Celebrate Baisakhi sale with Tribune| 8-20 April
TrendingVideosIndia
Opinions | CommentEditorialsThe MiddleLetters to the EditorReflections
UPSC | Exam ScheduleExam Mentor
State | Himachal PradeshPunjabJammu & KashmirHaryanaChhattisgarhMadhya PradeshRajasthanUttarakhandUttar Pradesh
City | ChandigarhAmritsarJalandharLudhianaDelhiPatialaBathindaShaharnama
World | ChinaUnited StatesPakistan
Diaspora
Features | The Tribune ScienceTime CapsuleSpectrumIn-DepthTravelFood
Business | My Money
News Columns | Show StopperStraight DriveCanada CallingLondon LetterKashmir AngleJammu JournalInside the CapitalHill ViewBenchmark
Don't Miss
Advertisement

‘The Decline of the Hindu Civilization’: Hindu (ism) — what, when and why?

The author says that while the word ‘Hinduism’ is a 19th-century coinage, the underlying religious identity is an ancient, evolving tradition
The Decline of the Hindu Civilization: Lessons from the Past by Shashi Ranjan Kumar. Rupa.

Unlock Exclusive Insights with The Tribune Premium

Take your experience further with Premium access. Thought-provoking Opinions, Expert Analysis, In-depth Insights and other Member Only Benefits
Yearly Premium ₹999 ₹349/Year
Yearly Premium $49 $24.99/Year
Advertisement

Book Title: The Decline of the Hindu Civilization: Lessons from the Past

Author: Shashi Ranjan Kumar

Some historians may scoff at the very term ‘Hindu civilisation’, for they contend that Hinduism itself is an invention or a construction of the nineteenth century, and the Hindus themselves were not aware of their distinctive religious identity in any meaningful sense before this. However, there is much disagreement among them on who invented Hinduism. While some credit this invention wholly to British scholars and administrators, others share it with Indian nationalists and communalists, and a few attribute it solely to Indians. When it comes to what exactly is meant by the ‘invention’ of Hinduism, the question can be addressed in two ways. Superficially, it means the construction of the word ‘Hinduism’ itself, which starts appearing in the early nineteenth century, more precisely in 1816, in Ram Mohan Roy’s works. But this date has been pushed back recently to 1787 by Asko Parpola, who credits this neologism to Charles Grant, an East India Company merchant and an evangelical Christian. No matter when exactly the word first appeared, it is undeniable that it gained currency only in the second quarter of the nineteenth century, mostly in books by British authors. So, in that limited sense, it is indeed correct to say that Hinduism was invented in the nineteenth century. More substantively, however, what is implied by the term ‘invention of Hinduism’ is, that a single conceptual category called ‘Hinduism’ was invented and foisted upon a heterogeneous collection of sects, doctrines and customs that neither had anything in common, nor were any such commonalities recognised by the Hindus themselves.

Advertisement

The casual sense of the term is so trivial that it does not merit refutation, for to claim that an idea or a concept does not exist until it is given a name, is an indefensible position-it is like saying that Pythagorean triplets did not exist before they were named so. The substantive meaning of the term can be better understood by asking two related questions: Did the various sects, doctrines and customs, which we now call Hinduism, have anything in common? If yes, did the followers of these heterogeneous sects perceive these commonalities?

Advertisement

The concepts of karma, punarjanma, samsara, moksha, etc. are shared by all sects, including heterodox Buddhists and Jains.

All schools of philosophy, including the four heterodox schools, operate within the same epistemological framework of pramanas. The cyclic conception of time, as also the broader cosmology, are common to all. Even though a deity may belong to a particular sect, its followers are not prevented from worshipping other deities. Rather, the difference is in the degree of emphasis given to the principal deity. What appears as a motley collection of endless diversity, has a fundamental essence, and if scholars of all people fail to notice it, one can only be infuriatingly surprised.

Agamadambara is a philosophical play written by Jayanta Bhatta, a minister in the court of Shankaravarman of Kashmir (r. c. 883-902). The central character of the play Shankarshana, a recently graduated young mimansa philosopher in the capital city of Srinagara, considers it his sacred duty not to rest until opponents of the Vedas are utterly defeated, of course, only through reason. The first one of such debates happens with a Buddhist scholar, Dharmottara, according to the methods, standards and decorum laid down by the observers. Shankarshana first gives a brief summary of the Buddhist tenets, which is, then, approved by Dharmottara. Thereafter, Shankarshana systematically refutes the Buddhist doctrine of kshanbhangavada (momentariness) and vijnanavada (consciousness only). Subsequently, he takes on a Jaina, a Charvaka, and the adherents of Agamas, specially the Pancharatra Agama. But the play ends on a rather reconciliatory note, with a peroration of Dhairyarashi, an umpire appointed by the queen to adjudicate the final debate: ‘This one God, by His own free will, takes manifold forms as Pasupati Kapila, Visnu, Sankarsana, Jina, Buddha and Manu and teaches the different Agamas.” He goes even further and proclaims complete equality among all sects: ‘If Vaidikas are to deny the continuity of the other traditions or attribute motives to them, the same criticisms, it may be pointed out, have been brought against the Vedas by the Nastikas and Carvakas. Shankarshana, instead of demurring, applauds him for his penetrative analysis, eloquence and mastery over the Shastras. Two things are noteworthy: first, the methods of vada (debate)-the distinctive tradition of first stating the position of the opponent-apply equally to all sects, including the unorthodox; second, the dramatis personae return to their svabhava, after some bitter intellectual wranglings, that the truth is one but wise people call it by various names.

Advertisement

Whether the Hindus possessed a self-conscious religious identity before the nineteenth century is a more complex question. Denialists place reliance on the fact that the word ‘Hindu’ was used in an ethno-geographical sense, beginning with the inscriptions of Darius I, from the sixth century BCE. Lorenzen argues that if the word ‘Hindu’ had been purely an ethno-geographical term right up to the nineteenth century, then India-born descendants of foreign Muslims, or at least the native converts to Islam, should have been called ‘Hindus’ or ‘Hindu Muslims’. But any evidence of this is wholly absent.

Denialists also argue that Sanskrit sources identify foreign invaders by names such as tajika, turushka, mlechchha, yavana, hammira, shaka, etc., and not by their religion. Brajadulal Chattopadhyaya gives us a list of Sanskrit sources between the eighth and the seventeenth centuries, which contains various terms used for the Muslims, but ‘musalamana’ has been used only once in about seventy instances, to refer to the Muslims. I will have something interesting to say, but later, on why the Muslims were referred to in such an oblique manner in Sanskrit sources. At this point, it is sufficient to say that all epithets used for the Muslims had negative connotations, and sometimes, these terms conveyed the sense of an impending apocalypse. However, the evidence from vernacular literature is quite unambiguous and abundant, and I need only summon the erudition of Lorenzen: The bulk of this evidence takes the form of texts composed by the popular religious poet-singers of North India, most of them members of non-Brahmin castes. This literature does precisely what Sanskrit literature refuses to do: it establishes a Hindu religious identity through a process of mutual self-definition with a contrasting Muslim Other. In practice, there can be no Hindu identity unless this is defined by contrast against such an Other. Without the Muslim (or some other non-Hindu), Hindus can only be Vaishnavas, Saivas, Smartas or the like. The presence of the Other is a necessary prerequisite for an active recognition of what the different Hindu sects and schools hold in common.”

To buttress his assertion, Lorenzen presents a few examples, but for the sake of brevity, I shall reproduce only one, whichis an extract from Kirtilata, a historical romance of Vidyapati, composed in the early fifteenth century. Lorenzen argues that the conjoining of the word ‘dhamme’ with ‘hindu’ and ‘turake’ provides us the closest vernacular equivalence of the term ‘religion of the Hindus’ and ‘religion of the Muslims’.

Moreover, the heightened sense of contrastive awareness in the passage is impossible to ignore. Also, this challenges the assertion that, ‘the term “Hindu” as referring to a religion, is initially absent in the vocabulary of Indian languages, and only slowly gains currency. The overwhelming evidence from vernacular literature makes a compelling case to accept his proposition that ‘the often antagonistic modern Hindu and Muslim identities, both individual and communitarian, arose out of political and religious conflicts during the historical periods of the Delhi Sultanate, the Mughal Empire, and the regional Sultanates.’ There indeed existed a distinct way of life with a common operating system that got crystallized only after an encounter with the Other, and although this has been held by the critics as its incapacity to express itself purely in an intrinsic manner, I find this quite in tune with the natural order of things. The ethno-geographic sense of being a Hindu was crystallized soon after coming in contact with a different ethnographical entity. Similarly, the religious sense of being a Hindu was precipitated by the arrival of Islam. Where does our South Asian identity find expression if not in distant geographies like the UK and the US? If you randomly ask anyone in an international gathering about his identity, he will surely refer to his nationality; hardly anyone will claim to belong to the world or to planet Earth. This, however, might change, if an alien civilisation from an exoplanet were to invade the Earth. The latent shared sense of humanity will manifest to counter the threat.

At any rate, the proponents of the ‘invention of Hinduism’ thesis are obliged to explain as to why the Hindus enthusiastically embraced the imposition of a wholly artificial construct on what ostensibly was a heterogeneous collection of sects, doctrines and customs, if no unifying feature was already extant. I am firmly on the side of those who think that the collective religious identity of the Hindus had been lying dormant for long, and it was catalyzed by the arrival of Islam in the subcontinent, and not in the nineteenth century as the opponents claim.

My only point of departure from Lorenzen is in the antiquity of Hinduism. While he sees it taking shape in the early Puranas, roughly c. 300-600 CE-although in all fairness, it ought to be said that he concedes the point about its continuity with the earlier Vedic religion-I see Hinduism as a living and constantly evolving tradition from the very dawn of civilisation, and any attempt to pronounce a specific date, or even a period, for its origin will be an unwelcome arrogation.

— Excerpted with permission from the publisher 

Advertisement
Show comments
Advertisement