http://scroll.in/article/775230/intolerance-debate-the-single-source-theory-of-indian-civilisation

OPINION
Intolerance Debate: The single-source theory of Indian civilisation

Why it is important for Hindutva to insist that all of Indian culture
flows from the Vedic or Sanskrit civilisation and every other part of
our heritage needs to be subjugated.
Tony Joseph  · Today · 08:45 am

This is the third of a three-part article.

Part I: Why the 'intolerance debate' is far from over [available at
<http://scroll.in/article/774610/why-the-intolerance-debate-is-far-from-over>]
Part II: Intolerance debate: How some historical brutalities are more
special than others [available at
<http://scroll.in/article/774898/intolerance-debate-how-some-historical-brutalities-are-more-special-than-others>]

We come to the last of the three legs on which the Hindutva stool is
constructed: a veneration of the Sanskrit or Vedic civilisation as the
singular fountainhead of Indian culture, and the subjugation of every
other part of our heritage to it. This is faithfully reflected in the
statement of the 47, in the form of an accusation against the
protesters:
A denial of the continuity and originality of India’s
Hindu-Buddhist-Jain-Sikh culture, ignoring the work of generations of
Indian and Western Indologists. Hindu identity, especially, has been a
pet aversion of this School, which has variously portrayed it as being
disconnected from Vedic antecedents, irrational, superstitious,
regressive, barbaric – ultimately “imagined” and, by implication,
illegitimate

Take a minute to read that, and see if you can identify the hidden
assumptions. It talks about the “continuity and originality of India’s
Hindu-Buddhist-Jain-Sikh culture”, taking care to group together some
religions and exclude others just as Savarkar would have wanted.

In the process, it ignores the fact that such watertight segmentation
is bogus, since all religions that exist today in India have been
influenced and shaped by each other. Sufi Islam has borrowed much from
Hinduism while Sikhism interacted with and knew enough about Islam for
its founder to be revered by both Muslims and Hindus.

Buddhism and Jainism rejected Vedic rituals and the authority of
priests while formulating new philosophic concepts, while the impact
of the arrival of British caused the re-definition and re-evaluation
of many Hindu practices such as child marriage and Sati. It also
started a process of intellectual churn in Bengal, leading first to
the creation of Brahmo Samaj and later, Arya Samaj which went on to
seed the thoughts that lie at the root of Hindutva.

>From Dayananda to Vivekananda

The cardinal book, Satyarth Prakash, written by Arya Samaj founder,
Swami Dayananda Saraswati, attacked Jainism which he described as “the
most dreadful religion” the followers and founders of which “are in
dense ignorance" and “introduced idolatry in India”. He also attacked
Shaivism, not to mention Christianity and Islam, with equal vehemence.
But his ideological inheritors like Savarkar have taken a different
line, re-juggling the religions and putting them together in a
different manner, with Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism in one
friendly bucket, Christianity and Islam in another inimical bucket,
and perhaps Zoroastrianism and Judaism in a third inconsequential
bucket!

Therefore, when the 47 insists on grouping religions just as Savarkar
would have done, it reveals an underlying and contemporary agenda more
than the reality of India’s history as it was lived. Also, the
accusation that Hindu identity has been portrayed as irrational,
superstitious, regressive and barbaric by the liberals is unsupported.
If anything, it is some of the statements of those whom Hindutva
considers its heroes that could be interpreted in that manner, as the
paragraph below will show.

Here’s a direct quote from a distraught Vivekananda commenting on
Indian society:
“Centuries and centuries, a thousand years of crushing tyranny of
castes, and kings and foreigners and your own people have taken out
all your strength, my brethren. Your backbone is broken, you are like
downtrodden worms.”

(Note that Vivekananda’s brilliant mind was more open and enquiring
than those of the 47: he pins the blame for the degradation that
occurred not just on the ‘foreigners’, but on the tyranny of castes
and kings and "your own people".)

And here’s more of Vivekananda on Buddhism:
“The most hideous ceremonies, the most horrible, the most obscene
books that human hands ever wrote or the human brain ever conceived,
the most bestial forms that ever passed under the name of religion,
have all been the creation of degraded Buddhism.”

So the charge of depicting the Hindu-Buddhist-Jain-Sikh culture poorly
can be more justifiably laid at the doors of Swami Dayananda Saraswati
and Swami Vivekananda (if at all it is to be laid) than at the
doorsteps of the protesters.

Hindutva hardline

Then again, in the paragraph quoted from the statement of the 47
above, there is a clever juxtaposing of the Hindu-Sikh-Jain-Buddhist
culture with “Vedic antecedents”.  The barely concealed intent is to
suggest that all of our cultural heritage flows from a single source,
and any suggestion that Indian civilisation as it exists today is the
result of the interaction, exchange and co-evolution involving at
least four major traditions  and languages – Aryan, Dravidian,
Munda/Tribal and Sino-Tibetan - not to mention exchanges with
religions such as Islam and Christianity – is heresy, and amounts to
“disconnecting” the Indian civilisation from its “Vedic antecedents”.

Why is it important for the 47 to insist that all of Indian
civilisation and culture has a singular source and thus deny its
plurality, the very essence of its being through the millennia? That
follows naturally from the flawed idea of nationhood as defined by the
ideologues of Hindutva who borrowed it in turn from Europe at a time
when it was discovering a rabid brand of nationalism. Here’s a
quotation from Golwalkar, one of the founding fathers of the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh and the man who shaped it more than anyone else:
“National existence is entirely dependent upon the co-ordinated
existence of the five elements constituting the Nation idea – country,
race, religion, culture and language. That is the final
incontrovertible verdict of the theoretical discussions and their
practical application to the world conditions past and present….
Living in this country since pre-historic times is the ancient race –
the Hindu Race, united together by common traditions, by memories of
common glory and disaster, by similar historical political, social
religious and other experiences, living under the same influences, and
evolving a common culture, a common mother language, common customs,
common aspirations.”

Golwalkar, in fact, goes much farther, against the entire theory and
practice of the science of Linguistics, and says this:
“There is but one language, Sanskrit, of which these many languages
are mere offshoots, the children of the mother language, Sanskrit, the
dialect of the Gods, is common to all from the Himalayas to the ocean
in the South, from East to West and all the modern sister languages
are through it so much inter-related as to be practically one”!

In the peculiar and idiosyncratic world-view of the Hindutva brigade,
which once came up with the slogan of "Hindi, Hindu, Hindustan" before
being forced to backtrack after language agitations threatened to
break apart the country, the nation of India is liable to cease if it
is not forcibly yoked to uniform cultural standards claiming common
origin.  That is why it is important for Hindutva to insist that all
of Indian culture flows from the Vedic or Sanskrit civilisation. This
old European or rather German concept of nationhood has been
thoroughly disproven by history and exposed to be a destructive idea,
but neither the leaders of Hindutva, nor the 47 seem to have noticed.

Ancient achievements

The 47 academicians make another complaint and it is as follows:
A near-complete erasure of India’s knowledge systems in every field
–philosophical, linguistic, literary, scientific, medical,
technological or artistic – and a general underemphasis of India’s
important contributions to other cultures and civilisations .

This, of course, is yet another trope of the Hindutva right-wing that
the 47 academicians are echoing, that the ancient glories of the
Indian civilisation have not been fully appreciated.  This statement
is both unsupported and unverifiable by nature because no amount of
emphasis on the achievements of Indian civilisation can be considered
enough by those who are determined not to be satisfied.

The astronomical and mathematical brilliance of Aryabhatta  after whom
the first satellite of India was named, the linguistic genius of
Panini, the literary wizardry of Kalidasa, the philosophical
sophistication of Sankara, Nagarjuna, Nagasena…  none of these had to
wait for discovery by Hindutva social scientists. The fact is that the
sheer scope, integrity and robustness of India’s philosophical
systems, the beauty of its literature and the arts, and its mastery
over mathematics, astronomy and medicine in ancient times are all
well-documented and well-accepted.

And so is the fact that very few societies in ancient times developed
such a robust culture of intense intellectual debates and discussions
over issues of human existence and goals (an irony, considering the
narrow definitions of nationhood that the right-wing today wants to
propagate).

But then one can always point to some other "miraculous" achievements
such as the Vedic discovery of genetics, head transplantation,
aeroplanes and atomic bombs (with each of these assertions being made
by leading members of the Hindutva movement, some of them at meetings
of the Indian Council of Historical Research as reconstituted by the
new government in power) and complain that they don’t get enough
applause.

Summing up

To put what we have discussed so far in a nutshell, the statement of
the 47 academicians dovetails neatly with the three fundamental
ideological positions taken by the Hindutva ideologues. One, that the
caste system with its Brahminic superiority should be accorded
primacy, with sufficient emphasis on its positive aspects; two, that
nationhood should be redefined and history rewritten to see India’s
evolution through the prism of religious conflicts; and three, that
the Sanskrit or Vedic civilisation should be acknowledged as the
singular source of Indian culture and language with everything else
being subordinate to it.

Each and every one of the conflicts that have riven the country apart
in recent months can be traced to one of these objectives that a
right-wing in ascendance is trying to push. Rationalists have to be
murdered because they question this agenda and suspected beef-eaters
have to be lynched because they derail the goal of a monolithic
culture that everyone pays obeisance to.

That similar majoritarian attempts to define nationhood exclusively
have led to horrific damage to the social fabric in every country that
went down that path – Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Germany – seems
to have made no difference to the ideologues of Hindutva, or their
camp followers.

When the original protesters wrote in their statement that the “regime
seems to want a kind of legislated history, a manufactured image of
the past, glorifying certain aspects of it and denigrating others,”
they could not have imagined that 47 learned academicians of the
opposite camp would soon, and very clearly, confirm every one of those
words.

Therefore, the next time someone tells you that what we have before us
is a “lifestyle difference over cuisine” or a “discord over the
English accent”, know those arguments for what they are: Wordplay to
deflect attention from  the real effort of deconstructing Indian
nationhood, and Hinduism itself, in order to put it together again in
a manner that is narrower, vicious and more reverential towards the
caste system. As long as this effort continues, the debate is unlikely
to go away for long.

This is the third of a three-part article.

Part I: Why the 'intolerance debate' is far from over [available at
<http://scroll.in/article/774610/why-the-intolerance-debate-is-far-from-over>]
Part II: Intolerance debate: How some historical brutalities are more
special than others [available at
<http://scroll.in/article/774898/intolerance-debate-how-some-historical-brutalities-are-more-special-than-others>]

Tony Joseph is a journalist and former Editor of Businessworld.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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