Book Review
Title: Gods, Guns and Missionaries: The Making of the
Modern Hindu Identity
Author: Manu S Pillai
Publisher: Penguin Random House India, 2024
Pages: 564 (about
half of which consists of Notes)
There never was any monolithic religion called
Hinduism. Different parts of India practised Hinduism in its own ways, with its
own gods and rituals and festivals. Some of these were even mutually opposed.
For example, Vamana who is a revered incarnation of Vishnu in North India
becomes a villain in Kerala’s Onam legends. What has become of this protean
religion of infinite variety and diversity today in the hands of its
‘missionary’ political leaders? Manu S Pillai’s book ends with V D Savarkar’s
contributions to the religion with a subtle hint that it is his legacy that is
driving the present version of the religion in the name of Hindutva.
The last lines of the book, leaving
aside the Epilogue titled ‘What is Hinduism?’, are telltale. “Life did not give
Savarkar all he had hoped for. But Hindutva, it turned out, was biding its
time. And not long after he was enshrined in the house of the people [Lok
Sabha], having won power, it would begin a process – now well underway – of
remaking the Indian state in its own image.”
In other words, the kaleidoscopic
Hinduism has been reduced to a monochrome Hindutva that carries Savarkar’s
legacy. Pillai tells us that Lord Wavell, the penultimate Viceroy of British
India, described Savarkar as an “unpleasant, intolerant little man full of
communal bitterness.” Today’s India has inherited all that unpleasantness,
intolerance, littleness, and bitterness. And Savarkar’s portrait hangs in the
Parliament next to Mahatma Gandhi’s. The irony cannot be lost because Savarkar
was always thought to be one of the conspirators of the Mahatma’s
assassination.
Gandhi has given way to Savarkar in
the present India. The Mahatma’s portrait may soon disappear from the
Parliament altogether in order to pave way for a Hindu Rashtra. One of the
limitations of Pillai’s book is that it stops short of writing anything
directly about the present political dispensation in the country. But his book
makes it amply clear that the Hinduism of history is not anything like the
Hindutva of today.
His book starts with the Mughals
though we are soon reminded of the fact that the Europeans had made their own
invasion of the country before the Mughals. Babur was still a teenager in
Uzbekistan when Vasco da Gama landed on the Kerala coast in 1498. The Christian
missionaries soon followed Gama.
Both the Christian missionaries and
the Mughal rulers had their immense impacts on Hinduism. Buddhism and Jainism
had already reshaped Hinduism earlier to some extent. Not all these people were
trying to impose their religious ways on the Hindus. Many of them like Akbar
and the Jesuit missionary Robert de Nobili tried to adapt their own religions
to suit certain Hindu ways that were acceptable to them.
Hinduism, like any other religion,
underwent a lot of changes due to various influences from external forces like
the Mughals and the missionaries. Pillai is eminently successful in narrating
the story of the dynamic evolution of Hinduism in those centuries.
The central chapter (fourth out of
the seven and titled ‘An Indian Renaissance’) gives us some illuminating
insights into the dynamic processes that take place when different religions
and cultures encounter meaningfully. British scholars like William Jones
(1746-94) and Colin Mackenzie (1754-1821) contributed significantly to the
growth and development of Indian literature and arts. The former translated Manu
Smriti from Sanskrit before discovering India’s own Shakespeare in Kalidasa
whose masterpiece Abhinjnanasakuntalam was also translated. Mackenzie
did a historical work of archiving 1568 manuscripts, 2630 drawings, 8076
inscriptions, and 6218 coins with the help of five “assiduous” Brahmins.
Not everything was evil with the
Mughals or the British.
Some of the British scholars took
interest in the Dravidian part of India too, F W Ellis (1777-1819) being chief
among them. Ellis suggested with ample evidence that the South Indian languages
formed a distinct family. Pillai informs us in this context that “Future
research would suggest that the Dravidian language group – as it is now called
– once straddled the subcontinent, illuminating a historical era prior to the
spread of Indo-Aryan culture.”
Pillai’s book has a lot more to offer
with its remarkable scholarliness. Scholarliness notwithstanding, the book is
distinctly readable. What makes Pillai a great writer is precisely that
readability. I haven’t come across any other historian recently who makes
history so delightful to read, though William Dalrymple is pretty close. There’s
something of Dominique Lapierre and Larry Collins in Manu S Pillai.
The sixth chapter, ‘Native Luthers’,
introduces us to some of the remarkable Hindu reformers like Raja Ram Mohun
Roy, Dayananda Saraswati, the Phules, and B G Tilak. This chapter may not offer
anything new to informed readers. For the young readers, however, these details
can be highly illuminating.
In short, this is a book that I would
recommend to anyone who is interested in understanding how India has come to a
kind of historical hiatus, if not regression, with the present Hindutva
ideology. Pillai doesn’t judge anyone. He presents certain facts though there
are subtle undertones that no discerning reader will miss. Manu S Pillai
My only complaint is with the bulk of
notes that follow the text: half of the book which could have been left online
for those who are interested. A much slimmer volume would have been a lot more
appealing to a generation that finds the smartphone more alluring.
Thanks for the Review of Guns, Gods and Missionaries by Manu Pillai. Though you may not like, I am glad that Pillai has copious foot/end notes, buttressing his readable historical revisionist venture. Otherwise, it would be another effluence of the WhatsApp University. Truth or Fiction, Sarkar is Parivar Hero. But Savarkar's History is an Appropriation of James Mill's History of India, the East India Company's Orientalist Court Historian, especially his inaccurate and a/unhistorical periodization of Hindu, Muslim, European Incursion Periodisation. What the Parivar has done is to suffix Glorious to the Hindu and Vandalising to the Mughals. And Castes in India has been solidified by the British. Too early for Pillai to write of Hidutva Post-2014. Somebody could write it in 3500 CE.
ReplyDeleteIf only we could read that history written in 3500.
DeleteJones, Mackenzie and Ellis are Orientalist Scholars.
ReplyDeleteI was hearing these names first time.
DeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteI know of the impressive Mr Pillai as a result of William Dalrymple, who has had him as a guest on the Empire Pod and has spoken fondly of his writing (in particular, The Ivory Throne)... will be keeping this one on the wishlist! YAM xx
The Ivory Throne reads like a novel!
DeleteNothing's ever simple, is it? So much history and conflict there.
ReplyDeleteIt's interesting, like our Mahabharata.
Delete