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Is
Religion all about Rituals and a Fancy Dress
Code?
The Muslim community
is going through a deep crisis. The intensity
of this crisis can be gauged from the fact
that everyone, be he a leader or commoner,
is asking the question as to why, despite
the presence of the Qur'an amongst us, we
cannot see any light at the end of the tunnel.
Why the community that was entrusted with
the task of leading the world, despite the
presence of the Qur'an and the teachings of
the scholars and commentators, is going through
a deepening ideological crisis? After the
trauma of Auschwitz this question had raised
its head among the Jews too as to how could
God abandon His chosen community to fend for
itself? The Jewish scholars and intellectuals
asked themselves the question that if the
community of Jews was wiped out from the face
of earth, then what possible meaning can the
history have for them? The Israelites who,
for a long time, have been accustomed to live
in history are yet to fully recognise the
fact that they have been ejected from the
seat of authority and guidance. The basic
difference between the Israelites and the
Muslims is that while the deposition of the
former is a divine decision, the deposition
of the latter is an historical aberration
that can be corrected through recourse to
the Last Revelation. However, the irony of
the situation is that instead of critically
assessing their situation and attempting to
light up their path with the help of the Divine
Revelation, the Muslim have become prisoners
of history. This has made it difficult for
them to come to grip with this historical
aberration and understand the full extent
of their decline.
The world is now going through its worst crisis
in history. Enormous changes, not always for
the better, have been effected in different
countries of the world in the name of development;
the unscrupulous way in which different parochial
powers have tried to extend their areas of
influence has resulted in an uncertain future
for the world community. The spoilage of the
environment, the accumulation of the wealth
of the world in a few hands, the monopoly
of multinational companies, the suppression
of the freedom of thought through the manipulation
of the media and publicity and compelling
the people to see and hear what some dominant
power or faction wants people to see and hear
- these are some of the realities of our time
that are difficult to come to terms with.
The anti-God stance of the policy makers has
turned the world into an atomic furnace. The
intellectual and economic resources of the
humanity are being used for the destruction
of human life rather than preserving it. Under
the circumstances, it was expected that the
inheritors of the last Divine Revelation would
come forward to direct the confused humanity.
However, the stark fact is that despite being
declared the most favoured community by God,
the Muslims are engaged in a struggle for
their existence. There is no doubt that the
current situation prevailing in the world
urgently demands guidance from God-fearing
people. If the Muslims, like the other communities,
do not show courage to face this challenge,
then how can they delineate their distinction
from other communities as the inheritors of
the last Divine Revelation?
Lately, on the occasion of the Parliament
of World's Religions, I had the opportunity
to travel to Spain and stay on the peak of
mount Montserrat in a Christian monastery.
Some Sikh religious leaders and a pandit from
Manipur were also staying in the same monastery.
I saw that the Pandit who had got up at the
break of dawn engaged in adorning, with utmost
care and concentration, his forehead down
to his nose with a white pigment, till the
time it became apparently visible from his
human face that he was indeed a religious
leader! On the other side, an old Sikh gentleman
was busy arranging a length of cloth, considerably
long, with the help of a friend so that he
could participate in the World Parliament
of Religions like a true Sikh wearing his
prominent turban. An extensive array of colourful
religious dresses was on display there. The
black robes of the Benedictian monks, the
Kippah
of the Jews, the white sarees
of the Brahmakumaris and the Arabian robes
and tarboosh
of some Muslim divines. Some had added the
honorific 'His Holiness' before their names,
while others insisted on prefixing their names
with 'Reverend' or 'Father'. If some were
rabbis, others were maulanas, and some even
considered it reasonable to write the word
'Imam' very carefully before their names.
In this assembly of the divines, such insistence
on sartorial refinement and its display left
one greatly disappointed. I asked the pandit
sitting by me the reason for this insistence
on the part of the divines on wearing the
particular dress of their community in the
World Parliament of Religions, as it would
accentuate perception of difference among
religions. After a lot of arguments and debates
on the issue, he finally came out with the
frank answer: 'People look up to us for direction
and guidance. They want to see us as role
models, different from the man on the street.
It is obvious that all this attention to dress
is because of the image that the common people
have of us in their minds. Otherwise, what
does dress have to with real piety?' In the
perpetuation of this ritual of dress, the
Pandit alone could not be held responsible.
All the leaders had taken great pains in wearing
dresses that would distinguish them from common
men, and project their image of being Godly
or religious beyond all doubt, at the very
first sight. The common people would find
it difficult to decide whether a human being
like them, of flesh and blood, is breathing
behind the heavy and impeccable robes, and
whether his views can be subjected to scrutiny
and analysis.
It is said that when the Roman officials had
come to arrest Jesus Christ, it was difficult
for them to recognise him as he was sitting
with his followers. They had to take the cue
from Judas' reverential kiss. Jesus Christ
was, after all, a distinguished Prophet. Even
the followers of Prophet Muhammad did not
like to adopt any artificial means of distinction
that would set them apart from the common
populace. The visitors to Medinah would often
express their amazement at the spectacle of
Caliph Omar interacting with them wearing
an ordinary dress, without any visible trappings
of power and the presence of a flattering
entourage. The first generation of Muslims
greatly valued freedom of thought. They knew
very well that everyone is equal to God. The
responsibility of leadership or offering guidance
to others does not take the leaders beyond
the level of common human beings to a holy
status. The common Muslims consider that they
are entitled to put the actions and words
of their leaders and scholars under the strictest
scrutiny. So much so that even during the
course of his Friday sermon a common Bedouin
woman dared to disagree with the Caliph of
the time. Conversely, leaders and scholars
also considered themselves to be ordinary
men of flesh and blood and would not like
any supra-human epithet or title for themselves.
The ordinary Muslims also did not like the
idea that they should see people like themselves
to be invested with a sacred halo around them.
As long as Muslims valued freedom of thought
they sought guidance from the pages of the
Divine Revelation, and not from their leaders
and scholars. The moment scholars and men
of letters established the convention of presenting
themselves as sacred entities, quite apart
from ordinary human beings, and pompous and
pretentious spiritual epithets began to be
prefixed or suffixed to their names, the Muslim
mind began to stagnate and take recourse to
blind imitation.
If today, despite the presence of the Qur'an,
we cannot see any light at the end of the
tunnel, it is due to the fact that we accord
greater credibility and honour to scholars
and jurisprudents than to the Divine Revelation.
Instead of directly accessing the Qur'an and
ignite our thinking from it, we consider it
necessary to verify whether our stance is
corroborated by the sayings of the earlier
Islamic scholars. Those who should have been
students of the Qur'an have, through different
rituals and through adopting impressive titles,
transformed themselves into the religious
authority. As a consequence, a priestly class
among the Muslims has emerged. What could
be the reason for this amazing similarity
between the religious leaders of the Israelites
and those of our own community? Just as the
religious leaders of the Israelites called
themselves rabbis, implying that they share
Godly attributes, and the Christian priests
adopted for themselves the term 'Father' which
is appropriate only for God Himself, in the
same way, the Muslim religious leaders have
adopted the title 'Maulana', a term that has
been used in the Qur'an for Allah the Almighty.
When communities get accustomed to seeing
their religious leaders invested with a halo
of sacredness, and when common people begin
to believe that there are some individuals
among them whose thoughts are sacred and pure
and do not admit of scrutiny and correction,
then freedom of thought is effectively stifled.
In critical moments, such communities fail
to find new solutions to their problems and
ignite their path with the light of the Divine
Revelation. And then all the tasks undertaken
in the name of religion result in its negation.
Christ's strongest admonition of the Pharisees,
the Jewish maulanas of Christ's time, in the
Bible endorses this view. The Qur'anic assertion
in the context of the Prophet extending da'wa
to people that he offered people relief from
the tyranny of priesthood was designed to
stress the idea that God has not given the
monopoly of interpreting religion to a particular
class, and that the Prophet's invitation for
revolution would not put up with any kind
of intervention by rabbis, popes or maulanas.
How can true piety and love for God allow
that the believers should use epithets and
titles exclusive for God, and the assumption
of false spiritual authority should extinguish
the light of freedom of thought and expression?
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