The Time Has Come For India To Get Serious
About Hindu Studies
Former High Commissioner to Bangladesh, Veena Sikri,
currently the Chair of the ICCR Committee for Assessment of Indian Cultural
Centres, recently introduced an erudite
Irishman, a no-onion-no-garlic Hindu scholar to a small group in New Delhi.
The gentleman is coincidentally from the Swami Vivekananda
era Sister Nivedita’s home-town, in Ireland.
The brief interaction, with a select group of invitees, took place at
the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Research Foundation (SPMRF), premises at 9, Ashoka
Road, New Delhi.
Incidentally, the very rooms occupied by the Foundation
today, were once occupied by a much younger Narendra Modi, in the nineties,
before he became Gujarat Chief Minister. This was when he was a BJP
spokesperson, frequently seen on TV panels broadcasting out of New Delhi.
The Irishman we met is the Director of the Oxford Centre
For Hindu Studies (OCHS). This organisation is located in Oxford, that too for
the last 20 years, currently on Magdalen Street, in a small space between two shopping
malls.
But OCHS is a bona fide part of the hallowed
Oxford University offering, with all the academic quality and rigour that
implies.
OCHS was introduced to Oxford University originally via
the good offices of its Theological faculty, traditionally, culturally and
historically, devoted to Christian studies.
Now OCHS qualified students go out to research/guide/teach in Religious Studies
faculties in Europe, America, Africa, Japan, indeed all over the globe. And Das, its Director, encourages them to expound their well informed and considered views as ‘public
intellectuals’.
India herself has been largely missing-in-action in this
endeavour so far, with a mistaken Nehruvian belief that religion, particularly
the Hindu religion, is obscurantism, and will hold back progress.
Nehru as India’s first prime minister, actively
discouraged any governmental involvement or support in the propagation or
dissemination of the Hindu religion. He
even frowned on private attempts to do so.
This tone and tenor set by him, has largely been the story for the 70 years
since Independence.
Meanwhile, at least in the course of the last twenty
years, seeking scholars from all over the world have come to earn a doctorate
in ‘Hindu Studies’ from Oxford University.
The Irish-Hindu prime-mover of OCHS we met goes by the
name Shaunaka Rishi Das, in the manner of some Western devotees of Hinduism who
take on a Hindu name without much regard to caste associations. Or perhaps, in
all humility, making sure that ‘service’ to humanity, rather than caste
pedigree, is the meaning highlighted in the name chosen.
OCHS has been quietly doing serious work on a
non-sectarian and apolitical basis over the years. This, said Das, has been a strategic decision
to successfully skirt any controversy.
Currently, OCHS is about to inaugurate a Bhagwat Puran
project, a mammoth undertaking, as the Purana, in the uncompromised Sanskrit
original, is in 14,500 verses. The project will be launched, in Chennai between
the 6-8th of January 2017.
It will draw upon many streams, narratives, styles, and
traditions, from different parts of ancient India on the Purana.
Another book on the anvil is on the prominent and well-funded Swami Narayan Sect from Gujarat, that not
only boasts of magnificent temples in India, but also in London (Neasden) -
visited by British royalty, prime ministers, politicians, tycoons, and many-hued
celebrities.
Other works in progress include the Bhakti Movement in
the ‘Braj era’, Bengal Vaishnavism, and the confluence of Hindu, Christian and
Islamic traditions that pre-date the British Raj.
Although the OCHS is little known in India as of now, The
Oxford University Press, and Rutledge, have published a number of its scholarly
works on, for example, the Tantra traditions.
There is also a Journal of Hindu Studies, and a programme
of Continuing Education on Hinduism online as well.
Das made the very relevant point that Indian Christianity
is 2,000 years old, and peculiarly and distinctly Indian in its cultural
moorings, and Indian Islam is not the same at all as that which prevails in
parts of West Asia. The Sufi traditions of Indian Islam are quite unique.
OCHS is now working to collaborate with a number of well-established
universities in India, who have all been welcoming. Together, it proposes to work
on academic explorations of Hinduism so that this work, neglected here for so
long, can be extended, into the land of its origin, with both primary and
secondary resources developed locally over time.
Das pointed out that faculties of Religious Studies do
not exist in Indian universities as of
now, but there is a great need to establish them in a format that will work
alongside India’s ‘secular’ constitutional position.
The manner in which OCHS is strictly non propagandist,
sectarian or political, does, in fact, fit the ‘secular’ needs of India.
But unfortunately, in the attempt to be secular, there
are no serious Hindu studies being conducted in Indian universities at all, leaving
the field to be sometimes distorted via Western and other foreign efforts that
do not adhere to the highest standards of academic research.
The best Indian work, and it does exist, is currently being done in various Ashrams and
religious organisations only.
But in the public space, the raging debate between aggressive Marxism from
the socialist, and the Left, versus the Nationalist Right, are both missing the
need to speak from the point of view of India’s considerable cultural and
philosophical ‘Heritage’.
It is time, said Shaunaka Rishi Das, to plant ‘oak trees’,
that no man can expect to see full grown in his lifetime. But still, there is
the civilisational need to plant the oak trees anyway.
For: Nationalist Online
(920 words)
September 14th, 2016
Gautam Mukherjee
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