Playing the Indian Card

Thursday, May 25, 2006

The Twain Meet

An interesting cross-cultural debate has been going on in the comments section of this blog recently, under India Ink. I think it is interesting enough that it should get a bit better billing, so I’m moving the current exchange up here as a new post.

Birdie:

"Freedom of religion is a right the people hold and which the government cannot infringe. It is not a right the government holds and which the people cannot infringe. Accordingly, freedom of religion means anyone is free to set any rules they want in their own religious institutions, be they schools, hospitals, or churches, and the government may not interfere. (Albeit many governments, illegitimately, do)."So you are saying once a hindu student joins a mission run school, his religious freedom becomes subordinate to the religious freedom of the school? Extending that logic, once one accepts aid from a mission, his religious freedom becomes subordinate to the missions! If you say a state can not make laws to force a mission to follow a particular path(which the state has not anyways) , then how can that mission make regulations to force students to follow their religious path? That means religious freedom really means religious freedom of you alone. This is the real face of you and your cause.


Od:

Hello, birdie!

Welcome to the party here at Od’s Blog!

That’s right. Once a Hindu student chooses to enter a Christian school, his religious freedom becomes subject to the rules of the school. Similarly, in Canada or in India, entering a mission for aid implies agreeing to follow the rules of the mission. He may be expected, for example, to listen to a Bible lesson, or to join in prayers. So long as his act in entering is voluntary and the religious aspect is made plain, his freedom is not violated. He has freely chosen this implied contractual relationship.

This is proper for the mission, and improper for the state, because involvement in the school or mission is voluntary; while involvement in the state is essentially involuntary.

Thanks for asking.



Trip:

Yes humor is not always so handy. The missions in India had not a modicum of it when it came to da vinci code movie. so that sort of thing happens in matters Indian. don't take it personally.I essentially agree with just abt everything you say abt religiuos freedom. I never even wanted to debate it. What i'm debating is the technicality of there being any persecution. first of all, no schools are being banned from doing ANY activities. No law says there can be no conversions. No law says you can't come to India or do charitable work. no law says you can't mention historical facts or preach to people. the so called 'anti conversion' laws are in place in some states for the last 38 years. 38 sir, and the latest ultra sensitive US report on religious freedom states categorically that there is no misuse of these laws. Then where is the persecution? the leader of india's ruling alliance and the most powerful politician is a roman catholic, the PM a sikh, the president muslim, the army chief a sikh, what persecution are you talking abt??? kindly reply to these and help me get back my sense of humor.when there is no persecution, and still a head of a state gives a sermon to another sovereign state, it's bound to recieve a retort. if you have any knowledge of protocol, this sort of thing DOES NOT happen in international relations.You ommitted the persecutions in Goa and you say the perpetrators are dead. Most nazis are dead or become pious now but we still call nazism bad don't we? Similarly, the casteism in India was banned sixty years ago and those who wrote the vedas are dead too, but missions still use this argument against Hinduism (Fact. check out the mission books). As far as blood libel goes, we in India don't have experience with such things. Even after conceding the authority on the subject to you, i'll tell you some facts - Jews have been living in India since the time before the destruction of the second temple. Not a single case of persecution ever reported. Zorashtrians are living in India for over a thousand years, not a single case of persecution. Same applies to jains and buddhists. Some missions in India work in most remote, poorest and lawless places where the the govt itself loses 100s of securitymen a month (Fact). So the govt can not give complete protection to missions in such parts. Even then there have been no cases of state persecution (there may have been criminal cases ( I don't know of any) but i hope you appreciate the difference). Basically this persecution war cry is hogwash. if you guys use spreadsheets, it will be interesting to compare the decible levels of this cry in a year and the increment in the money that comes into the country.Your comparison of schools with homes is weird. homes are not public institutions teaching state curricula and subject to states responsibility of what happens in them to the students. In any case, no school activity or church activity is banned by any law as you ignorantly claim and my having an opposite viewpoint is not persecution. I'm not impying malice, but i'm saying your views are based on misinformation. So prove what i said is factually incorrect or stop abusing my motherland.Many missions do lot of public service in India and they are given credit too. Mother teresa as an example. India had a three day state mourning after the pope's death recently even when its a secular state ( there has never been state mourning when Hindu shankaracharyas die). India is a tolerant and spiritually generous country and I have no idea what is being achieved by making Indians reconsider their stand.


Od:

Hi again, Trip:

To try to answer your points more or less in order:

The Da Vinci Code is not a comedy.

You say “no law [in India] says there can be no conversions.” That’s true, technically. What the law says is that requests to convert must be approved by the civil authorities, and can be denied. This is obviously not religious freedom; the state has no business telling you what religion you can be, believe and practice. But note that, also technically, you are wrong to say no law says you can’t come to India as a missionary. Unless my sources are wrong, India does not let people enter as missionaries: they must come as tourists, or they must have an employer in India and do their missionary work in their spare time.

Besides the Pope, Amnesty International has also protested a growing trend to religious violence in India (http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGASA200031999). The latest report by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, although it withdrew India from its list of countries of particular concern a year ago, states that it is still being “monitored closely,” and that "concerns about religious freedom in India remain, particularly indications that attacks on Christian churches and individuals persist - in some areas at alarmingly high levels - without adequate prosecution.”

You make a good point that the upper levels of the current Indian government show impressive diversity. Everyone agrees that the situation has improved since Congress replaced the BJP in the last national elections. It has been the BJP and some smaller parties, holding government in some states, which have continued to be a problem.

You say this sort of thing—a rebuke from one “head of state” to another--“DOES NOT happen in international relations” (emphasis yours). This is not so. The Pope criticized Muslim nations for religious intolerance in the same week he cited India. This sort of thing is common, even among sovereign states, and the Pope is only incidentally the head of a sovereign state. He is, quite obviously, speaking here not as the chief magistrate of Vatican City, but as leader of the world’s Catholics.

You miss the critical difference between condemning Nazis and persecuting Germans. We indeed still criticize Nazism. Yet we do not blame modern Germans for the acts of others in the past.

You are correct that the caste system is banned in India as a civil matter. But it is still a cultural and a religious concern, as the Indian government itself clearly concedes with its continuing “affirmative action” programs. As you note, many still consider the system justified by the Vedas. It is therefore perfectly legitimate to continue to comment on it and condemn it.

On the whole, India has had an admirable record of religious tolerance; but just as past wrongs do not justify present wrongs, neither do past rights.

It is also an exaggeration to say the Jews of India have never known persecution. They were driven from their homes and livelihoods in Kerala in 1524, by the ruler of Calicut. And the Indian record is somewhat marred by the death of around 500,000 people during the partition.

As to your claim that the escalating attacks on Christian churches and missionaries are the acts of private individuals, the Pope, Amnesty, and the US government all believe this has been with some government connivance. Pakistan claimed the same, remember, for the fedayeen who sought to seize Kashmir in 1947; it is a time-honored technique in other persecutions. Hitler used it too, in the 1930s.

You argue that homes are not public institutions, and schools are. But we are talking about private, not public, schools. Private schools are indeed private institutions.

Your charge that I have said that some particular activity is currently banned in Christian schools in India is false. Perhaps this is due to your difficulties with reading in a second language?

Pax. Et Lux.

Od

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hello Stephen,
You may not initially agree with everything I assert, but we are allies nonetheless. Take the time to understand what I have revealed; understand clearly that your opinions are not infallible!! The truth is sometimes a bitter pill to swallow, but it is the truth you should be honoring, not an ancient cabal of deceivers. Resist the urge to scoff and be prepared to have your eyes opened so that you may live again...

Here is the key to understanding what the Vatican and Papacy truly fear...

Here's a real hot potato! Eat it up, digest it, and then feed it's bones to the hungry...

Pay close attention, profundity knocks at the door, listen for the key. Be Aware! Scoffing causes blindness...

There's much more to the story of the Vatican's recent machinations than meets the eye. It's not the DaVinci Code or Gospel of Judas per se, but the fact that people have now been motivated to seek out the unequivocal truth about an age of deception, exactly when they expect me to appear. These recent controversies are spurring people to reevaluate the Vatican/Papacy and the religions that Rome spawned, at the worst possible time for them.

Remember, "I come as a thief..." ?

The DaVinci Code novel and movie are no more inaccurate as literal versions of history than the New Testament. The primary sub-plot involved purposeful symbology being used to encode hidden meanings, exactly like the Bible and related texts. In other words, none of these stories represent the literal truth. This is the common and pivotal fact of all such narratives about ancient Hebrew and Christian history. Debating whether the DaVinci Code, Gnostic texts, or the Bible are accurate history is a purposeful ploy designed to hide the truth by directing your inquiry away from the heart of the matter.

There is a foolproof way to verify the truth and expose centuries-old religious deceptions. It also proves why we can no longer let the Vatican tell us what to think about ancient history or much else. It is the common thread connecting why the ancient Hebrews, Yahad/Essene, Jews, Gnostics, Cathars, Templars, Dead Sea Scrolls, DaVinci Code, and others have been targets of Rome’s ire and evil machinations. The Vatican and its secret society cohorts don’t want you to understand that the ancient Hebrew symbology in all of these texts purposely encodes and exposes the truth about them. Furthermore, the structure of ancient wisdom symbology verifiably encodes the rules to decode messages built with it. This is what they most fear you will discover.

If the Bible represented the literal truth or even accurate history, there would be no need for faith in the assertions of deceptive and duplicitous clergy and their ilk. It is undeniable the New Testament is awash with ancient Hebrew symbolism and allegory. The same is evidenced in the Old Testament, Dead Sea Scrolls, Gnostic texts, biblical apocrypha, Quran, DaVinci Code, and other related sources. All ancient religious, mystical, and wisdom texts have been shrouded in mystery for millennia for one primary reason: The ability to understand their widely evidenced symbology was lost in antiquity. How do we finally solve these ages-old mysteries? To recast an often-used political adage: It’s [the] symbology, stupid!

It is beyond amazing that the Vatican still tries to insist the Gospels are the literal truth. Every miracle purported for Jesus has multiple direct symbolic parallels in the Old Testament, Apocalypse, Dead Sea Scrolls, and other symbolic narratives and traditions. Recasting the symbolism of earlier Hebrew texts as literal events in the New Testament is one of the central deceptions associated with Christianity. This is part of the secret knowledge held by the ancient Gnostics, Templars, Cathars, and others, which is presented with dramatic effect in the DaVinci Code. None of these narratives or stories were ever intended as the literal truth. This fact is the key to unraveling many ages-old mysteries and exposing the truth about the Vatican's long-term deceptions.

Moreover, the following Washington Post article (The Book of Bart) describes how many changes and embellishments were made to New Testament texts over the centuries, unequivocally demonstrating they are not original, infallible, or truthful. When you combine proof that the New Testament Gospels are not wholly literal with proof that these texts were heavily reworked in the early years of Christianity, you are left with only one possible conclusion. The Vatican has long lied to everyone about the central tenets and history of Christianity. This revelation also proves they are not the Creator’s representatives but Her longtime opponents. The recent hoopla over the Gospel of Judas and DaVinci Code demonstrates they are still desperately trying to deceive the world and obfuscate their true nature and activities.

It's no wonder the Vatican fears the truth more than anything else. As further proof of these assertions, seek to understand the symbolic significance of my name (Seven Star Hand) and you will have proof beyond disproof that Jews, Christians, and Muslims have long been duped by the great deceivers I warned humanity about over the millennia. What then is the purpose of "faith" but to keep good people from seeking to understand the truth?

Now comes justice, hot on its heels... (symbolism...)

Not only do I talk the talk, I walk the walk...
Here is Wisdom!!

Revelations from the Apocalypse

Anonymous said...

Since the stay of foreign missions is voluntary in India, according to your logic, they have absolutely no right to complain. Similarly, its voluntary to follow any religion in India( religion is a conscious act, so a new born baby decided later on to follow a religion), so the contractual agreement with the state would be the constitution and the laws. if you don't want to follow the constitution, you can say you are a missionary and move to any 'free' country where no VISA or immigration technicalities are required if you are on a religious mission as claimed by the wise author.

Germans and Nazis are indeed different people. what a weird comparison. But its the same institution that sanctioned the inquisitions in Goa. Hindu places of worship were permanently destroyed and thousands tortured and killed. Just the same way as you say Hindu cast system was created by people who are dead, but the religion is receptive enough to change itself and acknowledge the evils and take corrective action. An on going process indeed, but officially corrected by the state and the religion too, and there's an independent judiciary to protect it. In your case, the perpetrator is itself the state, the institution and the judge. not quite the comparison. Then why not own up and say it was a mistake? If not, then why shouldn't India be suspicious of what you are sowing?

Interesting fact : "Lower caste catholics in India demand reservations." search news. If you say backwordness of certain classes is a religious issue with my religion and not a social one, then kindly explain what in the world is lower caste catholic? their backwardness is finished with theie conversion (thats the promise). Now don't say that too is a hindu conspiracy, as catholics in India are quite well to do. Many prominet businessmen and academicians and stars are from minorities. The richest Indian is a minority too. I'm a low caste Hindu myself. What saved me was education, and no 'seeing the light'.

When I say something is not done in international affairs, you are giving me examples of the same party lecturing others (righly or wrongly, I'm talking abt protocol). I do believe you should take some lessons in logic, but it might conflict with theology.

Whan you take out a religious procession, you have to inform the authorities in India. Same applies to any public religious activity. The idea is not to curb freedom but to make sure there is no social tensions created as these activities have the potencial in the complex yet liberal India. When the law has not been misused in 38 years, including in BJP ruled states, then why are you implying it will be misused? because the boss said so. Whats the problems with following laws? resist misuse, indeed.

You saying the religious leader spoke not the head of state is factually incorrect too as the pope himself is against separation of religion and state. Don't be a heretic.

Anonymous said...

Hi,

Nazis (institution) sanctioned the holocaust, hence Nazis are bad, NOT germans. Nazis are more or less extinct. The church (institution) sanctioned the inquisition in Goa, so it is responsible, not present day portuguese. the church is very much here and has a responsible role to play. This responsibility is what we'd like to see in its conduct and the accountability for its actions just the way Indian behaviour is scrutinized or open to punishment in case of violations of international laws and conventions, the Vatican is too if it seeks equality and the right to sermon.However common theme is its religion so its above the law or Vatican is a special case no religious freedom there.There are other religions too, and if all go above the law, then we are back to the days of barbarians.

There must not be any persecution at all in any state. I totally agree. Its not a perfect world though, and we must try to keep improving always.

Partition of India was not a case of persecution my dear friend, it was a catastrophic event of tearing apart one ancient civilization. Conceived and ably implemented under the God fearing british. Interestingly the whole episode can be tracked back in history to someone far away far back in time having the bright idea of converting the heathens of India to a superior peaceful faith . Quite the same thing we are discussing here.

I think I've said what I had to and I much better understand your point of view now. Thanks for the opportunity to interact and sorry if I said anything offensive in my zeal to point out what I think is major inconsistency in your contention. All the best in whatever you are doing, and stay safe.

Anonymous said...

Maybe you can better understand Hindu viewpoint below

http://www.hvk.org/Publications/perception.html

Steve Roney said...

Seven Star Hand, welcome to the discussion; though you come more or less from left field. From your chosen pseudonym and from what you write, it is clear that you are a Gnostic. I hope I will have time soon to comment more on what you have written.

For now, you note that every miracle of Jesus has precursors in the Old Testament. You think this disproves the New Testament; why does it not instead prove it, that Jesus came "in fulfillment of the scriptures"?