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The secret of the Vedas
Though we have literature dating back to almost 4,000 years,
Indian history begins only 2,500 years ago. Part of the problem
of this lost history lies in us trying to run ourselves up in
interpreting our literature against perceived injustices in
previous interpretations. It is time we got our feet back on the
ground, says SUDHANSHU RANADE.
IT is strange. Yet it is true. The Hindus are a community without
a history; and, it would seem, without a religion either. Ask a
Hindu about Hinduism,and he will in the end tell you with a shrug
that "it is just a way of life". This is only to be expected,
given the contrary and wide-ranging customs and beliefs that the
Hindu religion is made up of. Anyone who has experienced the
cheering, steadying, reflection-inducing effect of diyas or
deepams in Hindu homes, temples and festivals will have no
trouble understanding why Hindus have always regarded Agni as
"the invoker of the gods". And it is so refreshing to hear that
"even a flower, fruit, or drop of water, offered with devotion,
He accepts from him whose heart is pure"; and to see the
refreshing, personal, intimate, informal, "nodding" relationships
that Hindus, as individuals, have directly with their Maker - and
the trust they repose in Him.
But, side by side, we find long, endless rituals that go on for
ever and ever; without the participation of, and without a word
being understood by, those on whose behalf prayers are uttered,
intricate rituals gone through, and offerings offered. In this
sort of Hinduism, one can approach the gods only through the
"proper channels", only through an intermediary who alone has the
connections or qualifications necessary for direct access; who
alone knows the ways of the gods. To my surprise, this sort of
"mystiquification" is to be found even in the Rg Veda, where one
finds priests "offering prayers on behalf of those who do not
comprehend them".
Then again, there is the puzzle of the odd contrast between the
basic large-heartedness of the Hindus and the intense status
consciousness of Hinduism; and the odd practice that some people
have of deliberately tarnishing or "polluting" others, so that
they themselves can seem pure.
How does one reconcile Krishna's advice to "see all beings,
without exception, first in yourself, and then in Me" (Gita, Ch.
4), with his statement in the same chapter that "the four castes
have been created by me"; and his concern about the
"intermingling of castes" (Ch. 1): such and such castes one may
not marry into; such and such castes one must not share a meal
with. In later times it came to the point where the pure began to
consider themselves "polluted" even if touched by the shadow of
an outcaste; who were therefore required to roam around with a
bell around their necks to warn people of their approach.
Contrary to popular belief, these things were not merely an
unintended byproduct of the fact that, in ancient times,
professional skills could only be preserved and built on if sons
followed in the footsteps of their fathers. If that were all, one
would expect only castes; not caste discrimination. The fact is
that a somehow-legitimated hierarchy of castes was believed to be
crucial for the maintenance of order in Vedic society; and
therefore became an intrinsic part of the Vedic religion -- along
with the romance, sentiment and colour that was required to
maintain a sense of community of one-ness, within a community
that was in fact so deeply divided.
This "divinely ordained" pecking order has outlived whatever
utility it might once have had. The caste system today divides us
instead of keeping us together, as it once did - with each in his
"proper" place. So much so that it is hard to imagine that this
particular link between religion and politics could ever have had
an integrative function.
Having outlived its utility, caste has now indeed become an
"aberration". It no longer serves a political purpose; only
"self-satisfying" prejudices remain. "There are real differences
between the higher and lower castes", one priest told a BBC
television crew, in all innocence; adding woefully that it was,
nevertheless, "so hard to make them understand".
Notwithstanding the impression sometimes conveyed by
"nationalist" scholars of the stature of Sri Aurobindo, the
literal and/or integral fidelity of the best translations of
ancient Indian literature has never been seriously challenged.
Nor is it true that the translations, almost all of which were
compiled by reputed German, Indian and English scholars while
India was still under British rule, were bent on showing us in a
poor light.
This did happen in some cases, in some places, because of faulty
interpretation. But most of the time the reason lay simply in the
sad state of Hindu society that scholars could see out of their
windows over the first half of the 19th Century, whenever they
looked up from their labours; coupled with the fact that they
conscientiously sought to record the good in ancient times along
with the bad in their attempt to faithfully portray the texts as
they originally stood; instead of coming up with sanitised
versions that today, three or four thousands years later, we
might feel less embarrassed by.
This perfectly sound method unfortunately knee-jerked many
"patriots" into "running us up", giving free rein to their
imagination and creativity; simply because so many people seemed
intent on running us down. But in fact, for politico-
administrative reasons, British rulers of India, like most Muslim
rulers before them, went out of their way to avoid or prevent any
actions that might grievously hurt the sentiments of the people
they ruled. This made it difficult for 19th Century missionaries
to go public with the highly offensive characterisations of
Hinduism that are to be found in books written by them; addressed
essentially to liberal, westernised, upwardly mobile Hindus. This
is why even after centuries of Muslim and British rule, and
despite the rough and rude treatment that the majority of Hindus
had put up with, at the hands of "high caste" members of their
own community, the overwhelming majority of Indians are still
Hindus.
But let us leave the Hindu religion to fend for itself, while we
ourselves turn to history. By definition, history begins only
with the availability of reliable literature. Until literature of
a meaningful sort becomes sufficiently available, nations have to
rest content with the patchy, fragmented, brick and mortar
sketches of pre- or proto-history. This, sadly, has been our
fate, even though a massive amount of literature, running into
hundreds of thousands of pages, has come down to us from ancient
times; much of it in the form in which it was originally
composed. This literature is easily and cheaply accessible today,
thanks to reprints by the Gita Press (Gorakhpur), the Advaita
Ashram, the Ramakrishna Mission, and "Indological" publishers
like Motilal Banarsidass, Munshiram Manoharlal and a whole lot of
smaller publishers, some of whom, too, maintain the highest
standards of quality. Knowledge of Sanskrit is not a problem;
excellent English translations are available, many of which
interweave the Sanskrit and English texts, verse by verse.
Nevertheless, though ancient Hindu literature takes us back three
to four thousand years, the history of India begins only 2500
years ago; with Buddhism! Looking at it from another angle, one
finds a gap of more than a 1000 years (and kilometres) in the
ancient history of India; from the time the "pre-historic" Indus
Valley Civilisation collapsed (in the west), almost 4000 years
ago, till the beginning of "history proper" with the advent of
Gautam Buddha (in the east) in the sixth Century BC. The only
"history" we have for the intervening period and the intervening
territory is the theory of the aryan invasion. But this "theory"
stood on a wobbly foundation to begin with, because of its
excessively literal and somewhat naive reading of the Rg Veda.
And it has been getting more and more shaky ever since, with each
passing year, as more and more archaeological evidence comes to
light; indicating quite clearly that the "invasion", if any,
could not possibly have happened in the way that earlier
generations of historians had "discovered" in and between the
lines of the literature studied by them; or, for that matter in
the "theories" of the aryan invasion that modern historians have
since been concocting to explain away the differences between the
ancient literature (what little they knew of it), and the "hard"
archaeological evidence, and the "soft" interpretations based on
it, that has/have now become so abundantly available.
There are four main reasons for our ancient history having got
lost (together with the blueprint for the architecture of the
Hindu religion), even though our ancient literature has remained
reasonably intact. First, the failure to adequately recognise
that the ancient texts were not written for us; the failure to
recognise that they can only be understood after one has
understood the context in which they were written thousands of
years ago, and the audience to which they were addressed. A
chicken and egg problem, essentially. One can become aware of the
context only by poring over individual texts, but these cannot
really be understood until one is aware of the context. In
effect, you cannot understand any of the ancient texts unless you
understand them all.
The second problem makes it harder to solve the first one. The
division and subdivision of labour that made it possible for
ancient literature to be handed down generation after generation
for hundreds of generations, scripted a situation in which, even
after a lifetime of labour, most players knew only their own
part. People who had a good grip on both text and context, people
like Adi Shankara and Ramanuja, were few and far between. There
are, and always were, many lesser mortals with a firm grasp of
the Vedic religion in its entirety; for instance Agnihotra
Ramanuja Tattacharya of West Mambalam, Chennai, whom it was my
privilege to meet while researching this story. But, lacking a
comparable stature, they would never be able to credibly get
their message across, even if they wanted to do so - except to
people who already knew.
As for the ancient history of the Hindus, though there are, and
always have been, many Hindus who "know"/"knew" that India was
their "original" homeland, not one of them has ever been able to
prove his point; while simultaneously giving a reasonably
comprehensive account of ancient history; one that goes beyond a
barebones narrative of "kings and queens and battles", to give an
intelligible and reasonably comprehensive overview of, say, the
economic, social and political conditions that then prevailed.
Another version of the "knows only his own part" problem cropped
up over the past two centuries, as scholars laboured to bring
together, resurrect, understand, the ancient literature.
Individual texts were obviously reliable; there was hardly any
variation in the various "editions" that were found across the
length and breadth of the country, whether preserved in the form
of centuries-old manuscripts, or in the form of "oral tradition"
- by people who had, as Max Muller put it, "strengthened their
memory to such a degree that once their apprenticeship was
finished you could open them like a book, and find any passage
you liked, any word, any accent".
However, life is short, and funding limited; so most
"Indological" scholars concentrated almost exclusively on the
"less devious" Vedic or religious literature. The traditional
literature (namely the Epics and Puranas in which our history
lies buried, and along with it the answer to the puzzle about the
location of the Rg Veda in the space/time matrix of ancient
Indian history) was almost totally ignored on account of its
fancifulness (with the honorable exception of a few largely self-
financed civil-servants-turned-scholars like H.H. Wilson and F.
Eden Pargiter); despite the fact that it was this very
fancifulness that had kept its stories alive and kicking as
recently as the middle of the 20th Century (and free from the
clutches of the priests). It was precisely this fancifulness that
gave the literature its popular appeal, and thus ensured its
financial viability.
Be that as it may, the net result was that students of the
"Indological" literature too ended up knowing only the parts they
had studied; or picked up second-hand. They too had only a skimpy
idea of how the various parts fitted into one another. In general
one could say that the literature was not understood even by
those who wrote it.
The third problem is the sheer mass of the literature that has
been passed on to us, together with its apparent
ambiguities/inconsistencies, the blurring caused by the passage
of time, and the confusion caused by numerous attempts to
"clarify" it. Taken together, these things make one tremble at
the thought of venturing into dusty manuscripts and decrepit
libraries to extricate their treasures. As Arjun tells Krishna in
the Gita, when the war is just about to commence, the very
thought of it "makes the limbs droop, the mouth dry, the body
tremor, the hair stand on end, the bow slip from one's hand, and
the skin burn intensely. I am unable, too, to stand up; and my
mind whirls around".
But it is the fourth set of problems that is the most serious;
the problems that have been caused by all those efforts to "run
ourselves up", allowing romance to cloud our judgment; refusing
to be satisfied even with superb drama - insisting that we must
have cheap melodrama as well.
Despite all that talk about the ancient Hindus having discovered
or invented thousands of years ago the things that the rest of
the world is only now waking up to, despite the picturesque
characterisation that one finds in folklore about the grand
palaces and forts of ancient India, the fact is that even the
grandest palace or fort described or hinted at anywhere in the Rg
Veda was an altogether modest affair.
What we need to do to get our feet back on the ground is to take
a cue from Vishwakarma who, in the Markandeya Purana, is found
telling the sun that the latter's wife has been "practising the
most ardent austerities in the forest on account of thy too
glorious form - if it please thee, my lord, I will restrain thy
beloved form, O lord of heaven". So, singing his praises all the
while, and keeping him entertained with divine music and the
dancing of "the choicest among the apsaras", they pared away
fifteen parts of the sun's glory; with the prayer "may thy glory
become endurable to created beings, thou who causest created
beings to exist" (Sec. 106-8).
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