| Appendix 2. Ram Swarup on Indian secularismI gladly leave the last world to Ram Swarup. By way of introduction, let me quote the first part of Arun Shourie's article Fomenting reaction, concerning the ban on the Hindi translation of Ram Swarup's book understanding Islam through Hadis:Ram Swarup, now in his seventies, is a scholar of the first rank. In the 1950's when our intellectuals were singing paeans to Marxism and to Mao in particular, he wrote critiques of communism and of the actual-that is, dismal - performance of communist governments. He showed that the sacrifices which the people were being compelled to make, had nothing to do with building a new society in which at some future date they would be the heirs of milk and honey. On the contrary, the sacrifices were nothing but the results of terrorism, pure and simple- of state terrorism, to use the expression our progressive use for all governments save the governments which have used it most brutally and most extensively. And that this terror was being deployed for one reason alone: to ensure total dominance, and that in perpetuity, for the narrowest of oligarchies. He showed that the claims to efficiency and productivity, to equitable distribution and to high morale which were being made by these governments, and even more so by their apologists and propagandists in countries such as India, were wholly unsustainable, that in fact they were fabrications. Today, anyone reading those critiques would characterize them as prophetic. But thirty years ago so noxious was the intellectual climate in India that all he got was abuse, and ostracism. "His work of Hinduism and on Islam and Christianity has been equally scholarly. And what is more pertinent to the point I want to urge, it has been equally prophetic. No one has ever refuted him on facts, but many have sought to smear him and his writing. They have thereby transmuted his work from mere scholarship into warning". 
 Seeing through Indian secularismThe country's political atmosphere is rent with anti communal slogans. There are deafening warnings against the threat to India's secularism. Everywhere there is a gushing love for the minorities and a hearty condemnation of the forces of communalism as incarnated in the VHP, the RSS and the BJP. The parties and personalities who not long ago opposed India's struggle for freedom and unity are fully in the campaign. The Left intellectuals who dominate the media lead the Chorus; Muslim fundamentalism provides the political sinews and the street strength; that section of the press which had British connections (like the Statesman and the Times of India) is still carrying on the old tradition either out of habit or old loyalty or for sheer consistency.The warnings against communalism are not new. They have a familiar feature of the post-independence period. They have been sounded partly to keep the warners in form, and partly because they have been the stock-in-trade of slick intellectuals in search of a progressive image and of skillful politicians in search of easy votes. But this time one also notices a new urgency and shrillness in the alarm bells. It seems it is no longer a put-up affair and the warners feel really endangered. It also appears that this time the danger is not felt to be against the Muslims- their adopted ward- but against themselves. For what has begun to be attacked is not Muslim fundamentalism but pseudo-secularism itself. A great threat indeed to those secularist-communists in India whose model show-piece in Europe is in ruins and whose ideology and the very way of thinking are under great questioning. Though borrowed from the West, secularism in India served a different end. In the West, it was directed against the clergy, tyrannical rulers, and had therefore a liberating role; in India, it was designed and actually used by Macaulayites to keep down the Hindus, the victims of two successive imperialisms expending over a thousand years. In the West, it opposed the Church which claimed to be the sole custodian of truth, which took upon itself the responsibility of dictating science and ordering thought, which decided when the world was created, whether the earth is flat or round, whether the sun or the earth moves round the other, which gave definitive conclusions on all matters and punished and dissent. But in India, secularism was directed against Hinduism which made no such claims, which laid down no dogmas and punished no dissent, which fully accepted the role of reason and unhampered inquiry in all matters, spiritual and secular; which encouraged viewing things from multiple angles - Syadvada (for which there is no true English word)323 was only a part of this larger speculative and venturesome approach. 
        
        There  is yet another difference.  In the West, the struggle  for
 
        secularism  called  for  sacrifice  and  suffering-remember   the
 
        imprisonments,  the stakes, the Index; remember the  condemnation
 
        of  Galileo;  remember how Bruno, Lucilio Vanini,  Francis  Kett,
 
        Bartholomew Legate, Wightman and others were burnt at the  stake.
  
        But  in  India secularism has been a part of  the  Establishment,
 
        first  of the British and then of our own self-alienated  rulers.
  
        It  has  been used against Hinduism which has nourished  a  great
 
        spirit  and culture of tolerance, free inquiry  and  intellectual
 
        323.   Syadvada   literally   means 
perhaps-ism.     Approximate
 
        translations   could   be  cognitive  [as  opposed   to   moral]
 
        relativism,    viewpointly    pluralism.     The    dictionary
 
        translations   
        
        Now turning away from this larger aspect and looking at it in its
 
        present  context, we find that secularism is quite  a  profitable
 
        business.  Even more than patriotism, it has become a  refuge  
of 
        many   shady   characters  of  various   descriptions   Ambitious
 
        politicians  resort to it for vote-catching; intellectuals,  many
 
        of them not too intellectual, use it for self-aggrandizement .
        
        But  the  slogan  has  been so often  used  that  it  has  become
 
        hackneyed;  and considering the contexts in which it is used,  
it 
        also sounds hypocritical; by a too reckless use, it has even lost
 
        its abusive power. 
        
        Religious harmony is a desirable thing.  But it takes two to play
 
        the game.  Unfortunately such a sentiment holds a low position 
in 
        Islamic  theology.   The situation is made  more  complicated  
by 
        certain  historical factors into which we need not go here.   The
 
        immediately  preceding British period added its  own  difficulty.
  
        More  than the policy of divide and rule, the British  followed
 
        another  favourite  policy,  the policy  of  creating  privileged
 
        enclaves  and ruling the masses with the help of  those  policies
 
        were  embraced in their fullness by our new rulers-the  rules  
of 
        the  game did not change simple because the British  left.   They
 
        have   a   vested  interest  in   consolidated   minorities   and
 
        minorityism.   Consolidated  minorities  can be  used  against 
 a 
        notional  majority which can be further fragmented  and  rendered
 
        powerless a la Mandalisation and other such devices. 
        
        In  his  book My Eleven Years With Fakhruddin  Ahmad,  Mr.  Fazle
 
        Ahmed  Rehmany quotes an incident which throws interesting  light
 
        on  the psychology of secularism and its need to keep Muslims  
in 
        isolation  and  in  a sort of  protective  custody.   During  the
 
        Emergency  period, some followers of the  jama'at-e-Islami  found
 
        themselves  in  the same jail as the members of  RSS;  here  they
 
        began  to discover that the latter were no monsters as  described
 
        by  the nationalist and secularist propaganda.  Therefore  they
 
        began   to  think  better  of  the  Hindus.   This  alarmed   the
 
        secularists  and the interested Maulvis.  Some Maulvis  belonging
 
        to  the Jama'at-ul-Ulema-i-Hind met President  Fakhruddin  Ahmad,
 
        and reported to him about the growing rapport between the members
 
        of the two communities.  This stunned the President and he said
 
        that this boded an ominous future for Congress Muslim  leaders,
 
        and  he  promised  that "he would speak to  Indiraji  about  this
 
        dangerous development and ensure that Muslims remain Muslims."
        
        Different  political  parties have a vested interest  in  Muslims
 
        retaining their Hindu phobia.  This phobia is a treasure trove 
of 
        votes  for them-or, at least, this is what they believe.   It  
is 
        unfortunate that the Muslims have not thrown up leaders who  stop
 
        playing  the  anti-Hindu game of some Hindus.  It  can  bring  
no 
        religious   amity.    What  Islam  needs  is   an   introspective
 
        leadership,  a leadership which is prepared to have a fresh  look
 
        at  its traditional doctrines and approaches.  It must  give  
up 
        its  religious  arrogance  and  its  fundamentalism,  its   basic
 
        categories of believers and infidels, its imperialist theories 
of 
        Zimmis  and Jizya, its belief that it has appeared with a  divine
 
        mission to replace all other religions and modes or worship. 
         
        [Published with some editing in Indian Express, 2/1/1991] 
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