
But still not as good as - 'something is better than nothing and nothing is better than nonsense'. Came to me from a true blue BeKaam Madrasi - Really great guy. Now I think I should call him up. Saale se bahut dino se baat nahi kari.
Best of luck.
If Rāṣṭra was there, then in one form or another Rāṣṭravāda was always also there, which enabled coalitions to come together to oppose outsiders.shiv wrote:Part 2 of my question was, is Hindu nationalism = Hindutva?
iF Hindutva is an organized response by Hindus to tackle nation-state - it is a new response. Therefore there was no Hindu nationalism before the Muslim and British invasions. It is then true that the British created the Indian nation because there is no Hindu concept of nationalism that pre-dates that.
I am unhappy with this conclusion because I do believe there was a sense of nation that goes back centuries. if Hindutva is telling me that a sense of nation was actually non existent till the Abrahamics came, I suspect they are wrong.
I would say you need some precision here. What do you mean by "nation-state"? E.g., one conception of it arose only in the 18th century in Europe. How can you respond to something before it was invented?shiv wrote: Part 2 of my question was, is Hindu nationalism = Hindutva?
iF Hindutva is an organized response by Hindus to tackle nation-state - it is a new response. Therefore there was no Hindu nationalism before the Muslim and British invasions. It is then true that the British created the Indian nation because there is no Hindu concept of nationalism that pre-dates that.
I am unhappy with this conclusion because I do believe there was a sense of nation that goes back centuries. if Hindutva is telling me that a sense of nation was actually non existent till the Abrahamics came, I suspect they are wrong.
West has the power to tempt, power to impress, power to make us doubt ourselves. It is up to us to tear through the web of illusion that the West spreads. However all this also needs institutions.shiv wrote:Rajesh I agree with you here.RajeshA wrote: Their gripe is over what they feel is an adoption of Western "immorality" (boozing, dancing, rubbing, kissing, ...) in the name of individual freedoms. Even all that activity would be acceptable to these orgs if there would have been some Indian tradition of such indulgence. What they find unacceptable is not the acts as such but the presumed Western influence on them which cause the youth to act this way!
But do you see that the problem cannot be elucidated in its right context unless we understand what the west is doing to us. Hindutva vadis who do thse things need intellectual leaders who understand how "western liberalism" is being foisted on Hindu culture and what the history of that liberalism is, so that Hindus can take more nuanced line while tearing down the west.
LGBT and Dharmic perspectiveshiv wrote:In India we accept western norms of "liberalism" without question. I have got into many an argument by asking about the Indian norms for homosexuality. What are they? Is the west invariably right? Are "rights" to be imposed from above, by "law'.
shiv saar,shiv wrote:We seem to believe that Hindus were always liberal in a western sense. I think that is wrong. Hindu liberalism was never something that emerged out of conservatism. It was liberalism that was moderated by Hindu social laws. It was not initial religious control of behaviour followed by "release" when the religions were defeated and sidelined and replaced by "reason" and "rationality" . I use English words that can be misused by saying that Hindus represent "Unreason" and "Irrationality" if they refuse western norms. But these are rhetorical arguments, in fact sophistry, that we need to sort out intellectually - by separating rhetoric from facts
No. In fact I think that in my mind the question has been answered.A_Gupta wrote:I would say you need some precision here. What do you mean by "nation-state"? E.g., one conception of it arose only in the 18th century in Europe. How can you respond to something before it was invented?shiv wrote: Part 2 of my question was, is Hindu nationalism = Hindutva?
iF Hindutva is an organized response by Hindus to tackle nation-state - it is a new response. Therefore there was no Hindu nationalism before the Muslim and British invasions. It is then true that the British created the Indian nation because there is no Hindu concept of nationalism that pre-dates that.
I am unhappy with this conclusion because I do believe there was a sense of nation that goes back centuries. if Hindutva is telling me that a sense of nation was actually non existent till the Abrahamics came, I suspect they are wrong.
It is logically entirely possible that Hindutva is an organized response to the nation-state as it arose in the 18th century AND there was Hindu nationalism that pre-dates that --- simply because nationalism is a rather imprecise notion.
<snip>
PS: anyway, we are not getting any closer to examining why Hindu nationalism is spoken of in a pejorative sense and what we might do to change that.
Shiv:shiv wrote: I find this reservation of "Hindutva/Hindu nationalism" to a narrow aim disappointing. Personally I see a much older sense of unity and many goals that will never be achieved because the aims of Hindutva are limited. The morphing of European Christian supremacist tendencies to western universalism is something that Hindutva will not meet because it's aims are religion centered and is not developing the intellectual capital to meet the demand.
Long ago when I was in Kendriya Vidyalaya, we had Sanskrit in sixth, seventh, eighth (and perhaps ninth) class; it was taught in a rather boring way with emphasis on memorization. Then our Sanskrit teacher went away for a month of training; and when he came back, he totally changed Sanskrit instruction. He made the class interactive, and started us on conversational Sanskrit and composition. Alas, it lasted only a short while; he then got promoted and transferred. Our next Sanskrit teacher was the same old, same old, he writes on the blackboard, we copy into our notebook; in the exam we are tested on how accurately we can remember and reproduce what he wrote on the blackboard.shiv wrote:There has been a big hue and cry in the media about the proposed introduction of Sanskrit language studies in schools . I have not figured out how and where the proposed idea will fit into the curriculum. I agree wholeheartedly that every Indian child, especially if he or she is Hindu, should learn a little bit of Sanskrit, but the question I am asking is, what should be taught as Sanskrit and how should it be taught?
Dump Savarkar's version of Hindutva and use the supreme court definition of 2002. But practitioners of the new version are needed!A_Gupta wrote:
Shiv:
Well, Savarkar may have the copyright on Hindutva; "Hindu nationalism" is still up for grabs. Or we eschew labels, simply do our part for a bottoms-up revival. What would be fatal to do is to disengage.
Precisely!A_Gupta wrote:
But I think that the people who study these things have come up with innovative ways to teach Sanskrit.
Could you post a link please.ShauryaT wrote:Dump Savarkar's version of Hindutva and use the supreme court definition of 2002. But practitioners of the new version are needed!A_Gupta wrote:
Shiv:
Well, Savarkar may have the copyright on Hindutva; "Hindu nationalism" is still up for grabs. Or we eschew labels, simply do our part for a bottoms-up revival. What would be fatal to do is to disengage.
The form of Sanskrit usually taught in schools is dry and useless ( this goes for most subjects though, especially 'Arts' subjects ).shiv wrote:There has been a big hue and cry in the media about the proposed introduction of Sanskrit language studies in schools . I have not figured out how and where the proposed idea will fit into the curriculum. I agree wholeheartedly that every Indian child, especially if he or she is Hindu, should learn a little bit of Sanskrit, but the question I am asking is, what should be taught as Sanskrit and how should it be taught?
shiv wrote: Could you post a link please.
Hindutva decision: Supreme Court 2002, CJ J.S. VermaThese Constitution Bench decisions, after a detailed discussion, indicate that no precise meaning can be ascribed to the terms `Hindu', `Hindutva' and `Hinduism'; and no meaning in the abstract can confine it to the narrow limits of religion alone, excluding the content of Indian culture and heritage. It is also indicated that the term `Hindutva' is related more to the way of life of the people in the sub- continent. It is difficult to appreciate how in the face of these decisions the term `Hindutva' or `Hinduism' per se, in the abstract, can be assumed to mean and be equated with narrow fundamentalist Hindu religious bigotry, or be construed to fall within the prohibition in sub-sections (3) and/or (3A) of Section 123 of the R.P. Act.
In fact a meaningful debate related to the material culture at the time of the Mahabharata should be about whether it involved the cultures of Painted Grey Ware (PGW) or that of Ochre Coloured Pottery(OCP) and not whether they used hydrogen bombs or flying saucers.
The 1976 debate on the historicity of the epic was about PGW and OCP and the archaeologists who debated these questions belonged as much to Hindutva thought as Romila Thapar belonged to the Marxist school.
That the Kurukshetra war fought with much more down-to-earth localized weapons in a cultural milieu that used painted grey ware or ochre colored pottery in no way reduces the spiritual significance of the Bhagavat Gita.
Nothing against Sanskrit and it should be offered, however a highly sanskritized form of Hindi has more practical usages and has the capacity to unify the nation in ways unimagined and will displace English as the socio-economic language of the elite. Aware of the language wars, however political will is needed to overcome those. We have a crisis as of today, where people do not master "any" language with sufficient literacy. This can be gauged by the number of literary works in any Indian language. Spoken forms of the language thrives however.shiv wrote:There has been a big hue and cry in the media about the proposed introduction of Sanskrit language studies in schools . I have not figured out how and where the proposed idea will fit into the curriculum. I agree wholeheartedly that every Indian child, especially if he or she is Hindu, should learn a little bit of Sanskrit, but the question I am asking is, what should be taught as Sanskrit and how should it be taught?
Thirukural is known by many names such as:[8]
உத்தரவேதம் / Uttaravedam - later Veda
பொய்யாமொழி / Poyyamozhi - statements devoid of untruth
வாயூரை வாழ்த்து / Vayurai vazhthu - truthful utterances
தெய்வநூல் / Deyvanool - Holy book
பொதுமறை / Pothumarai - Veda for all
முப்பால் / Muppal - three chaptered
தமிழ் மறை / Tamil marai - Tamil Veda
Shaurya - there is a huge Hindi divide in the country which cannot be good.ShauryaT wrote:Nothing against Sanskrit and it should be offered, however a highly sanskritized form of Hindi has more practical usages and has the capacity to unify the nation in ways unimagined and will displace English as the socio-economic language of the elite. Aware of the language wars, however political will is needed to overcome those. We have a crisis as of today, where people do not master "any" language with sufficient literacy. This can be gauged by the number of literary works in any Indian language. Spoken forms of the language thrives however.
This is correct. We are getting worse day by day. Nowadays little children are being brought up speaking English-only. We want to learn German, Chinese, anything other than our own languages, it seems like.ShauryaT wrote: We have a crisis as of today, where people do not master "any" language with sufficient literacy. This can be gauged by the number of literary works in any Indian language. Spoken forms of the language thrives however.
The division between Dravidian and North Indian ('Aryan') languages exists. And we should not be ashamed of it. Because there is no imposition going on here. Sanskrit was the common link by which we could express ideas and thoughts and concepts across the length of ancient bharata. This gave rise to 'Sanskriti' or culture.shiv wrote: Shaurya - there is a huge Hindi divide in the country which cannot be good.
Swacch Hindi is not going to become a link language anytime soon. But Mumbaiya versions and Bollywoodized versions may work better. Most native Hindu speakers do not instinctively recognize that languages like Bengali and Kannada are dripping with Sanskrit. I was myself never educated in Kannada and I sometimes find a Sanskritized Hindi word that I don't recognize and I simply ask a native Kannada speaker who is able to tell me the meaning right away. Malayalam again is dripping with Sanskrit. The Kannada and Telugu alphabet too are the A Aa, e Ee type like Sanskrit.
So the British classification of "Dravdian" and Dravidian languages has created a division where a division did not exist and that division is alive and healthy today on both sides of the divide. The "philology" that the British told us about separated North and South India like Britain and France with no insight into a common past and a common culture. Echoes of that mental colonization runs so deep now that it won't go away anytime soon. Only anger at being told about that colonization seems to occur.
We don't believe our own (Indian) observations about language and culture but revert back to British theories and characterizations even today. And no one will admit that this disconnect is a variant of mental colonization.
You need to explain what this means - because I speak Kannada, Tamil and Hindi and am familiar with spoken Marathi and Gujarati and I believe I have certain insights into how people from these regions see themselves and their language.csaurabh wrote: The division between Dravidian and North Indian ('Aryan') languages exists. And we should not be ashamed of it.
Many Southern scholars, blinded by nationalism’s anti-imperialist role in the South, believe it can be tamed and used creatively. The experiences of South Asia in the last two centuries suggest that usually religions and cultures change to accommodate nationalism, not the other way round. Savarkar, whom many see as a minor pawn of South Asian history, did change not only South Asian Hinduism but also South Asian Islam and Buddhism. All three had to accommodate strains that have more in common with house-broken versions of Christianity in Europe and North America than with home-grown, South Asian Hinduism, Islam and Buddhism.
Ultimately, Vinayak Damodar Savarkar is the name of a blown-up, grotesque temptation inherent in the Southern world’s encounter with the global nation-state system and with religious traditions that facilitate the internalization of the motive force of western nationalism. That temptation is a part of everyone dreaming of working with tamed versions of nationalism and nation-states armed with ideas of rationality, secularism, progress and the so-called lessons of history, untouched by empathy, compassion and other such subjectivist traps.
Some interesting titbits hereShauryaT wrote:The Demonic and the Seductive in Religious Nationalism: Vinayak Damodar Savarkar and the Rites of Exorcism in Secularizing South Asia by Ashis Nandy
I am not in complete sync with the below conclusion that "Nationalism" as experienced in Europe is the only way to use the concept. The issue is not one of taming it but to tap into the unifying aspects of the people of the land and use these concepts to stenghthen the union. However a damning indictment of Savarkar and his version of Hindutva, if any was needed.
Everyone knows that the western history of state formation and nation building is simultaneously a story of how religions, denominations and ethnicities were bludgeoned into nationalities. For those entering the realm of history for the first time in Asia and Africa and facing the hierarchies and exclusions of the global state nation system for the first time the temptation is not only to construct their own history, but also to read into Europe’s history their own past, present and future. Even when they construct their own history, the categories and concerns that frame it are ‘universal’ or, it comes the the same thing, European
Savarkar publicly supported cow slaughter when necessary and declared the cow to be a useless animal with no sacredness about it. He also advised Hindus to give up vegetarianism and eat fish and eggs.
Savarkar actually said the cow is an extremely useful animal, but that there was no need to consider it holy or sacred.shiv wrote:Savarkar publicly supported cow slaughter when necessary and declared the cow to be a useless animal with no sacredness about it. He also advised Hindus to give up vegetarianism and eat fish and eggs.
Interesting difference in perceptions of what Savarkar might have said. I don't know - either way.nachiket wrote:Savarkar actually said the cow is an extremely useful animal, but that there was no need to consider it holy or sacred.Savarkar publicly supported cow slaughter when necessary and declared the cow to be a useless animal with no sacredness about it. He also advised Hindus to give up vegetarianism and eat fish and eggs.
In retrospect one realizes why Gandhi insisted that the nineteenth-century religious reform movements had done more harm than good to Hinduism in the long run
Vinayak Damodar Savarkar and Mohammed Ali Jinnah were not personally as culpable as many like to believe. The evil that many locate in them resided, at least partly, in the political ideas that dominated the world. Savarkar and Jinnah were, like most first -generation builders of South Asian states, faithful and obedient pupils of the Bismarckian state and post-medieval European republicanism, both vital parts of the dominant culture of commonsense in their times. Once they accepted that culture, they could not but try to duplicate Europe’s history in South Asia, whatever the cost. Not surprisingly, neither of the two ever mourned seriously, in public, the unnecessary death of more than a million people in the bloodbath that came with the division of British India.
For both, human beings were means of implementing larger historical designs. The rationality they worshipped overlay deep emotional voids, created by personal losses that came almost like betrayals by fate. Both coped with the betrayal through uncompromising, dispassionate, ruthless pursuit of a form of political rationality that allowed and even glorified withdrawal from or avoidance of personal
emotional involvements.
Both lived with fragile, perhaps anchorless self-definitions that pushed them to embrace aggressive, ideological postures that tallied with their deeper psychological needs. In politics if you wear a mask long enough, it becomes your face
I thought this was relevant to the topic of Hindutva. I'll delete it if people think it is OT.Gratitude to the cow is consistent with the Hindu trait of compassion towards all living beings
…That we should look upon that extremely useful animal (cow) with the same affection as for a family member is no doubt in keeping with humanism. To protect and sustain the cow is our personal and familial duty. At least in the case of Hindusthan, it is also our national duty.
…To have a feeling of gratitude towards an animal that is so useful to us is particularly consistent with the Hindu trait of compassion towards all living beings. (1936, vidnyannishtha nibandha or pro-science essays, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 3, p.340)
Cow is worthy of protection so long as this serves humanitarian and national interests
Animals such as the cow and buffalo and trees such as banyan and peepal are useful to man, hence we are fond of them; to that extent we might even consider them worthy of worship; their protection, sustenance and well-being is our duty, in that sense alone it is also our dharma! Does it not follow then that when under certain circumstances, that animal or tree becomes a source of trouble to mankind, it ceases to be worthy of sustenance or protection and as such its destruction is in humanitarian or national interests and becomes a human or national dharma? (Samaj Chitre or portraits of society, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 2, p.678)
…When humanitarian interests are not served and in fact harmed by the cow and when humanism is shamed, self-defeating extreme cow protection should be rejected…(Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 3, p.341)
…A substance is edible to the extent that it is beneficial to man. Attributing religious qualities to it gives it a godly status. Such a superstitious mindset destroys the nation’s intellect. (1935, Savarkaranchya goshti or tales of Savarkar, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 2, p.559)
Protect the cow, do not merely worship it
I criticized the false notions involved in cow worship with the aim of removing the chaff and preserving the essence so that cow protection may be better achieved. A worshipful attitude is necessary for protection. But it is improper to forget the duty of cow protection and indulging only in worship. The word ‘only’ used here is important. First protect the cow and then worship it if you so desire. (1938, Swatantryaveer Savarkar: Hindu Mahasabha parva or the phase of the Hindu Mahasabha, p. 173)
Do genuine cow protection
…Without spreading religious superstition, let the movement for cow protection be based and popularized on clear-cut and experimental economic and scientific principles. Then alone shall we achieve genuine cow protection like the Americans. (1934, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 3, p.171)
The cow should not be the emblem of the Hindu nation
The cow is but a milch symbol of the Hindu nation. By no means should it be considered its emblem (*Savarkar’s exact words are: gaay hi hindurashtraachaa ek dugdhabindu! Maanbindu navhech navhe!). The object of worship should be greater than its worshipper. Likewise, a national emblem should evoke the nation’s exemplary valour, brilliance, aspirations and make its people superhumans! The cow exploited and eaten at will, is an appropriate symbol of our present-day weakness. But at least the Hindu nation of tomorrow should not have such a pitiable symbol. (1936, Ksha kirane or X rays, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 3, p.237)
The symbol of Hindutva is not the cow but the man-lion (*Nrsinha or Narsimha is considered the fourth incarnation of Lord Vishnu. He was half-man, half-lion).
The qualities of god permeate into his worshipper. Whilst considering the cow to be divine and worshipping her, the entire Hindu nation became docile like the cow. It started eating grass. If we are to now found our nation on the basis of an animal, let that animal be the lion. Using its sharp claws in one leap, the lion fatally knocks and wounds the heads of wild mammoths. We need to worship such a Nrsinha. That and not the cow’s hooves, is the mark of Hindutva. (1935, Ksha kirane or X rays, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 3, p.167)
The non-Hindus should discard their hatred for the cow and do genuine cow protection
…The religious character that Hindus have given to cow protection howsoever naïve is not symptomatic of cruelty. This is because protecting animals such as cows and buffaloes that are extremely useful to man have an objective of safeguarding human interests. But the religious fanaticism of those non-Hindus whose religion itself is based on hatred for the cow is not only naïve but also cruel. They have no right whatsoever to mock at the Hindus.
There is an overdose of gratitude, compassion, notion of all living beings being one in the cow worship of Hindus. But the cow slaughter indulged in by non-Hindus has an excess of cruelty, ungratefulness and demonic (asuric) taking of life. It is not religious madness but irreligious wickedness. For this reason, these non-Hindus should discard their ‘religious’ cow hatred and consider cow protection done for economic reasons to be their duty. (1935, Ksha kirane or X rays, Samagra Savarkar vangmaya, Vol. 3, p.171-172)
Nachiket - I think I am in agreement with Savarkar in some ways, but I disagree with attempts to sanitize his words for a Hindu audience. I found excessively sanitized language in some links. To me these are self goals. The link you gave me has obviously sanitized versions. I saw that one shortly before I posted another one.nachiket wrote:Rather than believing people like Ashis Nandy, we should try to understand what Savarkar actually thought and try to make up our own minds. The man was a great thinker. His views about cows, cow slaughter and cow worship are quite complex.
Link: http://www.savarkar.org/en/rationalism/ ... ow-worship
You are right. The original Marathi text is much clearer. But I couldn't find another translation. I could translate myself, but I don't have access to the books currently. They are with my father back in India.shiv wrote:Nachiket - I think I am in agreement with Savarkar in some ways, but I disagree with attempts to sanitize his words for a Hindu audience. I found excessively sanitized language in some links. To me these are self goals.nachiket wrote:Rather than believing people like Ashis Nandy, we should try to understand what Savarkar actually thought and try to make up our own minds. The man was a great thinker. His views about cows, cow slaughter and cow worship are quite complex.
Link: http://www.savarkar.org/en/rationalism/ ... ow-worship
The thing about Savarkar was that he was nearly as passionate about Science as he was about Hindutva. He desperately tried to make people think scientifically at all times and that sometimes shows up in what he writes about Hinduism as well. Hindutva was more political than religious to Savarkar.shiv wrote:According to Nandy, Savarkar's mind was also colonized. Nandy makes his argument convincing but I cannot claim to know the nuances of Savarkar's speeches in Marathi
Funny, I was just reading an escapist work of fiction, which had this (mildly edited):
If one chooses power over good, then that power will fail in time....If one chooses good over power, then evil will triumph because there will not be the strength to oppose it....Knowing what to do, regardless of what others including sages say, is not the most difficult task. Doing what needs to be done for good to survive is far harder. Good only needs to survive, not triumph.....alance good and power.
Agreed. The point is that people were influenced by the "great thinkers" and "thoughts of the times". The great thinkers and thoughts of the times were all European. An ability to perceive what influences people might have had in their views gives an insight into how they might have approached any problem. Savarkar's views have been categorized (by Nandy) as being very much in consonance with European ideas of secular nation building of that period.A_Gupta wrote:^^^ IMO "colonized" mind - let us not get too much into that terminology. Given a civilizational crisis, there is no one who will get the response exactly right. Great thinkers make great leaps forward, they also make great mistakes. If one is trying to do big things, both successes and failures may be big.
The point is not to uncritically accept all that great people do or say as correct.
Which is what I hope we are doing in our small way here, and I hope is happening in a thousand other places in the bottoms-up way that we are supposed to haveHow relevant those methods are today need to be assessed independently and objectively without the rhetoric of secularism and communalism of present day politics.
That is an interesting topic. I dislike using the words Aryan and Dravidian because these were made up by British. But all the same there certainly is a difference between Indo-Aryan and Dravidian languages. I would suggest watching these videos by Shrikant Talageri and coming to your own conclusions.shiv wrote:You need to explain what this means - because I speak Kannada, Tamil and Hindi and am familiar with spoken Marathi and Gujarati and I believe I have certain insights into how people from these regions see themselves and their language.csaurabh wrote: The division between Dravidian and North Indian ('Aryan') languages exists. And we should not be ashamed of it.
I am not sure that you are communicating to me what you mean and vice versa. This is not about shame, but it is about "perceptions" that draw a line where a real line does not exist. In fact where does the dividing line run geographically? What is the nature of the division that you speak of?
One persistent meme left behind by the British is that language makes a nation. Different language, different nation. But this is so untrue for Indians that we might as well be speaking about Mars
Absolutely. The languages are definitely different, despite the Sanskrit content.csaurabh wrote: Of course what we now call as 'Hinduism' and classical Sanskrit developed in a period long after that recorded by the Rig Veda and Shrikant doesn't talk about it very much. However he does rubbish the idea that there is no difference between Dravidian and Indo-Aryan language families, the difference is quite clearly there.