The Sunday Guardian

Looking at words that sustain the vibrancy of Indian culture

Edited and compiled by the veteran poet Ashok Vajpeyi, India Dissents brings together writings from across Indian history that embody the spirit of scepticism and reform, so central to our culture.

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Ashok Vajpeyi Publisher: Speaking Tiger Pages: 546 Price:Rs 499

It can be reasonably argued that in India, from the beginning of its civilisati­onal enterprise, nothing has remained singular for long; in fact, nothing has been, in a sense, allowed to be singular for long. Whether God or religion, philosophy or metaphysic­s, language or custom, cuisine or costume, every realm is marked by plurality. It is not accidental that in many Western languages the word India is plural— “Indes”, meaning “Indias”.

It is impossible, therefore, to talk about the Indian tradition: there are multiple traditions, all authentica­lly and robustly Indian. Even within a single major religion, Hinduism, there are four Vedas, millions of gods, eighteen Upanishads, six schools of classical philosophy, two epics (and numerous versions of both), four purusharth­as or goals of life. It can be easily claimed that India as a country—and, equally, as a civilisati­on—is an unending celebratio­n of human plurali- N TIO FIC N NO ty. This is how it has survived through millennia.

Central to the plural tradition, or sensibilit­y, is the n notion that there are many ways of looking at and living in the world. Plurality accommodat­es difference­s; and difference­s, in their turn, embody and enact dissent. When the Vedic seer ordains, Aano Bhadrah Kratvo Yantu Vishwatah (Let noble thoughts come to us from all directions), what is being sanctified is the idea that there are many different ideas and truths spread all over the world and they are all welcome. Another Vedic saying, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (The world is one family), embraces all humanity, and therefore every idea, emotion, lifestyle that exists. Such openness and acceptance, or, at the very least, accommodat­ion, is the core of the Vedic cosmic vision. Through the millennia, many dilutions and distortion­s may have occurred in real life and practice, as would inevitably happen everywhere, but Indian tradition and civilizati­on never lost this remarkable, largely inclusive vision.

Dr Amartya Sen has pointed out in his book The Argumentat­ive Indian that the Nasadiya Sukta, the Hymn of Creation, a major verse in the Rig Veda, ends with radical doubt:

Who really knows? Who will here proclaim it? Whence was it produced?

Whence is this creation? The gods came afterwards, with the creation of this universe. Who then knows whence it has risen?

Whence this creation has risen— perhaps it formed itself, or perhaps it did not— the one who looks down on it, in the highest heaven, only he knows—or perhaps he does not know.

This is evidently the begin- The author Neil George says:I had been raised from childhood on a diet of a comics, movies, American sitcoms—Tintin, Archies and so on. And then my workplace, I had to spend countless hours evaluating advertisin­g storyboard­s, attending television commercial shoots and had worked with some of the world’s greatest advertisin­g and graphic design minds. I thought to myself-—Why not create world’s first brand management comic? ning of Indian skepticism. Nothing, not even the creation of the universe, or the supremacy and omniscienc­e of God, is taken for granted. It may be noted that the hymn is also clear that the gods came after creation— they are, in that sense, no different from fish or trees or human beings. Into a major sukta of perhaps the oldest and one of the most important texts of Hinduism, then, the Vedic seers inserted a deeply metaphysic­al note of dissent.

A similar note was struck by a rishi named Kauntya, who declared that if what had been said in the Vedas could not be communicat­ed in any other language or in any other way, the Vedas must be meaningles­s. This was pure blasphemy since the Vedas were held to be inviolable, apourushey­a. But Yaska, an ancient grammarian and commentato­r on the Vedas, includes this view in Nirukta, his compilatio­n of Vedic interpreta­tions which became one of the central texts of Sanskrit scholarshi­p.

In these and other passages from the earliest texts of Hinduism, there is ample evidence that the Indian traditions begin with enquiry, doubt and challenge—the hallmarks of plurality.

These traditions continued and grew with the other major religions that arose in India—Buddhism, Jainism and, later, Sikhism. Their founders, Buddha, Mahavir and Nanak, dissented from the ritualisti­c and caste rigidities of orthodox Hinduism to discover new paths of spirituali­ty, metaphysic­s, social organizati­on and liberation. Here was religious plurality being created through religious dissent. Buddhism and Jainism were particular­ly radical faiths; they were not posited on the notion and existence of God, and they rejected completely the scriptures of Hinduism and many of its foundation­al concepts like the eternal soul and the four goals of life. The rejection was forceful, fearless and rooted in intellectu­al inquiry and debate.

Buddha, the great challenger, was later included as one of the ten avatars of God— Dashavatar— in classical Hinduism, along with Rama and Krishna. Here, too, was proof of India’s irrepressi­ble plurality and genius for accommodat­ion!

There was also a strong and multi-layered tradition of disagreeme­nt and debate in the fields of thought, con- duct, knowledge and morality in pre-modern India. Two aspects are easily noticeable. First, no one could propose a new concept or insight or theory without first faithfully summarisin­g the existing body of reflection on it. This was poorvapaks­ha, and only then could there be uttarpaksh­a— the thinker or debater proposing that which he or she claimed to be different or new, delineatin­g it in meticulous detail. This was the standard intellectu­al practice.

Secondly, any new or different idea, theory or insight had to be publicly debated and accepted before being given a place in the scheme of things. The institutio­n of shastrarth— philosophi­cal contests—was well entrenched and there are many examples of this. The most celebrated instance is of the great thinker Shankarach­arya having to engage in a shastrarth with Mandana Mishra and his wife Ubhaya Bharati over several days. There are many examples of such discussion­s and debates between Shaivites and Vaishnavit­es, Hindus and Buddhists, Buddhists and Jains; between different schools of philosophi­cal and ethical thought; between agnostics and believers. The interrogat­ive and dialogical ethos also finds place in literature, and the epic Mahabharat­a is full of such dialogues and debates. It is apt of Dr Amartya Sen to have called us ‘argumentat­ive’ Indians: these age-old convention­s of dissent, dialogue, debate and disagreeme­nt are ample evidence that India created a civilizati­on which was marked by curiosity and quest, by questions and doubts, by accommodat­ion and acceptance of contrary viewpoints. Extracted with permission from India Dissents: 3,000 Years of Difference, Doubt and Argument, edited by Ashok Vajpeyi, published by Speaking Tiger

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Ashok Vajpeyi.
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India Dissents: 3,000 Years of Difference, Doubt and Argument
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Building the perfect beast By Neil George Publisher: Power Publisher
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