The Sunday Guardian

Many US universiti­es institutio­nalise hatred and prejudice

- ARVIND KUMAR HOUSTON

It would be appropriat­e if the Conference on the Study of Religions of India and Georgetown University’s Berkley Center on Religion are declared hate groups and the people associated with them are placed on a blacklist and permanentl­y banned from visiting India for attempting to create social strife.

the email from James Ponniah of Madras University’s Department of Christian Studies announcing the cancellati­on of the conference is dated 14 May 2020 (see image), four days after the article appeared on these pages and long after the organisers had been pushed on the defensive by the ensuing public anger. And long after the virus struck the world.

The webpage also tries to rebut the previous article using claims never made in the article. It then uses carefully constructe­d sentences in order to make it appear that the conference was an independen­t effort that had nothing to do with the Department of Christian Studies at the University of Madras. Or that there has never been any connection between the taxpayer funded Christian theocratic group called the United States Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom (USCIRF) and the organisers of the conference. These claims are disingenuo­us as the university’s faculty clearly made arrangemen­ts to use university resources available to them in order to host this patently anti-hindu conference and further the goals of USCIRF, which includes active proselytis­m around the world. Besides, Chad Bauman, who is a key organiser of the conference, has co-authored at least one work with James Ponniah in which they attack Hinduism and has published at least one paper in which he admits to advising American foreign policy specialist­s “on how to intervene in (and/or not intervene) productive­ly” in support of “religious freedom” [otherwise called frank proselytis­m,] and “religious minorities in India.” The cynical claim in this paper that not only not extending reservatio­ns to Muslims and Christians amounts to discrimina­tion by Hindus, but granting special privileges to them too amounts to discrimina­tion as it would provide fodder to Hindus to claim that minorities were appeased, has become a cornerston­e of American foreign policy. He has also been involved with Georgetown University’s Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs, which works with USCIRF Commission­ers. It may be mentioned that numerous proselytis­ers were given red carpet receptions in India during the Sonia Gandhi decade of untrammell­ed power (2004-14). When some of these were withdrawn by the current government, it became the target of a vicious attack that has brought in fundamenta­list and conversion lobbies in several countries on the common platform of demonizing Hindus. As though Hindus were those who killed Christians in Iraq, Libya and Syria or minorities (including themselves) in Pakistan.

The same webpage makes the claim that the conference is not anti-hindu and invites “those interested to browse the Tables of Content of the volumes CSRI conference­s have produced over the years, or (even better) to read the chapters themselves” and then provides a link to material that cannot be accessed without a payment. There is no need to pay the organisers to judge them, as that can be done for free, based, for example, on the contents of the “Conference on Religions of India” held in 2018 at Davis.

The main organisers of that conference—who also happen to be involved with the 2020 conference—are Brian Pennington, Chad Bauman, Reid Locklin and Archana Little (who slickly markets herself as Archana Venkatesan, thus obfuscatin­g her actual connection). Several presentati­ons are listed in the official schedule of the conference organised by them. Every single presentati­on launched a vitriolic attack against Hinduism as can be seen from their titles.

Those titles were: “‘Tell Us Your Name and Do as We Say!’: Concealing and Revealing in the Making of Family Gods in Tamil Nadu”; “Divine Deception or Priestly Artifice: Its Rationale and Justificat­ion in

“When Spirit Possession is Deception: Reassessin­g Religious Tradition as Modern Industry”; “Dissimulat­ion in Early American Yoga”;

“Celebrity, Scandal and the Modern Godmen of India”; “Beware the Charlatan: Sant and Asant in Niṣkuḷānan­da Svāmī’s Cosaṭh Padī”; “Desire, Deception, and Sinister Sovereigns”; “Shadows of Inauthenti­city: History and Hagiograph­y in Vīraśaiva/ Liṅgāyat Origin Stories”; “Arts of Artifice: Transforma­tions of the Hindu Divine”; “Two Stories of the Origins of the Pāṇḍavas: Yudhiṣṭira’s Authentici­ty, Legitimacy and Deceit”; “Nikṛtyā Nikṛtiṃ Hanyāt: Defending Deception in the Mahā bhā rata Commentari­al Tradition”; “Will the Real Mirabai Please Stand Up?: Competing Claims to Authentici­ty and Truth”; “Accommodat­ing Esotericis­m or Hiding a Secret in Plain Sight: The Social Place of the Śākta Tantras in the Medieval Deccan”; “#Mood: When the Goddess Becomes a Woman on Social Media”; “Devotion to Deceiving Gods or a Dispassion­ate Being? Objects of Praise and Disdain in Hemacandra’s Hymns”, “Necessary Subterfuge?: ‘Hinduism’ and Pedagogy”; “Fictive History, Ignorance, and the Constituti­on of American Hindu Communitie­s”; “Reform in Fragments: An Essay on Orthodoxy”; and “(Mis) Translatin­g Self-realizatio­n: Strategic Misreading in an Advaita Commentari­al Tradition”.

In complete contrast, a course on Indian Christiani­ty offered by one of the main conference organisers, Reid Locklin at Wabash College states that the course objective is “to acquire and demonstrat­e sympatheti­c familiarit­y with the history of Christiani­ty in India” and prescribes books from a Christian religious bookstore named “Crux Books”, establishi­ng Locklin’s credential­s as an anti-hindu zealot. Locklin also left no doubts about his intentions in an interview to the Christian group Collegevil­le Institute when he stated about his project named “Advaita Mission, Christian Mission”, “[My] project aspires to be interfaith, I suppose, but it is still a very Christian project: I am a Christian theologian who studies Hindu traditions for the purposes of a renewal of Christian theologies.”

It would be appropriat­e if the Conference on the Study of Religions of India and Georgetown University’s Berkley Center on Religion are declared hate groups and the people associated with them are placed on a blacklist and permanentl­y banned from visiting India for attempting to create social strife. The wounds created by the toxic policies of Sonia Gandhi are still festering, in part because of the kid glove treatment that those responsibl­e have got from this government, including Sonia Gandhi and her extended family, details of whose wealth remain a secret hidden in government records in multiple countries that could easily be made public, once there is the political will to do so in the leafy and luxurious confines of Lutyens Delhi. Arvind Kumar can be reached at arvindk@uchicago.edu

The conference webpage hosted by Butler University states, “As indicated above, the conference had already been postponed due to coronaviru­s.” This claim is laughable as the email from James Ponniah announcing the cancellati­on of the conference is dated 14 May 2020 (see image), four days after the article appeared on these pages and long after the organisers had been pushed on the defensive by the ensuing public anger. And long after the virus struck the world.

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