Unexamined Faith

A trader of religion distributing the Gita


My last post was: When Religion Becomes a Weapon. It dealt with the malicious use of social media by people who claim to be defenders of their religion and god(s). If social media was their weapon in that post, scripture is in this.  

Three decades ago, Tracey Emin installed a work of art at an exhibition at the South London Gallery. She called it Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963-1995. The British press screamed about Tracey Emin’s scandalous new “exhibition of promiscuity.” But if you actually went to the gallery, you wouldn’t find a painting or a scandalous photo. You would find a small, ordinary camping tent sitting on the floor. To see the artwork, you would have to physically lower yourself, crawl through the zipped door, and sit on a mattress inside.

And what was inside? Lit by a single hanging bulb, the interior walls were softly lined with 102 names hand-stitched into the fabric. It wasn’t a libidinous shout; it was a quiet, claustrophobic sanctuary of memory. The list of people Tracey Emin slept with contained names of her own mother, grandmother, twin brother, and aborted foetuses.

The public that condemned her notorious and rebellious hypersexuality hadn’t bothered to go in and check what her “Tent” actually contained. They assumed that the list contained the names of 102 men she had slept with. After all, she was a rebel artist who started sleeping with older men right from the age of 13. But her present artwork was about the “intimacy of sleep” (in Andrew Marr’s words).  

Reading about Emin in Marr’s book on the Second Elizabethan England, I was poked to draw an analogy between her experience and what happens with religions today (at any time, in fact).

People judged and labelled Emin without even bothering to check what her list of 102 contained. The same happens with religion and scriptures. Believers hardly go in and experience religion and hardly bother to read the scriptures, let alone reflect on them. And so we have all this violence and fanaticism and what not, in the name of religion.

If it is absurd to condemn a work of art based entirely on its title, consider how we approach the ultimate text: scripture. Across the globe, millions are ready to argue, fight, and even go to war over books they have never actually read, let alone meditated upon.

The holy book is not a guide for living today. It is a totem: a sacred object that can mean many things including divinity and communal identity. Like a tribal badge. People don’t read it and get enlightenment. Instead they brandish it like a flag to show which ‘team’ they belong to.

Just as people judged Emin by a single title, religious folks often rely on isolated, out-of-context soundbites passed down by influencers or polarising leaders, completely ignoring the overarching themes of compassion, justice, or mysticism.

The most terrible and shameful irony is that people engage in ungodly behaviour (hatred, violence, abuse) to defend a God whose core commandment in those very scriptures is love and humility.

If Emin's shrieking, moralistic critics had done a little inquiry into her life, they would have come to know about the sad background that made her what she became. She came from what Marr calls “the down-at-heel seaside town of Margate.” She was a child of unmarried parents. Her Turkish-Cypriot father had no less than 23 children whom he acknowledged, and many others whom he didn’t know. Margate in the days of Emin’s childhood was a place of fairgrounds, discos, cheap pubs and a great deal of underage sex.

Emin wrote in her memoir later how much she yearned to be “touched” by a loving man. Too many men touched her – but only lust, no love.

Too many devotees touch religion. Only fever of fervour, no experience of the divine.

Tracey Emin's 'Tent'

Mail: tmatheikal@gmail.com


Comments

  1. An innocus, yet poignant experience. In the pioneering years of St John's Regional Seminary, Kondadaba, in the early 1990s, I happened to be occuotung the post of the Dean, of Studies and the Vice-Rector. Occasiinally, a bishop orv two used to step into my office. While seated in front of me, fascinated and inspired by the quote on the wall, behind my chair, sed to ask me for a pen and paper to not down the quote. As I would get up to comply with their request for the writing material, the name of the author of the quote would become visible to them. - Mao Tse Tung, the Chinese Communist Supremo. At the citing of that ominous name, they would decine the paper and the pen and would say... " Don't trouble yourself, Father. Let it be.. " At the name of Mao, the inspirational content of the quote evaporated.. And thst indeed was a Emin's Tent moment for me....

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    1. I can understand that. I remembered certain figures from my DB days as I read your anecdote with a wry smile. It isn't easy to find broadminded people among the religious!

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  2. They are broadminded, until they get into authority and then they have to protect the institution. Human nakedness, gives way to the fig leaves of prudence and prudery. " God asked Adam, " Who told you were naked?" for they had lost their at homeless and abandon, with their nakedness.

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  3. What an interesting art exhibit. As one who has never read the Bible and who rolls her eyes at mentions of it, I don't think people quoting scripture hits me the way they hope it will.

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    1. I'm convinced only by what people do, not what they say - Bible, Quran, Gita, whatever.

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  4. I'm a fan of Tracey Emin, her art is honest, raw, and speaks volumes. But I wonder if the shoe was on the other foot. If a male did an exhibit of all the woman I slept with.

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    1. I came to know about her only ftom Marr's book. Her life fascinated me more than her work. You're right, there's admirable forthrightness in her.

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  5. Hari OM
    Of course, Tracey was at the mercy of euphemism... the ridiculous substitution of 'sleep' for sex in a sentence of "I slept with". Indeed, the lady is frank and would actually have said, 'had sex with' if that had been her intention. She played the viewers! I really like how you drew the analogy with how certain people extrapolate scripture and present so many misguided interpretations. YAM xx

    (Blogger is really playing tricks and posts are going very astray - thanks for sending the link, no doubt this post will appear on my reader later today, or even tomorrow...sigh...)

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  6. Today a very interesting topic for all of you who read me, and rightly so. Sunny greetings, Andereja!

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