In
Mahabharata, we have the story of Lord Krishna who was troubled by the
traditions of the gopalas, involving the offerings to Indra. He prevented them
from doing the traditional sacrifice instead replacing that with more practical
deeds, angering the gods. When Indra tried to punish the gopalas with rain and
thunder, Bhagwan lifted the Govardhana hill and provided the lesson to gods as
well as humans: Traditions need to be constantly reevaluated to make sure they
are relevant.
Again
Ramanuja, one of the glorious saints of Hinduism, broke tradition by uttering
the name of Narayana to everyone who may hear it. His guru explicitly told him
not to reveal the secret mantra to anyone.
In
1830s, Raja Ram Mohan Roy with his Brahmo Sabha moment, fought for abolishment
of atrocious practices such as Sati. In the 1930s, Rajaji, the premier of
Madras presidency, issued a proclamation to allow Dalit entry into Tamil Nadu's
temples. Many Hindus were aghast by the move, but none of them had the
spiritual competence of Rajaji. Earlier Mahatma Gandhi pushed his followers to
famous satyagraha movements in Travancore to achieve the same effect. Recently, courts ruled to allow the entry of women into Shani Shingnapur temple and Sabarimala temple. These
brought more equitability in the society as well as protected Hinduism from
evangelical forces.
Few such cases have also been observed in relation to the practices of other
religions, such as the landmark judgement of shah-bano, or more recently, allowing the entry of women into the inner sanctum of Haji Ali Dargah. Same would be the case when
the government is now trying to abolish the practice of Triple Talaq. Injustice
should not be allowed to perpetrate in the name of tradition. Immorality
sanctified by tradition is still immorality.
I
believe the interference of law and judiciary in the religious practices was,
is and will be relevant, in the interest of both religion and its followers, to
protect it from the hands of few people abusing it. The Indian constitution, or
the Indian laws designed are not against Hindutva or Islam or for the matter of
fact, any religion. In the 1950s, Nehru pushed through the landmark Hindu code
bills that made the laws much more equitable to the Hindus. Many Hindus were
agitated that Nehru was interfering in their religion, but today we already see
the benefits of it helping many Hindu communities grow faster than the national
average.
Across
Hindu dharma, we see this scriptural guidance on breaking traditions when the
traditions become too faulty, cumbersome and stiffy. Everytime dharma was
disturbed, it was restored. Hindutva was
always open for new thought, science and technology. It came correcting itself wherever
it was wrong, and strengthening itself wherever it wasn’t. It came evolving.
Adapting to the changes in mindset, adapting to the circumstances, adapting to
the socio economic conditions.. It always was open to criticism both by its
followers and outsiders. Whenever it realised that something with it is wrong,
it took a step to correct itself. May be the process was slow, but the result
definitely was beneficial. Change came in the form of the acts of saints, or
leaders, or the god himself. There is no wrong if courts are trying to bring
changes in traditional practices.
“Parithranaya
sadhunam Vinashaya cha dushkritam!
Dharma
samstharpanarthayam.. Sambhavami yuge yuge!!”
“To
protect the pious, to destroy ignorance
and to reestablish Dharma, I shall advent
myself time to time.”
May
be sometimes in the form of Saints, sometimes in the form of leaders, and sometimes in the form
of law.
Jai
Shri Krishna.
Could Have Used hyphen for, Re-Evaluate & Re-Establish. Advent -- is that a verb??
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My view of Hindutva was so narrow when I wrote this. I totally stand corrected now. Don't at all agree with what I wrote back then.
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