Ram: From Divine Spirit to Hindu Nationalist Icon
Ram Puniyani
This January 22, a massive spectacle was created when the Prime
Minister Narendra Modi consecrated the idol of Lord Ram in Ayodhya. Declarations
were made that Lord Ram is the soul of India and is the one who united India.
Just before this ceremony some Muslim leaders warned that Muslim people should
avoid travel on 22nd January as there will be large scale movement of Kar Sevaks
during the day. As saffron flags flew all over including Ayodhya, as thousands
of celebrities thronged Ayodhya most of the Muslims remained indoors, they
feared the repeat of the mayhem that followed the destruction of Babri Mosque
by Hindu nationalists forces, nearly three decades ago.
After the consecration ceremony, a bit later a Muslim graveyard
was dug in Bihar, A Muslim was paraded naked in a town in South India and a
saffron flag was hoisted on the Church. In Mira Road near Mumbai, a Ram
Mandir Pran Pratishta procession was involved in an imbroglio in which a tempo driven by a Muslim and some Muslim shops were
attacked. As the Prime Minister acted as high priest of Hinduism on one hand
there were massive displays of religiosity, people assembled to celebrate, on
the other there was a scare among Muslim community.
With this Lord Ram assumed a new symbol as the one intimidating
religious minorities in India. The Lord, whose story was first written by poet
sage Valmiki, had the distinction of Maryada Purushottam (Man with dignity),
who renounced his throne so that his father Dashrath could keep his promise
given to his wife Kaikeyi. Many versions of Lord Ram Story are prevalent in
South Asia. A.K.Ramanujan’s essay, 300 Ramayans… is a classic piece telling us
the diversities in various versions. In the Jataka (Buddhist) version Ram and
Sita are also brother and sister, apart from being husband and wife. The reason for this was
to keep the purity of the clan. In the Jain version Lord is a believer of non violence
and propagator of Jain values. Popular and prevalent
"Women's Ramayana Songs" of Telugu Brahmin Women, put together by
Rangnayakamma, present Sita as finally victorious over Ram and in these,
Surpanakha succeeds in taking revenge over Ram. In Thai
Ramkirti, or Ramkin (Ram's story), there is a twist in the tale and
Shurpanakh's daughter decides to take revenge attributing her mother’s
mutilation primarily because of Sita. Here the focus is on Hanuman, who in this
telling is neither devout nor celibate but quite a ladies’ man.
In India Ram story was
popularized by Goswami Tulsidas, as he wrote it in Awadhi, lokbhasha,
(people’s language) away from the Sanskrit, Devbhasha,(language of
Gods) in 16th Century. After this Lord Ram became more popular
and many Ram temples sprung up in North India. Interestingly Tulsidas, a devout Ram Bhakta, living in
Ayodhya in 16th Century, does not mention any demolition of Ram
Temple by Babur. Also when he is threatened by Brahmins for writing
Ramcharimans in Lokbhasha (Awadhi) he merrily says that he can very well live
in a Mosque. (from Kavitavali, his autobiography).
The bhakti poets
presented Ram as an embodiment of Universal spirit, a formless God. For Kabir
the foremost among them, Ram is evoked in the nirgun (formless)
sense, which he uses to denote both Brahman (God), supreme consciousness, and
its individual expression as atman (Soul). As per him Ram
is the spark of consciousness within each of us. Gandhi considered Ram to be
the ultimate source of morality and spirituality. His powerful concept of the
Lord was inclusive and saw Iswar (Hindu God) and Allah (Muslim God) being the
same. This unique interpretation of Lord Ram by Gandhi was the underlying
factor for laying the basis of fraternity in the Indian context. This also laid
the foundation of his unique respect for people of all religions. This was part
of the moral and ethical ground which united India.
Gandhi clarified his concept of Ram in an article in
Harijan, 1946. He says “My Ram, the Ram of our prayers is
not the historical Rama, the son of Dasharath, the King of Ayodhya. He is the
eternal, the unborn, the one without a second.” The values of Gandhi symbolized
India’s ‘making into a nation’, symbolized the anti colonial struggle and
emergence of the values which are the foundation of Indian Constitution. These
are totally in contrast to what is being asserted by RSS-BJP as embodied in
BJP-Modi’s politics. Ram Temple was not in the scheme of things of RSS till
1980s. When the communal forces started getting steam, the issue of Ram Temple
was taken up.
The seeds of doubts about Ram temple having been destroyed by
Babur were sown by the British. Mrs. A.F. Beeveridge, while translating Baburnama
added a footnote that probably there was a temple underneath the mosque.
Serious scholarship shows that her writing was in tune with the British policy
of ‘Divide and Rule’. Mrs. Beveridge
produces no historical evidence to support her assertion that the mosque was
built at the site of a temple. Indeed the general tenor of Babur's state policy towards
places of worship of other religions hardly justifies Mrs. Beveridge's
inference. In Babar's reign there was a strong growth of syncretic
traditions, while he got the Jain temples of Gwalior demolished on the grounds
of nude idols being there. Babar's will to Humanyun advises him to respect
other religions especially, Hinduism, as his subjects are Hindus. Babur himself
was no bigot and he gives a good account of his respect for other religions in
his Baburnama. The Supreme Courts also
did not support this thesis that there was a Ram Temple underneath.
As the agenda of RSS-BJP
is to oppose the march towards social justice, it found it a very useful
instrument to whip up popular hysteria around Ram Temple once the Mandal
Commission was implemented. Kabir and Gandhi’s Ram has been transformed and
politics of polarization around the issue is peaking in the current scenario.
With coming to power through this polarization process now RSS-BJP are putting
their full energy into promoting their image of the Lord into today’s political
scenario. The occasion of consecration the Lord’s idol was heavily promoted all
around in different institutions and social spaces. This is accompanied by the
intimidation and political marginalization of the religious minorities.
Can we retrieve the
spirit of Lord Ram as envisaged by the likes of Kabir and Gandhi, can we
promote the moral, ethical and spiritual aspects of the religion rather than
the ritualistic aspects being promoted in the current scenario?
Comments
Post a Comment