Gods And Godmen Of India
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In this vibrant volume, Khushwant, in his inimitable style, tackles all issues related to religion, faith, blind faith, new cults, and new movements in other words, he charges like a raging bull to attack the epidemic of gods and godmen that has swept the nation in recent years. Khushwant Singh quotes liberally and with perfect ease from the Adi Granth, Adi Shankaracharya, Upanishads, Koran and other holy books to buttress his arguments.
Khushwant Singh
One of India's best-loved columnists and writers, Khushwant Singh (1915-2014) was the author of several novels, including the classics Train to Pakistan; A History of the Sikhs; and an autobiography, Truth, Love and a Little Malice. He was founder-editor of Yojana, and editor of The Illustrated Weekly of India, Hindustan Times and National Herald. In 2007, he was awarded the Padma Vibhushan.
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Gods And Godmen Of India - Khushwant Singh
Part I
God
You Kafir!
In every religious community there are two distinct groups: one which strives for accommodation with other communities, the other which asserts its exclusiveness and superiority. Since the first group preaches peace and reasonableness and the other fanatical intolerance, the latter makes more noise, is more aggressive and succeeds in creating the impression that it is the real voice of the people. This is far from the truth. The most recent example is the hoo-ha created over perfectly innocuous remarks made by Abid Raza Bedar, Director of the Khuda Baksh Library of Patna on the release of a book by Dr S.M. Mohsin. Governor Shafi Qureshi was present at the function. All that Bedar said was that in his book Mohsin had clarified the meaning of Kafir. Many years earlier Bedar had himself written on the subject expressing the view that it was not correct to describe Hindus as Kafirs and there was nothing wrong in Muslims abstaining from eating beef to avoid hurting Hindu sentiment. This time elements which wanted to get Bedar out of his post grabbed the opportunity to mount a campaign against him. They got a Mulla-dominated institution to pronounce a fatwa against him and an Urdu rag called Qaumi Tanzeem to publish a series of victriolic attacks on him. Governor Shafi Qureshi and Mohsin were allowed to fade out of the scene; the only man they wanted as a sacrificial goat was Bedar. Enter Jagannath Mishra – as unscrupulous a politician as any today and equally adept in fishing in troubled waters. He sanctimoniously proclaimed himself being with his Muslim brethren i.e. with the unthinking mob which makes louder noise and has more votes.
Who is and who is not a Kafir is not as simple a matter as it may seem: the word means many things in English and Arabic. There is a variety of sorghum grown in Africa and America which goes under the same name. In the South African stock market there are shares known as Kafirs. But the commonest usage is from the Arabic meaning infidel. It was the meaning of the Arabic word which became an issue. It appears several times in the Holy Koran meaning ‘the covers’ i.e. one who hides or covers up the truth. In common Muslim parlance it refers to people who deny that Koran is the word of God and Mohammed was His Messenger. The Prophet used it as such "those who misbelieve (walla zina Kafarun) read all our signs lies. They are fellows of the Fire, they shall dwell within for ever. The word was specifically used for Christians who believed in the Holy Trinity. The Koran says
they indeed are infidels who say God is al Masihu Ibn Maryam (the messiah son of Mary) … verily him who associates anything with God, hath God forbidden paradise, and his resort is Fire." Islam lists five categories of Kafirs: those who do not believe in First Cause, those who do not believe in the Unity of God; those who do not believe in the revelation; idolators; and those who do not believe Mohammed was the Messenger of God.
Whatever be one’s views on the subject, there can be no two opinions on the principle that it is for an individual to affirm or deny what he believes to be the truth and no one has the right to denounce another as an infidel. No administration which adheres to secular ideals should yield to arm-twisting by bullies in the guise of upholders of religion – mazhab kay theykeydar. Bedar has become a symbolic figure. Patriotic Indians be they Muslims, Hindus, Christians or Sikhs must rally round him and frustrate evil designs of backward-looking fanatics.
11/7/1992
Favourite Topics
What do Indians talk about most? God, money, politics and sex emerge as the top four favourites in the one-man public opinion poll I conducted last week. Of course, not in the order I have listed them. And with seasonal variations. When a catastrophe strikes or things start to go wrong, God tops. When all is tranquil, money manages to push God down to the second place. Politics (or the better Indian equivalent partibaazi) is a national obsession and at election time gets the better of both God and money. Likewise, sex, though it seldom gets the top ranking (few are willing to admit that they have sex on their tongues), manages to insinuate itself in most conversations whether it be about God and religion, money and the status money brings, politics and partibaazi. Since most Indians have sex on their minds rather than in their groins it finds more expression in speech than in action.
Another revelation that emerged from my field study in that whatever be the favourite topic of conversation, most Indians relate it to themselves. When they discuss God or religion, they emphasize their own religiosity or denigrate others as sanctimonious humbugs; when they talk of money it will be of their prowess in making it or of the unscrupulous methods adopted by those who have made more; when it is politics the undercurrent is always that politics is dirty business because it does not attract cleaner people like themselves. And when it is sex, although it is others that we strip naked, what runs though our tittle-tattle about it is the refrain that given the opportunity we could do better. The I is always triumphant.
It is a strange phenomenon that amongst a people who subscribe to the theory that the primary source of all evil is the ego, or ahamkara, the I runs through like a thread in the garland of all our conversation. And this when our Gods decried emphasis on the self. To wit Adi Sankara;
Manobuddhi, chittani,
Ahamkara naham
Chidananda roopa
Shivoham, Shivoham.
(I am not the mind, I am neither intelligence nor egoism I am the joy of intelligence, I am Shiva, I am Shiva.)
15/6/1982
Shanti
We tend to judge religions by the lives and teachings of their founders; never by the conduct of those who profess to follow them. In effect we treat founding-fathers of religious cults much as we do race horses and place our money on our favourite. This is utterly lopsided. It is not very important to find out who was greater – Rama, Mahavir, Gautama, Christ, Mohammed or Nanak: they were perhaps equally great, but which community – Hindus, Jains, Buddhists, Christians, Muslims or Sikhs produced more honest and courageous citizens. Consequently, although I study scriptures of all religions, I do not judge them by the loftiness of their teachings but by the impact they made on the taught.
I take greater interest in new cults than in established religions. Instead of having to accept myths and legends built round old prophets I can check on details of personal lives of their founders and study their impact on their following at first hand. There is nothing very new in anything that Sai Baba, Rajneesh, Anandmurti, Mahesh Yogi, Yogi Bhajan or anyone of the other of these latter-day Gurus have to say, but there are marked differences in the deportment and conduct of their followers. What they share in common is smug self-satisfaction and desire to gain converts. Rarely have I met one who would make me say, What a good person his guru has made him!
The only exception I can think of are the Brahma Kumaris.
I first came to their notice about ten years ago. Sindhi ladies dressed in virginal white and vowed to celibacy were not my cup of religion. I read the literature they left with me. It was mostly a distillation of popular Puranic Hinduism. I saw an exhibition illustrating the teachings of their founder, Dada Lekh Raj. They were put across in conventional low-brow illustrations: good people dressed in white sitting padmasan on lotus flowers, swans floating around; bad people holding wine cups with scantily clad women ministering to them. Paradise was depicted as a new Vrindavan with gaily ornamented Krishna and Radha underneath a halo of coloured lights. It was not the sort of thing that would impress sophisticated men or women looking for spiritual sustenance. I was intrigued: Why had the movement caught on? What kind of people were drawn to it? What do they get out of it? Last week I found some of the answers to my questions at the Golden Jubilee celebrations at the headquarters at Mount Abu. The Ashram Express (named ‘Superfast’ was superlate by five hours) carried lots of foreign delegates: an English children’s dentist from Leeds, a German scientist, teachers, engineers and business people from Brazil, Australia, New Zealand and all parts of India. The bandobast at Mount Abu was flawless. Vegetarian food cooked by Brahmakumaris was wholesome and tasty. An atmosphere of genial goodwill pervaded the campus. No hustle-bustle, no breakdowns, no fraying of tempers. They described it as ‘Godly Service’ rendered to each other by people who regarded themselves as members of one joint family of Dada Lekh Raj. I had darshan of Dada’s daughter, Nirmal Shanta, daughter-in-law Prajendra, and the head of the organization Dadi Prakashmani, all extraordinarily beautiful ladies in their early seventies. I listened to Dadi Janki addressing assemblages of over 3000 people: it was a rare treat of dignified oratory heard in absolute silence. I asked my escort, a 23-year-old pretty Punjabi girl, Lata Khanna, working in the telecommunications department why instead of marrying (she could marry any Prince Charming of her choice) she had taken the vow of celibacy. She smiled as she replied: I get all I want from meditation.
Even married members of the organization abstain from sex because, they say, it drains away energy required to meditate.
Many of my questions remain unanswered. However, I have to concede that I found Brahma Kumaris and Kumars more at peace with their environment than members of any of the other cults I have encountered. I bade them farewell with their own greeting: ‘Om Shanti’.
22/2/1986
Why Bring in God?
I went to Patiala to speak in a seminar on the Religious Heritage of Punjab. They could not have found a more unsuitable guest speaker as I have never made a secret of my Russelite rejection of religion. Vice Chancellor Bhagat Singh said so in the introductory speech when he quoted a friend’s remark: If you and K.S. are going to speak on it, then God help our religion!
That was a little unfair as despite my avowed agnosticism I continue to be obsessed by religion, get emotionally moved by Keertan, spend my spare time translating passages from the Adi Granth. My state of confusion is that of the Allama:
Dhoondta phirta hoon main as Iqbal apney aap ko;
Aap hee goya musafir aap hee manzil hoon main.
(O Iqbal! I go about looking for myself; As if I were the traveller as well as his destination.)
However, in the Patiala assemblage of theologians I was like a cat in a pigeon-loft. My address printed beforehand was deliberately held back till the last moment by the Director of the Department of Religion, Dr Wazir Singh, lest it cause a general walk out before I began. Mercifully they heard me to the last without booing me. What did I say? Nothing very novel. Only that every thinking man must make up his own religion; no rational person can subscribe to theories of the origin of life or to conjectures of life hereafter put out by different religious systems; he should content himself in making his own code of conduct for his years in the world; Iqbal has prescribed many such principles which could become the basis of a new ‘religion’ viz. take nothing for granted but question every statement (Yaqeen kam kun, giifitar-i-shak-i-bash); the best way to spend your life on earth is to create something worthwhile which may live after you; nothing of lasting worth can be created except by ceaseless striving triggered off by an ever-active talatum mind. (Hence reject in toto the practice of Yoga to still the mind.) Only that which is earned by the sweat of your brow is halal (legitimate) – all that comes through inheritance or by chance is haram. Above all once you are convinced of the righteousness of your cause, pursue it to the bitter end without fear or concern of consequences.
We can extract all this Iqbalism from the Gita and other scriptures. Why then waste your time speculating whether or not God exists?
12/12/1981
Hullo God!
Aruna Kapur of Kolkata has sent me a delightful little piece of an imaginary interview with God entitled ‘High On Waves’. I would like to share it with my readers:
I dreamed I had an interview with God. Come in,
God said, So you would like to interview Me?
If you have the time,
I said. God smiled and said, My time is eternity and is enough to do everything; what questions do you have in mind to ask me?
What surprises you most about mankind?
I asked.
God answered: That they get bored with being children; are in rush to grow up, and then long to be children again. That they lose their health to make money and then lose their money to restore their health; That by thinking anxiously about their future, they forget the present, such that they live neither for the present nor for the future. That they live as if they will never die, and they die as if they had never lived…
God’s hands shook and we were silent for a while. Then I asked … As a parent, what are some of life’s lessons you want your children to learn?
God replied with a smile, "To learn that they cannot make anyone love them;