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About Shri Giri Lal Jain
Late Shree Girilal Jain was the former editor of Times
of India. He was also the author of the book ?Hindu Phenomenon?,
written after the watershed event of the destruction of Babri structure
built on Shree Ram Janma Bhoomi temple. It has a comprehensive
discussion pertaining to the Hindu renaissance movement.
Girilal Jain belonged to that minority of Indian intellectuals
who welcomed the movement for the Ram temple as part of the process of
Hindu self-renewal and self-affirmation. The rise of Hindus, he argued,
was a phenomenon that began 200 years ago with the consolidation of the
British Raj and the disarming of the local populace. This produced a fundamental
shift in the power balance between Hindus and Muslims which has not been
reversed since, though it led to the partition of the country in 1947.
Every important Hindu leader has made his contribution to the Hindu resurgence.
The Ramjanambhoomi movement was only the latest manifestation of this
phenomenon, its importance being that it had placed the issued of the
civilizational base of Indian nationalism at the centre of the country's
political agenda.
A Historical Watershed
By- Late Shri Giri Lal Jain
1992 will doubtless go down in Indian history as the year of Ayodhya.
This is so not so much because recent events there have pushed into background
all the other issues such as economic reforms and reservations for the
'other backward castes' as because they have released forces which will
have a decisive influence in shaping the future of India.
These forces are not new; they have been at work for two centuries. Indeed,
they were not even wholly bottled up. But they had not been unleashed
earlier as they have been now. It is truly extraordinary that the demolition
of a nondescript structure by faceless men no organization owns up should
have shaken so vast a country as India. But no one can possibly deny that
it has.
These forces in themselves are not destructive even if they have led
to some violence and blood-letting. They are essentially beneficent. They
shall seek to heal the splits in the Indian personality so that it is
restored to health and vigor. Implicit in the above is the proposition
that while India did not cease to be India either under Muslim or British
rule despite all the trials and tribulations, she was not fully Mother
India.
And she was not fully Mother India not because she was called upon to
digest external inputs, which is her nature to assimilate, but because
she was not free to throw out what she could not possibly digest in the
normal and natural course. This lack of freedom to reject what cannot
be assimilated is the essence of foreign conquest and rule.
The meaning of Ayodhya is that India has regained, to a larger extent
than hitherto, the capacity to behave and act as a normal living organism.
She has taken another big step towards self-affirmation. All truth, as
Lenin said, is partisan. So is mine. I do not pretend to be above the
battle, or, to rephrase Pt. Nehru, I am not neutral against myself. But
partisan truth is not demagogy and patently false propaganda, which is
what advocates of 'composite culture' have engaged in.
Two points need to be noted in this regard. First, no living culture
is ever wholly autonomous; for no culture is an airtight sealed box; Indian
culture, in particular, has been known for its catholicity and willingness
to give as well as take. It withdrew into a shell when it felt gravely
threatened and became rigid; but that is understandable; indeed, the surprise,
if any, is that Indian culture survived the Islamic and Western onslaught
at all.
Secondly, a culture, if it is not swallowed up by an incoming one, whether
by way of proselytization or conquest or both, as the Egyptians and Iranians
were by Islam, or if it is not destroyed as the Aztec was by the Portuguese
and Spaniards, must seek to recover; even Indians in Latin America have
not given up the effort. Surely, since no one can possibly suggest that
Indian culture was either swallowed up or destroyed; it is only natural
that it should seek to recover its genuine self.
Surely, this is neither an anti-Islamic nor anti-Western activity. Pt.
Nehru almost never used the phrase 'composite culture'. His was a more
organic view of culture and civilization. He believed in, and spoke of,
cultural synthesis which, if at all, could take place only within the
old civilization framework since Islam did not finally triumph.
Pt. Nehru also wrote and spoke of the spirit of India asserting itself
again and again. Surely, that spirit could not be a composite affair.
In the Maulana Azad memorial lecture he also spoke of different cultures
being products of different environments and he specifically contrasted
tropical India with the deserts of Arabia.
He even said that a Hindu-Muslim culture synthesis had not been completed
when other factors intervened. Apparently he was referring to the British
Raj. This should also dispel the impression that the Nehru era was a continuation
of alien rule intended to frustrate the process of Indianization of India.
This charge is not limited to his detractors. It is made by his admirers
as well, though, of course, indirectly and unknowingly. They pit secularism
against Hinduism, which is plainly absurd. Hindus do not need the imported
concept of secularism in order to be able to show respect towards other
faiths. That comes naturally to them.
For theirs is an inclusive faith which provides for every form of religious
experience and belief; there can be no heresy or kufr in Hinduism. For
Nehru, secularism, both as a personal philosophy and state policy, was
an expression of India's cultural- civilization personality and not its
negation and repudiation. Secularism suited India's requirements as he
saw them.
For instance, it provided an additional legitimizing principle for reform
movements among Hindus beginning with the Brahmo Samaj in the early part
of the nineteenth century. It met the aspirations of the Westernized and
modernizing intelligentsia.
Before independence, it denied legitimacy to Muslim separatism in the
eyes of Hindus, Westernized or traditionalist. If it did not help forge
an instrument capable of resisting effectively the Muslim League's demand
for partition, the alternative platform of men such as Veer Savarkar did
not avail either. After partition, it served the same purpose of denying
legitimacy to moves to consolidate Muslims as a separate communalist political
force.
Pt. Nehru's emphasis on secularism has to be viewed not only in relation
to the Muslim problem which survived partition, but it has also to be
seen in the context of his plea for science and India's need to get rid
of the heavy and deadening burden of rituals and superstitions, products
of periods of grave weakness and hostile environment when nothing nobler
than survival was possible.
Seen in this perspective, the ideologies of socialism and secularism
have served as mine sweepers. They have cleared the field of dead conventions
sufficiently to make it possible for new builders to move in. Sheikh Abdullah
exaggerated when he charged Pt. Nehru with Machiavellian- ism, but he
was not too wide off the mark when he wrote in Aatish-e-Chinar that Nehru
was "a great admirer of the past heritage and the Hindu spirit of
India..
He considered himself as an instrument of rebuilding India with its ancient
spirit". The trouble is that self-styled Nehruites and other secularists
are not able to recognize that India is no longer the convalescent she
was not only when Gandhiji launched his first mass movement but also when
she achieved independence with Pt. Nehru as the first prime minister.
The two leaders have helped nurse her back to health as have their critics
in different ways. That is the implication of my observation that the
energies now unleashed have been at work for two centuries.
Only on a superficial view, resulting from a lack of appreciation of
the history of modern India, beginning with Raja Rammohan Roy in the early
19th century, can the rise of Ramjanambhoomi issue to its present prominence
be said to be the result of a series of 'accidents': the sudden appearance
of the Ramlalla idol in the structure in 1949 and the opening of the gate
under the Faizabad magistrate's orders in 1986 being the most important.
As in all such cases, these developments have helped bring out and reinforce
something that was already growing - the 200-year-old movement for self-
renewal and self- affirmation by Hindus.
If this were not so, the 'accidents' in question would have petered out.
Similarly, while it cannot be denied that the RSS, the VHP, and the BJP
have played a major role in mobilizing support for the cause of the temple,
it should also be noted that they could not have achieved the success
they have if the general atmosphere was not propitious and the time not
ripe.
Indeed, not to speak of Gandhiji who aroused and mobilized Hindus as no
one had before him, fought the Christian missionary assault and successfully
resisted the British imperialist designs to divide harijans from Hindu
society, it would be unfair to deny Nehru's and Indira Gandhi's contributions
to the Hindu resurgence that we witness today.
A civilization revival, it may be pointed out, is a gradual, complex,
and many-sided affair. Again, only on the basis of a superficial view
is it possible to see developments in India in isolation from developments
in the larger world. Nehru's worldview, for instance, was deeply influenced
by the socialist theories sweeping Europe in the wake of the First WW
and the Soviet revolution in 1917.
By the same token, this worldview, which has dominated our thinking for
well over six decades, could not but become irrelevant in view of the
collapse of communist regimes in eastern Europe, and the disarray in the
Soviet Union itself.
This cannot be seriously disputed even on rational grounds. Intensification
of the search for identity in India today is part of a similar development
all over the world, especially in view of the collapse of communist 'universalism'.
But if it is a mere coincidence that Ramjanambhoomi issue has gathered
support precisely in this period of the disintegration of Soviet power
abroad and the decline of the Nehruvian consensus at home, it is an interesting
one.
At the conscious level, the BJP, among political formations, has chosen
to be an instrument of India's cultural and civilization recovery and
reaffirmation. As such, it is natural that it will figure prominently
in the reshaping of India in the coming years and decades. But others
too will play their parts in the gigantic enterprise.
VP Singh, for instance, has already rendered yeoman service to the cause
by undermining the social coalition which has dominated the country's
politics for most of the period since independence. When a master idea
seizes the mind, as socialism did in the twenties, and as Hindutva has
done now, it must usher in radical change. In the twenties and the decades
that followed before and after independence, conservative forces were
not strong enough to resist the socialist idea.
Similarly, conservative forces are not strong enough today to defeat
the Hindutva ideal. There is a difference, though, for a while the socialist
ideal related primarily to economic reorganization and was elitist in
its approach by virtue of being a Western import, Hindutva seeks, above
all, to unleash the energies of a whole people which foreign rule froze
or drove underground.
When a historic change of this magnitude takes place, intellectual confusion
is generally unavoidable. The human mind, as a rule, trails behind events;
it is not capable of anticipating them. But it should be possible to cut
through the mass of confusion and get to the heart of the matter.
The heart of the matter is that if India's vast spiritual (psychic in
modern parlance) energies, largely dormant for centuries, had to be tapped,
Hindus had to be aroused; they could be aroused only by the use of a powerful
symbol; that symbol could only be Ram, as was evident in the twenties
when the Mahatma moved millions by his talk of Ramrajya; once the symbol
takes hold of the popular mind, as Ram did in the twenties and as it has
done now, opposition to it generally adds to its appeal.
An element of subjectivity and voluntarism, typical of a modern Westernized
mind, has got introduced in the previous paragraph because that is the
way I also think. In reality, the time spirit (Mahakala) unfolds itself
under its own auspices, at its own momentum, as it were; we can either
cooperate with it, or resist it at our peril.
Historians can continue to debate whether a temple, in fact, existed
at the site of Babri Masjid in Ayodhya; whether it was , in fact, a Ram
temple; whether it was destroyed; or whether it had collapsed on its own.
Similarly, moralists and secularists can go on arguing that it is not
right to replace one place of worship by another, especially as long as
the foregoing issues have not been resolved. But this is not how history
moves and civilization issues are settled. Pertinent is the fact that
for no other site have Hindus fought so bitterly for so long with such
steadfastness as over Ramjanambhoomi in Ayodhya.
There is no rational explanation for this and it is futile to look for
one. All that is open to us is to grasp the fact and power of the mystery.
In all cultures and societies under great stress flows an invisible undercurrent.
It does not always break surface. But when it does, it transforms the
scene. This is how events in Ayodhya should be seen.
The Patal Ganga, of which all Indians must have heard, has broken surface
there. Human beings have doubtless played a part in this surfacing. But
witness the remarkable fact that we do not know and, in fact, do not care
who installed the Ramlalla idol in the Babri structure and who demolished
the structure on 6 December 1992.
While almost everyone else is looking for scapegoats, to me it seems
that every known actor is playing his or her allotted role in the vast
drama that is being enacted. We are, as it were, witnessing the enactment
of a modern version of Valmiki's Ramayana.
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