*Impossible Lessons*

*● Ravi Sinha*

Far away from Peshawar five men and a woman sat in a physician’s waiting
room in Lucknow. The television screen that ordinarily shows some Bollywood
film or a cricket match had a news channel on. It was day after the
slaughter of children. The assistant who maintains the waiting list of
patients and collects the doctor’s fee said something very predictable,
even if heart-felt, expressing his horror and revulsion. The matter would
have passed as unremarkably as most things do most of the times, except for
what an elderly gentleman waiting to see the doctor had to say in response.


In a feeble yet firm voice whose conviction and sincerity was unmistakable,
he said – *dhaarmikata ko badhaava doge to kattarta badhegi; kattarta
badhegi to aatank upajega, haivaaniyat saamne aayegi.* (If you will promote
religiosity, fundamentalism will grow, and from that will emerge terror and
barbarism.) After a pause he added – *hamaare desh mein bhee yahee ho rahaa
hai, haalaan ki abhee hum pehle daur mein hain, dhaarmikata badhaane ke
daur mein. *(Same thing is happening in our country too, although we are in
the first phase so far – that of promoting religiosity.)


It was stunningly simple a statement with clear enunciation of a causal
chain. No one spoke after that. Uncharacteristically, for Indians, no
discussion followed and no rebuttals were made. The statement was
surprising for a number of reasons. First of all it did not come from an
atheist leftist. There are too few of them left in any case in this city of
Majaz, Rashid Jahan and Sajjad Zaheer, and it would have been too much of a
coincidence if both the patients waiting to see the doctor in that lean
hour of the day belonged to this rare breed. (Others were either family
members of the patients or the doctor’s assistants.)


The statement was surprising also because, despite widely held views to the
contrary, it did not blame one particular religion for being more disposed
than others to harbour and incite terrorism. Nor did it sing the usual song
about true religiosity being antithetical to brutality and violence. If one
were willing to honestly count all killings across millennia of human
history, I have little doubt that religion will show up as the single
biggest killer. There are those who deploy enormous erudition and
scholarship in proving that it kills only when it becomes modern. There are
others who would not tire of repeating that it kills only as a handmaiden
of imperialism. Veracity of examples likely to be cited in support of such
theses cannot be denied. And yet, the theses themselves are grievously
mistaken. Religion kills for its own sake too. If others hire it
frequently, they do so because it is extraordinarily effective at the job.
Nobel winning physicist Steven Weinberg once said – *… you have good people
doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But, for good people
to do evil things, that takes religion.*


It does not take a great deal of erudition to know that the Thirty Year War
in seventeenth century Europe had seen the biggest blood-bath before the
world wars of the twentieth century broke that record. That can hardly be
attributed to modernity or to imperialism. Nor did religion begin to kill
children only in the modern times. The oldest of religious myths recount
massacre of children. If one were to consider that the slaughter of all
male children of Hebrew families at Egyptian Pharaoh’s orders is a story
intended to portray the adversary in bad light, how does one interpret the
same side reporting gleefully the extermination of all Egyptian firstborns
in the last of the ten plagues unleashed by the Hebrew God on the Egyptians?


A mistaken view that seems to be widely held in this country considers
Hinduism comparatively non-violent. The *Hindutva brigade* laments this.
They would like to turn Hindus into ferocious warriors against other
faiths. This sordid episode is currently in full bloom in the Indian
society and polity. I do not fully agree with the gentleman in the clinic
when he says that we are in the first phase of promoting religiosity that
is yet to attain full-scale brutality and violence. Can one draw any such
comfort after witnessing, for example, what happened during the Gujarat
carnage of 2002?


If religion can kill even while preaching peace, compassion, brotherhood
and spirituality, one can imagine the added ferocity when it openly
preaches the virtues of violence. The current foreign minister of India has
called upon the world to accept *Gita* as the global holy book. Honesty
would demand that this appeal be accompanied with a disclaimer – this book
is basically a call to arms and an incitement to violence. Lord Krishna
went to great philosophical lengths to rid Arjun of the scruples the latter
had about participating in the impending blood-bath of *Mahabharat* that
would include killing his own cousins and relatives.


Speaking against religion is not a wise thing to do. It carries all kinds
of dangers – exclusion and ridicule being among the more benign ones. It is
not easy, therefore, to draw truthful lessons from histories and practices
of religion. Nearly all of humanity that has lived so far has been
religious and, by and large, it continues to be so.  How does one criticize
or evaluate the mode of living of the entire human race? How does one bring
its core beliefs under dispassionate and fearless scrutiny? It is not
surprising that thinkers and theorists have had to plumb great
philosophical depths and weave intricate theories around this issue.
Obvious observations and simple truths would simply not do.


Undoubtedly there are things in the world about which precious little can
be done. There are problems about which the best one can do is to go around
them. And yet one learns about them not only because one is curious but
also because one is always trying to cope with the world and make it
better. One cannot do anything to gravity, and yet one keeps learning about
it. In the process one does find newer ways to cope with it. Religion,
unfortunately, is much like gravity. Lessons drawn from its history may
invariably be impossible lessons, but even impossible lessons have their
uses.


The poetically inspired moment in which Marx coined the phrase – *opium of
the people* – has been the bane of every Marxist’s life. They have been
mercilessly beaten up with this phrase and endlessly ridiculed for being
juvenile. Hardly anyone reads the passage in the *Introduction* to
Marx’s *Critique
of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right* from which the phrase gets plucked. It
almost reads like an ode to religion when he says – *Religious suffering
is, at one and the same time, the expression of real suffering and a
protest against real suffering. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed
creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless
conditions. It is the opium of the people.* One wonders what Marx would say
about religion after the slaughter of children in Peshawar. Would he say
that it did the killing at the behest of imperialism? Would he say that
seeds of a ferocious religious culture were sown in the Swat valley and
elsewhere so that harvest of slaughters would feed the powers that rule
over the planet, control its oil and own its wealth?


Anger and ridicule should be directed not towards what someone might say
about religion. They should be directed towards what religion actually
does. Its deeds are so grim and stark that even its sympathetic theorists
are forced to raise questions about its conduct. Take for example the
communitarian-idealist philosopher Charles Taylor who is famous for
deploying exceptional intellect and erudition in making sense of the likes
of Hegel, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty and later Wittgenstein. In 2007 he came
out with a 900-pages long book on the role of religion in history and
civilization. The approach of this book, which he called *The Secular Age*,
is too nuanced and its conclusions are too complex to be summarized here.
While wrestling with the riddles of human thought and deeds in the dark
alleys of history, myth and psyche with little light from the lamps of
science and certainty reaching those alleys, Taylor emerges occasionally as
if to catch a breath on the surface of manageable questions and simpler
conclusions. I am tempted to quote from him, despite the risk of doing
injustice to him and of exposing my own pretentiousness, in the hope that
rational scrutiny of religion can be seen as a worthy enterprise.


Sources of primal frenzy, wild sexuality and plain slaughter have been
debated within religious discourses themselves. More modern and humanist
interpretations of religion have often castigated the primordial and
naturalist versions for holding a view as if “all religion is ultimately
Moloch drinking blood from the skulls of the slain” (*The Secular Age*, p.
648). I wonder if there have been similar debates within Hinduism where
*Kali* and *Shiva* are reprimanded for such conduct. In any case, through
an anthropocentric cleansing of ancient religions, at least in the west, it
was hoped that religion would be rid of evil and frenzy, sex and slaughter,

“… in this anthropocentric climate, where we keep any idea of the
spiritual, it must be totally constructive, positive. It can’t accommodate
Kali, and is less and less able to allow for a God who punishes. The wrath
of God disappears, leaving only His love…On the older view, wrath had to be
part of the package…some people fry in Hell; and the others are only saved
because Christ offered “satisfaction” for them. This was the heart of the
juridical-penal understanding of the atonement. But in the anthropocentric
climate, this no longer makes sense, and indeed, appears monstrous.” (*The
Secular Age*, p. 649)


The question, however, remains. Why then, despite modernity, religion
remains a prime instigator of bestiality and slaughter? Taylor discusses
the question at various levels – biological, meta-biological, metaphysical,
psycho-social, political and historical. Given his theoretical and
ideological dispositions, he is inclined towards metaphysical explanations.
Wading through complex arguments he arrives at a conclusion that puts part
of the blame at modernity’s door. Modernity turns out in this account to be
as self-righteous as religion. Citing examples of modern and non-religious
violence, from the French Revolution to the War on Terror and Abu Ghraib,
he accords equivalent status to Robespierre, Hitler, Stalin and George Bush.


I have put Taylor on display as an illustrative example. The point is to
recognize the intrinsic relationship between religion and violence. If we
have to understand our own specific predicament, we may have to step away
from Taylor and go beyond his conclusions. After all, Peshawar and Gujarat
happen here and not in Canada or Sweden. There must be some reason if
religious slaughters and other barbarities of the present age tend to
cluster in some parts of the world and not others.


*The Economist* this week quotes a former army officer from Pakistan, “I am
not sure if Pakistan was created in the name of religion, but it is surely
being destroyed in the name of religion” (*From the Graveyard*, Selections
from *The Economist*, The Indian Express, 22nd December, 2014). There have
been condemnations around the world of the slaughter of children, and also
declarations that this is going to be the much-awaited turning point as far
as Pakistan is concerned. But wishes cannot be horses. The soil often gets
soaked with blood because political and civilizational histories – and
above all religion – have poured poison into its deeper layers. The
courageous Pakistani intellectual and physics professor, Pervez Hoodbhoy,
is on spot when he points out with his characteristic forthrightness why
this is not going to be “the final atrocity” in Pakistan,


“All tragedies provoke emotional exhortations. But nothing changed after
Lakki Marwat when 105 spectators of a volleyball match were killed by a
suicide bomber in a pickup truck. Or, when 96 Hazaras in a snooker club
died in a double suicide attack. The 127 dead in the All Saints Church
bombing in Peshawar, or the 90 Ahmadis killed while in prayer, are now dry
statistics. In 2012, men in military uniforms stopped four buses bound from
Rawalpindi to Gilgit, demanding that all 117 persons alight and show their
national identification cards. Those with typical Shia names, like Abbas
and Jafri, were separated. Minutes later corpses lay on the ground.


If Pakistan had a collective conscience, just one single fact could have
woken it up: the murder of nearly 60 polio workers — women and men who work
to save children from a crippling disease — at the hands of the fanatics.”

(The Dawn, December 20th, 2014, http://www.dawn.com/news/1151930)

One could raise a few questions about the Indian collective conscience too.
Did it wake up after *Gujarat 2002*? Did it punish the perpetrators of the
horrific crimes? Did it punish those who presided over the carnage? Did
India hang its head in shame when thousands of women were raped, scores of
children slaughtered, even foetuses were torn out of wombs? The answer is
well-known. The person who presided over *Gujarat 2002*, justified the
barbarism by invoking Newton’s third law (*the action at Godhra was bound
to have a reaction across Gujarat*), organized the post-riot “procession of
pride” (*Gaurav Yatra*)  just ahead of the coming elections, and
offensively humiliated an entire community with his *ame paanch, amaaraa
pachees* speeches (“we five, ours twenty-five” – an ugly caricature of the
family-planning slogan, “we two and ours two”), has been rewarded election
after election culminating in the final reward of the Prime Minister’s
chair. Nearly entire country is lying prostrate before this newly minted
“statesman” who is supposed to have moved on and become the messiah of
development. It is touching to watch fierce journalists and erudite
commentators worrying endlessly about the damage that might be done by the
minions of the *Hindutva brigade* to their own commander’s project. Why
should they raise the spectre of *love jihad*, speak obscenely about
*ramzade-haramzade*, generate tension through *ghar-wapsi* (home-coming by
reconversion to Hinduism), and go on fomenting riots in different parts of
the country? Why should they do what their commander-in-chief did before he
became the commander-in-chief?

Prevailing standards of political debate in this country would prompt many
to retort – why keep harping on Gujarat? What about the massacre of Sikhs
in 1984? Wasn’t Rajiv Gandhi rewarded with the largest majority in the
history of the Lok Sabha? Yes, that too! Although in that case victory may
have come despite the massacre and not because of it. In any case, one
could count many more cases of engineered riots and pandemic brutalities
that brought political dividends. That precisely is the point. Why is it
expedient for politics in our kind of societies – including in its
democratic avatar – to hire religion for mass killings if that is what is
needed to attain political goals?

This is a question that is often sidestepped and the entire blame is put on
politics. There is no doubt that politics is to be blamed for much and
there are politicians who have committed crimes against history and against
humanity. How can one ignore the poisoning of an entire civilization by
contemporary politics, especially since the days of the *Rath Yatra* and
the demolition of the Babri Mosque? And yet, most of the country appears to
have little trouble breathing in this poisoned atmosphere. Should this not
bring one back to the question that one was trying to sidestep in the first
place? Should one not look into the make-up of a civilization that finds it
natural to breathe poisonous air?

It might appear as if we are back to the affair of impossible lessons. Are
we going to elect a new people, as Brecht is supposed to have said
somewhere? Are we going to conjure up a new way of life and rewire the
social brain so as to give rise to a new civilization? If the haystack is
ever ready to catch fire, what can we do other than making sure that no one
throws a matchstick into it? Any lesson about religion or about the make-up
of a civilization is not likely to be of any real use.

But, one may be rushing too fast. In real life useful measures are
routinely squeezed out of seemingly impossible lessons. Consider, for
example, some of the processes at the interface of a modern system and a
yet-to-be-modern society. What prevents the religious fanatics and the
politico-religious brigades from throwing the society into a perpetual
inferno? Why are pogroms and carnages used selectively and, perverse as it
may sound, in limited ways? Why is it that in spite of the frequent bouts
of barbarism we escape plunging into outright religious wars of the ancient
and medieval types? The answer lies primarily in the existence of a modern
system and in the peculiar historical fact that modernity has become
remarkably, if unevenly, entrenched in this yet-to-be modern society.
Contrary to what the regular leftists and the esoteric post-leftists would
have one believe, the *Hindutva brigade* in India is prevented from going
completely berserk not because people will disapprove. It is primarily
because of the restraints imposed by modernity. Faced with the
religious-fascist onslaught even those who have more fundamental reasons to
oppose the system are forced to take shelter behind the Constitution and
the formal structure of a modern state. The plight of those living in the
countries without a modern state and a constitutional rule – in the
subcontinent and elsewhere – is far worse.

The regular leftist would be alarmed by what would appear to him an
explicit endorsement of the modern state. The post-leftist, on the other
hand, would be aghast at what would appear to her as succumbing to the
deceptive charms of modernity. Both would be mistaken in their respectively
expected ways. I can rehearse what I have written elsewhere about how the
modern state exists to serve the interests of the capital and why do
capitalists hire the brutes, including the religious kind, to manage the
polity (“Of Money-in-the-Blood and Blood-Money”,
http://kafila.org/2014/09/13/of-money-in-the-blood-and-blood-money-ravi-sinha/).
I can also rehearse and hopefully improve upon my take on modernity which
is one of critical appreciation. But that would take us away from the issue
at stake here.

Religion is not the sole repository of impossible lessons. There are other
seemingly impossible lessons to be learnt from capital, labour and history.
But that is another story and will have to be told another time.

December 24, 2014



(Ravi Sinha, by training a physicist, is a political thinker and an
activist. He is also a leading member of New socialist Initiative)

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