Who invented Hinduism?
Asia Times Online12 November 2005South AsiaBOOK REVIEWThe evolution of HinduismWas Hinduism Invented? by Brian K PenningtonReviewed by Aruni MukherjeeWilliam Wilberforce, a British parliamentarian who died in 1833, once  spoke of the "dark and bloody superstitions" that embody the creed  that came to be termed Hinduism.Prior to that, the mind-boggling diversity in sub-continental  religious practices existed without a common definition to bind them  together, and this "crystallization of the concept" is what Brian K  Pennington traces in his book Was Hinduism Invented? Britons, Indians  and the Colonial Construction of Religion.Between 1789 and 1832, the Orientalist fascination for the "cloud of  fables" - according to William Jones, the 18th century Indian  historian - embodied in Vedic literature was replaced by the East  India Company-backed intelligentsia who were preoccupied with  utilitarian criticisms of the "sinister principles" of the same,  depicted nowhere more vividly than in the works of James Mill and  Thomas Macaulay.Pennington argues that the modern avatar of the somewhat homogenized  ancient religion that can be loosely termed Hinduism is a direct  reaction to such seething and degrading criticism from the colonial  academics, some of it indeed valid (such as vilifying the sati  tradition - the traditional Hindu practice of a widow immolating  herself on her husband's funeral pyre).He argues that the elites within Hindu society entered a "dialectical  space" with colonialism, thereby producing a defensive self- determined version of their faith. While celebrating colonial  promotion of certain scriptures, they vehemently opposed  stereotyping, as can be seen in the outcry among the Bengali educated  middle classes over the label of the effeminate babu. This similar  dialectic process was behind the rise of Hindu nationalism in the  late 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as behind the progress  made by the Hindutva movement of the late 1990s.Nevertheless, Pennington refuses to present the colonial state with  the credit of transforming "fragmented, disparate, localized,  particularistic and ever-changing mini traditions" into a world  religion. Whereas "Indophoebia" and the "racist science" of the 19th  century did indeed contribute substantially toward the development of  a defensive definition of Hinduism, crediting the state with the  invention of Hinduism as we know it is ignoring the "mess of  encounters" that can better explain this development.Whereas literary critic Edward Said accused the West of  essentializing the East, the opposite argument is also true.  Pennington makes a distinction between various classes of Hinduism's  "other", and argues that class, nationality, outlook and background  of the actors on the ground made the encounters between, say, a  missionary and a peasant much different from that between a colonial  academic and a local historian.What follows from the importance of the nature of the "other" is the  fundamental significance of religious values in this discourse,  discarded by many schools of historians preferring to focus solely on  socio-economic trends. Pennington associates himself with Partha  Chatterjee who wrote in the first volume of the Subaltern Studies  about the various ways in which the downtrodden communities often  express themselves in the form of their religion. This is also seen  in the works of David Hardiman on Adivasis or indigenous people in  western India, as well as that of Saurabh Dube on the Satnamis of  central India.Pennington uses a relatively small number of first-hand sources, but  adheres closely to them. The archives of the Church Missionary  Society reveal the attitudes of missionaries toward evangelizing the  natives, an attitude advocated by many including Charles Grant, the  Scottish politician, and Wilberforce. On the other hand, the  transformation in colonial attitudes can be seen in the archives of  the Asiatick Researches, which gradually gets taken over by colonial  influences, sidelining the Orientalists. He also dwells on the  religious newspaper Samacar Chandrika published by Bhabanicaran  Bandyopadhyaya, which took on the task to refute much of the  essentialism dished out by colonial literature. However, all of this  does strengthen the author's point about the importance of religion,  explicit or implicit, in colonial policy-making.Two questions beg to be answered by Pennington. First, he says  nothing about the crude distinction made by the colonial state  between "martial" and "non-martial" races in the subcontinent, and  the various categories of castes it defined. Such essentialization  went a long way toward complicating the already juxtaposed threads of  Hinduism, and much of that legacy exists to this day.Moreover, whereas the colonial state may not have explicitly defined  Hinduism, its criticisms of the same nevertheless led to Hindu  nationalism adopting a very homogenous and essentially narrow view of  Hinduism. As Amartya Sen has argued in his recent work The  Argumentative Indian, Hinduism is simply too diverse to speak of in  one single breath. Therefore, the prevalent definition of Hinduism  (as in the stereotype used in the public domain today) may well have  been invented during the high noon of colonialism.Second, Pennington argues that there is increasingly a "need of  structuring the relationship of religion and the nation state". This  contemporary universal "need" can be readily questioned if one looks  at secular Europe and India. Debates about race relations in Britain  and France, and that of minority reservations in India are more to do  with social exclusion and opportunities rather than any concerns  about delineating the contours of state and religion. A more relevant  discussion is the Middle East, where Islam and the nation state  remain problematically juxtaposed.However, Pennington is in need of recognizing the "essence" of Hindu  philosophical writings during times much before his book covers, but  which can indeed be a useful apparatus to determine the role of the  state vis-a-vis religion. The image of the Brahmin holding the sveta- chattra (white umbrella) over the king was never involved in the  analytical modus operandi of the colonial state while defining Hinduism.On the larger question of whether contemporary Hinduism was invented,  Pennington seems to adopt a persuasive argument. Whether there exists  an alternative and distinct definition is a question that he leaves  unexplored.Was Hinduism Invented? Britons, Indians and the Colonial Construction  of Religion by Brian K Pennington. Oxford University Press, April,  2005. ISBN 0195166558, hardback. Price:$45, 260 pages.Aruni Mukherjee is based at the University of Warwick, England.(Copyright 2005 Aruni Mukherjee)
        
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
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