Questioning the Equality Statue
(First Post, mid-January 2022)
On 5 February 2022, the revered Prime Minister, Sri Narendra Modi, unveils
a giant five-metal statue of the 11th-century founder of the Viśiṣṭādvaita
Vedānta (“qualified-non-dualist conclusion-of-the-Veda”) philosophy and Ācārya
of its concomitant Bhakti (“devotion”) practice, Śrī Ramānuja. Though
the preceding philosopher Śaṅkara with his Advaita Vedānta
(“non-dualist conclusion-of-the-Veda”) is better known internationally among
intellectuals, in India he is more revered for his path-breaking organizational
work in monasticism and temple worship, while it is Ramanuja whose devotional
theism is far more entrenched in Hinduism’s religious orders and popular
culture, including its variations in sects like the Nanak Panth (Sikhi) or the
Swaminarayan community. In living Hinduism, which has many leading figures, he
may not be such a household name as Shankara or Swami Vivekananda, but arguably
his influence reaches the deepest.
This is a joyous occasion, we have no reason to minimize it. But, as is my
wont, I leave it to others to applaud this event; I would rather offer a few
critical observations.
1. Gigantism
The Ramanuja statue is one of
the largest in India, reportedly 216 feet high, standing on top of a 54-feet pedestal.
It follows the trend set by Sardar Patel's statue in Gujarat, to which even
overflying airplane pilots draw the attention of their passengers. But what
purpose is served by this?
In the case of a political figure, one can
understand that the public square is where he belongs. So, a century and more
ago, national authorities strengthened their self-justification in the public's
mind by visually commemorating those who had been pillars of their
establishment. For a philosopher and religious leader, this overwhelming
physical presence is less appropriate.
Secondly, making a statement
about your ideological sympathies by means of a statue towering over the street
view is rather obsolete, since our visual life has mostly gone into cyberspace.
Statues belong to a past century, nowadays you can produce far more impressive
images online.
Thirdly, why the gigantism? The best Hindu
temples have an intimacy about them (as struck me especially in Ujjain’s
HarSiddhi temple or in the present Kashi Vishvanath), and even the biggest ones
are divided in compartments that reproduce this intimacy. They are meant for
visits by families at times convenient to them, not for congregational worship
fixed on Friday or Sunday. And they are meant for pilgrims, not the mass
tourism that giant statues aim for.
A few years back, I was in Haridwar and
Rishikesh, where a flood of the Ganga river had wrought some destruction,
washing human constructions away. This included a recent giant statue of Shiva.
The locals told me that this was Ma Ganga's way of showing her disapproval for
this gigantism. A god doesn't need this kind of emphasis on his intrinsic
greatness. In a way, it is disrespectful to his divine character. If you must,
then make a giant statue of Patel, who after all cemented the Indian state, the
ultimate authority sanctioning all these monuments. But Shiva can do without
this, and so can Ramanujacharya.
2. Trinkets
Whenever anything is done for religion, Leftists
sourly object that the money had better been spent on prosperity-enhancing
initiatives for the masses. Dharma-oriented people can take a leaf from the
Leftists’ book and wonder whether the money spent on the statue (and to be
spent on its upkeep in the future) could not have served a better purpose. Thus,
local temples or Dharmic associations connected with those temples could have
deployed more activity in the field of education, a field where Hindus are
painfully absent compared to the Christian missionaries.
Since Modi came to power, many people have
noticed with increasing consternation that several consequential legal
anti-Hindu discriminations which could finally have been abolished by the BJP’s
comfortable majority in Parliament, are on the contrary being perpetuated. The
BJP not only left the existing inequality between Hindus and the minorities (who
are given privileged autonomy by the Constitution, esp. Art.26-30) in school
and temple management intact, it has actively thwarted attempts to correct this
glaring inequality. When in 2018 BJP MP Satyapal Singh tabled a Private Bill to
abolish these discriminations, it was not just cold-shouldered by his party; he
was given a minor Minister’s post (bought off?) and nothing was heard of his
proposal again.
Hindu places of worship are not autonomous, they
are subject to or constantly threatened by nationalization and the siphoning
off of their funds towards secular or even anti-Hindu purposes. This is
highlighted by the race to the exit of the Hindu community by sects that want
to invest in education and fear such government take-overs, such as the Arya
Samaj, the Ramakrishna Mission or the Lingayats. Similarly, Scheduled Tribe
communities who have a status in a grey zone part Hindu part separate, are
embracing the non-Hindu side, affirming their local identities as Donyi-Polo
(Arunachal Pradesh) or Sarna (Jharkhand), because they gain from a cool
“aboriginal” identity and have everything to lose with a demonized and
discriminated-against Hindu identity. The alternative to leaving the sinking
ship of Hinduism is to remain loyal, but of such loyal Hindu temple
associations I hear from local primary sources that they sometimes contemplate initiatives
in education but call these off because of this same fear of a hostile
take-over. Instead of glittering statues, they could use extra funds to finance
their juridical defence under the present power equation; or better still, a BJP-piloted
abolition of these discriminations so as to lift this fear.
Instead, apart from giving privileges to the
minorities in the vain hope of catching their votes (or in the equally vain hope
of a pat on the back from his revered secularists), Modi has merely made a number of
empty Hindu gestures. These include highly televised temple visits, conspicuous
public works in Ayodhya and Kashi, or the recent unveiling of a Shankara statue
in Kedarnath. But the legislative jobs for remedying the second-class status of
the Hindus in India, which only his government is in a position to do, he has
left undone. As a former confidante of Modi’s told me, the BJP merely wants to “keep
the pot boiling”, throw Hindu-looking crumbs to the Hindus to earn their votes,
yet give them nothing substantial.
The highly mediagenic unveiling of the Ramanuja
statue follows the same pattern. Hindus love all the pomp and circumstance,
regardless of whom it is dedicated to (hence no eyebrows were raised when Modi
recently gave glittering presents to the dargah of the anti-Hindu ideologue and
invasion-facilitating spy Muinuddin Chishti in Ajmer). Short of a high-powered
campaign to raise their awareness of the discrimination they suffer, they won’t
be up in arms about the disappointingly superficial performance of their Hindu
government. Even if the BJP itself can’t convince the Hindu voters of any
pro-Hindu commitment, it can count on the media: they will seize on any
appearance by Modi in a religious setting to clamour indignantly that he is
pursuing a Hindu Rashtra, an unearned reputation that only makes him more
popular. It merely confirms him as the Hindu Hrdaya Samrat (“emperor of the
Hindu heart”). Hindu jubilation after receiving yet another trinket only proves
that a child’s hand is easy to fill.
3. Egalitarianism
When honouring Ramanuja, the
Government has taken care to give an ideologically useful name to the new
monument: it will go by the name “equality statue”. In the 1960s the Jan Sangh,
earlier incarnation of the BJP, veered into Socialist territory, rather
explicitly in the case of leaders like Nana Deshmukh (whose slogan vikās/“development”
is still central in Modi’s speeches), AB Vajpayee and trade-union leader
Dattopant Thengadi, and even after the liberalization of the economy since the
1990s it hasn’t really vanished. In all three, this Nehruvian economic view
went hand in hand with a choice for secularism: in both realms they simply
followed the dominant ideology.
This is still the case today:
the BJP, portrayed worldwide as fanatically Hindu, is in fact ideologically weak
and ever-weaker. It has no ideological backbone and therefore turns with the
reigning wind, or even dances to the tune played by its declared enemies. It
has no self-respect but is a dedicated follower of fashion. Now, an
international ideological fashion that even India can’t escape, is absolute
egalitarianism.
So the great Sri Ramanuja is
instrumentalized in the BJP’s egalitarian re-profiling. It emphasizes that Ramanuja
assured everyone regardless of caste that he could achieve Liberation. Anyone
can develop and cultivate devotion (Bhakti) to a God and intone His name as a
Mantra.
This insight wasn’t all that
revolutionary: none of the classics on Yoga (Katha Upanishad, Bhagavad Gita,
Yoga Sutra, Yoga Vasishtha, Shiva Sutra etc.), demanding though they may be in
terms of Sadhana discipline, excludes anyone from the spiritual path. Thus, one
of the most constant inequalities in society is that between men and woman, yet
already in the Mahabharata the nun Sulabha defeats king Janaka in debate with
her argument that “the Self (Ātman) is not gendered”, so that women are
equally fit for yogic achievement.
It is claimed that some
Brahmin circles did transpose the inequalities in society to the spiritual
realm. If so, it was but an intermezzo in Hindu Dharma’s long history, always counterbalanced
by the view that the Self is nirguna (“without qualities”) and neti-neti
(“neither this nor that”). Indeed, that the worldly inequalities do not apply
to the yogic sphere is the more orthodox, more Vedic position. Whatever else
may be up for criticism in the Arya Samaj, its endeavour to root its
egalitarian reformism in the Vedas has a basis in fact.
And yet, though this same
age-old position was expressed by Sri Ramanuja, the modern-sounding name
“equality statue” is infelicitous. It is unlikely that he had ever heard of
egalitarianism, and it certainly wasn’t what occupied his mind. He concentrated
on the Supreme, as did the many Bhakti sects centred around variations on his
worldview. I suspect that his assuring all men of Liberation provided they do
the right Sadhana made no difference to their societal status.
The Leftists, whom Modi has
been imitating in his zeal for secular social justice, won’t be impressed. When
Karl Marx and the first trade-unionists took their stand in then-Christian
Europe, they faced a similar ideological obstacle: the Church instilled in its
flock the sense that vis-à-vis God they were all equal. They all had an eternal
soul, tainted by eternal sin, but capable of faith and of receiving God’s
grace, regardless of their status in society. That was what Marx called the
“opium of the people”: the belief in some higher realm endowed with equality
which made socio-economic inequality bearable. As St Paul wrote: there is
neither freeman nor slave, for all have been freed in Christ – but this was a
poor consolation for the slaves, for it made no end to worldly slavery.
For the present purpose, the
situation in Vedanta is not substantially different from that in Christianity.
Yes, in a yogic perspective, all are equally endowed: man and woman, rich and
poor, master and servant. But their spiritual progress doesn’t make them leave
the class they belong to. It may Liberate them from their limitations, but not
from their societal category. It doesn’t make them equal in any worldly sense.
Conclusion
The statue of Sardar Patel,
who like Otto von Bismarck in Germany was the “iron man” and the unifier of his
country, is sensibly called the “Unity Statue”: his main legacy is indeed India’s
unity. In Ramanujacharya’s life, equality is only an incidental aspect of his
prescriptions for spiritual progress. Commentaries and papers have been written
about him in the intervening nine centuries without dilating on equality. The
pursuit of equality is a typically modern phenomenon, alien to Jesus and Paul,
and just as alien to Ramanuja.
We've often seen Hindus make
flattered claims to modern equality, only to collapse when critically
questioned by outsiders. They may find themselves very clever in projecting
this contemporary value onto their ancient tradition, but others see through
this ploy. That's why we warn them to think twice before making such claims. Neither
the Buddha, another much-acclaimed purported egalitarian, nor Ramanujacharya had
the power to change lay society. They could influence their followers’ minds
and organize their monastic orders, but that was the extent of their reach.
From a modern perspective, a certain amount of equality was incidental to their
real purpose, but this purpose was not equality. Contrary to what Ramanuja’s
statue’s name might suggest, his goal was not equality but Liberation.
3 comments:
Similar claims by leftists on islamic egalitarianism
Dr elst, it is not project of bjp, or indian state.
It os project of chinna jeeyar swami, in his ashram.
sar-sanghchalak, and prime minister are just invitees for inaguration.
In my view, Bhakti movement did have a social impact. Public activities, like Nagar Kirtan, Annachhatra (the sikh version Langar is more famous, but observed in many temples) etc. evolved from the concept of spiritual equality, but manifested in social sphere.
But, agree that this is different from socialist/ communist concept of equality, which stem purely from political, and economic aspects.
Any way thanks for your enlightening views as always.
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