I loved the whole Sethusamduram yarn woven with purely original anecdotes (" Lord Rama never strikes an emotional chord in the south"- certainly not true Sir, unless there is only one state in South India which, of course would be oh-so-convenient but sadly, is not the case) complete with the proverbial proof of the Indian political pudding, the cherry on which has to be none other than the Dravidian atheist CM's grandiloquence: "From which engineering college did Rama graduate?".
I was in stitches when I read the feminist’s view of Rama (yes, growing up in Andhra with a communist of a mom, I did read the legendary “Ramayanam visha vriksham by the Ranganayakamma) and the way his disservice was being touted as the justification for building the canal. It would shame the Bush gang if they knew how creatively one can build a case with unadulterated opinions and still be called intellectual (as opposed to being ridiculed for "Bushisms").
Oh and did I say I totally loved the “intellectual” (read the classic apologists who start a piece with a disclaimer that is along the lines of “let me put this upfront, I am a Hindu but only by birth, I don’t give a damn to religious sentiments as long as it is not about Baabri Masjid and oh the 9/11 too”) Hindus’ take on the sethusamudram?-It is not about religion, it is about progress/national security and some such brain waves?
Rather neglected in this cornucopia of emotions and intellect is the logic of using survey details from the 1970's in planning this project. But that’s for experts in Navigation technology to debate on. Equally neglected is the impact this project will have on the environment. As a biologist, as much as I feel compelled to add my slant to the story, I realize I have only one thing to say - it is a lie when anyone tells you that projects of this magnitude will not negatively and irreversibly affect the environment. The rest as we Indians (yes Sir, even the southies) say …Raam jaane.
I do want to write about how an educated person can be perfectly normal (not me perhaps but I assure you, a lot of people I know are normal) and still call oneself a Hindu (Muslim, Christian, Jew) among the myriad other identities that one takes on in the course of life. I do want to say that I will not be coerced into being apologetic about my faith. I do want to say that we should start seeing issues in the multi-dimensional manner that is demanded of life and stop slotting things into "communal" and "everything else". To say that I believe in Rama is not blasphemy as is to say that I don’t, for that matter.
Having said that, one question teases my mind since the beginning of this episode. Would our intellectual pundits and the pseudo-intellectual politicians dare say that they do not believe in Mohammed and hence scrap the Muslim personal law that allows polygamy among Muslims in India? If we as a nation cannot profess to have the courage to rise against religion in the name of justice and equality, what gives us the right to rise against religion in the name of progress?
Yes, I know- writing this means I am well on my way to being honored as the next saffron queen (since when did the queen of spices become Hindu, did you ever wonder?). I am also well on my way as being labeled anti-Muslim, anti-progress, anti-whatever. We can argue endlessly about how the hindutva fanatics react to the sethusamudram project, how religion should not come in the way of progress, how this project would cause environmental havoc. But certainly, not all that happens in the name of progress is good.
I think it is time to pause and think if causing a national debate in the name of religion/faith is worth the fuel that would be saved by destroying the bridge. It is time to think if Hindus do deserve respect for their faith at least as much as those who belong to another religion. After all, an overwhelming majority in this democratic country are Hindus. Can our secularism afford to be a-religious only in the case of Hinduism?
4 comments:
great views :)
happy dussera
Thanks very much. Heres wishing you the same.
Very well written..but
"I think it is time to pause and think if causing a national debate in the name of religion/faith is worth the fuel that would be saved by destroying the bridge."
Dont u think that is mighty circumspect??
Agreed no one knows for sure if the good pros outweigh bad cons here, but pussyfooting around any issue with a religious slant, is not the answer.
And then again, I am sure we agree the objective of the project was not to question the divinity of Ram (nevermind a few flippant comments by heads of state). It is unfortunate that somewhere along the way , a few touchy sentiments got bruised and, like is so often the case, the big picture got completely eclipsed by self indulgence.
And yes Thank God it is still a Democracy.
Thanks.It is true that the real issue about the bridge should be whether it is worth building it in terms of the economic, social (relocation of villages) and political (Srilanka) criteria. But my rant is not about the bridge nor the Muslim civil law for that matter. It is about the hypocrisy involved in singling out one religion for asserting our secularism- sort of like reversediscrimination (we all know about vote bank politics). It is equally if not more sick than its counterpart.
You are right, runnning away from any potentially "communal" iussue is not the answer here. But my crib is are we really courageus enough to adopt this viewpoint with relation to any faith? If we are not, please let us not kid ourselves and say we look for progress and nothing else.
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