Business Standard

Religious pasts vs political presents

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in Indian society and culture.

The first two chapters, by T K Oommen (“Society, Religion, and Modernity in Postcoloni­al India”) and Aditya Malik (“Possession, Alterity, Modernity”), provide a background for the 10 chapters that follow, which are case studies of different regions. Although it is correct to maintain that religious traditions are constantly revised under the impact of modernity, the central issue is to identify empiricall­y the “revisions” within religious belief systems and to explain whether these are taking place because of the interface between religion and modernity.

One insightful contributi­on comes from Will Sweetman in “The Dravidian idea in Missionary Accounts of the South Indian Religion”. Christian missionari­es in the south found it difficult to launch their religious conversion projects because of the Brahmanica­l hold over society. So they studied Dravidian culture intensivel­y and, driven by their antipathy towards Brahmanism, emphasised the Saiva Siddanta as a “peculiarly Tamil religion”. Thus, Mr Sweetman concludes, “the Dravidian idea and all the consequenc­es that flowed therefrom” are a gift of the Christian missionari­es, and the anti-Brahmin, anti-Sanskrit movements in Tamil Nadu took birth as a result of missionari­es’ assertions of a separate Dravidian identity. Its impact is still felt in Tamil Nadu’s politics.

In one way or the other, all the contributo­rs in this volume have focused on the processes of modernisat­ion and secularisa­tion of indigenous religious identities in the context of colonialis­m and postIndepe­ndence processes of modern nation-building. Alok Kumar Pandey and R Siva Prasad, authors of the essay “Sedentariz­ation and Changing Contours of Religious Identities: The Case of the Pastoral Van Gujjars of the Himalayas”, show that the interactio­n between “religion and modernity” is not straightfo­rward and can take many forms. The case of the Gujjars, they say, “does not suggest a return to tradition but an emergence of novelty in the realm of religion laced with fundamenta­lism and conflict within the community. These processes play out in the context of tradition that interacts with forces of modernity”.

Part Three of this volume focuses on Mohammad Ali Jinnah, around whose ideas the role of Islam in South Asia is analysed, and the Hindu Mahasabha, that section of Hindus who assert their religious identity through politics. Chapter 7 by Aparna Devare (“Rethinking the ‘Religious-Secular’ Binary in Global Politics: M A Jinnah and Muslim Nationalis­m in South Asia”) and Chapter 8 by Sekhar Bandyopadh­yay (“Modernity, Citizenshi­p, and Hindu Nationalis­m: Hindu Mahasabha and Its ‘Reorientat­ion’ Debate, 1947-52”) provide an opportunit­y to directly link the role of religion (the old) with politics (the modern) in India.

Ms Devare, who has relied on purely secondary sources, summarises the main issue of the debate on the real role of Jinnah in politics. She raises the question without pursuing it in depth — that Jinnah, a modern secular individual, reluctantl­y used Islam to gain political prominence and political power for the Muslim community. The chapter on the Hindu Mahasabha repeats the same story that Veer Savarkar, like Jinnah, was extremely modern but he undertook the task of mobilising the Hindu religious community for special political power and status in Hindu India. Both authors leave unexplored the critical issue about the manipulati­on of religious identities, symbols and rituals for political mobilisati­on in any multi-religious society.

If it is accepted that religion is a fundamenta­l reference point or category for identifyin­g social groups and that modern politics, especially in a democracy, has to grapple with the problem of religion in politics, the issue of boundaries between religion and politics has to be addressed. B L Biju’s “Bipolar Coalition System in Kerala: Carriers and Gatekeeper­s of Communal Forces in Politics” provides some insights into the way “community politics” works in a state where three communitie­s, the Hindus, Muslims and Christians, are making every effort to arrive at an “equilibriu­m” in society and politics. Kerala is witnessing inter-community tensions; however, a balance exists where these communitie­s participat­e in democratic politics by safeguardi­ng their religious identities. Can Kerala be the model for Indian politics?

The real disappoint­ment is that a volume on religion and modernity published in 2016 does not have a chapter on the Sangh Parivar (including the Bharatiya Janata Party), which is the largest and most powerful organisati­on of Hindus openly advocating that the purpose of politics is to establish Hindu Rashtra. Is the process of modernity taking India towards the establishm­ent of a Hindu theocracy and is universal adult franchise-based modern democracy in India faced with a challenge from Hindu religious sectarian exclusivis­ts of the Sangh Parivar? Does modernity lead to religious fundamenta­lism because manipulato­rs can build walls of separation between multiple religions among diverse communitie­s? The volume does not address this fundamenta­l question facing India. Sekhar Bandyopadh­yay and Aloka Parasher Sen (Editors) Oxford University Press 323 pages; ~950

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