Source: sabrang

I ask myself, would Bhagwan Ram who thought nothing of giving up his royal due in Ayodhya have applauded the   zealous assault on the erstwhile Babri mosque?

Would Jesus have been heartened by the crusades fought in his name?

Would Prophet Mohammed have approved of the beheading of a journalist  for the preservation of his honour?

I think not.

God gave us the prophets for human betterment.  We made them sectarian, religious heads.

The question to ponder is this: can any coercive incorporation of human beings into sects and denominations ever be compatible with the intentions of prophets? Can any pursuit of faith that does not issue from free will ever be either truly soulful or sanctified?

The current debate about the seemingly antagonistc claims of the right to free expression and the exalted status of religions thus seems a faulty one ab initio.

No prophets have ever instructed that calumnies against them be made occasions for consolidating rabid hordes  detailed to bolster their standing among men, or to  snatch consent from the recalcitrant.

Allegiance to any faith is hardly allegiance that is not freely given, and no denial of faith, however crudely expressed, can be offensive to prophets whose appeal has always been to a voluntary and felt make-over of the individual soul and psyche.

In our current worldwide contexts, it would be well for religious affcionados to recognize that laicite is as much a faith as any other. And if votaries of secularism make no distinctions between other faiths that contest secularism, the assumption of malice only bespeaks an insecurity of beliefs that feel threatened by other beliefs.

After all, no prophets of any religion have been in history spared by caricaturists and mavericks in their bid to assert the freedom of expression.

Nor is it any fact that religions are monoliths of belief systems. Within Sanatan and Buddhist thought reside eloquent traditions of atheism; within Christianity exist denominations that deny the divinity of Christ; and within the world of Isalm there are traditions who remain opposed to dogma, teaching a non-discriminatory  humanism  that leaves no one out.

It would be well, therefore, to recognize that the freedom of thought and expression  is as integral to religious faiths at their truest and noblest as it is to secularists who advocate separation of church and state even though many of them may well retain privately conducted forms of spiritual conviction and even forms of personal prayer.

And all belief systems must remain rather hollow should they descend to violence instead of meeting  annoyances with  reason and  an unshakable  conviction that requires no forced or crude  assertion.

God, we are told, made  man and woman.  Men made religions.  Iti is hardly to be thought that  any  religion can be ultimately  persuasive that does not place  the  principles of humanism above  sectarian dogmas and  ritualistic practices.

Of all things in life, freedom of expression must be the bed rock  of the faiths we espouse, if the  work of the prophets is truly to be  understood and accomplished.

No slavery is worse than a slavery to a faith that is not willingly adopted and felt in the bone. And our plurality of faiths, including secularism, demnds that we respect convictions other than our own  as we do  laws  democratically  legislated that affect us diversely.


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Badri Raina is a well-known commentator on politics, culture and society. His columns on the Znet have a global following. Raina taught English literature at the University of Delhi for over four decades and is the author of the much acclaimed Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth. He has several collections of poems and translations. His writings have appeared in nearly all major English dailies and journals in India.

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