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Religion, Politics and the Modern State
-Ram Puniyani
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Last two decades have witnessed a constant invocation
of religion in the arena of politics. From George
Bush’s crusade against terrorism to Osama bin Laden’s
Jihad against the greatest Satan, US, to our own home
bred Hindutva ideology which aims at Hindu Rashtra,
one constantly gets to hear that politics is to be
guided by religion. So when Mr. Advani, the pioneer of
Ram Temple movement which brought Hindutva to the
fore, stated in Ahamadabad that if there was no
religion in politics then it was of no use to him
(July 26 2004), it was not much of a surprise.
There are many an arguments on this line, which regard
Secularism as a western concept, it being against
religion, it being appeasement of minorities, it being
an artificial graft in the body politic of India the
country, which is the land of spirituality etc.
It is not only the Advani parivar, which will argue on
these lines. This parivar is in the company of
Talibans, Zia Ul Haque and others from near the
borders who also conduct their politics in the name of
religion. On the face of it the two trends may sound
antagonistic while there is a deeper conceptual unity
in both the streams. This stream is joined by an
unexpected quarter of Post Modernists, the likes of
Ashish Nandy to whom Secularism is a Western graft
unsuitable and unnecessary here as diverse communities
here have been living together peacefully in the same
geographical area.
Somewhere in the middle of this argument Gandhi is
quoted as if he was against secularism, also Nehru is
quoted as being against religions and imposing this
‘alien’ concept in Indian context.
This Advani-Nandy duo suffers from multiple
confusions. To begin with secularism is not a mere
Western concept. It is true it began in the west. But
it began not to sort out the quarrels between
religions but it came up with the introduction of
Industrialization, with the emergence of two modern
classes, Industrialists and workers. Till that time it
was the King-Landlord who had the divine sanction to
rule on the direct approval of the almighty. While
King was the Son of God, landlord his representative,
the clergy the most visible part and the custodian of
religion, was the legitimizer of this ideology.
Secularism essentially was an outcome of
secularization process in which the divine power of
the king-landlord and the social hold of clergy was
done away with.
While secularization is presented as an external
process, the deeper inner logic of this was to do away
the hierarchy of caste and gender. In Indian context
due to colonial rule and the Landlord-British
alliance, the process of secularization could not be
completed. The hold of Landlord-Priest and the
accompanying values of caste and gender hierarchy
persisted though in less intense form. At this point
of time secularization process was represented by
Jotiba Phule, Savitribia Phule, Bhimrao Babasaheb
Ambedakr and Periyar Ramasamy Naicker social level and by
the likes of Gandhi, Nehru and Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
at political level. While many a differences can be
seen if one sees their ideologies in a superficial
way, the deeper unity of their thoughts was apparent
as these luminaries spearhead the social process of
opposing the inferior treatment to Shudra and women at
social level and relegating the clergy-landlords at
political level.
Advani is able to confuse himself as the word religion
has many components and many meanings. Gandhi did
state that those who think religion has nothing to do
with politics understand neither religion nor
politics. This is his oft-quoted sentence. But what
does ‘his’ religion mean, needs to be seen. The first
and foremost, one has to see the claim of being
custodian and so the arbiter of religion is taken away
from clergy, Mullah and Brahmins. Than one has to see
that religions’ facets are diverse, moral values; holy
books; holy places; communitarian functions and the
like. Also one has to see that within a single
religion there are various sects. What people like
Gandhi and Azad mean by religion is totally in
contrast to what Advani, Taliban, Jinnah and Godse
mean by it. As per Gandhi, “ Indeed religion should
pervade everyone of our actions. Here, the religion
does not mean sectarianism. It means a belief in
ordered moral Govt. of the universe. This religion
transcends Hinduism, Islam, and Christianity etc. It
does not supercede them. It harmonizes them and gives
them reality.” (Gandhi quoted in Madan 1997,3 Indian
Journal of Secularism). The claim of Nandy's that
Gandhi could do without the concept of secularism is
again based on the ignorance about values of father of
the Nation, “ Religion and state will be separate. I
swear by my religion, I will die for it. But it is my
personal affair. The state has nothing to with it. The
state will look after your secular welfare, health,
communications, foreign relations, currency and so on,
but not your or my religion. That is everybody’s
personal concern”. (Gandhi quoted in Madan, 1997,4
IJS).
One has seen than impact of religion in the politics
through the politics of Muslim League, Hindu
Mahasabha, RSS, Taliban and the like. It will be worth
its while to think as to with what aspect of life we
associate religion with. With the dictates of clergy
or with the humanistic teachings of saints. Here,
there is no point in asserting that clergy and saint
were both religious. Yes both of them were talking in
the language of religion, clergy on behalf of those in
power and saints on behalf of those poor and destitute
struggling for their survival. One has seen Advani’s
‘politics with religion’ leading to demolition of
Babri Masjid, Taliban’s ‘politics with religion’
leading to demolition of Bamiyan Buddha.
The relationship between State-Politics and religion
could not have been defined better than what Nehru has
to say on the issue, "What it means is that it is a
state which honors all faiths equally and gives them
equal opportunities; that as a state, it does not
allow itself to be attached to one faith or religion,
which then becomes the state religion...In a country
like India, no real nationalism can be built up except
on the basis of secularity...narrow religious
nationalisms are a relic of the past age and no longer
relevant today."
(Author Teaches at IIT Mumbai)
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