Friday, 15 July 2022

THE OFFENDED INDIAN

   If there is one quality Indians cannot be accused of, it is the ability to be sensitive- to the feelings of others, to the environment, to civic decencies, to social mores. One has only to look at their behaviour in public places or even a familial setting, to realise how true this statement is, unpalatable as it is. And the higher up the pecking or social order one is, the more insensitive one is.

  But a new, paradoxical dynamic has emerged over the last eight years or so- this crass insensitivity is now blended with an obnoxious oversensitivity to matters relating to one's own religion (not that of others), creating a toxic broth whose fumes are choking the life breath of this nation. And all this is being done under the shadow of a tattered Constitution, justified by the "rule of law", encouraged by all four so called pillars of democracy eaten away by the termites of the seven sins.

  We could all hear the chewing of these termites these past years but matters have now come to a head post the Nupur Sharma episode. The taking of offence has now reached pandemic proportions; not a day goes by without a dozen FIRs being filed for "hurting the religious feelings" of worthies who have suddenly discovered that a police complaint is one sure fire way of emerging from their miserable anonymities. More FIRs are filed for "inciting hatred", as if any further incitement were necessary in a social environment brimming with the bloody thing. This phenomenon applies to both the major communities, is assiduously encouraged by the ruling dispensation and other political parties, made use of by a darbari media to churn out even more profits, and allowed to fester by a judiciary which is either complicit, pusillanimous or confused, or all three.

  It is bewildering for your ordinary citizen like me, brought up to believe that we live in a secular democracy where the organs of government behave responsibly and act in accordance with the law. How does one reconcile these (perhaps naive) beliefs with beheading threats, demands for arrests for showing a deity with a cigarette in a creative genre, rejection of bail for tweeting a still photograph from a 1983 film by one of India's most renowned Directors, lodging of multiple FIRs against a Parliamentarian for saying that her Goddess eats meat or drinks alcohol ?

  This is a collective madness, a viral insanity spurred on by the government of the day, assorted "leaders" of various communities, and a police which is looking more and more like the private militia of whichever party rules in a particular state. The only possible antidote for this disease is the judiciary but its recent erratic, inconsistent and biased orders indicate that it is not up to the job, and may even be making matters worse by giving legitimacy to the actions of the rulers and the dominant community. It may be making the virus stronger, not weakening it.

  Looking for some explanation for this suicidal behaviour, I came across a recent interview with the author Amish Tripathi on India Today which made a lot of sense. Tripathi states that every society craves for an equilibrium of religious beliefs. This can be achieved either by all religions respecting each other, or by all religions equally disrespecting the others. The former ensures a harmonious social order, the latter a chaotic and violent society. Till recently India was fortunate in having the former, notwithstanding the occasional communal riot, but over the last few year we seem to be moving towards the latter, negative equilibrium. I agree with his assessment, the only one so far which makes any sense.

  But I have certain caveats, which perhaps better explain his basic postulate. The negative equilibrium Tripathi talks of- all religions equally disrespecting each other- sounds very much like the concept of MAD- Mutually Assured Destruction, where the equilibrium is reached only when the opposite forces are equally balanced, as with the nuclear deterrent of countries. But attaining this equilibrium in a country where there is a marked numerical imbalance between religions- 82% of the population versus 14%- is not possible through the certainty of mutually assured destruction, especially when the state favours the majority. Any effort to do so can only result in large scale violence, civil disorder and worse. This can only be a recipe for a dangerous disequilibrium, not equilibrium.

  The only solution is to strive towards what our Constitution envisages- Tripathi's first equilibrium- mutual respect , not mutual destruction. For this we need an enlightened political leadership, an objective media, a proactive judiciary not afraid to do its job, a bureaucracy which works for the citizens, not the ruling party. But most of all, we need a society and citizenry which stops feeling offended on the slightest pretext. To help this latter process we need to do away with outdated laws like the IPC sections 153A (promoting enmity between different groups) and 295A (outraging religious feelings) which only incentivise the propensity to feel offended. They also provide a handle to the police to persecute anyone they wish, as the case of Muhammad Zubair shows.

  Most developed and progressive countries have done away with such laws, even if they once had them in the first place. They are disturbingly close to the Abrahamic tenets of "blasphemy" and, if not repealed, will only Talibanise our hitherto eclectic, broad minded society and cultural traditions. We are being pushed further and further down this dangerous path with each fresh FIR that is filed and each ambiguous decision of our higher courts. They have no place in a civilised society, for they can lead to ridiculous outcomes- just last week a man in UP was charged with wrapping non-vegetarian food in a newspaper containing pictures of Hindu gods, while in Assam a person was arrested for dressing up as Shiva in a street play protesting against price rise ! Such instances only confirm that as a society and a polity we are not yet mature enough to handle such draconian laws; it is like giving an AK47 to an eight year old child and then expecting him not to fire it.

 I am of the firm belief that neither Nupur Sharma nor Leena Manimekalai, and certainly not Zubair Mohammad or Mahua Moitra, deserve to be prosecuted or arrested for their statements, even if some people find them offensive. Their utterances are in fact a reaction to a toxic sub-culture that has been deliberately created for political benefit. Religions through the ages have evolved and reformed themselves through a process of questioning and debate; some have even branched off into different schools. If this dialogue is stopped by criminalising every statement or observation then there will be no scope for improvement. This regressive trend must be countered by erasing the ecology of hatred and anger before all space for rational discussion and questioning is extinguished. We would do well to remember the wise words of George Bernard Shaw: " All great truths begin as blasphemies."                                                                                                  If we have to feel offended, let us be offended instead by the poverty, unemployment, rising costs, environmental destruction, child malnutrition, gender imbalance, exploitation of tribals, the declining democratic values, the erosion of our institutions of governance and pathetic state of our media and judiciary that is rapidly taking us down the global rankings. There are indeed plenty of things in our nation to take offence at , but religion is not one of them.  

15 comments:

  1. This utopian idea of respecting all religions equally is at best hogwash and betrayed by the recent deluge of anti conversion laws. If all religions are equal then what is the problem with conversion? But inside we know it's not as simple. Just like our hypersensitive religious sentiments getting hurt every time a Muslim skewers a kebab during navratras or why even mentioning pork near a masjid can spark a riot!

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    1. Quite right Nodnat Sir/ Ma'am.
      However, 'equality' has nothing to do with religion and spirituality. So the idea that all religions are 'equal' is non-starter.
      What matters (a) is the belief all roads lead to The One. Regardless of mode of transport. (b) All religions teach compassion. Regardless of those who refuse to hear, see, understand in their foul hubris, whether they be decapitating IS types or in the name of Mahadev types. And their fate is not for us to contemplate. And (c) Therefore, the belief in The One, unreserved of hate and abuse, is where we are to go. Who we go with is irrelevant at the time of going. As long as we are able to carry with us the comfort of knowing that that is how we tried to live and that is how those we lived among also tried to live. Such parity happens. Is meant to be. It's also probably the only thing we can take when we go.
      Violence, terror, self righteousness, hijacking morality and seeking to 'cast the first stone' have no place but for recognition and so to be shunned.
      Can I?Can we?

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  2. Maybe one could respect all religions equally when one is equidistant from all of them? When one believes in none of them.

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  3. As always Avay has hit the nail on the head!
    Whose head???

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  4. Reading this timely piece an example came to my mind of 'MAD made Glad' by modifying a vintage local tradition prevalent on the outskirts of Shimla.... On the day following deepawali the residents of 2 neighbouring villages perched on 2 opposite hillocks throw stones at each other to draw blood so that the goddess can be appeased by a tilak of blood rather than the traditional 'nar bali'. Such tokenism recognises the need to evolve from old barbaric practices while retaining their semblance which attracts tourists. Much of our 'civilised democracy' has rapidly deteriorated to the extent that i wonder how much of this ragtag will survive this onslaught of chest beating religious radicalism. How i wish we could bury this MADNESS with a token reminder and resurrect our "beete hue din"... Didn't want it to sound like an elegy.. But the woods are dark and deep.. Strewn with broken promises of achhe din.

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  5. "How tolerant should the Tolerant be of the Intolerant?"
    I quote this paradox by Australian-British philosopher Karl Popper. The same is appended as the heading of his discourse by R. Jagannathan (Jaggy) - Editorial Director of the Right platform Swarajya - which calls itself the "tent for liberal Right of Centre discourse". Another paradox?

    Jaggy's article in The Times of India did not overtly display his leanings, which made me read it a few times over to crosscheck. I figured that he had moderated himself as he was not on his hometurf Swarajya. Also, that he was choosing his words carefully because he was treading on religious ground in that essay. It appeared to read as a benign essay, distanced from hardline ideology.
    However, he wrote a line that jarred, which I quote, ".....be as intolerant as your rival".

    First, by assuming a rival in religion, one introduces a force precisely that which religion strives to extricate. It further presupposes the correctness of one set of religious beliefs over another. This takes one back to Karl Popper's paradoxical question and makes one wonder who the Tolerant is in the first place! Or the Intolerant!!
    Second, the current communal polarisation over the past 8 years has assumed such a jagged edge that clemency and lenience have been sliced by bigotry and prejudice almost completely. Jaggy chose to construct his sentence using "intolerance", which conveys a different flavour as opposed to (had he used) "tolerance" to frame the same sentence.
    The theory propounded by Karl Popper is that extended tolerance can lead to it being hijacked by intolerance.
    While I leave the wise ones to bask in the warmth of their paradoxes and tautologies, the observation is that we seem to have shortened the boundaries of religious forbearance drastically to permit its antithesis to enter our mindset and roost there.

    This must be expropriated and Avay Shukla's concluding paragraph captures the need eminently. Nodnat's comment may draw a sharp intake of breath but the searing truth is laid bare by him.

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  6. A wise man, whose name escapes me once wrote that religion, while it unites a man with his Maker, divides him from his brother. Nothing can be truer than that in today's India. I wonder why. Is it possible that a lot of people are either unemployed or under-employed, and consequently have nothing better to do, besides rolling up their sleeves at the drop of a hat?

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    1. Most of our many people are lucky to be under employed. Quite frankly it is so because they are unemployable. And surprisingly, the vast majority of the unemployable are the religious types? Wonder?

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  7. No, Mr Shariff, that is not the explanation. It does not explain why educated, financially stable Hindu families have now become so Islamophobic and are so ill disposed towards all minorities. In my own extended family the vast majority have become near bigots who support and applaud every excess of this govt. I am now beginning to believe that the BJP- RSS combine have forever subverted and toxified our once noble religion; it will never be the same again. The people have fallen for it, God help them- and us.

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  8. Having read about it being the opium of the people and sigh of the oppressed creature....I decided to spare myself of the embarrassment being under the surveillance of a supreme being at an early stage of my life making it easier for him as well.Nevertheless, this has not stopped me from enjoying creative cultural legacy, of any religion. The day it was wedded to state and property it triggered all that is base in man . Religious fundamentalism,in its present avatar,as obtained in India today,is not strange bedfellows to market fundamentalism.We have bigotry and violence and supi profit maximized, while the social fabric is torn asunder. Ina situation like this, long Godforsaken yours truly would like to gently roll over and say, George Carlin like,," Religion is like a pair of shoes: find one that fits for you, but don't make me wear your shoes".And not lose my sleep.

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    1. How gently yet profoundly have you made your point Mr. indrajit Sen! Very well written.

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  9. Thank you Mr.Patankar.Though I hardly deserve the compliments and match the prolific pen wielded by you and Mr Sukla.

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  10. A hard hitting write up, being tolerant is the only way forward as the other will lead to self destruction. The common man is least interested (and has no time) in the so-called religious matters, they are busy earning their daily bread. Why self-destruction? It is evident from the loss of business/income of the hoteliers and others of Ajmer following the hate comments. Ultimately who bears the loss, the common man. Not the instigator, that is the tragedy.

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  11. I had said abroad in response to Nodnatt Sir/ Ma'am, but shrouded thereafter in black, that 'equality' has nothing to anchor itself to when it comes to religion and spirituality. Equality means stratification. There is nothing to stratify as all roads lead to the same place, irrespective of mode of transport.
    All religions teach tolerance and compassion. But the ill of will appropriate it for self-righteousness. We are particularly adept at that, call it hubris, ahangkar or just plain evil. And of course none of this is confined to one religion or one space filled. But the other part continues to struggle for space - the part that is tolerant; that is generous and compassionate and admiring of other faiths. And it is hardly the fault of the establishment of religion in society. Unless we separate perpetrator from perpetuity, we shall continue to writhe in pain. Whether among the tatters of the Arab Spring or the Vatican or here among our Parliament and mosques and churches and temples. All so full of thunder it is hard to hear the divine.

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  12. We, as a society, have wrapped up our pea sized brains and have flushed them down a drain.
    We are on the edge of an abyss, just waiting for that last push which is almost certainly inevitable.

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