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     Peace in South Asia - is it
    attainable?
     the-south-asian
    asks Swami Agnivesh
     &
     Rev. Valson Thampu
     (cntd.)
      
      
    Swami Agnivesh & Rev. Valson Thampu
    
    
    
 "Fundamentalism signals the decay of
    the spiritual core of a religion and society."
    
    
      
      
    Which of the two is stronger -secularism or
    fundamentalism? 
     
    Both are as strong as we make it to be. The appeal of every ideology depends
    on the climate of opinion, especially the respect for truth and justice, we
    create. From a partisan perspective, a terrorist appears a hero. To the
    communally biased Godse, a Mahatma like Gandhi seemed a disaster. To the
    fundamentalists there can only be pseudo-secularists; for them secularism is
    not a genuine or authentic ideology. All secularists are, hence,
    pseudo-secularists necessarily. From a secular perspective, on the other
    hand, the fundamentalist outlook is prehistoric. Hence the importance of
    what sociologists call the "plausibility structure"-the framework
    of shared ideas, values and proprieties that acts as the shaping influence
    on popular tastes and choices. The task at hand is not to decide if
    fundamentalism is stronger than secularism or vice versa; it is, on the
    other hand, to create the authentic plausibility structure for secularism,
    or to propagate the authentic secular culture and outlook. This mandate is
    subsumed in the Indian Constitution. To give ourselves a secular democracy
    and to remain indifferent to the fundamental duty of propagating secular
    values and norms is to be irresponsible and hypocritical. And today we are
    paying the price for this hypocrisy. 
     
    Religious fundamentalism is a contradiction in terms; for it involves in 
    practice a violation of the 'fundamentals'(like love, compassion, truth, 
    justice, tolerance etc.) of the religion concerned. Fundamentalism signals
    the decay of the spiritual core of a religion and society. It is when a
    society becomes unspiritual that it gets hooked on the opium of
    fundamentalism. This means, among other things, that for secularism to
    remain robust, it must be nourished by a shared, trans-religious
    spirituality. Today religions have become contradictions of spirituality. In
    such a contest, fundamentalism might seem to be stronger. But that is a
    pointer to the spiritual and moral degeneration of a society, rather than a
    proof of the intrinsic strength of fundamentalism as such. Strength, at any
    rate, is not the yardstick for measuring the merit of religion or
    secularism. A madman may be stronger than his sane counterpart, but not
    necessarily more desirable for that reason. 
     
    Can fundamentalism pose a serious threat to
    the secular traditions of the 
    Indian sub-continent? 
     
    The danger that religious fundamentalism, especially of the majoritarian 
    variety, holds out secularism and democracy in the South Asian context is 
    eloquently illustrated by the woeful developments in the state of Gujarat. 
    The land of the Mahatma has been over-run by the combined armies of 
    religious and political (right wing) fundamentalisms. Once a people are 
    infected with fundamentalist prejudices and robbed of their freedom to think
    and choose dispassionately, democracy begins to stagger on its feet and
    collapse into fascism. The factors that aid and abet this process are: the
    educational under-development of the people, the hijacking of religion by
    vested interests and the exploitation of people's sacred sentiments for 
    political and other ulterior gains, the partisan patronage of the State, the 
    large-scale use of propaganda, the apathy of the intelligentsia, and the 
    support of the media. It does not have to be argued that religious 
    fundamentalism is already a plague for South Asia. But what needs to be 
    noted is the fact that secularism, as we know it today, has proved itself 
    unable to halt the juggernaut of religious fundamentalism in our context. 
    The antidote to religious fundamentalism is not religiously neutral 
    secularism, but true spirituality that insists on universal and inviolable 
    values and nurtures people in the practice of justice, compassion and 
    fair-play. 
     
    
    
  
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