Hinduism a liberal faith: Exclusive excerpts from Shashi Tharoor's new
book, Why I Am a Hindu

   - Shashi Tharoor
   - January 19, 2018
   - UPDATED 18:40 IST
   - FOLLOW
   
<https://auth.indiatoday.in/saml_login/other/aHR0cDovL3d3dy5pbmRpYXRvZGF5LmluL21hZ2F6aW5lL2NvdmVyLXN0b3J5L3N0b3J5LzIwMTgwMTI5LXNoYXNoaS10aGFyb29yLW5ldy1ib29rLXdoeS1pLWFtLWEtaGluZHUtZXhjZXJwdHMtaGluZHV0dmEtcG9saXRpY3MtMTE0ODU1NS0yMDE4LTAxLTE5>
   -   EMAIL AUTHOR <[email protected]>


   -
   -
   -
   -
   - READ LATER
   
<https://auth.indiatoday.in/saml_login/other/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuaW5kaWF0b2RheS5pbi9tYWdhemluZS9jb3Zlci1zdG9yeS9zdG9yeS8yMDE4MDEyOS1zaGFzaGktdGhhcm9vci1uZXctYm9vay13aHktaS1hbS1hLWhpbmR1LWV4Y2VycHRzLWhpbmR1dHZhLXBvbGl0aWNzLTExNDg1NTUtMjAxOC0wMS0xOQ==>

[image: Illustration by Nilanjan Das]
Illustration by Nilanjan Das

I grew up in a Hindu household. Our home always had a prayer room, where
paintings and portraits of assorted divinities jostled for shelf and wall
space with fading photographs of departed ancestors, all stained by ash
scattered from the incense burned daily by my devout parents. I have
written before of how my earliest experiences of piety came from watching
my father at prayer. Every morning, after his bath, my father would stand
in front of the prayer room wrapped in his towel, his wet hair still
uncombed, and chant his Sanskrit mantras. But he never obliged me to join
him; he exemplified the Hindu idea that religion is an intensely personal
matter, that prayer is between you and whatever image of your Maker you
choose to worship. In the Hindu way, I was to find my own truth.

I think I have. I am a believer, despite a brief period of schoolboy
atheism (of the kind that comes with the discovery of rationality and goes
with an acknowledgement of its limitations). And I am happy to describe
myself as a believing Hindu: not just because it is the faith into which I
was born, but for a string of other reasons, though faith requires no
reason.

One reason is cultural: as a Hindu I belong to a faith that expresses the
ancient genius of my own people. I am proud of the history of my faith in
my own land: of the travels of Adi Shankara, who journeyed from the
southernmost tip of the country to Kashmir in the north, Gujarat in the
west and Odisha in the east, debating spiritual scholars everywhere,
preaching his beliefs, establishing his mutts. I am reaffirmed in this
atavistic allegiance by the Harvard scholar Diana Eck writing of the
'sacred geography' of India, 'knit together by countless tracks of
pilgrimage'. The great philosopher-president of India, Dr Sarvepalli
Radhakrishnan, wrote of Hindus as 'a distinct cultural unit, with a common
history, a common literature, and a common civilisation'. In reiterating my
allegiance to Hinduism, I am consciously laying claim to this geography and
history, its literature and civilisation, identifying myself as an heir
(one among a billion heirs) to a venerable tradition that stretches back
into time immemorial. I fully accept that many of my friends, compatriots
and fellow-Hindus feel no similar need, and that there are Hindus who are
not (or are no longer) Indian, but I am comfortable with this 'cultural'
and 'geographical' Hinduism that anchors me to my ancestral past.

But another 'reason' for my belief in Hinduism is, for lack of a better
phrase, its intellectual 'fit': I am more comfortable with the tenets of
Hinduism than I would be with those of the other faiths of which I know. I
have long thought of myself as liberal, not merely in the political sense
of the term, or even in relation to principles of economics, but as an
attitude to life. To accept people as one finds them, to allow them to be
and become what they choose, and to encourage them to do whatever they like
(so long as it does not harm others) is my natural instinct. Rigid and
censorious beliefs have never appealed to my temperament. In matters of
religion, too, I found my liberal instincts reinforced by the faith in
which I was brought up. Hinduism is, in many ways, predicated on the idea
that the eternal wisdom of the ages and of divinity cannot be confined to a
single sacred book; we have many, and we can delve into each to find our
own truth (or truths). As a Hindu I can claim adherence to a religion
without an established church or priestly papacy, a religion whose rituals
and customs I am free to reject, a religion that does not oblige me to
demonstrate my faith by any visible sign, by subsuming my identity in any
collectivity, not even by a specific day or time or frequency of worship.
(There is no Hindu Pope, no Hindu Vatican, no Hindu catechism, not even a
Hindu Sunday.) As a Hindu I follow a faith that offers a veritable
smorgasbord of options to the worshipper of divinities to adore and to pray
to, of rituals to observe (or not), of customs and practices to honour (or
not), of fasts to keep (or not). As a Hindu I subscribe to a creed that is
free of the restrictive dogmas of holy writ, one that refuses to be
shackled to the limitations of a single volume of holy revelation.

And while I am, paradoxically, listing my 'reasons' for a faith beyond
understanding, let me cite the clincher: above all, as a Hindu I belong to
the only major religion in the world that does not claim to be the only
true religion. I find it immensely congenial to be able to face my fellow
human beings of other faiths without being burdened by the conviction that
I am embarked upon a 'true path' that they have missed. This dogma lies at
the core of the 'Semitic faiths', Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. 'I am
the Way, the Truth and the Life; no man cometh unto the Father [God], but
by me' (John 14:6), says the Bible; 'There is no God but Allah, and
Muhammad is His Prophet', declares the Quran, denying unbelievers all
possibility of redemption, let alone of salvation or paradise. Hinduism
asserts that all ways of belief are equally valid, and Hindus readily
venerate the saints, and the sacred objects, of other faiths. I am proud
that I can honour the sanctity of other faiths without feeling I am
betraying my own.

*A TRAVESTY OF HINDUISM*

What does this 'Abrahamic Hinduism' of the 'Sangh Parivar' consist of? The
ideological foundations laid by Savarkar, Golwalkar and Upadhyaya have
given members of the RSS a fairly coherent doctrine. It rests on the
atavistic belief that India has been the land of the Hindus since ancient
times, and that their identity and its identity are intertwined. Since time
immemorial, Hindutva advocates argue, Hindu culture and civilisation have
constituted the essence of Indian life; Indian nationalism is therefore
Hindu nationalism. The history of India is the story of the struggle of the
Hindus, the owners and custodians of this ancient land, to protect and
preserve their religion and culture against the onslaught of hostile alien
invaders. It is true that the territory of India also hosts non-Hindus, but
these are invaders (Muslims, Christians) or guests (Jews, Parsis); they can
be tolerated, depending on their loyalty to the land, but cannot be treated
as equal to the Hindus unless they acknowledge the superiority of Hindus in
India and adopt Hindu traditions and culture. Non-Hindus must acknowledge
their Hindu parentage, or, better still, convert to Hinduism in a return to
their true cultural roots.

Those political forces in India who are opposed to the Sangh ideology are
mistaken, the doctrine goes on, since they make the cardinal error of
confusing 'national unity' with the unity of all those who happen to be
living in the territory of India, irrespective of religion or national
origin. Such people are in fact anti-national, because their real
motivation is the selfish desire to win minority votes in elections rather
than care for the interests of the majority of the nation. The unity and
consolidation of the Hindus is therefore essential. Since the Hindu people
are surrounded by enemies, a polarisation must take place that pits Hindus
against all others. To achieve this, though, Hindus must be unified; the
lack of unity is the root cause of all the evils besetting the Hindus. The
Sangh Parivar's principal mission is to bring about that unity and lead it
to the greater glory of the Hindu nation.

The problem with this doctrine, coherent and clear though it is, is its
denial of the reality of what Hinduism is all about. What Swami Vivekananda
would have seen as the strength of Hinduism-its extraordinary eclecticism
and diversity, its acceptance of a wide range of beliefs and practices, its
refusal to confine itself to the dogmas of a single holy book, its
fluidity, the impossibility to define it down to a homogeneous 'Semitic'
creed-is precisely what the RSS ideologues see as its weakness.

The Sanghivadi quest for polarisation and unity is also a yearning to make
Hinduism what it is not-to 'Semitise' it so that it looks like the faiths
of the 'invaders': codified and doctrinaire, with an identifiable God
(preferably Rama), a principal holy book (the Gita), a manageable
ecclesiastic hierarchy, and of course a unified race and a people to
profess it. This is not the lived Hinduism of the vast majority of Hindus.
And so the obvious question arises: Must every believing Hindu
automatically be assumed to subscribe to the Hindutva project? And since
manifestly most do not, does the viability of the project require a
continued drive to force the dissenters into the Hindutva straitjacket?

*HINDUTVA AND HISTORY*

Unsurprisingly, a [particular] period of Indian history, following the
Muslim conquests of north India, has become 'ground zero' in the battle of
narratives between the Hindutvavadis and the pluralists. When, with the
publication of my 2016 book An Era of Darkness: The British Empire in
India, I spoke of 200 years of foreign rule, I found it interesting that at
the same time the Hindutva brigade, led by Prime Minister Modi himself, was
speaking of 1,200 years of foreign rule. To them, the Muslim rulers of
India, whether the Delhi Sultans, the Deccani Sultans or the Mughals (or
the hundreds of other Muslims who occupied thrones of greater or lesser
importance for several hundred years across the country) were all
foreigners. I responded that while the founder of a Muslim dynasty may have
well have come to India from abroad, he and his descendants stayed and
assimilated in this country, married Hindu women, and immersed themselves
in the fortunes of this land; each Mughal Emperor after Babar had less and
less connection of blood or allegiance to a foreign country. If they looted
or exploited India and Indians, they spent the proceeds of their loot in
India, and did not send it off to enrich a foreign land as the British did.
The Mughals received travellers from the Ferghana Valley politely, enquired
about the well-being of the people there and perhaps even gave some money
for the upkeep of the graves of their Chingizid ancestors, but they stopped
seeing their original homeland as home. By the second generation, let alone
the fifth or sixth, they were as 'Indian' as any Hindu.



This challenge of authenticity, however, cuts across a wide intellectual
terrain. It emerges from those Hindus who share V.S. Naipaul's view of
theirs as a 'wounded civilisation', a pristine Hindu land that was
subjected to repeated defeats and conquests over the centuries at the hands
of rapacious Muslim invaders and was enfeebled and subjugated in the
process. To such people, independence is not merely freedom from British
rule but an opportunity to restore the glory of their culture and religion,
wounded by Muslim conquerors. In this Hindutva-centred view, history is
made of religion-based binaries, in which all Muslim rulers are evil and
all Hindus are valiant resisters, embodiments of incipient Hindu
nationalism....

Communal history continues past the era of Islamic rule. Among those
Indians who revolted against the British, Bahadur Shah, Zinat Mahal,
Maulavi Ahmadullah and General Bakht Khan, all Muslims, are conspicuous by
their absence from Hindutva histories. And of course syncretic traditions
such as the Bhakti movement, and universalist religious reformers like
Rammohan Roy and Keshub Chandra Sen, do not receive much attention from the
Hindutva orthodoxy. What does is the uncritical veneration of 'Hindu
heroes' like Rana Pratap (portrayed now in Rajasthani textbooks as the
victor of the Battle of Haldi Ghati against Akbar, which begs the question
why Akbar and not he ruled the country for the following three decades) and
of course Chhatrapati Shivaji, the intrepid Maratha warrior whose battles
against the Mughals have now replaced accounts of Mughal kings in
Maharashtra's textbooks. The Maharashtra Education Board's newly-revised
class VII history book of 2017 has eliminated all mention of the pre-Mughal
Muslim rulers of India as well, including Razia Sultan, the first woman
queen of Delhi, Sher Shah Suri and Muhammad bin Tughlaq, who notoriously
and disastrously moved India's capital south from Delhi to Daulatabad. (The
educational system is the chosen battlefield for the Hindutva warriors, and
curriculum revision their preferred weapon.)

*TAKING BACK HINDUISM*

As a believing Hindu, I cannot agree with the Hindutvavadis. Indeed, I am
ashamed of what they are doing while claiming to be acting in the name of
my faith. The violence is particularly sickening: it has led tens of
thousands of Hindus across India to protest with placards screaming, 'Not
In My Name'. As I have explained... and would like to reiterate, I have
always prided myself on belonging to a religion of astonishing breadth and
range of belief; a religion that acknowledges all ways of worshipping God
as equally valid-indeed, the only major religion in the world that does not
claim to be the only true religion. As I have often asked: How dare a bunch
of goondas shrink the soaring majesty of the Vedas and the Upanishads to
the petty bigotry of their brand of identity politics? Why should any Hindu
allow them to diminish Hinduism to the raucous self-glorification of the
football hooligan, to take a religion of awe-inspiring tolerance and reduce
it to a chauvinist rampage?

Hinduism, with its openness, its respect for variety, its acceptance of all
other faiths, is one religion which has always been able to assert itself
without threatening others. But this is not the Hindutva that destroyed the
Babri Masjid, nor that spewed in hate-filled diatribes by communal
politicians. It is, instead, the Hinduism of Swami Vivekananda. It is
important to parse some of Swami Vivekananda's most significant assertions.
The first is his assertion that Hinduism stands for 'both tolerance and
universal acceptance. We believe not only in universal toleration, but we
accept all religions as true'. He... [quotes] a hymn... to the effect that
as different streams originating in different places all flow into the same
sea, so do all paths lead to the same divinity. He repeatedly asserted the
wisdom of the Advaita belief that Truth is One even if the sages call It by
different names. Vivekananda's vision-summarised in the credo 'sarva dharma
sambhava'-is, in fact, the kind of Hinduism practised by the vast majority
of Hindus, whose instinctive acceptance of other faiths and forms of
worship has long been the vital hallmark of our culture...



I reject the presumption that the purveyors of hatred speak for all or even
most Hindus. The Hindutva ideology is in fact a malign distortion of
Hinduism. It is striking that leaders of now-defunct twentieth-century
political parties like the Liberal Party and the pro-free enterprise
Swatantra Party were unabashed in their avowal of their Hinduism; the
Liberal leader Srinivasa Sastry wrote learned disquisitions on the
Ramayana, and the founder of Swatantra, C. Rajagopalachari ('Rajaji'), was
a Sanskrit scholar whose translations of the Itihasas and lectures on
aspects of Hinduism are still widely read, decades after his death. Neither
would have recognised the intolerance and bigotry of Hindutva as in any way
representative of the faith they held dear. Many leaders in the Congress
Party are similarly comfortable in their Hindu beliefs while rejecting the
political construct of Hindutva. It suits the purveyors of Hindutva to
imply that the choice is between their belligerent interpretation of
Hinduism and the godless Westernisation of the 'pseudo-seculars'. Rajaji
and Sastry proved that you could wear your Hinduism on your sleeve and
still be a political liberal. But that choice is elided by the
identification of Hindutva with political Hinduism, as if such a conflation
is the only possible approach open to practising Hindus.

I reject that idea. I not only consider myself both a Hindu and a liberal,
but find that liberalism is the political ideology that most corresponds to
the wide-ranging and open-minded nature of my faith.

*A REFLECTION OF INSECURITY*

The irony is that Hindutva reassertion is a reflection of insecurity rather
than self-confidence. It is built on constant reminders of humiliation and
defeat, sustained by tales of Muslim conquest and rule, stoked by stories
of destroyed temples and looted treasures, all of which have imprisoned
susceptible Hindus in a narrative of failure and defeat, rather than a
broad-minded story of a confident faith finding its place in the world.
Looking back towards the failures of the past, it offers no hopes for the
successes of the future.

This seems to be conceded even by one of the foremost voices of
contemporary Hindutva, the American Dr David Frawley. Hindus, he writes in
his foundational screed Arise Arjuna! (1995), 'are generally suffering from
a lack of self esteem and an inferiority complex by which they are afraid
to really express themselves or their religion. They have been beaten down
by centuries of foreign rule and ongoing attempts to convert them'.
Frawley's answer is for Indians to reassert Hindu pride, but his diagnosis
calls that prescription into question.

As a Hindu and an Indian, I would argue that the whole point about India is
the rejection of the idea that religion should be a determinant of
nationhood. Our nationalist leaders never fell into the insidious trap of
agreeing that, since Partition had established a state for Muslims, what
remained was a state for Hindus. To accept the idea of India you have to
spurn the logic that divided the country in 1947. Your Indianness has
nothing to do with which god you choose to worship, or not. We are not
going to reduce ourselves to a Hindu Pakistan.

That is the real problem here. As I have mentioned earlier, Nehru had
warned that the communalism of the majority was especially dangerous
because it could present itself as nationalist. Yet, Hindu nationalism is
not Indian nationalism. And it has nothing to do with genuine Hinduism
either.

I too am proud of my Hinduism; I do not want to cede its verities to
fanatics. I consider myself a Hindu and a nationalist, but I am not a Hindu
nationalist. To discriminate against another, to attack another, to kill
another, to destroy another's place of worship on the basis of his faith is
not part of Hindu dharma, as it was not part of Swami Vivekananda's. It is
time to go back to these fundamentals of Hinduism. It is time to take Hindu
dharma back from the fundamentalists.

*HINDUISM AS CULTURE*

Thanks in many ways to the eclectic inclusiveness of Hinduism, everything
in India exists in countless variants. There was no single standard, no
fixed stereotype, no 'one way'. This pluralism emerged from the very nature
of the country; it was made inevitable by India's geography and reaffirmed
by its history. There was simply too much of both to permit a single,
exclusionist nationalism. When the Hindutvavadis demanded that all Indians
declare 'Bharat Mata ki jai' as a litmus test of their nationalism, many of
us insisted that no Indian should be obliged to mouth a slogan he did not
believe in his heart. If some Muslims, for instance, felt that their
religion did not allow them to hail their motherland as a goddess, the
Constitution of India gave them the right not to. Hindutva wrongly seeks to
deny them this right.

We were brought up to take this for granted, and to reject the sectarianism
that had partitioned the nation when the British left. I was raised unaware
of my own caste and unconscious of the religious loyalties of my
schoolmates and friends. Of course knowledge of these details came in time,
but too late for any of it to matter, even less to influence my attitude or
conduct. We were Indians: we were brought up (and constantly exhorted) to
believe in an idea of nationhood transcending communal divisions. This may
sound like the lofty obliviousness of the privileged, but such beliefs were
not held only by the elites: they were a reflection of how most Indians
lived, even in the villages of India. Independent India was born out of a
nationalist struggle in which acceptance of each other which we, perhaps
unwisely, called secularism was fundamental to the nationalist consensus.

It is true that Hindu zealotry-which ought to be a contradiction in
terms-is partly a reaction to other chauvinisms. As I have pointed out, the
unreflective avowal by many Hindus of their own secularism has provoked the
scorn of some Hindus, who despise the secularists as deracinated
'Macaulayputras' (sons of Macaulay) or 'Babar ke aulad' (sons of Babar).
They see such Hindus as cut off from their own culture and heritage, and
challenge them to rediscover their authentic roots, as defined by the
Hindutvavadis.

*HINDUISM IS NOT A MONOLITH*

[F]rom time to time, a Hindutvavadi, reminding me of the religion that has
been mine from birth, succumbed to the temptation to urge me predictably to
heed that well-worn slogan: 'Garv se kaho ki hum Hindu hain.'

All right, let us take him up on that. I am indeed proud that I am a Hindu.
But of what is it that I am, and am not, proud?

I am not proud of my co-religionists attacking and destroying Muslim homes
and shops. I am not proud of Hindus raping Muslim girls, or slitting the
wombs of Muslim mothers. I am not proud of Hindu vegetarians who have
roasted human beings alive and rejoiced over the corpses. I am not proud of
those who reduce the lofty metaphysical speculations of the Upanishads to
the petty bigotry of their own sense of identity, which they assert in
order to exclude, not embrace, others.

I am proud that India's pluralism is paradoxically sustained by the fact
that the overwhelming majority of Indians are Hindus, because Hinduism has
taught them to live amidst a variety of other identities.

I am proud of those Hindus, like the Shankaracharya of Kanchi, who say that
Hindus and Muslims must live like Ram and Lakshman in India. I am not proud
of those Hindus, like 'Sadhvi' Rithambhara, who say that Muslims are like
sour lemons curdling the milk of Hindu India.

Why I AM A Hindu by Shashi Tharoor


I am not proud of those who suggest that only a Hindu, and only a certain
kind of Hindu, can be an authentic Indian. I am not proud of those Hindus
who say that people of other religions live in India only on their
sufferance, and not because they belong on our soil. I am proud of those
Hindus who realise that an India that denies itself to some of us could end
up being denied to all of us.

I am proud of those Hindus who utterly reject Hindu communalism, conscious
that the communalism of the majority is especially dangerous because it can
present itself as nationalist. I am proud of those Hindus who respect the
distinction between Hindu nationalism and Indian nationalism. Obviously,
majorities are never seen as 'separatist', since separatism is by
definition pursued by a minority. But majority communalism is, in fact, an
extreme form of separatism, because it seeks to separate other Indians,
integral parts of our country, from India itself. I am proud of those
Hindus who recognise that the saffron and the green both belong equally on
the Indian flag.

The reduction of non-Hindus to second-class status in their own homeland is
unthinkable. As I have pointed out here, and in my other writings, it would
be a second partition: and a partition in the Indian soul would be as bad
as a partition in the Indian soil. For Hindus like myself, the only
possible idea of India is that of a nation greater than the sum of its
parts. That is the only India that will allow us to call ourselves not
Brahmins, not Bengalis, not Hindus, not Hindi-speakers, but simply Indians.

How about another slogan for Hindus like me? *Garv se kaho ki hum Indian
hain.*

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to