Belief, Faith and Superstition in the Context of a Post
Modern World
Green Movement activists are always puzzled, when wars are
waged and gods are invoked simultaneously. Surely the arms industry is about
politics, loot and commercial stakes, with a handful of diplomatic, or
alternatively, virulently absurd hate speeches, thrown in? Similarly, when
disease is linked by political oratory to past lives, we feel some anxiety. Is
this the way that the politicians and their representative sadhus are evading social
responsibility for illness and their institutional obligations?
Other people’s beliefs are thought by us to be
superstitions, our own beliefs are imagined to be about real faith. However,
“faith” could very well be in Science, which takes on the contexts of religious
suspension, as well as toleration for other people’s imagined spaces. Durkheim used the category of sacred and
profane to argue that the two are divided, hierarchical and antagonistic.
“Sacred” is anything that which is seen to be higher, and valued. The Indian
flag was sacred till a young woman wore it as a designer garment and had to go
to court to prove that its secular use was acceptable to society and the judge.
The Indian flag is used to wrap the coffins of dead soldiers. Therefore, the
idea of religious need not be an intrinsic part of the sacred. Anything,
anything at all, can be considered sacred, as long as it is kept apart from the
mundane or routine which profanes it.
Religious ideas are sacred to those who belong to a particular
community, but may not be sacred to those who do not believe in that religion
or its ideals. Emile Durkheim and Marcel
Mauss, two important Sociologists who survived the First World War, while many
members of their Annales School died, suggested that if the Gods are not
worshipped, they die. Therefore, God, religious texts, prophets and priests
were social fabrications. Many of the ideological debates that surround us
today represent the way in which individuals and communities position
themselves vis a vis their religion, their faith, their dogmas and liturgies.
So Fundamenatalists believe that if you don’t believe in their religion or
their God you will go to hell, if you don’t join the jehad you won’t have
houris welcome you to Paradise, and that
your karma gives you cancer.
Ordinary people, in
India, are exalted by their religious experience. They have an intense belief
in this world, their place in it, their hopes and dreams are all laced by ideas
of beneficence and joy. Their sorrow arises often from their sense of neglect
because the Gods and Goddesses have ignored their prayers. As a result cults
arise which offer wealth, jobs, and
dreams of travel and recognition are continuously pursued with the help
of the guru, who commands the fates to deliver. Max Weber was immensely
interested in the idea that the priest was the “magician of the mass”, the idea
being that through his prayers, the bread turned into the body of Christ. In
parallel form, we understand how simple halwa becomes prasad, an embodiment of
the food of the Gods. Faith turns material things into spiritual presences, the
aura of the divine is all around us, only if we are open to it.
Recognition of the divine is not given to everyone, just as
logic is not the turn of thought of politicians. If it were so, the Nation
State would not endorse 33 percent of jail records among active politicians in parliament. The
accumulation of bad karma is what they are best known for. Cheating, lying and
looting is their usual modus operandi, ghettoization of the poor and killing
them by leaving them to die in the cold or extreme heat of hunger, is definitely contributing to
politicians bad karma.
Rather than selectively imagining our past lives,
ignoring human rights, and conceding to
the hegemony of cultural tropes, which impose notions of good and evil, based
on a variety of religious symbols, we need to get to the root cause of sorrow
and death. Sarvam Dukham is written in our biological inheritance, it is
compounded by our degradation in an entropy ridden universe. In the last
century, humans lived till forty or forty five years, and most likely, dental
problems and bone loss killed them off.
Susan Sontag argued that Tuberculosis became the symbol of the 19th
century factory system, Cancer of the 2ist century industrial society, and AIDS
the curse of post modern professional and information societies. Human genetic coding will change rapidly with
the compartmentalization of the populations of the world into those who are
exposed to severe radiation, personally by choice, or collectively by
imposition, for who can escape the radiation from the mobile tower? As Christ said “The meek shall
inherit the earth” translated as we shall have Gandhian economics.