March 29, 2015, 6:00 am IST Narayani
Ganesh in Treasure Hunt | India
| Times of India
Vamsee
Juluri, professor of media studies at the University of San
Francisco, speaks up for the anonymous Hindu who, he says, was silent all those
years of colonial rule only to be criticized as an ‘oppressor’
post-Independence. His new book ‘Rearming Hinduism’ seeks to restore to the
millennia-old faith its intellectual heritage by reintroducing Hinduism to
Hindus. Juluri tells Narayani Ganesh that foreign ‘experts’ have only
contributed to the misconceptions
‘Rearming
Hinduism’ sounds militant. Do you want Hindus to turn aggressive to uphold the
faith?
Oh no, the title
actually followed the cover image of the Narasimha statue in Hampi. You will
notice one hand is missing but he is trying to write something. This is like
the predicament the Hindu community faces right now: we wish to write our
history but don’t have a hand; it’s symbolic. All I mean is we need to “re-arm”
ourselves to be able to write our own history instead of passively receiving
Eurocentric histories of Hinduism that often lack sensitivity and cultural
understanding.
For instance, 10-15
years ago in America, history books written by white settlers said that
Columbus discovered America and the people living there were savages. Now,
academics are saying we should recognize the other point of view. Hindus were
not a dominant group during British rule. Now, suddenly Hindus were presented
as a dominant militant group. Wendy Doniger in her book even compares Hindus
with Nazis who committed genocide in Europe. My book is really a critique of
how we tell our history. In America, one lesson is taught on Ancient India in
sixth grade focusing just on two things: caste system and oppressing women.
This is nonsense. There was a big controversy in California in 2006. All
communities got school history lessons changed — that Islam is a peaceful
religion etc, and when Hindus realized there was a problem, the board of
education agreed but a bunch of so-called professors of Hinduism in America
cracked down and said this is Hindutva!
Why
do we need a Hindu national identity?
Personally, I am
still not in tune with the idea of a Hindu national identity. That is why my
book is not about Hindu nationalism but a strong argument for Hinduism. After
Independence, for 50-60 years people in India lived as Hindus without knowing what
it meant — almost embarrassed. The younger generation today is moving towards
more civilizational issues. My hope is that people focus on the intellectual
part of Hinduism. We are living right now in a moment of vast civilizational
hunger. It is not fundamentalism, nor fascism. It is an exceptional historical
moment in which an entire generation of young, modern Hindus in India and the
diaspora is growing up and asking only one pressing question: Who are we,
really?
How
will perceptions about Hinduism change?
I have been urging my
readers in America to encourage at least one child in the family to pursue the
study of humanities. Only then will the discourse change. Of course, it becomes
ridiculous when you talk of flying machines etc, but one must look at the
philosophy. We need massive investment in humanities to bring out the
intellectual perspective. The past is always telling stories but who is telling
those stories? The only books by Hindu authors you may see in American
bookstores are those by Yogananda or Vivekananda. The rest are dominated by
white non-Hindu academics not sensitive to the cultural nuances of Hinduism.
But
what about incidents like the recent attacks on churches?
When it is explicitly
religious in nature and a mob attacks places of worship, it could be construed
as a religious attack. But some guy throws a stone… you know some identities
are being protected and others are being blamed, it is so brazen. The lynch mob
in the northeast was a Christian one and attacked an alleged Muslim rapist and
beat him to death. That news item is circulating in American discourse as a law
and order problem; it is so devious. They don’t refer to the religion. In the
name of secularism and social justice, which are good causes, people are doing
a lot of hypocritical things.
The other big thing
was the BBC’s Nirbhaya documentary. It was silly of the government to ban it.
But the Hinduphobic mood globally is so deep that people immediately think that
‘Oh, if something bad is happening in India, it is because of Hinduism’ and not
a law and order problem. Richard Dawkins tweeted that the film shows the
culture of misogyny in India. Even his fans hit back and asked ‘why are you
blaming India for this’. Then he slowly backtracked.
That is why it is so
important for Hindus to have the right Hindu identity; the future of the world
depends on it. For a very long time Hinduism did the right thing by being
self-effacing. Other communities were driven by the canonical need to dominate.
But today we live in a world of distortions and misunderstanding. Every
community is representing themselves; why should the Hindu community be the one
that is disallowed from speaking for itself ? This is where the whole Left
secular argument has collapsed.
DISCLAIMER : Views expressed
above are the author's own.
http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/treasurehunt/it-is-time-to-speak-up-against-the-hinduphobia-of-foreign-writers-vamsee-juluri/
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