agency for the embattled Hindu community, amidst a sea of Islamic sultanates. This has so unnerved Laine that he repeatedly makes inane remarks about Hindus employed under Muslim rulers and vice versa, to claim that the two communities lacked a modern sense of identity, and could not be viewed as opposing entities. What he means, of course, is that Hindus of the era cannot be ceded to have had a sense of `Hindu' identity. Reading the book, I was struck by the fact that it did not once mention Shivaji's famed ambition to establish a Hindu Pad Padshahi. This is a strange omission in a work claiming to study how contemporary authors viewed Shivaji's historic role, and the assessment of his legacy by subsequent native and colonial writers. The most notable omission is of the poet Bhushan, who wrote: "Kasihki Kala Gayee, Mathura Masid Bhaee; Gar Shivaji Na Hoto, To Sunati Hot Sabaki!" [Kashi has lost its splendour, Mathura has become a mosque; If Shivaji had not been, All would have been circumcised (converted)]. Bhushan's verse has immense historical value because the Kashi Vishwanath temple was razed in 1669 and thus lost its splendour, and the Krishna Janmabhoomi temple was destroyed and converted into a mosque in 1670. Bhushan came to Shivaji's kingdom from the Mughal capital in 1671, and within two years composed Shiv Bhooshan, a biography of Shivaji. It clearly states that Shivaji wanted to set up a Hindu Pad Padshahi. Hence the view that Shivaji had no ideological quarrel with Aurangzeb and was only an adventurer in search of power and resources is juvenile. Laine obviously subscribes to the secularist school of historiography that decrees that Hindus must forget the evil done to them, a phenomenon Dr. Koenraad Elst calls negationism. But history is about truth, and Hindu society's long and painful experience of Islamic invasions and the subsequent Islamic polity has been so well documented in standard works like Cambridge History of India, that it is amazing a modern historian should claim there was no tension between Muslim rulers and their Hindu subjects. Shivaji strove consciously for political power as an instrument for the resurrection of dharma (righteousness), a quest he termed as "Hindavi Swarajya," a word having both geographical and spiritual- cultural connotations. When still in his teens in 1645 CE, Shivaji began administering his father's estate under a personalized seal of authority in Sanskrit, an indication that he envisaged independence and respected the Hindu tradition. A 1646 CE letter to Dadaji Naras Prabhu refers to an oath that Shivaji, Prabhu, and others took in the presence of the deity at Rayareshwar, to establish "Hindavi Swarajya." Shivaji was aware of the economic ruin and cultural annihilation of Hindus under the various sultanates. He desired to end this suffering, but was personally free from bigotry, as attested by contemporary Muslim chroniclers, notably Khafi Khan. It is therefore galling when Laine smugly proclaims: "I have no intention of showing that he was unchivalrous, was a religious bigot, or oppressed the peasants." A.S. Altekar (Position of Women in Ancient India) has recorded how Shivaji, in stark contrast to Muslim kings and generals of his era, ensured that Muslim women in forts captured by him were not molested and were escorted to safety. It is inconceivable that Shivaji would not know that Hindu women similarly situated would have to commit jauhar. It is therefore incumbent upon Laine and BORI to explain what "unchivalrous" and "bigot" mean. The insinuation about "bigot" is especially objectionable in view of Laine's insistence that Shivaji had no particular interest in Hindu civilization and no proven relationship with the revered Samarth Ramdas or sant Tukaram. A Maharashtrian friend suggests that Laine has probably not read the references cited in his book! What the reader needs to understand is that Ramdas' historical significance lies in the fact that he openly exhorted the people to rise against oppression and hinted in Dasbodh that Shivaji was an avatar who had come to restore dharma. By denying that he was Shivaji's spiritual mentor, Laine seeks to disprove that the great Maratha wanted to establish a Hindu Pad Padshahi. Ramdas, a devotee of Rama (Vaishnava sampradaya), visited the Khandoba temple at Jejuri, Pune; apologized to the god (Shiva) for boycotting the temple due to the practice of animal sacrifice there; and built a Hanuman temple at its entrance. I mention this to debunk Laine's pathetic insistence that devotion to a personal god divides Hindu society. This is alien to our thinking; we see no conflict between Ramdas and the Bhavani-worshipping Shivaji. Then, there is Laine's tasteless allegation that Shivaji may possibly (whatever that means) be illegitimate, simply because Jijabai, who bore many children while living with her husband in the south, gave birth to Shivaji on her husband's estate near Pune and continued to live there. Maharashtrians point out that Shahaji had to send his pregnant wife to safety in Shivneri due to political instability. Shahaji was on the run with the boy king Murtaza Nizamshah, in whose name he controlled the Nizamshahi. After its fall in 1636, service in the Adilshahi took him to Bangalore (his remarriage produced the distinguished Thanjavur-Bhonsle dynasty); he administered his Pune lands through Dadaji Konddev. My response to Laine's profound Freudian analysis is that he has thanked his wife and children and dedicated his book to his mother; I couldn't but notice the absence of a father. Is one to deduce something from the omission? Laine can relax: since the Vedas, Hindus have placed only proportionate emphasis on biological bloodlines; there is no shame if a man cannot mention his father; a true b@st@rd is one who does not know the name of his mother. End of matter Book folder - acharya - 01-27-2004 Reforms is alive, the Empire's long dead, the Cold War over, MTV all around. Yet, 54 years after India became a Republic, our erstwhile mai baap sarkar still plays nanny. Books banned by the Raj remain on the banned list and many more have been added sinceâJames Laine's on Shivaji the latest in Maharashtra. Here's some of what you can't read in India today. Of course, you can try to google your way out. MANINI CHATTERJEE We have porn.com, we can't have this ⢠Scented Garden (Anthropology of sex life in the Levant) by Bernhard Stern; translated by David Berger. Banned: August 18, 1945 ⢠Dark Urge by Robert W. Taylor. Banned: Dec 29, 1955 ⢠The Jewel in the Lotus (A Historical Survey of the Sexual Culture of the East). Banned: July 20, 1968 Sare Jahan Se Achha (And Let No One Tell You Any Different): By far the largest number of banned books are in this categoryâbooks critical of India, Indian foreign policy, or Kashmir ⢠The Face of Mother India by Katherine Mayo. Banned: January 18, 1936 ⢠Old Soldier Sahib by Private Frank Richards (memoirs of a British soldier serving in India whose book Old Soldiers Never Die has been described as ``probably the best account of the Great War as seen through the eyes of a private soldier.'' Banned: Aug 22, 1936 ⢠The Heart of India by Alexander Campbell. Banned: March 11, 1959 ⢠The Evolution of the British Empire and Commonwealth from the American Revolution by Alfred Le Ray Burt. Banned: Aug 9, 1969 ⢠A Struggle between Two Lines over the Question of How to Deal with US Imperialism by Fan Asid-Chu, Foreign Languages Press, Peking, 1965. Banned: Dec 6, 1969 ⢠Behind the Iron Curtain in Kashmir: Neutral Opinion (author not mentioned). Banned: Aug 27, 1949 ⢠American Military Aid to Pakistan (its full implications) by Salahuddin Ahmad. Banned: July 31, 1954 ⢠Captive Kashmir by Aziz Beg. Banned: April 19, 1958 ⢠India Independent by Charles Bettelheim. Banned: May 15, 1976 Leave Our Gods Alone ⢠Hindu Heaven by Max Wylie. Banned: April 28, 1934 ⢠The Land of the Lingam by Arthur Miles. Banned: Oct 2, 1937 ⢠What Has Religion Done for Mankind, Watch-tower Bible and Tract Society, New York. Banned: Feb 26, 1955 ⢠The Ramayana by Aubrey Menen. Banned: Sept 29, 1956 Let Sleeping Icons Lie James Laine's book on Shivaji is the latest in the line of books prohibited because they take atypical view on nationalist icons. Critical views on Nehru and offbeat takes on Gandhi's assassination are still on the ban list. ⢠Nine Hours to Rama by Stanley Wolpert. Banned: Sept 1, 1962 ⢠Nehru, A Political Biography by Michael Edwards. Banned: Dec 13, 1975 ⢠Who Killed Gandhi by Lourenco De Sadvandor. Banned: Dec 29, 1979 http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=39862 Book folder - muddur - 01-27-2004 I can't believe that there can be books with this title !!! <b> Shinde, Antulay flay PM over book ban</b> http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/430095.cms PUNE: A day after Prime Minister A.B. Vajpayee criticised the Maharashtra government for banning a controversial book on Chhatrapati Shivaji, chief minister Sushilkumar Shinde as well as former chief minister A.R. Antulay shot back, saying an insult to the Marath king will not be tolerated. While Shinde justified banning James Laineâs book, <b>Shivaji: A Hindu King in Islamic India</b>, <!--emo&:thumbdown--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/thumbsdownsmileyanim.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='thumbsdownsmileyanim.gif' /><!--endemo--> <!--emo&:flush--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/Flush.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='Flush.gif' /><!--endemo--> Antulay called for the arrest of the American author. Vajpayee had on Friday criticised the violent protest by members of the Sambhaji Brigade in Pune on January 5 and had also disapproved of the state governmentâs ban of the book. Shinde said, "We have banned the book and, at the same time,we have also donated Rs 10 lakh to the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute (Bori). It is unfortunate that our decisions are being criticised by Vajpayee. No one will tolerate an insult to Shivaji." Both the Congressmen were speaking at the inauguration ceremony of the Maulana Abul Kalam Azad memorial at Koregaon Park on Saturday. Seeking to raise the pitch on the tragic vandalism at Bori here recently, Antulay demanded that the Prime Minister initiate steps for arresting Laine for his allegedly derogatory remarks against Shivaji. Antulay lamented Vajpayeeâs reported statement that the issue should be sorted out through dialogue and by writing an authoritative book to counter the contents of Laineâs book. Antulayâs remarks, in a style characteristic of Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray, are being viewed as politically significant, as the issue is fast gathering political overtones. His speech stunned the audience, as he warned that even members of the minority community would not tolerate an insult to the founder of "Hindavi Swarajya". "There is no need to hold any dialogue with Laine, as he has insulted a national hero," he sought to advise the Prime Minister. Earlier, in his speech, Shinde accepted the demand made by city builder P.A. Inamdar that the state government frame a policy to popularise education among the minority community members. The CM said he would sanction any proposal initiated by Inamdar for opening B.Ed and medical colleges for the members of the minority communities. "The state is considering a policy for reservations in jobs for some minority communities. However, I cannot make public the details of this proposal," Shinde said. Both Antulay and Shinde praised Rajya Sabha member Suresh Kalmadi and mayor Dipti Chaudhari for taking the lead in constructing the beautiful memorial. Republican Party of India leader and MP Ramdas Athawale and Kalmadi also spoke at the function. Book folder - Guest - 01-27-2004 <!--QuoteBegin-Hauma Hamiddha+Jan 26 2004, 01:25 AM-->QUOTE(Hauma Hamiddha @ Jan 26 2004, 01:25 AM)<!--QuoteEBegin--> Pioneer 27th January 2004 Demeaning Shivaji, denigrating dharma By Sandhya Jain My response to Laine's profound Freudian analysis is that he has thanked his wife and children and dedicated his book to his mother; I couldn't but notice the absence of a father. Is one to deduce something from the omission? Laine can relax: since the Vedas, Hindus have placed only proportionate emphasis on biological bloodlines; there is no shame if a man cannot mention his father; a true b@st@rd is one who does not know the name of his mother. End of matter <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> <!--emo&:blow--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blow.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='blow.gif' /><!--endemo--> Book folder - Hauma Hamiddha - 02-06-2004 More Hindu baiting by western "theorists" HINDUISM IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE � Reform, Hindutva, Gender, and Sampraday: Antony Copley � Editor; Oxford University Press, 2/11, Ansari Road, Daryaganj, New Delhi-110001. Rs. 595. It's been reviewed in 'The HINDU'. http://www.hindu.com/br/2004/02/03/stories...20300311400.htm THE BOOK under review, which is a volume of essays, is an examination of the contemporary status of Hinduism under the shadow of Hindutva. The essays featured are a valiant attempt to disengage Hinduism from Hindutva as well as distance Indian identity from a distorted pursuit of an exclusivist idea of "Hinduness". This rich and varied collection is circumscribed by two major themes. The first is to examine the possibility of ever approximating to an ideal of secular nationalism within the Indian context. This seems to most authors as a contentious issue, given their idea of Indian society as predominantly religious. The other theme deals with the distinction between the public and the private realms and the question of the rightful place of religion in these spaces. Several other inferences follow from these two overarching paradigms. It is assumed that any semblance of collusion between religious reform movements in India and Hindutva is to be viewed as a distortion. This, in turn, flows from the belief that the essential core, if any, of Hinduism was largely tolerant. The editor expresses horror at the cruel appropriation of "tolerant" and essentially "spiritually enriching" Hinduism for political purposes by the votaries of Hindutva: "But one can see how disturbing it must be for India's secular historians to discover that the history of its modern religious institutions has to take on a new resonance and that the ways in which the sadhus were/are organised and mobilised both in the past and the present are no longer part of the history of some exotic religious culture but directly relevant to the cut and thrust of political events." To put it mildly, this is na�ve and self- indulgent. Hinduism can hardly ever be seen as non-political or apolitical. This tendency to reduce Hinduism into an inward-looking, non-worldly and essentially tolerant faith helps in underwriting the dogmatism of the Hindutva brigade. The tolerance of the "mild" Hindu is the very politics of Hindutva; it helps to portray Muslims, Christians and dissenting Hindus as the provocateurs. To argue that Hindutva is a modern aberration and has nothing to do with a pristine, original form of Hinduism is to support the very idea of a Golden Age that Hindutva so vociferously promotes. It is instructive that the editor takes note of Wilhem Halbfass's formidable thesis about the repressive tolerance of the Hindus: the inability of the Hindus to confront other faiths in order to learn from them. Halbfass argued that this resulted in actual practice of intolerance. The unfortunate bit is that neither Copley nor any of the other contributors engage with this very important formulation. Of course, Halbfass's thesis is only partially true. Hinduism did "learn" from other faiths by caricaturing them in the first instance and then remodelling itself on them. These caricatures were not always negative; they could just be gross simplifications. Vivekananda's oft quoted � Copley's introduction also includes it � statement about future India being a synthesis of a Vedantic mind and an Islamic body belongs squarely to this genre. Look at the trajectory of this argument. Firstly, the mind has inevitably been privileged with the body subservient to it. Secondly, Vedanta would consider the body to be an entity engulfed in "Maya", prone to decay and, hence, transitory. To build a theory of tolerance on the basis of this quote is to practise self-delusion. Neither does the distinction between the private and the public helps very much. The legacy of Hannah Arendt looms large over this distinction. Arendt romanticised the public sphere, reducing it to no more than a college debating society. (This is not to suggest that there is no distinction between the public and private. In fact it is just that, a distinction, and not a set of mutually exclusive spheres or realms.) There is far too much premium put on secular nationalism as a consequence. The modern state in Europe and its theory is little more than secularised theological concepts, where the Omnipotent God has cosmetically given way to an omnipotent law-giver, either in the guise of a person or in the abstraction called sovereignty. The question confronting India today is one of an alternative to Hindutva, not merely in political terms, but in the sense of constructing an alternate theory of reality that goes beyond the mindless parroting of homilies about Atman and Brahman. The way out lies in a clear understanding of Indian theories of materialism on the one hand and in looking afresh at Buddha's stupendous philosophical and ethical revolution. In more recent times, Ananda Coomaraswamy, Tagore and Gandhiji confronted these very issues of Hindu identity and emerged with dazzling insights. But as long as the Indian mind continues to partake of the serpent and rope logic, there is little hope. It is time now to ask why the sanctum sanctorum was dark in the first place. Book folder - Guest - 02-14-2004 I got this from sulekha newshopper.. http://www.sulekha.com/hoppercomments.asp?cid=327007 society&the arts BOOKS The Hidden Agenda Ten reasons why Romila Thapar's meeting with Mahmud of Ghazni at Somnath is historic By Chandan Mitra Eminent historian Romila Thapar has an agenda and a central character in her authoritative monograph on the high-profile temple at Somnath in Gujarat. But it is an agenda that dare not take its name. And as for the central dramatis persona, she does not even mention him. After regretting the involvement of various Congress leaders, including India's first President Rajendra Prasad, in the rebuilding of the Somnath temple in 1951, Thapar refers to the most recent challenge to the "secular credentials of Indian society". That being the rath yatra organised by the VHP "in association with leaders of the BJP". L.K. Advani, who electrified India with his 1991 campaign and put his party on the road to power by making Hindutva a mainstream ideology, is not named throughout the narrative. As a historical work, Thapar's scholarship is difficult to fault. She has meticulously studied various accounts of Mahmud of Ghazni's destruction of the temple in the 11th century. She has carried the narrative through to contemporary times, explaining the reasons for the resurgence of Hindu sentiment in the 19th century on this issue, leading to the temple's rebuilding after Independence. The volume, however, is so apparent in its purpose that it can only preach to the converted. Considering the dwindling band of Marxists and their fellow-travellers in the arena of Indian history (since they don't control university appointments any more), it is doubtful how many would uncork champagne bottles at the publication of this scholastic endeavour. For the general public, the book makes laborious reading. Even secular fundamentalists from a non-history background would not be tempted to persevere through the Byzantine complexities of textual and interpretational rivalries among the Turks, Arabs, Chalukyas, Rajputs, Jainas, Shaivites, colonialists and the Hindu nationalists. If a sahmat-type organisation were to sum up Thapar's treatise in a pamphlet, it would read something like this: 1. Undeniably, Mahmud of Ghazni raided a temple at Somnath and destroyed the idol there. 2. Although Persian sources extol his achievement and refer to the many infidels he killed, the purpose of the raid was economic, perhaps even iconoclastic, but not communal. 3. It is even possible that Mahmud believed the Somnath icon to be that of an early Arabic Goddess, Manat, for Somnath might even be a bastardisation of the Arabic su-manat. She was one of the goddesses Prophet Muhammed once said could be worshipped, but then retracted, claiming that the assertion was influenced by Satan. The reference to Manat is contained in the so-called Satanic Verses, subsequently deleted from the Quran. 4. Jaina and Sanskrit sources, on the other hand, make only cursory references to Mahmud's repeated raids. They don't repeat stories like Mahmud smashing the idol into smithereens and feeding Brahmins the lime that emerged from its ruins after breaking his promise not to destroy the lingam and confine himself only to loot. This suggests Mahmud did not either divide society or permanently traumatise Hindus by his actions, as "communalists" have since led us to believe. It is immaterial that non-Muslims might have feared offending the ascendancy of Muslim political and military prowess and dared not question such actions. (Postscript: Alternatively, they may not have wanted to wallow in the angst of their humiliation at the hands of the Yavanas. But that would be a politically incorrect position to take.) 5. Hindu rulers frequently raided temples for booty and there was nothing extraordinary about Mahmud's or subsequent Muslim desecrations of Somnath. Anyway, Hindus were not Hindus (they still aren't), but a group of people divided by caste and subcaste residing in a place called India. 6. The Somnath temple was repeatedly renovated by various local rulers and the worship of the deity went on. This is contrary to suggestions that it had been converted into a mosque. The reconstructions were necessitated by sea spray that routinely damaged the structure. In other words, irrespective of Mahmud's raid, the temple would have fallen into disuse and, thus, its projection as a symbol of Islamic intolerance of Hindu beliefs is unwarranted. 7. The Arabs had settled in Sindh and Gujarat long before Mahmud's incursions and lived in perfect harmony with Hindus. A merchant from Hormuz in the Gulf, who engaged in the trade of horses, was actually given land by a Hindu ruler to construct a mosque close to Somnath. This suggests there was no antagonism between the two communities. In fact, Hindus explained the destruction of Somnath as an inevitability in a dark age called the Kaliyug. 8. The entire mischief began with governor-general Ellenborough who premeditatedly relied on Persian accounts of Hindu humiliation and decided to play them up to drive a wedge between Hindus and Muslims. His efforts were challenged by Macaulay who opposed "Linga-ism" and denounced support for obscurantism and idolatry. Ellenborough mistakenly sought to appease maharaja Ranjit Singh and brought back the gates of Somnath allegedly ferried away by Mahmud, but these turned out to be fakes. 9. In the 19th century, Hindu historians and politicians made a big deal of Mahmud's raids. While K.M. Munshi wrote emotion-charged novels, Bengali nationalists got unnecessarily worked up over these issues. Munshi was influenced by people like Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, Aurobindo and Vivekananda. (How terrible!) 10. Taking a cue from the likes of Munshi, Gujarati leaders, including Vallabhbhai Patel, supported the reconstruction of the temple after Independence much to the chagrin of the secular Nehru. This was an assertion of Hindu, not Indian, nationalism. It only helped the "communal" forces that plotted the fall of Babri Masjid at the "supposed" Ram Janmabhoomi by launching a mobilisation drive from Somnath. I believe I have not unfairly summarised Thapar. She is entitled to her views and has taken pains to try and establish it through scholarship. Sadly for her, very few will believe her. Book folder - acharya - 02-14-2004 <!--QuoteBegin-Hauma Hamiddha+Feb 5 2004, 11:43 AM-->QUOTE(Hauma Hamiddha @ Feb 5 2004, 11:43 AM)<!--QuoteEBegin--> More Hindu baiting by western "theorists" HINDUISM IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE � Reform, Hindutva, Gender, and Sampraday: Antony Copley � Editor; Oxford University Press, 2/11, Ansari Road, Daryaganj, New Delhi-110001. Rs. 595. It's been reviewed in 'The HINDU'. http://www.hindu.com/br/2004/02/03/stories...20300311400.htm THE BOOK under review, which is a volume of essays, is an examination of the contemporary status of Hinduism under the shadow of Hindutva. The essays featured are a valiant attempt to disengage Hinduism from Hindutva as well as distance Indian identity from a distorted pursuit of an exclusivist idea of "Hinduness". This rich and varied collection is circumscribed by two major themes. The first is to examine the possibility of ever approximating to an ideal of secular nationalism within the Indian context. This seems to most authors as a contentious issue, given their idea of Indian society as predominantly religious. The other theme deals with the distinction between the public and the private realms and the question of the rightful place of religion in these spaces. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> This is a careful propoganda material to slowly descredit Indian culture. The whole idea is that there is no valid reason for the hindu ethos. Book folder - Guest - 02-29-2004 Online book at Bharatvani.org. Incidentally I am now sure how many appreciate what a rich resource Bharatvani.org is. I own the hard copy of this book. It is an excellent book and probably one of the very few of its kind in print with a wealth of data collected by the late KS Lal. Truly anoutstanding historian of India. Muslim Slave System in Medieval India K.S. Lal Aditya Prakashan, New Delhi Book folder - Guest - 03-20-2004 Return of the Aryans Bhagwan S. Gidwani A sweeping saga of ancient India Return of the Aryans tells the epic story of the Aryansâa gripping tale of kings and poets, seers and gods, battles and romance and the rise and fall of civilizations. In a remarkable feat of the imagination, Bhagwan S. Gidwani takes us back to the dawn of mankind (8000 BC) to recreate the world of the Aryans. He tells us why the Aryans left India, their native land, for foreign shores and shows us their triumphant return to their homeland⦠Vast and absorbing, the novel tells the stories of characters like the gentle god, Sindhu Putra, spreading his message of love; the physician-sage Dhanawantar and his wife, Dhanawantari; peaceloving Kashi after whom the holy city of Varanasi is named; and Nila who gave his name to the river Nile⦠Richly textured and with a cast of thousands, the epic adventure of the Aryans comes gloriously alive in the hands of the bestselling author of The Sword of Tipu Sultan. http://www.siliconindia.com/books/newbooks...ils.asp?bid=822 Book folder - Guest - 03-21-2004 Just wanted to post one more resource for books about India -- http://www.swaveda.com/books.php I have about 130 books listed there. Would be happy to add more books, if you guys have a title to recommend. You can also post book reviews on the site if you so choose. - Anand Book folder - Guest - 03-29-2004 <b>download all the 18 puranas / 4 vedas</b> Book folder - acharya - 04-08-2004 ADVERTISEMENT Book Review Name of the Book: At the Confluence of Two RiversâHindus and Muslims in South India Author: Jackie Assayag Publisher: Manohar, New Delhi Year: 2004 Pages: 313 Reviewed by: Yoginder Sikand Compared with north India, relatively little has been written on the social history of Islam and Hindu-Muslim relations in the southern states of India. This is particularly unfortunate, given that Islam arrived in coastal south India considerably before Muslims appeared in the north, and that the spread of Islam in the region, in contrast to much of north India, was not accompanied by Muslim political expansion, being the result mainly of the missionary efforts of Sufis and traders. Furthermore, and again unlike the situation in much of the north, Hindu-Muslim relations in most parts of south India have been fairly tension-free, and continue to be so, although things are now changing with the rise in recent years of aggressive Hindu organizations in the region. This book sets out to explore various aspects of Hindu-Muslim relations in the southern Indian state of Karnataka. In doing so it seriously challenges several key assumptions that underlie both commonsensical notions as well as scholarly writings on this vexed issue. Examining various shared religious traditions, cults and shrines in Karnataka with which both Hindus and Muslims are associated, Assayag questions the notion of âIslamâ and âHinduismâ, as actually practiced, as being two monolithic entities, neatly defined and clearly set apart, if not opposed to, each other. In turn, this challenges the understanding of âHindusâ and âMuslimsâ as two distinct communities that have little or nothing in common at the level of social practice and religious belief and ritual. In this way, Assayag questions the grossly simplistic and misleading notion of âHindusâ and âMuslimsâ as being inherently and necessarily the theological âotherâ of each other. The shared religious traditions in which many Muslims and Hindus in present-day Karnataka jointly participate forms the main focus of this book. Assayag provides interesting anthropological details of the beliefs and practices associated with the cults of various Sufis and local deities, showing how the common participation of both Hindus and Muslims in these cults helps to promote a shared tradition and culture. Thus, Hindus flock in large numbers to Sufi shrines; village Muslims often visit Hindu temples where some of them even âexperienceâ being âpossessedâ by a local goddess; Hindus enroll as disciples of a Muslim saint; Muslims and Hindus jointly participate in rituals on the day of Ashura in the month of Muharrum; a Hindu chooses a Muslim as the custodian of a Hindu shrine and vice versa, and so on. This shared religious tradition owes in part to the nature of the process of the spread of Islam in the region. Islamisation, typically, took the form not of a sudden and drastic conversion, but, rather, as an process of religioi-culural change that was limited in its impact, leaving many aspects of the convertsâ pre-Islamic tradition somewhat unchanged. To add to this was the fact that Sufi saints used several local traditions and motifs in their missionary work so that much of the local tradition came to be understood as âIslamicâ by the converts. Furthermore, the belief in local âHinduâ deities as well as Sufis as powerful beings, able to cure ailments or grant wishes attracted Hindus as well as Muslims to their shrines, a phenomenon that is still observable in many parts of Karnataka. Yet, while all this undoubtedly helped bring Hindus and Muslims into a shared cultural universe and into closer contact with each other, the bond of shared tradition has not entirely free of tension. In the case of several shard shrines and cults, the coexistence between Hindus and Muslims could, Assayag argues, be described as âcompetitive sharingâ, âcompetitive syncretismâ or even âantagonistic toleranceâ. This is reflected in myths and counter-myths about commonly revered figures through which each community seeks to stress its superiority over the other and in the process fashion an identity for itself based on a re-written collective memory. Increasingly, this antagonistic aspect is becoming particularly pronounced, as for instance, the dispute over the shrine of the Sufi Raja Bagh Sawar, whom many Hindus now claim to have been a Brahmin, Chang Dev, or the case of the shrine of Baba Budhan in Chikamagalur, which Hindutva militants now seek to convert into a full-fledged Hindu temple, denying its Islamic roots and associations altogether. Assayag discusses these new challenges to the shared Hindu-Muslim tradition in the wider context of the process of urbanization, the rise of Hindutva militancy in Karnataka in recent years and the consequent heightening of Muslim insecurity, the emergence of Islamic reformist movements and the role of the state in defining fixed religious identities and policing community borders. As an anthropological study of Hindu-Muslim relations, focusing on the complex nature of shared or âsyncretisticâ religious traditions, this book poses important questions related to how local Muslims and Hindus identify themselves and relate to each other. In that sense it rightly critiques the notion of Hindus and Muslims as monolithic communities inherently opposed to each other. Not everyone will agree with everything that Assayag has to say, however. Most crucially, his understanding of Islam and local Islamic traditions can easily be faulted. Thus, he refers to emergence of the Mapilla Muslims of the Malabar coast as a result of mutâa or temporary marriages contracted by Arab Shafiâi Muslim traders (p.37). He does not provide any evidence of this, and it is unlikely that this is correct, since mutâa is not recognized by the ShafiâI school. He refers to the great Deccani Sufi Hazrat Bandanawaz Gesudaraz as âBandanamazâ, and claims that his tomb is âworshippedâ by many Muslims (p.39). This, of course, is completely incorrect, as the devotees of the Sufis do not worship their tombs at all, and Assayag here confuses reverence for worship. He refers to the panjahs, a hand-shaped metal object often displayed at village shrines during the month of Muharrum, as generally having only three fingers, âin keeping with the Sunni creed which recognizes only the first three Caliphsâ. This is simply untrue. The panjahs almost inevitably have five fingers, representing the panjatan pak In what can only be described as a meaningless statement he writes, again without any substantiation, that â[C]ontemporary Muslims always seek to establish their nobility (sharafat) by claiming that they have been named God [?], who caused them to be born in the Prophetâs family or as descendants of saints who came from Arabiaâ [42]. At several points he makes sweeping statements, again without adducing any evidence, as when he talks about the âmasochistic character to which the austere piety of the Shiâites is so inclinedâ [p.76], or when he talks of the rulers of various Sultanates in the Deccan as âwaging warâ to convert Hindus to Islam [p.39]. Book folder - acharya - 04-29-2004 FT WEEKEND MAGAZINE - Books Essay Divine inspiration The most potent fundamentalism is brewing not in terrorist networks or autocratic Islamic states but in two of the world's largest democracies. By EDWARD LUCE 1,943 words 24 April 2004 Financial Times Surveys MAG Page 26 English © 2004 The Financial Times Limited. All rights reserved Mention "religious fundamentalism" and most people would probably think first of Islam. There is nothing surprising in that. The aircraft attacks of September 11 and numerous other prominent acts of terrorism have been carried out by Islamic fundamentalists. Some people might also think of Christian and Judaic fundamentalism and possibly even its Hindu or Buddhist varieties, but these would be faint echoes in comparison. And yet, if you were to pinpoint two important societies that were increasingly influenced by strong fundamentalist movements, you could quite reasonably single out the US and India. In ordinary comparisons, India and the US have little in common. But they share some salient characteristics. Both are democracies, the US being the world's richest and India by far the largest (its 670m voters went to the polls this month). Both are vibrantly diverse societies with deep- rooted traditions of pluralism. Both boast proudly secular constitutions, and in both countries one religion - Christianity in the US, Hinduism in India - accounts for roughly 85 per cent of the population. Both have also experienced a sharp growth in fundamentalism in the past two or three decades. Twenty years ago, most political scientists and sociologists would have held fast to the idea that modernisation went hand in hand with secularisation. Whether it was the decline of church attendance in western Europe or the apparent triumph of nationalism in the Arab world, modernity was taken as a byword for "post- religious". Such certainties are no longer widely held. The failure of economic reform in much of the Muslim world makes it easier to explain away Islamic fundamentalism as a particular and temporary reaction to the shortcomings of secular government in the Middle East and beyond. Even then, prominent scholars of Islam, such as Gilles Keppel, argue that the rise of Islamist terrorism is a reaction to the failure of Islamism as a political movement. But how to explain India, where per capita income has almost tripled since 1980, and yet Hindu fundamentalism has come from almost nowhere to dominate the country's coalition government? (India's ruling Hindu nationalist BJP had two seats in 1985; now it has 182 out of 545.) Or the US, where resurgent and politically organised Christian congregations have helped overturn hard-won milestones of progress, such as the abolition of capital punishment (which was repealed in 1976), or the legalisation of abortion, a right that is constantly being eroded? There also seems to be a mini-renaissance of Catholic and Orthodox churches in central and eastern Europe, and a growth in Protestant evangelism in South Korea, Latin America, the Philippines and elsewhere. Indeed, far from being a model of the future, secular western Europe could prove to be an increasingly eccentric exception to the rule. But there are few societies where political fundamentalism is as advanced or successful as in India or the US (by comparison, Islamism in its political form is a relative failure). In his latest book, Fundamentalism: The Search for Meaning, Malise Ruthven dangles an intriguing theory as to why. Religious fundamentalism crops up here and there in almost every society that is confronted by rapid social change and urbanisation. But most variants fail. What marks out its Hindu and Christian (American) versions is that they have hitched their wagons to nationalism. And nationalism - again, in spite of the European project - is a very successful and durable phenomenon. Hindu nationalism stretches back at least to 1925, when the Rashtriya Sway-amsevak Sangh (Organisation of National Volunteers) was founded. The RSS, with 2m members, is the parent body to India's ruling BJP. Its founding philosophy was and is simple: you are Indian if you view India as both your fatherland and your holy land. At a stroke this disqualifies those who look to Rome or Mecca for spiritual sustenance. Of course, in its political avatar - under the prime ministership of Atal Behari Vajpayee, who leads a coalition of 23 parties, some of which are secular - it is far more circumspect and sophisticated than in the hard-boiled rhetoric of the RSS. But few BJP politicians would dissociate themselves from this simple test of patriotism: India is Hindu and Hindu is India. Christian, or - more accurately - Protestant nationalism in the US can be traced as far back as the Mayflower, which delivered the dissenting English Pilgrim Fathers to the shores of Massachusetts in 1620. Unlike Hindu fundamentalists - who, were they to govern alone, would drastically alter India's constitution - the US's fundamentalists are mostly content with their constitution because it guarantees freedom from state-imposed religion (something the pilgrims were fleeing). But the consensus by which different factions agreed to the US constitution in the 1780s was one that evolved between competing Protestant denominations. The exercise preceded by a generation or two the emergence of mass Jewish and Catholic immigration to the US. In becoming Americans, other faiths absorbed a very Protestant strain of nationalism. How is one, for example, to characterise Thanksgiving, the US's most popular national holiday? One could describe it as a purely secular national day celebrated by all Americans, regardless of faith. But it could equally be described as a Calvinist parable in which the righteous were fed (with turkey) by divine providence after having reached their "City on the Hill". Has Thanksgiving been de-Calvinised? Or is America simply Calvinist by subtler means? Whichever the answer, it is clear that the lexicon and symbolism of American nationalism is more fertile ground for Protestant revivalists than, say, for their sometime allies in the Judaic and Catholic communities. Thus, from a fundamentalist perspective, mainstream nationalism in both India and the US is low-hanging fruit ripe for the plucking. And they are plucking it quite frequently nowadays. The speeches of George W. Bush, himself a born-again Christian, are littered with allusions to the New Testament, particularly the Book of Revelations. This is how Bush began his 2003 State of the Union speech: "In all these days of promise and days of reckoning, we can be confident. In a whirlwind of change and hope and peril, our faith is sure, our resolve is firm, and our union is strong." This is how he concluded: "We Americans have faith in ourselves, but not in ourselves alone. We do not know - we do not claim to know all the ways of Providence, yet we can trust in them, placing our confidence in the loving God behind all of life, and all of history. May He guide us now. And may God continue to bless the United States of America." (The capital letters are from the White House draft.) The qualifier, "but not in ourselves alone", clearly means God, not other countries. Bush's world is brimming with "evil" and "evil-doers". Those who listen carefully are rarely in much doubt that the US has been chosen by a higher power to defeat the forces of darkness. Even Bush's stance on the environment, which critics see as a consequence of the administration's close links to the energy industry, carries the fingerprints of Protestant millenarianism - the belief in the imminence of Christ's second coming, a view to which Mr Bush may or may not subscribe. "What is the point of saving the planet, they argue, if Jesus is arriving tomorrow?" asks Ruthven. "American fundamentalists are a headache, a thorn in the flesh of the bien-pensant liberals, the subject of bemused concern to 'Old Europeans' who have experienced too many real catastrophes to yearn for Armageddon." India's leaders are also steeped in the symbolism of religious nationalism. Prime Minister Vajpayee and L.K. Advani, his hardline deputy, frequently conjure up holy images of India that could have resonance only with Indian Hindus. In his recent book Hindutva ("Hindu-ness"), Jyotirmaya Sharma, an Indian journalist, argues that India's BJP-led government has profoundly altered the political vocabulary and imagery of Indian nationalism since 1998. Originally forged by the secular freedom struggle against the British Raj, Indian nationalism is increasingly tinged with saffron - the holy colour of Hinduism. India's nuclear-capable missiles are named after Hindu gods. Its universities offer courses in astrology and "Vedic mathematics" (in an echo of some corners of the US, where evangelicals have succeeded in winning equal teaching time between the "creationist" and "evolutionary" account of human origins). And, much like televangelism in the US, Hindu programming dominates increasing chunks of India's booming cable television network. Many scholars argue that Hindu radicalism cannot be described as fundament- alist, since there is no single holy text that is read by all Hindus or on which all Hindus agree. In contrast, the Koran, Bible and Torah provide undisputed texts that can be read literally - the basic criterion to qualify as fundamentalist. But this is to miss the wood for the trees. Hindu nationalism is driven by a yearning to return to a classical golden age that preceded the baffling rootlessness of modern life - an impulse that drives all fundamentalisms. On this more informative reading, fundamentalism should not be described as revivalist, but as a specifically modern response to the confusions of living in a ceaselessly changing world. Traditional societies are not aware that they are traditional. In Ruthven's words, fundamentalism is "tradition made self-aware and defensive". On this count, Hindu radicalism is clearly fundamentalist. And this brings us to a provocative conclusion. Hindu and Christian fundamentalism are more likely to succeed and endure precisely because they are nurtured by and can conflate their world views with two powerful nation states. As a result, neither have much needed to resort to terrorism (although attacks on abortion clinics in the US could be described as terrorist). In contrast, Islamists are mostly on their own. Islamism cannot easily nail its colours to nationalism. Most Islamic fundamentalists disdain the nation state because it artificially divides the Ummah, or international community of believers, into separate groups. Even where Islam-ists capture state power, as in Iran in 1979, it is hard to sustain both nationalism and Islamism. Every time Shi'ite Iran acts in its national interest - for example, by allying with Christian Armenia against mostly Shi'ite Azerbaijan - it undermines its Islamist credentials. By contrast, India and the US can align with any state for any reason without much risk of haemorrhaging self-belief in the national project. No Hindu nationalist questions India's close relations with Iran, since Iran, like India, is also a rival of Pakistan. But Iranian clerics agonise about Tehran's close ties to Hindu nationalist New Delhi. The same could be said of Washington's enduring ties to Saudi Arabia's puritanical ruling dynasty - though many on the US's secular left do complain. Or Washington's connivance with hardline govern- ments in Israel, which can hardly be described as strict adherents to the US's model of multi-faith democracy. Like its enemy, liberalism, fundamentalism is adaptable and dynamic. So it would be rash to make clear predictions about the future of such movements. But here, for the hell of it, is one: fundamentalism will probably continue to prosper (and adapt) in India and the US. Whereas in the Muslim world, Islamism - in its political, rather than its terroristic, form - might well be past its peak. Edward Luce is the FT's South Asia bureau chief. Fundamentalism: The Search for Meaning by Malise Ruthven Book folder - acharya - 04-29-2004 Websites with great info on South Asia ADVERTISEMENT [1] http://dsal.uchicago.edu/books/socialscientist/ [entire volumes of the journal, "Social Scientist" from 1972-2001! Great info; use the search facility to find info on Hindutva, the Congress, etc][2] http://dsal.uchicago.edu/index.html [3] http://www.collectionscanada.ca/thesescanada/index-e.html [more great info from the national library of Canada; entire theses are online!] For example, using the keywords, "Sardar" "communalism", one finds: E-LOCATIONS: http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp 03/MQ47769.pdf NAME(S): *Khoday, Amar, 1973- TITLE(S): The Lokamanya and the Sardar [microform] : two generations of Congress communalism PUBLISHER: Ottawa : National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, [2000] DESCRIPTION: 2 microfiches. SERIES: Canadian theses = Thèses canadiennes NOTES: Thesis (M.A.)--Concordia University, 2000. Includes bibliographical references. STUDENT ABSTRACT: Antagonism among various religious communities and particularly between Hindus and Muslims has become a recurring feature of the public sphere in South Asia. This antagonism fed a steady growth of Muslim separatism in British India which led to the creation of Pakistan in 1947. The purpose of this thesis is to explore the evidence of such communal attitudes within the major movement dedicated to achieving Indian nationhood, the Indian National Congress. From its founding in 1885, the organization espoused secular ideals and a broad vision of Indian nationalism which would be inclusive of all religious communities. Nevertheless, a strong undercurrent of Hindu chauvinism was evident early in its history and contributed to the weakening of political and communal harmony from the early 1890s to the late 1940s. Lokamanya Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1856-1920) and Sardar Vallabhbhai J. Patel (1875-1950) were two powerful leaders who helped to nurture this Hindu chauvinism over a period of two generations of political activism. This thesis investigates how Tilak and Patel's demonization of Muslims in the print media and the relegation of Muslims to limited roles within Congress helped to enfeeble the secular goals of Congress, despite the efforts of Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948) and Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964). Book folder - acharya - 04-29-2004 MAPS http://dsal.uchicago.edu/maps/gazetteer/index.html STATS http://dsal.uchicago.edu/statistics/ Historical data Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1840 to 1865. [First number] In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1860 to 1869. Fourth number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1867/8 to 1876/7. Twelfth number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1876/7 to 1885/6. Twenty-first number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1885-86 to 1894-95. Thirtieth number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1894-95 to 1903-04. Thirty-ninth number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1903-04 to 1912-13. Forty-eighth number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Statistical abstract relating to British India. From 1910-11 to 1919-1920. Fifty-fifth number. In digital book form. In Excel spreadsheet form. Current census information is available at the following web sites Bangladesh India Maldives and Statistical Yearbook of Maldives 2001 Nepal Pakistan Sri Lanka EDUCATION http://dsal.uchicago.edu/digbooks/digpager..._1867&object=70 Shows gradual increase in scope and progress of educaiton in India since 1854 |