I am attaching an article written by Fr Felix Raj a Jesuit priest from 
Calcutta. It would be good to know the views of goanetters.

Regards,

Marshall

ORISSA – A KILLING FIELD OF THE FUNDAMENTALISTS
J. FELIX RAJ, SJ
We are all pained by what is going on in Orissa these days: destruction of 
Churches, rape of nuns, killing of priests, harassing and terrorising of 
minority communities, re-conversion of dalit and tribal Christians, and so on. 
These are nothing but inhuman and barbaric manifestations of the fundamentalist 
forces, which point to an insecure and dangerous future. In all these, one sees 
a serious threat to secularism and consequently, a danger to democracy, and 
peaceful and harmonious co-existence of Indians belonging to diverse religious 
faiths and belief systems.
“Father, forgive them; they do not know what they are doing”(Luke 23:34). This 
is the prayer of Indian Christians, whose response has been through non-violent 
protests and repeated representations to the Government while being persecuted 
or brutally murdered or forcibly stopped from feeding the hungry, by divisive 
and communal forces. Christianity was born of the Cross and Christians should 
consider themselves privileged to reproduce in their own lives the death and 
resurrection that was the central feature of Christ’s life on earth.
This does not mean that the communal forces can be let loose to do what they 
want and that their challenge, which threatens secular and pluralistic India 
can go unchecked. While tolerance is a basic tenet of Hinduism, intolerance has 
become the hallmark of fundamentalist “hindutva” forces that spread hostility 
towards minorities, dalits and tribals. Their systematic attacks on Christians 
have increased in the recent years especially while the BJP was in power. The 
Orissa carnage is yet another demonstration of their fundamentalist strategy. 
They are making a mockery of the Rule of Law. The Orissa Government, led by 
Naveen Patnaik’s BJD and supported by the BJP, which has close links with the 
Sangh Parivar, is watching disinterestedly. One cannot but doubt the secular 
credentials of the Government. “Justice delayed is justice denied”.

In Indian context today, more than ever, as Romila Thapar, one of India’s 
eminent historians, says, caste, regional and other identities are replaced by 
religious identity, which “is used as the basis for political and social 
ideology. Such identity irons out diversity and insists on conformity for it is 
only through a uniform acceptance of the religion that it can best be used for 
political ends. The attempt is always to draw in as many people as possible 
since numbers enhance the power of the communal group and are crucial in a 
mechanical view of democracy. The political effort requires domination over 
other groups and where the number is larger becomes superior and majority group.
The attempt to establish a single Hindu community or Hindutva in India by 
violent, fanatical and fundamentalist groups is a development of recent times. 
It is an attempt to make Hinduism a Semitic religion like Christianity and 
Islam. It is a departure from the past when Indian society was constituted of a 
variety of communities based on location, occupation, caste, sect and so on, 
but not bound together by one religious identity. Romila Thapar, puts this in 
correct perspective in her book, History and Beyond, Oxford, 2000:
“Early history suggests the existence of multiple communities based on various 
identities. The need to create the idea of a single, Hindu community appears to 
have been a concern of more recent times which was sought to be justified by 
recourse to a particular construction of history. The new Hinduism, which is 
now sought to be projected as the religion of this community, is in many ways a 
departure from the earlier religious sects. It seeks historicity for the 
incarnations of its deities, encourages the idea of a centrally sacred book, 
claims monotheism as significant to the worship of deity acknowledges the 
authority of the ecclesiastical organisation of certain sects as prevailing 
over all and has supported large-scale missionary work and conversion. These 
changes allow it to transcend caste identities and reach out to larger numbers. 
Religions indigenous to India, which questioned brahmanical belief and practice 
such as Buddhism and Jainism, have been inducted into Hinduism and their 
separateness is either denied or ignored” (pp.84-85).
But what is alarmingly surprising is to bring all diverse caste and religious 
communities under the one umbrella of Hinduism! ‘The inclusion of the “lower 
caste” people as Hindus was contrary to the precepts of Brahmanism. This 
all-inclusive approach was a new and bewildering feature for the multiple sects 
and castes’ (Thapar). Thus the present attempt to force these communities to 
come under one Hindutva fold is both communally and politically motivated.
 It is a type of syncretism. An unhealthy syncretism! Christopher Jaffrelot 
calls it a “Strategic Syncretism”. “Syncretism because the content of this 
ideology has been supplied to a large extent by materials taken from the 
cultural and religious values of groups who were seen as antagonistic towards 
the Hindu community. Strategic because it underlies an ideology that aims to 
dominate the others, in terms of prestige as well as on a concrete 
socio-political plane”(“Hindu Nationalism: Strategic Syncretism in Ideology 
Building”, EPW, March 20-27,1993, p.517-523).
 The strategic syncretism of Hindutva ideology is attempted at two ways: 
Firstly: Vedic religion succeeded in integrating within itself indigenous 
popular religions and sects. Deities were absorbed into the Vedic pantheon 
through a process of identification or subordination. Buddha, for example, was 
given the status of Vishuite incarnation. Even the Bhakti Movement with a large 
mass support could not maintain its thrust and was ultimately domesticated by 
the Hindu orthodoxy.  As Dumont observes, “ A sect cannot survive on Indian 
soil if it denies caste”, which is a creation of Vedic ritualism.
Secondly: With the coming of Christianity and Islam to India, Hinduism came 
face to face with two Semitic religions from outside. This western challenge 
initiated a strong intention to reform Indian society. That is why, reformers 
like Ram Mohan Roy and Dayananda laboured hard to ‘discover’ in the Vedas what 
they needed to resist the Christian and Muslim influences. The socio-religious 
reform movements, as Thapar puts it, “ attempted to cleanse Indian religion of 
what they regarded as negative encrustations and tried to find parallels with 
the Semitic model”. The Hindu organisations like RSS and VHP aim at 
assimilating within modern Hinduism those cultural and religious features and 
practices of Christianity and Islam to resist them more effectively.
 The RSS, VHP and similar organisations provide the required ecclesiastical 
structure, and the BJP, which has deep and enduring ties with the RSS and VHP, 
creates a conducive political climate for such strategies. As Amrita Basu says, 
“ Hindu nationalism undoubtedly represents one of the major challenges Indian 
democracy has faced in its fifty years of existence, and the BJP is its 
principal proponent”(Transforming India, Oxford, 2000, p.379).
Talking about syncretism, I am reminded of the beautiful approach of the Bauls 
and Sufi Fakirs of Bengal.  Rabindranath Tagore observed in his introduction to 
Haramoni by Mohammad Mansurudin (1927), “ The real history of our country bears 
testimony to the devotion of synthesis which has been shared by the common 
people as the innermost truth in their emotional depths. This devotion can be 
located among the Bauls – their syncretic tradition emerging as a common 
heritage of both Hindus and the Muslims who came close without hurting each 
other”.
This is what all should encourage. Otherwise, the syncretic endeavour would 
sound more like the anecdote told of a group of students who wanted to fool 
Darwin. They assembled together the limbs, wings, feelers and tail of different 
insects and brought the odd creature to him and asked, “ What bug is this?” 
With a quick eye, Darwin seemed to have replied, “ A humbug”!
Hindutva organisations, argue that the state should favour the interests of the 
majority over those of minorities. They propose to do away with minority 
rights. This explains the BJP’s opposition to the National Minorities 
Commission, its desire to review the Constitution and to abrogate Article 370 
and its attempt to introduce the Christian Marriage Act in parliament. The BJP 
seeks to redefine democracy.
Indian secularism is subverted by over zealous communalists. They dig the 
Scriptures and Holy Books and concoct falsity in order to attack the 
minorities.  It is a dangerous move, a move that could take us to the darkest 
period of the middle Ages. Mahatma Gandhi once said, ‘I like Christ, but I do 
not like Christians’. I want to rephrase his statement and say bit differently: 
I like Hindus, I respect Hinduism, but I do not like the Hindutva strategy of 
violence and destruction.
No God-fearing Hindu, whether orthodox or liberal, will be comfortable with the 
‘hindutva’ strategy. Its rise and consolidation has sparked off a serious 
existential and relationship problem in the whole country. Hinduism, with its 
non-Semitic, non-dogmatic, cultural and religious pluralism, needs to be 
protected from fundamentalist and self-styled crusaders. Efforts of many 
secular thinkers and academicians in this respect, irrespective of their 
religious affiliation, are not to malign or degrade Hinduism, but to save 
Hinduism from the clutches of Hindutvawadis who equate it with ‘hindutva’, 
which is a strategic syncretism. 
We need to challenge and strenuously expose the fundamentalist strategy of 
these communal forces, whose sole aim, as stated in the BJP’s election 
manifesto of 1998, is: “India is one country, one people, and one nation”(read: 
one ‘hindutva’ religion). The hindutva seeks to devalue minority identities, 
and erase constitutionally guaranteed rights, in order to institute the 
‘hindutva’ religion.
Accepting the ‘hindutva’ strategy would mean the abdication of everything the 
freedom movement stood for. From the beginning of this century, the leaders of 
our country’s freedom struggle proclaimed their commitment to secularism. For 
Gandhiji, secularism, in other words, the equality of all religions was founded 
in the doctrine of Sarva Dharma Sambhava. Dr. Radhakrishnan phrased this 
concept aptly: “ We hold that no one religion should be given preferential 
status, or unique distinction, that no one religion should be accorded special 
privileges in national life, or international relations; for that would be a 
violation of the basic principles of democracy and contrary to the best 
interest of religion and government…”
The development of Hindu nationalist ideology and consolidation strategy has 
forced the emergence of other nationalist consolidations and identities like: 
Dalit, Tribal, caste, regional, and so on. Let me explain briefly one such 
consolidation namely Dalit:
The last hundred years have seen the emergence of a new consciousness and 
identity among the 200 million people who have been considered ‘outcaste’ or 
‘untouchable’. Today they call themselves as Dalits, and aggressively demand 
their share in the shaping of the destiny of the nation. This is one of the 
many protest and reform movements among the ‘untouchables’ against both the 
Vedic ritualism and the Brahminical caste rigidity.
 The conversion of Dalits to Buddhism, Christianity, Islam and Sikhism, besides 
being change of religion, was also search for equality. Dr. Ambedkar believed 
that neither bourgeois nationalism nor traditional Marxism provided any 
satisfactory solution to the problem of caste. Hence he turned to religion. He 
rejected Christianity and Islam, because though formally egalitarian in nature, 
they did not face in their origin the task of fighting the caste system. For 
him, the only Indian religion, which arose and grew out of the struggle against 
the caste system and never succumbed to it, was Buddhism.
 Today we live in a global context of secularism and democracy. In the last 
hundred years, secularism has come to be accepted as an alternative to 
religious orthodoxy and fundamentalist ideology. Secularism, we know, is lived 
and practiced in diverse ways in different countries. There cannot be one, 
homogenous way of practicing it. A secular state is one that allows its 
citizens to profess and practice their respective faith freely and fearlessly. 
Secular state does not interfere with the religious and spiritual affairs of 
the people. It should respect all religions equally. It should not prefer one 
to the other.
Secularism in India is different from the western concept of the state in 
confrontation with the Church. Indian secularism was born out of an experience, 
a painful process of national liberation struggles. The Fathers of our 
Constitution had reasons to introduce secularism in our country:  fear of 
disorder arising from dangerous forces of political movements associated with 
militant Hindu nationalism, Muslim separatism, Hindu-Muslim communalism and so 
on. Nehru condemned casteism and communalism. He observed that communalism was 
fascism in India and favoured secularism. For him, secularism was necessarily a 
civilized behaviour. This was to transcend religious, cultural, caste 
differences and combat militant communalist forces.
 Human civilization has brought into focus the significance of secular ideals, 
and there is a growing consciousness to support and nurture this type of 
societies. Today almost all the countries in the world have come to accept that 
secularism is sine quo non-for democratic governance. To establish a peaceful 
and just society, secularist principles and democratic polity are indispensable.
 All true religions have an immense potential for tolerance. Each religious 
community claims that theirs is the most tolerant religion of our time. Their 
claim is true so long as they recognize other religions as different ways 
leading to the same goal. Tolerance is a normative value, yes, but it is not an 
answer to the fundamentalist danger to unity and integrity of our country. In 
today’s context what we need is to affirm and perpetuate:
 1.      Rootedness of every believer in his/her religion;
2.      Acceptance of the other and his/her religious belief and practice;
3.      On going dialogues between different religions.
These are the principles that will pave way for a healthy atmosphere of 
respect, tolerance and acceptance of each other, of each religious tradition 
and enable us to live together as Indians in peace and harmony.
 It is time now for all academicians, thinkers, philosophers, theologians and 
the like to come out openly and speak out against the dangers of fundamentalism 
and its offshoots of disorder, and undo, with the weapon of their wisdom, all 
that has gone wrong. Politicians in my opinion are not capable of doing this 
job. All that they normally seek after is power and for power they justify any 
means. If the age of Enlightenment and of Science has brought changes in the 
west, our intervention at this juncture will definitely put the wheels of our 
country on the right track. What German Bishop Niemoler said about the 
situation under Hitler might teach us something: 
“ When Nazis put communists in the concentration camp, I did not protest 
because I was not a communist; when they persecuted the social democrats, I did 
not protest because I was not a social democrat; When they massacred the Jews, 
I did not protest because I was not a Jew; When they banned all political 
parties and trade unions, I did not protest because I was not one of them; when 
they came for me, there was no one to speak for me.”

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

The author is vice principal, St. Xavier’s College, 30 Mother Teresa Sarani, 
Kolkata – 700 016. Tel: 033-2255 1202/1135



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