What is the National Dharma Shastra?

Ram Puniyani


Judiciary as the top arbiter of the disputes on all the issues is some
times caught up in delivering judgments on things for which an
individual judge may not be well equipped. The case in point is the
famous 'Hindutva as a way of life' by Justice Varma of Supreme Court.
Here the theological and political paraphernalia to opine on this
concept were not clear. To begin with Hinduism is the only major
religion in the World which does not have a prophet or a single book.
On the top of it many a terms have been coined over a period of time
which one does not find in the earlier texts so one resorts to the
overlap of terms. It pertains to the terms, Hindu, Hinduism, and
Hindutva. While passing a judgment on the word Hindutva, the judge
took it as synonym of Hinduism and pasted on it the definition of
Hinduism, where due to the lack of single cohesive one, it came to be
called as a way of life. It is another matter that the word Hidutva
came to be coined in the early twentieth century to express the
composite politics of Hindu Mahsabha and later RSS. It was to be based
on race; Aryan, language; Sanskrit and culture; Brahmanic. This
elaboration may not be the part of the training imparted for the
judgeship.

The current judgment by Justice Shrivastava, (signed on August 30th
2007) Bhagvat Gita should be a national dharma shastra, Holy book,
falls in another genre. Here the judge was giving his verdict on the
dispute on the sale of temple land between two brothers. As an, add on
to the basic verdict he was generous enough to share his personal
wisdom as a part of the judgment. It was an unwarranted and
unsolicited advice. His novel point was that as we have national
animal, bird and what have you, we should have national Dharma Shastra
and that should be Gita. He advised the nation that all citizens
should follow the dharma propounded in it. The VHP immediately stood
to lap this up and its vocal face, B.P.Singhal was quick to endorse
the same by adding that the judgment has nothing to do with judges'
being Hindu, "He has justice in his mind, not as a Hindu, but as a
judge." Meaning there by that pronouncements of Gita are above the
judge's own religion, i.e. Hinduism and they should be part of our
judicial system. Leaders from other religious communities vehemently
opposed this. Also the legal authorities and legal experts pointed out
that a book from any single religion cannot qualify for being a
national Holy book.

One recalls that in the aftermath of Babri demolition many an
ideologues from Hindutva camp asserted that Ram is the national
figure, far surpassing the Father of the nation Mahatma Gandhi. The
assertion was that Lord Ram should be the basis of Indian identity.

Many a confusions are crossing our path and the nature of Hinduism,
being a complex ensemble of different traditions does not help the
maters in the least. As far as Gita is concerned it has been a source
of inspiration for many Hindus who also participated in freedom
movement. Its impact on the section of Hindus is humongous, and it
does have a special place in the culture of the land. But neither is
it the holy book of all the Hindus nor it can have a place in the
scheme of things of followers of other religions. We have Vedas,
Upanishads, Purans, Dharmshatras, and a whole plethora of holy books.
While for Dayanand Sarswati Vedas were supreme, for Viekanand Vedanta,
for Lokmanya Tilak and Vinoba Bhave Gita had a central place. For the
followers of Hindu Mahasabha/ RSS, Manusmriti had a central place.
Gandhi, the tallest Hindu in the freedom movement did not comment
about the individual books as he gave preference to values.

Gita is essentially a sermon given by Lord Krishna to Khstriya warrior
Arjun. Seeing all his relatives on the other side of the divide in
war, Arjun gets pensive and wants to withdraw from the battle. Here
the Lord building up on the Dharma as given in the Vedas, the system
based on the Varna (hierarchical location in social order) of the
individual, advices that if we do our duty as per our Varna it is not
a sin, on the contrary running away from this Dharma, Varna based
duties is a sin. So go ahead and engage in a battle even with those
who are your kith and kin. Also one should not look at the results of
one's action as it is dharma itself. The Lord also says that whenever
this dhrama, Varna based social system, is in danger, he takes birth
to reinstate it.

Now how many Hindu streams will hold on to this? Surely Nath, Siddha,
Tantra and Bhakti tradition of Hinduism reject the varna based
preaching. Buddhism and Jainism will look the other way around as far
as Varna dharma is concerned and they will have nothing to do with the
violence and war. Gita, while highly revered, its base is Varnashram
Dharma, unacceptable to the teachings of other religions as well.
Similarly Lord Ram, despite all his virtues may not be acceptable to
the tribe of Shambuk, or Bali or women, even with the mildest
aspiration of equality, today.

This debate about certain holy books/ laws has been affecting many a
nation states. Many Islamic states, in the grip of Mullahs call for
the implementation of Sharia. In Pakistan due to the erosion of
democracy army kept dominating the social scene and to get the
legitimization of their dictatorial powers have been allying with the
section of clergy and implementing parts of Sharia to the detriment of
democratic norms. Here in India also many a Hindutva ideologues have
been calling far the institution of laws based on our Hindu books,
i.e. Manusmriti, Gita etc. and to do away with the Indian
constitution.

Earlier during the process of the formation of Indian constitution
they felt this whole exercise is futile as 'we' already have the best
of the laws in the form of Manu's laws. It is another matter that the
chairman of the drafting committee of Indian constitution, Dr. B.R.
Ambedkar had burnt the Manusmriti. Tragically some authorities even
today pledge more to those laws than the ones of Indian Constitution.
Not long ago after the pronouncement of K.Sudarshan of RSS, BJP led
NDA wanted to review the Indian constitution.

India's freedom movement sorted out many of these issues. This
movement was based on values of pluralism and drew people from all the
streams of society cutting across religion, caste and gender. It also
could be built up due to the solid secular foundations where religion
was the private matter of the individuals and politics was to be based
on the principles of this World, the matters profane. And that's what
came to be enshrined in the values of Indian Constitution. If one is
to use the language of religiosity one can affirm today that our
National holy book is Indian Constitution, while people can revere and
draw their personal inspiration from the plethora of Holy books. As
individual Judge Shrivastva has the liberty to follow this or that
holy book but to give it as a judgment making it the national holy
book, is an abuse of his position as a judge. It is heartening that
barring few, those deliberately mixing religion in political life, all
Indians steeped in the values of freedom movement will ignore this
pronouncement which is derogatory to Indian values.


--

Issues in Secular Politics
September 2007- II
For circulation/publication

[EMAIL PROTECTED], www.pluralindia.com


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