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By:
Shachi Rairikar
January 22, 2005
(The author is a Chartered
Accountant working in a software company in Indore, MP, India and manage
www.indpride.com)
The Hindu talent for self-condemnation does not find a parallel anywhere
in the world. The art of self-hate is what the Hindus have mastered in
during the latter half of the last century. The politicians, media,
so-called secularists, intellectuals, human-rights activists who never
tire condemning Hindus are themselves Hindus. The greatest enemies of the
Hindus today are the Hindus themselves.
Understanding the Hindu mind is not difficult. Let us try and analyse our
mentality - the Hindu mentality. Whenever there is a problem with some
other community, which is harming the Hindus, how do we address the
problem? We have two options – we acknowledge the problem and take action
for its resolution or we do not acknowledge the problem. What if we
acknowledge this problem? – We will have to take steps to resolve it,
interact with the other community in question; there might be
confrontation and agitation; we will have to “fight”. What if we do not
acknowledge the problem at all. Nothing happens – no confrontation, no
agitation, no “fight”. The adverse effects of the problem can be tolerated
– after all, it is easier to tolerate than to fight. What if grave
consequences will have to be faced in the years to come? At the moment we
are comfortable with few adjustments and compromises, so why worry about
the future? Who cares if to make today more comfortable we make tomorrow
bleak?
How do we address the problem then? The easier course of actions is to
blame our own people for being communal, narrow-minded fundamentalists.
After all, it is much easier to confront the Hindus as they are less
aggressive and less violent. Fighting the real enemy would require a lot
of courage so we choose to make the enemy look saintly and turn against
our own people. We find faults with our own people rather than addressing
those who are actually at the crux of the problem. So our politicians,
media and the so called secularists and intellectuals call the Hindus
communal and fundamentalists, responsible for rioting but never have the
courage to criticize the Jehadi terrorists; and the human rights activists
agitate for the human rights of the terrorists, never caring for the human
rights of the victims of terrorism.
So we don’t acknowledge that the rising Muslim population is a threat to
the integrity of our country and to the very existence of the Hindu
civilization. What if we have faced a vivisection of our Motherland when
the Muslim population became one third of the country’s population? What
if the only Muslim majority state Kashmir saw the driving away of the
Hindu minority from their homeland? That is history and we Hindus have an
excellent record of not learning anything from history. Even though the
current trends and figures clearly reveal that we are heading towards a
second partition, our intellectuals and media refuse to acknowledge this.
Instead, they are criticizing our people who conducted demographic studies
on the basis of religion. They find census figures on the basis of
religion completely irrelevant and uncalled for in a “secular” country
like India. The larger threat facing the country becomes a non-issue
whereas whether religious demographics should be studied as a principle or
the technical errors like the publication of wrong data on the first day
become the issue. The idea is to take the attention away from the larger
issues and focus on the non-issues, so that we don’t have to address the
real issues. To address the real issue we will need to talk to our Muslim
community, persuade them to go against Islam and practise family planning,
persuade them to not shelter but report the illegal Bangladeshi immigrants
staying in their colonies, we will need to confront and “fight”. We
quietly look for an escape route, don’t acknowledge that the problem
exists and condemn those who perceive it, then there is no confrontation
and we need not “fight”.
Thus, when Uma Bharati gets arrested for hoisting the national flag on
“disputed ground”, we do not question how and why a ground became
“disputed” for hoisting the national flag, we do not question the loyalty
of the community whose “sentiments” get “hurt” by the hoisting of the
national flag, instead we blame her for indulging in communal politics and
criticize her for using the national flag to play with the sentiments of
the people. When the Shankaracharya gets arrested on the charges of
murder, we do not see the conspiracy and evil motive behind it, instead we
start doubting his innocence and character and start discussing “equality
before the law”. When riots break out in the aftermath of Godhra, we
condemn the rioters as communal fundamentalists but do not say a word to
those who started it all by torching a train full of Hindus. Instead we
conduct an enquiry to prove that the Hindus had themselves deliberately
started the fire in order to have justified grounds to riot.
Thus, we cannot perceive a threat to the country’s integrity from illegal
Bangladeshi immigrants, we cannot acknowledge that the terrorism faced in
India and throughout the world is Islamic terrorism, we cannot see the
merits of teaching the real history of the atrocities of the Muslim
invaders, we cannot change the British education system, we cannot
regulate the madrasas which breed terrorism, we cannot ban the
missionaries who defame our religion and convert our tribals by unethical
means and methods, we cannot feel pride in rebuilding our demolished
temples, we cannot call India what it truly is – a Hindu Nation.
Thus, we condemn our own people who talk of driving away the Bangladeshis
staying illegally in our country, we call our people who implement laws
against terrorism communal, we call the teaching of the true history of
India as “right-wing” history, we call the teaching of Vedic mathematics
and astrology as “saffronisation” of education, we believe that the
missionaries are doing great services for our tribals, we find the
re-building of demolished temples a wasteful effort to dig up the past, we
call India what it officially is - a secular country.
If we acknowledge all these problems, we will have to work towards their
solution. The cowardly, escapist Hindu mentality refuses to acknowledge
the problem, so the question of working towards a solution does not arise.
We do this under the pretext of Hinduism being secular, peace-loving and
non-violent, but we accept and practise only those aspects of Hinduism
which suit us. Hindus spend time, money and energy in performing poojas,
yagyas, Bhagwat path, visiting swamis and babas but when it comes to
practicing the real philosophies of the Vedas and the Bhagwat Geeta, we
back out.
We have forgotten the teachings of the Bhagwat Geeta which asks us to
fight against the wrong – adharma. We are using the tolerant and secular
mask to hide our incapacity. We have tampered and moulded the doctrine of
ahimsa or non-violence to camouflage our inaction. Not protesting against
violence is in fact supporting and encouraging more violence, which is a
greater sin. What we are resorting to today is not tolerance, secularism
or non-violence but cowardice. Mahatma Gandhi had once said, “My own
experiences but confirm the opinion that the Mussalman as a rule is a
bully, and the Hindu is a coward; where there are cowards there will
always be bullies.” Even this great apostle of peace and ahimsa had said,
“I do believe that where there is only a choice between cowardice and
violence I would advise violence ... but non-violence is infinitely
superior to violence.”
The ostrich mentality of the Hindus does not help make Bharat a better
place to live in. Rather it endangers the very existence of the Hindu
civilization. Turning a blind eye to our problems will not solve the
problems, instead it will only aggravate them. Nehruvian secularism has
already left us with a legacy of complications and it would be sad if our
successors were to inherit more. Playing the blind man’s bluff is leading
us to disaster. It is high time we call a spade a spade, “fight” the real
enemies or else it will be too late. It is time we pay heed to what Lord
Krishna told Arjun:
“Klaibyam maa sma gamah Paarth naitatvayyupapadyatey
Kshudram hridaya daurbalyam tyaktovttishta Parantapa”
“O Arjun! Yield not to unmanliness for such an attitude is not worthy of
you. Casting aside your weakness of mind, therefore arise, O scorcher of
enemies, and get ready for the battle.”
Shachi Rairikar
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