Wednesday, 30 March 2016

“Comfort” is no test of truth; on the contrary, truth is often far from being “comfortable” – Swami Vivekananda

Whenever there is a terrorist attack, the most comfortable thing to say is “Terrorism has no religion”. And in most discussions about Islam the stereotype is that “Islam is a religion of peace”.  But it is no secret that more than half the violence on the planet has been inflicted for religious reasons. The irony is that, it is the perpetrators of terror who claim that what they have done are religious duties while it is mostly the people from the victim communities that insist that the act has no religiosity in it. 

This attitude to absolve religion as the cause of violence is very much understandable in India. Indians are not attuned to think that religion can motivate its followers to indulge in violence. This thought is alien to Indian religions. After all, those religions that incite violent actions have an altogether different theology than the Vedic religions of India. The fundamental goal of a Vedic religionist is freedom from the sense of limitation that comes along with body-mind-intellect complex. While this goal of human life for a Vedic religionist is accomplished with or without allegiance to any of the millions of Gods available; for the religionists of the other kind, there is no such possibility of either opting for a personal God or not developing affinity to any of them.

The fundamental dogma in the religion of books is that, God is looked upon as a judgemental person located in a place yonder where the lights are shining bright. Reaching that place and living with him is the goal of their religion. Fundamentally, there is one and only God who has mercifully showered his compulsive blessings only through a one and only prophet. It is this very merciful God in these religions who order His followers to fight men until they testify that there is no God other than him.  It is part of the doctrine to wage war against other religions and bring them under submission to Islam. 

Hit by intense desire to remain politically correct or by virtue of being sponsored by vested interests, the ‘intelligentsia’ tries desperately to project some reason or the other to blame as motivation for terrorism in order to avoid blaming religion. Even before the involved outfit claims any responsibility for the terror attack, certain sections of media and ‘intellectuals’ start stuffing the opinion space with reminders about Babri Masjid demolition and the Gujarat ‘progrom’. When the attack happens in any western country, fingers are immediately pointed to American intervention in internal affairs of certain countries. Whether India or abroad, the popular opinion gets build in the lines of how Hliary Clinton tweeted after the Brussels attack: “Let’s be clear: Islam is not our adversary. Muslims are peaceful and tolerant people and have nothing whatsoever to do with terrorism”. So as per the ‘comfortable truth’, we are trained to and thereby supposed to believe that neither Islam nor Muslims is responsible for terrorism. Conspicuously, what will remain missing from the public discourse is who then is responsible.  They insist that the villains are “Misguided Muslims”. While enacting this campaign, they smartly keep the people whom they ‘inform’ muted from asking the other pertinent questions – “What are those people who are supposed to ‘guide’ Muslims doing?”, “Why are the ‘misguided’ allowed to become more powerful than the ‘guided’ ones?”, “Do the patrons of the ‘misguided’ ones need ‘guidance’ too?”

There may be political, social, economic and national reasons that might have contributed to the growth of each terror establishment. All these reasons may contribute to raise funds, control resources, manufacturing and supplying of arms among several other factors. It may even determine targets of attack that suit the cause of their growth story. But it will be unwise to lose track of what actually is the basic cell that makes a terror establishment and how it is developed. The answer is not very complex. The basic unit that forms the big terror outfit is a “recruit”. It is by understanding the common intentions and collective motivations of every single recruit that terror psyche can be understood. It is by answering these fundamental and simple questions that terrorism can be countered. “Why a youth does get motivated to join a terrorist outfit?”, “Why are his parents not a greater influence on him than the recruiter?”, “Why does his teacher, school and education not lead him to take better informed decisions?”, “Why does his religion not allow him to get ‘misguided’ and remain committed to the set of moral values that it proposes to teach?”. 

The motivated campaigners rush to the debate scene holding a placard written in capital letters alerting the masses of a phenomenon called Islamophobia. They pre-empt the saner ones who prefer not to mince words and tell it like it is. So when they actually tell it like it is, they sound communal. Just as they would not ask those pertinent questions about the ‘misguided youth’, they also would also not answer a very basic question. Is ISIS the first Islamic terror organisation? Is this a new phenomenon emerging from the Islamic world recently, within the past two or three decades? Before each radical outfit that we can name today, there has been some other evident force that was actively radicalising youth earlier. Preceding those outfits, there was some other. Jihad has been central to Islam since the time of their prophet. The war against terror as administered by many countries may come to an end with killing down of the ace leadership of the radicalising avatars that exist today. But war against radicalisation may perhaps never come to an end unless the root cause of radical thinking is addressed. 

This is why there is a lot of difference when someone says “terror has no religion” and someone wiser says “delink terror from religion”. Asking those custodians of religion to delink terror from their teachings, is like tactfully saying now your religion is linked with terror; and we can leave a better place for our children by throwing out from religious teachings those aspects of hatred and incitement of violence. The calls to moderate Muslims to raise their voice against misrepresentation of their religion by the radicals are repeatedly almost falling in deaf ears. With no sincere efforts on the part of the world Muslim community to challenge the ever increasing radicalisation, the rest of the world is slowly getting to believe that the ‘misrepresentation’ that is intended, is perhaps a wishful thinking about what Islam could have been. A system of self-introspection is virtually non-existent in the Islamic societies because such a pursuit would be deemed un-Islamic and would elicit death penalty. The possibility of forsaking one’s religion also gets ruled out because of the same reason. If at all something can be termed as Islamophbia, it is coming face to face of this bleak situation and being helpless about it; but not the recognition of the inherent problem of violence in Islam. Let it be clear that it is ordained in the scriptures to be violent against those who not only have different value systems but even against those who does a different interpretation of the same text. It is for this reason that we often see sectarian clashes and people killing each other within the Islamic societies as well. Those who recognise this inherent problem in religion, are the ones that insist that certain rules be laid down before allowing immigrant Muslims to settle down in a land. Most such demands are not unreasonable, particularly when they insist that those who come into the land should adapt to the culture of the land so that people can co-exist with modern values forgoing the medieval superstitions that they bring along. Now that co-existence is inevitable, if this inherent conflicting nature of Islam is simply brushed aside as Islamophobia, what will ensue in the event of living together is medieval barbarism prevailing at the cost of modernity. It may be uncomfortable. But truth is often far from being comfortable.
A.Sudarshan,
YB-ET

Friday, 4 March 2016

Fix the root of the problem…



One praises a terrorist and criticizes the nation for punishing him, another says that he will not rest till the country is divided. 

These are scenes we witnessed in the country’s premier educational institute, JNU, in New Delhi. One may wonder what makes them so rabidly anti national. What makes them detest our Heritage? The problem lies in our curriculum which seldom instills any values in the minds of the student. The reason why values like patriotism and nationalism are mocked at by some of the present day students is that the curriculum was designed by those who don’t subscribe to the concept of nation. Majority of our textbooks are written by leftist “intellectuals” who want to run down our country. This is an endeavour which is continuing right from the colonial days.  If the minds of children are filled with contempt towards Hinduism and India from childhood onwards, then how will they revere it when they grow up?

The intention of these curriculum designers is to wean the students away from the nationalistic fervour which  And the proven way to do that is foist a diabolical history on them. Nation has history and geography as two constituents in it. The Geography of a nation can be maintained intact only if real history of that nation is told to its subjects in entirety. The lessons that ought to be learnt from the History, the legacy to be revered and followed, the tradition and heritage which are to be fostered and promoted, can be instilled in the minds of the subjects only if it is told to them with a proper perspective. The Jews after their exodus from Egypt got scattered throughout the world. But they could regain their geography because of their knowledge about their History. It re ignited the fire, generation after generation to get their Holy land back, which fructified finally in 1948. Seeing such examples our adversaries are bent upon not only delinking our young generation from its heritage but also imposing a fabricated version of history on them. This is a sure and proven way to subvert a Nation’s sovereignty.
one would naturally have.

This subversive curriculum should be replaced by a nationalistic one. Only then can a holistic, harmonious, future be assured for our Nation. Many countries have the practice of compulsory induction of their citizens in Armed forces for a specific period. Such a program is also very much needed for a country like ours. Though because of the size of the population, implementing that may not be feasible, government can make enrolling in NCC and Scout mandatory for all the students in the schools. This will ensure that discipline and a sense of patriotism is instilled in the minds of the younger generation. These ought to be done expeditiously to stem the rot.



V.V.Balasubramanian
YB-ET


 

Friday, 5 February 2016

Mahishi on the Prowl…

Dream of a society where women are not allowed entry into places of worship. Imagine they are banished to keep their religious practices confined to their homes. Imagine they are taught that they serve God best by serving their religious husbands. Think of the God as formless and yet it is only Him not Her. Get snapped out of the dream and come to reality. There exists such a society that lives this dream. Not only in the middle-east, but it exists well within free and democratic India. Not only that it exists, it is very well protected by the constitution through the fundamental rights to practice one’s own religion.
Now start dreaming again. Dream of a society where women freely enter places of worship. Imagine some of the women sing in praise of deities and become saints themselves. Imagine they are not only taught religious practices, rather some of them become exponents in the field of inner exploration and teach the paths to other practitioners. Think of the God as formless, or having form. Think of the deity as Him or Her; if any of this is uncomfortable and doesn’t fit in your scheme of imagination, think of the deity as neither Him nor Her but as one having either genders or having none of them. Just for the charm of it, imagine that one of such a deity remains in the masculine form and the other masculine deity takes a feminine form for a short period. Extend your imagination and give them a child. Give him all the powers of both his parents and also give him a bell around his neck. Imagine a young lady waiting to avenge the slaying of his demonic brother, disillusioned and embodying all anger and negativity in her. Think of this young man by his sheer entry into the lady’s life transform her into a beautiful angelic woman. Having inspired by this brave man, think of the lady as falling in love with him and offering herself in marriage to him. Imagine this young man wanting to lead a celibate life instead and therefore turns down the offer. Give him the freedom to look for a place where women do not reach so that he can continue to remain in an undisturbed yogic state. Give the angel the patience and ability to wait for centuries till the time he completes his tapas and come back to marry her. While imagining all this, don’t forget that this deity has only chosen a place free of alluring disturbances for his meditation. In your imagination make a resolution not deny him that choice. While dreaming of all this, never forget that there are thousand other deities who has not taken such decisions. They all live happily with their consorts or sometimes away from them. They all have temples that are visited by men and women alike, while this strange young man with a bell around his neck is also a star, and only one of them, in some small corner of your imaginary universe. Get out from the dream startled and come back to reality. There exists such a society too, that lives this dream. It exists well within free and democratic India and nowhere else. Yet, unfortunately it is in the danger of being questioned and abandoned by the same constitution that promises fundamental rights to practice one’s own religion.

The Supreme Court of India recently questioned the age old practice of not entertaining women in menstruating age span within the Ayyappa temple premises at Sabarimala while hearing a public interest litigation filed by the Kerala unit of a lesser known NGO, Young Lawyers Association. The Honourable Supreme court, no doubt, has all the powers to question a social practice that may seem conflicting with the constitutional guarantees of equality and justice. While doing so, it would serve well by exercising equality of perception and judgement on all sections of the society; not by concentrating only on one section and that too, the least harmful. By the time this issue of Yuva Bharati is in the hands of the readers, in all likelihood, there would be a clear picture of the stance taken by the Court. Having made the point, let us confine to elaborating on a more pressing issue; the components that drive decision making in our country even after so many decades of freedom; the engine, piston and the fuel.

With continual and dismal trend of criticising, ridiculing and dismissing the time tested religious and cultural practices, irrespective of public sentiments or cultural validities, the engine that drives the country, appears to be something that the British carefully left behind as a forced gift for free India. This gift is essentially, a mindset that keeps on doubting about all practices that are native to this land as primitive and needing modernization. This mindset is an outcome from a factory of the modern education system. The production line in this factory, at one level has a framework for worldview. The produce goes through this framework and course corrections are made by filtering out any good regards for native value systems, its inherent diversities and pluralities. Thus the engine, namely the mindset is devoid of nativity and comes through as a well groomed and ready-to-fit into a monolithic western value system.

With continual and dismal trend of inconsistent secularism, the engine has a piston that keeps running back and forth during every cycle of elections and run up to elections. And that is appeasement politics. With every forward movement, the piston pushes favours to minority groups, thereby creating congenial electorate. With every backward movement, the piston disregards the majority to keep the engine running.

It is better to mention what the fuel is, without any decoration of expressions. The simple reason is because the fuel on which the engine runs is nothing but ‘ignorance’ – ignorance of the Hindus about their own religion, religious practices, scriptures and philosophies. It is because of this engine of enslaved mentality, the vehicle of free India doesn’t seem to move in the direction it ought to move. As darkness is nothing but absence of light, ignorance is not something which is true. It is merely the absence of knowledge. The absence of knowledge happens because it is convenient for the enslaved mind to remain in the comfort zone believing that all that is traditional is against modernity.

If it was not for the ignorance, the narrative about women not being entertained in the Sabaraimala temple would have been very different. It would have included a mention of a temple not very far from the holy hill, the Attukkal Bhagavati amman temple, where 4.5 million women gather for the Pongala festival. The line up of women who gather to cook prasadam in earthen pots, run several kilometres spanning half a dozen villages. If the argument was about the ‘weakness’ of Ayyappa’s ability to continue his meditation irrespective of who visits, the narrative would have included mention about women being allowed to visit thousands of other local Ayyappa temples anytime. If the argument was about the ‘primitiveness’ in considering women unclean during menstruation, the narrative would have included mention of another temple in the opposite end of the country, the Kamakhya temple at Guwahati, with the presiding deity being an embodiment of the sacredness in the process of menstruation.

A tradition can have answers for any number of doubts. But no tradition, however ripe and rich it may be, can have answers to motivated campaigns. The answer for such campaigns should not be searched in tradition under question but in the motivation of the campaigner. Any attempt to service the engine will not help. The vehicle will change course only when we change the engine, to that of National education, with a piston pumping Nationality running on the fuel of Knowledge. If plurality in India is still a reality, it is not because of what the constitution promises but because of what Hinduism dreams of. It is our duty to preserve the native practices if we intend to keep the dream of plurality real. 


A. Sudarshan
YB-ET

Friday, 1 January 2016

Marrying goodness with religion



It is impossible to express in limited words, the kind of physical and mental devastation that people of Chennai experienced due to the recent floods. It is equally impossible to express in limited words the kind of help that the affected received.  

Human brain has evolved in such a manner that when it is in stress, it yearns for social support and is soothed when it receives help. The natural extension of this evolution is that, it responds with compassion when it hears a cry for help.  Therefore, when Chennai was flooded with water, it was flooded with help too. The response was as organic as the calamity itself. 

The very basis of human civilization is built on this twin platform of ‘need’ and ‘response-to-the-need’. Our elders named this beautiful system as Dharma and the process of giving as Dana. A little child only keeps receiving all the time, be it food, material, care or love. As the child grows and become mature, she takes the role of the giver. In a Dharmic society the giver outnumbers the receiver. Those performing the act of Dana, in such a Dharmic society, consider the needy to be a child who needs to be taken care of. One cannot rest seeing the other suffer.  An effortless practice of this compassion transforms to something higher than that in spiritual life. For instance, a 70 year old renowned Tamil musician, Ilayaraja, who has scored recently for his 1000th film; while being involved in relief operations, said, “We are in no position to help anyone. All we can do is help ourselves. How can one hand give to the other? When I help others, I feel I’m only helping myself”. This ‘giving’ is beyond ‘Dana’. This ‘consciousness’ is beyond ‘compassion’. It is ‘Samvedana’; experiencing the suffering of others as one’s own.  

Any rational person with a social life, would vouch, that, for the feeling of compassion to occur in oneself, there is no need to be religious or to adhere to a set of doctrines. For that matter, it is not even necessary to be a theist, furthermore a believer of a particular God. 

But for some reason, in our country, we have this unique habit of binding all human actions with religion. Trying to explore the reason why we do so, the answer may not be very difficult to arrive at. Swami Vivekananda points out that each Nation has got a personality much like each individual. He says every nation has a principal note around which every other note comes to form the harmony. In a lecture, he says, “In one Nation, political power is its vitality as in England, artistic life in another, and so on. In India, religious life forms the centre, the keynote of the whole music of National life; and if any Nation attempts to throw of its National vitality, the direction which has become its own through the transmission of centuries – that Nation dies if it succeeds in the attempt”.

Only time can answer whether Indians in the pre and post Independence times internalised this idea or not. But those who enslaved us must have seriously reconciled with the grand idea. “Reconciled”, is a purposefully thought out word here. Out of recognition and reconciliation of an enemy’s strength will arise a strategy to defeat the very same strength. Knowing very well, that the people of India, knowingly or unknowingly, marry all human actions with religion; the opposite camp made use of the trait to their advantage. They took our education in their hands. They set the tone for our religious discourse. The thus enslaved Indian mind fell in the trap. The result was quite amazing. Our own intelligentsia continued doing the same marriage, but with a little social-tailoring. The slavish Indian mentality would feel no good about any good deeds of the society while it would attribute all negative actions to our religions. Therefore, superstitions, caste and untouchability became part of our religion, so much so, that these words started defining any discourse on Hinduism.

A 21st century free thinking Indian might be tempted here that this logic must have been applied to other societies as well, namely the Christian and Islamic. But the free thinking Indian mind would be intelligent enough to quickly come to terms, that too much cannot be expected from the enslaved Indian. The logical ends followed. The same slavish mentality would blatantly ignore any of their negative deeds while it would attribute all positive actions to their religions. Therefore, service and compassion became the exclusive characteristics of Christian missionaries. To cut a long story short, it took more than 50 long years for cinema in independent India, to depict that a non-Christian could ever run an orphanage. The startling statistics on the service activities of Hindu organisations that come to light year after year from the Hindu Spiritual and Service Fair organised in Chennai, is a proof of what was kept hidden in public discourses for so many years.
At this juncture, let it be made clear for the fear of reading it completely wrong. The dominant idea of this article is not to prove or disprove who serves and who doesn’t. No, not even to make a case for Hindus, who have been serving the needy even though it hasn’t been featured in popular public discourse. The case is for, and only for, pointing out a sick mentality prevailing in our country, particularly in Hindus and sometimes in others, about their inconsistency in attributing human actions to religion. During the time of Chennai floods, all around the mainstream and social media, photographs of Muslim brothers involved in relief operations spread faster than relief material. The very same set of people who would otherwise delink religion from terror (even though the perpetrators would swear on their religion for their actions), were hell-bent on praising overboard a section of volunteers reaching out for flood relief work. By evolution of Human nature, kindness and compassion, aren't they expected to be kind too? Weren’t they supposed to behave the way others did at the time of crisis, or for that matter the way they themselves did. Or were over-enthusiastic certifiers eager to grab the opportunity to attribute these humane actions to their religion? Let them decide for themselves once and for ever, if they were to attribute human behaviour to religion, they better do it for every other person too. And when they decide to marry the goodness with one's religion, they better do it for every other action too.

This is not an age when the tone for public discourse used to be set by mainstream media with vested interests. The social media encourages open debate and exposes double standards quicker than ever. Let us hear from the terrorist and not the enslaved Indian if it was his hatred towards humanity or religion that motivated his action. Let us hear it from the people rendering service and not the enslaved Indian if it was his religion or the underlying humanity that motivates him to serve. The free thinking modern Indian, would no doubt, do well enough to replace modern Indian discourse with original thinking devoid of enslavement and entrapment. Opportunities are ripe and this is the time to press the pedal.

A.    Sudarshan
YB-ET