Frequently Asked Questions
on Shri Rama Janmabhoomi Movement
Sir Vidiadhar Naipaul
on the Shri Rama Janmabhoomi movement
We reproduce excerpts of three interviews
given by Sir Vidiadhar on his interpretation of the ethos of the
Shri Rama Janmabhoomi movement. Sir Vidiadhar is a Trinidad-born
person of Indian ancestry. He now resides in the United Kingdom,
and is a recognised author in the English language. He has won all
the major awards in literature including the Nobel Prize. He has
also written a number of best-selling books on India.
In one of his interviews (not included
here), Sir Vidiadhar said: "The (second) millennium began with
the Muslim invasions and the grinding down of the Hindu-Buddhist
culture of the north. This is such a big and bad event that people
still have to find polite, destiny-defying ways of speaking about
it. In art books and history books, people write of the Muslims
'arriving' in India, as though the Muslims came on a tourist bus
and went away again. The Muslim view of their conquest of India
is a truer one. They speak of the triumph of the faith, the destruction
of idols and temples, the loot, the carting away of the local people
as slaves, so cheap and numerous that they were being sold for a
few rupees. The architectural evidence - the absence of Hindu monuments
in the north - is convincing enough."
"An area of awakening",
interview by Dileep Padgaonkar, The Times of India, July 18, 1993
Padgaonkar: The collapse of the
Soviet Union and the subsequent rise of Islamic nations in Central
Asia, the Salman Rushdie affair, similar harassment by fundamentalists
of liberal Muslim intellectuals in India: all these factors taken
together persuaded some forces to argue that a divided Hindu society
cannot counteract Islamic fundamentalism.
Naipaul: I don't see it quite in
that way. The things you mentioned are quite superficial. What is
happening in India is a new, historical awakening. Gandhi used religion
in a way as to marshal people for the independence cause. People
who entered the independence movement did it because they felt they
would earn individual merit.
Today, it seems to me that Indians
are becoming alive to their history. Romila Thapar's book on
Indian history is a Marxist attitude to history which in substance
says: there is a higher truth behind the invasions, feudalism and
all that. The correct truth is the way the invaders looked at their
actions. They were conquering, they were subjugating. And they
were in a country where people never understood this.
Only now are the people beginning
to understand that there has been a great vandalising of India.
Because of the nature of the conquest and the nature of Hindu society
such understanding had eluded Indians before.
What is happening in India is
a mighty creative process. Indian intellectuals, who want to be
secure in their liberal beliefs, may not understand what is going
on, especially if these intellectuals happen to be in the United
States. But every other Indian knows precisely what is happening:
deep down he knows that a larger response is emerging even if at
times this response appears in his eyes to be threatening.
However, we are aware of one of
the more cynical forms of liberalism: it admits that one fundamentalism
is all right in the world. This is the fundamentalism they are really
frightened of: Islamic fundamentalism. Its source is Arab money.
It is not intellectually to be taken seriously etc. I don't see
the Hindu reaction purely in terms of one fundamentalism pitted
against another. The reaction is a much larger response... Mohamedan
fundamentalism is essentially negative, a protection against a world
it desperately wishes to join. It is a last ditch fight against
the world.
But the sense of history that the
Hindus are now developing is a new thing. Some Indians speak about
a synthetic culture: this is what a defeated people always speak
about. The synthesis may be culturally true. But to stress it could
also be a form of response to intense persecution.
P: This new sense of history as
you call it is being used in India in very many different ways.
My worry is that somewhere down the line this search for a sense
of history might yet again turn into hostility toward something
precious which came to use from the West: the notion of the individual......
N: This is where the intellectuals
have a duty to perform. The duty is the use of the mind. It is not
enough for intellectuals to chant their liberal views or to abuse
what is happening. To use the mind is to reject the grosser aspects
of this vast emotional upsurge.
P: How did you react to the Ayodhya
incident?
N: Not as badly, as the others did,
I am afraid. The people who say that there was no temple there are
missing the point. Babar, you must understand, had contempt for
the country he had conquered. And his building of that mosque was
an act of contempt for the country.
In Turkey, they turned the Church
of Santa Sophia into a mosque. In Nicosia churches were converted
into mosques too. The Spaniards spent many centuries re-conquering
their land from Muslim invaders. So these things have happened before
and elsewhere.
In Ayodhya the construction of
a mosque on a spot regarded as sacred by the conquered population
was meant as an insult. It was meant as an insult to an ancient
idea, the idea of Ram which was two or three thousand years old.
P: The people who climbed on top
of these domes and broke them were not bearded people wearing saffron
robes and with ash on their foreheads. They were young people clad
in jeans and tee-shirts.
N: One needs to understand the passion
that took them on top of the domes. The jeans and the tee-shirts
are superficial. The passion alone is real. You can't dismiss
it. You have to try to harness it.
Hitherto in India the thinking has
come from the top. I spoke earlier about the state of the country:
destitute, trampled upon, crushed. You then had the Bengali renaissance,
the thinkers of the 19th century. But all this came from the top.
What is happening now is different. The movement is now from below.
P: My colleague, the cartoonist,
Mr R K Laxman, and I recently travelled thousands of miles in Maharashtra.
In many places we found that noses and breasts had been chopped
off from the statues of female deities. Quite evidently this was
a sign of conquest. The Hindutva forces point to this too to stir
up emotions. The problem is: how do you prevent these stirred-up
emotions from spilling over and creating fresh tensions?
N: I understand. But it is not enough
to abuse them or to use that fashionable word from Europe: fascism.
There is a big, historical development going on in India. Wise men
should understand it and ensure that it does not remain in the hands
of fanatics. Rather they should use it for the intellectual transformation
of India.
'Hindus, Muslims have lived together
without understanding each other's faiths', interview by Rahul Singh,
The Times of India, Jan 23, 1998.
Q: You gave an interview to The
Times of India, which was interpreted by the BJP as supporting them
in the destruction (of the Babri structure). Do you think you were
misunderstood?
A: I can see how what I said then
could be misinterpreted. I was talking about history, I was talking
about a historical process that had to come. I think India has lived
with one major extended event, that began about 1000 AD, the Muslim
invasion. It meant the cracking open and partial wrecking of what
was a complete cultural, religious world until that invasion.
I don't think the people of India have been able to come to terms
with that wrecking. I don't think they understand what really happened.
It's too painful. And I think this BJP movement and that masjid
business is part of a new sense of history, a new idea of what happened.
It might be misguided, it might be wrong to misuse it politically,
but I think it is part of a historical process. And to simply abuse
it as Fascist is to fail to understand why it finds an answer in
so many hearts in India.
Q: Couldn't it just be communal
prejudice?
A: It could become that. And that
has to be dealt with. But it can only be dealt with if both sides
understand very clearly the history of the country. I don't think
Hindus understand what Islam means and I don't think the people
of Islam have tried to understand Hinduism. The two enormous groups
have lived together in the sub-continent without understanding one
another's faiths.
"The truth governs writing",
an interview by Sadanand Menon, The Hindu, July 5, 1998
Q: You have been rather vehement
about Marxist, leftist interpretations of History. What did you
see as a major flaw in their arguments?
A: Probably not so much the Marxist
interpretation of history as Marxist politics which, of course,
is entirely criminal. Such disrespect for men. I think that is enough;
that is condemnation enough. This lack of regard for human beings.
Q: Well, that is not specific to
Marxists politics alone. All brands of organised politics, all parties
mirror each other in their behaviour and have discredited themselves.
But what about Marxism as a tool for analysing history?
A: You see, Sadanand, I have not
lived like that. I never looked for unifying theories. I think everything
is particular to a country, a culture, a period. In another context,
I do not like people taking ancient myths, shall we say, and applying
them to their own period. I think the ancient myths come from an
ancient world. Sometimes very many ancient worlds come together
in an epic work and to apply that narrative to modern life is absurd.
Something like that I feel about these unifying interpretations
of history. It is better just to face what there is. It is better
not to know the answers to every problem, before you even know what
the problems are. The Marxists, they know the answers long before
they know anything. And, of course, it is not a science. It deals
with human beings.
Q: You have given some signals during
your visit here this time about your - it may be a wrong word -
your "happiness" with the emergence and consolidation
of some kind of parasitic Hindu political order here. How do you
sustain such a thesis?
A: No. I have not done that actually.
I have talked about history. And I have talked about this movement.
I have not gone on to say I would like Hindu religious rule here.
All that I have said is that Islam is here in a big way. There is
a reason for that and we cannot hide from what the reasons were.
The great invasions spread very far South, spreading to, you know,
even Mysore. I think when you see so many Hindu temples of the
10th Century or earlier time disfigured, defaced, you know that
they were not just defaced for fun: that something terrible happened.
I feel that the civilisation of that closed world was mortally wounded
by those invasions. And I would like people, as it were, to be more
reverential towards the past, to try to understand it; to preserve
it; instead of living in its ruins. The old world is destroyed.
That has to be understood. The ancient Hindu India was destroyed.
Q: Many things changed and many
things overlapped in Indian history due to many diverse interventions.
But do such processes over time justify the line of "historic
revenge" with retrospective effect? Does it make that inevitable?
What do you see unfolding before your eyes here today?
A: No. I do not think so. It need
not happen. If people just acknowledged history, certain deep emotions
of shame and defeat would not be driven underground and would not
find this rather nasty and violent expression. As people become
more secure in India, as a middle and lower middle class begins
to grow, they will feel this emotion more and more. And it is in
these people that deep things are stirred by what was, clearly,
a very bad defeat. The guides who take people around the temples
of Belur and Halebid are talking about this all the time. I do not
think they were talking about it like that when I was there last,
which is about 20 something years ago. So new people come up and
they begin to look at their world and from being great acceptors,
they have become questioners. And I think we should simply try to
understand this passion. It is not an ignoble passion at all. It
is men trying to understand themselves. Do not dismiss them. Treat
them seriously. Talk to them.
Q: But don't you think this tendency
is only going to increase - this tendency to whimsically and freely
interpret religion or history at the street level?
A: I think it will keep on increasing
as long as you keep on saying it is wicked and that they are wicked
people. And if we wish to draw the battleline, then of course, you
get to battle. If you try to understand what they are saying, things
will calm down.
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