By Swapan Dasgupta
In the late-1980s, and for a time between 1987 and
1991, Devi Lal became a prominent player on the national scene. Deeply rooted
in the politics and rural ethos of Haryana, he was known for his earthy wisdom
and disdain for all things that didn’t fit into his ‘kisan’ experience. A
particular target of his derision was that section of the country that has come
to be known as ‘India’—as opposed to ‘Bharat’. The true representative of this
land, Devi Lal used to say, were those whose addresses would be prefixed with
the name of the VPO—Village Post Office.
It was an interesting formulation and perhaps
something that even Mahatma Gandhi with his utopian notions of self-sufficient
village communities would have tacitly approved. The problem was that it left a
lot of people (including myself) with a feeling of being second-class citizens.
Urban India may well be the Devil’s workshop but it happens to be the only
place many Indians can call home.
Nor is it accurate to regard rural India as the
natural epicentre of virtue and holiness. In his lifetime, Babasaheb Ambedkar
was eclipsed by the larger-than-life influence of the Mahatma and the Congress.
But it is worth remembering that the Dalit icon always regarded Village India
as the citadel of prejudice and oppression against all those who were damned
for being ‘untouchable’ by birth. The self-governing qualities of the local
panchayat didn’t inspire Ambedkar. To him and to many who were concerned with
caste-based oppression, rural hierarchies didn’t have space for those who were
condemned to live apart. The stereotype of happy kisans harvesting grain,
flanked by women in colourful clothes, didn’t always incorporate the brutal
underbelly of an economic order where some communities were regarded as
sub-humans, and their women treated as commodities.
Rape, the RSS chief asserted in Silchar last Friday,
is essentially an ‘Indian’ phenomenon. He is only partially right. The
brutalisation of women is more widespread in the ecosystems of Bharat—and has
been so for centuries.
Mohan Bhagwat is also entirely right when he maintained
that the respect for women is idealised in Indian culture. But he would be the
first to admit that traditional society was less than welcoming and applied
very different standards to those groups it regarded as being outside its
social orbit—an attitude that has been transmitted into the widespread
disrespect for white, women tourists. The deep reverence for ‘stree shakti’ in
Bengal, for instance, didn’t prevent the cruel custom of sati and the social
degradation and sexual exploitation of widows by ‘respectable’ sections of
society. It also didn’t prevent collective sanction for the sexual exploitation
of women from the ‘lower orders’.
A feature of the vibrant social reform movements
that arose in the 19th and early-20th centuries was their
willingness to first admit the shortcomings of Hindu society and then address
the question of possible remedies. Some of the reformers—notably Raja Ram Mohan
Roy and Swami Vivekananda—were modernists and had imbibed the intellectual
currents of the West. But others such as Pandit Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar were
steeped in tradition and approached the question of reform from a humanist
perspective.
The point to note is that for the Hindu stalwarts of
the past two centuries, there was a clear understanding that the Hindu, both as
an individual and as a collective, wasn’t the epitome of perfection. In today’s
context, going by the admission that cosmopolitanism has distorted the minds of
‘India’ and encouraged unwholesome attitudes towards women, the issue to be addressed
is: what can be done to change society? After all, there must be glaring imperfections
in the modern Hindu that facilitates the ready acceptance of misogyny—the
utterances of the Congress MP from Jangipur and a senior BJP minister of Madhya
Pradesh being two recent examples. (I am confining my remarks to Hindu society
because it sets the tone for India.)
More to the point, the heads of cultural
organisations such as the RSS must begin to ask why their unceasing activism
over more than eight decades hasn’t altered things. Why have the samskaras they
have sought to inculcate in their followers not had a wider effect on society?
Maybe the fault doesn’t lie in the samskaras—although a little less patronising
attitude towards women would help greatly—but in the priorities of groups that
have sought to create a moral leadership for India. If there was greater
emphasis on regenerating the institutions of what goes by the name Hinduism
rather than on exercising control over a political party, the nation would have
been better served.
There is little point celebrating the 150th
birth anniversary of Swami Vivekananda in style unless the grand speeches are
complemented by serious attempts to cleanse the temples of venality, casteism
and even the exploitation of women devotees by perverted priests. Vivekananda
spoke and wrote at length of the Brahmanical religion’s cruel indifference to
the plight of the Sudra and the Chandal. Was he exonerating Bharat and
indicting India? Was he creating false binaries?
Sunday Pioneer, January 6, 2013
2 comments:
Dear Sir,
Word by word I agree with your opinion. Though a die-hard RSS worker, I really believe that with its massive cadre strength, discipline and commitment, RSS should have by now changed the course of our society. I think the error was in the area of prioritization. Instead of addressing core issues like casteism, temple entry movements, gender equality etc., we stepped onto real politics, which in fact burnt our fingers. We got isolated and are looked upon like aliens in this society inspite of the numerous seva and relief work our cadres involve in.
We are not that late though. If RSS leaders turn their attention towards 'Bharath', which is plagued with bigger ailments like casteism, gender bias,superstitions etc..etc, surely RSS would turn out to be the darling of all eyes in a mere couple of years. Also, it can do wonders in abolishing casteism and gender bias much better than any government agency or NGO.
At this point of time, it is disastrous to talk of India & Bharath as two distinct entities. All efforts must be taken to merge these two and make the best of that.
Regards...
I agree. But we need to check as to how many Indians today know what Vivekananda stood for. He is more of a mythical figure confined to the shrines of Ramakrishna Mission and a few scholarly articles
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