Hinduism’s Human Face : Resisting Theocratic Pressure
By
M.L. Sondhi
The Statesman, October 9, 1987
The theocratic threat and the monstrous dimensions of
de-humanization manifest in the sati in Sikar district in
Rajasthan will not be answered by the legal process in
establishing the guilt or innocence of those who have
belatedly been placed under arrest. That a fellow human
being should be burnt alive and that this should have a
hypnotic attraction on so large a scale is not only
blasphemy and indignity, but also highlights the activities
of religious extremists and cultists to regain influence and
impose their intolerance and misunderstanding of the
spiritual tradition of Hinduism.
With Sri Ramakrishna, Ramana Maharshi and
others who brought about a change in self-awareness,
Hinduism acquired an environmental framework which is both
spiritually creative and humanistic. The revolution in
thought in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries provided Hinduism with a liberating force which
arose from both the individual and social intellectual
planes. Now, 40 years after freedom, the theocratic threat
has materialized as a dangerous and retrogressive
development which seeks to combine nostalgia for lost
privilege and the abuse of the democratic system to create
special positions and exploitative roles in society.
Gains
It is, therefore, not enough to talk of the true self in
Vedanta and remain a passive onlooker while the democratic
gains of reformist Hinduism are undermined. Hinduism can
only build a society with a human face if it energetically
combats all forms of doctrine and action which obstruct the
progressive advancement of Indian society and the
contemporary world. Hindus must learn to impose public
accountability on their religious institutions and
organizations.
Much of the malaise of our times stems from
the way in which Hindu reformist institutions have railed to
make their values explicit, and have instead allowed
themselves to be pushed towards obscurantism. These
institutions need to rekindle the reformist ethos and show
that they are alive and alert to the present-day problems of
Hindu society.
It is not only in academic circles that
human rights should be discussed; Hindu religious
organizations need to survey human rights policies on a more
general level and thus participate in a worldwide movement
to create a humanist society.
Raja Rammohun Roy, Swami Vivekananda and
Dayanand Saraswati were one on the investigation of
inalienable human rights, and those who put faith in their
legacies should find the capacity to renew the original
inspirations. If the act of sati has provided an outlet for
negative emotions, the creative imagination of reformist
Hinduism in matters of human choice and on issues of common
interest can also unite militant social concerns and
undertake the transformative task necessary for a humanist
society.
In identifying the sources from which the
theocratic threat emanates, it is necessary to avoid the
elitist tendency to undermine the very idea of a religious
society in the name of secularism. The enormous potential
of Hinduism in the service of mankind can be tapped by a
constructive programme which utilizes the life-giving
creativity of religion and the democratic ethos in social
relations. The dilemmas of Hindu identity cannot be solved
by an effort to denigrate religiously oriented
self-perceptions as was attempted by many emancipated and
westernized intellectuals.
Many so-called secularists forgot that it is
through the enrichment of human identity, and not through
its impoverishment that the higher expressions of human
creativity can be reached. They often played an elitist
game and brought about an unholy alliance between those who
favoured the erosion of India’s cultural uniqueness and
those elements which enjoyed no mass base in any community.
It is one thing to be incensed about religious shortcomings
but quite another to regard religion as an obstacle in the
way of an advanced society.
It is not surprising, therefore, that the
secularists got entangled in a web of contradictions between
their political attitudes and religious predispositions.
The attack on the ethos of social responsibility, which a
humane Hinduism could have fostered, led only to a large
scale destruction of social and spiritual values. The
frequent invocation of an anti-religious spirit by the
secularists only made the fanaticism of some religious sects
more attractive. Behind the smoke screen of secularist
terminology, many turned to godmen and messiahs who, in
turn, encouraged political irresponsibility and exonerated
corruption.
The sati incident has served to sharpen as
well as clarify the crucial differences between the
conflicting forces in contemporary Hinduism. Those who
promised to take us into the 21st century have
shown that they lack confidence in their ability to create a
better society; those who, till yesterday, stressed the
universality of Indian culture have singularly failed to
unite their sense of faith and national destiny on this
urgent issue. The deafening silence, from the Prime
Minister to several leaders of the Opposition in the first
few weeks following the incident, almost suggests that their
conscience was slumbering.
It is this departure from the values and
insights of their predecessors that casts an ominous shadow
of moral tragedy on the entire political system. The
philistine and narrow-minded character of some Hindu clerics
could be ignored but for the fact that the modern media and
the communication network of present-day India enables them
to contribute to the deterioration of the social climate.
If the country is not to fall into an abysmal mess of
medievalism, the legitimacy given to the misguided actions
of religious extremists and cultists must be challenged by
those who have the courage and conviction to uphold a humane
Hinduism.
The theocratic threat cannot be successfully
met by the secularists who hardly understand the meaning of
the history of Hinduism as inscribed in the spirit of the
people of this land. The theocratic hegemony can become
irrelevant and lose its power to shape the future of
Hinduism if every practising Hindu asserts his or her
capacity to influence events. To win back the redemptive
vision of Raja Rammohun Roy, Dayananda Saraswati, Sri
Ramakrishna, Swami Vivekananda, Ramana Maharshi and Sri
Aurobindo, men and women who are an integral part of Hindu
religiosity must express themselves fearlessly on ethical
and moral issues.
Factor
Many political analysts seem to imply that the electoral
factor creates a mobilization of castes which induces
passive responses in politicians on issues like sati. This
merely points to the breakdown of the social balances which,
in turn, maintain political equilibrium. The pathological
phenomenon on political leaders participating in the “chunri
utsav” is inevitable where the contest for State power lacks
any concrete base in an ethos of social responsibility.
There are, however, reasonable grounds for
optimism that humane and democratic-minded Hindus can
develop an organized response to theocratic pressures. The
pseudo-legitimacy of fanatics and zealots can be challenged
firmly while maintaining the integrity of the humane values
of Hinduism. The anti-sati agitation can become the nucleus
of a Hindu ecumenical movement which can unite Hindu
reformist organizations on a common platform. The specific
contours of Hinduism with a human face will derive from both
the social humanism of the reforms of the past and
enlightened and democratic action against contemporary
theocracy. A new vision of socio-religious change is the
only authentic answer to religious extremism. |