By Saswat Pattanayak
My post to the Oriya group:
My friends,
And to all, especially involved in the religious
discourses (and the lack of it),
Just as everyone else, I have an opinion to air. So
here it is:
I read Chinmaya’s mail and feel this had more
validity than any other mail on the subject of
religion. He drew from a personal narrative to share
what relevance did religion still hold for him and
did generalize it to some extent. I appreciate the
fact that he debated the contents of texts (“If you
do believe in the first place that you are germinated
from super soul *PARAMATMA*, it must have its own
outlook in directing you.&rdquo

and put up a contemporary
challenge (“Can you, the advocates of religion,
give a guarantee that, you are born with
efficacious grace, and other are destined to
eternal damnation ?&rdquo

only after sharing with us what
had happened to him in terms of beliefs in god
and godmen.
We need not be intolerant towards opposing views.
Especially when they attack the core of beliefs
shaped by external factors and normalized by imagined
circumstances. My friend, referring to your mail, do
we have to ask Chinmaya to quit the thread of
Mahabakya, because he challenges them? Since when the
so-called ‘great’ verses become so indefensible? If
there can be a positive discussion, there can be a
criticism piece also. Lets be more democratic than
shoving contrary thoughts to obscurity by force.
Religious people, historically have been the most
intolerant (any standard book or mass experience
would show that). But by spirit of the age, we need
to raise newer questions.
Who does religions benefit? Which class of people?
Where does the discourses on religions lead to?
Issues or non-issues? You say no one forces Hinduism
on another. Lets not even talk of the array of
conversions, the Dara Singh, the Sangh Parivar? Why
even discussion of Mahabakyas in a group pertaining
to development of the Oriyas in general? If we do so,
what happened to other religious texts too? Do we
need a Muslim to talk about Koran? By that
assumption, are we becoming exclusive a club within
the Oriyas? Why does one need to hear black metal
(which is not a bad idea at all, anyway) when one
starts an anti-religious discussion?
If there can be a fare share for the Oriyas who
believe discussing the ‘great’ verses is alright,
lets be democratic enough, if not progressive, to
allow for discussions by other Oriyas who think
little differently.
One thought about “religious jargons”. It thrived
historically in order to exclude a mass section of
society from practicing. In course of actions, the
preachers have not only neglected a section of
downtrodden people, they have also systematically
exploited them in the name of religion. If not for
other religions trying to ‘convert’ and what-nots,
the mainstream religion in India would not have given
two hoots to those people it subjugated through
centuries---our own indigenous people. Its their
land, after all. ‘Those’ Adivasis. Their It’s a shame
that we still talk the talk of hindu supremacists
while we don’t walk the walk of the civilized. High
time not only we repented over what we did with the
instrument of religion, to completely obliterate
sections of people, we got to realize that we still
dare to preach the same elitist texts that have
always marked distinction among peoples and need
“authorized” explanations from only a certain class
of folks.
Must we wake up only too late, in our attempt at
carrying the legacy of the forefathers who had gone
blind to recognize their deadly fallacies? We are all
offshoots of a racist, sexist, fanatically war
chauvinist world, proudly claiming itself to be a
thousands of years old civilization! Whose
civilization has it been anyway? One where we relied
on our religions to oppress the landless, and rule
over women in our hypocritical houses? Shut our
children up from asking critical questions, instead
urged the child to surrender to the almighty who we
had never anyway experienced of being of any use? The
older generation never asked the pertinent questions.
The younger ones grew up with complexes of identities
revolving around families and personal gods. The
legacy of rich and privileged continued and the state
of the poor remained at the mercy of the manufactured
god.
These don’t need any different thread. Or any
different group. Or any different situations. Lets be
democratic within, even without a phony political
system. Lets be aware that not only different
questions be welcome to be addressed within the
parameters of what we are discussing, but also be
properly addressed to and respected as much.
Regarding freedom of choices to make, and emanating
frustrations, all I think of right now is between the
bushes and kerrys of the worlds, we have not been
given the choices, dear. We got to be the choices
ourselves. And no freedom is granted by others. It
has to be fought for because most times, its
suppressed by the environment.
Like you, I have been leading life from the seat of
privilege. We must not be blind to the oppression we
cause in name of voluntary freedom. We don’t realize
that freedom is freedom only when its freedom for
all, or its freedom for none. When the parents are in
shackle of superstitions, to assume that the child
would not have utilized the freedom properly would be
erroneous. Its not just freedom to think, which is
needed, but also freedom how to think. We will be
parents one day and must keep in mind that by going
with age-old beliefs, there are more rigidity than
flexibility to think around certain texts. And a
traditional family does not go beyond providing the
authoritative answers, not encouraging critical
questions. What results is another generation,
content with self, to afford the luxury of discussing
religious codes at the time when we know majority are
still sans basic necessities. In the US alone, 35
million people are homeless and will seek winter
shelter. Orissa is another story. Lets talk about
Orissa in a NEW thread.
Friend, in our long roads to progress in life, there
will come several junctures in time when we got to
stop for awhile and ask a question, “Could I have
been wrong all throughout in my core beliefs? Is
there a probability of such having happened?”
I have been wrong many times in my ‘core’ perceptions
about people, events, places, ideologies and beliefs.
May you not be as unfortunate like me in coming to
terms with the radically opposing truths.
But may you ask the questions, nevertheless.
Peace.
In struggle,
saswat pattanayak
Tags: Saswat, Orissa, Hinduism, India