shiv wrote:The supporters of Hindu Nationalism have simply accepted the accusation and some actually come up with rationalizations and explanations to prove that the accusations are correct, rather than applying themselves to disproving this egregious association of Hindu nationalism with murder and bigotry.
This is a good query and one starts thinking.
There is this "1=> all" principle, as pointed out by harbans ji, that exceptions do not make the rule.
There is this Jew saying, but found in Qu'ran, which the Moderate Muslims like to point out as "in Qu'ran it says", and thus obfuscating that it is not meant for Muslims but for Jews
Qu'ran 5:32 wrote:Because of that, We decreed upon the Children of Israel that whoever kills a soul unless for a soul or for corruption [done] in the land - it is as if he had slain mankind entirely.
Then there is the principle of
Original Sin. Whole mankind is condemned because of Adam and Eve's transgressions.
We Hindus, for some reason, also have adopted such thinking, that Karma is not individual, but rather Collective. A Hindu's wrongful actions somehow smear his upbringing, his community, his faith everything, and all have to share in his dishonor. Perhaps at some point, Hindus were given collective punishment by the Islamic rulers and the British. Film Lagaan comes to mind. So all village elders ran to the Mai Baap and asked for forgiveness and scolded the person who had caused this transgression, so that the community may escape that collective punishment.
To some extent, Hindus feel collective shame because we think ourselves as a society, where a whole family and community are responsible for the good upbringing and imparting of values to an individual from that family or community, and any transgression by him, is like the failure of that family or community in their mission.
I think this thinking is somehow latent still with us. We feel responsible for the deeds of our brethren in faith.
Muslims and Europeans don't think like that. For Muslims, everybody's deeds are his own, i.e. a man is only responsible for his deeds and the deeds of those whom he own - his women, his daughters, his sisters, but not for the deeds of other men, i.e. unless they are against the Qu'ran. Their deeds are owned by them and them alone. However punishment on any Muslim is owned by the whole Ummah, and so the whole Ummah needs to retaliate - individual guilt but collective victimization. In modern Europe too, it is individual guilt. One is not responsible for the deeds of the others, and they are against collective punishment, at least in their societies.
Thus whenever any accusations are made against any Hindu, all Hindus start feeling collective guilt. Many who are well-versed in the issue, can defend the actions of the pronounced guilty Hindu, but most just shut-up and bow their heads in shame. But basically all buy into collective shame and guilt. Secondly as the accusation made is by calling the pronounced guilty Hindu as "Hindu", and thus a follower of the religion "Hinduism", an effort is made to smear the religion itself as guilty and allowing barbarism and violence.
That is the trap of "Hinduism" as a religion! It is easy to push the insinuation "Hindutvavadi" => "Hindu Nationalist" => "Hindu" => "follower of Hinduism", so any Hindutvavadi who is perhaps guilty of violence suddenly transforms into all followers of Hinduism share in the shame and guilt of that action.
So we then start feeling guilty for being followers of "Hinduism" as well.
These are chains we have put around ourselves, and need to free ourselves from.
1) The act of some "Hindutvavadi" is his own.
2) He does not represent, in fact, he cannot represent, all of Hindutva!
3) So Hindutva does not share in his guilt.
4) So other Hindutvavadis do not share in his guilt.
5) Neither his actions nor that of any Hindutvavadi have anything to do with their faith, with "Hinduism".
6) No follower of Hinduism, "Hinduist", is responsible for what Hindutvavadis do, one is faith, the other politics.
7) Teaching values to an individual may be the responsibility of the whole Hindu community, but since Macaulayists have destroyed Hindu education system, Hindu Samaj can hardly own up any responsibility.