Skip to main content

Secularism and Cows




Sensible people will keep religion in the temple or mosque or wherever their god resides.  Mediocre people will insist on carrying their god to where the angels will dread to tread.  Villains know how to subjugate others using religion and god.

Sensible people are rare in India like in most other countries.  That’s why secularism never took roots in the country though many prominent leaders like Nehru and Ambedkar would have endorsed secularism a million times over theocracy.  India was fortunate to have leaders like Nehru who were not religious and hence were able to redeem India from the clutches of bigots who would have made it another theocratic nation like the rival Pakistan. 

Mediocrity insists on making people like their enemies.  Hence the sublime vision of people like Nehru was doomed to fail in the normal course of time.  The Congress party itself betrayed Nehru’s concept of secularism which gave equal respect to all religions.  The ideal would have been to delink religion from the state altogether.  But that ideal is not practical.  Even in western countries where that ideal is upheld constitutionally, the actual practice is quite something else simply because majority of people are mediocre and they have to clutch their idols wherever they are. 

The Congress party chose to appease certain religious communities merely for the sake of creating vote banks.  The paucity of the Congress imagination cost the country much.  It alienated the majority, an absurd thing to happen given the fact that the majority in India is a substantially huge population.  Yet that absurdity reigned supreme in the country.  Eventually that absurdity metamorphosed into a monster, the monster of communalism. 

When the majority of a country’s people choose to clutch idols instead of obvious human values and moral principles, the country is headed for disaster.  The magnitude of the disaster will be Himalayan when the leaders lack any vision except using the idols as weapons for establishing political power. 

Religion has not saved any country from any evil so far.  On the contrary, theocratic nations have proved to be much more inhuman than others.  Secularism in its ideal form may be impractical simply because most people are mediocre and mediocrity cannot survive without its idols.  But we can have a practical version of secularism: keep god to where he belongs and build up a strong legal system (Uniform Civil Code?) for managing actual social life in the country.  This is what Nehru and others wanted.  The tragedy is that India did not have leaders of their intellectual stature.  It is the leader who ultimately defines a nation.  So we need not be surprised if India has now become a nation of cows and cowards or cowherds. 

PS. Written for Indispire Edition 177: #SecularIndia

Comments

  1. Glad to know that you endorse UCC. Although the party in power has a hidden agenda for implementing it, but a uniform code of conduct would force people to oblige secularism even if they are bigots from within.

    What is troublesome, although is when people are coerced to do something they do not believe in practice because of their divergent faith they become frustrated from within. Atheism do not even an iota in their dreams would be frustrated but the theists?

    Religion kills individuality of the mass, kills critical thinking.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The party in power has only hidden agenda. It can admire Hitler and Israel at the same time. It can threaten China with war while its leader can praise their leader at BRICS meeting.

      Religion flourishes precisely because people don't want to think. Gods are ready-made answers for all problems, panacea for all evils.

      Delete
  2. you have diagnosed the disease correctly. Basically it is the vote bank politics and people falling to see the vicious agenda of these leaders that is posing threat to the secular structure of the nation.
    You have also rightly pointed out that theocratic nations become inhuman.
    However, still among Asian counties India has the best form of secularism. I hope we the people will continue to recognize and rise above the vicious agenda of the forces trying to destabilize the secular nature of India.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. India HAD the best form of secularism. Not any more. India is becoming another Pakistan. Hindutva is the brother of Taliban.

      Delete
  3. Other than the politics and hidden agendas, there is something more to it which I find more alarming...the agenda of propagating the opinion of a select (and highly biased) few as opinion of the masses. Do I also adopt the same rowdy ways to prove that I do not support the idea. Wouldnt that be the other extreme? It is baffling to see religion being twisted into something so trivial and harmful.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your agony in this regard is the same agony I experience. The distortions are alarming. They are perverting a whole nation and the nation is allowing it to happen!

      Delete
    2. You are absolutely correct Deepali. That's a real great danger enveloping this nation fast.

      Delete
  4. Did you notice what was on top of the "o"% tax on GST list ??

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Machiavelli the Reverend

Let us go today , you and I, through certain miasmic streets. Nothing will be quite clear along our way because this journey is through some delusions and illusions. You will meet people wearing holy robes and talking about morality and virtues. Some of them will claim to be god’s men and some will make taller claims. Some of them are just amorphous. Invisible. But omnipotent. You can feel their power around you. On you. Oppressing you. Stifling you. Reverend Machiavelli is one such oppressive power. You will meet Franz Kafka somewhere along the way. Joseph K’s ghost will pass by. Remember Joseph K who was arrested one fine morning for a crime that nobody knew anything about? Neither Joseph nor the men who arrest him know why Joseph K is arrested. The power that keeps Joseph K under arrest is invisible. He cannot get answers to his valid questions from the visible agents of that power. He cannot explain himself to that power. Finally, he is taken to a quarry outside the town wher

Levin the good shepherd

AI-generated image The lost sheep and its redeemer form a pet motif in Christianity. Jesus portrayed himself as a good shepherd many times. He said that the good shepherd will leave his 99 sheep in order to bring the lost sheep back to the fold. When he finds the lost sheep, the shepherd is happier about that one sheep than about the 99, Jesus claimed. He was speaking metaphorically. The lost sheep is the sinner in Jesus’ parable. Sin is a departure from the ‘right’ way. Angels raise a toast in heaven whenever a sinner returns to the ‘right’ path [Luke 15:10]. A lot of Catholic priests I know carry some sort of a Redeemer complex in their souls. They love the sinner so much that they cannot rest until they make the angels of God run for their cups of joy. I have also been fortunate to have one such priest-friend whom I shall call Levin in this post. He has befriended me right from the year 1976 when I was a blundering adolescent and he was just one year older than me. He possesse

Kailasnath the Paradox

AI-generated illustration It wasn’t easy to discern whether he was a friend or merely an amused onlooker. He was my colleague at the college, though from another department. When my life had entered a slippery slope because of certain unresolved psychological problems, he didn’t choose to shun me as most others did. However, when he did condescend to join me in the college canteen sipping tea and smoking a cigarette, I wasn’t ever sure whether he was befriending me or mocking me. Kailasnath was a bundle of paradoxes. He appeared to be an alpha male, so self-assured and lord of all that he surveyed. Yet if you cared to observe deeply, you would find too many chinks in his armour. Beneath all those domineering words and gestures lay ample signs of frailty. The tall, elegantly slim and precisely erect stature would draw anyone’s attention quickly. Kailasnath was always attractively dressed though never unduly stylish. Everything about him exuded an air of chic confidence. But the wa

Nakulan the Outcast

Nakulan was one of the many tenants of Hevendrea . A professor in the botany department of the North Eastern Hill University, he was a very lovable person. Some sense of inferiority complex that came from his caste status made him scoff the very idea of his lovability. He lived with his wife and three children in one of Heavendrea’s many cottages. When he wanted to have a drink, he would walk over to my hut. We sipped our whiskies and discussed Shillong’s intriguing politics or something of the sort while my cassette player crooned gently in the background. Nakulan was more than ten years my senior by age. He taught a subject which had never aroused my interest at any stage of my life. It made no difference to me whether a leaf was pinnately compound or palmately compound. You don’t need to know about anther and stigma in order to understand a flower. My friend Levin would have ascribed my lack of interest in Nakulan’s subject to my egomania. I always thought that Nakulan lived

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl