Am I A Hindu?
Jeyamohan - July 8,
2015, 7:33 pm
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Tamil
writer Jeyamohan’s exchange with a reader over what makes
a Hindu, Hindu; and Hinduism, Hinduism.
Question:
Let me tell you at the
face of it: I do not believe in an external power named God. This is not due
to reading the Dravidian Movement literature. It’s entirely through my own
confusion and the resulting introspections. The feeling that there is no
external power named God gained strength after reading the thoughts of
Ramakrishna, Vivekananda and Ramana. The reason I am saying this is to show
that I am not merely a vacuous atheist. Though I do not understand Bharathi’s
concept of ‘All that I see is Self’, Einstein’s ‘The World is a Cycle’,
Ramakrishna’s ‘Nirchalanam’ I am incapable of refuting their contents. I am
incapable of accepting them either maybe because I do not understand them or
haven’t experienced them. All I can do now is value them.
I have a desire to
read the Vedas and the Upanishads. But not now.
I think this letter is
the first step in my effort towards that. Though my question is not direct, I
know that the answer will be a journey towards that. I will come to the
question. Why am I a Hindu? Is it my mother religion or is it an alien
religion? Please do not repeat like all the others that this is the power of
Hinduism (I feel this is absurd. If I create a chapter on Karuppaswamy in the
Bible, will I become a Christian? These sort of questions arise within me).
I do not agree with
the reason that it is impossible to pinpoint what defines a Hindu or that under
the Constitution, those who are not Buddhists, Christians or Muslims are
Hindus.
What’s common between
me and my fellow Hindus? Not religion, not even cuisine. Not habits (not even
in worship). Not even common Gods. Isn’t that true? In my grandfather’s
generation, I have never seen any other form of worship than the worship of our
communal deity (nor have I heard them speak of it). It’s only in my generation
that for the people of my village it has occurred that someone living in
Thirupathi or Sabarimalai could be a God. Even the worship of Murugan at Thiruchendur
was not very prominent till a generation ago.
Till now, my village
had worshipped only deities such as Karuppaswamy, Sudalaimadan, Kanniamman. My
people (including me) knew of the Ramayanam as merely an epic (that too through
Kambar, or pattimandrams).
There is no Siva temple or a Rama temple in the vicinity of our village or an
easily accessible distance (there was none in the past too). As far as I know,
there is none in my ancestors who have read the Gita or the Vedas or have even
thought of doing so.
I believe you would
have understood my question now. With all these, why am I still a Hindu? Or is
the Hindu religion something that was thrust on me like the other religions?
From where did this
religion come towards me? Is the distance the only differentiating factor
between Christianity, Islam, Buddhism and Hinduism? If it came in the recent
past, did my ancestors have no religion before that? Did they have no form of
worship? At the beginning of human history, there would have been no religion.
I believe that all religions arose after that.
My question is – did
my village not have any form of worship as its own? Or will this become a
reality soon? The most significant change I notice in my generation is the food
that is presented in temples. The educated (so-called) classes are keen to show
themselves as abhorring the custom of eating meat in temples. For them, only
the larger temples appear to be beautiful, potent and possessing divinity. My
argument that we present to our deity what our deity likes fails to impress
there. (I support vegetarianism solely on the basis of health. But this is
different. They eat meat at home. But at the temple, they will do so with a
guilty heart or will refuse.)
Similarly, I do not
remember my grandfather or my grandmother performing offerings for the dead.
What I learnt from that is that after the tenth day of rites, that’s it. Now,
this habit is also on the rise.
My question is not
whether these are for good or for bad. My question is whether the Gita and
Vedas are to me what the Bible and Koran is? Or whether there is a connection
between me and them.
Am not sure if I have
put my question properly. But I have hopes that you would have understood me.
Regards,
Kaliraj.
Kaliraj.
***
Dear Kaliraj,
This confusion exists
among a large section of educated youth in Tamilnadu who come from a humble
background. This has been fanned by Dravidian organizations and the Left over
the past several years. Powers with financial and organisational mightiness
which operate with the objectives of proselytisation stand behind them. They
seek to convert this confusion into a firm concept.
To give an example,
it’s only in the 1990s that intellectuals of the Dravidian movement and the
Leftists who espoused rationality started emphasizing that the worship of local
deities in Tamilnadu is not connected to Hinduism and that it is even against
Hinduism. Before that, they used to entirely brand it as superstition.
The reason for this
happening is the ten-day conference named ‘Gods of the Common Folk’ (‘Sanangalin
Saamigal’) conducted at the behest of Father Jeyapathy of the Department of
Folklore at the St. Xavier’s college in Palayamkottai. At the conference, a
segregation narrative was easily fed to our intellectuals that all the local
deities were subjugated and that Hinduism is a religion of subjugating gods.
Around 50 lakhs was spent toward this.
Look at what our
Leftist intellectual S. Tamilselvan had to say about it: ‘In those days when
the Department of Folklore at the St. Xavier College in Palayamkottai
functioned actively, a ten-day conference ‘Sanangalin Saamigal’ was conducted.
Those ten days were a turning point in my life. It gave a new perspective about
gods and deities.
Observe here. See who has
to come and present these intellectuals with the history of their own society
and their own deities.
These intellectuals
failed to ask just one question to the organisers of this conference. Does
religion of the organisers permit the worship of local deities? Did it allow
those who converted to continue their worship of their communal deity? What
happened to the communal deities of those who got converted before this? Which
is truly the subjugating religion that suppresses smaller deities? Only one
student stood up and asked this, and he was removed from the room.
This question that you
ask has been planted inside you without your knowledge and has been growing in
strength with continued propaganda. I am pointing out that those behind such
efforts are proselytising forces. An educated person like you may have doubts
and misgivings that your illiterate father might not have had. He would never
have doubted whether he was a Hindu or not. I had to tell this since I could
not have answered your question without explaining this background.
The basis for your
question lies in your definition of religion. You consider that a religion
consists of firm principles of divinity, a definite organisational structure and
well-defined practices and rituals. Most of the religions that we see today are
like this. But this is not applicable to all religions. Only if we understand
religion from a broader and less rigid definition will we be able to understand
not only Indian history but also Asian and African histories.
There are two kinds of
religions that have a firm center with surrounding structures. The first kind
are religions based on race like the Jews. The faith of the Jews is Judaism.
Outsiders cannot convert to it. Several African minor religions are like this.
These religions have clear boundaries. The boundary of race-based religions is
the racial identity. For them, those outside this boundary are aliens. Race
based religions do not proselytize.
The second kind are
the religions of Prophets. The Prophet who founded the religion would have
clearly defined the religious center and its boundaries. In the Abrahamic
religions, the Prophet would have said that ‘I am the true Prophet, all else
are false’, or it would be written that he said so. Christianity, Islam,
Manichaean, Bahai, Ahamedia – these religions can be listed in this category.
These kinds of religions keep appearing even today.
These religions would
demand complete faith from its followers on its founder prophet and its book.
All those who do not accept this would have been defined as aliens or others.
It will insist that these others have to entirely give up their own beliefs and
customs and join them. These religions will do all that is necessary to this end.
This duty would have been preached to all of its faithful. It’s on this basis
that they grow.
Other than these two
kinds of religions, there are two other. One – religions based on philosophy.
Examples, Buddhism and Jainism. They were founded by prophet too. But they do
not preach faith, they advocate their philosophy. Even the God that they preach
is a philosophical construct. Their description of the universe is not based on
faith, but on philosophy. They do not say that this philosophy had to be entirely
believed and accepted. Instead, they call for a debate with that philosophy.
Even Confucianism and Taoism belong to this category.
There are basic
differences between how the two religions spread – the religions of the
Prophets and the religions based on philosophy. The religions of the prophets
ask the others to come to them casting off their older beliefs and customs in
its entirety. They command that what they say be accepted with complete faith.
If you become a Christian or a Muslim, you cannot retain any aspect of your old
religion, communal deity or customs. You cannot doubt Christian or Muslim
beliefs even a little.
But religions based on
philosophy do not say so. They only teach that the philosophy be imbibed in
your thoughts and your lifestyle. By only accepting the five customs of a Jain,
and the basic principle of the Universal cycle, one can become a Jain. Standing
within that boundary, one can worship his own community’s deity and practise
his customs. In other words, they do not propagate their religion, but their
philosophy.
If we consider
Buddhism, this is why Sri Lankan Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism are different in
customs and beliefs. A follower of Taoism can also be a Buddhist. The Japanese
are able to use Shintoism for material life and Buddhism for spirituality. But
it’s the Buddhist philosophy that remains as the essence. What Buddhism does is
not proselytisation, but the transmission of philosophy.
Another category of
religions can be called aggregate religions in general. Hinduism is the best
example of this. Shintoism is another, somewhat smaller, example of the same.
They do not have a central vision of divinity or a central philosophy. These
emerge at a particular juncture in history and continue to grow.
We usually compare
these religions to Abrahamic religions, religions of the Prophets. Hence, we
start asking what is the central vision? what is its holy book? and who are the
‘others’? We ourselves decide that these are the central points and boundaries
of this religion. Soon we are confused who else is within this boundary along
with us. The same confusion exists in your question.
What is the difference
between aggregate religions and the other religions mentioned before— religions
based on race, religions of the Prophets, and philosophy-based religions? It is
that the other three originate at a point and start expanding outwards.
Religions based on race have a self-identity based on race as their core.
Prophet’s religions have the vision and viewpoint of their prophets as their
core. Religions based on philosophy have a philosophical system as the basis.
They make this core
interact with several other beliefs and thoughts. Prophetic religions defeat
other beliefs and thoughts and establish themselves. Religions based on
philosophy penetrate other beliefs and thoughts at the level of philosophy,
modify their core, and carry them along. In other words, in both these
categories, a core that already existed in the religion starts moving towards
the fringes.
For example, when
Jainism came to South India, it spread among the Nagars who worshipped Nagas.
It made them accept the Jain philosophy. Nagar’s worship of the Naga became a
part of Jainism. The five headed serpent over the head of Parsavnath is the god
of the Nagars. The Nagaraja temple at Nagarkoil is their temple.
But aggregate
religions do not have a pre-defined central principle or core. Since they are
ancient, it is not easy to point out their source or where they originated. It
can be said that aggregate religions are formed when the ancestral customs and
beliefs of a set of people living in a landmass combine over a period of time.
Tribes living over a
vast expanse of land develop individual forms of worship out of their lives. It
cannot be called religion. When those people start relating with another group
of people over a long period of time, there is a dialogue between their belief
systems. They grow by giving and taking. A common ground is discovered between
the two. In other words, by conjoining the cores, a new one is created. When it
merges with a third form of worship, a new common point is discovered.
Like this, over
hundreds of years, hundreds of forms of worship come together to form an
aggregate religion. Most of these aggregate religions still continue to be in this
process of aggregation. Hence, their central core continues to change and grow.
This core moves towards whichever group of people within that population that
has the largest intellectual influence or authority.
The structure that we
call Hinduism today has been in this aggregate form since the beginning. Even
the most ancient book of Hinduism, the Rig Veda is an example of this aggregate
nature. It does not preach a particular faith, custom or a philosophy. In it,
there are several forms of worship, beliefs and philosophies. We can see them
in dialogue with each other and join with each other in the Rig Veda.
In the ending part of
the Rig Veda, there is this approximate central core that arose out of this
aggregation. It can be called ‘Brahmam’. That is to say, the essence of this
universe or power is envisaged as unfathomable and realizing the universe as
its expression. As soon as a core like this is created, dialogue begins between
this and the other cores. This we can see in the period of the Upanishads.
This dialogue
continues till today. A few Leftists explained that this structure called
Hinduism pulls in smaller components towards itself. Several people keep saying
the same thing. Any form of worship which they claim was sucked into Hinduism
has not lost its self-identity. Even philosophies and beliefs which came in
like this two thousand years ago continue to remain so. It’s the newcomers that
have modified what the Leftists called as the core. Hence, it is not swallowing
in. It’s dialogue and reconciliation alone.
If we see history, we
can notice that the central course of Hinduism has changed entirely once in
every two or three hundred years. If a new population arrives or a new thought
comes in, it changes itself after reconciling with them. Almost like a river.
Our Ganges is not a river, it is an aggregation of rivers. It’s course and
shape are all determined by the rivers that merge into it. Every group within
Hinduism may claim that they are the core, but the core is always
all-containing.
Please examine this
question from this background. ‘Am I a Hindu?’. Saivaites, Vaishnavites and
Saktars could ask this question too, isn’t it? Saivite and Vaishnavite forms
of worship are different, aren’t they> Then, who is a Hindu? One is ‘Hindu’
only if everyone stays together. If they stand alone, they are merely Saivite,
Vaishnavite or Saktar.
You have pointed out
in your question a duality that is present in Hinduism. It is the
contradiction between theological religion and folk religion. It is a
sociological method developed by the British to study the forms of worship
here. But one cannot understand Hinduism using this. The great godheads here
were folk deities till a few years ago. A folk deity of today will combine
with an existing godhead and become one as well.
Shiva was a folk deity
like your Karuppaswamy once. Today Sudalaimadaswamy is turning into the
Graceful Lord Sivasudalaimadaswamy. This evolution is constantly happening.
You can worship yesterday’s Karuppaswamy or tomorrow’s Shiva. You cannot add
a chapter to the Bible about Karuppaswamy and make him a godhead. There is no
place for him in the Bible and the Koran. It’s possible in the Gita. It is
this nature which creates aggregate religions.
Now, the information
which you share. They mostly reveal your ignorance about your own heritage.
You mostly do not know anything about your village, deities and forms of
worship. You would have grown up without interest in any of these like most
other youth and would have come to the cities for work. After this, you have
imagined a village from what you have read or learnt here and there and are asking
this question.
What do you know of
Karuppaswamy or Sudalaimadan? Have you attempted to learn something? I know
local deities very well; the local deities and communal deities of Nellai and
Kanyakumari districts in particular. I am in touch with folklore researcher A.
K. Perumal and have been discussing with him for over a decade. Only a few
communal deities belong to your village alone. Karuppaswamy, Madaswamy,
Kanniyamman, Maduraiveeran and Muthupattan are present all over the southern
region.
Written histories are
available for more than three hundred years for all these deities. In oral
folklore, there are stories about these deities from even before this period.
The Sudalaimadaswamy folk song belongs to the 15th century. The Karuppaswamy
villukathai (story narrated with a villu musical instrument) belongs to the
16th century. You can try reading them. Almost all of the southern folk deities
belong to the Saivite tradition. Shiva would have been mentioned as the god of
these deities. Or they would have become deities having after receiving a boon
from Shiva. These stories are still being sung in the villu songs and kaniyan mudiyetru of these deities.
In our culture, gods
continue to be created. There are three ways through which a folk deity can be
created. One, symbolic deity. That is, a small deity worshiped to cure a
disease or to increase the harvest. Worship of trees, rocks and rivers fall
under this category. Secondly, worshiping the deceased. Making deities out of
those who faced a violent death, killed in a war, or childbirth for the sake of
honoring their memory. Thirdly, worshipping elders – deifying one’s
ancestors. Temples rise in places where saints are laid to rest.
In the beginning,
deities created in this manner stay within the groups that created them. When
this community forms relationships with other communities, they mix with other
gods and transform into larger godheads. All the godheads that you see today
were created in this manner. Deities for a particular family alone continue to
exist as their communal deities.
This process of
relating would have started several generations ago. To tell the truth, a
local deity starts relating to the Shaivite tradition as soon as it is
created. For example, the temple of ‘Serman’ Arunachala Swamy. It is in Eral.
Arunachala Nadar was born on October 2nd, 1880 at Melapudhukudi near
Thiruchendur to Ramaswamy and Sivananaindha Ammai. He took over as the
Chairman of Eral Panchayat on 5th September 1906. He undertook several good
measures for the people. He passed away on Adi Amavasya of 1908. People
established him as a deity and started worshiping him.
Slowly, the worship of
‘Serman’ Swamy started interacting with Saivism. ‘Serman Swamy’ turned into an
incarnation of Siva. Today Arunachala Swamy temple is an important spot of
Saivite worship. This is how Hindu religion takes birth and continues
growing. Any form of worship here starts a dialogue with Hinduism and over a
period of a time merges with it. Only by merging this like, Hinduism moves
forward. Like all streams of water in a particular region somehow going and
merging with a large river in that region.
Hence, your deities do
not hang out of thin air without any relation whatsoever with the Hindu
tradition like you think. And you are not silent in the dialogue with the
common structure of Hindu religion. You are merely unaware of it. Even
communal deities will merge into the Hindu common traditional worship when the
community expands and spreads a bit more. All other deities will have a
historical narrative which fits with the Hindu tradition. Enquire this when
you go visit next time.
As far as our smaller
deities go, only a few in the village will have knowledge about them. The
others do not care. The reason is the cultural setback caused in the
19th century due to the great famines. Most of our families would have migrated
during that time. The root of the community would be somewhere else. As a
result, communal deities were given up and forgotten. Traditional forms of
worship were lost. Traditional stories and wisdom were lost. Only simple
rituals survived in the places where some ended up living. Our fathers and
grandfathers would have existed in a cultural vacuum and slowly gained roots in
the new towns and villages. They would have known nothing.
Why this doubt as to
what your religion is? Which other religion does the word ‘Kaliraj’ belong
to? I believe that you at least know that Kali is a Hindu god. You mentioned
Thiruchendur temple. You can learn this easily. Please see if your community
has any right to any ritual like mandagappadi in the Thiruchendur festival. If so, you are a member of a
grand, temple based Hindu (Saivite) religious organization which has existed
since the tenth century. If your father or grandfather did not perform the
communal worship meant for their community, it is their personal issue alone.
I too have communal
deities. Ittagaveli Neeli and Melaangodu Yatchi. It is them that my ancestors
worshipped. At the same time, they were also a small part of a grand setup of
the Thiruvattaru Adhikesavan temple. All communities would have this dual
religious belief. Small deities would be their own unique deities. They would
have been attached to temples for larger godheads.
The Vedas were
considered merely as books for rituals. Hence only those who conducted rituals
alone read them. The Gita and the Vedanta were not spoken of as meant for
everyone. It was meant for those who crossed devotion and worship and searched
for true knowledge. In all the communities, those who knew these were a
miniscule number.
The puranas and epics
belonged to all people of India in their respective forms. For every
community, there were different forms of the same stories from the Puranas.
That lower class people had no introduction to the puranas and that they had no
relation to it is simply a fraud perpetrated by the Folklore Center
Palayamkottai and the Madurai Divinity College.
Have you ever known
that the puranas and the epics are the sole basis for all the folk arts of
Tamil Nadu? There are around two hundred folk arts in the Nellai region like
the Therukoothu, Tholpaavaikoothu, Pulluvan Paatu, Villupaatu etc. All of them
still narrate stories form the puranas and the epics. Even today, over a hundred
of them continue to be staged without facing extinction. All the local deity
festivals for the past two centuries have been conducting them only. The
people who act in them playing parts and those who watch them are all from the
lower classes only.
When special dramas
arrived, they staged dramas from the puranas. When silent movies came, they
were movies on the puranas as well. Your village or your family is very
surprising. If they really do not know a little bit about all these things,
they certainly live in an interesting illusory world. Their special state
should be separately studied. One cannot examine Hindu religion or Tamil
society on that basis.
You say that you and
the Hindu form of worship do not have any relationship. This is a statement
made without any knowledge merely by believing in hearsay. There are four ways
of approaching divinity in the Hindu religion. One, padayal (offerings) and sacrifice. Secondly,
poojas and prayers. Third are the Vedic rituals.Fourth, dhyana (meditation) and yoga. Any folk deity would
be within the first two forms of worship only.
Do your offer prayers
to your Karuppaswamy? Or a joint prayer session? You would light a lamp or a
torch. You would deck it with flowers, offer food and worship it, wouldn’t
you? And you would share the food as sacred prasadam. What is this but Hindu worship? This what
Hindus do in the Fiji Islands, South Africa and in Nepal. This is what is done
to Thiruchendur Murugan as well. It is sacred ash (thiruneeru) that is smeared on Karuppaswamy and
Sudalai. You would know this if you went to a Karuppaswamy temple.
There would be life
sacrifice and food from meat in a Karuppaswamy temple. In a temple for a
larger deity, vegetarian food would be offered. There would be a few
differences in the materials and in the words used, that is all. This is
because a few centuries ago, Thiruchendur Murugan became a god for a larger set
of people. Hence, he moved towards a form of worship common to all the
people. Life sacrifice existed till around a hundred years ago in several of
the great Hindu temples for major godheads.
Any small deity would
continue to exist somewhere in the Hindu common tradition. It will definitely
not be completely outside of it; even the deities of the Dalits and tribal
people. How far within it depends on how big the worshiping community is, how
wealthy, how educated and how much social status it possesses. The deity of a
community gains as much importance within a larger tradition (and merges with
it) as the extent to which the community gains stature in society.
That’s why Hindu
religion is not thrust down your throat. Who is there is to do so? Does
someone come door to door for religious conversion? Do they distribute
pamphlets or do they campaign with loudspeakers? There are no evangelists for
Hinduism. Counter campaigns happen from all quarters with the utmost rigor.
It’s you who force
yourself into the Hindu religion. This is the history of the past five or six
thousand years. Every community jostles for social power. It searches for its
own place in society. Once it reaches there, it establishes itself there.
Soon their deities gain prominence. Convincing proof for this is the great
prominence gained by Badrakaliamman temples of the Nadars and the importance
being gained by Mariamman temples of the Vanniyars.
Watch the roadside
when you go. You will notice brand new Ammans and Karuppaswamys standing up
out of the concrete. A few people from the community that worships those
deities would have earned money in Dubai. As they move up the social ladder
and slowly gather authority, their deity will move towards the current core of
Hindu religion. If it has to move towards the centre, it should have a
dialogue with the centre. It should transform itself. It should seize the
centre. That is what is continually happening.
This is what is
happening in your village as well. When smaller deities turn into larger
godheads, their appearance and rituals get transformed. When Karuppaswamy
which seeks life sacrifice is worshipped as the All-Pervading ruler of the
universe, it has to become a god which has compassion for all living beings.
After that, it is not possible to offer life sacrifice to it anymore. It
transforms into the Graceful Lord Karuppaswamy.
There is no question
as to whether this is right or wrong. This has been the way culture has
functioned in the Indian subcontinent for the past five thousand years. This
is how Hinduism was formed. This society has grown and has progressed forward.
Our intellectuals who scream that this is cultural colonialism shamelessly
dance to the tunes of proselytizing forces that uproot and destroy entirely the
worship of local deities.
Hence, if you ask if
you are a Hindu, I would say that yes, you are a Hindu. Hindu religion is not
an ear-marked region. It is an expanse in which several fronts continue to be
in dialogue. You and your deities are already a part of this vast Hindu
expanse. From what you have said, it appears that you continue to move towards
the general way of life. You are one among the group of people who are gaining
ground within the Hindu religion and are making themselves the new core.
Translated by Gokul.
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