Not sure what to make of the following article. Yes, it is informative,  
however
it is also written from a secular Left perspective and, accordingly, it  
simply
does not consider all kinds of issues that are vital to people with  
religious
commitments  -and not only  Hindus but Christians, Sikhs,  Buddhists, etc.
For example, there is a visceral revulsion against Islam that is  palpable
in many circumstances. This is rooted in India's history during which  
Muslims
carried out a full scale war against Hinduism, Hindu people, temples,  and
Hindu states. Hundreds of mosques now either occupy the sites of  former
Hindu shrines or even consist of architecturally modified Hindu edifices  
per se.
All of which is unforgivable for Hindus   -and, to provide full  
disclosure, 
is a sentiment I share for reasons that are parallel to those of  Hindus.
My main grievance concerns Muslim destruction of the cultures of the
Mid East, especially Iraq and Iran, particularly Muslim war against
ancient religion and against Christians and Christian churches.
 
Anyway, the article is fact filled and despite its viewpoint provides
some information that is otherwise difficult to find.
 
Billy
 
 
---------------------------------
 
 
 
India's new Hinduism is about order, not  wonder
A BJP  triumph in the 2014 election will further undermine India's 
secularism, and its  astonishingly rich, creative view of religion

 
 
  
_Amit Chaudhuri_ (http://www.theguardian.com/profile/amit-chaudhuri)  
_The  Guardian_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian) , Thursday 1 May 
2014  


 
 
Indians love premature celebrations almost as much as they seem to like  
disappointment. Witness any cricket world cup in which India has been a  
contender: the victorious dances the moment a match begins, and then the  
familiar, subdued return to reality when it is lost. 
Right now, as the _Indian  elections progress towards their finale_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/07/-sp-indian-election-2014-interactive-g
uide-narendra-modi-rahul-gandhi) , there's a mood of celebration among  the 
supporters of the rightwing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata party.  The 
market decided some time ago that India will soon have a BJP  government, 
and since then has stabilised – and is now on an upswing. 
For those who aren't  looking forward to a BJP reign, it is a time for 
nervousness. Those like me who  have lived through a term of BJP government 
(1998-2004) know that _Narendra  Modi_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/30/narendra-modi-breaking-election-rules-selfie)
 , the prime ministerial 
candidate – revered and reviled in almost equal  measure – is only part of 
the problem; the larger issue is the BJP itself and  its disciplinarian, 
quasi-militant, extreme rightwing outfit, the _Rashtriya  Swayamsevak Sangh_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/apr/14/narendra-modi-extremism-in
dia) . The riots in Modi's Gujarat that killed 2,000 Muslims  took place 
while the BJP was in office. During that period the BJP education  minister, 
Murli Manohar Joshi, _proposed  that astrology should be studied at 
university_ 
(http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/in-the-ugc-i-am-nobody-murli-manohar-joshi/1/231176.html)
 . Both these were expressions  of the party's robust, 
masculine Hinduism. We can't be certain what might be on  the agenda with an 
entrenched BJP. 
The endlessly repeated  criticisms of Modi don't seem to have made the 
slightest difference. But an _observation  in the Times of India from a Muslim 
activist, Tanweer Alam_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/opinion/edit-page/Top-myths-about-Muslims/articleshow/32375368.cms)
 , is worth noting  
for its directness: "India is secular, not because Muslims want it to be but  
because this country has evolved over millennia in [such] a way that 
religion  and its practice have been left out of the domain of the state. This 
is  
reflected in India's constitution. It is relevant to note that Europe did 
not  become secular to accommodate Jews, Muslims or Buddhists, but to protect 
people  from sectarian strife within Christianity. US secularism has 
similar  origins. India too is secular because of Hindus, not Muslims, Sikhs, 
Christians  or Parsis." 
This is important. But if  Hinduism, rather than what Indians call "secul
arism", is to be the dominant  paradigm for the near future, what does it mean 
for politics today? Given that  it was never an organised religion, and 
even its name has a Persian rather than  indigenous provenance, Hinduism is 
hard to pin down. Its fluidity encompasses  the caste system, mythology and 
austere philosophical positions including  atheism. Even texts that are now 
associated with _Brahminical_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmin)  Hinduism, 
such as  the _Bhagavad  Gita_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/sep/29/afghanistan.terrorism6) , are 
really subtly anti-Brahminical given the 
influence on them of  Buddhism. 
It was also part of the immensely sophisticated cultural makeup of a 
certain  kind of Hindu to treat the stories central to their beliefs as both 
sacred fact  and metaphor. This was one of the characteristics of this faith 
that 
made it  open up to secularism. 
The BJP's contribution to the reshaping of Hinduism has been twofold. 
First,  by turning metaphorical moments such as the birth of Lord Rama into 
historic  events to be fought over, it has made Hinduism a literal-minded, 
Europeanised,  Semitic-style faith. By taking away from Hinduism its complexity 
and  contradictoriness, both the BJP and the free-market "new India" in which 
it has  flourished have produced a generation that knows little about 
Hinduism. 
Second, the political, instrumental use of Hinduism to defend and assert  
identity while assailing other identities, and a general ignorance of 
religious  experience on the part of the most active religionists, means that 
not 
only do  we live in an age when to be Hindu is to constantly take offence, 
but the line  separating obeisance from offence, the holy from the disgusting, 
religious pride  from poor taste, is blurred. Indians are being schooled to 
defend the sacred,  but have absolutely no idea how to recognise it. 
Let me provide an example.  "Prophylactic Hindu tiles", as I'll call them, 
have been proliferating in India  for the past two decades. You see them on 
walls, the sides of urinals, and  staircases. They have on them a Hindu god –
 _Shiva,  Parvati, Ganesh_ 
(https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=Shiva,+Parvati,+Ganesh&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=DzViU_GkB4GyPJ6IgbAC&ved=0CC0QsA
Q&biw=1902&bih=978)  – painted in the European style that is a cliche of 
kitsch  Hindu iconography. Their function is to discourage urinating and 
spitting on  public surfaces, both compulsive national masculine pastimes. The 
argument they  embody – never actually inscribed in either ancient scripture 
or even a  municipal text – is that no one would dare urinate or spit betel 
juice on a god.  I can think of no more tasteless use of the sacred, but the 
bizarre  interpretation of religion in contemporary India means that hardly 
anybody  thinks the tiles an outrage. 
In its unintended  strangeness it is both akin to and the very opposite of 
Marcel  Duchamp's "found object". _Duchamp placed a urinal  in an art 
gallery_ (http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/feb/09/art)  in 1917, named it 
Fountain and so turned it into an  art object. He not only inaugurated the 
artistic avant garde, but also created  an aesthetic and political scandal, 
provoking his audience to reimagine how and  why things become culturally 
sanctioned. 
The prophylactic tile, too, performs a political role, if "political" means 
 the instrumental use of religion in the "new India". Here, the sacred is 
not  meant to cause wonder, but to impose order and obedience and curb 
visceral  urges. 
And what of the  astonishingly rich creative legacy of Hinduism in 
modernity? Its demise is  hardly remarked on. Among the last artistic products 
of 
that legacy were the _nude Hindu goddesses  painted by MF Hussain_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Is93yU_Q0DI) , for which he was hounded out of 
the 
country. 
If modern Hindus wanted secularism primarily for themselves, it is worth  
noting that they also wanted their faith to be largely unprotected, a free 
and  common cultural resource for everybody: atheist, Muslim, Christian, 
Buddhist,  Sikh, Parsi and Hindu. When Hussain, a Muslim, worked on those 
pictures, he  believed we still lived in that world. It's become clear in the 
past 
decade that  we don't, and pretty evident – even if the BJP loses – that we 
won't any time  soon.

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