There is a gray area between religion itself and the way it is used by vested interest groups. In a God fearing society it is unproductive and sometimes catastrophic to bluntly criticize a religion. It antagonizes common people and the reactionary forces get an excuse to pull them on their own side. But can a society really progress without pointing out the weaknesses in a religion? Obviously, No. But if we do so, religious feelings of the believers cannot but be hurt. It is a dilemma indeed. When Dipa Mehta shows in her film "Water" the quote from Gandhi and Manusanhita side by side, the Hindutvabadis do not like it. But we come to know that Gandhi did not endorse all of sage Manu's sacred pronouncements.
From: Farida Majid <farida_majid@hotmail.com>
To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, June 29, 2012 8:55 AM
Subject: RE: [mukto-mona] Voice of the People
To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, June 29, 2012 8:55 AM
Subject: RE: [mukto-mona] Voice of the People
Do we all agree, on this one point, that we are all opposed to religion-peddling? I fervently hope that the answer is: YES. If so, then it is our solemn duty to understand the matter of 'religion-peddling'. In this business of religion -peddling it is the 'peddling' part that should command our attention. And that requires certain in-depth and close attention to politics. Religion is a very powerful cultural artifice, and since both politics and religion deal with a community of people, there has been a mix of the two from time immemorial. But we are constantly talking about religion-related social symptoms, and mis-diagnosing them as 'religion'. Why? There are several reasons. One, mental laziness. It takes a lot more patience and astute observation to do a political analysis. It needs historical information. Throughout the 16th century in Europe, for instance, the Catholic Church was fighting an intense political battle with the breaking up of the Church. The execution of the Nolan Magus and poet, Giordano Bruno, who was not a scientist or mathematician like Nicholas Copernicus, and the persecution of astronomer Galileo, a couple of decades later are indicative of the Church's political authority under severe pressure. It is silly to cite this as the paradigmatic 'science v. religion' struggle. It is a singular historical event within the context of Europe. Both Dawkins and Hitchens are being totally dishonest in their discussions against religion. Dawkins is addressing the Creationists exclusively, and Hitchens's arguments apply to the Jehadists only. Neither has the courage and intelligence of Karen Armstrong who discards the construction of the binary opposition of 'science v. religion' and refuses any hierarchical positioning of the two branches of knowledge. Two, critiquing religion is a mask for communalism. More on that later. Farida Majid
To: mukto-mona@yahoogroups.comFrom: jnrsr53@yahoo.comDate: Thu, 28 Jun 2012 17:17:30 -0700Subject: Re: [mukto-mona] Voice of the People
I meant to say that religion-peddlers are shaping current affairs. Thanks.--- On Wed, 6/27/12, Kamal Das <kamalctgu@gmail.com> wrote:
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