In his
autobiography ‘My Experiment with Truth’ Mahatma Gandhi wrote, “My devotion to
Truth has drawn me into the field of politics; those who say that religion has
nothing to do with politics, do not know what religion means.” It is no secret
that all the secular parties project themselves to be the messiah of the Muslims,
fighting for their rights and liberties. But by doing so, they take the
majority for granted. This aspect of Indian society was evident in the
concluded general elections. Narendra Modi in his pursuit to enhance his
secular credentials, didn’t lose the connect with the core ‘hindu’ votes. He
perpetually reached out to the ‘majority’ by invoking the policy of ‘justice to
all and appeasement of none’. Hence for the first time, ‘secularism’ has come
under intense scrutiny or in fact being challenged by the common mob.
In today’s world, religion
is a reality as well as a necessity. Even before the current phase of globalisation,
capitalist institutions like the market integrated vast areas and people in
different parts of the world. There were the capitalists and the wage-earners.
The wage earners were devoid of ownership of the means of production due to
their poverty. After being paid a subsistence wage, these workers were
alienated from the fruits of their labour due to the prevailing social
relations. Hence, they grasped the conception of God and institutions of
religion to compensate in imagination what they had
lost in the
real world. Religion was welcomed by them into their culture in order to make
the conditions of the ‘heartless world’ slightly more bearable. On the other
hand, capitalists needed religion to buffet the brutal uncertainties strewn in
their lives, both as individuals and firms, busy with the task of accumulating
capital. The capitalists may occasionally also need religion to be used as an
instrument to pacify potential rebels among wage-earners. Hence the words of
Marx that ‘religion is the opium of all masses’ is rightly justified as
religion comes to the rescue of these wage earners and prevents them from
fighting for their rights and liberties.
In the context of secularism,
there has been a considerable debate about the suitability of the concept and
practice of secularism in India. Secularism and religion are mismatched in an
Indian scenario since religion is irrational and makes a guarded attack on
modernity, while secularism signifies modernization. If secularism wants to
remove religion from the public life and culture of India, it’s not going to
happen.
HINDUTVA AND SECULARISM
Hindutva or
Cultural Nationalism is BJP’s conception of nationhood. According to the
judgement of Supreme Court of India, Hindutva is ‘a way of life’. It signifies
a culture of tolerance and universalism. The BJP owes its origin to the non
political organization such as the RSS and hence cannot relinquish the ‘Hindu
tag’. This explains the reason as to why Modi refused to wear the skull cap
during his ‘sadbhavana fast’ and refuses to apologise for 2002 riots. He also
chose a safe, Hindu dominated constituency of Varanasi to contest his first
election outside Gujarat. But what’s wrong with it? Modi proudly proclaims
himself to be a Hindu nationalist and wears its ideology in his sleeves.
Hindutva can
be distinguished as a faith and as an ideology. Hindutva as a faith means ‘a
way of life’,
a tradition that is non-monolithic and operationally plural. Religion as ideology,
on the other hand, is a sub national, national or cross-national identifier of
populations contesting for or protecting non-religious, usually political or
socio-economic, interests. Modernity produces religion and then generates
secularism to meet its challenge.
It is important to accentuate the ‘other
side’ of secularism too; the anti-religiosity
and the
hyper-substantive secularism which excludes religion from public life. It’s
time to privatize religion and rationalize politics. Secularism is criticised
for being invalid in circumstances where religion is of immense importance to people.
Modern culture is a mixed bag and its outright rejection may not be the best way
to have secularism. On the one hand,
modern culture has some frightening flaws like a drive to control; a purely
instrumental and destructive stance towards nature and human life, towards
poor, marginalized sections and victims of the savage side of capitalism. The onus
is on us to go for ‘my way’ or the ‘high way’.
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