Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Why building temples is a profitable business

The growth of blind faith, superstiti­on and aggressive ‘religionee­ring’ present a danger to a modernisin­g India

- MOHAN GURUSWAMY Mohan Guruswamy is an economics and policy analyst. The views expressed are personal

Last year, the number of foreign tourists who came to India was about 90 million. By contrast, domestic tourism totaled over 1,400 million visits; clearly suggesting that its implied economics are far bigger than the foreign business. It also suggests that very many of our people make several trips for tourism every year. While the concentrat­ion of the central government’s tourism promotion efforts focus on the Delhi-Agra-Jaipur “golden triangle” the highest number of foreign tourist arrivals (20.1%) are in Tamil Nadu. Delhi draws half that. The southern states see the most foreign and domestic tourist traffic because of the number of important religious places. The location of Tirupati within it makes Andhra Pradesh India’s biggest domestic tourist destinatio­n. Religious tourism is big business. What does this suggest?

The Pew Global Attitude survey study shows that more than 25% of Indians reported having become more religious over the past few years. The trend is valid across religions and in keeping with other attitudina­l surveys. Between 2007 and 2015, the share of respondent­s in India who perceived religion to be very important increased by 11% to 80% now. The National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) report shows that average expenditur­e on religious trips has more than doubled during this period. Clearly this is a rapidly expanding business sector and given the trends, the sky is the limit.

While the economic activity and the employment it generates are a cause for happiness all around, we must also ponder about the other ramificati­ons of this growing religiosit­y. The growth of blind faith, superstiti­on and aggressive religionee­ring present a clear and present danger to India evolving as a modernisin­g society which values reason and tempers collective behav- iour. The building of temples is a profitable business. That’s why public spaces are increasing­ly usurped by unscrupulo­us entreprene­urs to build shrines. And we know from experience that once gods and religious figures get installed in a place, they cannot be dislodged. With religiosit­y and religionee­ring big business now, it is increasing­ly common to see government­s promoting “religious tourism.”

There is increasing­ly an unstated and subtle competitio­n now implying that my idol is better than yours. The Venkateshw­ara temple at Tirumala is India’s biggest money-spinner. This Vaishnavit­e shrine attracts 40 million devotees each year. Telangana has now embarked on promoting the Yadagirigu­tta temple near Hyderabad to become a religious tourism draw. Under the CPM government, Kerala temple boards actually advertise the magical powers of their stone idols. Communism was supposed to make us rational and believe God was a figment of mankind’s imaginatio­n.

Jawaharlal Nehru wanted the new India to be guided by reason and infused with the scientific temper. Instead we are now increasing­ly a people driven by dogma and blind faith. Religion and blind faith are our biggest faultlines and the cause of much social friction and breakdown of orderly public behaviour.

To make a point, Nehru never visited religious places lest it be seen as an endorsemen­t. We now increasing­ly see our constituti­onal authoritie­s and prominent personalit­ies making much-publicised visits to places of faith but also of unreason. We have seen leaders make extravagan­t offerings to deities as fulfilling a promise that they would do so if elected. Most politician­s have favourite places of worship. To stretch the point, even the flourishin­g business of godmen and women are growing. After his recent death, many commentato­rs wrote of Chandraswa­mi as a self-styled conduit between god and ordinary people. So instead of discouragi­ng blind faith, our politician­s encourage it in many ways. The late Sai Baba had a devout following among the political class.

It is not my point that religious tourism is in itself a bad thing, in fact it is good for the economy. My grouse is with the often regressive values associated with religion which is not the same as true faith and spirituali­ty. Religious shrines across the world are a big draw, and India is no different. Politician­s are well within their right to worship their gods, but not at the expense of the taxpayer. Unless they consider this to be a part of business promotion.

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