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Engineering India: Religion, Nationalism
and Technology
By Peter
van der Veer
Abstract
Although it begins with a reference
to relationship between western
technology and “Islamic fundamentalism”,
the article quickly moves to dealing
with modernity (as modelled on Western
pattern) and Hindu fundamentalism.
In Nehru’s scheme for developing
India, the education of science
and technology (as mainly represented
by engineering) was very vital.
As a result, India despite being
poor, and in spite of investing
poorly in education, has been able
to produce world class scientists
and engineers. Many of these Indian
brains, however, landed in USA enriching
its economy. However, they have
also contributed to the economy
of India specially after the country
began to open its economy in mid
1980s. Vishva Hindu Parishad, a
rabidly communal outfit at home,
however, has pursued its fundamentalist
agenda in USA in a technology-friendly
manner, and in a language that would
appeal the highly-educated Hindu
in order to remain in touch their
roots.
A recent contribution to the British
newspaper The Guardian by an American
philosopher had the following argument:
“It is a modern thought that faith
is antagonistic to reason. Scientific
reasoning does not sit easily with
the presuppositions of any religion,
and the work of Enlightenment philosophers
made the belief in God appear irrational…It
is easy to imagine Mohammed Atta,
at Hamburg University, encountering
the dichotomy between faith and
modern reason, and turning to a
form of Islam untempered by any
rational morality. But, if so, Atta,
like many others, followed a path
first laid out in the Modern West.”[1]
The strong presence of engineers
and scientists in Muslim fundamentalist
movements which is noted in work
on Iran, Turkey, Indonesia, and
Malaysia is indeed something that
requires some thought, although
I am not convinced that it is a
separation of faith and science
that allows them to participate
in these movements. It is rather,
I would argue, specific affinities
between spirituality and science
that allow this participation. In
the case of Islam it is a newly
militarised spirituality, which
enables a radical negation of a
conventional view of spirituality
as composed of compassionate and
merciful acts. This depends on a
counter-orientalist argument that
posits a spiritual, moral East that
can use rationality and science
for the welfare of Mankind and a
materialistic, morally debased West
that uses them to colonize and humiliate
others. As Mohamed Tavakoli-Targhi
has argued, one finds among these
radical Muslims, such as Mohammad
Atta, a readiness to destroy the
hateful Other of Western civilization
by going on a spiritual journey
of physical self-annihilation in
martyrdom.[2]
In this paper I will not examine
Islamist views on science, rationality,
and religion, but Hindu nationalist
views, both because I know more
about Hindu India and because I
think that the kinds of arguments
found in modern Islam can also be
found in other modern religions.
The focus on Islam in many studies
is the result of a particular geo-political
formation in which the Middle East
–and especially the Israeli occupation
of the West bank- make Muslim movements
clash with American interests. It
is not the result of the exceptionality
of Islam as a world religion.
The Indian Council for Social Science
Research -an institution comparable
to the French CNRS but limited to
the social sciences- is "making
a major effort to bring into the
Social Science arena advanced information
technology and the Internet through
the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Information
Gateway of Social Sciences" (from
an ICSSR brochure). The effort
to bring Information and Communication
Technologies (ICTs) to Indian social
sciences is laudable and much needed,
but who is or was S.P. Mookerjee?
Before the partition of the Indian
subcontinent he was a leader of
the Hindu Mahasabha and in 1951
one of the founders of the Bharatiya
Jana Sangh, the predecessor of the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which
is currently the leading party in
the Indian government under A.B.
Vajpayee. Mookerjee, a Bengali intellectual
and one-time Vice-Chancellor of
Calcutta University, was known for
a Hindu nationalism with a strong
anti-Muslim and anti-Pakistan bias.
It should not surprise us, of course,
that the Hindu nationalists who
are in power in Delhi today want
to honor their heroes and leaders
of the past. After Independence
Indian politics and Indian government
have been dominated by the Congress
Party that had a socialist
ideology, supported by a more or
less left-wing social science establishment.
The right-wing Hindu nationalists
in Indian society and politics had
been for a long time marginalized
and seize their change to reverse
the signs.[3]
But why would one name the information
highway after Mookerjee? What is
the connection between ICTs and
Hindu nationalism? One would perhaps
have expected that these nationalists
who emphasize the authenticity and
superiority of Hindu culture and
try to protect it from the vulgar
influence of the West would vehemently
resist agents of globalization,
such as ICTs. One would perhaps
also expect that the scientists
and engineers -and other highly
educated professionals- who form
the cadre of the informational
revolution- would feel little affinity
with the cultural politics of the
Hindu nationalists or would even
resist it. If it is not a scientific
spirit that underpins their work
then it might be an innovative
and entrepreneurial spirit. Descriptions
of the computer industry emphasize
the anti-hierarchical, anti-authoritarian
culture of this group as well as
a lifestyle that does not cherish
ancient values but youthful experimentation.
Especially the focus on 'newness'
would seem to be incompatible with
what is often seen as the traditionalizing,
anti-modernist spirit of religious
politics.
This paper begins -in a very tentative
fashion- to explore some of the
contradictions concerning the development
of science and technology on the
one hand and of religion and nationalism
on the other. The BJP government
has been extremely forceful in the
promotion of the new ICT industry
while, at the same time, its ideologues
denounce 'foreign' (that is Muslim
and Christian) influences on Indian
culture. To give only one example:
Ashok Singhal. leader of the Vishva
Hindu Parishad (a major ally of
the BJP), has denounced the award
of the Noble Prize to the economist
Amartya Sen as a 'Christian conspiracy'.
Sen's notion of the development
of human capital through education
(which, obviously, is a crucial
factor also in developing the ICT
industry) is seen as a threat to
the inculcation of Hindu values
in the curriculum.
First, I want to address some misunderstandings
concerning the relation between
science, technology, religion.
Secondly, I want to look at that
relation in the Indian context.
Thirdly. I want to explore the transnationalism
of ICT-workers and its relationship
with religion and Hindu nationalism.
Finally, I want to draw some tentative
conclusions about religious nationalism
and ICTs.
The Information Revolution
The rapid development of ICTs is
often called a revolution. These
new technologies, so the argument
runs, cause a complete transformation
of economy and society. The technological
determinism, inherent in these
arguments, resemble the claims made
for the industrial revolution. Manuel
Castells rightly rejects this determinism
by arguing that "technology is society,
and (that) society cannot be understood
or represented without its technological
tools".[4].
He thinks that what he calls "the
rise of the network society" is
a societal revolution which requires
a new sociological understanding.
Robins and Webster doubt that one
can even speak of a technological
revolution and argue that it is
a transformation in the management
and control over information resources
which is at issue.[5]
In their view the role of knowledge
structures and education is still
the key political issue to be addressed
whatever the new technological possibilities.
Despite his emphasis on a new sociology,
Castells slips, in the second volume
of his impressive trilogy on the
network society, called "The Power
of Identity", in an understanding
of religion as a purely reactionary
force. This perspective is precisely
part of a discourse of modernity
that is established in the 19th
century in the wake of the Industrial
Revolution and becomes dominant
in the USA after the Scopes trial
in the 1920s. This is therefore
'old' rather than 'new' sociological
thinking. According to Castells,
civil societies and national states
are disintegrating under the influence
of globalization and "the search
for meaning takes place then in
the reconstruction of defensive
identities around communal principles"
(II, 11).[6]
Religion is therefore not anymore
important as an apparatus in a
Gramscian civil society, but has
a new role as a communitarian,
defensive project. Castells ignores
mainstream institutions and focuses
on religious fundamentalists,
who are in the terms of the Chicago
Fundamentalism Project "always
reactive, reactionary". These religious
groups resist globalization and
its effects on the community and
the family, just as in the nineteenth
century they resisted modernization
and its effects on community and
family. The revolutionary world
is, again, divided in progressive
groups who creatively respond to
the new challenges of the time and
give them a positive meaning and
the reactionary groups who try to
rescue old types of life and would,
as the Luddites, prefer to destroy
the agents of change, the new technologies.
Religion is portrayed as defensive
and reactionary in this kind of
argument, because there is an implicit
assumption about religion under
modern conditions that science and
scientific reasoning marginalizes
religion and religious reasoning.
Religion can therefore not be progressive,
because it stands outside of the
progressive history of rational,
scientific thought. First of all,
there is the enlightenment view
that religious absolutism hinders
the growth of knowledge. The paradigmatic
case is, of course, Galilei and
his struggle against the Church,
but there are many celebrations
of the struggle of the powers of
light, liberty and rationality,
against the powers of darkness,
the church and the inevitable victory
of the secular mind. Secondly,
there is the notion that key discoveries
by scientists have delivered a fatal
blow to central religious doctrines.
The paradigmatic case here is Darwin's
discovery of evolution and the blow
it delivered to doctrines of creation.
In British history it is the victory
of Huxley over Bishop Wilberforce
in the 1860 Oxford Debate and the
wonderful literary rendering of
religious turmoil in Edmund Gosse's
Father and Son, while in
American history it is the 1920s
Scopes trial which illustrate the
notion of a clash between Religion
and Science best.
The historical evidence shows, however,
that instead of being a reactive
and even reactionary force in the
wake of the Industrial Revolution
religious movements and institutions
have been exceedingly creative in
shaping the transformation of society
in which new scientific and technological
knowledge was increasingly available.[7]
Imperialism, the form of globalization
that dominates the nineteenth century,
with its new technologies of government,
especially in the fields of education
and leisure, was profoundly shaped
by religion. And it is imperial
culture that provides the infrastructure
for scientific and technological
progress. There have also been almost
no attempts to stop the progress
of scientific inquiry in the modern
period on the basis of religious
arguments. The battle in some societies,
such as the USA, about the science
curriculum in primary and secondary
education is specifically about
the role of evolution theory in
it, but besides that there are very
few religious claims that immediately
clash with science. In fact, most
of what happens in the natural sciences
remains entirely beyond the comprehension
of the uninitiated.[8]
New technologies do, however, touch
the lifeworld of the wider society,
but they are in general (sometimes
with a time-lag) readily accepted
in most religious circles except
for a few marginal groups. In fact,
it is hard to discover a clash between
science and technology on the one
hand and religious doctrine on the
other. That this is so may well
be the result of the rapid declericalization
of scientific research and the
shift in power from the humanities
(including theology) to the natural
sciences. There is a large autonomy
of scientific research which is
not affected by larger religious
or moral debate. The social environment
in which this research takes place
and in which researchers live is,
however, in important ways shaped
by religious institutions. The
development of these institutions
determines the importance of religious
or secular doctrine in society.
The growth of scientific knowledge
does not result in an automatic
secularization of the mind.
The relative autonomy of scientific
research would seem to depend on
the separation of different spheres
of life and what some sociologist
have called the 'compartmentalization'
of the mind. Jurgen Habermas (while
referring to Hegel) summarizes
the development succinctly: "In
the process, the spheres in which
the individual led his life as
bourgeois, citoyen, and homme thereby
grew even more apart from one another
and became self-sufficient. This
separation and self-sufficiency.
which, considered from the standpoint
of philosophy of history, paved
the way for emancipation from age-old
dependencies, were experienced at
the same time as abstraction, as
alienation from the totality of
an ethical context of life. Once
religion had been the unbreakable
seal upon this totality; it is not
by chance that this seal has been
broken. The religious forces of
social integration grew weaker
in the wake of a process of enlightenment
that is just as little susceptible
of being revoked as it was arbitrarily
brought about in the first place."[9]
Religion has thus developed in modernity
from an all-embracing worldview
to an autonomous sphere, like science
and art, as Max Weber argued. This
is, obviously, also a cornerstone
of the secularization-thesis in
modernization theory. In his celebrated
essay 'Religion as a Cultural System'
Clifford Geertz distinguishes a
religious perspective from a scientific
one "in that it questions the realities
of everyday life not out of an institutionalized
scepticism which dissolves the world's
givenness into a swirl of probabilistic
hypotheses, but in terms of what
it takes to be wider, nonhypothetical
truths. Rather that detachment,
its watchword is commitment; rather
than analysis, encounter."[10]
In response Talal Asad has argued
that " "the optional flavor conveyed
by the term perspective
is surely misleading when it is
applied equally to science and to
religion in modern society: religion
is indeed now optional in a way
that science is not. Science and
technology together are basic to
the structure of modern lives,
individual and collective, and religion,
in any but the most vacuous sense,
is not."[11]
Science and technology, then, are
dominant, and religion is marginal.
For Habermas the project of Enlightenment
entails that the rationality of
science and universal morality replaces
religion in the organization of
everyday life. He rejects the celebration
of fragmentation in postmodernism
and sees the modernist project of
the Enlightenment to restore somekind
of unity as "not yet fulfilled".[12]
The notion that religion signified
the unity and totality of life before
modernity seems to me a stereotypical,
romantic representation of the holism
of 'pre-modern' life. It fits a
sociological approach to society,
as found in structural-functionalism,
which sees society as a system with
sub-systems. Sociological (and
political) discourse about integration
and about norms and values which
hold a society together belong to
this perspective. If we approach
social phenomena and historical
change from a history of power with
an emphasis on the production of
knowledge by movements and institutions
(as Asad does), it seems clear that
science and technology, as produced
in universities and industries,
have become very powerful in producing
knowledge that affects people's
lives and that churches and religious
movements have no role anymore in
the production of this kind of knowledge.
This would imply that they can still
be creative forces in shaping social
life and creating religious dispositions,
including responses to scientific
and technological changes, but are
not anymore the institutional sites
for the creation of such changes.
While this definitely shows a marginalization
of religious institutions in the
production of important knowledge,
it does not imply a marginalization
in social and political life.
Let me illustrate this with the
development of science and Christianity
in contemporary US society. There
is no doubt that the research institutions
in the US are the major sites of
the production of scientific and
technological knowledge in the contemporary
world. At the same time a Gallup
poll in the mid-1970s showed that
over one-third of adult American
(50 million Americans) described
themselves as 'born-again', that
is as having experienced 'a turning
point in your life and when you
committed yourself to Jesus Christ
and felt "that the Bible is the
actual Word of God and is to be
taken literally, word for word".[13]
Do these two facts -scientific productivity
and religious fundamentalism- in
one society conflict? No, they do
not, except for the debate about
creationism and evolutionism which
is marginal to most science. Even
the fact that so many Americans
are biblical literalists does not
seem to affect their participation
in the scientific and technological
activities in their society. Does
this imply that there is a separation
of spheres which are relatively
autonomous? Only in the sense that
laboratories and churches are different
sites of the production of knowledge
and that these knowledge have different
effects, but not in the sense that
they can be reified as separate
spheres. The relative irrelevance
of science for religious doctrine
and vice versa does not marginalize
the public role of religious institutions
and movements in the US. Jerry Falwell's
Moral Majority was perhaps the
most important political movement
in the US in the 1980s. The support
it gave to the military-industrial
complex in its Christian patriotism
has been of crucial importance to
the funding of scientific research
for military purposes and that includes
the development of the Internet.
The development of the new ICTs
has been and will be overwhelmingly
dependent on military research.[14]
Moreover, the Moral Majority made
ample use of the technological advances
in communication and consumption
(telemarketing, television, theme
parks) to bring the message of the
literal truth of the Bible. This
is continued in the 1990s with the
full use of the new ICTs by these
movements. What is particularly
striking is the extent to which
these movements occupy the same
terrain as secular humanist movements
and with a similar flexibility and
versatility. They are not outside
modernity, but fully part of it.
Hindu Science and ICTs
Compared to the USA India is definitely
not at the cutting edge of scientific
and technological production. It
is a relatively poor country with
low literacy rates and low life
expectancy. It does not have the
wealth which would be required
for huge investments in research.
Nevertheless, from the nineteenth
century there has been in India,
as in the rest of the modern world,
a constant development of modern
science and technology. Moreover,
there can be little doubt of the
centrality of science to the Indian
nationalist project in its various
incarnations, including the Hindu
one. Even more than elsewhere the
Indian idea is that science and
religion belong together. One of
the questions posed by Hindu nationalists
was how it happened that modern
science and technology had not been
developed in Hindu civilization,
superior as it was. This question
had also been persistently raised
by the British and answered by
them in terms of an essential difference
between Indian backwardness, mainly
ascribed to Hinduism, and British
forwardness, mainly ascribed to
a combination of rationality and
Christian morality. The British
could not get enough of stories
about the bewilderment of natives
when they saw the railways or telegraphs.
They mixed this view of the naivete
of the common people with the quite
Protestant view about Hindu priests
who had misled the common people
with false knowledge. The response
to this notion of Western and Christian
superiority naturally was one of
Hindu superiority. Hindu scientists
searched for and found an archaic
Hindu science in the Vedas and other
sacred scripture. Some of the assertions
were simply that rituals had results
which could be scientifically demonstrated
or that certain technological inventions
were already mentioned in ancient
scriptures. Others were more sophisticated
in their use of scientific experimentation
to show some basic philosophical
points of Hinduism, such as the
research done by J.C. Bose (1858-1937),
the renowned physicist, who used
his work on electric waves to explore
consciousness in plants in order
to prove Hindu monism. Perhaps the
most important and lasting effort
to connect Hinduism and science
can be found in the field of health
practices, from the Ayurveda, an
indigenous system of doctrines and
practices concerning health, and
Unani, its Islamic counterpart,
to the system of yoga which unites
notions of Hindu spirituality with
disciplines of the body to create
mens sana in corpore sano. The extent
to which allopathic (Western) medicine
is combined in India with homeopathic
and Ayurvedic medicine and
not seen as conflicting systems
is quite striking till the present
day.
Modern science then was not rejected,
but embraced and creatively translated
in Hindu civilizational terms. The
idea of scientific rationality
was used both by secular modernists,
like Nehru, to nationalize science
and to marginalize religion and
by Hindu nationalists to nationalize
religion and appropriate the 'scientific
spirit' and apply it in the
reform of certain Hindu customs.
Science is a field that both secularists
and religious nationalists wished
to take away from the imperialist
project and celebrate as truly their
own. This was done with such fervor
that science and technology came
to be the hallmark of Indian civilization
for all members of the Indian intelligentsia
whatever there political views,
except for Gandhi and the Gandhians
who remained radical outsiders
in this regard. All this is, obviously,
quite contrary to the popular view
in the West that Indian civilization
is a mystical one, focused on renouncing
the world and instrumental rationality.
For Nehru especially it was quite
clear that the spirit of science
had to be harnessed to the project
of modernizing India. He did not
see science and technology as in
themselves solving the basic needs
of life, unless it was harnessed
to a superior morality than that
available in imperialism. In
The Discovery of India (1946)
Nehru showed that Indian civilization
possessed great moral resources
which would help it to appropriate
modern science for the common good.[15]
Gandhi, on the other hand, could
easily be portrayed as a Luddite
with his spinning-wheel. But, as
Gyan Prakash has pointed out, he
was not against technology as such,
but against the enslavement that
industrialization had brought India.[16]
Only if one could resist the capitalist
drive which was destroying the world
one could use technology appropriately.
Both Nehru and Gandhi, then, had
(often opposite) visions of the
use of science and technology, but
they agreed that they should be
embedded in a civilizational morality
and that India was superior to the
West in this regard.
While there was some lip-service
paid to the Gandhian philosophy
of appropriate technology in the
post-independence period (ironically
described in V.S. Naipaul's A
wounded Civilization, 1977),
Nehru's views dominated the scene
for several decades. Nehru cared
less for the growth of pure science
than for the rational planning
of India's development. Science
(and especially the science of Economics)
and technology (especially applied
in heavy industry) would be instrumental
to a social change which would be
scientifically planned and executed.
It is immediately clear why engineering
had such an importance for Nehru.
He gave full support to the education
of scientists and engineers and
this is a major reason why especially
engineering colleges (as well as
medical colleges) have flourished
in Independent India.
Transnational Engineers and
Hindu Nationalism
The very top of the education pyramid
in India is formed by the Indian
Institutes of Technology which
have a competitive selection that
can only be compared to the top
echelon of American institutions
such as MIT and CalTech. Below that
one finds a whole range of engineering
colleges of varying quality. This
system of higher education depends
on a huge system of pre-college
education in which math and science
are very important topics. In interviews
with Indian engineers that I held
in the USA an often-heard view was
not only that education was a prime
value, but that Indian education
was superior to American primary
and secondary education especially
in the fields of math and science.
Some of them wanted to send their
children back to India for that
very reason. Even when one considers
that we are dealing here with an
elite group that can afford private
schooling in India this remains
a striking observation about Indian
education.
Thanks to this high level of education
for the most gifted (and socially
best positioned) in India there
has been a long-standing tradition
of pursuing higher research education
and training (at the Ph.D. level)
in Western universities. It has
been observed that Graduate Schools
of Engineering in the US in the
1970s would have had to close because
of too little interest in engineering
careers in the US population, if
not for the influx of Chinese and
Indian students.[17]
This coincided with the Immigration
Act of 1965 in the US which allowed
for a much larger quota for immigration
for highly trained and educated
professionals. The Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1990 tripled
the number of visas granted on the
basis of occupational skills and
thus further enhanced the immigration
of engineers. These new laws made
it also possible for Indian students
to stay on in the US. The earlier
preference for going to the UK
was replaced with a craze for 'green
cards'. Nehru's vision of an Indian
modernity which would be created
by Indian engineers and scientists
and would allow India to be fully
self-sufficient ironically laid
the basis for the emergence of a
transnational cadre of Indian engineers
who would be instrumental in creating
wealth in the West.
The informational revolution, if
it is a revolution, is being created,
primarily, by engineers and many
of them are Indian. There is a recent
study of Chinese and Indian entrepreneurs
in Silicon Valley by Saxenian that
shows that between 1975 and 1990
the foreign-born population of
the region doubled to almost 350.000.[18]
According to the 1990 census more
than half of Asian-born engineers
in the region were of Chinese or
Indian descent. In 1998 24 % of
the High-Tech firms started in Silicon
Valley were run by a Chinese or
Indian CEO. Together they employed
more than 58.000 workers. A difference
between Chinese-run and Indian-run
firms is that the former are more
concentrated in computer and electronic
hardware manufacturing and trade,
while the latter are in software
and business services. Saxenian
relates that to the superior English
language skills of Indian immigrants.
The transnational migration of what
sometimes are called 'knowledge
workers' has economic effects on
both the country of immigration
and on the country of origin. Saxenian's
study demonstrates clearly that
the politically motivated fears
in California about Asian immigrants
who take jobs away from native workers
are false, because these Asians
have massively created new jobs.
There is a clear awareness in the
American business community that
the arrival of Asian engineers and
scientists has been a great blessing
for the American economy. The effects
of the departure of these professionals
on the Indian economy have generally
been captured under the negative
term 'brain-drain'. Clearly many
more Indian professionals stay in
the US after having benefitted from
Indian education than return. In
short, India's brain drain is the
USA's brain gain. The effects of
this can be probably calculated
in terms of investments in education
versus remittances, but the issue
is more complex and interesting
than that. Binod Khadria distinguishes
financial resource flows, technological
resource flows and human resource
flows back to India and comes to
a very sceptical assessment of the
benefits for India thus far.[19]
The negative effects on Indian economy
and society from the emigration
of scientists and engineers could,
however, be reversed by the 'death
of distance' inherent in the new
ICTs which makes it in principle
possible that the work done by Indian
ICT specialists in the US (and elsewhere
in the developed world) is also
done in India itself. The rise of
high-tech sites in Bangalore and
Hyderabad, as well as in a number
of other cities in India, mainly
initiated by US-based or US-returned
Indian entrepreneurs may bear that
possibility out. This development
has great potential which is already
clear in the effects of this industry
on Indian economy, but the real
issue is whether this industry which
is still by-and-large providing
low-grade, low-wage, low value-added
services to the global market can
develop into a more upgraded software
industry. Transnational networks
of NRIs and their India-based counterparts
would be essential for such a development.
The social field created by transnational
migration would then really grow
into a decentred economic field,
enabled by ICTs.
What could motivate NRIs to return
to India and/or invest in its development?
My suggestion would be that the
historically established notion
of the superiority of Hindu culture
and the prominent place of science
and technology in it is crucial
here. These notions are not only
inculcated in the upbringing of
Indian migrants who were born in
India, but also actively propagated
by the Vishva Hindu Parishad, the
religious ally of the BJP. The
VHP is a movement that is very active
globally and one of the prime agents
of the globalization of Hinduism.
In the USA it is active since 1974,
following sizable immigration
from India. The anti-Muslim politics
which is central to its activities
in India, does not make much sense
in the USA. Anti-globalization
rhetoric is conspicuously absent
from the VHP propaganda in the
USA and rightly so, since its supporters
there are strongly in favor of
the liberalization and globalization
of the economy.[20]
As NRIs they have also direct personal
advantage in the free flow of capital.
The focus of the VHP in the USA
is, as with many religious movements
globally, on the family. The
great fear of Indian migrants to
the USA is not so much the threat
to the patriarchal nature of the
Hindu family (as one would expect
from Castells's analysis), since
many of these migrants are well-educated
professionals, and depend on two
incomes. Rather, it is the struggle
to reproduce Hindu culture in a
foreign environment in order to
socialize their children in the
hybridity of Indian-Americans.
The fear is often that the children
will lose all touch with the culture
of the parents and thus, in some
sense, be lost to them. Both Internet-chatgroups
and youth camps are organised by
the VHP to keep Hinduism alive
among young Indians in the USA.
As Arvind Rajagopal rightly observes
in his insightful article on the
VHP in the USA, the VHP needs different
tactics, different objectives in
different places in order to be
able to recruit members. In India
it is a nationalist movement, but
in the US it is a global religious
movement. Arjun Appadurai's work
on globalization has reminded us
how important it is to keep these
disjunctures and differences in
global flows in view.[21]
Even with all this cultural politics
it would still be difficult for
Indian entrepreneurial engineers
to be interested in India economically
if the state would not encourage
them. This it has been doing to
some extent already under the Congress
governments from 1985. The global
economic ideology of liberalization
and privatization has affected
India in a major way. In India this
was introduced by Rajiv Gandhi's
government in 1985 in terms of
'bringing India in the 21st century'
and with a major effort to bring
ICTs into India. The favorite themes
of the Rajiv Gandhi administration
were the introduction of advanced
technology, imported from outside
of India and the replacement of
the old ethos of authartic asceticism
with a new ethos of westernized
consumerism. It is crucial to realize
that ICTs not only made consumerist
identities more viable, but also
became a new avatar of a technological
nationalism, reminiscent of the
Nehruvian pride in great hydraulic
works and heavy industry of the
fifties, but differing from it
in its stress on individualism instead
of collectivism.
In 1991 the technological enthusiasm
for ICTs, depending, as it is, on
the lifting of import restrictions,
was further enhanced when the government
agreed to implement a comprehensive
liberalization and reform package
negotiated by the IMF. Already
much earlier the Indian government
made special arrangements for the
remittances of that hyphenated social
category: the non-resident Indian
(NRI). The Foreign Exchange Regulations
Act of 1973 includes in this category:
1. citizens of India living abroad
for the purpose of carrying on a
business or career, but declaring
their intention to stay in India
for an indefinite period. 2. Persons
of Indian origin holding a passport
of another country. One is of Indian
origin if one has held an Indian
passport, or if either of the parents
or grandparents was Indian. The
wife of a person of Indian origin
is held to be of Indian origin too.
Citizenship nor residence is thus
the criteria for deciding on this
category, but 'origin' is and
in that sense it has much in common
with the German genealogical definition
of belonging to the German nation
and having the right to return to
Germany. The main reason for the
Indian state to create this category
is to raise foreign exchange, since
NRIs are allowed to deposit money
in Indian banks with competitive,
guaranteed rates of interest. Transnational
investment and the cultural capital
of 'belonging' go hand in hand here.[22]
Some final observations
Science and technology are central
to conceptualizations of Indian
modernity, both in its secular and
its Hindu variants. The enlightenment
notion that there is an opposition
between science and religion has
been an important element in sociological
theories of modernity and secularity,
but cannot be historically justified.
It has been an ideological notion
in particular secularist movements,
especially in Western Europe, but
has to be sociologically recognized
as such. It is quite striking how
provincial the sociological understanding
of modernity often has been.[23]
In societies as diverse as India
and the USA 'Enlightenment fundamentalism'
(to use Gellner's term) has only
played a very marginal role. There
is no reason at all to expect Hindu
engineers and scientists to 'lose
their religion' and become secular.
Hindu modernity includes an ideological
valuation of science and technology.
The empirical question is rather
to explore what religion does for
them; what kind of specific needs
it produces or addresses. The
globalization of production and
consumption, including the flexibility
and mobility of labour, is addressed
by movements like the Vishva Hindu
Parishad and is a major element
in their nationalist politics of
'belonging'. The idea that 'symbolic
analysts' (to use Robert Reich's
term) are rootless because they
are highly mobile misunderstands
the imaginary nature of roots. To
have roots requires a lot of work
for the imagination (dream-work).
One element of that dream-work is
that pride in one's nation of origin
is important in the construction
of self-esteem in the place of immigration.
It gives a different feeling to
admit that one is from a country
ravaged by famines and floods than
to say with pride that one is from
a superior civilization that is
also very good in high-tech developments.[24]
The coherence of a Hindu modernity
tied to the sovereignty of India's
past and territory is gradually
given way to a postmodern bricolage
of deterritorialized and dehistoricized
discourses on family values and
cyber-spirituality which is very
hard to capture. Contrary to what
their opponents think these movements
are not 'outside of modernity',
they were very much part of it and
are now moving beyond it.
Science and technology are instrumental
in the transformation of the lifeworld
and therefore have a considerable
impact on religious communication
and on religious notions of the
self and of belonging. The mediation
and virtuality involved in the
new technologies of communication,
like the internet, may have a profound
impact on religious communication.
Religion is not only mediated, but
is also crucially concerned with
the forms and practices of mediation.
According to William James religion
is founded on the subjective experience
of an invisible presence. This
may be true, but we only have access
to that subjective experience through
the mediation of concrete practices,
such as speaking, writing, acts
of worship, while, at the same
time, these acts may be considered
to produce the experience. There
is a whole range of activities
which induce religious dispositions
and which are about the relation
between human subjects and, what
I would like to call provisionally
for lack of a better term, 'the
supernatural'. Crucial in that mediation
is the relative invisibility of
the supernatural or, perhaps better,
its virtuality. There is always
in religious mediation an ambivalence
about the addressee and about the
arrival of the message which is
connected to epistemological uncertainty.
I cannot explore this here, but
it is clear to me that this is an
area of substantial interest if
one wants to understand religious
transformation.[25]
To give one example. One of many
websites with the word prathana
(means 'prayer') in it is E-Prarthana,
where one can 'click a deity' and
address Hindu deities in more than
450 temples in India.[26]
This might be interpreted as just
a technological advance to prayer
by mail and money-order, but the
communicative possibilities are
much larger.
In order to assess the relative
centrality or marginality of religious
discourses and practices in society
one has to examine processes of
state formation and the dynamics
of religious institutions and movements.
For Nehru the state was central
to the project of modernity. His
entire conception was tied up with
the idea of engineering and naturally
scientists and engineers played
a dominant role in that. This kind
of view of the role of the state
has been entirely discredited since
the 1980s almost everywhere and
also in India. The transnational
class of IT engineers is obviously
a carrier of the ideology of deregulation,
privatization and economic liberalization.
It is individual entrepreneurship
which they have learned to celebrate
in California, not the planning
commission. With that they have
become postmodern in the sense that
they will not accept Nehru's socialist
vision that modernization can only
be brought about by the state. Contrary
to what one sometimes thinks, however,
the tremendous transformation
of Indian society required to develop
the IT-sector requires not less
state, but a different state. The
process of regionalization which
has developed quite rapidly in Indian
politics in the 1980s and 1990s
seems, to give only one example,
to be precisely one of those processes
of state formation which are required
for the development of certain cities
in certain regions for the IT-sector.
Hindu nationalism is the major force
which counterbalances these centrifugal
developments and it operates exactly
in this field of tension between
territorial and cultural unity.
Before our eyes the spectacle of
a postmodern India seem to emerge
in which ICTs enhance regionalization,
in which relisoaps transform Hinduism,
in which the huge problems of spatial
mobility and transport might be
partly undercut by the electronic
highway, in which house prizes in
Bombay are higher than New York,
in which Hindu nationalists support
ICTs, but try to boycott Miss World
elections.
[1]
Sam Fleischacker in The
Guardian, Friday October
19, 2001
[2]
Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi,
“Frontline Mysticism and
Eastern Spirituality.
ISIM Newsletter, 9,
2002.
[3]
About Hindu nationalism,
see Peter van der Veer,
Religious Nationalism.
Hindus and Muslims in India.
Berkeley, University of
California Press, 1994.
[4]
Manuel Castells, The
Rise of the Network Society.
Oxford, Blackwell, 1996,
5.
[5]
Kevin Robins and Frank Webster,
Times of the Technoculture.
From the information society
to the virtual life.
London: Routledge, 1999,
91.
[6]
Manuel Castells, The
Power of Identity, Oxford:
Blackwell 1997.
[7] Peter van der Veer, Imperial
Encounters. Religion and
Modernity in India and Britain.
Princeton, Princeton University
Press, 2001.
[8]
My stay at the Institute
for Advanced Study in Princeton
(which is dominated by mathematicians
and theoretical physicists)
in 1995 made that annoyingly
clear to me,
[9]
Jurgen Habermas, Philosophical
Discourse of Modernity.
Cambridge, MIT Press, 1987,
83.
[10]
Clifford Geertz, The
Interpretation of Cultures.
New York: Basic Books, 1973,
112.
[11]
Talal Asad, Genealogies
of Religion. Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1993: 49.
[12]
Jurgen Habermas, 'Modernity-An
Incomplete Project' acceptance
speech for the Adorno Prize
in 1980, New German Critique,
22, 1981, 3-15. See also
J.F. Lyotard's response,
Answering the Question:
What is Postmodernism' in
I. Hassan and Hassan S.
(eds) Innovation/Renovation.
Madison: University of Wisconsin
Press, 1983, 71-82.
[13]
see Susan Harding, The
Book of Jerry Falwell. Fundamentalist
language and politics.
Princeton, Princeton University
Press, 2000.
[14]
see Robins and Webster,
op.cit.
[15]
I take here Gyan Prakash's
interpretation in his
Another Reason. Science
and the Imagination of Modern
India. Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1999,
213.
[16]
This follows an argument,
generally accepted, by Indian
nationalists of all persuasions
that Britain's industrial
ascendancy (the Industrial
Revolution) had ben accomplished
by ruining the Indian economy.
This thesis had been brilliantly
formulated in R.C. Dutt's
Economic History of India
(1901-1903) which became
a nationalist classic. Its
argument is very close to
the 'development of underdevelopment'
thesis formulated in the
1960s by Andre Gundur Frank.
[17]
Between 1985 and 1996 62
percent of all the doctorates
in science and engineering
granted to foreigners in
the US were given to Chinese
and Indians.
[18]
The data on Silicon Valley
are based on Anna Lee Saxenian,
Silicon Valley's New
Immigrant Entrepreneurs.
Public Policy Institute,
San Francisco, CA, 1999/
[19]
see Binod Khadria, The
Migration of Knowledge Workers.
Second-Generation Effects
of India's Brain Drain.
New Delhi: Sage, 1999. I
am grateful to Jan Breman
for bringing this book to
my notice.
[20]
Arvind Rajagopal, 'Transnational
Networks and Hindu Nationalism',
Bulletin of Concerned
Asian Scholars, 29,
3, 1997.
[21]
see Arjun Appadurai,
Modernity at Large.
Minneapolis, University
of Minnesota Press, 1997.
[22]
see the interesting argument
by Arvind Rajagopal, op.cit.
[23]
I think here in specific
of the work of the late
Ernest Gellner, but I single
him out only for his extraordinary
combination of extreme clarity
and wrongheadedness.
[24]
see Peter van der Veer (ed)
Nation and Migration.
The Politics of Belonging
in the South Asian Diaspora.
Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press, 1995.
[25]
see also Peter van der Veer,
'Religious Mediation' in
Enrique Larreta (ed)
Media and Social Perception.
Rio de Janeiro: Unesco,
1999, 345-356.
[26]
I am grateful to Sudeep
Dasgupta for pointing this
site out to me.
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