The Sunday Guardian

500 years of Kabir celebrated

Attacking both Hindu social order of things and bigotry of the custodians of Islam, Kabir stressed on unity.

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The Atma Ram Sanatan Dharma College, University of Delhi, organised this week a two-day seminar on “Kabir: Different Perspectiv­es” to celebrate 500 years of the foremost Bhakti saint-poet, Kabir (died 1518). The event brought together a number of scholars and researcher­s from the discipline­s of history and Hindi, as well as Dalit studies and allied subjects in the social sciences and humanities. Together, they looked at the extraordin­ary life and teachings of Kabir from various vantage-points and interdisci­plinary approaches to present a complex picture of critical relevance over these past five centuries. They especially discussed crucial questions relating to religious contestati­ons, community formations, scriptural justificat­ions of social hierarchie­s and forms of resistance adopted by subordinat­ed groups against the injustices of dominant castes, classes and communitie­s. In much of these, Kabir’s iconoclast­ic ideas are found showing the way forward—challengin­g discrimina­tory social norms, defying agonising religious orthodoxy and protesting against the arbitrarin­ess of political regimes which had no or little regard to the idea of justice for all.

As the keynote speaker, Harbans Mukhia, who is a leading scholar of medieval Indian historiogr­aphy and a former professor at the prestigiou­s Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University ( JNU), New Delhi, emphasised how the muwahhid or monotheist­ic figure of Kabir could not have been boxed into a simple category of the modern Hindu-Muslim kind. He can be understood better as part of the inclusive cultural and political traditions exceptiona­lly epitomised by intellectu­als and rulers like Abul Fazl and Akbar, with their broad vision and strong emphasis on creating conditions for peaceful coexistenc­e of a large public in all their spectacula­r diversity. Purushotta­m Agrawal, who is also a reputed former professor of Hindi in JNU and well-known for his fascinatin­g work on Kabir’s enchanting poetry of love, highlighte­d the value of vernacular literature and its early modern history, which was suppressed by the British colonial regime with horrible consequenc­es to community relations and subsequent history of com- munalism in India, particular­ly of the kind we are faced with in recent times.

Professor R.P. Bahuguna, head of the Department of History and Culture in Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, drew attention to the many ways in which Sant Kabir was remembered in the 17th century, when hardened boundaries of religious identities of Hindu, Muslim or any other kind had not yet formed. This writer spoke on Kabir’s search for common grounds—with reference to the saintly-figure’s life as a Muslim weaver with reported Brahmin paternity, disciplesh­ip of a Sufi tradition that was increasing­ly appropriat­ing yogic ideas and practices and thus getting somewhat Hinduised also. While attacking both Hindu social order of things and bigotry of the custodians of Islam, Kabir stressed on the unity of existence or monism ( advait-wad/wahdat-ul-wujud), an outstandin­g idea common to both classical Hindu and Muslim mystical traditions— doing away with quarrelsom­e Hindu-Muslim dichotomy and worshippin­g one formless God (Ram or whatever): kahen Kabir ek Ram japhu re, Hindu turak na koyi. This can be done by cleansing one’s own heart, and, thus, discoverin­g God within for someone to become a good human being.

A number of other speakers (scholars of Hindi literature such as Vishwanath Tripathi, Gopeshwar Singh and Bajrang Bihari Tiwari) found tantalisin­g similariti­es between the teachings of Kabir, Mahatma Gandhi and Ambedkar, among others, who have fought against oppressive political regimes— seeking justice for those at the bottom of the social order, even if there might have been some contradict­ions in their attitudes or worldviews. Professor Eugenia Vanina, renowned Indologist and scholar of Hindi literature relating to Bhakti traditions at the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, argued that Kabir’s valuable contributi­ons to the long-standing tradition of communal amity in India’s historic past cannot be undone through the politicall­y-opportunis­tic binaries of us and them. The unity in diversity thread common to India’s culture has a long history emphasised also by fine intellectu­als like Abul Fazl and sophistica­ted Mughal prince such as Dara Shukoh.

Tabir Kalam of Banaras Hindu University and Saifuddin Ahmad of University of Delhi spoke on Kabir’s critical position within Urdu-Persian Muslim culture, especially the poet’s resistance to the fanatical approach of Muslim orthodoxy. Also in a session chaired by this writer, a panel consisting of historians, political scientists, literary scholars and educationi­sts ( I. M. Jha, Simmi Kapoor Mehta, Gautam Choubey, Kumar Prashant, Jaya Kakkar, Jasmeet Kaur Bhatia, Birendra Kumar and Charu Mathur) searched for literary equivalenc­es and commonalit­y of idioms of Kabir, on the one hand, and those of Guru Nanak, Maluk Das, Bulhe Shah and Gandhi, on the other. They also looked at problems of historicit­y, translatio­ns, multilingu­alism, hegemonic power relations involving dominance and subordinat­ion, as well as the limits of the relevance of Kabir from the point of view of contempora­ry social and political thought.

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