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Secularism and the Hindu
1.
Introduction
As I realize the
sociological implications of the social engineering
going on in the name of Secularism, I am filled with a
deep sense of nausea and revulsion for the concept of
Secularism as it is practiced in India today. This essay
is an attempt to explain the reasons for my belief
Secularism in India today is bereft of
any integrity and / or intellectual honesty, nor is
there any internal consistency. What is good for the
goose (the minority) is rarely good for the gander (the
Hindu).
2.
What is the
dictionary meaning of secularism
sec·u·lar·ism (sek'y?-l?-riz'?m)
pronunciation
n.
1. Religious skepticism or indifference.
2. The view that religious considerations
should be excluded from civil affairs or public
education.
secularist sec'u·lar·ist n.secularistic sec'u·lar·is'ti
from
Wikipedia
Secularism is a form of governance that is not
affiliated with any particular religion.
In political terms Secularism is a movement toward the
separation of church and state as opposed to a union.
As the term "secularism" is often used in different
contexts, its precise definition can vary from place to
place. A democracy need not necessarily be secular. For
example, the United States of America is a democracy but
still has "in God we trust" printed on its currency.
Another example is the Iraqi Constitution which seeks to
establish a democratic government but also calls for the
Supreme Federal Court to be made up of judges who are
experts in Sharia (Islamic Law).
Its proponents argue secularism is the concept that
states should be governed by a process of reasoning
rather than dogmatic belief. Its opponents argue that
secularism is a concept which, instead of preserving
freedom of religion, actually holds all religions in
contempt.
A government based on the peoples ideals of liberty,
equality and fraternity being protected by the rule of
law are seen as superior to a government based on the
divine rights of kings, however the ideals of liberty,
equality and fraternity existed for over a century
before the Laicité law
(introduced in France in1880 )was introduced.
Secularism may also be defined as the idea that religion
should not interfere with or be integrated into the
public affairs of a society.
The reason I draw attention to the above
definitions is that the Indian model of secularism does
not conform to any of these definitions. In fact no
definition of secularism is offered in the Indian
constitution. While the general public in India
understands it to mean "equal respect for all religions,
and Morarji Desai's Janata Party government introduced
the Constitution (45th Amendment) Bill seeking to define
'secular' to mean 'equal respect for all religions', the
Congress Party refused to endorse such a definition
1. In practice the Government of India
and the legal system do not treat all religions and in
particular the Hindu faith with equal respect, nor does
it treat all religions equally under the law. There are
countless examples, of which some of the most egregious
are the separate civil law provisions for Muslims, in
which the civil law sections of the Indian Penal code do
not apply to Muslims.
2.Another is the special status of Jammu
and Kashmir state simply for no other reason than the
fact that it is a majority Muslim state
3. A third is the special subsidy given
to Muslims to undertake the Hajj pilgrimage, which runs
into very large sums of money. No such subsidy is
available for Hindus to visit their places of pilgrimage
even to proximate locations such as Mt. Kailash
4. While the government maintains a hands
off attitude to the administration of Mosques, it
administers Hindu trusts through the appointment of a
Administrative officer (there is no requirement for him
or her to be a Hindu) and not only does not subsidize
the maintenance of Hindu temples many of which are in
disrepair but diverts money from Hindu trusts to Muslim
religious Waqfs.
5. Minority Educational institutions get
subsidies that are not available to Hindu educational
trusts. The situation became so dire that the
Ramakrishna math started by Swami Vivekananda himself,
petitioned to be classified as a non Hindu institution,
in order that they be eligible to receive subsidies.
Such unequal treatment under the law is
becoming intolerable to the Hindu, who is becoming
increasingly alienated in the land of his own
forefathers, which is another reason for the nascent
self awareness of the Hindu and his increasingly vocal
participation in the Hindu renaissance movement
3.
What are
some postulates of Indian secularism
Secularism Sutras or the Aphorisms of the
Secular (adapted from Vishal Agarwal)
1. Majority communalism is reprehensible
while minority communalism is understandable. Hindu
communalism is worse than Muslim and Christian
communalism. In fact any communalism by groups other
than Hindu is rarely referred to as communalism.
2. Highlighting any act of minority communalism invites
being branded as a Hindu fanatic and is itself
considered a communalist act.
3. Dams and Factories are the modern Temples of India.
But they cannot replace mosques and churches.
4.
India is not one nation but a Multi-national state, in
other words, it is only notionally a nation state.
5. Hinduism is the opiate of Indian masses.
6. Secularism is the greatest good, to which all other
goods are subordinated. All morals and ethics can be
ignored in the defense of Secularism. In fact to be
secular is the highest accolade that can be awarded in
the secular parlance
7. If you are not `Secular', at best you are a
`Communal' and are most likely to be elevated to a right
wing Hindutvawadi who is closely connected to the murder
of Mahatma Gandhi, even though you may not have been
born then.
8. Marx, Mullah and Missionary are the Trimurti of
Secularism. Secularism leads to omniscience. What do
communalists know?
9. Majority communalists deserve no human rights.
Minorities, including their communal elements, are
entitled to special privileges.
10. Hinduism is a colonial construct, and to call it
a religion is at best a stretch and at worst against the
secular ethos of the country. Tribals are magically
transformed into Hindus only when they rape nuns.
11. It is `Progressive' and `liberal' to eat beef and to
oppose it is to be obscurantist, elite and well on your
way to become a fascist.
12. Children should be indoctrinated with Secularism
when they are young.
13. Conversion out of Hinduism is a fundamental right of
human beings. The right to Conversion and the resultant
act of conversion to Hinduism is communalism.
Acculturation of tribal Hindus with mainstream Hindu
culture is a deep and conspiratorial fascist act of the
Sangh parivar.
14. Secular Jihads, Secular Crusades and Secular Pogroms
are all kosher as long as they restrict their attack
on Hindus and Hinduism. When 50 women and children were
burnt to death in Godhra, the newspaper reports made a
special mention of the fact that they were Hindu
Karsevaks (volunteers), implying that was the motive for
killing them. Karsevaks were the children of a lesser
God and their murder was therefore understandable. They
had brought it upon themselves.
15. Hindu lives are cheap. According to Sharia, they are
worth 1/16 the life of a Muslim, according to
Secularism, they are worth even
less. It is interesting that the number of Hindu Lives
lost in the subcontinent since independence in wars,
riots etc is more than 16 times that of Muslim lives
lost
16. Secularists cannot be Hindu. They can call
themselves of 'Hindu descent', or 'Hindu and Muslim' or
'good humans' or 'Good Muslims' or 'Good Christians',
but never, never, as 'good Hindus'.
17. All Hindu acts of self assertion are Hindu
fanaticism. All Hindu organizations that do not say 'all
religions are equally good' are
Hindu Nazis. To assert pride in being a Hindu is an
automatic qualifier to being termed a nationalist Hindu
18. All charities that do not cater to Minority victims
are fascist. However, it is OK for NGO's or other
charities to cater to minority
communities preferentially.
19.
Secularists claim to be virtuous because of their
indifference to religion. But they draw the line when
they are faced with the real test of acceptance of
diversity in ideas. In general they tend to be extremely
bigoted when faced with a viewpoint other than their
own.
*****
4.
My view of
Secularism
Let me
start of by saying that genuine acceptance of diversity
is very much a part of the tradition of Sanaatana Dharma
and not only would I have no problems with such a
stand, but in reality I embrace it with all my heart
and with great gusto. If secularism is defined as an
embracement of diversity not only of ethnic and
religious communities but also diversity of ideas, then
one can safely say that preaching secularism to the
Hindu is like carrying coal to Newcastle. But just
because the Dharma is genuinely accepting of other
belief systems does not mean it should be held up to a
higher standard of conduct than the rest of the world .
For example the word secular is synonymous with apostasy
in many countries which profess that their state
religion is Islam. We do not feel such countries have
anything to teach India about secularism and have no
business lecturing India on the virtues of secularism.
Similarly, such is the case with Communism .In communist
ideology, secularism is synonymous with atheism and the
communist ideology is for all practical purposes a state
religion with little tolerance for any other belief
system. China is a typical example where there is very
little tolerance for most religions and those that did
not originate in China or did not have a substantial
Chinese tradition, are treated with special suspicion.
China can hardly be termed a secular state. But we
never hear the Indian left , many of whom are ardent
admirers of China and rarely have a word to say about
lack of secularism in China
5.
The Hostility of the Western Civilization
towards the Hindu Faith
In
general it is our view that for a communist to preach
secularism to a Hindu is like Lucretia Borgia preaching
chastity to Mother Teresa. But this is what happens in
India. The bulk of the criticism of the Hindu comes from
Left wing ideologues, both in India and abroad who while
making no secret of their abhorrence for Hinduism are
careful to conceal their equally vehement dislike for
protecting the freedom of the individual. In fact a
large part of the antagonism towards the Hindu faith in
the West stems from the freedoms which are enshrined in
the core values of Hinduism. As far as the West is
concerned, the Hindu is in an unenviable position of
drawing the ire of both the left and the right wing. We
know why the left wing abhors Hinduism. The Hindu
represents to the Communist everything he abhors -
reverence for tradition, acceptance of the individuality
of humanity in general, a tolerance for ambiguity, a
strong and objective ethical value system which is
independent of the subjective circumstances, a freedom
to choose his God (the embodiment of the supreme spirit
or Brahman) and to (or not to) worship in any way he or
she chooses. It is also interesting and a telling
commentary that while nastik (atheistic) traditions are
accepted within the Hindu fold, the converse is
certainly not true. Communist ideology considers
theistic beliefs in general and Hindu beliefs in
particular to be the opiate of the masses. Such
intolerance and bigotry towards Hindus would
automatically disqualify most Communists from calling
themselves genuinely secular, if the operative
definition is that there should be equal respect for all
traditions under secularism
The right
wing abhors Hinduism for reasons which are ironically
not all that different from those of the communists.
First and foremost there is deep mistrust of Hinduism
because it is regarded as a Pagan religion and the fact
that it does not have a single founder or Prophet. The
implications of this criticism are profound. What is
being implied here is that such a person would much
rather let his life be dictated to by the edicts of a
prophet who may have preached to an audience in an era
which has little relevance to the conditions extant
today, rather than rely on the powerful instruments of
his own mind as exemplified in the rational approach to
scientific knowledge gathering (which is what Hinduism
espouses even for PAra Vidya ,higher knowledge) using
techniques such as observation, perception, logical
inference. The five instruments of knowledge gathering
(Pramaana, or PramAna) associated with Jnana Yoga or the
Yoga of Knowledge are (see link below on acquiring
knowledge)
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PramAna: The Instruments
for acquiring knowledge
pratyaksha (perception)
anumAna (inference)
upamAna (analogy)
shabda (testimony--sacred [shruti and smRti] & secular)
arthApatti (implication of hypothesis, postulate)
anupalabdhi (non-apprehension, non-cognition)
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This is a
choice which every individual makes, whether to accept
on faith the words of a Prophet or to reason out for one
self the belief system that is bested suited for his or
her individual circumstance. The choice depends clearly
on the predilections of the individual and there is no
right answer that will be suitable for everybody.
Unfortunately the right wing in the West does not see it
that way. They take the reductionist view that there is
only one correct path and that is the one prescribed in
their belief system.
The net
result of all these observations is that the Dharma does
not appeal to either the ideologues of the left or the
theologists on the right and it becomes clear why there
is extraordinary opposition to the very conception of
the Hindu faith. It also explains the very vocal
opposition bordering on pathological hostility to the
notion that the very antiquity and the unbroken
Civilizational tradition of the Hindu bespeaks a
timelessness and the fact that it bestows a wisdom that
is adaptable to millennially long time spans.
6.
The
consequences of the hostility of the Political Left and
the Political right
The left
wing is more perspicacious in its choice of weapons and
more thorough in its quest to bury the uniquely Indic
antecedents of the people who live in the Indian
subcontinent
First
and foremost it seeks to deny an
indigenous/autochthonous identity to the very
foundations of the Hindu faith, namely the authorship
of the Vedas. Secondly they try to undermine the
antiquity of the Veda by making the authors the
descendants of a mythical race of people called Aryans,
about whom little is known except that they were blonde
and blue eyed and rode on chariots drawn by 4 horses and
entered India after the decay of the Saraswathi Sindhu
civilization. So much at variance is this viewpoint to
the historical record of the vast literature of India
(in fact the only extant literature of that period) that
it borders on the incredulous. Third it seeks to
fragment the historical legacy of India by divorcing the
archaeological and linguistic heritage from each other.
In the words of Nicholas Kazanas, the British Greek
Scholar
"The
Harappans were obviously a literate and highly civilized
people who maintained their 1000 year old culture with
peaceful means through trade and perhaps religion rather
than conquest and expansion. The area they inhabited
was, according to Rao (1991: 1), ³1.5 million square
kilometers² though I suspect it was much bigger. Then
at about 2000 down to 1800, because of ecological and
environmental changes including the alteration of the
routes of some rivers and as a result, the desiccation
of the Saraswati river, they, or many of them, began to
move eastwards to the Gangetic basin while their culture
was breaking down. At about this time, then, enter our
illiterate barbarians, the Aryans. Here the Allchins
(Parpola and Witzel) fail to notice the glaring
contradiction in their theory: if the Aryans had
acquired the ³material culture and lifestyle² of the
Harappans before they entered into Saptasindhu, then the
RV hymns ought to reflect Harappan elements
(urbanization, fixed fire-hearths, bricks, silver,
cotton, rice); but it is the later texts (BrAhmaNas and
sUtras) that do so, and not at all the RV hymns. Anyway,
the Aryans take over and after 2 or 3 centuries produce
a most astonishing collection of hymns, to be followed
by other collections, various prose works about cultic
rites and codes of social behavior.
Lord Renfrew (ignoring
the archaeological evidence he cites) suggests they came
as mounted bands and formed an elite (1989: 197)
presumably with their horses alone since in all else
they were just like the natives. All that the natives
left were their ruined brick-built cities and some seals
with inscriptions the nature and use of which is still
unknown. In this Region of the Seven Rivers, then, we
have an archaeologically well attested culture that
seems to have no literature at all (other than the
briefest inscriptions) no code of laws, no religious
hymns or secular songs, no fables and tales, and then an
illiterate people that is not archaeologically attested
yet produces, in quick succession, all the kinds of
literature that the previous culture lacked. It is a
most amazing paradox, an astonishing coincidence of
space, time and people. All this is, of course, possible
just as it is possible to be struck by lightning in
one¹s bed, or to fall from the 10th floor on the lawn
below and live with only a few concussions. Many
wondrous things are possible in life, but the question
is do they really happen?
"
Kazanas
can be excused for the incredulity he displays at this
rank exhibition of negating the most logical conclusion
, namely that the Saraswathi Sindhu civilization is
really the archaeological evidence of the presence of
the Vedics at a later stage in their evolution from the
time they talk about the battle of the Ten Kings, which
is described in the early phases and mandalas of the Rg.
7.
Blaming
social ills on Hinduism
Having consigned the Indic civilization
at best to an also ran and a mere spectator to the drama
of unfolding events in the rest of the ancient world,
the next step was to show that all that was bad in
current day India was the result of the Indic tradition.
That this was the goal of max Müller from the outset
when he was assigned the task of translating the sacred
books of the east into English is clear when in a
letter to his wife he wrote in 1886:
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'The translations of the Veda
will hereafter tell to a great extent on the
fate of India and on the growth of millions of
souls in that country. It is the root of their
religion, and to show them what the root is, I
feel sure, is the only way of uprooting all
that has sprung from it during the last 3000
years.' ,
Max Müller, Letter to his wife , Oxford, December
9,1867 |
So, the purpose of translating the Vedas
was not so much an academic exercise to learn what they
contained, but in reality to show the world that all
that was reprehensible in India was directly attributed
to them. In other words, the effort by Max Müller was a
hatchet job to portray the Hindu faith in a less than
stellar light. This has been the general approach of
most of those who followed in the footsteps of Max
Müller and claimed to be Indologists and the British
colonial administration, which has also taken the same
approach. We come now to the present, where , almost
every social evil in India according to the Wiki, is
attributed to the tenets of the Hindu faith
Hinduism is criticized, wrongfully or
rightfully, on the basis of some past and some current
regressive social customs such as
Dowry,
Sati
and
Casteism. These trends are however on the decline
in recent times due to a growing population of large
well-educated Hindu middle class.
How the
connection is made to the Hindu faith as propounded in
the sacred texts is not very clear, since rarely is
there a quotation given that explicitly condones such
behavior. The contrast with the treatment of social
evils in the west and in Islamic societies is glaring.
For instance, slavery was widespread in the west and
still is extant in Islamic societies like Saudi Arabia
or in the Sudan, but there is very little mention that
many in the west regarded the practice as being
sanctioned by their religion and the fact that they
fought a civil war in America because of slavery
indicates to us the righteousness of those who espoused
support for slavery. And yet there is very little
attempt by those who should know better to hold the
Church responsible for the actions of the vast majority
of its flock. The same is the case with the widespread
practice of serfdom in Eastern Europe or the practice of
the 'Droit de Seignior' (the right of the Baron to have
the first night with the newly wedded bride). Such a
practice gets explicit mention in Mozart's musical (the
Marriage of Figaro). There is very little accountability
of the church in many of these matters, which was in
many cases an active participant. We will not speak of
the active complicity of the Church in matters such as
the Inquisition, the genocide against the native
American peoples by the Spaniards and the rest of the
Europeans and numerous other instances.
The
double standard by which the Hindu faith is held
responsible for everything under the sun is ubiquitous
and endemic, while the attendant bigotry associated with
such a stance, in part resulting in Hindus being treated
as the children of a lesser God is usually ignored. Then
there is the question of the so called Hindu
Nationalism. To quote Wiki again
8.
Hindutva
and the Hindu Nationalist"
Another criticism is directed towards the
rise of
Hindu nationalism
in India, which has followed similar trends as the rise
of the Christian Right in the west. This movement has
been blamed by its critics for religious riots, such as
the one which followed the destruction of
Babri mosque
in 1992. The Babri Mosque was believed to have been
constructed by Muslim rulers after destroying an
original Hindu temple at that site which marked the
birth-place of Ram, the most highly revered God in Hindu
religion. Many believe that the rise of Hindu
Nationalist movement is a reaction to suppression of the
Hindu civilization by Islamic invaders in the middle
ages, followed by a lengthy British rule of India in the
18th and 19th centuries.
That there was a reaction to the
centurys long holocaust (see for instance Will Durant's
History)
during the Islamic era and the abuses of authoritarian
rule by the British without any accountability is not in
question and should hardly come as a surprise to
anybody. What is incredulous is to make a facile
comparison to the many egregious acts of the church over
the centuries to the Hindu renaissance. The Babri
-Ramjanmabhoomi incident as been blown up out of all
proportion without considering the historical background
to the case. There had not been a prayer conducted at
this so called mosque for well over 30 years at the time
of independence. The case had been under litigation
for well over 100 years and justice delayed is a case of
justice denied. The structure had been one of hundreds
built over the centuries over the remnants of temples
destroyed by the Islamic invader. So pervasive is the
perverted form of secularism prevalent in India today
that even to mention that such destruction happened is
to draw the wrath of the secular brigade. In the entire
operation of the destruction of the structure not one
life was lost. Still, it was an illegal act and the
perpetrators should be brought to justice. Yet the fact
remains that there are several misstatements in popular
accounts of what I would like to term the Hindu
renaissance as exemplified in Wiki's Hindutva
article and the portrayal is not balanced and accurate.
To brand an entire religious following for the acts of a
few are neither just nor will it be considered an
unbiased portrayal.
9.
Conclusions
The Hindu in India is faced with a unique
situation. While he is theoretically part of a majority,
he is so fractured ideologically speaking into various
ideological groups that he is virtually powerless to
influence the politics of the country. His adversaries
know this. The entire burden of maintaining a secular
state is placed on the hapless Hindu, when the real
perpetrators of anti secular behavior lie elsewhere in
the electorate. The minority consistently appeal to
their minority status to ask for special privileges,
knowing full well that the Hindu is powerless and is in
reality has no more powers than the Muslim and is for
all practical purposes a minority . The situation has
deteriorated to such an extent that no political party
including the Bharatiya Janata Party will fashion an
electoral platform to appeal solely to Hindutva
sentiments. The Hindutva vote while considerable, is
stuck currently at 23% and shows little signs of
increasing, despite the palpable effects of the Hindu
renaissance. In numerical terms this is the single
largest ideological grouping in the country. However,
little attempt is made by the strategic thinkers to
coalesce other groups around this admittedly largest
single group. In contrast the attempt to garner Muslim
votes is unabashedly anti-secular in tone and most of
the parties fall over each other trying to appease this
second largest group in India. The remainder of the
Hindu population appears to be content to be reduced to
second class status in the land of their forefathers. Of
course the simple answer to this is that the Hindu
should adopt a unified stand at least on those key
issues that affect the exercise of their faith. However,
one constant characteristic of the Hindu, throughout the
ages, has been his inability to stay unified even when
confronted by blatantly disruptive forces and there
seems to be little hope that he will change his behavior
anytime soon.
I do not see a practical way out of this
impasse. This is evident in the increasing frustration
of the 23% of the electorate that regards itself as
Hindutva. They see themselves as increasingly embattled
and under siege. It is dangerous for the future health
of the republic that such a large constituency, even
though it may not be a majority, sees itself as helpless
to influence the politics sufficiently to advance Hindu
causes. Till now the Hindus have eschewed by and large
violence as a means of achieving their ends, as the
Muslims have done repeatedly using riots as a means of
expression in most of the country and using ethnic
cleansing in Jammu and Kashmir to drive out the Hindu
population. The question facing the Hindu is stark. Will
he go the way of the Buddhist in India and disappear
into the sunset or will he resort to means that he has
hitherto been reluctant to use. There is no clear cut
answer to these questions and we do not have the ability
to prognosticate the future.
Links
The definition of Secular
The Secularism Sutra
The instruments of acquiring knowledge
Starting around 1880, the French state gradually took
over the running of most hospitals, banned catechism
from state schools, legalized divorce, removed
crucifixes from public offices and required civil
weddings at the local town hall before a couple could
wed in church.
     
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