Beware,
Fundamentalism!
Even as fundamental ideas are injected into the minds of the
people, people have started taking serious note of the harm it has done to
people’s outlook. Attaching too much
importance to anyone tenet of religion and giving a twist and turn to the
concepts so as to make a believer’s outlook narrow and prejudiced, can be
called fundamentalism. Fundamentalism,
instead of making one grow stronger in faith in God and love for humanity,
makes one a fanatic and causes her/him to look with derision at all the tenets
with which s/he does not agree. Naturally, nurturing fundamentalism breeds
hatred in the community, and quite strangely, this happens in the name of God
who loves peace in the world. The greatest
paradox is that no religion advocates a philosophy of hatred, but rather all
religions are attempts at bringing people closer and unite them with a bond of
love, for the common good.
The worm of fundamentalism has eaten
into the marrow of all religions in India.
…Looking closely at the various communal disturbances in independent
India, from Mandaikkadu to Kashmir, one can say without much hesitation, that
all religions are guilty of this. Each
religion, instead of respecting the feelings and beliefs of other religions,
has risen up in arms, which has resulted from time to time, what in Indian
history, is to be recorded as communal riots.
A close look at these riots will prove that it is not consequent to an
isolated rift between two faiths, but rather as a part of what narrow-mindedness
the religions in India have taught its followers. As Gandhiji once asked, if
religions which should unite the people, create cleavages in the human
community, should we have such religions? Any religious group that is soaked in
its fundamentalist tenets fails to understand the rationale behind the beliefs
of other people practicing other religions, and places of worship become a
target of their hatred. …
As we look around the Indian
society, we understand that it is infested with ills, socio-economic inequalities
and multifarious problems – casteism, communalism, regionalism, exploitation
and poverty. The dominant fissiparous
tendencies everywhere threaten the very integrity of the nation. No one can deny the fact that emotions run
high, passions run amok and reason is shattered when religious feelings are
kindled. Political opportunists and
anti-social elements fan the religious sentiments and this is the reason for
many communal riots that India has witnessed. …
India is a country of many faiths, linguistic
and ethnic groups, and our social structure is caste-based. In spite of these diversities, an average
Indian is peace-loving and possesses the ability to look above all these
differences. The greatest mission of
religions today is to be agents of social change. Indian society is infected with social ills
like inequalities and corruption, violation of human rights, harm done to the
dignity of women, injustice meted out to children, and cruelty to the underprivileged. The unemployed, the unorganized and the
illiterates have many a tale of woe to narrate.
Superstitions, evils of dowry and practices like child-marriage are
common in Indian society. Not realizing
the integrity of creation, human beings heartlessly most ruthlessly do damage
to nature which God has given under their care.
Religions, steeped in fundamentalism, have no time to think of these
burning human issues. …
When many die due
to hunger and poverty, when the guiltless die and the guilty go unpunished,
when the ignorant are exploited and the innocents duped, can religions be blind
to the stark realities? Is it time to
breed hatred OR time to act and transform society, where love would rule over
everything?
[These are excerpts from my
article that won the first prize in the Rerum Novarum Centenary All India
Essay
Competition on “Response of the Church in India to the Threat of Religious
Fundamentalism”, &
was published in the book Challenges
to Religious Pluralism by The Commission for Dialogue,
Madurai Archdiocese,
1994.]

A powerful piece Ma'am. 👏👌 Though it's published years ago, I can say it fits with the present political scenario of our country as well.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I find such fundamentalists sowing seeds of hatred even between different denomination/sects of Christianity.
~ Christal Jeya