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I had practiced Hinduism from early childhood. My nurse had taught me to invoke Rama when I feared evil spirits. Later on I had came in contact with Christians, Muslims and others, and after making a fair study of other religions, had stuck to Hinduism. I am as firm in my faith today as in my early childhood.
I believe god would make me an instrument of saving the religion
that I love, cherish and practice. In any case, one has to have
constant practice and acquaintance with the fundamentals of religion
before being qualified for becoming god's instrument.
It has been
whispered that by being so much with Musalman friends I make myself
unfit to know the Hindu mind. The Hindu mind is myself. Surely I do
not need to live amidst Hindus to know the Hindu mind when every fiber
of my being is Hindu. My Hinduism must be a very poor thing if it
cannot flourish under influences of the most adverse. I know
instinctively what is necessary for Hinduism. As my instinct is wholly
Hindu, I know that what I am about to say will be acceptable to the
vast mass of the Hindus.
My Hinduism is not sectarian. It
includes all that I know to be best in Islam, Christianity, Buddhism
and Zoroastrianism. I approach politics, as everything else, in a
religious spirit. Truth is my religion and ahimsa is the only way of
its realization. I have rejected once and for all the doctrine of the
sword. My position is and has been clear. I am proud of being a Hindu,
but I have never gone to anybody as a Hindu to secure Hindu-Muslim
unity. My Hinduism demands no pacts. I am no politician in the accepted
sense.
It is because I am sanatani (orthodox) Hindu that I claim
to be a Christian, a Buddhist and a Muslim. Some Muslim friends also
feel that I have no right to read Arabic verses from the Koran, but
such (people) do not know that true religion transcends language and
scripture. I do not see any reason why I should not read the Kalma, why
I should not praise Allah and why I should not acclaim Muhammad as his
prophet. I believe in all the great prophets and saints of every
religion. I shall continue to ask god to give me strength not to be
angry with my accusers, but to be prepared even to die at their hands
without wishing them ill. I claim that Hinduism is all inclusive and I
am sure that if I live up to my convictions, I shall have served not
only Hinduism but Islam also. There is mention of terrible punishments
in the Bhagavatam, the Manu Smriti and the Vedas. Yet the central
teaching of the Hindu religion is that mercy of kindness is the essence of
all religion.
I want you to bear in mind what Tulsidas has said:
"Good and bad, all men are the creation of god. The man of god
picks up the good and discards the bad like the proverbial swan which
is able to drink the milk and leave behind water, when a mixture of
water and milk is placed before it."
I am proud to belong to that Hinduism which is all inclusive and
which stands for tolerance. Aryan scholars swore by what they called
the Vedic religion and Hindustan is otherwise known as Aryavarta. I
have no such aspiration. The Hindustan of my conception is
all-sufficing for me. It certainly includes the Vedas, but it includes
also much more. I can detect no inconsistency in declaring that I can,
without in any way whatsoever impairing the dignity of Hinduism, pay
equal homage to the best of Islam, Christianity, Zoroastrianism and
Judaism. Such Hinduism will live as long as the sun shines.
Tulsidas
has summed it up in one doha: The root of religion is embedded in
mercy, whereas egotism is rooted in love of the body.
Tulsi says that
mercy should never be abandoned, even though the body perishes.
Hinduism
is not an exclusive religion. In it there is room for the worship of
all prophets in the world. It is not a missionary religion in the
ordinary sense of the term. It has no doubt absorbed many tribes in its
fold, but this absorption has been an evolutionary, imperceptible
character. Hinduism tells everyone to worship god according to his own
faith or dharma and so it lives at peace with all religions.
Though
I call myself a sanatani Hindu, I am proud of the fact that the late
Imam Saheb of South Africa accompanied me to India on his return and
died in the Sabarmati ashram. His daughter and son-in-law are still at
Sabarmati. Am I to throw them overboard? My Hinduism teaches me to
respect all religions. In this lies the secret of Rama Raj.
The die is
cast for me. The common factor of all religions is non-violence. Some
incalculate more of it than others; all agree that you can never have
too much of it. We must be sure, however, that it is non-violence and
not a cloak for cowardice.
Hinduism with its message of ahimsa is to
me the most glorious religion in the world -- as my wife to me is the
most beautiful woman in the world -- but others may feel the same about
their own religion.
Religion is outraged when an outrage is
perpetrated in its name. Almost all the riots in the unhappy land take
place in the name of religion, though they might have a political
motive behind them. There is no room for goondaism in any religion worth
the name, be it Islam, Hinduism or any other.
If religion dies, then
India dies. Today the Hindus and the Muslims are clinging to the husk
of religion. They have gone mad. But I hope that all this is froth,
that all this scum has come to the surface, as happens when the waters
of two rivers meet. Everything appears muddy on top and underneath is
crystal clear and calm. The scum goes to the sea of itself, and the
rivers mingle and flow clear and pure.
--M.K. Gandhi
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