*State must not organize Religious festivals*


*Ram Puniyani*



After staging the Yoga on 21st June 2015 on Raj Path, Delhi, Modi Sarkar
has planned to celebrate Rakhi, Raksha Bandhan at a grand scale in late
August. This plan has full approval of its parent organization, the RSS.
Now a Hindu religious festival will be given the status of a national
festival so blatantly. It surely is indication of the type of deeper agenda
of narrow nationalism this Government has in mind?



As such this festival Raksha Bandhan stands for ‘bond of protection’ and is
amongst the very popular festivals, primarily celebrated by Hindus, Jains
and some Sikhs. There are legends which point to the innovative use of this
festival for goals which are beyond the religious identity so to say. There
is a tale of Rani Karnavati of Chittor sending a Rakhi to emperor Humayun
when she was faced with the attack by Bahadur Shah (1535), the Sultan of
Gujarat. Touched by the gesture of the Hindu queen the emperor set off to
defend her, but it was too late to defend Chittor by the time he reached
there. This Rajasthani narration is doubted by many historians. Whatever be
the truth this tale does reflect the Hindu Muslim amity in medieval times,
it does reflect the Ganga Jumani tehjeeb (syncretic culture) which was the
kernel of the sub continent.



Another legend is the invocation of Rakhi by Guru Rabindranath Tagore in
the aftermath of the partition of Bengal by the British (1905) on communal
lines. To register the protest against British policy and to cement the
bonds between the two major religious communities, the poet laureate gave
the call of celebrating Raksha bandhan as a bond of unity between Hindus
and Muslims. This was also a time when the communal forces had begun
articulating the sectarian mindset, trying to promote aversion for the
‘other’ community. While the communalists from both the communities went on
articulating hatred against ‘other’ community, this type of incidents show
the deeper bonds which prevailed amongst Hindus and Muslims during the
freedom movement, these were the bonds which reflected Indian Nationalism
at social level.



There are multiple other instances where Rakhi has acted as a symbol of
love and unity cutting across social groups, kingdoms and clans. While all
this is in place, the fact is that primarily Rakhi is reflection of
patriarchal relations. Here the sister is tying the thread on the wrist of
her brother wishing for his well being. The brother in turn is pledging to
*protect* her all her life.

While recognizing the other lovely narrations, like ‘Rakhi brother’ (one
who is not a biological brother but becomes brother after Rakhi is tied)
etc. the core of the festival does remain structured around gender
equations of prevalent from feudal times. Its meaning and tenor has not
changed so far despite the development of industrial-democratic society and
despite the concept of equality of women to coming to fore. It is
unnecessary to judge the past society by the values of the present times,
but it all the same calls for revision in the symbols and rituals in the
direction in which we aspire to go. The overdue just demand for gender
equality is what we need. Today the deeper meaning of Rakhi needs to be
understood before carrying on with it in the same form.

Many Hindutva ideologues are harping on the point that this festival
empowers the woman to choose her brother, who is not a biological one.
*Brother* in present equations stands for protection along with control as
well while what women want is parity, the freedom to choose their way of
life and their life partner. The intriguing fact of the rise of Khap
Panchayats with the rise of communal politics needs to be underlined. Such
social groups are intimidating and attacking the couples who make their own
choices in matters of selection of life partners. A promotion of this
festival with inherent gender hierarchy means reinforcing curbs on freedom
of women. Many religious festivals are being supported and organized in
state like Andhra also.



Primarily festivals of this type are social. The Holi, Divalis, Eid,
Christmas are social event of joy, celebration. Many politicians and
organization celebrate it at social-community level. Social festivals are
family-community events. Two major questions which the decision of the Modi
Sarkar raises are, one why a Hindu festival is being presented as a
national festival, and why the Government should come forward to promote
*social* festivals?. The answer to this lies in the fact that this
government is having the agenda of Hindu nationalism and so they are
walking an extra mile to promote a Hindu festival as a national festival.
National festivals have to be restricted to the one’s which are related to
freedom movement, a phenomenon, which built us as an Indian nation.



In a plural society one religion cannot be singled out to become the
national religion and a secular state does not go in for organizing the
celebration of religious festivals, majority or minority. Government should
not come in the arena of social festivals; communities are already doing
that. It seems this government wants to give a subtle message of the deeper
gender related agenda; that of the subordination of women as well through
this festival. All narrow nationalisms and ideologies which take recourse
to the label of religion or race have this agenda inherent in them. Be it
Christian fundamentalism, Islamic fundamentalism of Hindu Fundamentalism,
they all take recourse to some or the other pretext from the past or
present to restrict the freedom, equality of women.



In a society where Khap Panchayats are becoming more visible, what is
needed is the program to empower women for economic self sufficiency and
the promotion of an emotional build up which looks at both the genders on
par. What should be promoted is the tendency for mutual help and
coordination amongst siblings where they support each other on par in
building their lives around their free choices. The deeper agenda of RSS,
upholding patriarchal mind set is very well reflected in the celebration of
this festival. Perpetuation of patriarchal norms is inherent in the very
nomenclature of RSS. The term Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is masculine
(Swayam, self) in contrast to its women’s organization which is Rashtra
Sevika Samiti, sans the *swayam*, the ‘being’. Women’s *being* is missing
in this scheme of things and that’s what is aimed to be strengthened by
such festivals being organized at national level. The innocuous looking
things do have deeper inherent meaning and agenda!.



 (modified version of this appeared in Thecitizen.in


http://www.thecitizen.in/NewsDetail.aspx
Id=4622&The/State/Must/Not/Organise/Religious/Festivals  )

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