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The World Of Myth - Guest - 11-22-2004 <span style='color:red'>The World of Myth</span> The âclash of civilizationsâ is mostly about the adumbration of religious ideas and the practice of religion. This clash is acted out by Muslim fundamentalists who cut the throats of hapless journalists, engineers, and other Christians, born-again or not, lost in the alleys of Karachi or Karbala or Kirkuk. Fellow Christian religionists then drop 3,000 pound bombs from 30,000 feet up in retaliation. Meanwhile both seek to poke the eyes of Hindus, who demand from the two some promise of a âSarva dharma samabhavaâ (All religions are equal) which by all accounts is a concept dead on arrival at the Vatican or in Mecca. Roman, Greek, Mesopotamian and other pagan cultures are âdead and buriedâ, and the tribal cultures and religions of Africa, Australia, and South America have been decimated. What is left for the predatory religions are one another and the pesky Hindus who keep pushing wrongly, I believe, the idea of âSarva dharma samabhavaâ. In a recent conference that I attended, one of the speakers told the Hindu-American audience that if they are confronted with the question â âSo, what is your Bible?â â to tell the questioner that Hindus donât have a single book but a library. This âsound biteâ made us all happy but we were still left the queasy feeling that the reality on the ground was much harsher and more invidious. One way it is invidious can be discerned from how âreligionsâ, âmythsâ and âphilosophiesâ are taught in American schools and colleges. I am told that only two American universities offer a Ph.D. in Indian philosophy. It seems as if the learned scholars of Indic and Hindu traditions in the West have taken to heart the assertion by the maverick Nirad Chaudhuri. In his bombastic, know it all style, the diminutive Bengali with a Napoleon complex proclaimed that, âThere is no such thing as thinking properly so called among the Hindus, for it is a faculty of the mind developed only in Greece, and exercised only by the heirs of the Greeksâ (The Continent of Circe: An Essay on the Peoples of India, paperback, p. 163). Chaudhuri also mimicked the Christian missionaries and the Muslim fundamentalists when he compared the books of the Semitic religions with the Vedas: âTheir (Vedas) prestige is not accounted for either by their contents or by the use that has been made of them. The Judaic, Christian, and Islamic books are revealed scriptures of the type made familiar by these historic religions, but the Vedas are, if I might extend the word used for the religion of the Hindus for their basic texts as well, ânaturalâ scriptures. They are not the word of any God or gods, but mostly words addressed to godsâ. Because the Hindus are marked as neither having a religion nor expounding any philosophy, then much of what is contained in their scriptures is proclaimed âmythâ. Mythologies can be interesting, profound, symbolic, and entertaining. I donât have any problems with mythologies. However, when a distinction is made between mythology and religion, and mythology and philosophy, then we see the continuation of the divide between peoples of the âbookâ, and peoples âwithout booksâ as well as those who have too many books. The problem struck home when I discovered that a âworld mythologyâ course taught in our university to bright 13-15 year olds in a âsummer academyâ included âGreek, Roman, Hindu, Chinese, Buddhist, and Native American mythologyâ but not any Semitic mythology. The course instructors were my good friends and colleagues, who seemed to have bought into the distinction without a protest. They taught the Ramayana and the <i>Mahabharata</i> as mythology in the course and deleted Christian, Muslim, and Jewish stories. The World Mythology textbooks they used include the Ramayana as myth but did not include any stories from the Bible or Koran. Separate translations of the <i>Mahabharata</i> were prescribed to the teenagers as part of the readings for the class. I protested. The <i>Mahabharata</i> was removed as a separate text, but the confusion continued about what is myth and what is religion. What I have noted is the extreme reluctance to include specific and explicit mention of Christianity in the course. One can very easily speculate the reasons why the administrators of the program advised instructors what not to include, but it is distressing to see how easily teachers are seduced to teach such intellectually dishonest courses. Whatever the reasons for their decisions, such practices go on to perpetuate the false divide between Semitic/monotheistic religions and the âotherâ world religions. Unfortunately, we know that throughout the world the two aggressive monotheistic religions are considered âgreat religionsâ, while other religions/religious traditions are relegated to âmythâ and âfalse religionsâ status. To perpetuate that âmythâ, whether benignly or otherwise, in a university or school setting, is extremely dangerous. Many of the âWorld Mythologyâ textbooks do not include Muslim and Christian stories. Reviewers on the Amazon web site, for example, include comments like these: âThe title is something of a misnomer. This is a fine collection of ancient myths found throughout world history. However, it is intellectually dishonest because the author fails to recognize some of the most powerful myths in human history -- namely those found in the Bible and Koranâ. You will not find the names of Adam and Eve, or Jesus or Mary, or Mohammed or Allah in these textbooks, whereas Rama, Krishna, Indra, Buddha all make multiple appearances, including pictures of Benares! I told my colleagues that the <i>Mahabharata</i> is considered by many as the âFifth Vedaâ, not just because it includes the <i>Bhagavad Gita</i> but because Vyasa himself is considered an incarnation of the Gods and Ganesha is his amanuensis. The Ramayana of course is a story about Rama and Sita, and all over India they are worshipped as Gods and not merely as âfolk heroesâ (as Indian Marxists claim), I reminded them. I also pointed out that there is a group of scholars, led by S. N. Balagangadhara of the University of Ghent, who have been arguing that âreligionâ in the Western sense is scientifically false, and that Hinduism is not a religion in the Western/Semitic sense. Balagangadharaâs study of the encounter between the early Christians and the Roman pagans and between the modern Europeans and the Indian pagans, leads him to formulate the following problem: (a) Christianity recognizes itself as a religion; (b) The terms under which Christianity recognizes itself as a religion are also the terms under which Islam and Judaism recognize themselves as religion; © Christianity singled out both the Roman and the Indian traditions as rival religions; (d) Judaism and Islam also singled out these same traditions as their religious rivals; (e) Both the Roman and the Indian traditions did not recognize themselves in the descriptions Christianity, Islam, and Judaism gave of them: they did not conceive of themselves as rivals to these three. Without accepting the fact that their religions are âscientifically falseâ, some Western teachers of âmythâ, however, continue to make the distinction between religion and myth, privileging the former over the latter. A little more nuanced in their understanding of world cultures and other religions, some teachers argue that when teaching about myth to young students one has to be careful about their sensitive nature. Thus, Christian mythology is not included for it might distress students to find out that what they believe is âtrueâ includes âstories/fictionâ. These teachers define mythology as âa set of stories, beliefs, and traditions of a people, accrued over timeâ. âWe donât evaluate them as good or bad storiesâ, they proclaim. But these practices raise some questions in the American context:
Some Indian-Americans donât see much merit in complaining about these matters or correcting what is egregiously wrong in American school text books or classroom practices. For them, Hinduism is a âmish mashâ of cultural practices accrued over millennia. Most of these beliefs and practices is plain obscurantist nonsense, they proclaim. By conflating the obscurantist aspects of Hinduism with the world of Hindu knowledge and culture, they ignore the explicit practice of religious supremacy and academic discrimination in their own neighborhood. By labeling these concerns as merely that of the âHindu Rightâ or of the âRSSâ Indian-American activists and academics are collaborating in the decimation of local culture and religious practices in India. The World Of Myth - Guest - 12-10-2004 Article has been promoted to India-Forum front-page.. <!--emo&:rock--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/rock.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='rock.gif' /><!--endemo--> The World Of Myth - Guest - 02-09-2005 The World of Myth by Ramesh Rao This article has now been published on Sulekha.. <!--emo&:rocker--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/rocker.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='rocker.gif' /><!--endemo--> |