CONVERSION DESTROYS RELIGIOUS HARMONY
by
SWAMI DAYANANDA SARASWATHI
The article written by Swamiji, appeared in New Indian Express
on Monday, 21 Jan 2008
“THERE
are Christian theologians who feel the conversion of others is not any
more the business of the Church.” This is indeed an encouraging
statement from Dr Hans Ucko, Head of the Committee on Inter-religious
Dialogue and Cooperation of the World Council of Churches, a powerful
body that has over 350 member churches. This statement has the potential
to promote harmony among religions, particularly between Christianity
on the one hand and its two main targets: Hinduism and Buddhism, on the
other. Dr Ucko, as I know him, is an upright, outspoken gentleman.
Personally he has “never been interested in converting people”. But, on
the ground, the situation presents a total contrast. Christian
missionaries, almost without exception, work with unabated zeal to
convert. The conciliatory words of Dr Ucko ,seem to conflict with what
he says next. While underplaying the conversion agenda, Dr Ucko also
makes this seemingly innocuous, but profoundly theological, statement:
“I believe it is more important for us to bear witness to Christ by our
action of caring for people without any ulterior motive and by our
exemplary living.” Here is the clue to the potential for disharmony.
Christians, regardless of their denomination, are mandated by their theology to
‘bear witness to Christ’ which, in simple terms, means sharing the
faith with a stranger. Why share the faith with a stranger? The vast
majority of Christian believers are firmly convinced that unless a
person ‘accepts Christ as his saviour’, he is, at the very least, denied
entry to Heaven. More extreme, but not less common, believers
are convinced that he will definitely go to Hell - and forever. So,
given the theological compulsion to share the faith with a stranger, a
serious Christian has no option except to exert and ‘save’ the person,
inevitably a non-Christian, from such a fate. That is to say convert him
to Christianity. See the effect. Obviously the theological belief that
no faith other than Christianity can guarantee salvation, or that other
faiths can only lead to Hell, cannot amount to honouring non-Christian
religions. Can a Christian, who believes this, view a non-Christian
religion as anything but inferior or, as is often the case, dangerous? So
in the innocuous mandate to ‘bear witness’ to Christ inheres the
denigration of the religion of the ‘other’, if not explicitly, certainly
implicitly. Herein lies concealed the propensity and the potential for disharmony, for, when one’s religion is denigrated a great violence is done to what one holds most dear.
Older traditions, in contrast, do not believe in conversion. A
Jewish person is born of a Jewish mother. A Zoroastrian is born of
Zoroastrian parents. A Hindu is born of Hindu parents. And so are the
followers of Shintoism, Taoism and other ancient religious groups all
over the world. They acquire their religions by birth. They do
not convert anybody to their faith. Hindus stand as an example of how
this approach protects ‘other faiths’, not denigrate them. When the
persecuted Zoroastrians, the Parsis, came here as refugees driven from
Persia, they were received here as “Athithis” (Honoured Guests) and were
helped to settle in India. Identical was the case with the Jews. This
is what a booklet “Indian Jews in Israel” [edited and published by
Reuven Dafai, Consul, on behalf of the Consulate of Israel, 50 Pedder
Road, Cumballa Hill, Bombay 26] says: “While
most of the others came to Israel driven by persecution, discrimination,
murder and other attempts at total genocide, the Jews of India came
because of their desire to participate in the building of the Third
Jewish Common Wealth their long sojourn in India, nowhere and at no time
were they subjected to intolerance, discrimination and persecution”
. The Parsis and the Jews, protected thus, saved their religion and
lived by it. The Hindus protected the early Christians and Muslims too.
Our vision of God compels us to do that. We accept various forms of
worship, prayers and Gods; one more really does not matter to us.
In
contrast, in the other category of religions, mandated by their
theology to convert, their followers practice conversion with
conviction. Undoubtedly,
they have a right to believe that unless one is a Christian, one will
not go to Heaven. But to claim the right to go further and exert
influence to turn all non-Christians into Christians to make them
eligible to enter Heaven cannot but promote conflict. Dr
Ucko identifies the “key issue that haunts people opposed to
conversion” as what he calls “aid-evangelism” - a euphemism for
conversion by “allurement” or “fraudulent means.”
The
key issue is not this, but the very assumption underlying the impulse
to convert. Today we stand at a precarious juncture in world history,
where a wide range of factors including monoculture, nuclear warfare,
and ecological disasters threaten our survival as a human race. As never
before, we stand in need of the rich knowledge base of various
indigenous traditions. We stand in need of diversity, ecological
diversity, bin-diversity, and religious-diversity. We stand in need of
understanding how to live peacefully with one another, without
destroying one another, and our environment. While our need is diversity, conversion endangers all diversities, not just religious. Conversion comes at the cost of extermination of native people’s cultural diversity and way of living.
Without preserving as they are, the existing religious traditions and
the people that practiced them, we cannot access these knowledge-bases
that contain the lessons of harmonious co-existence.
I
would unhesitatingly call the Jewish, the Zoroastrian and the Hindu
traditions as non-aggressive traditions for just this reason: they do
not convert. Conversion uproots individuals, devastates families, creates discord in communities and destroys ancient cultures. This
is what we have been arguing for several years. We need all cultures,
and therefore all religions. With the destruction of religion comes the
destruction of culture. Our religion and culture are intertwined. The
religion has gone into the fabric of the culture. When I say ‘Namaste’ to you, it is culture. It is religion. When you are doing Rangoli, it is religion; it is culture. There
is a vision behind all that. Every form of culture is connected to
religion and religion itself is rooted in spiritual wisdom. As spiritual
tradition informs all aspects of life, there is no cultural form or
expression unconnected to religion. Destruction
of culture is destruction of religion. Destruction of religion is
destruction of culture. If this destruction is not violence, what else
is violence? Aggression need not be physical. It need not be the
Kargil type. There are varieties of aggression. You can either be
emotionally, economically or verbally aggressive. But, the worst
aggression, more than physical aggression, is cultural aggression or
religious aggression. That is why we say ‘Conversion is Violence’. It is the deepest and most profound violence.
To
overcome this violence we need to think of conflict avoidance and
conflict resolution. Conflict avoidance implies the abstention from
propaganda for conversion as that is the major cause of violence.
Conflict resolution demands that the conflict-prone faiths and
civilisations understand the need to internalise the acceptance of
others’ view of God. Here is where the world, as two of the greatest
historians Will Durant and Arnold Toynbee had said, has to look to the
Hindu civilisation for relief from conflicts. Durant
told the West that “in return for conquest, arrogance and spoliation,
India will teach us tolerance and gentleness of the mature mind, the
quiet content of the un-acquisitive soul, the calm of the understanding
spirit and unifying, pacifying love for all living things”. Toynbee
prophesied that “a chapter which had a Western beginning will have to
have an Indian ending if it is not to end in self-destruction of the
human race. At this supremely dangerous moment in human history, the
only way of salvation is the ancient Hindu way. Here, we have the
attitude and spirit that can make it possible for the human race to grow
together into a single family”. The two historians have exposed the source of disharmony and pointed to where to look for solution.
(Swami
Dayananda Saraswati is a Vedantic scholar, and runs dedicated classes
on Vedanta in his ashrams at Coimbatore (Arsha Vidya Gurukulam,
Anaikatty hills), Uttaranchal and at Pennsylvania, USA).
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