Three states of matter and a matter of faith
By Jawed Naqvi
IS it function of a secular state to organise religious pilgrimages for its citizens? One of the largest hoardings on the approach to Delhi’s international airport announces a special “Haj Terminal” built; for some strange reason; for Muslim pilgrims who travel to Saudi Arabia each year. Many of these pilgrims partake of other privileges accorded by the state including a token financial subsidy. It is another matter that most of these facilities are not given by even Islamic states to their citizens.
Compared to the effort put in by the secular Indian state to virtually run pilgrimages for its Hindu worshippers, often with military precision, every other religious subsidy pales into insignificance. The Amarnath Yatra that leads to a cave shrine near Pahalgam in Jammu and Kashmir is virtually managed entirely by the army and constitutes a high security drill on war footing each summer for the hundreds of thousands of men and women who throng there. Similarly, the foreign ministry runs a major pilgrimage to Lake Mansarovar and Mount Kailash across the border in China.
The Amarnath cave shrine is opened to visitors every summer between June and August. An ice stalagmite usually forms there in the preceding winter months and worshippers regard it as a symbol of Lord Shiva. This year, either because of a shorter winter or perhaps due to higher ambient temperatures it seems the shivling did not form. Instead many visitors were quoted as expressing disappointment because the sanctum sanctorum was a wet patch with melted ice.
A majority of Hindus have a soft corner for the pre-Mughal sufi poet Kabir, who said: “Kaankar puje hari mile to main poojon pahaar; Wa se to chaaki bhali pees khaaye sansar”. (If we can reach God by worshipping stones than I should want to worship an entire mountain. And yet a mere millstone is by far the superior stone, which serves to feed the world as it grinds the flour from corn.) In an era of quick gratification such a worldview is difficult to appreciate.
So where does that leave the secular Indian state? According to news reports the government-backed Amarnath trust erected an artificial shivling this year, as the natural one hadn’t formed till late May. The natural icicle took its known shape and size only after fresh snowfall in late May this year.
Now, with Times of India reporting that the trust had planned to — and perhaps actually did — place dry ice inside the cave to bring down its temperature, the affair has taken a curious turn. The state’s governor Lt. Gen (retired) S. K. Sinha has instituted an inquiry into the “artificial” shivling scandal. The Times says it has obtained strong evidence to suggest that the governor’s office itself played a role in manufacturing a shivling that has outraged devotees.
On May 20, a senior aide of the governor had shot off letters to dry ice manufacturers in Delhi seeking to “urgently” procure tonnes of ice and deliver it in heat-proof packaging at Baltal, near Sonamarg, just 13 km from the Amarnath shrine.
Only four days earlier, on May 16, Sinha — who is the ex-officio chairman of Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board — had personally gone to the cave to oversee preparations for the yatra. Did he discover that the natural shivling had not formed this year; and then decide to make an artificial shivling instead? The question was raised by the Times.
That was enough provocation it seems for some zealots led by the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) to swing into action. What appeared to be a mild looking scandal was swiftly blamed on Kashmir’s “jehadi politics”.
“In the mayhem, an unproven rumour has become the season’s biggest scoop with the typically anti-Hindu segments in the media,” proclaimed the RSS in its party mouthpiece. “Reports from Kashmir are often tempered by the proclivities of fundamentalist Islamic negationism. Unfortunately, through the orchestrated frenzy on an allegedly fake Shivlingam, the authenticity of the shrine and the pilgrimage is being sought to be questioned.” Nothing of the sort was of course happening.
But the RSS saw a huge conspiracy taking shape. “There are demands for the resignation of the governor, judicial probe and investigation by geological experts. That the faith of the Hindus and the yatra have survived since the dawn of history and that there has been no impact of the latest controversy on the ever-increasing number of devotees have not chastened the scoop scavengers, is disconcerting and dangerous.”
A climatic anomaly probably rooted in the heating up of the earth’s atmosphere struck a sermon for an explanation. “We are living in a milieu of systematic onslaught on everything Hindu, every symbol that binds this nation as one. Two years ago on the Deepawali day we witnessed the arrest and humiliation of His Holiness the Shankaracharya of Kanchi and the attempted desecration of the Holy Mutt built and consecrated by Adi Shankara. Few weeks ago, we witnessed the fall of the world’s only Hindu state, victim to the vicious machinations of the godless Maoists, Indian Left and a violent movement for democracy. Hinduism is under siege from all quarters. Not only the jehadis who abet it. The central government itself is formed on the only plank of anti-Hindutva, and so they perform: encouraging proselytisation, introducing legislations, setting up commissions and committees only to undermine the Hinduness of this great nation. They dangle reservation and special benefits only to divide the society.”
In a rational world there are three states of matter. We had so far heard of the solid and the liquid states in the form of the Amarnath shivling affair. The RSS has added a third dimension: a lot of hot air. And the RSS considers itself to be the fountainhead of Indian nationalism, the conscience-keeper of the secular Indian state.
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It’s monsoon time when Mumbai experiences its periodic flooding caused by rain havoc. Little has changed in 50 years it seems. On July 1, 1956, The Hindu carried a report headlined “Downpour in Bombay”. It went thus: Bombay city and suburbs, for the second day in succession, had a heavy downpour on June 30. Whipped by strong winds, the rain flooded the roads bringing vehicular traffic to a standstill. At some places water was knee-deep and cars were stranded at a number of places in the traffic islands. Both buses and trams plodded on water-logged roads.
jawednaqvi@gmail.com

