Don’t Teach Religion to India!

The colonial hangover is not yet over. The previously colonised races are still living in the shadows of a dream-world of living that never was, a patronage of the all-powerful, all-knowing colonisers that never existed, and reminisce about the ‘good old days’ when everything was so smooth and easy, when everything had been taken care of by the all-merciful, all-compassionate colonisers, who had to ‘sacrifice’ so much to make themselves home in their colonies like India, where they were confronted with whatever their white bodies had never experienced before: dirt, poverty, illiteracy, a medley of confusion, so on and so forth. The colonised, in this case, the Indians, are living with the same image of themselves as the colonisers painted for them and maintained till seventy-two years ago. After they left, sincere and faithful Indians have taken up the baton and continue to worship this image of an intellectually, culturally, spiritually, and economically depraved nation. The strange part of this phenomenon is that even the millennials, for whom colonization means nothing but a few pages of their historybooks, carry this image, rather cherish it.

Being emotionally and ideologically enamoured and in reality, being cowed down by the seemingly magical powers of the white colonisers, has caused serious damage in the past and is continuing to fragment and severely break the Indian national identity. The point of the present discussion, however, is the damage that this psyche has caused to the field of religion in India, both in theory and practice. Right from the beginning of the eighteenth century, some Western scholars started studying Indian religions. Among these scholars were two main groups. One group was trying to learn from the ancient Indian wisdom contained in texts in different languages, primarily Sanskrit, but also Pali, and many other vernaculars. They unearthed manuscripts, made critical editions incorporating various versions of a text, transcribed and translated these texts, and did many other activities to start a tradition of Indology in non-Indian languages like German and English. The other group, on the other hand, did many of the works that the first group did, but with the ulterior motive of proving to the world that Indian religions were basically pagan, inhuman, and savage belief-systems and that the world was better off without them.


India does not need Western religious
preachers but Western benefactors.


The Western mind, particularly the American mind, is exceptional in organising and managing, as observed by Swami Vivekananda. Thus, when the Westerners started dabbling with Indian religious ideas, they made great academic disciplines and well-managed ashramas out of them. However, Swamiji also said that India’s ideal was renunciation and service. If any person, Western or Eastern, takes to Indian religions and understands them in theory and in practice, through renunciation and service, they will imbibe the spirit of these religions, as did Swamiji’s Western disciples. However, most Western minds have taken up Indian religious ideas, because they think that Indians are not worth these ideas, that Westerners can better manage and propagate these ideas.

This has led to a quite strange situation, where Westerners claim that Hinduism is not a religion proper, that yoga was never Hindu or Indian, that all that India could claim as Indian are some savage races, who always need enlightenment from the West. And of course, many Indians have started parroting these ideas, because the white person is always right! So, the Western mind now wants to teach religion to India! It started centuries ago with hordes of Christian missionaries coming to India to preach the gospel of salvation. Some of them though, had the wisdom to quickly realize that in India lived thousands of Christs, who were silent to the world. In his deliberations at the World’s Parliament of Religions, Chicago, 1893, Swamiji told the West that India did not need Western religious preachers but Western teachers, who could give her lessons on managing society and earning livelihoods, and also that India needed benefactors, who could give her wealth. 125 years hence, not much has changed in kind, though appearances might show changes in degree.

India has lineage of rishis that continues till today. The Western academia is now questioning the unidimensional thought systems of the West and is looking out for more inclusivism and broadness. At this juncture, is it wise to bash down millennia- old Indian faith-traditions based on some wisdom and perspectives that are only a few centuries old and have never seen application beyond a limited geography, where also they are beginning to cause strife and disturbance? Instead, the Western mind would do better to sit at the feet of the thousands of living masters of India, learn their wisdom, both in theory and practice, and become one with India, and then, if they have understood even one Indian tradition, just try to preserve it for posterity in non-Indian languages with the help of the organisational and technological skills that the Western mind naturally possesses. But, no word against India or Indian religions!

While it is true that Indian religions are divided into numerous sects and sub-sects and while it would be almost impossible for these factions to come to an agreement about any aspect of religious thought, all of them are Indian and all of them are striving hard to live the ideals they profess. Their focus is never on the empirical or the temporal, they are not bothered about the world or time. All of these spiritual aspirants are focussed on attaining the Divine, which each of them understands in a different manner. Contrast them with the average Western mind that hardly sees anything beyond the temporal and empirical even in places practising the spiritual. It makes businesses out of ashramas, organizations out of sects, and academic departments out of shastras. But, are not Indians also doing all of these? Yes, they are and to that extent all those Indians are primarily Western in their mindset.

India needs all-renouncing Indians focused on the Divine, who can not only expound the Brahma Sutra but also experience at will, the Brahman this text talks about.

3 thoughts on “Don’t Teach Religion to India!

  1. Amitava Aich says:

    Kindly, proclaim the essence of Indian religion (although it was proclaimed long ago through speeches / writings of Sri Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda) to the new young generation with respect to current perspective/ condition/simpler language, who apparently seems victim of western)/Yaanky culture and becomes a patient of depression/anxiety/ Psychological disorder.

  2. Meenu says:

    India urgently needs to rightfully take back all the so called field of Indology the way China has firm and complete control of its narrative. It has been hijacked to suit the Juden Christian narrative of ultimately evangelizing India. The global White Privilege makes them gradually take over the culture n religion even as they throw out its original practitioners. Their dismissive attitude towards Hindus is abetted avidly by the converted Christians ever eager to sell image of our country culture and religion to their mental masters in the West…

    • Advaita Ashrama says:

      Swami Vivekananda points out- No outside condition or germs can succeed in making us sick unless our bodily immunity is compromised. Before blaming outside agencies for attacking Hindu religion, we need to get rid of our slavish mentality – that of looking up to them to teach us what our culture is. Regarding Hindu studies, the Author of this article has spoken at length in the following video which might be of interest to you:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09CLI4mGZNc

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