1. Education

India – A Beautiful Land of Spiritual, Pluralistic Ethos Now Entangled in Religious Hatred

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  • 1.    India has sheltered people of different religious faith and beliefs.
  • 2.    India is the birthplace of Hindu gods, Mahatma Buddha, Jain Tirthankars and Panj Pyare of Sikhism.
  • 3.    Independent democratic republics of the world proudly follow the Indian essence of Unity in Diversity.
  • 4.    People of India celebrated their religious and cultural festivals without any distinction between religious identities.
  • 5.    India has been an example of pluralistic ethos and brotherly love for world humanity. India can rightly claim to be a Vishwa Guru or World Teacher. This position was actually accepted by the world when Swami Vivekananda spoke in the Parliament of world religions in Chicago a century ago.

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Since the beginning of time, India has sheltered people of different religious faith and beliefs. Since India was an amalgam of princely states, all the states had their spiritual upbringing in the lap of their respective religious identities. All the states of the Indian land welcomed all the other religions that came under their wings. Thus Indian beauty consists of various religious communities embracing each other's cultural heritage willingly through history and produce an unparalleled example of deep-rooted Inclusiveness. After the Indian states united and became a nation its religious inclusiveness became its identity in the world. Indian state gave the world its idea of Unity in Diversity. Independent democratic republics of the world proudly follow the Indian essence of Unity in Diversity.

Indian landscape that includes the eye-catching natural beauty of Kashmir and Kanyakumari that is the meeting point of three oceans-the Bay of Bengal, the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean, also has hundreds and thousands of Sufi shrines, Sadhus Mutts and religious heads. India is the birthplace of Hindu gods, Mahatma Buddha, Jain Tirthankars and Panj Pyare of Sikhism. This country has brought up great religious heads in its lap. All the Sufis and Saints Rishis and Munis spread the message of love compassion, peace and tranquillity among the people of India. India boasts of foreign kings who sacrificed their sons on the altar of India’s independence. Whoever made India its abode transformed it into a pluralistic cultural hub. People of India celebrated their religious and cultural festivals without any distinction between religious identity and regional affiliation. India has been celebrating Holi, Deepawali, Eid ul Fitr, Eid ul Azha, Pongal Bihu and Lori with all, irrespective of religion and race. India has been an example of pluralistic ethos and brotherly love for world humanity. India can rightly claim to be a Vishwa Guru or World Teacher. This position was actually accepted by the world when Swami Vivekananda spoke in the Parliament of world religions in Chicago a century ago.

Being a part of the world, India also felt the tremors of the social, political and ethical quake. Religious supremacism attacked the nation in a big way. India also witnessed the waves of religious and casteist hatred like a pandemic. It was helped by the media in a big way. It seemed as if the nation all of a sudden forgot all the lessons of inclusiveness and brotherhood taught to it by its religious past.

Religious Pluralism Reverberates in India

India, geographically being too close to the terror-stricken countries also came in the line of fire. Being a multi-religious and multi-cultural nation, some of the Indians also bought the idea of Islamophobia to make it a cause of concern among the people and take political advantage.

Indian history and its culture are too rich in pluralistic ethos to be dented easily. It felt some low-pressure tremors but it was of no use for the destructive forces.

The tremors caused by the hate mongers and irreligious Islamophobic forces were not transformed into big earthquakes. This is the power of India's deeply rooted Sarva Dharma Sadbhavana. Hatred blurs the vision of reality and creates an image of everything that is not there. Islamophobic and hate merchants’ vision of Indian ethos reality also blurred and they saw what their devilish desires showed them.

It is said that there is something good hidden in even the worst things. Good things that came out of the Islamophobic trying times in India are the faces of the advocates of Indian Inclusiveness. India exhibited that there is no dearth of Messiahs of pluralism here. It has been, is and will remain a country of spiritual enlightenment and salvation. India has been a witness to innumerable ups and downs but has stood firm with its religious inclusiveness.

 Therefore, the present Islamophobia, hate and lynching incidents look like a bubble that will dissipate at the earliest and it will again reverberate with the sounds of different religious festivals which will see the participation of all the colours of human life. Religious pluralism reverberates in the Indian atmosphere that has the power to brave all the seasons of religious hatred and religious phobia. No ill will against any religious faith can ever get a place to step in. The verses and Shlokas from the Holy Quran, the Rig Veda and Bhagwad Gita, the Shri Guru Granth Sahib, the Bible and the preaching of revered scholars of different religions given under are the proof of our deep-rooted belief in religious pluralism.

Quranic Verses’ Pluralistic Messages

“We believe in the revelation which has come down to us and in that which came down to you; Our Allah and your Allah is one, and it is to Him we bow in Islam.”  – (Al-‘Ankabut – 29:46)

 People of the Book, why do you dispute about Abraham when both the Torah and the Gospel were not sent down till after him? Have you no sense? – (Al-e-Imran: 65)

.. I do not worship what you worship, nor do you worship what I worship. I will never worship what you worship, nor will you ever worship what I worship. For you is your religion, and for me is my religion.” – (Al-Kafirun – 2-6)

Hindu Scriptures Teachings of the Virtues of Pluralism

Truth is One, though the sages know it variously (एकं सद्विप्रा बहुधा वदन्ति) — Rig Veda, 1.164.46

One and the same be your resolve and be your minds of one accord. United be the thoughts of all that all may happily agree. — Rig Veda, 1.191.2-4

But that which clings blindly to one idea as if it were all, without logic, truth or insight, that has its origin in Darkness. — Bhagavad Gita, 18:22

As people approach me, so I receive them. All paths lead to Me. — Bhagavad Gita, 4:11

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