http://scroll.in/article/774518/a-brief-history-of-religious-intolerance-in-india

OPINION
A brief history of religious intolerance in India

>From very early times, India has witnessed religious and sectarian antagonisms.

DN Jha and Mukul Dube  · Yesterday · 05:30 pm

At a time when religious bigotry has vitiated the air around us, it is
worthwhile to investigate how old the idea of tolerance is and remind
ourselves of the intolerance of our ancestors. Although early India
had strong traditions of cultic and religious syncretism, there is
plentiful evidence to prove the prevalence of religious and sectarian
antagonisms from very early times.

In the 2nd century BC, Patanjali tells us that the relationship
between Brahmins and Buddhists is like that between the snake and the
mongoose; and its actual violent manifestation is supported by a
plethora of historical evidence. Similarly, there is copious proof of
the Shaiva-Vaishnava antagonism. The persistent animosity between
Shaivism and Jainism, and the persecution of the latter by the former,
is also well documented. In the 11th century Alberuni tells us that
the Hindus are “haughty, foolishly vain and self-conceited” and
“believe that there is no religion like theirs”.

But ignoring all this, Indian politicians constantly chant the
aphoristic statement “vasudhaiva kutumbakam” (the world is one family)
out of context.

Privileging Hinduism over others


The construct of tolerant Hinduism seems to be of relatively recent
origin and to have first acquired visibility in the Western writings
on India. In the 17th century, Francois Bernier (1620-1688), the
French doctor who travelled widely in India, was one of the early
Europeans to speak of Hindus as a tolerant people. In the 18th century
the German philosopher Johann Gottfried Von Herder (1744-1803), the
forerunner of the Romantic glorification of India, referred to the
Hindus as “mild” and “tolerant” and as “the gentlest branch of
humanity”. Around the same time, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) said that
they “do not hate the other religions but they believe they are also
right”. Such views find a more prominent place in the writings of
Orientalists like William Jones, according to whom, “the
Hindus...would readily admit the truth of the Gospel but they contend
that it is perfectly consistent with their Sastras”.

In the 19th century, some Indians also began to speak of the tolerance
of Hindus, but they clearly privileged Hinduism over other religions.
Dayananda Saraswati (1824-1883), who founded the Arya Samaj in 1875,
claimed to believe “in a religion based on universal values... above
the hostility of all creeds...”. But as a champion of the Vedic
religion, he sharply opposed all other religions: to him, Mohammad was
an “impostor” and Jesus “a very ordinary ignorant man, neither learned
nor a yogi”. His contemporary Ramakrishna (1836-1886) spoke of the
equality of religions, but in his view “the Hindu religion alone is
the Sanatana Dharma”.

His disciple Vivekananda (1863-1904) also laid emphasis on toleration
and picked up the famous Rigvedic passage “ekaüsad viprà vahudhà
vadanti” (The wise speak of what is One in many ways) in support of
his vision that “India alone [was] to be...the land of toleration”.
But this was incompatible with his view that “from Pacific to the
Atlantic for five hundred years blood ran all over the world” and
“that is Mohammadanism”, even though his Rigvedic quote has become a
cliché through being endlessly milked by politicians.

Similar views continued to be held by some leaders in the early 20th
century. Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1856-1920), for example, couched his
views in the vocabulary of tolerance and quite often cited the above
Rigvedic passage but, in reality, espoused militant Hinduism. Even the
Muslim-hater MS Golwalkar (1906-1973) spoke of the Hindus as the most
tolerant people of the world, although this sounded like the devil
quoting scripture, for he identified Muslims, Christians and
Communists as internal threats to the country. It would appear that
these leaders, from Dayananda to Golwalkar, used tolerance as a
camouflage for Hindu belligerence: they privileged Hinduism over other
religions and did not provide enough space to them. Unlike them,
Mahatma Gandhi, who lived and died for communal harmony, genuinely
found Hinduism to be the most tolerant of all religions even if his
excessive pride in its inclusivism may have tended to make it
exclusive.

Emphasising the syncretism

Many historians and social scientists have also spoken and written
about the inclusive character of Hinduism and have produced much
literature which highlights its syncretic traditions. Several
instances of mutual accommodation among the various Hindu sects have
been cited.

It is rightly held that the Buddha, founder of a heretic religion,
emerged as an avatara of Vishnu around the middle of the 6th century
AD. He figured as such in several Puranas and other texts including
the Dashavataracharita of Kshemendra (11th century) and the
Gitagovinda of Jayadeva (12th century) as well as in inscriptions and
in the Kitabu-ul-Hind of Alberuni (11th century). Even sacrifice to
him was recommended for those desirous of beauty. But, interestingly,
he was also reviled as a thief and an atheist, and Shiva is believed
to have appeared on Earth in the form of Shankara to combat the Buddha
avatara, even though Shankara himself is described as an illegitimate
child in a 14th century Vaishnava text.

The Vedantist philosopher Madhava Acharya (14th century) is often said
to have displayed an exemplary tolerance of opposing points of view in
his Sarvadarshanasamgraha (Collection of All Systems), which begins by
presenting the school of Charvakas, criticises it and ends with
Shankara’s Advaita “as the conclusion and crown of all philosophical
systems”. But it is forgotten that this was in keeping with the
traditional Indian practice of presenting the opponent’s view before
refuting it.

Further, Adinatha (Rishabha), the first tirthanakara of Jainism, was
accepted as an incarnation of Vishnu in the Bhagavatapurana. Christ
was sometimes included in the incarnations of Vishnu, and the Muslim
sect of Imam Shahis believed that the Imam was himself the tenth
avatara of Vishnu and that the Quran was a part of the Atharvaveda.
Akbar was sometimes thought of as the tenth avatara of Vishnu and
Queen Victoria too was accepted as a Hindu goddess when a plague broke
out in Bombay following an insult to her statue by some miscreants.

It is, however, missed in all this that neither Adinatha, nor the
Imam, nor Christ, nor Akbar, nor even Victoria occupied an important
place in the Brahmanical scheme of things. In other words,
non-Brahmanical religions were not treated on par with Brahmanism but
as religions which, although unwelcome, did exist and so had to be
tolerated. It is difficult to say that the status of Islam and
Christianity is no different in present-day India, although there is
the argument that the attacks on them by the proponents of Hindutva do
not represent Hinduism and Hindus.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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