Skip to main content

The Innards of Spirituality


When a huge concrete cross was being shattered with a demolition hammer, I laughed rather raucously. I was watching the breakfast news on TV as usual. Most of the time, breakfast news is depressing with news about drug addicts, rapists, murderers, and politicians. This video of a cross being brought down in a very unceremonious ritual officiated by revenue mandarins was unique in a country of people whose religious sentiments are more brittle than dry leaves in an Indian summer.

Maggie was not amused at all by my laughter because she misunderstood that I was laughing at a religious leaf being crushed with a political hammer.

“This is the same cross in front of which our X (I named a very close relative of ours) fell prostrate a couple of months back during their picnic to Parumthumpara,” I explained.

“She is a very spiritual person and so she respected the cross, that’s all.” Maggie’s spirituality is more like a leaf in a storm: I am the satanic storm and she is the tenacious leaf that will withstand any evil like Father Lankester Merrin of the movie, The Exorcist.

I chose to chew on my cheese-and-honey sandwich because a blog post is a better solution for a lot of samasyas* [one of the few Hindi words that I’m in love with – and this one means problems] than a live discussion with people.

The cross at Parumthumpara was not my samasya at all, notwithstanding the rebars of the cross that appeared on my TV screen like the ribs of ravaged divinity.

The cross, like too many other religious images, has been misused by the religious and the irreligious alike, particularly in India. Some idol like Ayodhya’s Ram Lalla or image like the Shiva linga will be planted somewhere and then all sorts of claims will be made. The cross was used with similar effects in Kerala too occasionally. Parumthumpara is the latest episode.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I am reading the autobiography of Pope Francis these days. I’m reading it slowly like a meditation book because that’s how it reads like. It moves me to a lot of spiritual reflection. What I read this morning is the Pope’s citing of Lanza del Vasto, “a polymath writer, Christian thinker, and nonviolent campaigner against war and nuclear armament, an artisan of peace.” The worst lie, according to Vasto, the greatest and most dangerous lie, is “truth minus one.” Pope Francis explains it thus: “Not truth, but its contrived appearance, its comic or dramatic distortion: an attitude that makes falsity credible, error acceptable, that makes the inept arrogant, the ignorant wise, the incompetent powerful.”

I stopped reading the book just there. My meditation started.

Aren’t our religions the worst lies? I’m sorry my meditation went in that direction. I’m a fan of Khalil Gibran’s counsel: “If you accept, then express it bluntly. Do not mask it. If you refuse, then be clear about it.” Honesty, clarity, authenticity, and courage are the values I cherish the most, though I fail them many times.

I love Pope Francis, but I detest his religion. Similarly, I can love a lot of saints and sadhus and mullahs irrespective of their religion, but their religion is my problem.

Individuals may possess authenticity. Religions are meaningful only because of the individuals who put it into practise. I hardly find authentic religious people. A visit to a church or a temple or a mosque or any such place leaves me feeling nauseated all too often.

I started with X’s religion and my laughter. Let me end with X too. She is very religious. She spends every first Saturday night in meditation at a retreat centre. She attends every Sunday morning Mass. She prays every evening at home: rosary and a whole lot of catechism prayers. She is very religious. But she is one of the silliest creatures, most off-putting ones, I have ever known. Her spirituality is like the philosophy of a balmy socialite. Her religion gives her a community with a sense of belonging, roots in a desert, and aspirin when a headache strikes.

She prays a lot. But the prayer doesn’t seem to touch her heart, let alone her thinking. A concrete structure that resembles a cross can bring her to her knees. But she will choose to be blind if you point out the exploitation or injustice being perpetrated by the erector of that cross. She loves her God. But she hates a lot of her God’s creatures because their truths differ from hers.

Her cross is made of concrete whose innards look ghostly when it is struck with a demolition hammer.


* I fell in love with the word ‘samasya’ merely because it was used frequently by one of my colleagues in Delhi whose hobby was to create samasyas for others and enjoy the outcomes just as most of our religions do.  

Comments

  1. Hari Om
    "Religions are meaningful only because of the individuals who put it into practise." That is the sentence of the day! And what that meaningfulness is comes down to the interpretation of each one... too much capacity for the ego to play! YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
  2. When any ideology is institutionalised it gets corrupted and loses its purity.

    ReplyDelete
  3. "She loves her God. But she hates a lot of her God’s creatures because their truths differ from hers." She didn't find God yet

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Most devotees don't, I think. Religion for them is not as much about God as about a sense of psychological security.

      Delete
  4. Have you ever considered the symbolism of the cross? They pray to the instrument of Jesus's murder. And a long, painful death at that. A lot of organized religion is about power, but not the power of the people.

    Religions are weird.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pope Francis gives a very different interpretation to the cross symbol - wisdom lies in the ability to lose, he says, and the cross is a symbol of ultimate surrender.

      Delete
  5. Religion has to be private, just the personal concern of individuals. The more religion occupies the public space, there will be more and strife.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, god resides in hearts. Anywhere else, god can be a terror!

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

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

Re-exploring the Past: The Fort Kochi Chapters – 4

The footpath between Park Avenue and Subhash Bose Park The Park Avenue in Ernakulam is flanked by gigantic rain trees with their branches arching over the road like a cathedral of green. They were not so domineering four decades ago when I used to walk beneath their growing canopies. The Park Avenue with its charming, enormous trees has a history too. King Rama Varma of Kochi ordered trees to be planted on either side of the road and make it look like a European avenue. He also developed a park beside it. The park was named after him, though today it is divided into two parts, with one part named after Subhash Chandra Bose and the other after Indira Gandhi. We can never say how long Indira Gandhi’s name will remain there. Even Sardar Patel, whom the right wing apparently admires, was ousted from the world’s biggest cricket stadium which was renamed Narendra Modi Stadium by Narendra Modi.   Renaming places and roads and institutions is one of the favourite pastimes of the pres...

Good Life

I introduced A C Grayling’s book, The God Argument , in two earlier posts.   This post presents the professor’s views on good life.   Grayling posits seven characteristics of a good life.   The first characteristic is that a good life is a meaningful one.   Meaning is “a set of values and their associated goals that give a life its shape and direction.”   Having children to look after or achieving success in one’s profession or any other very ordinary goal can make life meaningful.   But Grayling says quoting Oscar Wilde that everyone’s map of the world should have a Utopia on it.   That is, everyone should dream of a better world and strive to materialise that dream, if life is to be truly meaningful.   Ability to form relationships with other people is the second characteristic.   Intimacy with at least one other person is an important feature of a meaningful life.   “Good relationships make better people,” says G...

Re-exploring the Past: The Fort Kochi Chapters – 1

Inside St Francis Church, Fort Kochi Moraes Zogoiby (Moor), the narrator-protagonist of Salman Rushdie’s iconic novel The Moor’s Last Sigh , carries in his genes a richly variegated lineage. His mother, Aurora da Gama, belongs to the da Gama family of Kochi, who claim descent from none less than Vasco da Gama, the historical Portuguese Catholic explorer. Abraham Zogoiby, his father, is a Jew whose family originally belonged to Spain from where they were expelled by the Catholic Inquisition. Kochi welcomed all the Jews who arrived there in 1492 from Spain. Vasco da Gama landed on the Malabar coast of Kerala in 1498. Today’s Fort Kochi carries the history of all those arrivals and subsequent mingling of history and miscegenation of races. Kochi’s history is intertwined with that of the Portuguese, the Dutch, the British, the Arbas, the Jews, and the Chinese. No culture is a sacrosanct monolith that can remain untouched by other cultures that keep coming in from all over the world. ...

Yesterday

With students of Carmel Margaret, are you grieving / Over Goldengrove unleaving…? It was one of my first days in the eleventh class of Carmel Public School in Kerala, the last school of my teaching career. One girl, whose name was not Margaret, was in the class looking extremely melancholy. I had noticed her for a few days. I didn’t know how to put the matter over to her. I had already told the students that a smiling face was a rule in the English class. Since Margaret didn’t comply, I chose to drag Hopkins in. I replaced the name of Margaret with the girl’s actual name, however, when I quoted the lines. Margaret is a little girl in the Hopkins poem. Looking at autumn’s falling leaves, Margaret is saddened by the fact of life’s inevitable degeneration. The leaves have to turn yellow and eventually fall. And decay. The poet tells her that she has no choice but accept certain inevitabilities of life. Sorrow is our legacy, Margaret , I said to Margaret’s alter ego in my class. Let...