What the
West’s academy has to say on Ayodhya
(Pragyata, 24 December 2020)
At this year’s digital version of the American Academy
of Religion’s Annual Conference, the most agenda-setting event worldwide in the
field of religious studies, several of the hundreds of sessions were devoted to
Hinduism Studies. Of these, one (Boston, 9 dec 2020), presided over by Diana Dimitrova, addressed “The Ayodhya Verdict: The Jurisprudence
and Geography of Modern Hinduism”. Nothing important, this report of ours: just
letting you know what goes on in influential places. The on-line programme book
announced:
“This panel examines
the 2019 Supreme Court of India’s controversial judgement on the ‘Ayodhya
Dispute’, M Siddiq (D) Thr Lrs v. Mahant Suresh Das & Ors, in order to
better understand modern Hinduism as a juridical and geographic phenomenon. Two
papers focus on the jurisprudence (legal theory) of the judgement itself: how
Rāma is conceived of as a juridical person capable of owning land; and how the
court’s privileging of Rāma’s rights over those of Muslim litigants effectuates
a legal endorsement of majoritarian Hindu claims to contested spaces by state
institutions. How does the legal language of the judgement recast Ayodhya and
India more broadly as a ‘Hindu’ space? In what ways is modern Hinduism shaped
by the language of law? Conversely, the next brace of papers posit that text of
the judgement itself is the culmination of longstanding practices of Hinduizing
India’s geography. These papers explore the religious practices - temple
building, pilgrimage, and intense devotion to Hanuman - whereby Hindus built
possessory claims over the contested space in Ayodhya. Thus, this panel
theorizes modern Hinduism majoritarianism’s spatial and legal dimensions.”
No Ayodhya debate
So, the actual Ayodhya debate, about the history of
the site, was starkly avoided. In the past, the Indologists all meekly parroted
India’s Eminent Historians that there never was a temple there, that it was
merely a Hindutva concoction. It would be in the scholarly fitness of things if
they were to face their mistake, acknowledge that they had made a false
allegation of a “concoction” and that the evidence has robustly confirmed the
demolished temple scenario. But they haven’t done that on any forum whatsoever.
The judicial aspects were safer ground for the Eminent
Historians and their foreign allies: the insiders among them know of their
hilarious defeat in the scholarly debate, so they avoid or muzzle any mention
of it. Their ostentatious position of around 1990 was proven wrong and is now
all the more embarrassing in proportion to how high-profile it was back then.
So, their loyalists in the US likewise tiptoe around the issue.
Even many of their followers abroad have gone
remarkably silent on the Ayodhya history: they still do obligatory instalments
on what they call “Hindu history manipulation”, but whereas the Ayodhya debate
used to be their crowning example, now it has gone down the memory hole, though
in fact it was the one case that was fought out in the public square and came
to a clear verdict both scholarly and judicial, viz. to the complete detriment
of the anti-Hindu camp. Thus, the Flemish tabloid De Morgen (25 March
2020) did a multi-page article on an alleged policy by Narendra Modi to rewrite
history, but innovatively left out all reference to the Ayodhya affair (my reply:
“Negationisme in India”, Doorbraak, 5 April 2020, English translation: Koenraad Elst: . Negationism in India, and
in De Morgen).
The only ones in the anti-temple camp who
are staying the course and repeating what they used to say in the 1990s are
people who haven’t paid
attention for the last 20+ years. At the Leiden conference in July 2019 of the
International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS), an all-Korean panel discussed
India’s religious conflict. They were well-meaning and had nothing of the
foaming hatred against Hinduism that many secularists and their Western
acolytes display, but they were poorly informed; or rather deliberately
misinformed, most of them having studied in Delhi at JNU. So, while saying
nothing about the scholar’s debate on the Ayodhya site’s history, they focused
on some conspiracy theories featuring the Hindu forces, e.g. that the public
works in Varanasi to open a corridor between the Gyanvapi mosque (standing on
the Kashi Vishvanath site) and the river, intended to make it more visible, are
“in reality” Narendra Modi’s and Yogi Adityanath’s preparation for engineering
a new temple-mosque controversy.
Anyway, it was in the audience that someone brought
the long-buried claim of a no-temple scenario in Ayodhya back to life. Unbelievably,
Italian scholar Marzia Casolari (who wrote about alleged links between Italy’s
Fascist regime and the Hindutva movement, as discussed in K. Elst: The
Saffron Swastika, p.483-500) still voiced the belief that it was merely a
British divide-and-rule concoction launched by Montgomery Martin. Why would
they concoct a novel mosque-replaces-temple scenario when there were so many of
these present in India, often clearly visible with the temple remains worked
into the mosque, and often affecting other prominent Hindu sacred sites (as in
the aforementioned Gyanvapi mosque)?
Anyway, this flight of fancy only survived the first
months of the Eminent Historians’ offensive, for pre-colonial testimonies of
the Hindu pilgrimage to the contentious site soon surfaced. The negationist
story therefore had changed already in the beginning: from blaming the British
to blaming the Ramanandi Sadhus. But time had stood still in the minds of the
meekest followers, including Dr. Casolari’s: having interiorized the victory
claims of the anti-temple camp thirty years earlier, she kept on repeating them
in blissful ignorance of the scholarly defeats meanwhile suffered by her side.
Otherwise, the no-temple claim has been buried even by
India’s anti-Hindu forces, and though this news has clearly not reached all
their loyalists, their American friends have clearly come to toe their line. Although,
the next speaker made a semi-exception.
Rama as litigator
Christopher Fleming addressed the topic: “In Breach of Trust with God? Fiduciary
Principles and the Bar of Limitation in the Ayodhya Verdict”.
“My paper
attends to a novel facet in the Supreme Court of India’s controversial 2019
judgment concerning the ‘Ayodhya Dispute:’ the fiduciary relationship between
the juridical person ‘Ram Lala Virajman’ and his erstwhile servants (shebaits),
the Nirmohi Akhara. The Nirmohi Akhara, a monastic order, had long claimed the
right to represent Ram Lala Virajman (a perpetual minor under the law) and to
enjoy a percentage of the revenues brought by pilgrims coming to Ayodhya. The
court, however, found that, despite their representations otherwise, the Akhara
had acted against Ram’s best interests (collaborating with Muslim litigants and
undermining Ram’s proprietary claims) in a mala fide (bad faith) manner.
Ironically, the court ruled that the Akhara’s breach of trust with Ram
constituted a ‘continuing harm’ that protected Ram’s suit O.O.S. No.5 of 1989
(Regular Suit No.236 of 1989) from the bar of limitation. My paper concludes
that the way the court construed Hindu religiosity as a justiciable form of
Trust with a deity is a unique feature of modern Hinduism as a legal
phenomenon.”
These are details about
a well-known fact, though certainly surprising to outsiders: that a Hindu deity
can be a party to litigation, and that it has the status of a minor as his case
has to be taken up by a guardian. The perceived divergence between the deity’s
interests and its guardian’s position in this particular case adds spice to this
exotic situation. This is not controversial, so here we need not go deeper into
it.
However, in presenting
the verdict, Fleming claimed in passing that the Supreme Court in its verdict
was non-committal on the historical question. Naturally, he too avoids going
into the history question itself, and even the judicial treatment of that
evidence is passed over swiftly. This much is true, that the Supreme Court did
not explicitly base its verdict on the history question, partly even falling
back on the inertial reasoning of the 1885 Court case, when the status quo
(then de facto Muslim possession, now de facto Hindu possession) as such was
taken as sacrosanct. Earlier, Prime Ministers Rajiv Gandhi and Narasimha Rao
had wanted to base the solution on the historical facts, which they knew to be the
pre-existence of a Rama temple; and the UP High Court had, after ascertaining
the historical evidence, given its verdict on this basis.
This verdict was
confirmed by the Supreme Court. The whole background gives a central place to
the historical evidence, which the Supreme Court wouldn’t go against. Still,
unlike the UP High Court, which for years had been preparing a verdict based on
the evidence, the Supreme Court looked hesitant to follow the evidence, which
would necessarily lead to a pro-temple verdict. From the media reports,
admittedly a doubtful source, the Supreme Court seemed to be more resolutely
“secularist”, meaning prejudiced against the Hindu position.
This appeared from a
strange episode in mid-2019, of which we must await the explanation from the
jurists involved. The Supreme Court seemed to throw out all that had been
acquired in terms of evidence, and instead leave it to a compromise between the
parties. It declared that it did not want to impose a verdict, instead
preferring a negotiated solution. (Imagine the murderer of your daughter standing
trial and the judge declaring: “No, we don’t feel like sitting in judgment. Try
to find an agreement with him.”) This was back to square one, reopening all
possibilities, depriving the Hindu side of the lead that it had built on the
scholars’ and archaeologists’ findings.
Moreover, the Hindu
negotiator appointed by the Supreme Court was Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, which
raised some eyebrows. His record in interfaith discussions was rather
spineless, with booklets about Christianity and Islam churning out the usual
flaky sentimental pap, and a video debate with Zakir Naik bandied about by
Muslims as a shattering victory for their side. On the other hand, he has set
up a network of meditation centres in the Middle East, which is extremely
meritorious and makes up for any shortcomings by far; but it also makes him
vulnerable to blackmail from the Muslim side. However, during this episode, he
consulted with a very goal-oriented VHP, that monitored the mediation closely. At
any rate, the sell-out that some observers had feared, never materialized. No
one wanted to give up his claim, as the judges had hoped. So, a disappointed
Supreme Court gave up on this mediation gambit and took up the process of
judgment again.
The verdict that
resulted was predicated partly on other considerations (like the status quo
factor confirming the extant Muslim possession in 1885 and the extant Hindu
possession in 2019) than the long-available proof for the temple, which had
earlier already informed the UP High Court’s verdict. But if the evidence had
not been there (let alone if it had pointed the other way), it is strongly to
be doubted that the Supreme Court would have awarded the contentious site to
the Hindus.
Space
One of
the buzzwords of Subaltern and other Grievance Studies is “space”. The third
speaker, Knut Axel Jacobsen, dealt with “Hinduization of Space and the Case of
Ayodhyā”:
“This paper discusses
Hinduization of space as a historical process in India. It presents some
central features in the development of Hindu pilgrimage sites and makes some
comparisons with modern and contemporary developments. The close connection
between political power and expansion of sacred sites is analyzed and the paper
looks in particular at sacredness as a form of land appropriation and the
function of parikrāmas as a way to construct and mark religious boundaries. The
paper looks at different ways Hindu sacred sites have been constructed and
expanded in the past and compares these processes with the present Hinduization
of space in India and especially with the contemporary centre of Hinduization
policies of Ayodhyā.”
Throughout the whole
field of Hindu Studies, you just have to get used to the omnipresence, though
in different doses, of the Marxist-inspired reduction of religion to worldly
categories. Prominent among these is “appropriation”, as in e.g. “cultural appropriation”
or indeed “sacredness as a form of land appropriation”. There are power
dynamics, to be sure, but you’re never going to understand Rama worship and the
place of the Ayodhya site in it by forever dragging it down to the political
level; just as Romila Thapar or Richard Eaton were fated never to understand
the Muslim invaders’ iconoclastic zeal given their reduction of temple
destruction to a mere political statement. It is an occupational hazard of
post-religious scholars of (or opinionators on) religion that they just don’t
understand the passion involved in their subject, including the destructive
passion springing from a religion’s iconoclastic doctrine.
To be sure, economic
and political dimensions of religious activity also exist, and may present
legitimate objects of study. We can’t hold it against Jacobsen individually
that he chose this theme, but having followed the scene for decades, we know
that the academic authorities in this field do channel all scholarly energy
towards this reductionist view of Hinduism. This is much less true for other
religions: it is Hinduism that is very disproportionately targeted for reduction
to its external dimension.
The Marwaris
Another form of
reductionism focuses on the financial dimension of Hindu initiatives. Thus,
Jeremy Saul dealt with “The Ayodhya Decision and Marwari Merchants: Financing
Ram Devotion Through Hanuman”:
“This talk focuses on
the decades leading up to the Ayodhya decision as a time of Marwari merchants’
cultural activism, when they championed devotion to Hanuman as a representation
of Ram. The rise of Hanuman worship was thus a stand-in for the long-stalled
Ram temple-to-be in Ayodhya. The Marwaris, prosperous merchants who reside in
cities throughout India but trace their ancestry to northern Rajasthan,
modified their longstanding reverence for ancestral shrines in their Rajasthan
homeland, long reified as a symbol of ancient Marwari dignity, into Vaishnava
(Ram-oriented) temple devotion in that region. They thus adopted the Hindu
nationalist ideology of reviving Ram’s mythological domain onto Marwari
ancestral piety. Thus, this talk argues, the chronology of Marwari donations to
Hanuman temples in Rajasthan has closely paralleled the historical trajectory
of the Ram Janambhumi movement. The patronage arose as a consequence of the
formation of urban Marwari devotional organizations dedicated to Rajasthani
folk manifestations of Hanuman during the late 1980s, just as public enthusiasm
for the Ayodhya movement was reaching its climax in the destruction of the
Babri mosque.”
This was an interesting but perfectly inconsequential
piece of research in the margin of the very consequential Ayodhya affair, the
kind that our academics fill their time with to distract from the real issue.
The noteworthy aspect was a little contemplation on the Kothari community. It
was mentioned that among these Marwaris in Kolkata were the Kotharis, who count
in their ranks the brothers Ram and Sharad Kothari, who were martyred during
the Ayodhya agitation in late 1990. The speaker claimed that the Kothari
sub-caste belongs to the Terapanthi Oswal Jain community, which doesn’t
practice murtipuja (“idol-worship”).
That is when discussant Deepak Sarma intervened, who
said his very own wife is a Kothari Jain. He agreed that it was odd for the
Kothari brothers to be that deeply involved with Vaishnava worship when they
shouldn’t have been into “idol-worship” in the first place. He was smirking and
dismissive of the Kotharis’ doctrinal inconsistency.
In fact, this intervention exemplifies how estranged
the Indo-American secularists are from the reality of India’s religious landscape.
As we have been able to ascertain ourselves in Delhi and Gujarat, there is no
fixed boundary between Vaishnavism and Jainism, they are communicating vessels
with lots of intermarriage within the Bania class. Mahatma Gandhi was a
Vaishnava Bania but had the Jains’ extreme concern for non-violence. We have
visited the Kothari family’s home in Kolkata to pay our respects to the martyred
brothers, and we saw nothing non- or anti-Hindu there. The idea that Jainism (or
Sikhism, Virashaivism etc.) is separate from Hinduism, a kind of anti-Hindu
revolt, is a figment of the secularists’ imagination. They cultivate the
Christian misconceptions about religious boundaries (which they think can only
be crossed by “conversion”, e.g. Khushwant Singh describing Banda Bairagi’s
entry in the Khalsa as a “conversion”), as if they are first-time tourists
bringing their baggage of Christian categories to Hindustan.
Feedback
Through the chat facility, I put the
following feedback in writing:
“Contrary to what Christopher Fleming claims, the
court-ordered excavations in 2003 did yield evidence that the structure
replaced a Hindu temple: this (rather than the plentiful documentary evidence)
was the main ground for the UP High Court's 2010 verdict. It confirmed what
earlier partial excavations since 1974 had found. Far from being a ‘Hindutva
concoction’, it was confirmed by the participant senior archaeologist KK
Mohammed. The High Court also called a line-up of ‘eminent historians’ who had
earlier pleaded in public that there never had been a temple there, to the
witness stand. One after another, they collapsed and were reduced to
stammering: ‘I have never been to the site’, ‘I am not an archaeologist’; their
evidence for a non-temple scenario amounted to exactly zero, and they were
fiercely reprimanded by the Court for their misuse of authority to mislead the
public.
“The Ayodhya evidence debate has presented the
hilarious sight of an entire academic and mediatic establishment in India and
abroad denying what had been a matter of consensus till the mid-1980s, and this
on the strength of strictly no evidence at all. In all these years, documentary
and archaeological evidence for the demolished temple has been accumulating,
and some has kept on coming to light even after the debate had ended. This to
the extent that the judges simply couldn't push a verdict going against this
wealth of evidence. Now that the Ayodhya dispute is over, the question remains
when all these academics are going to climb down from the denial of history on
which they had staked their august reputations. The present power equation,
which has allowed them to get away with this historical negationism in years
past, and to keep the lid on their defeat now, is not going to last forever.”
Talking to those people is like tossing a message in a
bottle into the ocean. Probably it will go nowhere, but there still is that
slim chance of someone somewhere picking it up. It just might set a
consciousness revolution in motion.