Tuesday 17 March 2015

In Politics Women Must Avoid Seeking Patronized Entry

International Women’s Day is a time for celebration, to mark the challenges women have overcome in the fight for equality. But it’s also a time for honest stocktaking, and this is particularly relevant in India where women suffer from severe disabilities. The answer may lie less in legislation like the Women’s Reservation Bill and more in women supporting each other, building political bases from the grassroots and fighting those tough battles that need to be fought     

The biggest challenge facing Indian women today is the criminalization of India’s polity and its domination by money and muscle power. The governance machinery is heavily criminalized and corruption scams are a product of that criminalization. Any society where violence and crime dominate, women tend to get marginalized. The answer does not lie in demanding reserved quotas in legislatures. The answer lies in decriminalizing the machinery of governance and decriminalizing our polity.  A polity in which crime and corruption thrive and is therefore hostile even to honest men cannot possibly be women friendly.
India has taken some baby steps on the road to decriminalizing our polity. For instance, the new rules and regulations about disclosure of assets, etc. are good.  But there is no system in place for taking action if the person concerned under reports or under values assets. The system requires a far more thorough overhaul.  However, very often in the name of course correction, we add far more problems. Take the example of election expenditure; it’s an accepted fact that the expenditure mandated by the Election Commission is totally unrealistic. These days even Delhi University elections are not fought within that limit.

Now when an unrealistic and impractical law is made, people will find ways of sabotaging that provision and find underhand means of doing it. No one can say that money power is not playing an important role in our elections; no one can say that bribes are not given on election eve, or freebies and all manners of inducements are not offered to buy votes, all this is happening despite a fairly vigilant Election Commission. So the rules of the game need to change far more drastically.  
Lack of Political Base
The slower the overhaul and reform of government and governance, the slower will be the pace at which women will come into their own. Take for example the current Cabinet, it’s not that there are no women there but most of them don’t have a political base. They are there because somebody or the other gave them ‘patronized entry’. By contrast, somebody like Sumitra Mahajan is there in her own right. She has won elections time and again on her own strength and therefore her presence has a different kind of meaning than the presence of those who are Rajya Sabha material, don’t have their own political base and who are there only because a powerful male leader patronized them.  
It’s only when women with an independent political base start coming into politics, when women are mobilized in the manner our caste leaders mobilize their caste brethren as vote banks that women leaders will carry some weight and clout.  But very few women leaders are working in that direction. The few who have cared to mobilize a political base of their own become even more powerful than men.  Whatever the flaws in the style of functioning of Mamata Banerjee, Mayawati or Jayalalitha -- all these women are powerful in their own right and even men tremble before them. Why? Because they don’t depend on men, on the contrary male leaders curry favour with them.

They are far from ideal politicians but it goes to their credit that they created their own political base and therefore they actually represent the face of the empowered women. But a notable feature about successful women politicians in India is that most of them have turned out to be very whimsical, vindictive and cranky. There are a few exceptions like Sheila Dikshit and Anandiben Patel—both of whom have maintained a measure of restraint in their behaviour.
However, the tragedy of Indian politics is that the women who succeed, like Mamata Banerjee, Sonia Gandhi, or Mayawati, do so by proving they can outcompete men in the dirt and grime of politics. They can outdo men in all the wheeling and dealing required to win elections. So their presence doesn’t improve the nature and quality of politics.   This is quite contrary to the Gandhian vision. Gandhi believed that women would lead the war against war, that women’s entry into politics would cleanse politics, it would rid politics of money and muscle power and it would bring benign feminine qualities into play. But what we are witnessing is the very opposite: women are masculinising themselves rather than feminizing politics.  They are proving themselves no less crooked than men and often far more authoritarian and power crazed than men.
These women are remarkable in their own right but have played the game by the rules created by the worst of male politicians.  That is why none of them are women friendly because they are not cleansing politics.  
Political parties are the prime instruments of democracy. If they are run as personal fiefdoms, if there is no inner party democracy and transparency in their decision making processes, such parties cannot nurture real talent.  Only sycophants and manipulators can thrive in such outfits. So you cannot enhance the participation of women in any meaningful way in our polity, if the nature of our political parties and institutions of governance, don’t change radically.  
Thus far BJP has attracted far more women workers than most other parties. It has even more women spokespersons than any other party and yet not many women leaders in the BJP can be said to be powerful in their own right. Even a senior like Sushma Swaraj depends on CM of Madhya Pradesh, Shivraj Chauhan to provide her a "safe" seat.
Ironically, we now have several women headed political parties - Sonia Gandhi leads the Congress, Jayalalitha heads AIADMK, Mamata Banerjee is the unquestioned leader of Trinamool Congress, Mehbooba Mufti of PDP and Mayawati of BSP. But that hasn't really brought forth women as a powerful bloc within these parties. At best, they are brought in for street demonstrations and electioneering. But they haven't emerged as strong satraps with ground support.
The case of AAP, the newest entrant on the political scene is the most interesting. Though this party has adopted the most politically correct position on women's rights, and has a couple of effective female spokespersons, not many women got or won on AAP tickets. And there is not a single woman in Kejriwal's new cabinet. No one is complaining that Rakhi Bidlan has been dropped because she was quite a joke as Women and Child Development Minister during Kejriwal’s first stint as CM.
Today, women are taking more interest in politics. In drawing room conversations earlier men would herd together on one side discussing politics while women would be discussing family affairs. But now at least educated women are engaged in political discussions, they are taking an independent stand, they are more engaged in public affairs.  But that has not translated into women being organised as a steadfast vote bank. This despite the fact that issues of women's safety, mobility, access to education and jobs are fairly high in public discourse and almost every party swears by the need to strengthen women's rights.
Taking Short Cuts
This situation has arisen because women in politics themselves are taking shortcuts and want to continue their dependence on men. Women in India have a distinct history in comparison say with women from Western countries, where they had to fight fierce battles to find a space for themselves in public life and politics. The right of women to vote in America and Europe came after very prolonged and  bitter struggle. Right to equality, equal pay for equal work, took long battles which women waged on their own strength. So they came to organize themselves as a viable vote bank. They mobilized women qua women to take charge of their own affairs, instead of merely waiting for men to give them their due
In India, starting from the 19th century reform movements to the Gandhi-led freedom movement we have witnessed male reformers take up women's issues. These men faced the brunt of social criticism for challenging discriminatory and oppressive social norms vis a vis women. They protected women from direct attacks. Numerous male reformers in different regions of  India dedicated their entire lives to removing crippling restrictions and social disabilities imposed on women. As a result of tireless efforts of men like Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar in Bengal, Justice Ranade and Mahatma Phule in Maharashtra, Veeransalingam in Andhra,  Lala Devraj in Punjab and a host of others in different parts of India, women could begin to reclaim their lost rights in the public domain, including the right to education and jobs in the "Modern" sectors of the economy.
During the freedom movement, especially after it came to be led by Mahatma Gandhi, women's rights movement received even greater strength and support. It is noteworthy that as early as 1919, the Congress party elected Annie Besant as its president. In 1925, Sarojini Naidu became the president of the Congress and by 1930, the Congress Party formally passed a resolution that in free India, women would be guaranteed constitutional equality. Thus the right to vote, the right to hold political office, the right to equal pay for equal work, etc. came to Indian women much before many of the European countries were ready for it. What is more it came without having to beg, grovel or fight against men. By contrast, women in western countries had to face enormous hostility and humiliation including violent attacks in their struggle for these rights.
But this spontaneous support Indian women got from men also led to a culture of dependence unlike in the West where women learnt to fight largely on their own steam. It also means men can draw the line—thus far and no more any time they decide to do so. In India women did not need to wage a gender war against men to claim their due. Mahatma Gandhi in particular worked hard to create a respect worthy space for women in public life. He wanted women to be leaders of men and not come mainly to add numbers in the movement. He reiterated time and again that his choice of non-violence as a weapon of struggle had a lot to do with wanting to see women play a leading role in the freedom movement. It’s well established that whenever violence dominates social life women get pushed to the margins but when non-violence is adopted as a dharma, women don’t have much difficulty in proving themselves equal or even better than men. That is why during the Gandhi led freedom movement numerous women like Kamladevi Chattopadhyaya and Hansa Mehta emerged in different parts of India and they were not just confined to the women's wing of the Congress party but became leaders of men as well. In those days, Congress had committed party workers in every city, town, district and even at the village level.
Biwi Beti Girl Friend Brigade of Indian politics
However in post independence India as money and muscle power came to slowly dominate our political life, women started falling behind. This is because Nehru did not care to democratize the machinery of governance. He let the same old colonial system of administration continue unchecked. Since lack of accountability is inherent in the system that the British left behind, corruption and tyranny are its inevitable products. In this system, holding a political office is as good as holding a loot license. Hence politics too became a game of plunder. In such a situation even honest men find it difficult to survive in politics. It is noteworthy that most eminent Gandhians withdrew themselves from the electoral arena and confined themselves to social work. Therefore, the only kind of women who found a place in politics were those who could be as ruthless and unscrupulous as men or those who got a patronized entry into politics through familial connections with powerful political satraps. Today, most women politicians fall in the category of Biwi Beti Brigade. The reservation of women at panchayat and zila parishad level has strengthened this tendency. Men who are asked to vacate their seat for a term because its reserved for women, manage to convince the party bosses that the seat should be assigned to their wife or some other female relative so it remains a safe citadel for the family.
Barring exceptions, such women are there to safeguard their family interests not to safeguard the interests of women or their constituents. They are willing to play by the same foul rules of the game that men play. That’s why their presence in politics does not work to empower women as a group.

But things have gotten far worse in the last decade and a half. If earlier, the Biwi Beti Brigade cornered whatever little space was available to women in politics, now girlfriends and mistresses are also claiming that space. The earlier generations of politicians too had their 'aiyyashi' but they kept that side of their life under cover. But today, the "casting couch" phenomenon has raised its ugly head in virtually every political party. One hears horrid accounts of how young women who are not connected to any powerful male leader through family ties have to oblige male leaders in demeaning ways. Sexual exploitation in political parties is no less rampant than in the film or fashion industry.
Earlier, the girl friends and mistresses of politicians were kept in the background. Now these women are flaunting themselves openly and demanding not just party tickets to fight elections but also ministerial berths. So if we introduce reserved quota for women in our legislature, this new breed is likely to corner a large chunk of the quota along with the Biwi Beti Brigade. At least, the wives and daughters commanded a measure of respect from male politicians because they maintained a degree of dignity in their conduct with men. But women who use powerful men to climb up are treated with utter disdain by their party colleagues. They also have a very demoralising effect on other young women seeking a foothold in politics. The message is clear - your work doesn't but ability to manipulate men or willingness to be subservient to men's needs is what takes you forward. This is an important factor why ordinary women who value their dignity and don’t wish to use sex for climbing up, shun politics. Since ordinary women are averse to joining politics because of such adverse conditions, every party is short of women workers. This is an important reason why not enough women get tickets.
Those who feel concerned about the inadequacy of female representation in our politics need to address these issues. Without cleansing politics of crime and corruption, without ensuring a dignified environment for women, without genuine inner party democracy you cannot attract large numbers of female political workers. In such a situation, it is unrealistic to expect political parties to field enough women candidates.
On The Plus Side
But the situation is not all grim. The most hopeful aspect of Indian politics is that ordinary voters are not at all averse to electing women or seeing them in positions of power. The data from the very first election onward clearly shows that the success rate of women candidates is far higher than that of male candidates. This indicates that if a credible woman candidate appears on the scene, voters tend to prefer her over men. Feminists keep crying discrimination. Yes, party bosses discriminate against women but we should draw strength from the fact that voters are not biased against women. If anything they show a distinct bias in favour of women. Look at the way Indira Gandhi came to be lionized as Durga incarnate as she grew more domineering. Her emergence as a political leader who created fear among her male colleagues was celebrated, not ridiculed. She was admiringly called "the only man" in her cabinet. Such a woman wouldn’t fare so well in the West, or become a loved icon the way Indira became, till she turned despotic and became marred with charges of corruption and nepotism. A Durga-like woman does not  easily get such admiration among men in the West leave alone command reverence and awe. But in India, all those women who assume the role of powerful matriarchs and learn to command men, do very well. But those who keep whining about equality or operate under male patronage don’t reach too far.
It’s to do with the all pervasive mother complex in our society. Even grown up men are expected to and are respected for being reverential towards their mothers. Unconditional obedience to a mother's commands are held up as a cultural ideal. Such a man in the West would be sent to a psychiatrist for Oedipal complex and treated as an infantile creature. But in our culture, feminine as Shakti is treated as worship worthy. Smart women use it well to their advantage.
It is not a coincidence that all the powerful women politicians in recent decades have either been single or widows. Mamata Banerjee and Mayawati never married. Sonia Gandhi came into her own only after she became a widow.
Jayalalitha too acquired real clout and aura only after MGR’s death.  Sheila Dikshit may have gained entry into politics as a daughter-in law –but she came to be counted only after her husband and father-in law passed away.
On the Women’s Reservation Bill
I have serious reservations about the women’s reservation bill even though I do wish to see serious enhancement in women’s participation in politics. The Bill is highly flawed in its present form and needs serious reformulation. We had presented an Alternative Bill which was adopted by the Election Commission of India as a far more viable proposal. (for detail description http://manushi.in/articles.php?articleId=1100#.VQgPstKUeGN)
I am of the firm belief that cleansing politics of crime and corruption of eliminating the role of muscle is far more important at this point in time than ensuring quotas for women.  If women were to lead the battle for far reaching political reforms and succeed in the task, that will automatically create a respect worthy place for them in electoral politics.
There is no substitute for creating an independent political base through solid work. Can the Quota Brigade claim in all honesty that they have done the required ground work and are yet denied tickets?  Women weaken themselves by seeking patronized entry. That prevents the emergence of an effective women’s lobby in our politics. They see each other as competitors rather than comrades and colleagues. It is noteworthy that most women leaders don’t get along with women within their own parties; instead of promoting each other, they try and under cut each other. A Minakshi Lekhi would see a Nirmala Sitharaman as a threatening rival rather than rejoice in the other’s elevation. Likewise Jayanti Natarajan won’t be pleased at Ambika Soni’s elevation. But they all play rhetorical tribute to women’s empowerment. Women as a group remain weak because each one vies for male patronage rather than bond with other women.  In the West, women gained strength as a group because they had to bond with each other in the face of a hostile male dominated establishment. In India, women have instead sought patronized entry which can help individual women but not women as a group.
But we must remember that women have made a mark for themselves in European democracies mainly because the rules of the game were already relatively clean. Take the case of Scandinavian countries where women have even crossed the 50% mark without reserved seats. They could do so because there is genuine inner party democracy with a high degree of transparency in their functioning.  There women mobilized bottom up – starting from neighborhood politics. That’s how they built a solid political base for their participation. The trouble with my feminist sisters in India is that they don’t want to start at mohalla level and fight municipal corporation elections. They want to get MLA and MP tickets straight away simply because they come from elite backgrounds, are articulate and have access to media. You can’t get your due place in politics by going and shouting in TV studios, making statements in press or raving and ranting against male politicians.  If you want to be served parosi thali by men, then you have to accept a secondary status.
For all their rhetorical radicalism, the pro reservation lobby of feminists can’t mobilize even 20,000 women to come and demonstrate in Delhi, leave alone display a massive support base in the way a Mamata Banerjee or Narendra Modi can do.  That is why they are not taken seriously.  

First published in Parliamentarian, March 2015


Posted on March 17, 2015

Monday 26 January 2015

How NaMo Transformed Sarkari Festivals into People’s Festivals


It speaks volumes that two of the most important days in the political calendar of modern India – namely Independence Day and Republic Day – are marked by mere sarkari ceremonies.  On August 15 school children are brought in as audiences under the hot sun or pouring rain to be passive audiences at the PM’s speech to the nation.  On 26 January, the sarkari function is a long spectacle with armed forces followed by school children going down Rajpath in a grand parade peppered with colorful floats of each state.  However, for all its grandeur, the Republic Day is without any participatory role for the public. (See my article: Some Thoughts on India's Republic Day ‏ --Republic Day Celebrations without the Public The same pattern is repeated on a lower scale in all state capitals.

For the average citizen, both these days are just two more official holidays – though more quiet and relaxing than most because even the bazaars are compulsorily shut down.
However, Narendra Modi changed all that  in the second year of his term as  chief minister of Gujarat. From 2003 onwards he converted these two deadpan official functions as well as the May 1st, Gujarat founding day celebrations into people’s festivals with the government of course playing a leading creative role. The first major change  it involved was to shift these functions away from the state capital into the various districts of the state. In 2003, he announced that henceforth the focus of celebrations on January 26, May 1st and August 15 would not be only in the state capital as is the practice in all the states of India.  Each of these major functions would be celebrated in a different district of Gujarat. This didn’t mean simply replicating the standard official function in some district headquarter.  It meant a whole new orientation.  The function was not only made participatory but the occasion began to be used to give that particular district a total facelift and a new pride in its own unique history regional culture as well as the past and present accomplishment of its people.
When Modi first announced that the locale for the 2003 Independence Day celebrations would be the ancient historic town of Patan, Gujarat Congressmen protested vehemently.  They even held black flag demonstrations and organized their own parallel function as a matter of protest.  The Gujarat media too gave big mileage to these protests and made it out as if this was some kind of mad Tuglaqi move of NaMo.  They held similar protests for the Republic Day and Gujarat Founding Day celebrations in district towns. But these protests dwindled in size and significance as these regional functions became more and more popular and evoked an enthusiastic response for the following reasons:
1)   Whichever district got selected for hosting the Republic Day, the Gujarat Day or Independence Day celebrations, was simultaneously expected to prepare well in advance a whole list of small and big development projects for the area.  The Deputy Commissioner (DC) of the district prepared this list by consulting local panchayats and municipal corporations.  DCs were also encouraged to come up with their dream projects for the area that involved innovation and had the potential to infuse new life into the district.  These projects ranged from minor things like a new bus terminal in a hitherto poorly connected place, water harvesting structures, a new Industrial Training Instituteor new hospital, new hostel or connecting government schools to e-learning or a major river front development project with new recreational and commercial complexes built into it.  The budgets for these were also sanctioned with speed well in advance and each DC made to deliver those projects within the given time frame.  The budget typically ran into Rs 1000 to Rs 2000 crores depending on the size and requirements of the district. 
2)   Fifteen days before the scheduled event all the Cabinet ministers were made to tour the district not just to oversee the satisfactory completion of commissioned projects but to inaugurate those falling within their ministry’s domain.  A day before the event the chief minister arrived in the district and inaugurated some of the major projects.  Thus in one go the selected district would witness major uplift in civic infra-structure and new educational and health facilities leading to all round development in a time bound manner.
3)   The local government in each instance was also mandated to launch a major cleanliness drive for the entire district with the aim of making it garbage free. This included setting up the required municipal systems for garbage management.  Modi made it a point to communicate to people of the district in his public speech that from then on it was their job to maintain high level of hygiene and cleanliness in their district.  The district headquarter in particular underwent major sprucing up.  On the eve of the big day, the district headquarter would also be lit up and decorated to make key segments of the town carry a festive look.  Its impact on society at large can be gauged from the fact that many commercial establishments as well as private homes joined the celebration by lighting up their respective buildings.
4)   On the eve of Republic Day, Gujarat Day and Independence Day a major cultural program began to be organized in the district headquarters.  Typically 30,000 to 50,000 persons attend the meticulously arranged cultural program also attended by the chief minister. Almost everyone is provided proper chairs even though the scale is mammoth.  World class audio-visual arrangements are made so that even with a giant gathering, there is no disorder and no chaos and the program is seen and heard by the last person in the last row.  I attended two such programs (Republic Day 2013 in Bhuj and Independence Day 2013 in Banaskantha). The discipline and orderly arrangements in both were awe-inspiring. 
The unique thing about this two hour cultural program is that it is neither a Bollywood song and dance bonanza as is becoming common in India these days in the name of cultural programs, nor is it marked by amateurish performances as is common in small towns of India.  The artists are always local but they are given proper professional training even though many may be performing for the first time.  The two functions I attended involved an elaborate high tech-audio-visual dance drama that enacted the history of Bhuj and Banaskantha districts respectively. They were both conceptualized and directed by known Gujarati writers with Gujarat Government’s Secretary of Info and Culture Bhagyesh Jha, himself a known poet and writer, playing a key role in formulating the script and artistic inputs.  Both these docu-dramas provided a scintillating crash course in the socio-political and cultural history of that district from times immemorial to the present day. Both provided gripping performances that included hi-tech audio-visual inputs, regional music, dance, poetry and dramatic narrative through selecting key revealing moments in the history of the area.  Both had world-class sound and light effects.  Both used local artists from within the district.
Another major highlight of the evening bonanza is that, NaMo set the tradition of honoring local heroes – be they educationists, artists, writers, medical professionals or dedicated social workers selected through a transparent process.  This too generates a great deal of public enthusiasm in the entire district.
But the biggest star of the show would be NaMo himself who would deliver a public address exhorting people to take pride in their region along with other social-political messages.
Thus the entire focus of the Republic Day Gujarat Day and Independence Day eve programs is to enhance the self esteem of that region and get familiarized with their own unique history and culture – not just celebrate being Indian or being Gujarati but also celebrate their own micro regional cultural identity.  By combining folklore, mythology with cultural and political history, these programs encourage young people to value the study of their past and celebrate their local heroes.  However, they have meaning for the rest of Gujarat as well.  Through these programs, each region of the state gets to better understand and appreciate other regions of the state.
The next day the celebrations are more official – the usual parade or flag hoisting and a formal address of the chief minister to the people of his state.
It is fortunate that Anandiben Patel, the new chief minister of the state has decided to keep alive this tradition with equal aplomb.   
This time Narendra Modi has not had time to refashion the Independence Day celebration into a people’s festival as he did in Gujarat because he has had no breathing space from the day of his swearing-in on May 26, 2014.  The main change that one witnessed this time in Independence Day celebrations at Red Fort was that space for over 30,000 ordinary citizens had been provided to witness the Prime Minister’s address to the nation from the ramparts of Lal Quila.  But this is too little going by NaMo’s penchant for bringing about major tectonic shifts in the way things are done in government.  I hope by the time of the coming Republic Day, he has acquired enough grip over governance in Delhi to make 26 January 2014 the most historic Republic Day in Post-independence India.

Reposted on January 26, 2015


Republic Day Celebrations without the "Public"

With US President Barack Obama as the chief guest at the Republic Day function this year necessitating unprecedented security measures in Delhi, the following article (written some three years ago) on the absurdity of celebrating Republic Day while shunning ordinary citizens becomes all the more relevant.

I have never felt like celebrating 15th August, Independence Day. For me, coming from a family of Partition refugees, it marks the date of India’s Partition.  However, I do want to celebrate Republic Day because it is on this date in 1950 that the Indian Constitution came into effect. It is a document held sacred by millions of its citizens, including those of us who think its drafting was an elitist exercise and did not incorporate some of the key concerns of Mahatma Gandhi and his vision of institutions that would promote a culture of Self Rule or Swaraj.
But despite its limitations and flaws it offers each citizen—rich or poor --the promise of equality and many important freedoms as fundamental rights.
The government of India, however, has a strange notion of what is an appropriate way to celebrate the occasion; it not only shuts down all its offices but forces by law all commercial and corporate establishments to take a compulsory holiday.Public transport is also withdrawn. In Delhi for instance, the Metro and Delhi Transport Corporation run only a skeletal service—that too after the Republic Day Parade is over. Even flights are not allowed to take off from or land till the Parade is over and done with. Streets are deserted, markets are all shut and our usually bustling urban centres look like ghost cities.
There was a time, anyone could go and witness the celebrity Parade on Rajpath in Delhi by turning up early enough to get seats in the janata enclosure. Today, only VIPS are allowed access anywhere near Rajpath. The “people” who gather to witness the parade are overwhelmingly government officials, politicians and their families. There was a time thousands would gather en route to welcome the Parade as it moved from India Gate to Red Fort. Today, security scares have resulted in far fewer people venturing out  of their homes to cheer the marchers. In smaller towns the celebrations are even more dull and grim, with bored school children brought in to sing the national anthem and applaud bored officials who do the flag hoisting ceremony while the population at large is excluded from any role on what is supposed to be a historic day for citizens’ rights in India.
But nothing saddens me more than the pompous display of military might during the Republic Day Parade in Delhi. Instead of happy citizens we see contingent after contingent of military regiments—Punjab, Madras, Bihar, Assam Rifles, Gorkha et al-- march past the President, Prime Minister and other dignitaries gathered at Rajpath. They are followed by the display of the muscle and might of our air force and navy. The soldiers are accompanied by armoured tanks, ballistic missiles, anti aircraft guns, torpedoes and other deadly weapons.  These are followed by various contingents of armed police—the CRPF, Railway Security Force, Border Security Force, CRPF, CISF and the works. Why on earth did our post independent rulers choose this Soviet style display of the armed might of the Indian state on of alldays, Republic Day? Is it meant to make the rulers feel secure from their own people? Or is this display of weaponry and military--police power meant to awe and frighten the citizens?
This is not at all to belittle the vital role played by our brave soldiers in defense of  India but simply to point out that there are better occasions to celebrate our armed might. January 26 ought to be a people’s festival. Instead it has become a deadpan sarkari ritual. It is significant that the colourful and lively contingents of school children and folk dancers come at the fag end of the Parade. In a genuine republic people come first. It is only where there are militaristic authoritarian regimes that coercive arms of the state machinery take precedence over people.
After giving us a glimpse of the gung ho, macho Indian state, we are subjected to a series of mostly unimaginative tableaux put together by various state governments and Public Sector Undertakings.
Deprived of the life force and energy that ordinary people bring to any occasion with their participation, the Republic Day Parade has become such a sombre event that TV cameras hardly catch a happy or smiling face among the select audience, except when school children or folk dancers appear on the scene or jaanbaaz soldiers display their acrobatic skills on motor cycles. Our ministers and bureaucrats look bored as though going through a tough ordeal. 

Narendra Modi had changed the face of Republic Day and Independence Day celebrations in Gujarat by transforming them into vibrant events with far greater participation of local people. I hope something similar is done to transform these two historic days in Delhi as well.

Postscript:
One of my young friends, Wahid Parra from Kashmir, happened to be in Delhi on 26th January--his first experience of Republic Day in Delhi. He went to Connaught Place thinking the city centre will be in a festive mood. His shock at what he saw is aptly summed up in the following words: "Madhuji it was like being in Kashmir on Republic Day. There everything shuts down due to hartaalcall given by terrorists/ separatists. But here the government is enforcing ahartaal on the entire population. Strange country indeed!"

Posted on 26th January 2015

Monday 12 January 2015

Decoding PK: Despite Fun and Frolic, the Undertone is Anti-Hindu

Let me state at the outset that PK is an eminently entertaining film, though it claims to raise serious issues. Cinematically, too, the film is a visual treat in many parts. The dialogues are crisp and punchy. The use of Bhojpuri dialect, with its quaint mixture of English words in their Bhojpuri-fied avatar, adds enormously to the fun and frolic in the film. All in all, there is a hardly a dull moment in the two-and-a-half hour saga of an alien creature landing on our planet and experiencing endless culture shocks in his encounters with the various specimens of humanity on earth.
But what gets him befuddled is the all-pervasive god obsession among human beings and how this sentiment is manipulated for personal aggrandisement by spiritual gurus. Exposing phony and crooked spiritual leaders is not a new or unusual theme in Bollywood films. From its days of inception, Bollywood has portrayed a whole range of holy men, from the innately compassionate and elevated ones to outright thugs and criminals masquerading as sadhus and swamis. Bollywood has also often ridiculed the tendency of people to put blind faith in people either claiming supernatural powers or speaking as though they are actual representatives of god on earth.
The relationship between humans and divine beings has been put through repeated scrutiny – both through a comic lens and hard-hitting satire as well as through the eyes of socio-religious reformers. But since there is no dearth ofgenuine spiritual gurus, ascetics and sanyasis in Bollywood films, no one really takes offence.
The most recent example of a very rigorous questioning of the very existence of god and those who claim to speak on his behalf was the Umesh Shukla directed film, Oh My God. A much earlier film in the same genre entitled Yehi Hai Zindagi (1977) was even more audacious in challenging the supremacy of god face to face rather than merely challenging his self-appointed representatives on earth. There are numerous other such examples of Bollywood presenting the relations between humans and divinities in ways that demand accountability of gods or challenges their wisdom in letting wrong-doers prosper.
Hindus are used to laughing at their gods and even picking quarrels with them. Therefore, films that indulge in rebellious dialogues with the divine have hardly ever caused upsets in the way PK has done. Instead of disdainfully dismissing the outrage around PK as a product of the resurgence of obscurantist Hindutva forces, we need to try and understand why this particular film has evoked such outrage.
To begin with, director Rajkumar Hirani has tried to be too clever by half by deviously proclaiming that he has the blessings of BJP leaders as well as that of one of the most popular spiritual gurus, Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. The film begins with the following opening credits. The first one says:
Earnest Gratitude
LK Advani
Pratibha Advani
Amitabh Bachchan
Amitabh Jhunjhunwala
The second slide reads as follows:
Earnest Gratitude
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar ji (The Art of Living Foundation)
Dr Prannoy Roy (NDTV)
Andre Timmins, Sabbas Joseph & Virat Sarkari (Kingdom of Dreams)
One can understand NDTV or Kingdom of Dreams being thanked by Hirani because he used their facilities for shooting certain scenes of his film. But bringing in LK Advani and Amitabh Bachchan is clearly meant to use them as shields against criticism by Hindutva groups. Luckily for Hirani, LK Advani actually endorsed the film enthusiastically, but Sri Sri Ravi Shankar has good reason to be displeased with the use of his name and visual shots of his ashram in the film.
Hirani filmed the Shivratri Sangat at Sri Sri’s ashram under the false pretext that his projection of it would respect the spirit of the festival organised by the ashram. But then he superimposed the character of a very devious and thuggish spiritual guru on the real life sangat of Sri Sri’s ashram with the clear purpose of trashing the very institution ofdharma gurus. By this clever gimmick, Hirani not only betrayed Sri Sri’s trust but also played foul with thousands of Sri Sri devotees whom he filmed live. They are presented as gullible fools who dance to the tunes of an evil dharma guru.
Sri Sri is
Sri Sri's trust was betrayed by the makers of the film
It would have been quite another matter if Hirani had created his own filmy sangatwith hired actors playing mock devotees. But to caricature and demean real life people who come motivated by deep faith to their chosen dharma guru – without as much as a by-your-leave-- can only be called outright fraud.
Secondly, the phony credit line mentioning Sri Sri makes it out as if he has blessed the film. This puts Sri Sri in a very awkward position. Firstly, shots of his own ashram andsangat are being used to defame him by implication. Secondly, Hirani is making out as if Sri Sri actually endorses Hirani’s all-out attack on dharma gurus. This is a double whammy on Sri Sri, and totally unethical at that!
Many defenders of PK have raised the point that Hindu groups did not attack Oh My God even though it is no less devastating in exposing the frauds of those claiming to be spiritual gurus. They argue that attacks on PK are in large part because OMG had a Hindu hero while PK has Aamir Khan, a Muslim, as the hero.
There is no doubt that Aamir Khan has been the special target of ire of Hindu groups. But that is not because he is a Muslim but because he is the lead voice of the “secular brigade” which has demeaned and demonised Hindu groups and political parties like the BJP in the guise of fighting allegedly communal politics of BJP. Hindu groups are outraged at him because he was a lead player in the Teesta Setalvad-Tarun Tejpal-Shabana Azmi brigade that acted as the fighting sword of the Congress and Left parties against the BJP, in general, and Narendra Modi, in particular.
Aamir Khan’s attempts to cosy up to Modi and Modi’s willingness to befriend Aamir Khan has not softened Hindu groups because they feel their demonisation as fascists was totally unmerited. They are not quite ready to embrace Aamir Khan because he has not even expressed the slightest regret for his role in the Hate-BJP campaign.
It’s not easy to forget that Aamir Khan actually pleaded with voters to give a fractured verdict to prevent BJP from coming to power— not caring that India desperately needed a stable government after 10 years of disastrous coalitions cobbled together by the Congress party. People are angry because the “Secular Brigade” Aamir was part of did not fight an honourable political battle against the BJP; their politics was based largely on lies and hideous exaggerations.
Normally, people don’t hold actors responsible for the flaws of the story line or script. But Aamir is not just another actor. He is known to take deep interest in the minutest detail of the script, storyline and even technical aspects of any film he accepts to act in. Therefore, he can’t disown the political orientation of the film.
Comparison with Oh My God (OMG)
There is a world of difference between the content and intent as well as the approach ofOh My God, towards the issue of blind faith as compared to the worldview adopted inPKOh My God takes a very even-handed approach towards religious leaders of the three major faiths - Hindu, Christian and Islam. Even while the Hindu faith gurus get a special drubbing, it is fairly upfront in challenging the self-appointed guardians of other faiths.
But PK focuses obsessively on Hindu dharma gurus as well as Hindu deities. There is only one fleeting scene dealing with Christian priests promising redemption to poor families targeted for conversions. The scene involving a dargah very fleetingly shows the hero being chased out of the shrine because he naively carries wine bottles asprasad in a place of Islamic worship. But that only indicates the insensitivity of the iconoclastic hero, not a flaw in Islam. Likewise, he is shown causing a stir in a church because in his ignorance he tries to carry out Hindu puja rituals before an image of Jesus Christ. No words are exchanged, no pious sermons delivered by the hero challenging the Christian priests as to why Jesus is averse to accepting a coconut offering. In fact, the film studiously avoids dealing with the frauds within Christianity or Islam.
Other than these two harmless comic scenes, there is no attack on the core values or mythology of Christianity or Islam, whereas the core values - and not just the corruption of individual religious gurus of Hindu faith - are lampooned and caricatured mercilessly in diverse ways. While there is no denying that a certain number of hypocritical sants, swamis and gurus have brought a bad name to the Hindu faith, Hinduism is far from being the worst case example in this matter.
Core Values of Sanatan Dharma Attacked in PK
Some will argue that the film is not anti Hinduism per se but against the corrupt among Hindu dharma gurus. But Hinduism has perpetuated itself mainly through sampradaysand dharma gurus. They are not incidental to but an integral part of Hinduism. Therefore, an all-out attack on the very institution of dharma guru or sampraday is as good as an attack on Hinduism.
Most important of all, despite its ostensible intention of fighting harmful superstitions and unscrupulous gurus, the film is an outright, vicious attack against one of the core aspects of Sanatan Dharma—namely worship of the divine in its myriad, countless manifestations. Hindus are supposed to have 33 crore devis and devatas with new ones taking avatar whenever the devotees so desire. This freedom of devotees to call upon the divine to manifest to them in as many forms as the myriad devotees desire, as and when they desire, is something that none of the Abrahamic religions - Christianity, Islam and Judaism - have been able to stomach. In their world view, there is only ONEand ONLY ONE TRUE GOD. And each of them claims a monopoly over the exclusive way to reach this Almighty God. Each one of them rejects the god of the other Abrahamic religions as well as demonises the gods and goddesses of non-Abrahamic faiths as being not just “false” but also evil.
Representational image: AFP
Representational image: AFP
The Abrahamic god is also a “jealous” god who demands that his devotees wage relentless war against all “false gods” and their devotees who are derogatively termed as “kafirs and idol worshippers,” deserving the most hellish punishments. The believers of the one and only true god are expected and encouraged to wreak vengeance on worshippers of “false gods” as proof of their commitment to theOnly True God! This arrogance and claim to exclusivity has caused endless mayhem and havoc in the world, especially for people of Indic faith traditions as well as for Jews, who were ironically the originators of the idea of an almighty one and only true, ferociously jealous, god. The Jews faced an endless series of pogroms and ethnic cleansing all over the Christian and Islamic world. The only place they escaped persecution and violence has been India.
Hindus have been similar victims at the hands of Islamic invaders who carried out huge massacres and looted as well as vandalised and desecrated countless Hindu temples and deities. Allah’s zealous soldiers forced Hindus to give up their faith and convert to Islam largely through brutal means for over 1,000 years - all because the Allah of Muslims demanded ruthless elimination or subjugation of infidels. After them the British, Portuguese and French, who together colonised large parts of India, launched equally vicious attacks against the Hindu faiths as part of their “civilising missions” coupled with attempts to convert Hindus to Christianity. They may not have broken Hindu “idols” but they caused no less damage by enacting laws which allowed the state to control major shrines and temples and take away their landed properties and other assets.
This is not to deny that conversions to Islam and Christianity by the lower castes, especially untouchable groups, were at times a voluntary rejection of Hinduism on account of the demeaning treatment meted out to them. But most converts have been won over through a combination of force, violence, fraud and/or inducements.
Pluralism & Respect for “the Other” Innate to Hinduism
For most Hindus, the arrogant claims of Abrahamic prophets or religious leaders who present their god as such a mean-minded and tyrannical creature as to want the destruction of people of other faiths is an unacceptable way of dealing with the divine. As Tulsidas said in his inimitable way: “Jaaki rahi bhavna jaisi, Prabhu moorat tin dekhi taisi” (The temperament and emotional bent of the devotee determines the attributes he/she gives to his/her chosen god). The god of Abrahamic religions is tyrannical because through history most of those claiming to be sole spokespersons of that god have been tyrants. He shows mercy only to those who follow him exclusively and obey his commandments blindly. The commandments have come through prophets in the form of the one and only sacred book—the Bible for Christians, the Torah for Jews and the Koran for Muslims.
Representational image
Representational image
At the core of Classical Hinduism or Sanatan Dharmawith its philosophical moorings in Vedanta lie three basic propositions:
  1. God, or the divine power, is present in every living and non-living being. Thus there is no sharp divide between the human and divine, between human and other forms of life, between living and non-living. This finds popular expression in sayings such as “kan-kan mein hai Ram” (Ram, or the diving being, is present in every being, every atom in this universe). Hence, the worship of nature – in all its manifestations – rivers, mountains, trees, animals, birds and even pests and reptiles – is a characteristic feature of Sanatan Dharma.
  2. The purpose of life is to know and recognise this divinity not only within ourselves but also in each living and non-living being and become one within it. Once you accept the non-dualistic view of the world; there is no scope for “me” or “us” versus “others”. All religions, no matter how vast their theological differences and clash of dogmas or belief patterns, are supposed to lead one to union with the divine. Therefore, those who are truly spiritual, at one with the divine, cannot possibly have any quarrel with the followers of other theologies or religions or those following varied spiritual paths.
  3. Daily life is to be lived by codes of morality (dharmic codes) specific to different life situations, roles and relationships a person is involved in at different stages of life. Thus, there is pitra dharm (fatherly responsibilities and duties), matri dharm(those of a mother), padosi dharm (duty towards one’s neighbours) raj dharm(duties and responsibilities of a king), guru dharma (that of teachers), grihastha dharm (that of a householder), and so on. A person who performs his worldly duties in different situations and stations of life with integrity and steadfastness needs no formal prayers, no religious rituals to be close to god.
Just as Hindus have millions of devis and devatas, so also they have innumerable sacred texts, with each sampradaya free to choose whatever text it considers worthwhile. But none of these texts, including the two foundational texts of Hindu faith traditions - namely the Mahabharata and the Ramayana - claim to be the word of god or product of exclusive divine revelation. Each of them has been written by gifted mortals. None of our sacred epics, dharma shastras or even vedas issue commandments for their followers. Almost all of them state that the code of ethics to be followed by each person is time, culture and situation specific hence constantly evolving.
The most endearing part of Hindu faith traditions is that devotees and even non-devotees alike are allowed full freedom to laugh at, criticise and even punish their gods. Since there is no sharp divide between humans and divines, our gods and goddesses routinely take avatars and get born on earth as ordinary human beings. In their roles as sons, brothers, fathers, and friends they are judged by the same moral standards that you would judge ordinary human beings. They neither claim perfection nor any special rights in those roles. For instance, Lord Ram may be iconised as Maryada Purushottambut even today he was not been forgiven his ill-treatment of Ma Sita as depicted inValmiki Ramayana. Consequently, hundreds of Ramayanas have been written to force him to make amends for his unacceptable behaviour of subjecting Sita Ma to a fire ordeal and later abandoning her in a forest. In many latter-day Ramayanas, Ram is either an improved version of Tulsi Ramayana or is castigated harshly for his uncouth behaviour towards Sita. (For a detailed analysis read my essay, Yes to Sita, No to Ram” in Manushi issue No 98, 1999).
Likewise, Krishna died a tragic death because of the curse of Gandhari he willingly took upon himself for his role in the Mahabharata war. As Bal Gopal, he took endless scoldings and spankings from mother Yashoda for his naughty pranks as would any ordinary child. (For more details read my article “Of Humans & Divines in Manushi issue No 136 May-June 2003.
The Vedantic worldview was further strengthened and popularised by the Bhakti tradition that spread in wave after wave in different parts of India starting from the South in the 6th century AD. The sufi upsurge within Indic Islam in the medieval period popularised a version of this view among Muslims. The bhakti and sufi movements played a vital role in finding theological resolution to the historic clash between the polytheistic Indic faiths and the aggressively monotheistic Islamic worldview, building bridges of non-antagonistic communication and even friendship between the two. The essence of both these worldviews is that god dwells everywhere and in every being but especially among the humble and poor; that a good heart with love and compassion for all of god’s creatures brings a person much closer to god than any ritualistic practice, textual commandments or the dictates of any religious authority. To treat anyone as the “hostile other” is not to know god. A real heartfelt prayer reaches god, no matter whether performed in a church, mosque or mandir. Allah, Ishwar, Christ are different names for the same Divine Power.
ramayan
It is no coincidence that Mahatma Gandhi openly proclaimed that his idea of mutually respectful coexistence of diverse communities of India was deeply rooted in Sanatan Dharma and drew sustenance from the Bhakti tradition. His vision of Ram Rajya was that of an egalitarian society capable of protecting and respecting the rights of all citizens, irrespective of their caste, religious or class or gender identity. One of his favourite bhajans played in his regular prayer meetings, attended jointly by people of different faiths, says it all:

Raghupati Raghav Raja Ram, Patit pavan Sita Ram, Ishwar Allah tero naam, sabko samati de bhagwan.
(Lord Rama, Chief of the house of Raghu, Uplifters of the weak and the downtrodden, (O divine couple) Sita and Rama; Your name may be Ishwar or Allah, Please bless everyone with good sense and wisdom).
Such a prayer would be considered blasphemous by fundamentalists within Islam, Christianity or Judaism. For them such syncretic beliefs are the route to hell and perdition.
All these values give unique intellectual, social and spiritual freedom to followers of Hindu faiths. Devotees are free to choose their preferred deities, or even invoke new ones. One remains a Hindu even if one is an atheist, or agnostic. We are free to hold this or that book sacred or reject them all. We are also free to read the sacred texts of other faiths and imbibe in our conduct what we like of them. No one challenges a person’s right to be a Hindu even if the person goes and prays in a church or mosque rather than a temple. Belief in one’s own chosen deity/deities does not mean rejection of the gods and goddesses of other faiths as false or evil.
For most of us this easy and gracious acceptance of the right of each person to his/her own forms of worship as well as ways of relating to the divine is one of the greatest strengths of Hinduism.
PK’s Critique Identical to Islamic & Christian Critiques of Hinduism
The most objectionable part of PK is that it attacks these core values of Hinduism in the same vocabulary and spirit that Christianity and Islam have used to attack Hindu faiths. The message of the film given through PK is that people should worship the True Almighty God and not the various gods invented by human beings because that amounts to “dialing the wrong number”. PK would have us believe that “man-made gods” with distinct forms - Ganesh, Shiva etc - are invented by unscrupulous spiritual thugs to fleece and cheat people. He tells us that Lakshmi, Durga or Saraswati, or male gods like Shiva, Ram, Krishna or Ganesha, are all images created to mislead humanity. Praying to them amounts to “dialing the wrong number”. One will not get an answer simply because there is none there to answer. These are mere clay idols or “false gods”. The god who created us all is the ONLY ONE worth praying to. This is not one bit different from the theological basis of attacks by Christians and Muslims on Hinduism. This is why the film is offensive even to those of us not given to blind faith in spiritual entrepreneurs.
The Love Story Angle
Finally, let’s review the love story aspect that has irritated Hindu groups no less. At a time when the reported phenomenon of “love jihad”— ie, the entrapping of young Hindu, Christian or Sikh girls into phony love affairs and marriages with a view to converting them to Islam - has come to aggravate a large section of Hindus, this film projects the fleeting romance and sexual liaison between a Hindu girl from India with a Pakistani Muslim boy as the acme of the most sincere devoted love a man can ever have for a woman.
PK-love
To begin with, the objections of the heroine Jaggu’s father to her marrying a Pakistani are interpreted as a sign of Hindu communalism. The truth is that given the state of affairs in Pakistan, given the crude dominance of jihadi terrorist groups over Pakistani society and polity, even Indian Muslim parents are reluctant to marry their daughters to Pakistani grooms. The days when elite Indian Muslim families used to look across the border for suitable grooms and brides are well nigh over.

Today, the only ones keen to go to Pakistan are psychologically disturbed, Islamic zealots gravitating towards jihadi mayhem. They go to get arms training to spread terror. In such a situation, the concern of a Hindu father that his daughter might be endangering her very life by marrying a Pakistani is perfectly understandable. It is also well known that girls marrying even Indian Muslims have to convert to Islam and raise their children as Muslims. There is very little chance that a Hindu girl marrying a Pakistani Muslim can retain her faith, especially if the couple has to live in Pakistan. The systematic genocide and forced conversions of Hindus who were left in Pakistan following the 1947 partition as well as reports of large scale abductions of Hindu girls in Pakistan and Bangladesh would give nightmares to any parent at the prospect of his daughter having to live under the umbrella of terrorism and extremist Islam which has overtaken Pakistan. To project this anxiety as a subject of ridicule, as this film does, is to rub salt into deep, hurting wounds.
On the other hand, the euphoric response of the staff of the entire Pakistani embassy in Belgium to Jaggu’s reaching out to her long separated lover Imran makes it out as if getting Jaggu to marry Imran was a Pakistani state-sponsored project. The message: Hindus are all misguided and narrow-minded bigots whereas Pakistani Muslims are all tender-hearted liberals who embrace Hindu girls into their fold with love and warmth. One could have swallowed such an unrealistic scenario if the film was all fun and frolic. But under the humourous façade of this film is a serious message about the need to reject “false gods” while using stereotype versions of fraud gurus to proselytise people to worship the One and Only True God.
The same point of parental disapproval of an inter-faith, inter-country marriage could well have been driven home by picking on a Belgian or Spanish or even an African boyfriend for the film’s heroine. But projecting a marriage between a Pakistani Muslim man with a Hindu girl at a time when there is a virulent upsurge of jihadi elements within Pakistani and when the minuscule Hindu community in Pakistan is facing a literal genocide, when Hindu girls in Pakistan are being routinely abducted, subjected to sexual slavery and converted to Islam, the idea of a Hindu girl’s marriage to a Pakistani Muslim as the most idyllic example of matrimony can’t be digested that easily. If the purpose of the film is to say that all Muslims are not out to defraud Hindu women and that a Pakistani Muslim can also make a genuinely caring husband for a Hindu girl, there are better ways of getting across that message. But the gooey-gooey manner in which this film goes about projecting what on the surface appears like a casual, flippant romance makes one suspect a hidden agenda behind it all, especially since the Hindus are either presented as naïve, gullible idiots or as thugs and manipulators.
Hinduism has an infinite capacity for self-criticism, self-improvement and even withstanding attacks from outsiders. But the attacks hurt more when an insider attacks with the imperious arrogance of an outsider or when outsiders assume they have an exclusive copyright on perfection!
Post Script: Bizarre to Equate Paris Carnage with Protests over “PK”
Just as I finished writing this piece came the horrific news that three AI-Qaeda terrorists stormed the office of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, well known for lampooning politicians, public figures and religion, including Christianity and radical Islam. The attackers called out the names of these cartoonists they had come to wreak vengeance on. The masked gunmen shouted “Allahu Akbar” before gunning down and killing 12 people – two policemen and 10 journalists, including the editor of the weekly. Among the dead were four prominent cartoonists who had lampooned Islamic terrorists and Prophet Mohammad.
The spirit and tenor of the TV programmes discussing the Paris carnage was serious and non-aggressive. For instance, on Rajdeep Sardesai’s programme on Headlines Today, all the panelists, including those like Aamir Raza Hussain, who argued forcefully in favour of state censorship and self-censorship when dealing with matters of faith, were given a respectful hearing. There were no hysterical harangues against terrorists who gunned down French journalists and the condemnation was in measured tones.
AP
AP
This was in sharp contrast to the contempt and disdain with which critics of PK have been treated by media’s secular left liberals. The protestors againstPK were snubbed and humiliated on most TV channels as though they represented a sub-human species that did not understand the value of artistic freedom.
Most important of all, even while discussing the Paris carnage, almost every TV channel continuously referred to the intolerance shown by Hindu groups towards PK and other such portrayals as proof that Hindus were no less intolerant than Islamic jihadis. This attempt to draw equivalence between Hindu zealots and Islamic terrorists is indeed bizarre. Even the lunatic fringe of Hinduism has never gone for bloodshed and mayhem to express their religious hurt in the murderous manner in which militant jihadis are routinely expressing their defence of Islam.
The double-standard and attitude of open contempt displayed by left secular liberals towards Hinduism and its followers is what pushes a section of Hindu zealots into believing that their sentiments and hurt will be taken seriously only if they too start getting violent against people who outrage them. Centuries of being ridiculed and demeaned for their modes of worship and belief systems has unfortunately led a section of Hindus to think that they need to mould their gods and goddesses in the template of the ‘quick-to-take-offence’ Abrahamic God. To my mind, this would be the greatest tragedy for Hinduism.
It would be a great pity if we have to start treating our devis and devatas with the same awe and fear that the followers of Islam, Christianity and Judaism have to treat their Almighty God. In Hinduism, highly evolved human beings are even allowed to acquire greater power than gods. Hindu lore is full of stories of great tapasvis whose tapa gave them such exceptional powers that even gods had to do their bidding. Any woman who displays extraordinary valour or courage often gets to be called and even treated as Durga incarnate!
As pointed out by Sharda Ratan in his Open Letter to Bollywood,  "God Fearing is an English Term”, rooted in Christian theology. The Hindus use the term “Prabhu premi”(god loving). The ultimate aim of life for a Hindu is discover the divine within, not be fearful of god up above.
I pray and hope that we find better ways of protecting our faith traditions from ugly, gratitutous attacks than emulate the negative aspects of Judaic faiths by making our deities as quick to take offence and demand vengeance, as does the Abrahamic God. The fact that the Bajrang Dal and allied outfits who vandalised theatres running PK could not find more than 15-20 persons to join their hoodlum protests shows that the Hindu samaj is not endorsing their lawless ways of expressing hurt.
First posted at First Post: http://www.firstpost.com/bollywood/outrage-pk-really-sign-hindu-intolerance-2041285.html 

Madhu Kishwar

Madhu Kishwar
इक उम्र असर होने तक… … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … …اک عمر اثر ہونے تک