The world scene has
seen immense and horrific violence in recent times. Two planes ram
into the World trade center, nearly three thousand people perish into
oblivion, an “Islamic terrorist” Osama bin Laden thanks Allah for this
act. US President George W. Bush launches an attack on Afghanistan to
catch hold of Osama bin Laden and call this attack as crusade.
Separated by thousands of kilometers, in another part of the World,
Gujarat, India, a train coach is burned. Instant investigation by the
Chief minister of that state gives him the insight that this was an
act of Islamic terrorists in collaboration with local Muslims. His
associates give the call that Hindus are in danger and he signals that
revenge process will not be disturbed. He instructs his staff to sit
back. His administration goes a step further and assists the rampaging
marauders out to kill Muslims. Two thousand people loose their life.
The plight of women and children is beyond description. What these
victims share in common is the religion called Islam. Just a few years
ago people in Bosnia and Rwanda died in thousands for belonging to the
‘wrong’ religion.
Last three decades have seen the violence world over under the flag of
religions. Is this violence done to save some religion or its
followers? Is it done to protect the moral values, din, ethics, and
dharma of the particular religions? Is this violence done to save the
traditions and communitarian ethos of the followers of those
religions? How are religions related to the massive violence, which
goes on in their name?
One recalls that even in medieval times the phenomenon of crusades,
jihads and dharmayudhs, which, kings undertook on the pretext of
religion. Were these meant to expand religion or were they meant to
expand their empires. One recalls that the identity of religions is
associated more with the clergy and less with the moral values of the
religions. It does not require too much of knowledge to realize that
in pre-industrial society the clergy, the most visible part of
religions was associated with the landlords and the kings in different
forms. Somewhere in direct collaboration from top to bottom, somewhere
in fragmented form. Also there was another set of people associated
with religions, the saints, who were away from the power centers.
These were the saints, the bhakti saints in Hindu tradition, the Sufi
saints in Islamic tradition and mystiques and later liberation
theologian in Christian tradition, were away from the centers of power
and were close to the poor, exploited and oppressed sections of
society.
The rulers did not tolerate the saints. The clergy, the official
upholders of the religion, were hostile to bhakti saints, who were
killed in various ways. The two facets of religion were always
counter-posed to each other. Since the traditions close to power are
more dominant, the Church, Olema and Brahmins are presented as the
vehicles of religion. The parallel traditions of saint’s remains on
the margins, snubbed by the social and political powers.
A sufi saint Nizamuddin Auliya refused to receive the emperor in his
dargah, Tukaram was done to death, Chokhamela reprimands God himself
for the plight of the poor. These traditions emphasize on the message
of love and amity in contrast to the clergy, which gives importance to
rituals and the written word. In India the saints, mostly came from
low caste and did proclaim that they have no capacity to learn the
heavy tomes of their religion written in Devbhasha (language of Gods,
upper caste) Sanskrit, which was denied to them anyway, because of
their low caste status.
During the process of
secularization the role of clergy declined from the social and
political space. The structural hierarchies of caste and gender, which
this clergy legitimized in the name of religion started getting
challenged, got abolished in countries where industrialization took
place in the early period. These societies strove for the values of
Liberty Equality and Fraternity (community). In colonies the nexus
between colonial powers and the landlords, kings blocked the
secularization process.
And in country like
India these declining classes, Landlord-Clergy, threw up the politics
in the name of religion, known as communal politics. For example in
India it came up as Muslim league and Hindu Mahasabha-RSS, but these
were marginal streams. At World level the politics was dominated by
the colonial powers. Later US emerged as the major World power and
national liberation struggles in the colonies took the inspiration
from Russian and Chinese revolutions, at many places under the flag of
socialism. During this era the global violence was presented as the
struggle between the ‘free world’ and communism.
After the cold war
era, the decline of socialist economies, the hegemony of US started
becoming indisputable. Its machinations in the oil zone where Islam
was the dominant religion, the new offensive of Imperialism took the
garb of religious language and the ‘backward Islam’ started being
targeted by the US and its cohorts. It is to support this imperialist
ambition that the theory of Clash of Civilizations (Samuel Huntington)
came up as a cover for US policies. This theory very cleverly counter
poses the advanced Western Civilization against backward Islamic
civilization. Here the Western civilization is not Christian, and the
Middle East Muslims and others are clubbed to be having the backward
Islamic civilization. The wars launched by US against the people of
Afghanistan and Iraq is presented as a logical extension of this
thesis, to set right the wrongs of backward Muslims.
Around this time in
India the rise of Hindutva politics has goals similar to the ones of
the US as far as targeting Muslims and Islam are concerned. This
Hindutva ideology is a politics based on Brahminical stream of
Hinduism and had base earlier in the declining classes of Landlords
and clergy (Jamindar, Brahmin, Bania) and now it flourishes amongst
the new middle class thrown up by the so called development process.
This middle class, affluent and the core of ‘Shining India’ has gained
immensely from the process of industrialization and also from the
mindless globalization from eighties onwards. It is this middle class,
which sustains a new breed of religious people, in saffron or any
other color. This new set of Gurus and Acharyas, Sri Sri Ravishankar,
Asaram Bapu, Pandurang Shastri Athwale, Sudhanshu Mahraj, Aniruddh
Bapu and the like, are the nerve soothers for the existential tensions
of the middle class. These Gurus are pushing the Manusmsirit and the
feudal values of caste and gender hierarchies in a new language, the
language laced with modernity, so to say.
Globally and locally
various phenomenon are overlapping. Now as the offensive of power
seekers at world level is masked in the language of religion,
particularly anti-Islam, those aspiring for control on social and
political power at home are also using this Hindutva, religion based
politics.
The language of
religion is deceptive. It gives it a type of moral sanctity, it
creates a sort of mass hysteria, and it offers a sort of platform for
the retrograde ideology. The goals of power are creating violence,
condoned by those who should have different types of social power.
Violence is the superficial layer of this politics of power in the
name of religion. It is more than a coincidence that while, religion
targeted by US at the level of the World and the one targeted in India
by Hindutva are the same. The camaraderie of those using religion for
their political goals cannot be missed.
Religion has diverse
functions in society. The way it is being used (! abused) by Hindutva
and US and its cohorts, is its most dominant face. The clergy at many
times plays diverse roles as well. At times it has played the role of
projecting the religion, which is the opiate of the masses, it has
also been the sigh of the oppressed in this heartless world. The Sufis
and saints had particularly played the latter role. While the opiate
role has been played by the section of clergy tied to the apron
strings of those in political and social power, acting as legitimizers
of their exploitative and oppressive role. One sees the Church of old
times associating with Kings, and the one currently, which is opposing
the US offensives as the same institution playing diverse role with
change of time. One can see in Indian context the fleet of gurus with
immense wealth under their control serving as the base for creating
the opinion and opium for Hindutva politics. One also sees the saffron
clad sadhus of Vishwa Hindu Parishad asking for revenge against
Muslims.
Religion, if one regards moral values as its core, should not be
associated with power. Different types of people associated with
religion have at times played as handmaiden to the power centers,
legitimizing their violence in turn. The triad of religion power and
violence gets connected once we see the ambitions of those using
religion for their narrow goals. If the people of religion cannot be
associated with the plight of poor and oppressed they are handmaidens
of the powerful. And in turn then they are legitimsers of violence.
The examples of these abound.
It is time that the people associated with religion realize the abuse
to which religion has been put. Some streams of religion are for this
goal in a blatant fashion. Than there are other streams of religion
which play a soothing role for the exploited sections of society. This
section of religious people, true to the moral values of religions,
can live their religion only by associating themselves with the plight
of the poor, oppressed and the underdogs. Association of religion with
power is the crux of its negative role in society. A severance of this
will surely put religion more as the vehicle of sigh of the oppressed
and this can only be achieved by firm advocacy of the causes of this
section, this can be achieved by associating with their struggles for
the justice, gender, economic, social and political.
(Excerpts from the talk delivered at 6th W.A. Vissert Hooft Memorial
Consultation, Ecumenical Institute Bossey, June 2004)