The other night I came across a very thought provoking article by Madhu Kishwar on the Hinduism Today website. It was entitled, “A peaceful coexistence of religions requires more than tolerance.”
In it Kishwar writes:
“Unfortunately, many modern secularists, who insist that inter-community harmony can be established only when everyone gives up all their religious taboos, end up creating more strife than harmony.”
………………….
“American scholar Paul Courtright, caused a major uproar recently because the author used Freudian analysis to interpret Ganesh’s elephant head and trunk in sexual terms. Those Hindus who led the campaign against this book saw it as part of a deep-rooted bias in Western academia, stemming from a tendency to trivialize or demonize Indic religions and cultures. The book is undoubtedly the product of painstaking research, and Courtright obviously knows more about the stories, myths and legends surrounding Ganesha than many practicing Hindus. What offended believers, was not his lack of knowledge but his use of a totally alien and inappropriate tool of analysis to deal with the belief system and iconography of a faith that does not lend itself to a Freudian worldview.”
“This is a classic example of conflicts arising not out of too little knowledge, but too much of it, combined with the unconsciously imbibed arrogance of a Western academia which assumes that its tools of analysis give it the right to understand and pass judgment on the experiences of all human beings. Instead of dealing with what was actually a criticism leveled at their intellectual approach, many Western Indologists treated the conflict as a case of “academic freedom ” versus an intolerance of Hindu community leaders. Such an approach left the conflict unresolved in a bitter stalemate.”………………….
“While it is true that academic freedom should be preserved, it should also be acknowledged that every cultural community should be treated with respect and integrity.”
This all got me really thinking … but then Kishwar comes out with this:
“The concept of God in Christianity (as well as that of other Abrahamic traditions) poses the biggest challenge for interfaith harmony. We cannot provide meaningful interfaith education without effectively combating the culture of intolerance derived from a belief in the inherent superiority of an exclusivist, hierarchical, jealous God…”
So the only way we can have religious harmony is if Christians and other monotheistic faiths abandon monotheism? How is that treating the Christian tradition with “respect and integrity?” Once again, tolerance language leads into intolerant paradox. What do you think?







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