By:
Chinmay Bajekal
October 16, 2004
Swami Vivekananda at the parliament of religions in Chicago (1893)
mentioned in his speech, that he was proud to belong to a Nation that gave
safe refuge to several persecuted communities of the world. In history we
find examples of the Jews, Syrian Christians, Zoroastrians, and in recent
times the Tibetan Buddhists who after being driven out of their homeland
sought safe refuge in India. The native Indians back then – Hindus not
just accommodated these refugees but also gave them the freedom to
practice their respective faiths.
Long ago, even before the birth of the Greek and Roman Empires, our Vedic
Seers had declared ‘Vasudaiva kutumbakam’ – “The world is one family”.
Long before the modern world came out with the concept of ‘Universal
welfare’ our Vedic prayer throughout the ages has been ‘Loka samastha
sukinau Bhavantu’ – “May entire world attain bliss”. Even the modern
concept of freedom of thought is respected in the Vedic verse, ‘Ekam sat
vipraha, bahudha vadanti’ – “Truth is one the wise call it by various
names". The verse expresses the matured understanding of the Human mind
that the ancient thinkers of India possessed.
Centuries ago when sects like Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism came as
reformist movements to correct what their founders perceived as wrong or
unwanted in the society, the Hindus did not suppress these reformers but
gave them the freedom and space to grow. Sri Adi Shankaracharya brought
many back to the Hindu fold not through force, coercion, incentives or
threat but by preaching in the form of debates.
Thus, Indian virtues like ‘pluralism’, ’tolerance’, ’freedom of thought’
and ‘Universal welfare’ pre-date the arrival of the ‘secular’ concept in
India. This point needs to be emphasized as in today’s India ‘secularism’
is unjustifiably credited for all these Indian virtues and the term is
being misused to suppress the movement of ‘national renaissance’ also
known as Hindutva that aims at preserving the very culture which actually
deserves credit for these age-old virtues of India.
Secularism originated in Europe centuries ago when the Kings revolted and
overthrew the theocratic hegemony of the Pope from over their kingdoms and
established their own rule. But India has never known such a conflict,
thus the western secularism never was relevant for India. However today
many Indians perceive ‘secularism’ to be a synonym of ‘pluralism’ and
‘tolerance’, but they perceive the very culture that blessed the Indian
society with these noble features from the Western perspective of being a
“religion”.
The pseudo-seculars in India who swear by secularism would like to have us
believe that any threat or challenge to the concept of secularism in India
would endanger the age-old pluralism of the country. Little do these
self-proclaimed defenders of secularism realize that wherever in the
Indian subcontinent Hinduism declines, with it declines the support for
secularism too (whichever kind of secularism that may be). Pakistan &
Bangladesh two of our neighbouring countries were formed out of the same
territory and people of undivided India, yet they are far from being
secular.
The need of the hour for India is the recognition of the fact that India
does not owe its great virtues of pluralism, diversity and tolerance to
any western concept or ideology, but to the influence over India of Vedic
culture and philosophy. And also to be understood is the fact that India’s
age-old virtues shall not be endangered by the questioning of the
relevance of secularism to the world’s oldest and most pluralistic
civilization.
India has always been a country that has welcomed reforms, and encouraged
new ideas. It has never resorted to prejudicial behavior. Unfortunately
the manner in which the self-proclaimed seculars in India spew venom over
the movement of ‘national renaissance’ and call for ‘de-saffronization’ is
in reality an act that is ‘de-Indianizing’ as it does not go well with the
ethos of our ancient country which tolerated different views.
Chinmay Bajekal
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