Hindus
Hindus
Hindus
WARNING
TO THE
HINDUS
by
Savitri Devi
Calcutta
1939
Dedicated to
Divine Julian
Emperor of the Greeks and Romans
***
Preface 13
Introductory 17
Foreword
nationality. They tried to forget their collective self in order to bring foreign
elements within the orbit of what they considered to be the “nation” — a
strange “nation” indeed, in which men of foreign culture and foreign
interests are given the upper hand, while the true children of the soil (faithful
to its civilisation), are being reduced to helotry. And thus the Hindus
encouraged the foreign elements, namely the Moslems, to foster the anti-
national ambition of establishing their supremacy in India, either allied to
the British or of their own.
As a result, the very existence of the Hindus as a nation has been
increasingly threatened. Day by day, the situation is becoming more and
more serious, and a time is almost at hand when, it is feared, it will be quite
an impossible thing to think of the Hindu nation being saved. Anyhow, an
herculean effort is needed to, save it, and the first and most important step
towards such an effort is to produce an extraordinarily forceful thought-
current through the collective Hindu mind; a thought-current which will,
inspite of their still apathetic mental condition, create, among the Hindus,
the positively assertive attitude of Hindu nationalism.
With the knowledge of this diagnosis, a few people have come forth
who are doing their best to enable the once glorious and now unfortunate
Hindu nation to come out of these critical times victoriously. And the
authoress of this little book may safely be given due credit for producing the
most necessary thought-current and thus, for rendering the most urgent
service to this Hindu nation of ours.
She has one advantage over the usual workers from within the Hindu
fold. She was Greek by nationality. It is owing partly to her appreciation of
Hindu art, thought
11
and “dharma,” and partly to deeper reasons that she was drawn to our
society and that she adopted what we call “Hindutwa” for the rest of her life.
But naturally, being a European, she could, though from within, study the
condition of the Hindus in a detached manner. And this book contains the
mature and thoughtful conclusions drawn by her, conclusions which, in no
case, can be taken as the outcome of that partial attitude which one of the
born-Hindus may be said to possess.
This highly inspiring and thought-provoking book will make the
Hindus realise where they stand, and what dangers are threatening their very
existence as a nation; it will put them on the right turn of national thinking.
And this new attitude, if whole-heartedly adopted throughout the length and
breadth of this country, will raise them, and help them to assert their national
existence which the world shall not be able to ignore.
After this much, I introduce this book to the Hindu readers, and take
leave of them hoping to be excused for having stood in the way between
them and its valuable contents.
G. D. Savarkar
Preface
These pages were written after a year and a half work with the Hindu
Mission (headquarters: Kalighat, Calcutta) in Bengal and Assam. They
express a very old national outlook on religion, in the light of recent
personal experiences. The Hindus who have a long and continuous
experience among their countrymen, both in the social and political field, are
humbly requested not to take offence of any such statements of a junior
worker, which may seem premature to them.
The last chapter of the book, concerning the Hindu militia and the
cultivation of the art of self-defence among the Hindus, reflects mainly the
ideas preached by Srimat Swami Satyananda, the President of the Hindu
Mission, and given by him a beginning of application in Assam, with the
collaboration of the physical trainer and leader of the Hindu volunteers in
Shillong. These same ideas are at the back of the vast youth movement
started by Dr. Moonje and the Hindu Maha Sabha.
Rather than of a Hindu militia, we would have preferred to speak of
an Indian militia, that is to say, not of a body trained for the protection of the
Hindus alone, but of a widespread organisation of young men of all
communities, trained for the defence of India’s rights, and solely aiming at
the reconquest of India’s freedom and the rise of India’s power. We would
have preferred undoubtedly, to speak
14
Introductory
***
such actions which cannot but be anti-social (such as, for instance, murder of
man for personal motives) cannot be commended, or even tolerated,
according to any possible code of morals. They constitute the stable
minimum of prohibitions, which is common to all religions considered from
the point of view of “morality.”
***
man. The place to which the various paths lead is the same, and, to the
seekers of wisdom, that may be the only thing worth considering. But the
paths remain different. In this world, religions do not meet, even as paths
leading to a truer world.
***
***
But there are religions which do not rest upon any moral or
metaphysical “truth,” considered as absolute. Their followers may or may
not accept a certain number of common beliefs, and, if they do, still they do
not condemn the many possible beliefs, in religions different from theirs, as
“false,” nor do they look down upon them as “precious teachings entangled
with superstition.” In fact, the followers of each one of such religions
generally do differ from one another on the ground of metaphysics, of
morals, or of religious discipline. Take the instance of the cultured ancient
Greeks, followers of the same national religion but, at the same time,
followers of different (and antagonistic) philosophies. There was, in that
national religion of theirs, no common metaphysical system, comparable
with that which we find in hellenised Christianity. Take the instance of the
cultured modern Hindus, of different sects. There is very little common in
their religious outlook, or in the particular discipline they may follow. One
worships a personal God; one worships
21
God as impersonal; a third one does not believe in God at all; one practises
hate yoga, another practises nothing but bhakti. Still, they are all Hindus,
just as the ancient Greeks, inspite of their opposite metaphysical views, or of
their personal devotion to entirely different Gods, were the followers of the
same “religion.”
It is easy to see that the word “religion,” in this case, bears a totally
different meaning from that which it had, while applied to “creedal
religions” such as Christianity or Islam.
Here, there is no truth, whether concerning God, soul, salvation,
creation, or anything else, which should be considered as absolute by all
men. Every truth is relative, being the outcome of man’s experience, which
is necessarily limited. And therefore, metaphysics (the common ground of
religious thought, in “creedal” religions) are a matter of individual outlook.
Spiritual realisation is also individual. The knowledge that it gives cannot be
transmitted to a crowd. Even the path to realisation cannot be shown but to
those who have undergone, through previous experience, a sufficient
evolution.
In other words, in religions which are not creedal, there can be no
conflict between “religion” and “philosophy,” no more than between
“religion” and “science,” for a broad spirit of free research — that what is
called, in modern language, scientific spirit — is applied there, without
restriction, to every sphere of life, including spiritual realisation. And there
can be no common beliefs commended to men at different stages of
evolution. There can be no one-sided outlook on God, soul, etc., “good for
all mankind,” to be preached from country to country.
Hinduism is the most perfect type of such “religions”
22
***
Even the idea of a “creedal” religion is not entirely free from this
historical notion of civilisation and society. The creed is one thing, and
society is another, that is true. But a creed without any society organised
upon it, stands nowhere as a religion, while a society, without any creedal
unity, but of which the members share a common civilisation and a common
culture, has a sound existence of its own, as a society. The great difference
between creedal and non-creedal religions lies in the fact that, while the
principle of unity and the sense of brotherhood are to be found, among the
followers of a creedal religion, in commonness of belief, (and not necessarily
of culture and civilisation) that principle of unity and that sense of
brotherhood are to be found, among the followers of a non-creedal religion,
in commonness of culture and of civilisation, (and not necessarily of belief).
Two Indians, of whom one believes in God and one does not, are two
Hindus, provided they both share that culture and civilisation which is the
only thing all Hindus are supposed to have in common, which is, really,
“Hinduism.” While an American or a Frenchman who has accepted one of
the doctrines of manifold “Hindu philosophy,” Vedantism or any other, or
any special type of Hindu
23
devotion is no Hindu as long as he has not adopted such a style, not only of
thinking, but also of living, by which he enables himself to become one of
the units of Hindu society; moreover, socially speaking, he is no Hindu as
long as a sufficient portion, at least, of Hindu society, has not accepted him
as one of its members. It is in one’s own hand to become a Christian. It is
not in one’s own hand alone to become a full-fledged Hindu, (or a follower
of any other non-creedal religion).
Civilisation and culture are not free from geographical, as well as
historical conditions. A follower of a non-creedal religion has necessarily,
along with the greatest spirit of relativity, (and therefore of toleration) in
every matter where his religious “philosophy” is concerned, a geographical
sense of religion, in every matter where “religion,” to him, means society.
One can dream of unifying mankind through certain beliefs, (though this
also, is an illusion) but one cannot even imagine the same civilisation, the
same style of life, the same type of society all over the world. Therefore, in a
non-creedal religion, no missionary activities can be conceived beyond
certain geographical boundaries.
***
One may wonder, after this, if there is anything or not which is neither
morality, nor metaphysics, nor society, but “real” religion. And if there be
such a thing, what is it? Can it not be defined anyhow, except negatively?
The only thing which can, it seems, apart from all the rest, be called
“real” religion, is spiritual experience.
It is clear that, however different religions may be, religion is one, if
considered in that light alone. And it is
24
***
cannot stand for spiritual experience — for self-realisation. That is why one
can find, among the followers of creedal religions, a certain morality, a great
amount of theology, but such a little real religion, (personal realisation of
truth) compared to what could be expected.
What can be done is not to teach spirituality, but, through the habits of
life, through customs and ceremonies, through art and culture, and daily
dealings, to create an “atmosphere” in which spiritual experience appears to
be the ultimate experience of man. No common creed is necessary for that.
Only certain permanent influences, in certain special social surroundings,
are. And that is what the Hindus have understood, from time immemorial up
to the present day. The great religious value of Hinduism — manifold on the
ground of morals, as well as of beliefs, but unified by culture, by artistic
expression, by the “style of life” it evolves — lies in that fact.
But this is not the only reason, this is not even the main reason for
which we want to preserve and strengthen Hindu civilisation, and organise
Hindu society throughout India.
Apart from the high philosophies contained in the Hindu Scriptures
and from the high spiritual ideal realised by the Hindu seers, we want to
defend Hindu civilisation and society, against the increasing forces of rival
proselytising societies strongly united by the consciousness of a common
creed. Even if India itself were to disappear just now, the philosophical and
spiritual inheritance of the Hindus would remain. Mankind would preserve
it, because it is worth preserving. It is immortal, and needs no one to defend
it. What we want to defend, we repeat, is Hindu society, the Hindu people,
the bearers
26
of Hindu civilisation, whose number is decreasing every day. They are the
body of Hinduism, of which the high philosophies and spiritual realisations
are the everlasting soul.
Our point is that Hindu society must not perish; nor must it stagnate in
its present state of weakness. We want it to live because we know it can be
mighty and beautiful, and also, because it is Indian, nay, because it is India
herself.
We have no other reason to defend it.
28
Chapter 1
What we have just said about creedal and non-creedal religions, leads
us to the statement which can be considered as the main thesis of this essay:
Hinduism is the national religion of India, and there is no real India besides
Hindu India.
We know, there are people in India, nowadays, (and, unfortunately,
not merely among the non-Hindus) who are ready to criticise this statement.
They tell us that “religion is a personal concern; why should not every
Indian follow the one he pleases? That has nothing to do with his national
feelings.” They tell us that “in all civilised countries, nationality and religion
are two separate entities.” They tell us that, “in Japan, for instance — the
most progressive country of Asia — people of the same family may frequent
different temples, belong to different religions, and yet be united.” And they
add: “In India, why should it not be the same?”
All these remarks presuppose the same fundamental confusion of the
two entirely different meanings of the word “religion,” that is to say, creed
and culture. They are perfectly justified as long as one speaks of “religion”
as a creed. They do not hold,
28
the days of the Holy Inquisition. And that is the limit of what can be tried. It
has proved a failure; for never an entire nation of so-called Christians has
been united in the same faith, (in the same creed), not to speak of the same
inexpressible realisation of God. If you only just examine the personal faith
of a few Christians of the same nationality, you will easily be convinced of
the truth of this statement.
In the “civilised” countries where “religion” and nationality, Church
and State, are supposed to be separate, creed and nationality are separate,
and always were, inspite of infructuous efforts to establish State dogmas.
But culture and nationality are not separate; civilisation and nationality are
not, and never will be.
Nowadays, a Frenchman who is a Catholic and a Frenchman who is a
Theosophist, and another one who is a Seventh Day Adventist, are all three
Frenchmen, not merely because they all speak French and have the same
French ancestors, and live on the same soil. They are all three French
because, inspite of minor differences (the Theosophist may be a vegetarian
and the Catholic a meat-eater; their opinions may also differ, concerning the
nature of God), they share common daily thoughts, common habits; a
common way of dressing, of sitting, of furnishing their houses; some
common standardised ideas about literature, art, music, science; in one word,
that what we call “French culture” and “French civilisation.”
French culture is not a religion, for sure. But it is an aspect of the
broader and more complex “European culture” and “European civilisation”
which is that
30
culture and civilisation that developed in the West of Europe, under the
double influence of Christianity and Rationalism. We cannot call it Christian
culture and civilisation, for Christianity alone has not produced it. And
though the part played in its development by Christianity is great, no doubt,
it is difficult to determine. Christianity being a “creed” before anything else,
could not be the only factor in this huge creation of this world.
The fact that “religion” means (at least in the modern East), culture
and civilisation as well as personal creed, misguides us when we bring forth,
as an example of progress, the countries where “Church and State” are
separate. If “Church,” if “religion,” is taken in its later sense, that of
civilisation and culture, then, religion and State, or, better say, religion and
society, are separate nowhere, not even in the West. Just try to imagine the
case of a Frenchman who would live entirely, in his daily life, according to
Mohammadan lines! The case is not impossible. But the gentleman, inspite
of his European face and of his ancestry, would no longer be a Frenchman.
He would be some sort of non-European, exiled in France.
The example of the creedal toleration of Japan, is as fallacious as that
of the modern States of Europe. It may be that, in some Japanese families,
from the point of view of creed, two brothers are Buddhists, a third one
Christian, and a fourth one, a faithful observer of Shintoic rites (which
implies no creed). That is to be said about the four men, as spiritual beings
or as thinkers: two believe in the Buddha, in the Law, and in the
Community; one, in Christ; and
31
the other one may be an agnostic, or anything else. But, as social beings,
they all live in the same way, think according to the same standards, share
the same culture; as Japanese, they can all four be said followers of Shinto.
Theirs is the smiling and heroic civilisation that Shinto thought and custom
have brought forth. The sanctity of the Emperor is as great to the so-called
Christian as to the faithful observer of the national rites. Moreover, the
Christian himself will not hesitate to take part in a public function,
performed according to Shinto rites, as a member of the nation. And, just as
the rest of his compatriots, Shintoists, Buddhists, or whatever they may be,
he bears a Japanese name — not a “Christian” one, which would be a
foreign one, whether imported from Portugal or from America, or directly
from the Bible, that is to say, from Palestine.
***
***
Indian civilisation and culture. That is perhaps why they like to imagine that
their ancestors were all immigrants from Persia or Arabia. This claim is
absurd. The Mohammadan population of only one district in Bengal
(Mymensingh) is more than half the total population of Arabia. In fact,
practically all the Musulmans of India are the descendants of converts from
Hinduism. They are Indians by blood, no doubt. But to feel: “We are
Indians” would mean, to admit that beautiful Hindu culture is theirs also.
Then, perhaps, many would feel like coming back to the still numerous fold,
and sharing the national life once more, with their Hindu brethren. But their
religion, being a creedal one, is naturally intolerant. Non-Musulmans must
be looked upon as “heathen,” and everything “heathen” must be rejectable
— everything, including Indian nationalism, that is to say, the consciousness
of unity with “heathen” people, on the basis of a common “heathen”
civilisation and culture. Moreover, the Hindu brethren will not take them
back in their society. So it is better for them, to say, like the fox in the fable,
that “the grapes are sour;” it is better to call themselves the descendants of
Arabs and Persians, and to feel themselves one with the Mohammadan
countries outside India. There is a lesser possibility for some of them to be
tempted, sooner or later, to prefer India to Islam; and a lesser possibility
also, for those who may be tempted already, if any, to fall into temptation,
and meet with bitter disappointments in daily life.
36
***
and died, is still more holy than England can ever be. If he would go on a
religious pilgrimage, it would be to Jerusalem, outside England, not to any
place in England. The same with a Frenchman, or any modern European.
But just as an ancient Greek used to have his sacred places in Greece, a
modern Hindu has still his sacred places within the boundaries of his
motherland. Wherever he may go on a pilgrimage, may it be to Benares, to
Mathura, to Gangotri or to Rameswaram, he will remain in India, in contact
with his own soil. An Indian Mohammadan has to look abroad, to the most
sacred spots on earth. So has an Indian Christian. A Hindu enjoys the
privilege of regarding his own India, not only as the most beloved or as the
most beautiful, but also as the most holy Land on earth.
***
Europeans who have taught the Indians nationalism, indirectly; that India
had never felt herself a nation, before the late struggle undertaken against
British domination. This is difficult to believe, in the light of Hindu legend.
Long centuries before any foreigner had settled in India, the unity of the
country was materialised in symbols. What more suggestive story than that,
for instance, of Sati, Siva’s wife, whose body, divided, after her death, in
fifty-one pieces, is lying still in fifty-one different places, therefore revered
as “tirthasthans,” throughout the Indian Peninsula? One lies near Peshawar,
one in Kamakhya, not far from India’s eastern boundaries; one in Benares,
one in the very extreme South, others here and there. Fifty-one pieces, but
one body; fifty-one “tirthasthans” in the name of the same Goddess,
scattered over the same territory. Indeed, among the different interpretations
that can be given of the legend of Sati, one can take it in this light: Sati is
India herself, personified; India’s soil, sacred from end to end, is, with all its
variety, the actual body of one great Goddess.
The consciousness of Indian unity is nothing else but this feeling. And
Indian nationalism means: devotion to this great Goddess.
That is why, besides the Hindus, no one can share it. Whoever really
shares it is a Hindu.
***
For, last but not least, there is no other religion which can be used as a
basis of Indian patriotism, like that of the Hindus; no other religion which
can create and
39
over the other. Nothing is more inconsistent, because they are supposed to
be Christian nations. Had they not been so, nothing would have been more
natural. But Christianity itself is not natural. And the growth of Europe, with
different Church-civilisations at its background, has taken place inspite of
Christianity, not according to Christianity.
Any Christian who feels himself nearer to an Atheist of his own
country than to a Christian from a foreign land, is not a real Christian. Nay,
any follower of a creedal religion who is a nationalist at the same time, is
utterly inconsistent. One cannot serve two masters. One cannot put God first,
and also one’s Nation first . . . unless the religion he professes is of such a
type, that Nation and God can be taken as the same. This is not the case with
Christianity and Islam. But this is the case with Hinduism. Therefore, it can
be said that Hinduism is not only the religion which has developed in India,
and which gives a living illustration of India’s unity in variety. It is also the
religion which, owing to its very outlook, to its very tenets, gives India the
basis of a consistent nationalism, entirely in harmony with the spirit of its
cult.
***
else can possibly be loved but God, through various forms, and names, and
symbols.
There is a lovely story concerning Sri Ramkrishna Paramhamsa. One
day, a childless widow came to visit the great saint. She asked him what to
do to actually see Lord Krishna, for whom she professed a great devotion.
The saint asked her whom did she love the best in this world. And when she
answered: “My brother’s young son,” he said unto her: “Keep on loving
him, and love him still more. Keep his sight constantly before your eyes;
serve him and love him. And soon, in that little child, you will actually see
the One who used to play, years and years ago, in the fields of Vrindavan.”
She did what she was told and saw Krishna, in the garb of her little nephew.
In the same way, among the Hindus, all fundamental natural feelings
are magnified, exalted, sanctified through religion. Love and service to one’s
husband is love and service to one’s God. A husband is God, visible and
tangible. Love and service to one’s own mother is love and service to the
Mother of the Universe. Every mother is Mother Kali, personified.
What is, then, more natural for a Hindu, than to consider his greater
mother — Mother India — as another broader and more lasting expression
of the Dark-blue Goddess? What is more natural than to feel that love and
service to India, is love and service to that infinite Mother worshipped in
temples? What is more natural than to erect temples, like that “Bharat-Mata
ka Mandir” of Benares, where incense is burnt in front of a map of India?
On the Diwali day, the girls of the Arya Kanya Maha Vidyalaya of
Jullundur (Punjab) draw a large
42
map of India upon the ground of the school courtyard; they set lights in a
row, all along its outlines, and then, standing around it, they sing “Vande
Mataram,” and other patriotic songs. They are right, and perfectly consistent
with the spirit of the national religion. And no cult, besides Hinduism, can
promote in India that beautiful devotional nationalism, that revival, on an
immense scale, of the spirit of “Ananda Math,” which is the thing, the only
basic thing that present India needs to uplift herself as a nation, and become
free, and great once more.
43
Chapter 2
not change the condition of India. It only makes it still more shocking than it
is, if more shocking can be, and therefore, is no consolation. But, in fact, the
Indians as a whole, are not more “spiritual” than other people. There are
giants of real spirituality, in present India, no doubt. But the average Hindus,
when they boast of their “spirituality,” are not true to themselves. Nor are
they doing justice to their country, and to their religion.
Hindu thought and culture (what is commonly called, Hindu religion),
is, by no means, superior to other religions because of the famous spirituality
that shines in the Hindu religious giants, saints and seers. Saints and seers,
realised men, are to be found also among the followers of other religions.
Are they greater or lesser in number? It is difficult to say. And it does not
matter.
Hinduism is really superior to other religions, not for its spirituality,
but for that still more precious thing it gives to its followers: a scientific
outlook on religion and on life. Hindu spirituality is a consequence of that
very outlook.
***
***
scientific thought are to be found together. The fact, often recalled, that
many great scientists have been, at the same time, faithful Christians, does
not lessen that inconsistency. Wherever arbitrary separations are set up,
restlessness of mind sooner or later arises, with the growing consciousness
of a “false position.” Life is one, in its complexity, and impossible to divide
into compartments. The weakness of reasonable men who follow a creedal
religion (whichever it may be; we took the case of Christianity merely as an
instance), lies in the implicit denial of that fact. It is always possible to point
out, either their want of true simple faith, either their wilful or unwilful
absence of elementary criticism.
***
But the difference is that this knowledge is not merely, the ordinarily called
“scientific” knowledge, concerning the phenomena of matter; it is every
knowledge, including the highest (or subtlest) knowledge of what is at the
background of all phenomena, of all existence: the Absolute. In other words,
every knowledge must be scientific, otherwise it is no knowledge at all.
As one can see, far from being opposed to so-called “materialistic”
European thought, Hindu thought is exactly of the same nature. Thought, in
fact, is neither European nor Indian, nor “materialistic” nor “spiritualistic;” it
is thought, and no more, unless it is nothing. The superiority of the Hindus
lies, not in the different nature of their thought, but in its consistent and
universal application to all realms of life, including the realm of spiritual
development, while European thought stops where begins, either blind
religious faith, or else (more and more nowadays), systematical agnosticism.
A Hindu as well, can be an Agnostic (and many are, and always were,
in all times). But his agnosticism is never systematical. He does not know,
say, what is beyond the world revealed to him by his senses and by his
intelligence. He has no experience of an “Absolute.” But he will not deny
the possibility of having one. To the “sadhak,” who asserts “his” experience,
he will not say: “It is nothing but imagination.” He possesses the real
scientific mind, which is dogmatic about nothing, but open to everything.
50
***
Chapter 3
Another, and perhaps a more expressive word for Hinduism would be:
Indian Paganism.
The Christian missionaries call “Pagans” all those who are neither
Christians, nor Mohammadans, nor Jews, that is to say, all those whose
religious tradition has no connexion with the Bible and tradition of the Jews.
We accept the word, because it is a convenient one. It points out some sort
of similarity between all non-creedal religions of the past as well as of the
present day.
Once, practically all the world was “Pagan.” Now that half its people
have been converted either to Christianity or to Islam, the number of Pagans
is less. That is no proof of the lesser value of different Paganisms, compared
to the great creedal religions. It is surely an advantage, to be numerous; but
it is no virtue. And therefore the number of its followers has nothing to do
with the value of a cult.
53
***
We have remarked that among the so-called Christians, there are more
and more people who are no total believers in the Bible at all, but “free
thinkers.” And we have said that free thought in all matters, including
religion, is a feature of Hinduism. This does not mean that we consider all
the free thinkers of the World as Hindus.
Philosophically, Hinduism is an attitude of mind, and an outlook on
life. But it is not only that. It is a number of cults, among which one may
choose. And, whatever cult it may be, it is a cult, one of the immemorial
Pagan cults, surviving in the midst of the modern world. The Hindus are one
of the few modern civilised people who are openly Pagans.
The Japanese, with their official Shintoic ritual, are another of these
people. And they being one of the leading nations of the modern world, their
example is priceless. They show magnificently that, even if it be
indispensable to adopt any new mechanical inventions, in order to compete
with other nations, and live, yet it is not necessary to adopt the religion and
the civilisation of the inventors, wholesale. Aeroplanes and war-tanks, and
modern banking business on a broad scale, can perfectly go together with the
existence of a Solar dynasty of king Gods, in whose Godhood everyone
actually believes, as well as an Egyptian did, six thousand years ago. When
India, freed from internal weakness and foreign yoke, will become again a
world power, then she will, still better perhaps than Japan, stand as a witness
of such sort of truth as this.
In the meantime, she remains the last great country of Aryan
civilisation, and, to a great extent,
54
of Aryan tongue and race, where a living and beautiful Paganism is the
religion both of the masses and of the intelligentsia.
***
***
***
***
This was at the time when the great Samudra Gupta was ruling over
India.
Oh! if only Julian could have seen what a display of beauty, in daily
life and in festivities, and in processions in honour of Gods and Goddesses
much akin to his, was going on, over there! If only he could have seen that
Aryan Paganism would live and flourish forever, in that luxuriant land; that
India would preserve the World’s youth from age to age,
59
***
But it is not through the forms and colours of popular Hindu cult
alone that Hinduism is a religion of beauty. Its conception of God, creative
and destructive, is the expression of a broad artistic outlook on life and on
the universe.
In creedal religions, the centre of interest is man; the background,
man’s short history, man’s misery, man’s craving for happiness; the scope,
man’s salvation. God, man’s Father, has a particular, and somewhat partial
tenderness towards this privileged creature of His.
In intelligent Hinduism, this anthropomorphic view has no place. The
centre of interest is this eternal universe of Existence, in which man is only a
detail. God is the inner Force, the deeper Self, the Essence of that Existence
— the “Greatest Soul.” (Paramatma).
No personal likings and dislikings, in Him. No special favour to any
of the creatures that appear and pass away, in the course of time. Nothing
but an endless succession of infinite states, of infinite expressions of the
unknown Thing, which is the reality of all things; a dancing succession of
birth and death and rebirth, over and over again, which is never the same,
and yet, is always the same; a play, (lila) which has no beginning nor end,
nor purpose, but which is beautiful, whatever may be the temporary fate of
any particular species, in its course.
The fate of all species, of all individuals, is to grow
61
slowly more and more conscious of the beauty of the Play, and, at end, to
experience their substantial identity with the Force which is playing-playing
with its own Self. Nobody knows what this Force is, except those who have
realised it in themselves. But we all adore It, and bow down to It. We do not
bow down to It because we know It, and because It is God. It is because we
bow down to It, that we call It God. And we bow down to It and worship It,
in its millions and millions of expressions (those which destroy us, as well as
those which seem to help us), because, in its millions and millions of
expressions, It is beautiful.
***
Chapter 4
in India? And what about Bengal, the home of Indian culture in the present
day, if we except its western districts? Punjab, at least, has got the Sikhs
who, in case of trouble, will stand like one man and fight for Hindudom.
Bengal has no equivalent of the Sikhs yet, and its condition is worse.
As far as a census report written in India can be correct, the latest
figures, which are supposed to give a picture of Bengal in 1931, are
impressive. In West Bengal, the Hindus are in majority; but in North and
East Bengal they seem to be, according to the tragic words of a Bengali
author, “a dying race.”
Just see their proportion, compared to the Mohammadan population,
in a few districts:
amidst a thick green jungle and a few tanks full of pink and white lotuses —
and you inquire of its name. The name will be Krishnapur, Kalipur,
Sitarampur, or some other Hindu name like that. But how many Hindus are
there in the village? Not one. Or perhaps, yes, there may be a few: half a
dozen fishermen, a barber, a washerman, who through ignorance, through
need, and through the pressure of the environment, will be Musulmans, in a
generation or two, or less than that.
The “zamindar” and the, money-lender were and are still generally
Hindus. But their position in the village is growing more and more
precarious.
***
been aristocrats since the beginning of the world. They are poor, and
spotlessly clean. And by coming in contact with them, one feels like
discovering an untouched spot of ancient India.
When one has been walking for miles and miles, or sailing for hours
and hours along the broad streams of Bengal, crossing places with Hindu
names and ninety percent Mohammadan population, it is refreshing to stop
in a village where there are, at least, one or two pandits, and have a talk with
them There is such an atmosphere of serene Hindu life all about them, that
one takes to hoping once more. They may also tell you, in their beautiful
language, with Sanskrit quotations from several “shastras”, and
commentaries upon the shastras, that Hinduism is eternal (“Sanatan
Dharma”).
You will learn, at the same time, that during the last month, a
“namasudra” of the village, and two “malis,” from a village five miles away,
have become Mohammadans. But it seems that the loss of those low-caste
people does not injure Hinduism’s eternity.
***
India; in fact, you are in India still. But the masses are getting day by day
more Mohammadanised.
And if you speak of this to the educated Hindus of Dacca or of
Chittagong, they may also tell you, like the learned village Brahmans, that
another name for Hinduism is “Sanatan Dharma.” They are accustomed to
see bearded men walking about the streets, with red “tupis” upon their
heads. They have never seriously inquired to what extent the number of
these men is increasing. Nor have they ever troubled to find out, by what
mysterious mental process a Hindu (one of their own people), suddenly
makes up his mind to grow his beard, and wear a “tupi,” and call himself a
Musulman; by what mysterious mental process he actually becomes a
Musulman, with a full-grown Musulman consciousness, ready to stand
against the Hindus, at the first call.
They will tell you that those Musulmans are nothing but low caste
Hindus converted once upon a time to Islam; which is generally true. They
will tell you that quality is to be sought more than quantity, which is always
true; but which is not the only truth about the Hindu-Moslem problem in
India, and specially in Bengal — far from it.
***
which is beyond time and space) and the other, concerning action and
success, that is to say, our ordinary historical plane, in which time and space
are everything.
Truth is eternal, no doubt. It does not depend upon the number of
those who accept it. An increasing number of those who accept it, does not
prove it to be more true. Nor does the display of their spirit of sacrifice or of
any other qualities of character; it bears witness in their favour, as strong
and faithful men, but adds nothing to, and alters by no means the “truth” (or
untruth) of what they profess. A martyr never proves, by his death, that truth
for which he dies; he only proves his own personal consistency, and that is
all he can do.
Beauty, perfection, and all other abstract entities of the same sort, are
equally eternal. So it is mere waste of time to defend them; they take care of
themselves. “Eternal” Hinduism (that is to say, the truth expressed in the
innumerable “shastras” and “sutras,” etc., the wisdom of the Upanishads, the
splendour of the Vedic hymns) will, in the same way, take care of itself. No
need defending it. Would all India profess Islam, tomorrow; would it even
disappear wholesale, in some formidable cataclysm, that would make no
difference: the enlightened world would preserve the Hindu Scriptures,
because they are worth preserving.
And even if it did not preserve them, it would slowly rediscover the
truth contained in them. So, in anyway, it is no good troubling about the fate
of the tenets of Hinduism. They are not in danger.
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***
When one goes about in the North and East of Bengal (not to speak of
the other places in India where the Hindus are less than 25% of the total
population), one realises, to a great extent, what a fully conscious Greek
Pagan must have felt like, in his own country, during the early Middle Ages,
when Christendom was growing to power day by day.
Because Christianity has finished by winning, people, nowadays,
speak a lot of the persecutions against the first Christians, and do not speak
so much about the oppression of the last Pagans by the Christians. Works of
art destroyed, festivities stopped, schools of philosophy shut down, wise
men exiled: all this marked the rising of Christianity to the dignity of a State
religion, from the days of Constantine the 1st to the days of Justinian. But,
however bitter it may seem to us, who look upon these
71
facts from a distance of fifteen hundred years, all this must have been
nothing, compared with the growing tyranny exercised by the Christians
(day by day more numerous, and stronger, owing to government support as
well as to their number), upon the decreasing minority of Pagans, in the
towns and villages of Greece, Asia-Minor, Egypt, Italy, etc.
The fate of learned and virtuous Hypatia, barbarously put to death by
fanaticised Christian monks, fills us with indignation. But Hypatia was not
the only one, certainly. There must have been frequent Christian-Pagan riots,
in those days, on the occasion of public teaching of Grecian philosophy, or
of peaceful processions in honour of the Gods of old, until every free voice
was finally made silent, and every public manifestation of Pagan life stopped
forever.
To stop Pagan life was not an easy thing. To a certain extent, Pagan
life and Pagan festivities continued in the garb of Christianity. (A look at the
Christian Church will tell you that.) But apart from this, it is said that, in
remote villages of Greece, and in Crete, there were still, in the eleventh
century A.D, a few people who openly professed their ancient national
religion; and “the last of the Neo-Platonicians,” Gemistos Plethon, was
living in Greece in the fifteenth century A.D. (Distant Northern Europe, less
conscious of the possibilities of its warrior-like Paganism, accepted the
Gospel much quicker and more seriously than the Mediterranean World,
though it came much later in contact with Christianity.)
72
***
The same thing can be said about Italy. For true Christianity’s
misfortune, a lot of Pagan show may have invaded the Church. But
Paganism was not a mere show. There was also something else in it, which
is gone, now, from Italy as well as from Greece; there was the national
consciousness of Pagandom.
The same thing can be said about Egypt, the land that perhaps looked
the most like India, once, long long ago; the land where the sacred Bull was
worshipped, and where people used to regard the “Old Father Nile,” whose
life-giving waters flew down from Heaven, just as the Hindus look still upon
holy Mother Ganges.
Nowadays, along the banks of the Nile, there are Pyramids, and
temples, and huge statues of pink granite representing kings and Gods of
old. But those who dwell in the very shadow of these ruins are
Mohammadans; a few of them are Christians. There are some of them who
work as guides, for there are many foreigners to visit Egypt. They take the
Americans around, among the gigantic pillars and blocks of stone, and tell
them: “This was the temple of Phtah. . . . This is the image of that God. . . .
This is the image of Mout, his consort etc.” They tell them which ‘king built
the temple. They ask them to notice the beauty of the images. They show
them the glory of Egypt, conscientiously. But that glory of their ancestors is
not their glory. They are the children of another nation, grown upon the
ruins. The same land; but another nation. The same stones, but without their
meaning. The same Nile, but without the Nile-cult.
74
***
***
***
Hindudom has reached a stage where it has either to die out, or else, to
react vigorously — and then, not merely to survive, but to rule. There is no
third alternative.
If Hindudom were to die, India would no longer be India. But what if
Hindudom were to react, and rule?
Most Hindus are not deeply interested in their vital today’s problem:
to live or to die, just because they cannot imagine vividly enough what it
means to live. To live, for a nation, means: to rule. And, as the Hindu
leaders repeat, the Hindus are a nation, not a community. They are a nation
that is not conscious of its existence, but that still is a nation, just as a man is
still himself, while asleep. Nobody can tell what would happen, if the
Hindus were to awake.
First, future free India would be a reconquered Hindu India. But what
beyond that?
Imagine a well-organised Hindu India, having in her hands all the
power of a modern country of her size. Hindudom, once, used to extend over
what is now Afghanistan, over Java, over Cambodia etc. The wife of
Dhritarashtra was a princess from Gandahar, that is to say Afghanistan, and
the remotest kings of Java, Cambodia etc. were Indian kings. Powerful
Hindu India could reconquer these lands and give them back the pride of
their Indian civilisation. She could make Greater India once more a cultural
reality, and a political one too — why not?
And further still (who knows?), she could spread her name, assert her
strength, establish her glory, wherever there are lands with a great culture
that has been forsaken, lands waiting to be given back to
77
themselves. She could teach the fallen Aryans of the West the meaning of
their forgotten Paganism; she could rebuild the cults of Nature, the cults of
Youth and Strength, wherever they have been destroyed; she could achieve
on a world-scale what Emperor Julian tried to do, what the Sun-God himself,
through his oracle of Delphi, had declared impossible. And the victorious
Hindus could erect a statue to Julian, somewhere in conquered Europe, on
the border of the sea; a statue, with an inscription, both in Sanskrit and in
Greek:
***
Chapter 5
Social Reforms
As we have said, the beauty of Hinduism, its high philosophy, the art
it has developed, the possibilities it contains, nothing of all this will save
Hindudom, no more than the beauty of Grecian Paganism and its wonderful
growth of free thought could save the civilisation and society of ancient
Greece.
The greatest gift of Hinduism to mankind is perhaps the religious
sanction of free scientific thought, based, in all matters, upon experience
alone. But a man can be a free thinker, and even a “realised” man, without
being a Hindu. The greatest gift of Hinduism to present-day India may be
the possibility, for her, of expressing her reborn nationalism through a vast
national cult. But nothing proves that a future Indian will not be a
nationalist, unless he remains a Hindu. His India would not be our India; but
he would love it all the same, perhaps more than his religion, one day. (Are
there not modern Romans, who put their nation far above Christianity? The
future men of a hypothetical Mohammadan India might also put India above
Islam. Nobody can tell before hand).
Therefore, to point out Hinduism as the highest synthesis of religious
thought, on one hand, and on the other, as the cult of India, is not sufficient.
All
79
this talk is well and good, when addressed to such Hindus who never even
dreamt of leaving their fold. But in that case, it is useless; its only result can
be to make these Hindus a little more proud of themselves.
When addressed to Hindus who have become Christians or
Mohammadans, the argument presenting Hinduism as a scientific religion
has no effect, for reason is seldom the motive that brings about a man’s
conversion. The call of Indian nationalism is also without response. To a
Hindu who leaves his fold, there are things dearer than India.
Before trying to defend Hinduism by arguments, one must try to
understand why do Hindus desert the Hindu fold.
***
If the Hindus who leave their fold, were leaving it for religious
reasons, they would be fools, for whatever is contained in any other religion,
is to be found in this vast and complex and apparently contradictory record
of religious experience, which is Hinduism. A Hindu does not become a
Mohammadan for the advantage of worshipping one God alone. That, he
could do, while remaining a Hindu. Nor does he, for the advantage of
considering God as formless; many Hindus consider God as formless, and
worship without the help of images.
Nor does a Hindu become a Christian for the satisfaction of following
a personal Saviour, for that he could do, while remaining a Hindu.
Moreover, that very Saviour he is attracted to, Lord Jesus, he could worship
and honour without leaving the Hindu fold.
80
In more than one Hindu home, Lord Jesus has found a place. His image is
garlanded, and offered incense, among other images. Still no Hindu thinks of
excluding his worshippers from the Hindu society, as long as they,
themselves, do not express the desire of being excluded. One of the signs of
Hindu generosity lies in this broad-mindedness. A Hindu who pays homage
to Christ is still a Hindu, while a Christian who would pay homage to Lord
Krishna, along with Christ, would no longer be a Christian. The God of the
Christians remains the “jealous God” of the Jews, inspite of all the Greek
metaphysics that have influenced Christian theology.
One may think that many ignorant Hindus leave the Hindu fold,
persuaded that they are doing so for religious reasons.
It is true that ignorance is the source of all trouble, and that nothing
would stop the flow of conversion of Hindus to other religions, as well as the
intelligent teaching of what Hinduism really is, to all Hindus, including the
most depressed ones, throughout the length and breadth of India. Ignorant
Hindus, recently converted to Christianity, will tell you that Christ is the first
one in the world to have taught love to mankind. They know nothing of the
immense love of Lord Buddha, nor of Krishna; nothing of all what India had
given the world, centuries before Christ.
That is true. But one must not believe that, in every case, or even in
most cases, if they had known, then, they would not have left the Hindu fold.
Even ignorant Hindus do not leave their fold for religious reasons. It is
neither because human brotherhood was preached “for the first time” by the
Prophet of Arabia,
81
that they become Mohammadans, nor because love was preached “for the
first time” by Jesus of Nazareth, that they become Christians. It is because,
to become a Mohammadan means, to them, now, to enjoy the advantages of
social brotherhood, in a society which actually practices it; and to become a
Christian means, to them, now, to enjoy the advantages of some charitable
missionary’s love. It is for social reasons, and, practically, for social
reasons alone, that thousands of Hindus have abandoned the Hindu fold.
***
Three main things have been, during these last centuries, the cause of
an enormous numerical loss for Hindudom:
(1) The denial of elementary social rights to the majority of the
Hindus.
(2) The strictness of social rules, within the Hindu fold (resulting in
the too easy outcasting of transgressors).
(3) The refusal of the Hindu fold to re-accept those who wish to come
back to it, not to speak of those who may wish to join it, without themselves
or their forefathers having belonged to it before.
Unless and until these three main causes of disintegration are
removed, Hindudom will not be able to face the increasing dangers to which
it is exposed. And, if it cannot remove these sources of weakness,
Hindudom, inspite of its value, will ultimately be crushed. This is the bitter
truth that
82
must be spoken, and understood at once and now; tomorrow might be too
late.
***
not because they were virtuous, not because they brought with them a
greater and higher inspiration than that of the last Hellene Pagans, but
because they called all men (including Barbarians and slaves) to share their
brotherhood, while the Hellenes did not.
***
The ancient Greek and Roman society was not a complicated caste-
ridden society, like Hindudom. Yet there was, in it, a tremendous gap
between the free man and the slave. There was also a tremendous gap
between the Hellene (or the Roman) and the so-called Barbarian. With a
very few later exceptions (perhaps due to the influence of growing
Christianity), the born Barbarian had no place in the social life of the
Hellenes. He was a foreigner, and it was admitted that a foreigner could not
be assimilated on equal terms. To take part in the games of Olympia, for
instance, Greek culture was not enough; one had also to prove his Hellenic
descent. There might have been breaches to this rule during the later days;
but the principle stood until the end. And the principle was enough to
prevent the wholesale assimilation of outsiders.
In the same way, the son of a slave had no share in the glory of what
was Hellenism. In Athens at least, he was not illtreated. He was allowed to
thrive and multiply. This is so true that, in what is considered the golden age
of the city (fifth century B.C.) there were about fifteen thousand free
citizens, in Athens, and about one hundred and twenty thousand slaves.
84
As time passed, this numerical disproportion grew greater. The free citizens
would cultivate eloquence and every art, first of all, the art of being
beautiful, both in body and soul; they would talk with the wise men, honour
the Gods, and rule the city; they would leave philosophical systems, marble
temples, and the history of Greece, for the future generations to admire. But
the slaves had all the hard, weary, and dirty work to do, without feeling that
the glory of the city was also theirs. The Gods of the city were theirs; but the
sublime teachings of the wise men were not 1 addressed to them; and they
knew nothing, either of the value of Hellenic philosophy, or of the qualities
of the Gods. They knew that they were born for servile labour, while others
were born for leisure and higher thought, and all the possibilities of a more
beautiful life. Slowly came a time when they began to consider their fate as a
burden, and their sub-conscious mind was then prepared for revolt.
Paul and the first Christian missionaries came over, at that time, from
Palestine. And, from the Jewish quarters of the Grecian sea-ports, the new
teaching spread to the crowd of the slaves, throughout the Roman Empire; to
the Barbarians, north and south; to all those who were denied equality: “All
men are one, in our Lord Jesus Christ, the one and only Saviour.”
Nobody denies the existence of people of high education and noble
birth, among the early Christian converts. But they were a small minority.
The victory of Christianity appears mainly as the result of a widespread non-
violent revolt of the slaves, as well as of the Barbarians, against the existing
social order of
85
for a hypocritical Christian Europe, who would first destroy half the
treasures of Pagan cult, art and thought, and then, preserve the other half in
its museums? That was really not worth while.
***
The fate of the European Pagans, fifteen hundred years ago, is the fate
awaiting the Hindus of the present day, sooner or later, in all parts of India
where their number is less than at least seventy-five percent of the total
population. In those parts where they are less than twenty or twenty-five
percent, wholesale extinction (through willful or compulsory exile, through
conversion to Islam, or otherwise) is not far away if, at once and now, the
Hindus do not make a desperate effort.
(1) to unite into one firm, invincible bloc, trained in the art of self
defence.
(2) to keep all Hindus, without distinction of caste or creed, within
that bloc.
(3) to bring within that bloc all those who can be of some use to
Hindudom, specially,
the Indian aborigines,
the Indians once converted to Islam or to Christianity,
attracting them to Hinduism, as their own national cult.
***
refinement that has been, for centuries, the privilege of the high caste
Hindus, specially of the Brahmans. There are people even outside India to
recognise, in the Indian Brahmans, not merely the oldest, but still the finest
aristocracy of our earth. And personally, if we had to pick out a man all
round beautiful in appearance, mind, and character, to be the embodiment of
superior humanity, we would, without hesitation, pick out an Indian
Brahman, and most probably a Bengali, who would add to the virtues of his
caste, the enthusiasm and charm of the most lovable nation existing. If India
be compared to a vast lotus-pond, the Brahmans as a whole, still today, are
its most beautiful, its purest lotuses. The defence of Hindudom means their
defence. That, we entirely maintain.
But, at the same time, we remember one of the many names of the
lotus: “pankaj,” that is to say: born in the mud. So mud and water are also
necessary; without them, the beautiful lotuses would soon dry up. So the
preservation of the spotless flowers means, first of all, the preservation of
the pool where they are born and grow, that is to say of the fertile water and
mud.
In the same way, Brahmanical beauty, Brahmanical culture,
Brahmanical ideals, will mean nothing in the future Indian society, wherever
that society will be cent percent Mohammadan. And that will be the case of
North and East Bengal, in a few years’ time, if the flow of conversion of
Islam is not immediately stopped, and a contrary current of reconversion to
Hinduism, not immediately started. And this is not possible without an
enormous amount
88
of sacrifice, on the part of the high caste Hindus; sacrifice, not in the name
of “humanity,” not in the name of “justice” or of “democracy” (we do not
believe in “democracy” at all) but, in the name of their own self-
preservation. The alternative before the high caste Hindus — nay, before all
Hindus, wherever they are, not an overwhelming numerical majority — is
this: sacrifice caste prejudices at once and live, and, one day, rule India once
more; or else, stick to caste prejudices, and, under the pressure of a
formidable tide, growing every day, become Mohammadans in a generation
or two.
Let the Hindus choose.
***
can afford to wait, uninjured, another fifty years. The Bogra Hindus cannot;
nor can those of Pabna, nor of Rangpur, nor of Dacca, nor of Noakhali, nor
of Comilla, nor of Chittagong etc., in one word, all those of North and East
Bengal, from Jalpaiguri, down to the Bay of Bengal, and to the frontiers of
Burma and Assam; nor can the Hindus of Assam, where, along with
Mohammadan propaganda, a well carried on and lavishly financed Christian
missionary effort is continuing for the last few decades, throughout the hill
tracts; nor can the Hindus of any part of India, where a strong, conscious,
casteless society has grown or is growing to existence, by the side of caste-
ridden Hindudom. Whether caste-ridden or sect-ridden, or compartmented in
any other way, never and nowhere, in history, has a divided society stood
competition with an undivided one.
To what extent must caste prejudices be sacrificed? That we cannot
tell; it is a matter of every day’s application in every Hindu household, to be
decided by the Hindus themselves, who earnestly wish to live. We can only
say this much: the forces that are cooperating to crush Hindudom (if
possible) are of such a nature, and the danger is so imminent, that it is now
too late for any kind of patch-work. From what castes, considered up to this
day as contaminating the purity of the higher castes, through water, will all
Hindus agree, henceforth, to accept water? Such a question has no meaning.
The bitterness of the downtrodden castes of Hindudom has reached such a
depth, and the unconditioned equality offered to them, outside Hindudom, is
so increasingly attractive, that it is not by granting them a few
90
***
Danger is not far away; in many places already, the Hindus have
experienced it in violent riots, in which they have invariably been crushed,
owing to their lack of solidarity and to their un-preparedness.
But riots worse than any of those India has seen in the past, may take
place in an early future. India is preparing herself for political independence.
And it is a fact that no country has passed from foreign domination to free
self-government, without going through a period of confusion, in which the
old
92
government is no more, while the new one does not yet effectively exist. No
legal protection; no police. Such a state of things may last a month; it may
also last a year. We ask the Hindus just to try to imagine what would
probably happen to them, in North Bengal, in East Bengal, and wherever
they represent less than twenty-five, and sometimes, less than ten percent of
the total population, if, for only three days, they were left entirely to the
grace of God and to themselves, without the protection of any government or
police. What would happen to them in the villages where there are five
Hindu families, in the midst of five hundred Mohammadans? And what
would be the attitude of the discontented lower caste Hindus then, under the
combined effect of labour propaganda, indifference to the fate of Hindudom
which they do not feel theirs, hunger, and the primitive impulse of
destruction? Who can assure that they will not side with the Mohammadan
comrades, who have the same grievances as themselves, and share the loot
with them, before sharing, soon after, the brotherhood of Islam? Who can
assure that, on the contrary, they will stand by Hindudom, lending their
strength to their upper caste compatriots, for the preservation of real India?
But what is “real India” to them? What was real Greece and its
culture, to the slaves of Greece? And what was real Rome and its glory, to
the slaves of Rome?
***
prejudices, and any social beliefs or social customs should be given up, to
the extent that they are, at the present stage of Indian history, a hindrance to
the growth of a united Hindu consciousness, as well as to the fighting
capacity of the Hindus as a whole.
As long as all Hindus do not feel that within their fold, they are
offered more dignity, more justice, and greater possibilities of personal
development than without, they will not all love their fold; and an increasing
number of them will leave it for good. The greater number of those who
remain Hindus, will be indifferent to the fate of Hindudom not moving even
their little finger to defend it or help it in case of need.
As long as all Hindus do not feel a certain amount of freedom and
social toleration within their fold, there will be an increasing number of
them who will willingly leave the fold to live as they like, or unwillingly be
driven out of it, for having shown too much personal independence in social
matters. Whoever they may be, good or bad, they are a force that Hindudom
cannot afford to lose now. The Hindus should remember that, among the
most dangerous Mohammadan leaders, there are descendants of Hindus
driven out of Hindudom, for whatever good or bad reason it may be. It may
have been, and probably was, once, a gain for Hindudom to purify itself by
outcasting “undesirable” people. But now that Hindudom is not the only
society in India; now that there are two rival societies by its side, eager to
seize every opportunity of harming it directly or indirectly, strictness in
social matters only brings loss. It is too easy for an outcasted Hindu,
nowadays, to increase
94
***
will remain constantly losing its numerical strength without the possibility of
ever regaining it. A tragic position, in front of Christendom and Islam!
***
The reconversion of Hindus who have left the Hindu fold, is not such
an easy matter as it looks.
It presupposes the possibility of accepting any outsider into the Hindu
society, if proved worthy. For, the Hindu who has become a Mohammadan,
giving up his traditional diet and Hindu habits, is, from the orthodox Hindu
point of view, no better, no “purer” than any foreigner. It is not even proved
that no mixture of blood has ever taken place, in the family of an Indian
whose ancestors were once Hindus. So, logically, if Hindudom, forsaking its
orthodoxy, can take back such a man, it should be prepared to take in anyone
who earnestly wishes to join it.
Other religions encourage proselytism because they are creedal ones,
of which the communal unity is based upon the acceptance of the same
“truth” by all their followers. But Hinduism, we have said, is no creed. The
unity of Hindudom, if any, is the unity created by a common cultural
inheritance, a common civilisation, a common national existence. The
principle of conversion to Hinduism would be nothing more nor less than the
principle of nationalisation, accepted in all modern countries. Applied here it
means: “Whoever is worthy of India can become an Indian (that is to say a
Hindu), if he likes.” So far, apparently, no difficulties.
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***
In one word, it is not such and such a detail, such and such a practice,
that has to be forsaken, but the whole social atmosphere of Hindudom that
has to be changed, if Hindudom wishes to live, flourish and rule.
Hindudom can neither be united, nor strengthened, nor expanded,
without the whole-hearted
97
remain of no use. And they should take place, as we have said, at once, and
now, at least wherever the Hindus are a minority, like in North and East
Bengal or a rapidly decreasing majority, like in Assam. Threatened on all
sides, Hindudom cannot afford to wait.
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Chapter 6
better served than by the constant effort to bring back all Indians to
Hindudom, and to make Hindudom a power in the world. More cows than
any “goshala” can give shelter to, are saved, now and for generations to
come, simply by the reconversion of one Mohammadan family to Hinduism.
And cow-slaughter will not be suppressed, all over Hindusthan, unless and
until the Hindus become strong enough to rule.
***
them. But the pressure of a hard, undeniable necessity has, sometimes. The
necessity that is pressing the Hindus, specially in the regions where they are
a minority, is to live, first. To live, they must grow strong; they must get
political power in their hands. We advocate social reforms, the abolition of
Untouchability, liberalism in daily social matters, alliance with the sturdy
Hillmen considered as Hindus (since necessary), and the recall of all Indians
back to Hindudom, because we believe that these are the effective means, by
which the Hindus will get political power, and, with it, the possibility of
every kind of national glory, within India, and outside India, one day.
***
But the Hindus — those who remain in their fold, those who think that
everything is well and good, and marvellously regulated by the seers of old,
in Hindu society; those who perhaps will be, soon, (in places like North and
East Bengal, at least) the last Indian Pagans — are not politically minded
enough, or, better say, are not politically minded at all, as Hindus.
They may, sometimes, be religious-minded, and they are always
philosophically minded. But that is not sufficient to make a conscious nation
of them. That is not sufficient to shake off the greatest obstacle of all to
Hindu enterprises: indifference, nay, inertia; the product of the combined
influence of thousand years’ slavery, and of India’s burning climate.
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same true Prophet, are nearer to each other than any philosophers can be,
who share the more or less rational acceptance of the same hypothesis,
among many others; nearer to each other even than any religious minded
people can be, who follow the same spiritual path knowing that it is one
among many others. Certainly, the undiscussed belief in whatever is written
in a particular book, looked upon as sacred, is most unscientific. But it
makes one strong, practically. It also makes a nation strong. It promotes
action, and can lead to great things. It shakes people’s natural laziness, and
does not allow them to remain indifferent.
The Hindus, with their manifold and apparently contradictory beliefs,
with their experimental religion and their scientific out-look, can never hope
to enjoy the advantages of religious fanaticism. Not that they are always
faithful to their scientific attitude in every matter. It would be easy to prove
that they are not. But they are not in such matters which, properly speaking,
are not religious, but social; with the result that, while Mohammadan
fanaticism makes the Mohammadans strong, Hindu fanaticism, if any, only
makes the Hindus weak. Mohammadan fanaticism deepens the gap between
the Mohammadan fold and the rest of the world, and, at the same time, it
sets aside the differences, and strengthens the ties between any two
Mohammadans within the fold. It separates the fold from all what is not it,
and unites it, making it conscious of its existence and might, as a whole. The
Hindus’ position is quite different. While their total absence of religious
fanaticism makes them feel themselves one with all the world, their
105
orthodoxy, that is to say, their fanaticism in social matters, keeps them aloof
from one another within the Hindu fold, not allowing them as a whole, nay
as a nation, to be conscious of their own existence.
It is not possible (nor desirable) that the Hindus should any day
become fanatical in the same way as the Mohammadans. But there is no
denying that they need a wholesale change of mentality which will give
them, as a nation, all the advantages that the Mohammadans draw from
religious fanaticism; a change of mentality which will, on one hand, separate
them from the rest of the world, give them self-consciousness and self-pride
as a distinct body, and on the other, set aside all what makes one Hindu feel
different from another Hindu, all what keeps them aloof from each other and
indifferent to each other’s interests, to each other’s grievances, to each
other’s sufferings, within the Hindu fold; which will, in one word, unite
them.
It is that change of mentality which is the important thing, because all
resistance to hostile forces from outside, as well as all constructive work
within Hindudom, depends upon it.
***
and observe the same festival days as himself. All those people are Hindus;
they and he share the same civilisation. He feels that, but dimly. There are so
many restrictions, so many barriers between him and them, that his idea of
Hindudom is not even as clear as the idea of Christendom probably was to
an ignorant European, during the Middle Ages; and it cannot be compared
with any such thing as a national consciousness.
Of the Hindus who actually represent Hindu culture, a very few can
be called Indian nationalists. Socially, they also are the members of different
castes. Apart from that, they are either free thinking philosophers with a
smiling universal outlook and no particular love for anything, or else,
wholesale spiritual beings in love with God, or, at least, busy with the
progress of their own soul towards self-knowledge, through some particular
path.
And as for those Hindus who have reinvented Indian nationalism
during these last decades, who have built up the Indian National Congress,
who have suffered for India and put India above everything, they too often
seem to forget that India, apart from Hindudom, is no India at all. They, too
often, are nationalists inspite of being Hindus, not because they are Hindus;
nationalists just as so many European Christians are inspite of being
Christians.
But Christianity, we have said, as well as Islam, is essentially
international. A Christian cannot be a true nationalist except inspite of his
Christianity. While a Hindu can; while a Hindu should be an Indian
nationalist because he is a Hindu; because Hindu art, culture, life, and every
kind of Hindu glory
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are India’s, and India’s alone; and because the purest expression of Indian
nationalism, the devotional cult of Bharat Mata (Mother India) can find
place nowhere, can grow nowhere, can nowhere become prominent, except
within Hindudom.
***
the God. They form a happy brotherhood. If all Hindus follow their example,
then, no doubt, Hindudom will flourish forever and ever, united and strong,
and full of faith. Another will say: follow the example of the Vaishnavas,
and let all the Hindus actually become one huge brotherhood praising the
name of Hari, Love incarnate. Another will say something else. None seem
to be perfectly consistent with the true scientific Hindu attitude in religious
matters, and to consider religion as an affair of purely personal experience,
left to personal choice. And if there be any who do, then they seldom believe
in social reforms; they have higher things to think of.
***
The truth is that the unity of Hindudom, if ever it has to come, is not
coming through reverence payed to the same “guru,” not through praise of
the same divine name, nor through partaking of food from the offerings set
before the same God, by all the Hindus. First, these doings would be the
exterior signs of a sort of creedal unity, and creedal unity of such a religious
system as Hinduism, whose very essence is free experimental research in
religious matters, is the greatest impossibility one can think of. Never the
Hindus will be, like the Christians or like the Musulmans, the believers in
one and the same creed. Their spirit is much too free, and their culture too
old. But, besides that, it is too late to dream of any sort of unity realised
through religious gatherings; the experiment has been attempted long ago,
and without sufficient success.
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For centuries, the Hindus of all castes and all provinces partake the
same sacred meals, in Jagannath’s temple, at Puri. But as soon as they have
crossed the temple gates, they are as caste-prejudiced, as provincial-minded,
and as divided in every possible way as before. And what about the unifying
effect of the holy name of Hari? Nowhere in India have these blessed
syllables been more often and more devoutly pronounced than in
Navadwipa; nowhere have the Hindus more fervently beaten drums together,
repeating the name of God in mystical frenzy; nowhere Vaishnava faith and
Vaishnava love have been more flourishing than in that birthplace of
Vaishnavism. And yet, what is now the population of Nadia district, where
Navadwipa stands? Five and a half lakhs of Hindus, and . . . nine and a half
lakhs of Musulmans. As if, indeed, the name of Allah and of his Prophet had
more power than the name of Hari!
We may assert that they have not, and that nothing else but the social
bigotry of the Hindus has driven away from their fold these nine and a half
lakhs of Bengalis who have accepted Islam. We may also assert that, had
there been no “sangkirtans,” no “mahotsavas,” no repetition of the name of
Hari, no Vaishnava mysticism, then, possibly, not nine lakhs and a half only,
but fourteen lakhs and a half, among the Hindus of Nadia district, would
have become Mohammadans. This is conceivable, though nobody can tell
what would have actually happened. We do not say that the name of Hari
and “sangkirtans” and “mahotsavas” are of no use for the unification and
strengthening of Hindudom; we do not say that the
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***
The evolution of Hindu society is too slow, and the strength acquired
by the Hindus as a nation, insignificant, because the basis of all these
movements which we have mentioned is purely religious.
What is purely religious (in the sense religion means: a spiritual path)
is personal, and also of no concern with the trifles of this material world.
Hinduism may be a wonderful selection of spiritual
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***
each Hindu’s daily thoughts and life. And when we say: the Hindus, we
mean: all Hindus.
This new mentality cannot grow as long as purely metaphysical
considerations on one hand, and purely spiritual considerations on the other,
monopolise the best of so many Hindus’ energy; as long as the qualities of
the Unknown appear as important as they do, even to those Hindus who are
not in a position to speak of them through their own experience (and real
“sadhaks” do not discuss metaphysics); as long as the preoccupation of
personal salvation is greater, among the Hindus, than that of the freedom of
Hindudom, of the strength of Hindudom, of the prosperity and glory of
Hindudom as a nation.
It is an actual transposition of values that is needed to awaken the
Hindus to the desire of life and to the acceptance of struggle in this world; to
prepare them to face the crisis that is before them and to rule and be great, in
the future, if only they are able to stand firm in the present. This
transposition of values has two aspects:
(1) to bring the average Hindu idealism down from heaven, back to
India which is part of this earth;
(2) to draw the average so-called Indian ; nationalism away from the
imported idea of separation of “Church and State,” back to the real Hindu
Indian conception according to which “Church and State,” cult and politics,
cannot be separated.
In other words, to make both those Hindus who are not nationalists
and those Indian nationalists who do a not wish to call themselves Hindus,
into Hindu nationalists.
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***
For that, as we have said, one must, first, push at the background the
idea of Hinduism considered in one of its sects, or even considered as a
science of universal religious investigation. It is that, certainly. But it is not
by bearing in mind, all the time, that “it is that,” that the Hindus, as a distinct
nation of broad Asia, will get strengthened.
We have recalled, among the causes of the disintegration of
Pagandom in the West, the social position of the slaves and of the
Barbarians in the Graeco-Roman world. There was also another cause, not
social, but intellectual, and this was the cosmopolitism of the last
generations of Pagan intelligentsia. While new-born anti-national
Christianity was growing stronger and stronger, many were the learned and
cultured Pagans who felt themselves “neither Greeks, nor Romans, but men;
citizens of the Universe,” that is to say: philosophers without any sort of
patriotism. The efforts to stop the spreading of Christianity were undertaken
by the State, and in the name of the State. But what can the State do, when
national consciousness has grown weak among the most enlightened
citizens? The use of that political power which the State possesses depends
upon the ideas of those who compose the State. When those who had
influence in the Roman world did no longer identify their Nation with its
national Gods and national culture, and no longer loved the Nation as the
greatest of Gods, then the Roman State itself accepted Christianity. Then,
the cultured “citizens of the World” who stuck to the old
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Gods because of their symbolical value, and to the old schools of thought
because they were schools of human wisdom, were exiled or made to be
silent.
Deep, sincere, passionate nationalism could have saved the “Ancient
World” and its culture wholesale, had nationalism been able to thrive in
Greece, in Egypt, in Asia Minor and other places, under Roman domination,
and in Rome itself, when Rome had become the cosmopolitan center of a
vast empire.
Nationalism does exist, in India, however few may be those who
actually live up to its ideal. If only it spread on a broad scale it would save
Hindudom, and make it powerful once more. But if the Hindus do not learn
to identify India and Hindudom, and to look upon India as the embodiment
of sacredness, the actually most beloved deity, the very image and
expression of the greater Unknown (if any such Unknown be worshipped,
and if any image of it be conceived) then, even a free “Indian” government
would be incapable of saving Hindudom, wherever it is weak. For, wherever
Hindudom is weak, if such a government came to existence it would not
represent the Hindus.
***
We have said that no religion other than Hinduism can provide the
basis of Pan-Indian nationalism. But what would be Pan-Indian nationalism
risen upon that basis? It would be more than a mere civism, like that we find
in Europe. It would be a ritualistic nationalism, comparable, to a certain
extent, to that of Japan; an exterior cult of the traditional Gods and
Goddesses of India, of the great natural Forces of which India is the play-
ground (Lila kshetra) and of Mother India herself. It would also be a
devotional nationalism; absolute, unconditioned love of each and every
individual Hindu for that great Being, that Goddess India whose life and
spirit are his, but whose existence extends far beyond his, through time and
space; whose value transcends his and that of all what he can touch and see;
whose glory draws him out of his personal insignificance, and magnifies him
to his own eyes.
And just as the few really wise men worship God even in the
humblest manifestations of life, in the same way, the millions of Hindus
would see first of all a son of Mother India in one another, and treat each
other likewise.
***
Hindu who would be first of all a lover of Hindu India would say: “It does
not matter so much what is written in the Scriptures as it matters what means
we have to use, today, to face the special conditions in which we are placed.
If the written “shastras” are not able to meet our needs, then, we can write
new shastras. But nobody will be able to build up a new Hindudom if we
perish.”
To consider the interest of one’s nation first, means to adapt one’s
institutions to the necessities of time wherever national defence is
concerned. Social institutions are instruments in the hands of a nation, for its
own welfare. They were invented for the nation, not the nation for them. Old
things are, no doubt, venerable, while linked with a glorious past. That does
not mean that they must never be renewed, when times change. Any true
Indian will look upon the sword of Rana Pratap as sacred: some of the
noblest episodes of India’s past are linked with it. But no sensible, man
would ask India to use similar swords nowadays to fight against war-tanks
and aeroplanes. A real Hindu nationalist will look upon social institutions in
the same light, wherever the interest of Hindudom is at stake.
***
What we have just said about casteism can be said about excessive
provincialism, this other drawback of Hindu society, resting also, to a great
extent, upon the authority of custom, and enforced by caste restrictions
themselves. If the future military unity of free India is to be prepared from
today through a
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***
respect to all Gods and prophets of non-Indian origin. Such a narrow view
would itself be anti-Indian. But we say that, as an Indian, he should first pay
his respect and express his allegiance to all what, through millenniums of
living legend and history, through sculpture, song and thought, has become
the symbol of India herself.
Hindus have never asked anybody to renounce his personal faith, but
only to renounce his exclusivism, his fanaticism in matters of personal faith
or personal experience. If the Christians of India, today, following the
example of the Christians of Europe, would only put India above
Christianity; and if the Mohammadans of India, following the example of
the modern Mohammadan leaders of Persia and of Turkey, would only put
India — our common India — above Islam, then we would have no
objection to their existence in India. They would be, then, Christians or
Mohammadans as religious beings in search of their personal salvation; but,
as Indians, they would be loyal Hindus. And they would be Indians first,
religious beings afterwards. They would put the cultural as well as political
interest of India above their personal salvation. They would be then an actual
part of Hindudom, and it would be of no use “reconverting” them.
But this widespread national mentality is still a dream. And the aim of
the movement in favour of reconversion to Hinduism is not the sporadic
reconversion of half a dozen Indian Mohammadans and Christians, nor the
grant of Hindu initiation to a few half-conscious hill-tribes, but the creation
of a genuine Rational Indian consciousness, the same as
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***
But how to make people feel and think in terms of nation and national
values? It is not an easy thing. “Spiritual” values which should be the
concern of individuals alone, “moral” values, which are the product of the
influence of ageless rules of convenience for individuals living together,
play a daily part in the formation of the Indian public opinion, while national
values do not. “Principles,” a certain political philosophy, which is as
“moral” as it is political, a certain innocent conception of international
“right” and “wrong,” and a still more innocent hope that “right” will win, are
the things that guide the judgement of an average Hindu, about national and
international daily politics. The sole idea of India’s interest does not. The
average Hindu, because of his inheritance of high “principles,” along with
centuries of political annihilation, is in the habit of sympathising with all the
down-trodden countries of the world without trying to know if they really
are, or not, as “down-trodden” as they look, and specially without troubling
to understand what Hindudom can gain (what India can gain) by their not
being downtrodden. Since a year or two, to talk politics with Hindus means
to exchange expressions of grief in favour of the “poor” Abyssinians, the
“poor” Chinese,
124
and above all, the “poor” Jews. (May be, also, recently, the “poor”
Czechoslovakians, the “poor” Albanians, etc.) And God alone knows how
many other “poor” countries will soon be added to the list.* But what about
“poor” India?
Perhaps the rapid international changes taking place each day may
turn to be a blessing for her, and perhaps they may not. But this is not the
point. The point is that the Hindus do not care to examine this problem.
Their first thought is: “right” and “wrong,” not: “Hindudom’s gain,” and
“Hindudom’s loss.” When they get to feel that the first thing, for them, is to
live, ruling over a free, strong Hindu India (including Greater India) and
then only to invent as many definitions as they like of right and wrong, there
will be some hope for the Hindus.
Political training is necessary for people to think in terms of national
interest.
***
But political training is not enough. Or, better say, political training
should begin (and actually does begin, wherever it exists) long before future
citizens are able to discuss what is written in the newspapers. Like all
genuine education, it begins at home, from very childhood, and depends
immensely upon the mothers of a nation.
Every great nation is a nation where the women have a strong
consciousness of their country’s
* The “poor” Poles still formed an independent nation when this book was written.
125
Yet, school and college education do not necessarily mean culture; and they
surely do not mean nationalism, in a country where there is no national
education at all. The so-called “imitation of the West” is but a bad copy of
some petit aspects of a race of free men, by a batch of slaves whose mind
has been made incapable of considering what essential virtues have made
nations strong, in the West as well as in the East: national discipline, sense
of national dignity in each individual man or woman, and, above all, sense
of personal responsibility of each individual, man or woman, in every matter
in which the nation’s welfare is concerned.
Women’s bookish education is useful, whenever it helps women to
develop their national consciousness along with their character. When it
does not, then it is but an ornament of the mind, and, half the time, an
ornament out of place — an ornament of bad taste. What we want, in Hindu
women, is strength of character (their submissive attitude is too often a result
of weakness) and national consciousness, national pride.
***
In the West (we mean, in Europe) little children are taught to take
interest in their nation’s greatness. Little French boys, little Germans, little
Greeks, put their toy-soldiers in a row, and make them fight. One square-
yard of a rotten carpet becomes a battlefield, where two nations are
competing for supremacy. If the four-year-old child, the owner of the toy-
soldiers, be a French boy, then the French batch always wins.
127
habit of discussing among themselves, and within their family circle, with
earnestness, any matter concerning the nation, when it comes to their
knowledge; not necessarily politics, but social matters, social problems, in
the light of individual cases, which are the tragic realities of every day.
For instance, in Hindu public meetings, the fact is often recalled of the
number of Hindu girls and women driven away from their society by
Mohammadans. There are rowdy protestations against these daily outrages.
There are rowdy protestations against many sorts of “Mohammadan
injustice,” Mohammadan tyranny,” etc. in Hindu public meetings, letting
aside those, against every new legislative reform which favours the
Mohammadans, in a province where the Mohammadans are in power. All
these protestations are of no use. The new legislative bills are passed, inspite
of what the Hindus may say, because what the Hindus may say is mere talk
as long as they cannot do anything to back it; as long as they are weak.
“Mohammadan tyranny” continues, unchecked; and so does the abduction of
Hindu girls and women. For “Mohammadan tyranny” means: Hindus’
weakness. And insult to Hindu women means: Hindus’ weakness. There is
no liberty, no justice, no honour, no religion for the weak.
We would like the Hindus to realise it, and to react.
We would like, first of all, the Hindu women at home to feel
personally insulted, whenever they come to know of any action that is an
insult, not merely to such, or such a person, or to such or such a family, but
129
to the Hindus as a whole. They should feel ashamed; they should feel
indignant; they should promote to action their husbands, their brothers, their
sons; at least ask them: “What can be done?”; repeat to them that “something
must be done.”
When they come to know that, in their own province, Hindudom is
put to some new humiliation, then, we would like to see them express their
grief in some tangible way (by fasting, for instance, a whole day, from
sunrise to sunset). This would help them and all their family to feel that, to
be a Hindu, does not mean merely to observe certain customs concerning
diet and marriage, and to perform certain rites, but also to be one with a
whole nation, to whom they belong. And that feeling of the women and
children, if earnest and deep in every Hindu home (not in public meetings)
would transform the Hindus out and out. Out of harmless sheep boasting of
the inheritance of an old race of lions, it would remake them lions.
Last, but not least, we would like to see both ritualistic and devotional
nationalism, of which we have spoken, flourishing from today among the
women and children, in the Hindu home. We were told that in Maharashtra,
the image of Sivaji, the national hero, is honoured and worshipped, along
with those of the Gods, in the daily family “puja.” Sivaji is a God, since he
represents Maharashtra, Hindudom — eternal India. We would like this cult
of the heroes of Indian history to spread in every province, as well as in
Maharashtra. We would like the Hindu women (specially those who enjoy
the advantages of literacy) to become more and more
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Chapter 7
It becomes more and more clear that what the Hindus need, specially
in the regions where they are a numerical minority, is to recover, along with
their national consciousness, their military virtues of old; to rebecome a
military race.
It is useless to try to analyse how and why the Hindus have become
the strengthless flock which they presently are. And it is not only useless,
but harmful to put stress upon their present weakness without pointing out
what should be done to regain vitality and power. Mere stress upon a
nation’s weakness only makes it weaker and weaker, through the
consciousness of its desperate position.
What must be first got rid of is that idea (as common, it seems, in
India, among the Hindus, as in the West, among those who know nothing
about India) that Hinduism is a religion of the meek and mild, which exalts
passive forbearance as the greatest of virtues.
The present-day Hindus, as a result of centuries of humiliation, have
formed the idea that there is
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nothing else to do but to “grin and bear.” And longsuffering has become
among them a wide-spread “virtue.” To put up with, to tolerate, to excuse, is
considered as a sign of self-control (that is to say, of strength) and admired,
while in reality it is, half the time, a sign of incapacity to face the cause of
one’s sufferings, and check it — a sign of weakness. One puts up with
everything, in Hindusthan: with the neighbours’ noise, with the dirt of the
streets, and other such ordinary inconveniences, . . . and, ultimately, with
“Mohammadan tyranny” and with foreign domination. Having learnt from
generation to generation, that it is a “virtue” to tolerate others, one makes up
his mind not to say a word, and the evil remains. At end, one does not even
feel disturbed. Uncongenial material conditions of life, absence of
elementary comforts, etc., should not be taken into consideration by
“spiritual” people, whose “strength of mind” is enough to overcome any
such unpleasant things. But the Hindus are, in fact, far from being as
“spiritual” as they think themselves, and specially as interested foreigners
cleverly incite them to think. So, material conditions have an effect upon
their lives. The absence of comfort does depress them; and the absence of a
suitable atmosphere in which they could develop themselves, physically and
intellectually, does keep them backward as a race.
We have said that the finest human beings are to be found among the
Hindus, and we believe it is true. The genuine aristocracy of India is the
aristocracy of the world. But what about the rest of Hindudom? Compare the
down-trodden Hindu masses, who have forgotten everything of the teachings
of Hinduism
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***
***
heaven”? But: “How to make India, his motherland, actually ‘more exalted
than heaven’, to every Hindu;” not: “How to bear silently?” How to tolerate?
etc., but: “How to resist any force that keeps the Hindus from expressing
themselves.”
It is astonishing that with such examples in their mind as that of the
warriors in the Hindu Epics; with such Gods as the Krishna of Kurukshetra,
or as Siva, the Victor of Death (Mrityunjaya), the Hindus have become a
race of people so full of fear. Never has it become more necessary to
popularise among the Hindu masses, as broadly as possible, some of the
essential teachings of the Ramayana and Mahabharata, some of the most
uplifting stories of the Gods and, as a rule, all what, in Hindu legend, history
and religion, can awaken in man his instinctive warrior-like virtues.
But this is not to be achieved by mere preaching. Preaching alone has
never achieved anything; if there be any latent feeling, it can only bring it to
consciousness. National consciousness, and the will to resist are what we
would like to see the Hindus cultivate.
Will to resist does not appear as long as people are sure that there is
no danger. And the Hindus, nearly everywhere, enjoy such a feeling of false
security. There is now an organised government (whether foreign or not, that
is not the question) and a well-trained police to protect everybody. The
streets are quiet. Riots do not occur every day in the same place;
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and riots that one reads about in the newspapers are not the same thing as
riots around one’s own house. More Hindus are, everyday, becoming
Mohammadans or Christians. But they are inhabitants of remote villages, or
people with whom one is out of touch, even while living in the same town.
One does not hear of them. Everyday, there are new laws and regulations
made to curtail the legitimate advantages that the Hindus were formerly
enjoying, and, economically as well as politically, Mohammadan
competition is growing stronger and stronger. Everyday, the Hindus are put
to some new trouble, with regard either to some religious performance of
theirs (such as the immersion of a holy image) or to the percentage of jobs
they will be allowed to get in public services, or to something else. But life
goes on. If a Hindu cannot get any work, he will live upon his brother’s
income. If his brother’s income is next to nothing, then, they will both live
miserably, with their family. They will put up with it (long-suffering is a
virtue) and they will feel in safety, as long as there be no violent disturbance
within their immediate surroundings.
But when violent disturbance comes, it may be too late to think of
what to do. In Bengal at least, in most riots, two hundred Hindus are
scattered by twenty Mohammadans. Why? For the sole reason that they are
unprepared. If you ask them, when the riot is over, how it is that they did not
offer the slightest resistance, they will tell you, most earnestly: “We did not
know there was going to be a riot. Here, there had never been any yet.”
Certainly not. But elsewhere there had been many; the Hindus should never
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consider a riot as impossible, in any place where they are not themselves an
overwhelming numerical majority not merely in the town, but in the whole
province.
And even then, . . . who can tell? There have been riots in Benares.
***
***
But consciousness of danger alone will not make the Hindus strong,
unless there is something practical done to face the eventual danger. And
this is the task of the young Hindus.
It is the task of every Hindu to contribute his best to the organisation
of his fold. But the forces threatening them from every direction are so
powerful that the Hindus, in all parts of India where they are a numerical
minority, cannot survive unless they become, rapidly, a wholesale military
race comparable to what the Sikhs were in Panjab, during the days of Guru
Govind Singh. And it is the young men who first become soldiers,
everywhere. The very ideas of danger and of resistance are welcomed by
youth. To youth, these ideas are strength-giving.
That is why the first part of the constructive programme before the
Hindus should be the organisation of the young men,* in pledge-bound
military-like batches, with Hindu nationalism as their only ideal, with the
cult of all what, in Hindu legend and history, can exalt strength, and with, as
a rule of action, the determination to resist any attack, by all means and at
any cost.
* All what, in these pages, concerns the organisation of Hindu youth, represents the
views of Srimat Swami Satyananda, President of the Hindu Mission, Calcutta.
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the Hindu Mission, they have been started as branches of a “Physical Culture
Association.” And the name is perfectly justified, as physical training
(exercises to strengthen the muscles, games, etc. and exercises in the use of
knives, daggers and ordinary sticks, for self-defence) is the main thing which
the young men are given, in each batch.
The main thing which is given . . . apparently; for the young Hindus
receive, in fact, much more. They are trained in a new mentality: in
nationalism, and in the spirit of self-defence; they are made to think of
resistance as the main necessity for them; they are prepared for resistance
physically and mentally. Physical preparation is necessary, but not
sufficient. Essays are given to little boys to write: “Suppose five or six
dacoits attack your house at midnight. How would you defend yourselves?
What would your father do? What would your mother do? What would your
little sister do? What would you do?”; Or else: “Is your house, as it is built,
easy to defend in case dacoits attack it any time? Try to imagine what
possible transformations would make it more easily and more effectively
defendable.” And by writing such essays, the boys get into the habit of
thinking that danger, for the Hindus, is an everyday’s concern (which it is, in
so many places) and that each one of them, individually, as a Hindu, must be
always ready; that he must know, beforehand, what he has to do, in case of
attack, to defend himself (for there is nobody, no government, no police, to
defend him) and to defend his family members, his home, . . . the Hindus of
his village, who are all looking to him for protection; that, if danger comes,
he must do the duty
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for which he was trained. They get into the habit of feeling themselves
personally responsible for the defence of the whole nation, thing which the
Hindus have not felt for years, at least in Bengal.
***
castes, will disappear by itself. New life will create a new mentality.
***
The aim of those who are trying, here and there, to organise batches of
Hindu young men on military lines is, no doubt, to prepare a well-trained
Hindu militia, ready to fight in case of need for defence. But it is still more
to bring, through that undivided, national minded, self-relying, sturdy
militia, a new life and a new mentality throughout Hindudom; to awaken the
Hindus to resistance; to accustom them to disciplined action; to make them
and to keep them, as a whole, always prepared to face any danger, always
ready — like an army in the field.
It is natural that the military-trained Hindu boys will mark their
influence, not merely upon the next generation of Hindus (that would be too
late) but upon their elders of this generation and of the past one. After
having learnt to march together, in a row; to eat together; to play together, to
salute the flag of India together, and to obey command, they will go back to
their homes. Not only will they help to organise, in every village, new units
of the growing Hindu militia, but they will bring the, ideal, the principles
and the virtues of the Hindu militia within the Hindu family circle. They will
make their brothers, sisters, fathers and mothers understand that the defence
of Hindu honour, life and property, beginning with the defence of the Hindu
home, is the most important thing, the most urgent necessity; that, will of
resistance is the greatest virtue, not will
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***
could not but be awakened to the sense of danger and to the necessity of
being ready to face it, so it also could not but become more united. To
become militarised means to become united. The parents, relatives, friends
and acquaintances of each member of the Hindu militia, when they once let
their lives be influenced by its spirit, would become new men and new
women. When they get to think in terms of self-defence and of national
defence (feeling the whole of Hindudom as one nation, and their non-Hindu
brethren themselves as Hindus who have forgotten that they are Hindus)
then their habits would change, without them even troubling to change them;
their scale of values would be a different one. And, any social custom that is
a hindrance to the organisation and defence of the Hindus, as well as to the
acceptance, by them, as one of theirs, of any Indian who wishes to share
once more, with them, the only real Indian culture and civilisation, would be
rapidly looked upon as an inconvenience, and would die out by itself, as
among the young Hindu pioneers.
Rapidly, we say, . . . if Hindu society can rapidly imbibe a military
spirit, considering self-defence as its first necessity.
Most ordinary, insignificant customs, we know, are not easy to
change, not to speak of those which are believed to be sanctioned by
religion. But there are cases, in daily Indian life, in which even these are set
aside with bewildering rapidity. Take, for instance, the case of a Hindu
whose son has just received a scholarship to go and continue his studies in
England. It is amazing how quickly the orthodox father can, then, set aside
his orthodoxy, and send the boy off to
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Bombay. From the very moment the young man will take his place on board
the boat, it will be impossible for him to stick to his rules of life. He will, no
doubt, not touch beef; but who can tell how many times beef has been served
in the plates and dishes that he will have to use, wherever he goes? Still, the
orthodox Hindu father sends him, for he considers it a matter of great
interest, a necessity.
The Hindus will do away with all what is bar to united disciplined
action and a hindrance to their own national defence, when widespread
military habits create among them a widespread military outlook; when
national defence (beginning with self-defence) becomes, to their eyes, the
highest of duties, and united action a necessity. Then (and not before) will
Hindudom be in a position to live, and take in hand its own destiny as well
as the destiny of India, even in the regions where it represents, now, a
numerical minority.
***
is not arms and ammunitions, but unity and preparedness, military spirit,
which is lacking among the Hindus, wherever they come to a clash with
such aggressors who also possess no arms worth speaking of. Number itself
is a force, when readiness and unity go with it; not otherwise.
If only the Hindus, wherever a minority, would become a minority of
soldiers, well-trained and always ready, then, not only could they defend
themselves and survive, but, a time is coming when they would be the actual
masters of the situation.
We have spoken of a period of confusion (possibly coming, sooner or
later) during which no effective government may remain, in India, for a
time, no one can tell.
The Hindus, then, even in North and East Bengal, and other such
places where they are now a hopeless minority, would be the masters of
India, if organised and ready. For then, while there may be no police, they
would act as a police force: they would keep peace and order throughout the
country; and the leaders of the Hindu militia would be, practically, the only
government existing. What would happen afterwards, it is difficult to say,
now. But one can hope, at least, that a whole nation who, in a short time,
would have risen from the state of a helpless flock to the military virtues
which we have tried to suggest, would not be easily subdued.
The vitality, the power, the pride acquired by the Hindus after such an
experience, would be beyond conception. Not only the Indian
Mohammadans and Christians, themselves protected by the Hindu militia
during the unsettled transitory period, would
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