*Religion, Politics and Society*

*A Birds Eye view*

*Ram Puniyani*



What has religion to do with politics? What has violence to do with
religion? And how does the expression of major political agenda shape
itself in contemporary times? Roughly speaking it seems that the religion
is being used as a cover for many a political phenomenon. This seems to be
the observation more so from South Asian-West Asian perspective.



To talk of last few decades, the first major presence of religion in
politics began with the coming to power of Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran. This
was the political aftermath of the overthrow of Mossadeq, the
democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran in 1953. Mossadeq had
nationalized the oil wealth and this move hurt the interests of the Western
oil (mainly US) companies. After the overthrow of this Government, Raza
Shah Pahlavi, a US stooge, was installed into the seat of power. He was
overthrown in a revolution which was so manipulated that Ayatollah Khomeini
came to capture power. Khomeini and Company’s politics was that of Islamic
Fundamentalism.  With this, there were rumblings in the media, and phrase
‘Islam: the new threat’ came to be coined. In South Asia during these
decades in India we see the rise of politics of identity constructed around
Hindu religion, in Pakistan Zia ul Haq Islamized the politics and Maulana
Maududi’s interpretation of Islam came in handy for Zia to consolidate his
power. A bit later in Myanmar in due course we saw the rise of likes of
Ashin Wirathu, also called as Burma’s Bin Laden, Sri Lanka also saw the
emergence of Buddhist clergy which ran along to supplement the politics in
name of Buddhism. On a different note one also recalls the presence of
Christian Fundamentalism in US.



With the Twin Tower, 9/11, attack, the US media coined the word “Islamic
terrorism’, dragging Islam into the murky world of terrorist violence. Here
after ‘Islam, Muslims are the cause of terrorist violence’ has been a part
of social understating all over. The deviant tendencies with Islam,
Political Islam have done enough to deepen this understanding to the
detriment of Muslims all over.



The morality aspects of most religions’ talked of Humanism in the contexts
in which they emerged. Somehow, the identity aspects of religion, the
rituals; communitarian functions, clergy etc. became the dominant one’s and
have been perceived as major parts of religion today.

In feudal society, pre-industrial society, we see a big alliance of clergy
of religions with the powers that be. Clergy did evolve the concepts for
people’s subservience to the power of the rulers. King-Pope in Europe,
Nawab-Shahi Imam in large parts of Islamic world and Raja-Rajguru, where
Hinduism was prevalent; formed the nexus of this alliance where the rulers
took the cover of religion to carry on with their goals of power. During
this era again we see that Kings' expansionism also expressed through the
language of religion, the quest of Christian kings for expansion was called
Crusade, Muslim kings had Jihad as a cover and not to be left behind Hindu
kings expanded their kingdoms under the guise of Dharmayuddh.



The countries where the process of secularization, removal of the hold of
feudal-clerical elements from social affairs was substantial, the religion
was kept in the by lanes of society. Religion became related more to
matters personal. State came to treat all its citizens on par, irrespective
of their personal beliefs. In contrast; in South Asia in particular; the
process of secularization remained incomplete and the declining sections of
landlords and Clergy hit back with the politics in the garb of religion. In
India we saw the emergence of Hindu and Muslim communal streams from the
section of Kings and landlords, later to be joined in by the section of
educated middle classes. They were exclusive, Hindu or Muslim Nationalists,
and were led by small section the educated elite, likes of Jinnah or
Savarkar or Golwalkar. This had its own trajectory, assisting the colonial
project of ‘divide and rule’ and to maintain the economic dominance of
colonial now imperialist powers. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Mohandas
Karamchand Gandhi stood tall religious person advocating the secular state.
The communal streams, spread hatred against the other communities.



The communal violence in South Asia is now a frighteningly disturbing
phenomenon. It is taking the cover of Hinduism in India, of Islam in
Bangladesh and Pakistan, of Buddhism in Myanmar and Srilanka for example.
This violence has a political motto, the agenda; the values of the pre
Modern feudal classes in a modern context. The attempt to reinforce the
feudal values of caste and gender hierarchy is made in a language which
sounds modern and is modified for the contemporary context.



To add salt to the injury of violence in the name of religion, the post
Khomeini, labeling of “Islam as the new threat’ was boosted by the phrase
“Islamic terrorism’ in the wake of 9/11 attack on twin towers. The Al Qaeda
came to the forefront. This organization is the root of most the terrorist
violence in the central-west Asia. The Boko Haram, ISIS and AL Qaeda form
the triad where Islamic identifies is kept at the core. The process started
with joining the anti Soviet forces in Afghanistan, calling the communists
as infidels and so the violence. Now other’ sects of Muslims are called as
infidels and done to death in the scary manner. Surely, more Muslims have
died due to this violence than any other community.

Al Qaeda was a product of three major foundations. On one hand was Islamism
of Zia ul Haq, who set up Madrassas in Pakistan for indoctrinating the
youth. The ideology used here was from Saudi Arabia, Wahabism, which
centers on the ‘king-ruler as the representative of God. Here one who
disagrees with this version is the Kafir (Infidel), and killing the kefir
is projected as the noble act Jihad, with reward of Janna waiting for those
doing this inane violence. The major support for this endeavor came from
US, which poured in 8000 million dollars and 7000 tons of armaments to
build this root of the cancerous Al Qaeda and terrorist violence in the
name of Islam.

So where do we go from here. The roles of religion have been changing over
periods of time. We need to pick up the threads from the saint tradition of
religions and face the present challenge to human society. Religion as a
moral force needs to be projected; and morality of religions needs to be
projected and the violence in the name of religion needs of is
deconstructed to see the real intent of the violence, which is aimed at the
preservation of pre modern values or which is an offshoot of the politics
of oil. The activists and scholars of religion need to harp on the morality
aspect of religion and debunk the religion as identity part.

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