http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/26/books/review/Mishra-t.html

Another Incarnation, By PANKAJ MISHRA Published: April 24, 2009

THE HINDUS :An Alternative History By Wendy Doniger, 779 pp. The Penguin
Press. $35

Visiting India in 1921, E. M. Forster witnessed the eight-day celebration
of Lord Krishna's birthday. This first encounter with devotional ecstasy
left the Bloomsbury aesthete baffled. 'There is no dignity, no taste, no
form,' he complained in a letter home. Recoiling from Hindu India, Forster
was relieved to enter the relatively rational world of Islam. Describing
the muezzin's call at the Taj Mahal, he wrote, 'I knew at all events where
I stood and what I heard; it was a land that was not merely atmosphere but
had definite outlines and horizons.'

Forster, who later used his appalled fascination with India's polytheistic
muddle to superb effect in his novel 'A Passage to India', was only one in
a long line of Britons who felt their notions of order and morality
challenged by Indian religious and cultural practices. The British Army
captain who discovered the erotic temples of Khajuraho in the early 19th
century was outraged by how 'extremely indecent and offensive' depictions
of fornicating couples profaned a 'place of worship'. Lord Macaulay
thundered against the worship, still widespread in India today, of the
Shiva lingam. Even Karl Marx inveighed against how man, 'the sovereign of
nature', had degraded himself in India by worshipping Hanuman, the monkey
god.

Repelled by such pagan blasphemies, the first British scholars of India
went so far as to invent what we now call 'Hinduism', complete with a
mainstream classical tradition consisting entirely of Sanskrit
philosophical texts like the Bhagavad-Gita and the Upanishads. In fact,
most Indians in the 18th century knew no Sanskrit, the language exclusive
to Brahmins. For centuries, they remained unaware of the hymns of the four
Vedas or the idealist monism of the Upanishads that the German Romantics,
American Transcendentalists and other early Indophiles solemnly supposed
to be the very essence of Indian civilization. (Smoking chillums and
chanting 'Om', the Beatles were closer to the mark.)

As Wendy Doniger, a scholar of Indian religions at the University of
Chicago explains in her staggeringly comprehensive book, the British
Indologists who sought to tame India's chaotic polytheisms had a
'Protestant bias in favor of scripture.'

In 'privileging' Sanskrit over local languages, she writes, they created
what has proved to be an enduring impression of a 'unified Hinduism'. And
they found keen collaborators among upper-caste Indian scholars and
translators. This British-Brahmin version of Hinduism - one of the many
invented traditions born around the world in the 18th and 19th centuries -
has continued to find many takers among semi-Westernized Hindus suffering
from an inferiority complex vis-à-vis the apparently more successful and
organized religions of Christianity, Judaism and Islam.

The Hindu nationalists of today, who long for India to become a muscular
international power, stand in a direct line of 19th-century Indian reform
movements devoted to purifying and reviving a Hinduism perceived as having
grown too fragmented and weak. These mostly upper-caste and middle-class
nationalists have accelerated the modernization and homogenization of
'Hinduism'.

Still, the nontextual, syncretic religious and philosophical traditions of
India that escaped the attention of British scholars flourish even today.
Popular devotional cults, shrines, festivals, rites and legends that vary
across India still form the worldview of a majority of Indians. Goddesses,
as Doniger writes, 'continue to evolve'. Bollywood produced the most
popular one of my North Indian childhood: Santoshi Mata, who seemed to
fulfill the materialistic wishes of newly urbanized Hindus. Far from being
a slave to mindless superstition, popular religious legend conveys a
darkly ambiguous view of human action. Revered as heroes in one region,
the characters of the great epics 'Ramayana' and 'Mahabharata' can be
regarded as villains in another. Demons and gods are dialectically
interrelated in a complex cosmic order that would make little sense to the
theologians of the so-called war on terror.

Doniger sets herself the ambitious task of writing 'a narrative
alternative to the one constituted by the most famous texts in Sanskrit'.
As she puts it, 'It’s not all about Brahmins, Sanskrit, the Gita'. It's
also not about perfidious Muslims who destroyed innumerable Hindu temples
and forcibly converted millions of Indians to Islam. Doniger, who cannot
but be aware of the political historiography of Hindu nationalists, the
most powerful interpreters of Indian religions in both India and abroad
today, also wishes to provide an 'alternative to the narrative of Hindu
history that they tell'.

She writes at length about the devotional 'bhakti' tradition, an ecstatic
and radically egalitarian form of Hindu religiosity which, though
possessing royal and literary lineage, was 'also a folk and oral
phenomenon', accommodating women, low-caste men and illiterates. She
explores, contra Marx, the role of monkeys as the 'human unconscious' in
the 'Ramayana', the bible of muscular Hinduism, while casting a
sympathetic eye on its chief ogre, Ravana. And she examines the mythology
and ritual of Tantra, the most misunderstood of Indian traditions.

She doesn't neglect high-table Hinduism. Her chapter on violence in the
Mahabharata is particularly insightful, highlighting the tragic aspects of
the great epic, and unraveling, in the process, the hoary cliché of Hindus
as doctrinally pacifist. Both 'dharma' and 'karma' get their due. Those
who tilt at organized religions today on behalf of a residual
Enlightenment rationalism may be startled to learn that atheism and
agnosticism have long traditions in Indian religions and philosophies.

Though the potted biographies of Mughal emperors seem superfluous in a
long book, Doniger's chapter on the centuries of Muslim rule over India
helps dilute the lurid mythology of Hindu nationalists. Motivated by
realpolitik rather than religious fundamentalism, the Mughals destroyed
temples; they also built and patronized them. Not only is there 'no
evidence of massive coercive conversion' to Islam, but also so much of
what we know as popular Hinduism - the currently popular devotional cults
of Rama and Krishna, the network of pilgrimages, ashrams and sects -
acquired its distinctive form during Mughal rule.

Doniger's winsomely eclectic range of reference - she enlists Philip
Roth's novel 'I Married a Communist' for a description of the Hindu
renunciant's psychology - begins to seem too determinedly eccentric when
she discusses Rudyard Kipling, a figure with no discernible influence on
Indian religions, with greater interpretative vigor than she does Mohandas
K. Gandhi, the most creative of modern devout Hindus. More puzzlingly,
Doniger has little to say about the forms Indian cultures have assumed in
Bali, Mauritius, Trinidad and Fiji, even as she describes at length the
Internet-enabled liturgies of Hindus in America.

Yet it is impossible not to admire a book that strides so intrepidly into
a polemical arena almost as treacherous as Israel-­Arab relations. During
a lecture in London in 2003, Doniger escaped being hit by an egg thrown by
a Hindu nationalist apparently angry at the 'sexual thrust' of her
interpretation of the 'sacred' Ramayana. This book will no doubt further
expose her to the fury of the modern-day Indian heirs of the British
imperialists who invented 'Hinduism'. Happily, it will also serve as a
salutary antidote to the fanatics who perceive - correctly - the fluid
existential identities and commodious metaphysic of practiced Indian
religions as a threat to their project of a culturally homogenous and
militant nation-state.

Pankaj Mishra is the author of 'An End to Suffering: The Buddha in the
World' and 'Temptations of the West: How to Be Modern in India, Pakistan,
Tibet, and Beyond'.

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