|
Top Indian scholar hits out at
Hinduism with new book
WSN
Network
Kancha Ilaiah,
the author of the best selling book Why I am Not a Hindu, has now
come out with “Post Hindu India: A Discourse on Dalit-Bahujan,
Socio- Spiritual and Scientific Revolution”, a thought-provoking
critique of Brahmanism and the caste system in India, while
anticipating the death of Hinduism as a direct consequence of, what
he says is, its antiscientific and anti-nationalistic stand.
Ilaiah's new work challenges Hinduism`s interpretation of histo
attack on caste politics, and also takes a refreshing look at the
necessity of encouraging indigenous scientific thought for the sake
of national progress. It establishes Hinduism as a `backward`
religion that suppresses the latent scientific and productive
potential of the Dalit–Bahujan communities. The author says this
oppressive system of spiritual fascism is detrimental to both the
future of religion and the nation-state. He thus criticizes the idea
of spiritual justice or varnadharma, used to justify the caste
system, as rooted in spiritual inequality.
On a
micro-analytical level, it is based on a thorough study of the
productive knowledge systems of the Dalit–Bahujan communities of
Andhra Pradesh, and provides a detailed day-to-day analysis of the
scientific technological processes and events at work in the life of
a member of these communities. On a macro level, it shows how
Hinduism fails to negotiate between faith and reason, unlike other
major religions of the world. Kancha Ilaiah critiques the
intellectual imagination of the dominant communities and inspires
the marginalized. In the process of doing so he crafts a work of
immense sociopolitical interest which appeals to academics, and also
to all those who are concerned about contemporary India`s polity and
social fabric.
25
November 2009
|