Temples Everywhere, Peace Nowhere
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| Silence: Sound and Fury |
India has never been more visibly religious.
Temples rise where trees once stood. Loudspeakers
chant bhajans drowning birdsong mercilessly. TV channels sell salvation round
the clock. Politicians speak the language of gods more fluently than the
language of governance. Public life has become a procession of rituals,
slogans, pilgrimages, and declarations of faith.
Yet something feels broken.
There’s more anger in the air. More hatred. Suspicion
has spread like oil on water. Even family conversations at dinner tables are
guarded. Social media resembles a permanent battlefield.
We pray more, but trust less. We chant louder, but
listen less. We build shrines, but demolish bridges between human beings.
Isn’t something seriously wrong?
Perhaps religion today has nothing to do with
spirituality.
As I have understood, true spirituality softens the
ego. It teaches humility before the mystery of existence. A genuinely religious
person should become less violent, less arrogant, less selfish… in word and
deed. Compassion should be the natural fragrance of spirituality.
Instead religion has become a weapon of identity in
India – elsewhere too. Religion is no more a path toward truth; it is a badge
worn against others.
Faith is no longer about self-purification. It is
performance like a drama on a stage. Not prayer, but display. Not surrender,
but superiority.
The loudest periods of
religiosity have not always been the most humane. Medieval Europe burned
heretics while building magnificent cathedrals. Many kingdoms performed grand
rituals while the poor starved outside palace walls. Civilisations have often
mistaken religious grandeur for moral greatness – as we do now in India.
History remembers the towering temples and glittering courts; it forgets the
hungry peasant who actually built them or paid for them.
A society obsessed with proving its holiness may
slowly lose its humanity.
Religion at its best gives meaning to suffering and
teaches reverence for life. It helps alleviate the pain that life essentially
is. It adds some sweetness to life. Instead what is happening now is… Religion
poisons life.
Religion has become a moral permission to hate.
God doesn’t belong in politics. When God is forced
into politics, cruelty begins to feel righteous.
No wonder the greatest spiritual teachers spoke less
about defending religion and more about transforming the self.
The Buddha focused on compassion.
The Christ asked his followers to love their enemies.
Kabir detested empty rituals.
Guru Nanak rejected divisions of caste and creed.
No great religious guru asked humanity to become more
hateful in the name of God.
Perhaps the Viswagurus
today should use the microphone less. Let silence do its work, as it should in
genuine spirituality. Inner silence instead of all the political noise that’s
bombarding us from all around.
Let not the gods empty our hearts of kindness.
A country does not become spiritual because it builds
more temples and chants more bhajans. It becomes spiritual when its people
become less cruel to one another.
What we have today is not religion, but noise that
claims to be religion.


Any ideology or belief once institutionalised is prone to corruption.
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