Already the
younger generation asks what the California textbook affair was. Now that
California has been endowed with a Hindu awareness month (in a resolution
co-authored by the Hindu American Foundation, Indian Express, 26 June 2013), the first one scheduled for this
coming October, Hindus are enthusiastic that they will be able to show off
their culture. But past experience shows that Hindus are not good at selling
Hinduism, both because they misjudge their audience and because they don’t know
their own tradition very well. The California textbook affair was a painful
case in point.
The California textbook controversy
During the cold part of 2005-2006, the Hindu
community in the USA lived in expectation of a school history textbook reform
in which Hinduism would get a fairer deal and no longer be reduced to hateful
stereotypes. All it took was to use the opportunities provided by the system, viz.
to propose edits that were historically and philosophically impeccable and then focus the attention
on the dimension of equal treatment in the textbooks for all religions. After
all, Christian, Jewish and Muslim lobbies were having a decisive say in the
portrayal of their own belief systems, with the irrational or inhumane points
whitewashed or kept out of view. Given the fashion of multiculturalism and
cultural relativism, it was in the fitness of things that the judgmental
Christian account of Hinduism would now be replaced with something more
objective, even with a Hindu self-description. But that was not to be.
Two Hindu organizations, the Hindu Education
Foundation and the Vedic Foundation, handed in a list of edits they proposed to
be made to the extant Hinduism chapter. Some of these alarmed a handful of
anti-Hindu pressure groups and a few like-minded academics, among them Michael
Witzel and Stanley Wolpert. They pressured the California Board of Education
(CBE) to reject the “Hindu communalist” proposals. Though entering the fray as
accusers, they were then invited to sit in judgment upon the controversial edits.
This led to Hindu protests, and after everyone had his say, the CBE let Witzel
and pro-Hindu emeritus professor Shiva Bajpai work out a compromise. Where they
did not agree, viz. on most of the really controversial points, the CBE kept
the old version, or in other words, it rejected the Hindu alternative. All the
anti-Hindu lobbies cried victory. So did the HEF, pleading that 70% of the
proposed edits had been accepted. Yes, but those were only the
non-controversial points. Wherever an edit had really been debated, the Hindu proposals
had been overruled. Briefly, it was a smashing defeat for the Hindu parents.
The anti-Hindu hate group Friends Of South Asia
observed in its comments on the proposed edits, they show a replacement of
philosophical with religious views, e.g. substituting “God-realization” where
the textbooks had “self-realization”. If there is any victory in there, it is
that of a sentimental anti-intellectual Hinduism over the more mature (though
more ancient) and more skeptical Vedic philosophies. To the enemy’s glee, the
edits, while totally impotent in their pretence at replacing the established
anti-Hindu views, were successful in settling some intra-Hindu scores. The most
demeaning trends in modern Hinduism joined hands, esp. the Arya Samaj cum
ISKCON adoption of quasi-Protestant monotheism, hence several replacements of
‘gods’ with ‘God’ or ‘various manifestations of God’, obviously stemming from
an aversion to or embarrassment with the polytheistic term ‘gods’. Apart from
being untruthful, such attempts at covering up Vedic polytheism are also
downright silly for being hopelessly transparent and unconvincing. Any
Christian or Muslim seeing a Diwali display (Saraswati, Lakshmi, Ganesha) will
recognize Hinduism as polytheistic and idolatrous par excellence, and any
denial of it in Hindu-dictated textbooks will only add the extra impression
that Hindus are liars.
As the Wikipedia (California Textbook
Controversy) points out: “The subcommittee approved some 70 changes but it
rejected proposed major revisions from VF and HEF on monotheism, women's
rights, the caste system and migration theories.” Wikipedia is not always
reliable, but it is a good measure of the dominant opinion. In this case, it also
happens to be truthful.
Hindu claims of victory
One of the odd things about the California
textbook controversy is that the Hindu side refused to face its defeat. They
went to Court to overrule their defeat at the CBE, then still refused to face their
defeat at the Court. I made quite a few enemies by simply pointing out the fact of Hindu defeat. I am giving my
feedback in order to spare Hindus a repeat of such defeats. But it seems some
Hindus prefer more defeats to a critical analysis of where the past defeats
came from.
The best proof of the Hindu humiliation is that
a group of Hindus went to court to get the CBE decision judicially overruled.
They set up a pressure group, California Parents for Equalization of
Educational Materials (CAPEEM). In the phase called “discovery”, where both
parties have to make available all documents in their possession demanded by
the court, mostly at the request of the other party, some facts on the
anti-Hindu lobby came out that ought to have been incriminating. A CAPEEM
spokesman reported that a lot of evidence of the close cooperation between the
court-appointed “experts” and anti-Hindu groups including Evangelical Churches
and terrorist groups came to light. But that was not enough for CAPEEM to score
a courtroom victory regarding the political issue at stake here, viz. the
blatant inequality between the Abrahamic religions and Hinduism, which alone
gets to suffer a schoolbook description imposed by its declared enemies. For a
standard opinion, we may quote from Wikipedia again: “On February 25, 2009, the
California Federal Court dismissed all CAPEEM claims and demands regarding
content, and (…) the Court left the schoolbooks untouched. On June 2, 2009, the
Court finally dismissed the case, with prejudice, meaning it cannot be raised
again. (..) With this ruling the case was closed, nearly 5 years after the
fact.”
The painful fact remains that all the suspense
and the huge expenses incurred for the court proceedings could have been
avoided, not by swallowing defeat but by achieving victory and justice to
Hinduism in an earlier stage of the proceedings, free of cost. Namely, the
edits proposed could have been crafted to such effect that they would have won
the day, rather than having been such easy targets, indefensible even during
litigation.
Even after the CAPEEM defeat,
many Hindus continued to claim victory. On the Abhinavagupta yahoo list, late March 2009, a
US-based Hindu wrote to me: “You considered the outcome of the Hindu protests
in the above controversy as a complete failure. But I wish to make the record
straight as it is better to give the facts rather than making sweeping
statements like you have done. We have been successful in correcting some of
the horrendous mistakes. Instead of continuing the AIT as it is, the Witzel
group was made to accept that the there are two points of view: the foreign
origin of the Aryans and the indigenous origin of the Aryans.”
Well of course, there is no
indication that the Witzel group ever doubted the existence of the indigenist
theory. Only, they think it is wrong as well as politically motivated.
He went on: “Though we could not get the AIT /
AMT [Aryan Migration Theory, the velvet
version of the AIT] deleted, the SBE president Glee Johnson announced that
all textbooks will mention the contested nature of the AIT /AMT.”
During a mass meeting, all Hindu
parents could come and utter their complaint. They were appeased with sweet
words and promises by the SBE spokespersons, only to see it all disregarded in
the SBE's final decision. Note that this gullible Hindu doesn’t quote the actual
textbooks, doesn’t prove (or even care to verify) that these promises have
materialized. Hindus can be made happy with mere words.
The American Hindu continued:
“Further the Vedas will be mentioned as Sacred texts instead of calling them as
poems, in spite of the opposition from the Witzel group. The gods and goddesses
will be mentioned as deities. I hope these three points alone will show that
the Hindu protest was not in vain like you wanted to project it.”
Those two points are non-issues.
Whereas Hindus apparently can be made to believe that there is a huge
difference between ‘gods and goddesses’ and ‘deities’, as big as that between
victory and defeat, Witzel c.s. are perfectly aware that these are simply
synonyms. If Hindus are silly enough to treat as victory the replacement of a
term by its synonym, all the better will they swallow real defeats. As for the
Vedas, they are both poems and sacred, in the sense that there are people who
revere them. This is a matter of observable status, not of history. Again, no
controversy there, so no victory.
The elevation of the Vedic poems
to the status of ‘sacred texts’, while descriptively alright, is not that
innocent either in the intra-Hindu quarrels. What is meant here, is that the
Vedas are not of human origin but are a kind of Quran written by God Himself.
In fact, the Vedic hymns are explicitly in the form of human poets addressing
the gods (plural), contrary to the Quran where the imagined Allah is addressing
His prophet or, through him, mankind. The Vedic poets' names are given in the
Anukramanis and sometimes even mentioned or cross-referred in the hymns
themselves. Composing poetry and chanting it was a profession that required
payment, so we even have Danastutis in which poets by way of thanks praise
their sponsors. Allah never did such a thing. But modern Hindus don't want to
stand upright next to the Vedic poets, freethinkers who never crawled before
ancient texts but composed their own. They want to crawl, to turn off their own
thinking faculty and rely on texts, much like Christian Creationists. The great
thing about Hinduism, at its best, is that it does not ultimately idolize a
text but reveres a multiplicity of seers, a type of people that can be born
anywhere and at any time. Modern Hindus could be seers, but instead they choose
to be scripture quoters, or even just scripture worshipers. At any rate, their
enemies do not feel defeated by this denial that the Vedas were compositions by
poets.
So I stand by my diagnosis. On
all substantive points, the Hindu position was soundly defeated, the Witzel
side totally victorious. But by messing up this unique chance at improving the
textbooks within the limits of what was possible and at establishing the Hindu
community as a trustworthy partner of the education authorities, Hindus have
achieved more than just a defeat. They have established for a long time to come
the impression that Hindus are untrustworthy, wily schemers with a reactionary
and obscurantist agenda.
The Hindu unwillingness to face
facts, not just the complicated fact of the Aryan state of the art but even the
very straightforward fact of total defeat, does not bode well. Such denial of
reality in an individual would be deemed pathological. Here it affects a great
many members of the Hindu community. This fact should be the stuff of some
serious soul-searching.
A prediction
It is not as if they hadn’t been
warned of this perfectly predictable outcome. All through this process, I knew
and wrote that the Hindu side was sure to be defeated. On the
IndianCivilization yahoo list, in early November 2005, immediately after the
proposed Hindu edits for the CA textbooks became known, I diagnosed some
crucial ones among them as wrong and as not having a chance to pass. The enemy
can get away with lies, but the power equation is such that Hindus cannot. The
smallest mistake they make will be fully and cruelly exploited by the enemy.
The enemy was mobilized, and the Hindu proposals doomed, by a mere handful of
less-than-impeccable edits:
1) To pretend that the Aryan invasion theory (AIT)
has been discarded, was simply untruthful. The Hindu foundations could simply
have stated that the issue of Vedic origins is disputed. More importantly, they
could have delinked the origins of Hinduism from any theory regarding any
“Aryans”, for, as Shrikant Talageri has convincingly argued, even the AIT
itself accepts that a large part of Hinduism is of “indigenous”, non-Aryan’
origin. But they had been misinformed by OIT triumphalists, whose “little
knowledge is a dangerous thing”. The Hindu tendency to make false claims of
victory was one of the causes of the defeat. Several of the edits were premised
on the assumption that “the AIT has been disproven”, that “nobody believes in
it anymore”, so that the Out-of-India Theory (OIT) has come out victorious. It
is these edits which had drawn the attention of Witzel’s group and set the ball
of the controversy rolling. Now, the assumption is simply not true. There are
strong arguments against the AIT and in favour of an Indian homeland scenario,
alright, but AIT proponents tenaciously swear by certain types of evidence
(horses, chariots) which the Indian homeland theorists have not yet
convincingly accounted for. In fact, till today, many Indo-European linguists
don’t even know about an contemporary Indian homeland theory. In Leipzig,
Germany, an Indo-European conference takes place coming December, and from the
call for papers it transpires that the organizers only know about the
East-European and the Anatolian homeland theory, both of them amounting to an
AIT for India. Moreover, in a debate, as distinct from a physical war, a party
is only defeated when it concedes defeat. As long as it doesn’t concede, the
debate is still on. Now, it is simply a lie to pretend that the AIT has been
abandoned by everyone. It is defended pretty vigorously by powerful academics,
as the California Hindus were to find out.
2) To insist on presenting
temple worship as “monotheistic” was untruthful, or at least an unwarranted
generalization. First of all, with their hazy knowledge and presumptuous
notions about other religions, Hindus don’t know that “monotheism” amounts to
more than “belief in one God”. The Greek word monos does not mean “one”, it means “alone”. It refers to the
“jealous God” who does not tolerate another. If Hinduism believes in such a
God, Hindu claimants should have come equipped with scriptural quotes to this
effect: “For the greater glory of Shiva, smash the statues of the false god
Vishnu!” Failing this, Hindus will have to admit that even their theism is a
different type of religion than monotheist Christianity or Islam. The claim
that Hinduism believes in only one God, albeit an inclusive rather than a
jealous God, is, to put it charitably, an unjustified generalization. While I have learned in the ensuing
discussions that there is such a thing as Vaishnava monotheism, exemplified by
ISKCon (Hare Krishna), fact remains that many Hindu temple-goers worship plural
gods and experience them as plural rather than as faces of a single “God”. The
Vedic seers worshipped many gods, 33 in Yajñavalkya’s count. Some Vedic hymns
are addressed to “Mitra and Varuna”, others even to “all the Gods”. If Hinduism
is monotheistic, then the Vedic seers were not Hindus.
3) To resort to weasel
expressions like “different but equal” in order to deny the inequality of men
and women in Vedic and later Hindu society was silly. And likewise for any
hushing up of caste inequality. Instead, it would have been more correct to
acknowledge that deliberate inequality was a feature of every single premodern
society. Instead of being defensive, Hindus should have aggressively demanded
that, as inequality was a feature of the other religions too, the textbooks
should explicitly discuss it. At any rate, a certain rewording of the existing
text in this sense would have been justified. But anything that even smelled of
caste negationism was sure to backfire. Or have NRIs in all their years in the
West somehow managed not to learn that caste is the one thing that most
Westerners know and hate about
Hinduism? Moreover, while Muslims are known as violent, Hindus are likewise
stereotyped to be hypocritical, and articles about caste never fail to mention
upper-caste hypocrisy, so being caught as whitewashing the Hindu record on
caste is fatal. Again, certain corrections were possible, but denying caste inequality
was inviting trouble.
4) To insist on the Hindiwallah
form "Buddh" instead of the proper Sanskrit form "Buddha",
accepted in English and in most Indian and foreign languages, was boorish,
fully living up to the stereotype of the backward Hindi belt. While not
important in itself, this spelling betrayed the lack of alertness to the
public's standards, and the limited horizon, nay the wilful self-centredness of
certain Hindutva circles.
Hindu scholarship
There is also a political background to be
taken into account. The charge of “history falsification” sounds very familiar
in Hindu contexts because of the much-publicized effort by the BJP government
in India to effect glasnost (openness)
in the Marxist-crafted schoolbooks. The BJP badly mishandled the textbook
reform process in India (2002-2004), a horror show of incompetence. The
textbook overhaul under Murli Manohar Joshi ended in embarrassment, ridicule
and an ultimate massive strengthening of the Marxist hold on the textbooks. The
BJP had set a precedent and associated Hindu advocacy with history
falsification in the minds of the public, a mental impression that could easily
be spoonfed to ignorant outsiders like the California Board of Education.
At a Hindu history-rewriting conference in Delhi
IIC in January 2009, the usual wailing could be heard about the anti-Hindu bias
in the textbooks. No mention was made of the fact that the BJP had been in
charge for six years and that the textbooks had been changed already, only so
miserably that the subsequent Congress-Communist combine had no problem at all
in justifying a return to the anti-Hindu textbooks. The conference had no
session on: “What did we do wrong?” This time around, I suggest that all those
involved in or cheering for the CA textbook edit proposals face their own
failure and do some honest soul-searching.
In the 1990s, under Sita Ram Goel's guidance, an alternative
Hindu school of history was emerging. Today, most people involved (Harsh
Narain, AK Chatterjee, KS Lal, BR Grover, Goel himself) have left this world,
and their precious legacy has been mismanaged and squandered. They have not
been succeeded by a new generation of historians. MM Joshi and his acolytes in
India and the USA have a lot to answer for, but they carry on regardless.
The Hindu defeat in the
textbook controversy was nearly inevitable. Hindus have not invested in
scholarship, so they can not pick its fruits. Let’s talk a language that
successful Hindus will understand: organization, and money. They like to boast
of their success in business, how they are the wealthiest immigrant community
in the US, how India is becoming a superpower, and all that. But they spend
their surplus money on other priorities than scholarship, such as bribing the
powerful: whether the gods, by building temples, or the ruling party. They also
fund anti-Hindu scholars, feeling flattered that somebody wants to study India
at all, and not having the basic discernment to tell friends from enemies. At
any rate, the bottom line is that they still haven’t spent any serious money on
pro-Hindu scholarship, yet are surprised to find that all scholarship is in
enemy hands. They also talk a lot about “organizing”, after the RSS fashion.
The RSS mouthpiece is called Organiser,
and their philosophy is that Hindus have all along lacked nothing but
organization. Well then, organize a contemporaneous scholarly institute to
carry out the research needed for your aims. Not one that you dictate to what
it should find, but one that is guided by the realities it discovers. Better
still, insert scholars sympathetic to the Hindu cause in mainstream
institutions, as the enemy does. But if you are not willing to make the effort
and put the money on the table (or squander it on wasteful court cases ending
in total defeat), then expect to be defeated again and again. I am reminded of SR Goel's observation: “The
RSS has a pickpocket mentality, they hope to get things on the cheap.”
Conclusion
Whoever will take charge of the “Hindu awareness
month” should remain aware of the experiences with textbook reform. Those who
took the initiative to propose the edits were religious people with limited
knowledge of the way of the world, esp. of contemporary American sensibilities.
They surely meant well, but if they had applied their minds to the question of
how the American authorities would react, they could have foreseen the
opposition they encountered. Whoever will take similar initiatives in the
future will need to impress upon himself and on all his supporters that good
intentions are not enough. The hostile power equation imposes serious
constraints, which were ignored this time by the naive Hindu religionists. But the
situation is not all-suffocating and leaves room for manoeuvre to those who
know how to play by the rules.
(Hindu Human Rights, 30 June 2013)