Religion, as it is preached and practised today, divides.
Period. There’s an urgent need to refocus on the only religion that is – and matters,
humanity!
The amount of intolerance that some people have
for others, in the name of religion, is shocking. Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Praveen Togadia’s call to his
supporters, a couple of days ago, in Bhavnagar, Gujarat, urging Hindus not to
allow Muslims to buy land in Hindu localities may or may not end up being classified
by the Election Commission as a “hate speech” – but it surely smacks of stoking
intolerance. If you thought Togadia is a fundamentalist and there’s nothing
surprising about his view, consider those expressed this morning by my well-heeled,
erudite friend, who, on facebook, chided a community of south Indian Brahmins for
“aping” the north Indian wedding culture by introducing “baaraat, mehndi and sangeet”
at their weddings. My friend himself is a Brahmin but belongs to another sub-sect.
He posts with reference to the ‘other’ Brahmin community: “We know that your
wedding ceremonies suck….Cultural slavery is what you are leading now. You will
sacrifice your traditions to imitate the northies.
You are encouraging slavery of a different kind.” He even threw in an expletive
which made the sentiment he expressed tragically derisive.
Think about it. What’s our world coming to? If
this is the way people are going to react – being intolerant of each other’s
preferences, practices and opinions, we will soon be left with walled cities
and communities all around us.
But there’s still some hope. The famous Shehnai exponent Ustad Bismillah Khan’s (1913~2006)
family served some “heart-warming” sentiment yesterday when they politely
declined to nominate Narendra Modi for his candidature, when he files his
nomination papers from Varanasi on Thursday. Khan Sahab’s youngest son, Nazim, said that his family did not want to
propose any candidate for any party. “Hum
ko sirf kala aur sanskriti se matlab hai – We are just devoted to art and
culture,” he affirmed. Khan Sahab himself,
though a pious Shi’ite Muslim, was a devotee of Saraswati, the Hindu Goddess of
wisdom and arts, and used to perform frequently at the Kasi Viswanath temple on
the banks of the Ganga. India Today
paid tribute to Khan Sahab on his passing, saying: “In his lexicon, music was
the highest form of spirituality. “How can you call music ‘haram’ (sinful)?” he constantly argued with orthodox Islamic clerics from Banaras
(Varanasi) to Baghdad, adding, “If it is ‘haram’
then let there be more of it.”” People like Khan Sahab were not maestros without reason – they saw humanity as the
only religion and music (art, culture) as its only expression.
And here’s another story that shows how
humanity is still in safe hands. Vasant Bondale, then 76, was, in July last
year, returning to Mumbai from a Scandinavian tour via Istanbul on a Turkish
Airlines flight when he suffered a heart attack, mid-air. The pilots asked the
nearest ATC tower – in Karachi – for an emergency landing. The permission was
granted. And doctors at the Aga Khan University Hospital in Karachi performed an
emergency surgery saving Bondale’s Life. Those who know how much political and
religious rhetoric gets thrown across the border by both India and Pakistan
will appreciate this story better. An Indian Hindu, on a Turkish airliner,
lands in Pakistan and has his Life saved!? Incredible! Bondale’s wife, Nalini,
sums it up: “I was not scared of landing in Pakistan as the priority was to
save my husband. It was of course on my mind that we had no Visas, but the
Pakistani authorities never brought it up. They treated us like family!”
Simplistically – we have sure heard this before
– all of humanity is one big family! And if we have to preserve this family, we
have to revisit religion. It’s important we know what religion really is – and
understand it the way it should be understood. What I have learnt from Osho,
the Master, is that true religion is like science. It is a quest. Science explores
the objective while religion explores the subjective. The objective exploration
deals with things while the subjective exploration deals with being. And just as
there cannot be different variants of science – you don’t have a science that’s
different for Hindus, Muslims, Jews, Sikhs or Christians; the Law of Gravity,
for instance, is the same, irrespective of who you are – similarly, the science
of being cannot be different for each of us just because we have decided to
clothe ourselves with different beliefs. These belief systems have come about
because the mandarins that control religion across the world today wanted power
– and gullible followers wanted social acceptance. If anyone challenged the
power structure, they were ostracized by society. So, people fell in line, and
over generations, ‘diktats’ became ‘beliefs’.
And people who ‘subscribed’ to beliefs soon became ‘religious’. That’s why –
and how – we have a fractious social structure today, controlled by “the religions” – who make bad spaghetti of
such a beautiful recipe called Life!
True religion deals with the flowering of internal
awareness, the science of just being, which we also call spirituality! The only
religion we must champion or align with, therefore, is humanity. Everything
else is irrelevant!
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