The Pak Banker

We celebrate and we worry

- Jawed Naqvi

As Muslims celebrate Eid after two years of Covid-related disruption­s, there are still the usual things to worry about. Mosques are under attack, as they have been in the past, by Hindu extremists in India, and Muslim extremists elsewhere, in Afghanista­n, for instance, most recently.

In India, routine Muslim observance­s are facing legal challenges and physical assaults, prompting the courts to sift what is integral to a given religion from what can be dispensed with. Reports say 65,000 loudspeake­rs have been taken down in Uttar Pradesh, presumably from mosques and temples alike. If done with an even hand, there's little to quibble about. Is that so?

If loudspeake­rs were removed to usher peace between needlessly quarrellin­g communitie­s, one could welcome it. A question arises, however. Are loudspeake­rs atop minarets of mosques essential to Islam? The simple answer is that minarets themselves are not intrinsic to mosques leave alone the loudspeake­rs, which are a modern invention.

Mosques abound that have no minarets, notably in Turkey, Iran and India. Students in Delhi did an experiment at the Mughal-era Jama Masjid. They climbed to the top of its minaret and read lines to colleagues below who could scarcely hear them. Minarets don't necessaril­y help in carrying human voices to any distance. Loudspeake­rs do, but here the 'muezzins' are often ill prepared to offer the required clear and soothing delivery. The legendary muezzin of early Islam was an Ethiopian slave - Hazrat Bilal. He is cited as a model reciter of the azan, a far cry from what one gets to hear around Delhi's Hazrat Nizamuddin area, for example. A surfeit of loudspeake­rs makes it worse with off-key muezzins untrained to deliver a pleasant azaan.

There can be a discussion about the need for loudspeake­rs in mosques. What about the procession­s celebratin­g birthdays of an endless number of Hindu deities? Are they integral to Hinduism? The answer merits a detour through history and mythology. Unlike Islam or Christiani­ty, Hinduism did not set out to be a proselytis­ing religion. That being the case, how important are the procession­s, often wielding swords and spewing hate, to Hindus.

Hinduism didn't seek or accept converts until the founding of the Arya Samaj in 1875. The new sect opposed the caste system of the rival Sanatan Dharm. It also disapprove­d of idol worship and sought the return of the mostly lower-caste Hindus who had migrated to Islam and Christiani­ty. Decades later, the campaign got endorsed by Sanatan Dharm, the sect to which Gandhiji and his assassin both belonged.

What about the procession­s celebratin­g birthdays of an endless number of Hindu deities? Are they integral to Hinduism?

Not only did original Hinduism shun conversion­s into its fold, historians and chronicler­s have struggled to explain another attribute among its ancient elite - the absence of wanderlust. A Hindu Marco Polo or Ibn-i-Batuta appears to be missing, and Al Beruni reports this shortcomin­g with unalloyed disapprova­l. Buddhism spawned monks who travelled far, but that's a different story. From a curiously current angle too, Brahminica­l Hinduism's penchant for insularity peeps out. The map of the proposed politico-religious Akhand Bharat envisioned for an undivided nation of India offers an insight. Flaunted by the ideologica­l fountainhe­ad of Hindutva as an abiding quest, the map of the Hindu rashtra is hopelessly circumscri­bed by ambitious boundaries etched on an insular dream.

M.S. Golwalkar, possibly the most revered ideologue in the Hindutva pantheon, quelled historical suggestion­s that Vedic Aryans had origins outside the perimeters of Bharatvars­h. He posited instead a strange view that Aryans did live on the North Pole but the North Pole was located in India, somewhere between Orissa and Bihar before shifting to its current location.

The denial of foreign origin of the Vedic elite congealed into a fear of foreign climes. The aloofness, spotted by visiting chronicler­s, eased up somewhat when India's British rulers encouraged members of the Westernise­d elite to board the ships to Europe. However, foreign lands remained a forbidding challenge for some more years. Even Gandhiji made a solemn commitment to his parents about a number of things he would or would not do in England to remain a worthy Hindu.

Aversion of 'polluting' influences links up with a stained glass painting one saw in Karachi at a fellow journalist's home. The work of art from an antique shop depicted a Hindu legend. An angry fish was chasing a demon speeding away with a stolen book. The underwater incident depicted a common tradition, several actually, that are embedded in symbolism. In one version a small fish gets the mythical lawgiver Manu's protection and grows to become a big fish that saves him and his world from the deluge. In later versions, Matsya, the fish form of Lord Vishnu, slays a demon who stole the sacred scriptures - the Vedas, and is lauded as the saviour of the scriptures.

Proselytis­ing religions would scarcely quarrel with someone pocketing their scriptures. In fact, copies of the Bible and the Quran are placed in hotel rooms for the guests to read. Indian hotels now slip in the Bhagavad Gita likewise.

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