Dr Koenraad Elst
Some Hindus ask me, as a sympathizing
outsider, if I have any advice for them when they want to revive their
fortunes. In principle, I have no advice; it would be arrogant to pretend to
know something that the people concerned are not so sure about. But then again,
Hindus are no different from others, they are subject to the same laws, so an
approximative knowledge of their condition is enough to predict where they are
moving and to say what they have to do to make the best of it. So, here goes.
Self-knowledge
The first thing Hindus have to do, is to know
themselves. The great problem of Hindus today is that they have become
sleep-walkers, forgetful of their civilization. It gets worse with every
passing year, as the ever-larger Hindu middle-class is becoming Americanized
both in consumer patterns and in values. Their knowledge of Western films and
music is becoming bigger as their knowledge of Hindu tradition is lessening.
And the worst is that increasing numbers take pride in their ignorance. In the
past, it didn’t matter if you skipped religion classes. You would just breathe
Hinduism.
You would know the tales from the
Mahabharata and the Puranas through songs and theatre plays performed in your
village square. Girls would learn Hindu traditions from their mothers and pass
them on to their own children. But that can no longer be taken for granted.
In a way, the world has become
more conducive to Christian-style religion. NRI-PIOs congregate in their
temples the way Christians gather in their churches. They organize Sunday
school for their children the way they learnt from their Protestant neighbours.
India
itself is becoming similar, if only because the same family pattern with two
wage-earners is being transplanted. You can study religion on your own, he way the first Christians practised their
religion (even in secret), against or at least without support from your
surroundings.At any rate, unlike in the past, if you don’t make a deliberate
choice to do something about your religion, chances are that you won’t. To
Hindus, this is a new situation. In days gone by, religion was just
there, you fell in line with your surroundings, you did as everyone did. Now,
to an increasing extent, you have to make a choice for it.
The law of inertia is no longer working
for Hinduism; it starts to work against it. The missionaries know this; the
Hindus, I am not so sure. But they can save their Hinduism by practising it.
The very first result is that they themselves will realize again what Hinduism
is all about. Not otherworldly Hinduism but the kind that Krishna preached, on the Kurukshetra, with the real
enemies and opportunities and the real world.
For Hindus abroad,
depending on circumstances, knowledge of Indian languages is probably lost. In
a few places, native languages are perhaps viable, like Hindi in Suriname or Tamil in Singapore . If Hindu families can
speak their Indian language inside the home and transmit it to the children, so
much the better. But in mixed families and in oceans of powerful languages like
the Anglosphere, children or grandchildren are bound to take to the language of
their surroundings, so it is a waste to still your guilt feelings as an
immigrant by forcing your children to learn a smattering of Bengali or Kannada.
It is better to teach your children Hindu values, and if this has to take the
form of a language, let it be Sankrit, the key to the main Hindu scriptures.
For the rest, let them acquire a thorough grounding in Hindu stories and
ritual, in English or whatever vernacular they take to, rather than investing
your and their precious time in a language that is bound to die.
In India itself, English should be
shown its place as first foreign language. Mind you, mine is a position against
self-interest, for I will never have more fluency in an Indian language than in
English; by contrast, all Indians and Westerners pleading for English happen to
be self-serving. At any rate, an anti-English stand is not voguish, now that
Indian politicians are not just sending their own children to English-medium
schools while promoting vernacular-medium education for the common man, but
openly replace vernacular with English schooling. This is a political choice:
either Panjabis and Malayalis will speak English with each other, like Danes
with Koreans or Congolese with Pakistanis; or they will speak an Indian
language. If you want Indian unity, you’d better aim for an Indian language
that will set India apart from the Anglosphere.
That Indian language can only
be Sanskrit. At this distance, we can say that it was a fateful day when
the first President of India, Rajendra Prasad, cast the deciding vote in the
Constituent Assembly in favour of Hindi as link language, to the detriment of
the other candidate, Sanskrit. Hindi was not accepted by the chauvinist
speakers of the other vernaculars. One of the good reasons was that it was but
a recent language, a common denominator between old literary languages like
Braj Bhasha, Awadhi, Rajasthani and others. Hindi as it is, was deemed vulgar
by speakers of highly civilized non-Hindi languages like Bengali or Telugu. It
didn’t have the kind of prestige that could overrule such objections.
By contrast, Sanskrit if chosen as the link language would have sent a cry
of admiration through countries like China and Japan, Russia and Germany,
France and America. The state of Israel ,
that chose to make Biblical Hebrew its first language, would have understood
very well that India
made its main Scriptural medium into its second language. The Flemish, who
waged a struggle against French-language masses all while accepting Latin
masses as a matter of course, would have understood it if the Indians had
preferred their common sacred language over a vernacular. Even the Muslim world
would have understood it.
Most importantly, it would have been accepted by the Indian people. Speakers of
the constituent members of the Hindi commonwealth would have had no objection,
and speakers of non-Hindi languages (even Tamil chauvinists) would have had
fewer objections than against Hindi. As for the English-speaking elite, it
would militate no harder against one Indian language than against another.
The vote in the Constituent Assembly, fifty-fifty between Sanskrit
and shuddh Hindi,
shows how far India
has slipped, and what an outrageous and what an outrageous failure the
so-called Hindu Nationalist movement has been. If the vote were held today, it
would rather be fifty-fifty between English and Bollywood Hindi, i.e. Urdu. The
secularists were then a small coterie around Nehru, now the same stream of
opinion controls all the cultural and other institutions. Back then, a vote for
English would be unthinkable, now the same taboo counts almost for a vote
against English. The Muslims were only 10% and smarting under their guilt for
the Partition, not in a position to make demands; now they are 15% and growing
fast, and in active opposition to every language policy that smells of either
Hinduism or nationalism. Sanskrit has been borrowed heavily by the South-Indian
languages and would be welcomed by their speakers (so would shuddh Hindi, for that matter, and for the
same reason), whereas “Hindustani” or Urdu brings Hindi a lot closer to the
official language of Pakistan but at a greater distance from the Southern
languages of India itself.
So, you have a choice. Supporting Bollywood
Hindi will make Indian unity weaker and the Muslim factor stronger. But more
importantly, supporting English will make Indian unity and democracy weaker,
and the hold of the secularist elite stronger. By contrast, supporting Sanskrit
will make Indian unity stronger, along with popular access to the Hindu
tradition. Whether India
as a unified state survives, depends on many things, but English will certainly
not be a factor of unity. A Kannadiga may speak English with a native of Karachi or Chittagong , as
he would with a native of Hong Kong or Cairo or
anywhere, without sharing a national state with them; and the same counts for a
native of Mumbai or Delhi .
Admittedly, Sanskrit is a difficult language, but then it is equally
difficult for everyone. And if one positive development can be mentioned since
1947, it is the decreased importance of caste pride, which led many upper-caste
people to have a sneaking sympathy for the Nehruvian anti-Sanskrit policy,
which at least kept Sanskrit out of the hands of the lower castes. One of the
formative episodes in Dr. Ambedkar’s life was when he was denied the right to
study Sanskrit in school because of his low caste. It helped make him a
partisan of Sanskrit as national link language, a choice not followed by his
so-called followers in the Dalit movement. They favour English, a choice
unthinkable to the freedom struggle generation.
So, the anti-Sanskrit forces are a lot stronger than in the late forties, when they
very narrowly won the day. Still Sanskrit is the only chance the lovers of India
have. Hindi failed, and English will only weaken Indian unity, apart from
being an utterly undignified choice of link language. Brace yourselves for a
difficult struggle – or for national disintegration.
Build your own Hindu
organization
It is counterproductive to hope for tangible results from the
Sangh Parivar. In most respects, they achieved nothing for the Hindus. A few
merits go to their credit, viz. relief work and, in some areas, security
for Hindus threatened by aggressive “minorities” (i.e. the local branches of
international religions with a lot of support from abroad). Important as these
merits undoubtedly are, they do not justify the Sangh Parivar’s national claims
for the “awakening of the Hindus”.On the contrary, the Sangh Parivar has
done its bit for keeping the Hindus asleep.
They have misdirected their flock and
neglected a number of concerns of those Hindus who were awake.
One good thing the Sangh did, was to organize. I call
upon you to do the same. Unfortunately, the Sangh saw this as a goal in itself.
It forgot to make self-organization subservient to a Hindu vision, because it
had none.
However,
that criticism of the Sangh has been expressed enough times and on enough
forums. Repeating it is only one form of what Rajiv Malhotra calls: “mouse-clicking Hindu activism”, a useless
activity that may be ego-flattering but otherwise makes no difference. It may
be necessary to keep Hindus from a mistaken line of involvement, but it has
mostly outlived its use now. The thing to do is simply to set up your own Hindu
centre of activity and ignore the ideological line of the Sangh.
The focus may be very different depending
on local needs. Physical security is an important concern in areas where the
so-called minorities are strong and growing, like West
Bengal and Kerala. That is why the Hindu Samhati in West Bengal is so important: it promises to be more effective
than the RSS, and has so far also lived up to its promise. It channels the
natural Hindu capacity for self-defence. In opulent areas where Hindu
self-forgetfulness due to the invasionof American consumerism is a greater
menace, by contrast, the focus may be more on Hindu identity and the revival of
Hindu knowledge.
The national and international dimension can be taken
care of far more easily that in the past, thanks to the internet. The pure
communication dimension of this transregional cooperation will take care of
itself. But is there a need of some more formal way of grouping along national
and international lines? In particular, shouldn’t there be a party like the
BJP?
If there were an effective
lobby group, like the Jewish lobby in the US , there would be no need of a
Hindu political party. There is no Jewish political party, but both the
Democrats and the Republicans do their best to curry the favour of the Jewish
lobby. For the impartisan form, the VHP (World Hindu Council) has in the past approached
all political parties with its “Hindu agenda”, but in practice it only counted
on the BJP. And even this party did not do the Hindu lobby’s bidding, e.g.
whereas the VHP’s Hindu agenda of 1996 contained an anti-abortion item, in
keeping with the Brahmanic-Shastric interdiction of abortion, the BJP programme
(in keeping with most other parties’ and governments’) was all for
birth-control by any means necessary, including legal abortion. So Hindus don’t
consist of the right human material to form an effective lobby-group
pressurizing political party.
A party like the BJP is better than nothing, according to many
Hindus. While it fails to do anything for Hindu causes, at least when it is in
power nothing will be done against the Hindus, unlike the other parties; or so
they say. The opening of Indian media ownership under the NDA regime can be
given as a counterexample, a BJP-engineered disaster for Hindu society; but we
don’t want to be difficult. Well, let the BJP exist, it will do so anyway, but
let that not stop you from doing anything on your own.
Once you’ve built up something, it will automatically become the lobby
that some were dreaming of. The BJP, and perhaps other parties, will seek your
approval when making its programme, your support during the campaign. It always
does so when it sees people who know what they want; it did so with the
secularists, and it will do so again with Hindus. This will put you in a
position to make demands. The BJP will make some of your programme its own if
it has the impression that you are consistent and credible. All this and
more will accrue to those who really do something and get started.
Let the facts speak for
themselves
According to Rajiv Malhotra, Hindus
are : “under-informed and over-opinionated”. I already
had that impression, but being a foreigner, I had no business saying it.
However, if an Indian says it, it deserves to be quoted. They haven’t done
their “Purva-Paksha”, their study of the opponent’s
viewpoint, and – now I quote Sita Ram Goel —
yet: they think they know everything about everything”.
I have, for instance, made many an
argument with Hindus who claimed to know more of my home religion,
Christianity, than I myself did. Perhaps it is an atavistic behaviour pattern
dating back to the time when India
was on top of the world, and when Indians had a superiority rather than their
present inferiority complex.
On the internet, I have come across many Hindus who were ill-mannered and
unwilling to abide by the general rules of good conduct. That will not
influence my opinions too seriously, because my mind has by now been made up,
but it will affect those of many others. What they prove is that a good
cause can be spoilt by bad servants. They give a good message a bad name by
their lack of self-control.
They feel good about themselves because they had their
say. They think it is impressive if they shove it into the other side’s face.
But what they never do, is listen to feedback. Am I achieving what I set out to
achieve? Well, the problem with most of these folks is that they don’t really
want to achieve anything. The thought of getting somewhere just doesn’t cross
their minds. They merely want an emotional kick, a feeling of having said it in
a way that the other side, or more likely the sympathizing reader (they are not
aware of another side), is unlikely to forget. They want to live out what is
inside of them, and the result be damned.
The fact that they are participating in discussions
on Hinduism and its plight at least proves they feel that something is not
right. Let that be a start. For the rest, you have your own teachers to go to.
You don’t need me to tell you that self-control (in Sanskrit: yoga) is better
for you and for everyone than self-indulgence. You have Hindu civilization for that.
Hindu tradition teaches you all about Purva-Paksha,
the “earlier wing” against which your own viewpoint is the counter-wing. It
teaches you that you first have to acquaint yourself with what the others are
saying before you can answer them. Short, it doesn’t want you to be lazy. It
doesn’t want you to take the laughable posture of pretending you know it all
without studying. By extension, it teaches you to take into account what the
others say in answering you. It wants you to learn from their feedback. Thus,
there has never been a Hindu who has convinced an outsider by means of a false
(P.N. Oak-ian) etymology, it has solely earned them ridicule; only Hindus fall
for this kind of “argument”, and that should tell you something.
How does this work out in practice? Instead of letting your emotions take
centre-stage, you should let the facts speak for themselves. That works best.
Isn’t it funny, Hindus who have the facts as their best friends yet want to
hide these behind their own anger? In making your point, you should first of
all let reality do the talking. Nothing convinces as much as reality does.
And yet,
reality is not enough. Some Hindus know how to let reality speak and how to
make their own emotions shut up, yet their performance is insufficient. For
instance, so many times already I have received copies of Nathuram Godse’s
speech about Mahatma Gandhi. Hindus think they are meritorious by spreading the
word and propagating Godse’s speech, because it stays close to the facts,and
because it is itself a historical fact. But except for a secularist of sorts
(Ashis Nandy), I am the only author of an analysis of Godse’s speech. Many
Hindus admire Godse, but they don’t bother to stop and think about his speech.
They merely repeat it, mantra-like, without adding anything to it.
So,
once in a while it is necessary to think things over. Was Nathuram Gods right? Was he more
right in his words than in his act? What was the result of his act? Discussion
forums are an excellent place to make a start. The “wisdom of crowds” is
represented there, and I have already learnt a lot from it, even from the most
ordinary people who have their moments of brilliance too, and their area of
expertise. Hindus could learn a lot too, and train themselves in making up
their own minds and influencing other people’s.
Don’t create false problems
According to textbooks, Hindus and
especially low-castes (who were only induced into Hinduism by the evil Aryan
invaders) are fed up with “empty ritual”. That is, according to the secularists,
why they want to leave Hinduism. If you see Christians eat the flesh of Christ,
just remember that they would never want to be Hindus and condemned to doing
“empty rituals”.
In reality, there may be some things in Hinduism that
trouble them, but “empty ritual” is not it. Take it from an eyewitness to the
slow death of a religious culture, Christianity in Europe ,
who has seen numerous contemporaries sigh: “Yes, Christianity is a pack of
fairy-tales, but where will I find such a good ritual setting for my funeral as
a mass in church, conducted by a real priest?” Religion may be nonsense, but
ritual is very important.
So, when I see Hindus on internet lists complain about “empty
ritual”, I know they are just rattling off what they learned in their Jesuit
school. Of course, the Jesuits know the value of ritual and also practice it,
but to Hindu pupils they teach about its emptiness.
Ritual will take care of itself, it gets
reborn easily, but some matters are more serious when they are made into
problems. One perfectly false issue that has been keeping Hindus busy for a
century and a half (if not for a thousand years) is polytheism vs.
monotheism. Pharaoh Akhenaten, Moses and Mohammed thought they
stumbled upon some important realization when they declared monotheism true and
polytheism false. Against tem, some Hindus defend their ancestral polytheism,
which nowadays is a brave thing to do.
Others, whom the Buddha called lickspittles, try to curry favour
with their enemies by espousing monotheism. To have an edge over other Hindus,
they declare that the others have not understood how a single God is hiding
behind the seeming multiplicity of Vedic gods.
But the truth of the matter is that the
Vedic seers didn’t cared two hoots for this quarrel between monotheists and
polytheists. The divine manifests itself as one or as many, and both could be
lived with. You should not import into Hinduism a problem that only your
enemies created, and in the name of which they have destroyed your idols and
temples.
A related “problem” is that of idolatry. For thousands of years, Hindus have
depicted the divine through paintings and sculptures. To be sure, they also
worshipped in the open air, with the wind as the natural idol of Vayu, the
thunder as the natural idol of Indra, and so on. But surely the culture of
artificial idols has so long and so intimately been interwoven with living
Hinduism that we can call idolatry Hindu par excellence. So, it is safe to ignore those Hindus who, wanting to cozy up to
their self-described enemies, suddenly “discover” that the Hindus have always
been oppressed by false and evil idolatry.
The so-called problems of polytheism and idolatry are false problems floated by those Hindus who
want to feel superior to other Hindus, viz. by bathing in the reflected
glory of Christianity and Islam. Hindus had better concentrate on real issues,
like how to maintain their Hinduism in a sea of hostile forces, or how to save
girl babies.
Creativity
One very good thing by which Hinduism stood out, both in
its Vedic and its Puranic phase, was its unbridled creativity. Today, this is
what is sorely lacking. Sita Ram Goel diagnosed the Hindu activists among his
fellow students ca. 1940 as the most mediocre of the lot. Those who had nothing
to offer individually gravitated towards causes which tilted them above
themselves but to which they themselves had indeed little to offer. They
gave their time and energy, nobody can deny them this dedication, but a winning
movement cannot be built exclusively of such grey people.
The creative people are on the other side. Most Bollywood actors and directors are
either on the anti-Hindu or, at best, on the mindlessly Hindu side. They have
named their industry after its American counterpart and some say their product
is lousy, but at least they know how to attract money and they certainly have a
good time. Hindus ought to feel jealous, if at all they have the ambition to do
as well as Bollywood.
Creativity was to be found in the late
M.F. Husain, hated by the Hindus and disliked by a great many Muslims too. He
was driven by hate, old and uninspired hate, but undeniably he created things
in painting. Hindus could do nothing but demand a ban, the most humourless and
uncreative solution. No Hindu came forward to be the anti-Husain, let alone
some original way to silence him.
It was different once. Every art form was
steered to new heights by Hindu artists. Every province of India
had its own variation of the performing arts. In the visual arts, no tradition
was a match for the richness in characters that the fable collections, epics
and Puranas had to offer. Whereas Chinese and Japanese classical music are
museum pieces next to omnipresent Western classical music (at performing which
the East-Asians excel), Indian classical music remains as the only rival. More individualistic yet more
complex, it differs from European classical music the way adult music differs
from children’s songs. Hindus are fairly good at maintaining what was great
among the inventions of their ancestors, but not so good at giving a creative
answer to today’s challenges.
So, gird up your loins to start anew.
Create Hindu art. Let it not be an imitation of Western “modern art”, the West
is fed up with it and you have no need of Indians pretending to like it. Forget
about trying to be original, just be Hindu and your originality will take care
of itself. Except for calendar artists, no artist wants to be known as a Hindu,
so by doing Hindu art you automatically stand out.
Celebrate
The greatest thing about Hinduism for all
its adherents is its festivals. As long as people celebrate these, the religion
will exist. Just apply the Americans proverb: “If it’s fun, it gets
done.” The same counts for the more serious Hindu business, like meditation. It
is not airy-fairy, as Westerners imagine, but very down-to-earth, the most
realistic thing in the world. But it is also the happiest thing, the source of
joy.
And judging by this criterion, Hinduism is
alive and kicking. So, I am not all that pessimistic about the future. You
simply have to do what it takes.
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