Some months ago an official of the United States
state department met me through a common scholar friend. The
official had been following Indian affairs for many years, in
particular the Indian press. He knew more about the press, specially
about trends in our Indian language papers than a casual reader like
me is ever likely to know. He was also concerned about the frequency
with which our countries get into scraps with each other. Last week
the same scholar friend sent me an account which that officer had
written and circulated about the way India, in particular Hindus,
are again being portrayed in the USA. The note deserves to be read
in full, so what follows is the verbatim text of his note.
Politically aware Indians have made much recently
of the increasing strain between the US administration and India
over positions and statements on Kashmir. Those expressing this
concern, however, may be unaware of a growing phenomenon currently
taking place which has more profound and far-reaching
implications: legitimisation of Hindu-bashing in US
institutions.
Influenced and supported by noisy self-appointed
Indian "secularists," many western scholars and government
officials are now taking a position on Hindu revivalism. With very
few exceptions, this position is exceedingly negative. Though this
phenomenon is now limited to those conversant with South Asia and
has not yet influenced the general public's opinions, in time it
will. Though there are many forums for Hindu-bashing currently
being opened, I will reserve my comments here to two recent
conferences, one sponsored by the US state department and one by
the University of Wisconsin.
On July 16 of this year the state department held
a conference entitled, Hindu Revivalism in India: Position,
Prospects and Implications for the US. Many highly placed
individuals were present including ambassador elect deputy
assistant secretary for Regional Analysis Phyllis Oakley and a
wide range of US government officials. Scholars were invited to
make presentations on Hindu revivalism. On the whole, the
atmosphere was one of ridicule. There was a lot of finger pointing
at Hindu revivalism as the source of India's current problems and
of potential conflict with the US.
On November 5-7, at the annual conference on
South Asia at Madison, Wisconsin, two panels and many individual
presentations were devoted to Hindu nationalism. Every single
presentation was negative towards Hindu nationalism with
remarkable statements being made that I never thought I would hear
in an academic institution.
I will detail the presentation of Lisa McKean of
the University of Sydney because she was a featured speaker at
both the University of Wisconsin and at the state department
conference. I will give a sampling of the statements made by other
scholars. Though I have documented their statements as well, I
will avoid reference to their names in this note.
Lisa McKean claims to have spent a lot of time
with Vishwa Hindu Parishad, enough to make scholarly
presentations, anyway! The basic thrust of her argument is that
Vishwa Hindu Parishad of America is a fascist organisation which
remits funds to its illegal sister organisation in India. Not
mentioned of course is that the corrupt, opportunistic Congress
banned the VHP for its own political gain. Lisa describes VHP
sponsored groups in America as "Front Organisations" for a larger
fascist cause. She refers to VHP activities, including Diwali
celebrations and Swami Chinmayananda's spiritual camps as "covert
operations" and to active members as "militant activists." Lisa
called the late Shri Chinmayananda a "master manipulator" and
alleged that he initiated unwanted physical contact with women,
including herself. Not content with merely bashing VHP, however,
Lisa referred to the colorful monthly magazine, Hinduism Today as
a front paper supporting militant activities. Global Vision 2000
was targeted as a fascist assembly. She described Hindus moving
into professional positions as "infiltrators" working for the
cause of Hindu fundamentalism. Hindu Digest, Samskar and the Hindu
Students Council did not escape her censure.
Perhaps most appalling was the warm hand given to
her at the end of her presentation in both conferences. Praised as
a "bright, young progressive scholar," most of the audience
accepted her statements as fact, particularly those progressive
Indian "secularists." One even suggested that universities should
perhaps ban Hindu Students Council of America -- imagine the
outcry if someone suggested banning an Islamic or Christian
Students' Council. Lisa was certainly not alone and played to an
appreciative audience in both locations.
Scholars making presentations at the state
department conference were less concerned with facts than with
making points. Many erroneous statements were made such as "The
Sangh Parivar planned the execution of Mahatma Gandhi and will
stop at nothing. "The misquoted statement of Shiv Sena leader Bal
Thackeray about Indian Muslims being like the Jews of Europe was
used in making the authoritative statement that "Sangh Parivar
under- prinnings are just like those of Nazis." An example of how
criticism of Sangh Parivar activities is extended to Hindus in
general is the statement of a Johns Hopkins scholar that "Hindus
in the US are very sympathetic and supportive of fundamentalism."
One scholar even justified discrimination against Hindus in India
itself with the remarkable statement, "Equal rights to the Hindus
is equal to abolition of minority rights." The scholar made this
statement after echoing the hollow line started by Indian
"secularist" Romila Thapar that "There is in reality no such thing
as Hinduism."
The University of Wisconsin panels were truly
pitiful and I will give only a few quotes from various
presentations. One Indian "secularist" suggested that India was an
artificial entity which "Requires fascism to maintain its
existence." A scholar from Berkeley referred to the "dirty
communal imprint" that Hindus leave on Indian society. Hindu
Sangram Parishad's effort in India to spread Sanskrit learning
among all castes and classes was seen as "militant activity"
rather than a remarkable democratisation. Shri Ramakrishna
Paramahamsa was referred to as a "Celluloid Divinity" and Swami
Vivekananda was refered to as "reactionary at home though
seemingly progressive abroad." The popular Ramayana and
Mahabharata serials were referred to as "communalist, oppressive
and inspirational to fascists."
The University of Wisconsin's willing (witting or
unwitting) participation in Hindu-bashing is proven by their
giving a booth to the so-called "Overseas Friends of India" from
Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. This organisation has apparently taken
the lead in spreading malicious and misleading propaganda. Calling
Hinduism "unrivaled in sheer bigotry and intolerances, these
overseas "friends" claim that Hindus plan pogroms of minorities
and are guilty of having "banished Buddhism," and having "Forced
Jainism into a sect of Hinduism." Rape is claimed as the normal
response of a Hindu male to a "minority" woman. Harijans are
claimed to he non-Hindu. Sympathy is claimed for the "persecuted
Harijans who are not allowed to convert to Christianity or Islam."
The "lack of availability of beef" is claimed a "denial of protein
to a poor population." Finally these "friends" of India urge
overseas Indians to write to their ambassador to urge India to
stop this communalist behavior (assist efforts to delegitimise and
malign Hinduism). With "friends" like these, having enemies would
be an improvement.
There is no doubt that "secular progressive"
scholars bash other religions, and traditions as well. The consensus
viewpoint of western scholarship for quite some time has basically
been one of aggressively promoting atheistic values which denigrate
traditional culture and religion. Yet despite the "normalcy" of this
denigration, I cannot therefore dismiss these scholars' work as
harmless and limited to ivory towers. Though their arrogant
pronouncements are irrelevant to, and cannot impact upon divine
truth, I fear Hindus in the West may be persecuted due to the
willful spread of false and misleading propaganda on the part of
these scholars. It particularly pains me to see Indians, Hindu by
birth, participate in the denigration of their own civilisation.
What would they replace it with, a "progressive India" with a 50 per
cent divorce rate, high illegitimate birth rates, McDonalds on every
corner, discos replacing temples and MTV as the most watched TV
show?
Incredible as the assertions of these misguided
"intellectuals" are, there is a danger of an appearance of
legitimisation of these ideas through repetition. These unprincipled
"scholars" would leave no stone unturned to denigrate Hindu culture.
The "secular" Indians are at the forefront of this campaign which is
willingly supported by proselytising Muslims and Christians who have
the same goal: the denigration and delegitimisation of the
traditional Hindu culture and world view. The rhetoric of the
"Overseas Friends of India" is similar to that of an extreme group
of Protestant evangelicals who have portrayed Rajneesh as mainstream
Hinduism and maliciousness and ignorance as prerequisites to being
Hindu. How this will affect an unknowing American public, when
repeated over time remains an open question. Some possibilities:
Tenure of an university professor of Indian
ethnicity being contingent upon his or her allegiance to
Hindu-bashing rhetoric when dealing with Indian subject matter (a
very real possibility in light of the suppression of the truth
already being justified in some universities due to political
correctness ideology).
Professional advancement among Hindus in
non-university settings requiring their disassociation from
"backward" delegitimised practices and beliefs (based on the
assumption that the only good Indian is a dead Indian or at least
a secular atheist who is "dead" to his own culture and
civilisation and therefore "progressive" and "liberal."
Increasing embarrassment and alienation on the
part of Hindu youth growing up in this country from identifying
with Hindu beliefs and practices due to their delegitimisation.
Hindus having to repeatedly justify their
religious practices such as Puja to Ganapati as, not being "one of
those weird cult practices."
Hindus having to work much harder to dispel
mistaken impressions and to ward off a witch hunt mentality which
could be precipitated by incessant Hindu bashing. There is much
historical precedent for this in Western culture (Jew-hunts,
etc).
The complexity of Indian civilisation simply
overwhelms most western scholars (and apparently, Indian "secular"
scholars as well). They do not, for the most part, understand that
the rhythms of Hinduism beat in the heart of most "oppressed
untouchables" and in the hearts of much of "the minorities" as well,
including most Indian Muslims before 20th century politicisation.
One scholar, facing the complexity of increasing Harijan, Christian
and Muslim sympathy for Hindutva, echoed the true feelings that most
western scholars have always exhibited towards India. Asked how he
could analyse such a complex civilisation, he replied, "When
Hinduism dies, we'll do a better job."
The note speaks for itself. Notice the kinds of
things that pass for scholarship at meetings of scholars on South
Asia. This kind of "scholarship" will certainly harm America itself,
as it has done in the past: the then prevalent notions of "political
correctness" kept European and American intellectuals from speaking
the truth about Communism for decades, and thereby led the
governments to misjudge the nature of the beast that confronted
them.
Next, notice how several of your friends will react
to a note like this one. Sentences in the note speak to the regard
this particular official has for India, for Hinduism in particular.
In the eyes of so many, this fact alone will be sufficient to
destroy the veracity of his narrative, to reduce the importance of
what he has pointed out. Now look at the question the other way: how
many of the same persons ever discount what a person says about
India and Hinduism when it is evident that he hates Hinduism and
India? When someone who is obviously attached to Islam says
something about Islam -- even in the face of all of its history and
all the canonical texts -- do these scholars and friends dismiss it?
Do they not on the contrary insist that what he is saying must take
precedence over the evidence of mere texts and history'? And now?
Because sentences suggest that the official thinks well of India and
Hinduism what he says must be discounted! Almost the only thing
which might keep such persons from throwing out the note altogether
and at the outset itself is the fact it has been written by an
American and not an Indian! But what if the officer, though
American, actually is one who has converted to Hinduism?! That would
be the final, conclusive "proof' surely -- the content itself being
the primary "proof!" -- that nothing in the note should be believed
at all! "That explains it all," these friends will proclaim in
triumph!
"But surely," even the non-secularists among us
will exclaim, "it would have been so much better if a person less
obviously appreciative of India and Hinduism had written the note."
And what is the proof of the person being less than fit to
narrate the facts? That he has not indulged in Hindu-bashing! That
he has not conformed to the prevailing intellectual fashion, that
instead he has shown it up! And what if the "objective", "neutral"
scholars are too intimidated by the intellectual fashion to testify
to the truth? My friend puts it well. A man tried to stand up to the
gangsters in town. In retaliation they set upon his sister, and
raped her in view of a large crowd. Everyone was terrified. The
brother ran from one eye-witness to the other beseeching them to
help him lodge a complaint with the police. None dared. At last he
went himself and lodged the FIR. "But wouldn't it have been better
if someone other than you had come to register the case'." exclaimed
the policeman. "After all, she is your sister. Everyone will say you
are an interested party."
That is the secularist position. But notice that
this is their position vis-a-vis India and Hindus alone: if the
country in question is Palestine and the narrator is a Muslim, say,
then they insist that what he says has conclusive evidentiary
status. And then there is the other point: if even the brother will
shy away from filing the case when his own sister has been raped,
why would others?
In a word, what answers to the preceding questions
explain is the depth to which our self-esteem has been pushed. what
they document is the extent to which secularists have internalised
double standards and calumny, and the extent to which they have been
able to brow-beat others into adhering to these skewed
standards.
Notice the persistence of calumny; the falsehoods
which are being hurled at us are exactly the ones which the
missionaries fabricated and smeared us with a 100 years ago -- and
yet when, at the invitation of the Catholic Bishops Conference of
India, I had occasion to refer to them two years ago in my book,
Missionaries in India, the cry went up, "But why are you digging up
these old things? Who talks about India and Hinduism to those terms
today?"
Notice the congruence of themes: what is being put
of at these conference in the US is exactly what our secularists and
others put out in the newspapers here; the themes and premises are
the very same -- that there really is no such thing as Hinduism --
the very words are the same. The primary responsibility for this is
not of the foreign scholar as of the secularist Indians: just as the
spectacles of the foreign correspondent working in Delhi get
coloured by what he reads and hears from Indian journalists writing
in the English newspapers in this one city, the perception of the
foreign scholar -- a "specialist on South Asia" though he be -- gets
coloured by what he hears from and reads of the output of Indian
scholars.
Notice also the convergence of interests: of the
interests of Christian missionaries and Islamic groups, of the
official US establishment, of our secularists. Notice the
subservience of US academies to the current fashion of "political
correctness." Notice the total perversion, indeed the complete
inversion: the groups whose foundational belief is theocracy, whose
ideology is exclusiveness distilled 10 times over are the very ones
who are accusing Hindus of ahem -- theocratic! The very groups the
Leftists -- whose forbears collaborated with the Nazis, whose
ideology is Nazism by a different name are the ones who are accusing
Hindus of being Nazis.
But falsehood is a potent weapon. Neither American
Presidents and Congressmen nor the American people at large have any
time to ascertain facts about India. Policy is therefore formed by
just a handful of middle- level officers -- the Robin Raphaels whose
predilections have been on display in such vivid colours these five
years. Presidents and Americans in general go along with what this
handful concocts -- they are conditioned to do so by the stereotype
which they have been fed over the years. It is this stereotype which
this kind of falsehood manufactures.
When what the note of this official reveals is the
perception Americans are let to form of India, the policy which they
will countenance will be one of unadulterated hostility. That will
harm not just Indo-US relations, it will harm India no end.
But who cares?