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I am not a Hindu. And I am certainly not a Muslim.

So, when I started writing my


earlier book Ram Janmabhoomi vs Babri Masjid, a Case Study in Hindu-Muslim
Conflict, in the spring of 1990, I was an outsider to this conflict between Hindus
and Muslims. But as I ventured deeper into the unique configuration of forces now
existing in India, I saw that this was not a conflict between just any two
communities. It is not just a struggle between one self-interest and another self-
interest. It is a struggle between very unequal contenders, with unequal motives for
waging this struggle at all.

On the one hand, there is the society that has continued the age-old civilization of
this country. It has been badly bruised by centuries of foreign rule and oppression,
with the moral losses more serious than the territorial and cultural ones : it suffers
of self- forgetfulness and lack of self-respect. But it is still far better off than most
of the cultures that have been overrun by the Muslim conquerors or the European
colonizers. It has a real chance of coming through.

On the other hand, there is a community, which is allowed to function within this
larger society, but which has the roots of its separate identity outside this society's
age-old civilization. These people's ancestors were in may cases pulled out of
Hindu society and made members of the Muslim community under duress. Now,
they would automatically evolve back into Hindu society, were it not for some
politicians and theologians who instill a separate communal identity in them.

The Ayodhya movement, which wants to reintegrate the sacred place of Ram
Janmabhoomi into the living Hindu tradition by building a Mandir on it, is at the
same time an invitation to the Muslim Indians to reintegrate themselves into the
society and the culture from which their ancestors were cut off by fanatical rulers
and their thought police, the theologians. It is thus an exercise in national
integration.

The struggle of Hindu society is not primarily with the Muslim community. The
most important opponents of Hindu society today are not the Islamic communal
leaders, but the interiorized colonial rulers of India, the alternated English-educated
and mostly Left-leaning elite that noisily advertises its secularism. It is these
people who impose anti-Hindu policies on Hindu society, and who keep Hinduism
down and prevent it from proudly raising its head after a thousand years of
oppression. The worst torment for Hindu society today is not the arrogant and
often violent agitation from certain minority groups, nor the handful of privileges
which the non-Hindu communities are getting. The worst problem is this mental
slavery, this sense of inferiority which Leftist intellectuals, through their power
positions in education and the media, and their direct influence on the public and
political arena, keep on inflicting on the Hindu mind.

These Leftist intellectuals work in a strange collusion with the Islamic fanatics.
Normally, the atheist Left should be the sharpest opponent of religious
obscurantism and dogmatic adherence to anti-universalist belief systems like Islam.
But in India, the two work happily together for the destruction of their common
enemy: Hindu Dharma. Of course, the Leftists are mistaken if they think they can
use the Muslims for their own ends. It is a one-way collaboration, and increasingly
so, as the Left is put on the defensive while Islam is still on the offensive. So far,
the Left has rendered some fine intellectual services to the cause of Islam. It has
strongly supported the movement for the Partition of India on the basis of the
Islamic Two-Nation Theory. After Partition, it has used its increasing hold on the
entire intellectual and educational scene in India to paralyze all criticism of the
historical record and ideological character of Islam.

Then again, the impression that this westernized elite is merely being used for
Islamic communal designs, may be superficial. This elite itself is quite confident
that it is in no way threatened by Islamic self-assertion. And rightfully so : Islam
cannot seriously challenge modernity once it has really taken off and shaped the
polity (as it has in India, far more than in the Shah's Iran). While Islamic
resurgence may pose a physical threat to Hindu society, the deeper challenge and
the sharpest disdain are coming from the Left-leaning westernized (short :
Nehruvian) establishment.

So, one of the first tasks in the awakening of Hindu society is to scrutinize and
expose the Nehruvian establishment, it its political and in, more fundamentally, its
intellectual dimensions. Today, that is becoming easy. When in the fifties people
like Ram Swarup and Sita Ram Goel were waging an intellectual struggle against
Communism, they were up against a dense fog of widespread fascination with this
intrusive ideology. But in the nineties the sky is clearing up, and we witness the
swan song of the once so arrogant Leftist intellectuals even in their last
strongholds. It is a foregone conclusion that their empire is nearing its end, it is just
a matter of not letting their exit drag on for longer than necessary, and being
prepared to fill the vacuum.

At the intellectual level, Hindus will son be able to breathe freely. They will be
able to rediscover and reformulate the numerous valuable expressions of the one
Sanatana Dharma. They will be able to affirm the unity and integrity of this
Sanatana Dharma, without being falsely accused of assimilative
communalism when they restate the scientific fact that Buddhism, Jainism and
Sikhism are full members of the one Hindu commonwealth of schools and sects.
They will be able to reaffirm the unity and integrity of Hindu society, and to
debunk the casteist and regionalist separatisms that have been fostered by its
enemies and equipped with a pseudo- historical basis. They will be able to put
the evils of Hindu society into the correct historical perspective on the basis of the
real facts, and judge them by universal standards rather than by the hostile ad hoc
standards that have been applied to Hindu society by its enemies.
Equipped with a renewed self-awareness, Hindus will be able to face the challenge
posed by the increasingly militant Muslim world. So far, with the help of the
leftists, Islam has been able to impose a kind of Emergency on India. During Indira
Gandhi's Emergency rule, everyone was perfectly free to sing the praise of Nehru's
daughter, but criticizing her was a dangerous thing to do. All the Indian
intellectuals refer with indignation to this episode (during which the Constitution
was amended to make India a secular socialist republic). Similarly, it is allowed to
eulogize Islam as a religion of peace and brotherhood, but scrutinizing Islamic
history and doctrine, or merely asking some critical questions, is quite out of
bounds. Books that do these things, have a good change of getting banned, with the
tacit or explicit approval of the secularists, and newspaper editors have interiorized
this bank on critical writings about Islam. At the intellectual level it is very easy to
put Islam on the defensive and cool down its arrogance, just by doing those very
things which this Emergency wants to prevent. If Hindus take cognizance of the
real texts of Islam, the real doctrines they embody, the real story of the Prophet's
mission and career, and the real story of the application of these doctrines in the
Islamic conquest of India, then they will soon shed their habit of eulogizing this
imperialist ideology. If moreover they apply the precise psychological categories,
which Hindu tradition has developed, to understand the quality of consciousness
that has generated the central texts and doctrines of Islam, they will soon be cured
of their mental subservience to Islam.

It is my conviction that Islam will not last very much longer. In the confrontation
with the rational spirit, which was present in Hindu, thought since millennia, but
which has been brought centre-stage in modern culture and education by the West,
the dogmas of Islam cannot survive. The universalist attitude of science revolts
against the belief that one man could get a special message from none less than the
Creator of the Universe, while others are excluded from any such direct contact.
The critical attitude of science rejects the demand that we accept Mohammed's
claim to prophethood without verification. Islam has no satisfying reply to this
challenge of science and rationality.

Moreover, the present upsurge in Islamic activism, no matter how threatening it


may look, will not be able to deliver the goods. It may mobilize popular aggression
against the non-Muslims of the world, but when it comes to running a country, it
will note fare better than Communism. Of course, it has more roots in the soul of
the people. But it is faced with material needs and popular attitudes and
expectations that modernity has spread to all the countries of the world. Even
Islamic rulers, even in a dictatorship, somehow have to please their people. To do
this, they need the material products of modernity, if only because in the
overpopulated countries of today, a modern infrastructure is indispensable to feed
the people (we needn't even mention the fondness of Islamic as much as Kafir
rulers for modern weaponry). So, they cannot avoid bringing in modern
technology, therefore modern science, therefore modern thinking.
While modern thinking is certainly not the final word in the progress of humanity,
it is quite sufficient to undermine the exclusivist beliefs central to Islam.

With that, we have only demonstrated the weakness of Islam. It cannot possibly
win against the culture of rationality and humanism. However, it can hold out for
some time and still gain a lot in numbers and power. How fat it will crumble,
depends partly on the emergence of people, especially born Muslims, who go in
and actively criticize Islam in forums with Muslims audiences. It also depends on
the frankness and serenity with which non-Muslims who are in regular contact
with Muslims, such as the Hindus, express their skepsis regarding the central
claims of Islam, and the logic and humanity with which they present alternative
views. Confronting Islam with rational criticism will constitute a turning-point,
very delicate but inevitable. But it is the positive attraction of superior (i.e. more
rational and humanist) thought and culture that will be the single most important
factor in the inescapable decline of Islam.

The Hindu reply to Islam should consist mostly in a positive attitude of


understanding, rooted in Hindu humanism and springing from the knowledge of
the soul which Hindu tradition has been cultivating since ages. It should, for
instance, make a careful distinction between the two cultural components of the
present Islamic upsurge : one is the self-assertion against the imposition of the
spiritually impoverished (secularized), reductionist culture of the West, which is a
stand Hindus may share; the other is the fanatical imposition of the Islamic belief
system. The Hindu should understand the mental and the social processes that tie
people to such irrational belief systems, and maintain in his attitude and judgment
a scrupulous distinction between the human beings that have been caught in this
belief system, and the Islamic belief system itself. This will be easier, more
credible and less hostile, if he takes an equally sobre look at the state of his own
culture, dropping both the self- depreciation and the compensatory self-
glorification so prevalent in contemporary Hindu rhetoric.

This critique of Islam, it should be clearly understood, is a critique of a belief


system and its concomitant code of behaviour, and not an attack on a community
of people. It is also not a goal in itself. at the political level, it is merely a practical
diagnosis of an acute problem: the cause of the persistent communal tension in
India is Islam. After all, any two communities, religious or other, can pick a
quarrel, but it remains occasional; while the tension between Muslims and all other
religious is chronic and systematic. At the intellectual level, the critique of Islam is
merely an exercise or case study in the pathology of religion, as part of a general
exploration and mapping of man's religious history, which in turn is part of the
groundwork for the integral human education in the global civilization of
tomorrow. I for one have no intention of spending my life crusading against Islam
or any other It is just that we have to free ourselves from illusions about certain
intrusive and pretentious belief systems, and once that is done, we can concentrate
on more positive dimensions of social and spiritual life.
The same thing counts for the critique of the contentions put forward by the
secularists. It is thoughts, not people, that are the problem. However, people who
have been practising slander with so much gusto and self- righteousness, will only
understand if the proper name- tags are attached to the criticism of their thought. I
have dealt with them at rather great length in this volume, and I have not spared
them. They pretend to be the champions of modernity, rationality and democracy,
and that makes their distortions and their anti- democratic and even totalitarian
stand on important issues all the more unacceptable. They have to be exposed, and
I have made my contribution to the discharge of this fairly unpleasant job. I wish
and intend it to be the last time that I have to go after them. Once Hindu society
has shaken off these Hindu-baiting leeches, i.e. when it is no longer under their
mental spell, it can concentrate on developing and actualizing the treasures it has to
offer to mankind, and achieving genuine national integration.

Actually, this national integration that every talking body in India talks about, is a


very natural condition and needs no achieving. Rather, it requires dropping a few
things. It requires dropping the anti-Hindu separatist doctrines that have largely
been created for the purposes of several imperialisms, and are now being kept
afloat with a lot of distortive intellectual and propagandistic effort. Just drop this
effort, and this country will naturally find back its unity. Delhi, 5th February, 1991.

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