Sunday 28 December 2014

A response to Brinda Karat - part 1

This is in response to this article by Brinda Karat in the NDTV website. In the interest of brevity I am putting this post in two parts. The second part is definitely, in my opinion more interesting.
 
At the outset let me declare that I have no issue with any religion as long as it does not interfere with mine. Let each person worship God the way s/he wants. In principle and personally, I am against conversions of any kind - voluntary, forced and more importantly in today's India, induced - and to any religion. Conversion means the converted has lost faith in "his" religion or God. Today, when PK is the flavour of the day, this is all the more abnormal. The Indian saying goes, eko sat, vipraah bahudhaa vadanti - the truth is one, the learned call it by many names. However every person has the freedom to worship God the way he wants. Krishna says in the Gita

yo yo yaam yaam tanum bhaktah shradhdhayaarchitumichchati
tasya tasyaachalaam sradhdhaamtaameva vidadhaamyaham
 
यो  यो याम याम तनुम्  भक्तः श्रद्धयार्चितुमिच्छति 
तस्य तस्याचलाम् श्रध्द्धाम् तामेव विदधाम्यहम्
 
Paraphrasing, however one wishes to worship I make that path steady.
 
Also as Vivekananda said a Hindu does not ask anyone to convert. If that were the case the Jews and Parsis who came to India and took refuge would either have become Hindus or would have been wiped out by now.
This is how Hinduism works.

As the saying goes, there is no smoke without fire. Today the aspect which is creating headlines is the smoke - "reconversion" to Hinduism. While this is certainly illegal and deplorable if forced, nobody seems to be talking about the fire behind the smoke - forced and induced conversions, especially to Christianity. Via twitter, Gul Panag and Amrita Bhinder I found this article which highlights the issue well.

We have people like Rajiv Malhotra who are highlighting the activities of proselytizers in their works. Refer to this article in the Times of India. Creation of stotras glorifying Jesus and putting up dhwajastambhas in front of church are ways of "acclimatizing" people to Christianity before striking the final blow and converting them completely to Christianity, when all such pretenses are dropped.

I can personally attest to a few of these practices, the most blatant of which I have reserved for the next part:

1. I have seen major churches in Chennai where there is a prominent pillar in front of the church which resembles a Hindu dhwaja except that it has a cross on top of it - San Thome, St. Thomas Mount for example.
2. The church is referred to as a koil which is the Tamil word for temple.
3. I was in Rajamundry recently for my grandmother's final rites. On the ghats along the Godavari there are painted signs which talk about traita siddhaanta bhagavad geeta. Though it sounds like the Bhagavad Gita this is actually referring to the Gospels and Bible of Christianity. The term actually talks about the concept of the Christian Trinity - the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
4. Spreading canards about Hinduism - Refer to this Wikipedia post on Thomas, the apostle of Jesus Christ.

In my next post I will share a personal experience along with some translations, as I can manage.

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