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Temple entry a sastric right
By Sandhya Jain



There is no taint of untouchability, says Atri, when a person is
touched by an untouchable in a temple, during religious processions,
sacrifices, festivals, and marriages (verse 249). Satatapa avers that
there is no dosha (lapse) in touching untouchables on the public road,
in a religious procession or in a public fight, or when the whole
village is struck by calamity. Brihaspati concurs that there is no
error, and hence no prayascitta (penance), if one comes in contact
with untouchables at a sacred place, in marriage and religious
processions, in battle, or when the town or village is on fire. The
Nityacarapaddhati affirms that one need not bathe on coming in contact
with Chandalas and Pukkasas if they stand near a temple of Vishnu and
have come to worship Vishnu.



The Smrtyarthasara acknowledges untouchables entering temples. Indeed,
the evidence from religious literature suggests that so-called
untouchables were not excluded from worship. When Yajnavalkya I.93 or
Gautama IV.20 say the Chandala is outside dharma, it only meant he was
excluded from Vedic rites such as the upanayana (sacred thread), and
not that he was prohibited from reverencing Hindu deities or released
from adherence to the Hindu moral code. He could worship murtis of
Vishnu. The Nirnayasindhu cites the Devipurana authorising antyajas to
build a Bhairava temple. In south India, Tiruppana Alvar hailed from
the depressed classes and Nammalvar was a Vellala.



PV Kane asserts that the early smritis mention only four varnas; there
was no fifth varna and modern references to untouchability violate
smriti tradition (History of Dharmasastra, Vol II, Pt I). Both Panini
and Patanjali included Chandalas and Mrtapas in the Shudra varna.
Angiras also regarded Chandalas as Shudras. It was society, for
reasons historians must decide, that began differentiating between
Shudras and castes like Chandalas, and added a growing number of
castes to a list of 'untouchables'; the sastras do not legitimise
these practices.



Given this explicit inclusion of all castes within the fold of dharma
and temple worship, it is unfortunate that the ugly face of Hindu
arrogance has risen, for the second time in two years, in Orissa's
Kendrapara district. In July 2004, over a hundred Dalits of Badanka
village threatened to convert to Christianity in frustration at upper
castes excluding them from the village temple. Bajrang Dal activists
had then rushed to bridge the caste divide, but their intervention
clearly failed to yield lasting dividends.



Hence the shameful standoff spanning several days, in November 2006,
as Dalits were denied entry inside the Kendrapara Jagannath temple
owned by the erstwhile royal family. Right-thinking citizens are
perturbed over the silence of the Shankaracharyas and the Hindu Dharma
Acharya Sabha. In a communication to concerned Hindus, VHP president
Ashok Singhal claims that volunteers led by Swami Laxmananand
Saraswati visited the spot and their efforts led to the demolition of
the walls with peepholes for darshan by Dalits and the creation of an
environment in which all members of society could enjoy equal rights
to darshan.



I do not wish to contest Mr Singhal's claims, but all news reports
have credited the remedial measures taken in Kendrapara to the
district administration. There is no mention of any spiritual leader
visiting the site; attempts to elicit guidance from the Puri
Shankaracharya in the matter of Dalit entry in the temple met with
stony silence for days. I at least have not seen any positive
statement from the Puri matham. Mr Singhal has expressed surprise at
the Kendrapara incident because he was under the impression that
Jagannath temples are open to all Hindus irrespective of class, creed,
and gender, as is the case in Puri.



Mr Singhal's surprise is a timely warning of the need for eternal
vigilance in preserving and upholding the inclusive spirit of the
sanatana dharma. A new social evil in the form of upper caste
cussedness vis-à-vis those considered lower in the social scale must
be recognised and nipped in the bud. Besides Jagannath, there have
been incidents at Shrinathji and at Sulia in Rajasthan.



Kendrapara deserves serious attention because the Dalits, led by the
same Ashok Mallick who threatened conversion to Christianity two years
ago, have now threatened to convert to Buddhism. Many Hindus suffer
from the delusion that conversion to the Dhamma is a safe outlet as it
keeps Dalits within the Hindu fold. Actually, Gautama's path has
always had a tendency to depart from fundamental Indic traditions.
Prof Arvind Sharma says Ashoka made Buddhism ancient India's only
state-sponsored dharma; moreover, he used the resources of a Hindu
kingdom to propagate this faith in his own realms and even abroad.



This is a sharp reversal of the Hindu tradition that the dharma of the
people is the rajadharma of the ruler, a custom that goes back to at
least the Ramayana era, and is the reason for Rama's forsaking Sita.
More pertinently, Prof Sharma says, in the modern era, the Buddhism of
Babasaheb Ambedkar departs from Buddha's advice to not renounce one's
natal religion in order to follow his path. At Yevala in 1935,
Ambedkar said he was born a Hindu but would not die a Hindu, and in
his famous speech at Nagpur on October 15, 1956, he asserted he was
"renouncing" the Hindu religion.



The significance of this statement must not be underestimated. Unlike
in the ancient period when Buddhists comprised a community of monks
and survived with state and mercantile patronage, Ambedkar
single-handedly created a Buddhist laity in India; that too, a
community with animosities towards Hindu society. This laity
increasingly borrows its rhetoric from missionaries and the financial
sources of its activism are questionable. It is a soft underbelly of
Hindu society; we ignore its potential danger at our own peril.



The core of Hindu dharma lies in a hierarchy of values, not a
hierarchy of castes; the varna system rests on this premise. This is
also the basis of the apparent tension between the inclusive embrace
of the tradition and it's apparently exclusivist aspects. The bottom
line, however, is upholding dharma. Those who deny the religious
rights of Dalits are at par with the asuras who hindered the
sacrifices of devas and rishis. Dharma involves defeating asuric
tendencies within ourselves; Hindu leaders cannot afford to be silent
spectators to Dalit exclusion from temples.

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