Police investigation of Sanal Edamaraku for debunking a “miracle” at a church is a crime against the Constitution.
Early in March, little drops of water began to drip from the feet of the statue of Jesus nailed to the cross on the church of Our Lady of Velankanni, down on to Mumbai's unlovely Irla Road. Hundreds began to flock to the church to collect the holy water in little plastic bottles, hoping the tears of the son of god would sanctify their homes and heal their beloved.
Sanal Edamaruku, the eminent rationalist thinker, arrived at the church a fortnight after the miracle began drawing crowds. It took him less than half an hour to discover the source of the divine tears: a filthy puddle formed by a blocked drain, from where water was being pushed up through a phenomenon all high-school physics students are familiar with, called capillary action.
For his discovery, Mr. Edamaruku now faces the prospect of three years in prison — and the absolute certainty that he will spend several more years hopping between lawyers' offices and courtrooms. In the wake of Mr. Edamaruku's miracle-busting Mumbai visit, three police stations in the capital received complaints against him for inciting religious hatred. First information reports were filed, and investigations initiated with exemplary — if unusual — alacrity.
Real courage
Mr. Edamaruku isn't the kind to be frightened. It takes real courage, in a piety-obsessed society, to expose the chicanery of Satya Sai Baba and packs of lesser miracle-peddlers who prey on the insecurities of the desperate and gullible. These actions have brought threats in their wake — but never from the state.
India's Constitution obliges all citizens to develop “scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform”. India's laws, though, are being used to persecute a man who has devoted his life to doing precisely that.
Like dozens of other intellectuals and artists, Mr. Edamaraku is a victim of India's god laws — colonial-era legislation obliging the state to punish those who offend the faith of others. Section 295 of the Indian Penal Code criminalises the actions of “whoever destroys, damages or defiles any place of worship, or any object held sacred by any class of persons”. Its sibling, Section 295A, outlaws “deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings of any class”. Section 153B goes further, proscribing “any act which is prejudicial to the maintenance of harmony between different religious, racial, language or regional groups or castes or communities”. Alarmingly, given the sweeping generalities in which these laws are written, truth is not an admissible defence.
In the decades since independence, these laws have been regularly used to hound intellectuals and artists who questioned religious beliefs. In 1993, the New Delhi-based progressive cultural organisation, Sahmat, organised an exhibition demonstrating that there were multiple versions of the Ramayana in Indian culture. Panels in the exhibition recorded that in one Buddhist tradition, Sita was Ram's sister; in a Jain version, she was the daughter of Ravan. Even though the exhibits drew on historian Romila Thapar's authoritative work, criminal cases were filed against Sahmat for offending the sentiments of traditionalist Hindus.
Punjab has seen a rash of god-related cases, mainly involving Dalit-led heterodoxies challenging the high traditions of the Akal Takht. In 2007, police filed cases against Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, the head of the syncretic Saccha Sauda sect, for his purportedly blasphemous use of Sikh iconography. Earlier, in 2001, similar charges were brought against Piara Singh Bhaniarawala, after he released the Bhavsagar Granth, a religious text suffused with miracle stories.
Islamic chauvinists have shown the same enthusiasm for the secular state's god laws as their Sikh and Hindu counterparts. Earlier this year, FIRs were filed against four writers who read out passages from Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses — a book that is wholly legal in India. Fear of Islamic neo-fundamentalists is pervasive, shaping cultural discourse even when its outcomes are not as dramatic as Mr. Rushdie's case. In 1995, writer Khalid Alvi reissued Angaarey — a path-breaking collection of Urdu short works banned in 1933 for its attacks on god. The collection's most-incendiary passages were censored out. India's feisty media didn't even murmur in protest after the magazine India Today was proscribed by Jammu and Kashmir in 2006 for carrying a cartoon with an image of the Kaaba as one among a metaphorical pack of political cards.
Even religious belief, ironically enough, can invite prosecution by the pious. Last year, the Kannada movie actress, Jayamala, was summoned before a Kerala court, along with astrologer P. Unnikrishna and his assistant Reghupathy, to face police charges that she had violated a taboo against women in the menstruating age from entering the Sabrimala temple.
For the most part, judges have shied away from condoning criticism of the pious, perhaps fearful of being held responsible for public disorder. In 1958, the Supreme Court heard litigation that grew out of the radical politician, E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker's decision to break a clay idol of Ganesha. Lower courts had held, in essence, that the idol was not a sanctified object. The Supreme Court differed, urging the lower judiciary “to pay due regard to the feelings and religious emotions of different classes of persons with different beliefs, irrespective … of whether they are rational or otherwise”.
‘Insult to religion'
Earlier, in 1957, the Supreme Court placed some limits on 295A saying it “does not penalise any and every act of insult to or attempt to insult the religion”. Instead, it “only punishes the aggravated form of insult to religion perpetrated with deliberate and malicious intention” (emphasis added). The court shied away, though, from the key question, of what an insult to religion actually was.
Hearing an appeal against the Uttar Pradesh government's decision to confiscate Naicker's contentious Ramayana, the Supreme Court again ducked this issue. In 1976, it simply said “the law fixes the mind of the Administration to the obligation to reflect on the need to restrict and to state the grounds which ignite its action”. “That is about all”, the judges concluded.
That hasn't, however, been all. In 1998, the Supreme Court upheld Karnataka's decision to ban P.V. Narayanna's Dharmakaarana, an award-winning re-reading of the Hindu saint, Basaveshwara. In 2007, the Bombay High Court similarly allowed Maharashtra to ban R.L. Bhasin's Islam, an aggressive attack on the faith. There have been several other similar cases. In some, the works involved were scurrilous, even inflammatory — but the principles established by courts have allowed State governments to stamp out critical works of scholarship and art.
Dangers ahead
Indians have grappled with these issues since at least 1924, when Arya Samaj activist Mahashe Rajpal published the pamphlet that led the state to enact several of the god laws. Rangila Rasul — in Urdu, ‘the colourful prophet' —was a frank, anti-Islam polemic. Lower courts condemned Rajpal to prison. In the Lahore High Court, though, Justice Dalip Singh argued that public outrage could not be the basis for legal proscription: “if the fact that Musalmans resent attacks on the Prophet was to be the measure [of legal sanction]”, he reasoned, “then an historical work in which the life of the prophet was considered and judgment passed on his character by a serious historian might [also] come within the definition”.
In 1927, when pre-independence India's central legislative assembly debated the Rangila Rasul affair, some endorsed Justice Singh's message. M.R. Jayakar likened religious fanaticism to a form of mental illness, and suggested that those who suffer from it be segregated “from the rest of the community”. This eminently sane suggestion wasn't, however, the consensus: the god laws were expanded to expressly punish works like Rangila Rasul.
Perhaps Indians can congratulate themselves that the god laws have not been used to persecute and kill religious dissenters, as the ever-expanding blasphemy laws which sprang up in Pakistan. Mr. Edamaruku's case ought to make clear, though, just where things are inexorably headed. If Indians wish to avoid the fate of the dystopia to the country's west, its citizens desperately need to accept the right of critics to attack, even insult, what they hold dear.
In 864 CE, the great physician, Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakaria al-Razi, wrote: “The miracles of the prophets are imposters or belong to the domain of pious legend. The teachings of religions are contrary to the one truth: the proof of this is that they contradict one another. It is tradition and lazy custom that have led men to trust their religious leaders. Religions are the sole cause of the wars which ravage humanity; they are hostile to philosophical speculation and to scientific research. The alleged holy scriptures are books without values”.
Following a rich scholarly life, and a tenure as director of the hospital in Baghdad patronised by the caliph Abu al-Qasim Abd 'Allah, al-Razi died quietly at his home in Rey, surrounded by his students. In modern India, his thoughts would have led him to a somewhat less pleasant end.
Keywords: Velankanni church miracle, Our Lady of Velankanni, Sanal Edamaruku, capillary action, Sahmat, The Satanic Verses, religion and reason, religious miracles










1. How 'rational' is it to expect rationality in a place of worship? Places of worship are, BY DEFINITION, places where "belief" is held high above "reason"?
Sanal Edamarku professes to be a rationalist and ends up doing something totally irrational; his actions are so embarrassingly irrational that they can be explained perhaps only in terms of deliberate malicious intent. (On the contrary, the believers never claimed to be rational.)
2. Are Sanal Edamarku and his supporters the "reason police" of India?
When did the Indian government appoint Sanal the Guardian of Reason in India, authorizing him to raid and audit places of worship to ensure that everything that went on in these places made perfect rational sense? By what authority or under whose orders was he acting?
If he was acting as a self-appointed guardian of reason, how do his actions compare with those of the Sri Ram Sene, self-appointed guardians of morality?
An insult, eh? It's rather difficult to take seriously a
religious stance that defends ignorance and stupidity as
proper respect.
@Vijay
Because as much as the religious have the right to believe, Sanal has the right to offend.
And surely your analogy of a public park is a bit dishonest?
Do you see Sanal or other rationalists go to all temples all day long debunking the claims of religion?
He saw an opportunity (for want of a better word) to expose the chicanery. And he used this chance. How is it any different to religious people thrusting their practices on the public?
And do you honestly think that the right to religion is more important than a man of science risking his life (knowing that he'd be chided/maimed by fanatics) to show the public the eventual mundanity of religious miracles??
Vijay garu
Sorry to say, but your examples look half-baked. First, Sanal's family
looks to be from the christian background and as per wikipedia "He was
born in 1955 in Thodupuzha, in Kerala, India to Joseph Edamaruku and
Soley Edamaruku." But yes, Joseph was an atheist and part of
rationalist movement. Second, please please, do not compare this with
vandalism. He just found out the real root cause of the miracle(the
great dirty water), but he did not stop people to refrain from their
catholic beliefs by threatning them. Third and last, Sanal is a
rationalist, you give him the proper reason and knowledge (and not
emotional response), I am sure he will be there to hear you.
Excellent piece - Sanal should be given a national award for saving the lives of many - especially kids who were having that disgusting stuff forced down their throats by their half-witted parents - from that cocktail of germs. Practicing religion and display of religious symbols in public should be outlawed - what people do in their homes (the few that have them, i.e.) is their business so long as it's not criminal. The basic problem here is the number of people - and growing - that make it impossible to manage. And, of course, our band of politicians, bureaucrats/cops, and industrialists who have been ripping us off since Independence.
How does it work? Invite yourself to someone else's house for lunch and then criticize their food? Well, that's what this man Sanal Edamarku has done.
Regardless of whether or not something is rational, Sanal had no business going to a place of worship on his own accord and then insulting the believers.
To be sure, I, too, think that many of these beliefs are irrational, but I will defend the rights of those who hold these beliefs, especially when the beliefs are confined to their exclusive place of worship and not being demonstrated in non-exclusive public spaces and thrust upon everyone else.
If they had done this in, say, a public park regularly visited by Sanal, and if the man had exposed it, that's a different matter.
In this case, the man has gone to the church, knowing full well that that is a place of "belief" and not of "reason," with the deliberate intention of demolishing the beliefs of the believers. Why can't it be seen as the ideological equivalent of vandalism?
People try to rationalize their belief by what is called a miracle.
Hence such "belief" always collapse on scrutiny. People believe what
they want to believe, any challenges however sane and rationale are
met with persecution.
People are obsessed with religion and not the reality.This obsession
is actually a psychological issue, one that has to be cured in a very
pragmatic fashion.The intent should be to help the people realize the
truth and not attack them.
At the end of the day not everyone will accept what you say.And we
will need to recognize and respect the same.Just because we have the
tool of freedom of speech doesn't mean we can use it the way we want.
People have to realize that you are their friend and not an enemy.And
for that patience and a lot of "wisdom" is needed.
It is important to understand everything that is there in this existence before we
set sail to find god. When the creation is not understood and worshipped where is
the need to look for creator. It is typical indian way of trying to bribe god as well
and make him party to all non sense. If the bus doesn't come on time, people pray
for it to come on time and an offering to god is promised. It shows the lack of
confidence in self. If god is such a supreme being, does it make sense to trouble
him for all petty things ? It is better to put aside discussing god, debating about
his existence or non existence and try to live godly to people around you. You are
created to play in the field and there is no point in running to the coach in the
middle of the game for help. That is how life is. It is time that people start solving
their own problems and not become posessed. This will bring down all this
fanaticism about religion, beliefs etc. My two cents.
I fully echo Dr. Iniyan's position. That was the first thought that came
to my mind when I read the passage, which says 'Ramasamy Naicker'.
Periyar denounced his caste name from his name in late 1930s. The Hindu
should release a 'Corrigenda' for this grave mistake.
I'm not even going to fight it out against "true believers". But this
madness will stop very soon.
In west, kids normally question the existence of Santa Clause. I wonder why so-called educated fraternity in India doesn't raise any doubts on God(I mean Gods since religions are too many, so are Gods). Secondly if he does exist, why the hell should 'it' be imposed on others who don't believe? If we have got freedom of speech - thought, then why its illegal to express our thought of No-God? People don't want to listen to the rational explanation as their brains have been covered with the rust of ignorance - superstition. Blasphemous are those who follow religion without understanding it. And i am sure more than 90% of 'religious theists' are like that.
@Dr.Vishnu Vardhan - I want to contest one of the points you made, namely that science too is based on the faith that the world is susceptible to our rationality. I disagree. When scientists make models of the world using rationality, it works. When people use irrational ideas and wishful thinking to construct a model of the world, it fails when tested against reality. Over 300 years of the scientific revolution has repeatedly shown that our scientific theories built upon a rational and naturalistic model of the world is the most honest and accurate model and religious thinking is not. Planes built according to modern science work, magic carpets don't. Faith, which is commonly defined as belief in something without evidence, is the very antithesis of science and rationality, which depend on doubt and skepticism and humility. And I'm surprised that you cannot imagine any serious scientist without faith, when over 85% of Nobel laureates declare themselves as atheists or agnostics.
There is no such thing 'GOD' but created by the ignorance of a pre-scientific and medieval mindset. People are irrational by nature and need irrational beliefs to survive and cope with life. I think it is irrational of people called "rationalists" who engage in silly experiments to disprove miracles not realising that generally people are idiots and believe in stupid things because that is how human beings are. Do not try to change or improve anyone but let them wallow in the morass of superstition and ignorance otherwise they will attack those who challenge those beliefs. Rationalists stop your stupid project to try and save ignorant humans who need psychotic beliefs to cope and survive.
The author says: "In 1958, the Supreme Court heard litigation that grew out of the radical politician, E.V. Ramaswamy Naicker's decision to break a clay idol of Ganesha." Ramaswamy Naicker never called himself a politician. In fact, he detested politics and politicians (including the Dravidian variety). His followers called him a "social reformer". His promotion and propagation of atheism/rationalism was mostly limited to attacks on Tambrams (in a crude, indecent and vulgar way, like cutting the sacred thread and the tuft of temple archakas, breaking and throwing chappals on idols). He rarely targetted churches, mosques and even, Mariamman temples. While he could insult Hindu puranas, he seldom questioned or made fun of concepts such as immaculate conception. In spite of his efforts, caste identity has become only more prominent and Ganesha temples have literally mushroomed. It used to be said that on the personal side, he was the hereditary Dharmakartha his village temple.
"The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can (for me) change this." Einstein in his letter on January 3 1954 to the philosopher Eric Gutkind
@habib ilias basha "Now, even though the realms of religion and science in themselves are clearly marked off from each other, nevertheless there exist between the two strong reciprocal relationships and dependencies. Though religion may be that which determines the goal, it has, nevertheless, learned from science, in the broadest sense, what means will contribute to the attainment of the goals it has set up. But science can only be created by those who are thoroughly imbued with the aspiration toward truth and understanding. This source of feeling, however, springs from the sphere of religion. To this there also belongs the faith in the possibility that the regulations valid for the world of existence are rational, that is, comprehensible to reason. I cannot conceive of a genuine scientist without that profound faith. The situation may be expressed by an image: science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind" Science and Religion By Albert Einstein
Its heart rending to witness the secular traits of the largest democracy being gorged by a monster that has gained mass over centuries.The fault does not lie with ones faith in God but how it has been socialized and sold.The false presumption among the masses that God endorses himself to a few people and their failure to realize that faith and rationality can co-exist in this world is the root cause of problems mentioned by the author.Faith in God should be contained within a personal barrier.Ones it breaks the barrier and creeps into the society, it becomes malignant.Religion should never be allowed to interfere with administering of law.But I vehemently oppose the author's choice of Mr.Edamaruku as a "rationalist".It is obvious that Mr.edamaruku has been denied justice but his rationality was always situational.
Right, so because he was able to find out how the water was flowing, he was arrested because some feelings of the (blind and superstitious) faithful were hurt. This reminds me of the episode in Saatiya, where in kinjal's bedroom, the water was flowing from the krishna murti's feet and she became kinjal didi for a few episodes. It was a tap on the other side of the
wall that was damaged by the nail, that caused the dripping water. Has
any viewer complained to the police about that? Star Plus should have complaints! No wonder those gurus are able to exploit and get rich quick. Religion should not be immune to criticism because it engorges itself on
backward thinking and delusions of grandeur, and are protected by
secular law!
India should not protect religion with the law, because paedophiles, sex mad with devotees, fraudsters, greedy rich gurus will use it as an excuse to continue doing what they.
Mr Swami has invoked the Constitution, obviously Article 51A. Sadly, it is a fact that the biggest violators of the Article are the intellectual elite of the country, including national leaders, high-ranking newspaper editors, SCIENTISTS and some members of the JUDICIARY. "Godmen" and "godwomen" are worshipped by them all. ¶ Satya Sai Baba (SSB), the self-proclaimed Bhagawan, was the best known of these Godmen, but the land is teeming with quite a few lesser Babas. ALL political leaders, almost without exception, used to troop to seek SSB’s "blessings". SSB, even after death, has a huge following of "devotees". A former CJI is an egregious case. ¶Ex-CEC Seshan (MSc in Physics!) totally believed the Milk Drinking Ganesha idols. ¶A Delhi High Court judge slammed scientists for questioning astrology. He was also "National President" of the "Indian Council of Astrological Sciences" for some time. Our country is suffering from a destructive pandemic of "retreat from reason".
Congrats to The Hindu for having dared to publish such an article. Other medias should learn journalistic values from The Hindu!
Articles like this one written by Mr Praveen Swamy is what makes
people come back to The Hindu. Non-believers have a right to exercise
their freedom of speech. Non-believers' sentiments too are hurt when
charlatans lie about so-called miracles. Freedom of speech itself
implies that even if somebody does not like truth being spoken or he
is offended, the teller of that truth still has the right to speak
about it in public. Truth, due to its very nature can offend vested
interests. Yet, truth must be spoken in public. That is what freedom
of speech is all about and this is guaranteed in our constitution. It
is high time provisions misusing Section 295, 295A or 153B are
incorporated. Sanal Edamaruku must take the fight to bigots, fanatics
and charlatans who have a lot of skeletons in their cupboards. Right
thinking people like Praveen Swamy must be encouraged by The Hindu's
editors.
@Narasimhan- Well the question is, why shouldn't I announce my atheism confidently. I consider it to be a well-considered and well-thought-out position with at least as much intellectual credibility as any religious person can claim for his/her views. So why not tell people about it? After all, when i do tell people about it they either look at me uncomfortably or sometimes condescendingly, as if my atheism is a juvenile phase, birth-pangs of a rebellious mind in the process of becoming, but not quite yet, grown up.
In some ways you're right, it's might seem senseless to go around
telling people what I don't believe. After all, I don't collect
stamps and I don't tell people that I am a proud a-philatelist.
But if ever stamp collectors were to erect temples, worship stamp
collecting, have stamp-men who perform miracles and have a
pervasive influence in society such that secular politicians would ignore the constitution in favour of pandering to the to the stamp-collectors vote-bank, then a-philatelism might be necessary too.
As far as your right to practice your religion, nobody questions that. But religious views shouldnt be immune to criticism and good-natured satire, especially when they're aired in public and seek to influence.
Congratulations to the author and the best Indian newspaper "The Hindu" for publishing this article. It is very important that being a secular country this kind of subject get discussed. Denying the truth and the progress in the name of religion is being used a weapon in certain cases.
I also agree to the comment from "Navaneeth V K". One day in future, I may also file a PIL against all religions for hurting my atheistic sentiments.
On the contrary the Swami's & Priests use religious faith as a mask to gain unduly????(Personal advantages, Money, Influential position, HNI Network....) And they comfortably come out unhurt from the clutches of law.... Thanks to their own priestly community members and loads and loads of money accumulated in the name of religious sentiments....When will they be highlighted in the same lines as Sanal Edamaruku? Why is this discrimination for the same act of commission?
Are we surrounded by so many sentimental fools, whereby rationality is such a huge crime?
Thanks & Nice to see some of the references sighted from the Indian constitution as well as from the previous Supreme Court Judgements.
Oh my Gaud (pun intended)!
I never knew that there were so many fellow like minded atheists in
India. But the problem of our community is that we are very silent and
that is why the so called religious people have been taking a ride on us
for this long. We should religiously (un) start converting our near ones
in family, work place and internet from blind folded to open minded,
with our plain, simple, irrefutable scientific logic..
@Jasvir Singh
What do you mean by scientific fundamentalists?
Did you mean, People who are confident to talk truth in public?
ie talking against religion or god .
Please understand that science is not religion or belief system .its
the method to find the truth /understand the universe by experiment.
Sanal is a spoilsport. At times, the public needs circuses like this to take their attention away from the dreary morass into which we are sinking, little by little. We have already dethroned all gods and enthroned Greed in their stead. The rule is, "All to the winner and the Devil take the hindmost". The poor losers need to be kept silent by small incidents like these which will give them a false hope of a bright future / inheriting the earth. So a milk-loving Ganesha, or a weeping Madonna is not to be scorned. In the old days, we could have horsewhipped Sanal. I hope he gets the modern equivalent.
Periyar E. V. Ramasamy gave up his caste surname quite early in his
socio-political and also led a campaign for people to stop using their
caste surnames, which is the main reason why most Tamils in Tamil Nadu
do not name their children with caste surnames compared to Indians in
other Indian states. Hence, it is a shame that the author of the above
article refers to Periyar E.V.Ramasamy as "Naicker" and as "E.V.Ramasamy
Naicker" which is biased at the least. When the great man himself gave
up his caste surname why should the media use it?
Reffering to Praveen Swami's India's God law I want to say that it is
very shameful that in a democratic country like India where we have
liberty and freedom, people are punished for speaking truth. India is
a developing country, but people are getting underdeveloped day by
day. Everything is going scientific but people are becoming spiritual
fools. Having faith is good, but at the same time we should think
practically also. Our constitution is the most lengthiest in the
world, with so many laws but aren't there any laws for the safeguard
of those who removes the curtain of false believes, from the eyes to
show the real world? Pythagoras first said that 'the earth is round',
but who believed him?
"With or without religion, good men will continue to do good, and evil men will continue to do evil. But for good men to commit evil, that takes religion"
It's apparent from the article that the religious fanatics, and the easily offended are people who are least interested in the truth!
David Hume said "Any apparent deviation from the natural should be
investigated by the method of science in order to be disproved or else
fitted in to the system of science,instead of being taken as the
miraculous support of a subjective belief".Mr Edamaruku did just that
only. Secularism is one of the fundamental principles enshrined in our
constitution.The dictionary meaning of the word secular is to be
nonspiritual or nonreligious.But unfortunately almost 90% of our people
are traditionally religious and therefore superstitious.Same is the
case with every other country for thousands of years.It is futile to
think that one day the people will realize the fact that GOD is the
creation of man and not the other way round.
This article makes great reading. Brutally honest and exposes a serious problem with our laws, law makers & law keepers.
Voila, Praveen Swami! Excellent article on a issue many writers would
normally shun writing about. Congrats. How come 'Secular India' has
constitutional protections against People of Reason? I always felt
that Religious Fatalism on the one hand and Religious Fanaticism on
the other hand both work towards keeping India lacking in simple and
pure REASONING in all spheres of life; hence she is politically,
economically very backward even in the early 21st century! Now I
realize the genius of Chairman Mao who outlawed all religions and Gods
in China, and they are progressing relentlessly socially, politically
and economically. So, what do we learn from all this? Wait & watch!
Very sad laymen with full faith in religion are taken for a ride by such tricks; MUST stop this trend to help next generation to keep up FAITH in Supreme and act as per morals dictated by scriptures - avoid evil, speak truth and be sincere and honest in duty and all actions etc
WHY this was resorted needs to be investigated and ACTION taken against the folks who did this to get some advantage !
Thanks for writing this article, it was necessary. I willing to fight this fight for reason
and progress even if it means going to Jail.
This is a wonderful article. It is time to question our beliefs - are
they guiding us to the right direction?
The concept of 'bicameral' functioning of the brain proposed by Julian Jaynes, as existent during the evolution of human civilization, when humans behaved like zombies implicitly accepting and obeying blindly without reasoning, appears to bog them even today. To receive input, process intelligently through reasoning and experience (science), a faculty that the modern man has acquired over the millenniums, appears to be out of context, particularly, where 'God' is involved. Myths and miracles are continued to be believed and entertained without question and when they are exposed, even the more educated behave irrational; the reason could be to stay abundantly clear from any disrespect to 'God' out of an unknown unsubstantiated fear of 'His wrath' that hallucinates in their 'bicameral' brains to behave the way they do. When the majority is in this syndrome, irrespective of the religion they follow, they rival each other to substantiate their beliefs'; otherwise riot. What courts can do?
The times of weeping statues and apparitions are over. Also, there is no need to fabricate new kind of superstitions.
The constitution and authorities should guard the nation when some sections of society lack scientific temper.
What are you going to achieve by announcing yourself/atheists, Mr. Raamganesh? i accept that stupidity in the name of religion should be condemned but that does not mean the religion in itself should be abolished!
Selective atheism and Fanatic theism are unfortunately driving the secular goals of the nation. The only point I will differ with the author here is that - nobody has the authority to question/debunk/demean the faith of another person, however silly, down to earth or illiterate it may be, because faith is neither bound by principles of reasoning nor is it expected to be proved by any competent human faculty. That the author has tried to dwell too much on issues of faith disappoints me.
What is the truth in that miracle was known to the persons, who are promoting the same for exploiting the innocent people. The laws are made by the politicians, whose looks are on the votes, so they can not curb this evil, even though they know the truth. The courts can not think or do beyond the existing laws. So the persons like Sanal Edamaraku are face troubles like Copernicus in the middle ages. So the people must be rationally educated.
@Raamganesh, just to add to ur fine reply, Einstein was a pantheist, thats it! many of
these "believers" often misquote him and feel that theyve somehow proved a point!
Very very good article.
and Thanks Hindu to publish this.
it is shameful that this happens in this 21st century.
laws to protect idiotic fairy tails and supernatural forces?.
"its a duty of every intellect to expose the lies and tell the truth"
-chomsky
What is the difference between the period of Galileo and Copernicus, who
were persecuted for proving things using science, and now? Does that
mean that the ruling class will always belong to the dark ages?
Any society eventually falls into extreme abyss if it fails to pay attention to the balancing forces- on the other hand, unhindered CHALTA HAI attitude towards activities which are extreme in nature- have had serious repercussions each time-every time in the past.
Rise of Hitler in the German was less about his rise as such but it was the sheer unopposition to the extremely nationalistic ideas turning into hatred for jews which resulted in the xenophobia related with World War 2.
Similar is the case of killing of Salman Tasser in Pakistan who opposed the passing of Blasphemous Laws. Such practices will eventually lead to rise and rise of extreme forces leading to utter chaos and an ultra strong bigotry forces.
Similar rules bordering on insanity and inspired from illogical "God Laws" have made many rational souls face wrath for no fault for theirs but for merely opinions about irrational structures and practices.
People would have continued to collect Drain water if it was not for the
intelligent work of a person who is being victimized instead of being
rewarded. What kind of an insult has he done to a religion. The
honorable court may dismiss this case.
Blame it on the Indian media, who chose to telecast and distribute the half information without trying to find out the whole story. In last few years of media explosion in India, the news publishers (newspapers and the tv channels) have failed to follow ethics, time and again. The journalist who found 'hot news to make rounds and get TRPs' could have spent another 2-3 hours in identifying the whole picture. But why care? Its the TRP and the associated payment which matters most, who said journalism is about uncovering the truth and bringing new light to ignorant lives!!
"My practice as a scientist is atheistic. That is to say, when I set up an experiment I assume that no god, angel, or devil is going to interfere with its course; and this assumption has been justified by such success as I have achieved in my professional career. I should therefore be intellectually dishonest if I were not also atheistic in the affairs of the world. " -- JBS Haldane, Fact and Faith (1934) Preface
Ancient Indian tradition has always been in favour of subjecting religion to scrutiny by reason. That is why we did not find the need to separate the "church" from the "state". Any religion which refuses to subject itself to scrutiny will either degenerate into fanaticism or will simply be ignored and wither away.
Does anyone recall the frenzy about 17-18 years ago when statues of Ganesha
supposedly started "drinking milk"? To me as a young impressionable teenager, it
was still incredible how people were mug enough to believe it. You could see
clearly that the milk was running down in streams. As if such as thing could really
happen. You had more chance of getting a crack in your wall to drink milk.
But nobody said anything and the press seemed happy to highlight the story
without any critical comments.
The right to irreverence is a necessary one and one ought to be able to poke fun at
or question anything at all. In the land of Birbal and Tenalirama who chose to
approach life questioning everything naively and being as irreverant as possible, it
is sad that chicanery and superstition are still all too commonplace.
congrats MR Praveen Swami , a very good well written article-it is sad that people who cheat the society are growing in number protected by law. we want more people like Mr Sanal Edamaraku and writers like Pravenn swami to take to people.
Both religious fundamentalists and scientific fundamentalists are threat
to humanity and both have the capacity to kill millions and have killed
millions. What we need is religion and science which is also humane.
Anyone claiming power of 'miracle' is a fraudster. All godmen claim power of miracle. Let
scientists and men of reason challenge them. Let us support Edamaruku and his ilk. Praveen
swamy and The Hindu have done great service to humanity by writing a well-researched
piece and publishing it respectively
@Ilias Basha - If you stop quote-mining and could actually read
what Einstein wrote in his books, you'll find that Einstein was
pretty much an atheist. Einstein referred to "God" in the poetic
sense when he only meant "nature", and he often complained in his
writings about religious people using this to quote him out of
context. He was very clear in his disbelief of a personal
God, so please let's not distort the meanings
of his words.
Also, you seem confused about belief and atheism. I am an atheist
because I "disbelieve" in your God claims. If I tell you that I
have a pink dragon in my garden, you don't have to "believe" that
I am mistaken or lying. You can just reject my claim, since I do
not offer any evidence to back it up.
Anyway, I congratulate The Hindu for publishing such articles
that challenges the religious mindset. I think it will encourage
more atheists/agnostics to come out of their closets and announce
themselves.
@Haseeb Ilias Basha M.D.
Most advanced tool in the universe? haha! You should not comment about
things you don't know... the universe i.e. or may be you should read a
little about "the black swan".
Now coming to your talk about "reason". Sorry, reason and belief don't
go together. We reason based on axioms (ever heard of them.. they are
like 1+1 = 2 which are accepted and right) and reasoning builds on top
of other conclusions based on reasoning.
@Ajay,
While I think about your Apostle Paul's statement, you please give
time to reason about my argument next.
Sorry, the logic of creationism is a failed concept. Creationists
apply logic when they say "god created the world because something so
beautiful could not have happened by accident". The very means by
which creationism has been debunked in the west is by asking who
created God then? Creationists have no clue. You either use logic and
stick to it and answer that important question or you should not use
logic at all or go to some other universe where your expectations will
be met. But not on earth.
Wonderful article... it it just laws, it is people who make such scenarios worse. I wonder a day would come, just like the way in one of the Issac Assimov novels,that all the religious zealots will come and destroy so called science and humanity;and, still call it for the development of humanity.
I think that a religion should really help people realize truth. Truth is what our pursuit was, is and will be. Denying truth in the name of religion is utter foolishness and denial does not really do any good to anyone.
My plumber will do the same to figure out a water leak problem, just like what Mr. Edamaruku did. Here the Plumber is a rationalist, and not driven by hatred or malicious intent. Invoking Section 295, 295A or 153B against him is a mockery of Indian judiciary, unless he did something really bad to spoil religious harmony (beyond what is reported in this article).
Rajpal book was a response to a polemic on Krishna written by an Islamist of Lahore!
thank you the hindu for highlighting this piece of news. such news are
conviniently ignored by many other so called national media.
also these laws seems to be biased against majority community.
it is always given against-minority label to highlight such news.
hope people will wake up and stand behind mr sanal. such stupidity in
the name of religion must be stopped.
Why does the writer say that The Satanic Verses is wholly legal in India? isn't there a ban
on the book (even if it is technically an import ban). I am wholly in agreement with the writer,
though.
I'm saddened by the SC stand on this sending back our country to the dark ages in the name of avoiding religious conflict. However, I'm happy to see the comments who support rational thinking and reasoning.
An extremely well-research article! Wow!
Mr. Swamy, I couldn't stop my temptations to congratulate you for
pointing out, in the public media, such a serious backdrop in our
legal system. I had the same feelings in my mind after reading a
recent article regarding the arrest and detention of a Hyderabadi
rational youth. The penal provision is undoubtedly dated and the
time is up for an amendment for the colonial legislation. I
strongly believe the Constitution should recognize 'right to not
have religion' along with the fundamental right 'right to
religion'.
If hurting the sentiments of Religious people is an offense, then why not hurting the sentiments of Rationals? It is after all only about Hurt.It is like one cannot talk about heliocentric earth, because it hurts the sentiments of geocentric minded religious people!!!
Excellent article !. One can expect such fine reading on from your
paper. Congrats. Look forward to more such critical analyses.
Ramgopal, Bangalore, confirmed agnostic.
The sentiments of non-religious people are being hurt every day with the talk of miracles,superstitions, push of religion using loud speakers, religious posters and flyers. When is this inequality going to end? People have so many reasons to be offended. Coffee drinkers are offended by tea drinkers who are pushing for tea being called a 'national drink'. Being offended should not be a reason for someone to have to go to jail. These are laws which do not stand to reason and need to be removed.
Hats off Hindu for bringing this out to light.
This article reminds me of John Morley's quote, "Where it is duty to worship the sun, it is pretty sure to be a crime to examine the laws of heat". A country that fails to protect its scientifically inquisitive is not worth calling itself a developing country. No wonder the brightest and smartest are going abroad and we are stuck with corrupt and incompetent black magic believers back home. Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high.... uhhhh, Tagore would applied of Green Card if he were alive.
One day I wil file a PIL against all religions for hurting my atheistic sentiments.
according to ipc 295, if you deliberately break a moorthy of ganesh in
public, it is a criminal offence and prosecutable in court of law. The
important thing the above writer has failed to notice is that the
belief of every community is protected by our constitution- freedom of
religion as well. The very existence of christainity- i.e. christ born
of a virgin mary itself is not logical. As long as nobody is
discriminated or persecuted using religion, every belief must be
respected. Most of these problems occur due to bad literacy of
Indians. Nobody seem to question that- unless some aspects of religion
are taught in India (which of course opposed by secularists) such
practises shall prevail and such articles shall come on endlessly
The basic tenants of all religions are love, peace and understanding.Yet most wars have and are being fought in the name of religion. "defender's of the faith"as they say.
Does God need man to defend Him , that is if there is a God. Would the world be a better place if their were no religions.
I beleive religious fanatics have to understand the universal truth- “There are as many paths as there are hearts. There is no one way.” This is a Zen thought. I do not know where I read it and who it is attributed to. But my sincerest thanks to that person.
Keep living, “better to travel than to arrive” Zen way.
Like India's 'secularism' which allows different laws for different communities, the exhortation to cultivate a 'scientific temper' is self contradictory when obscurantists are allowed to persecute rational thinkers for 'hurting religious sentiments'. Religion is the source of superstition which it is the job of science to eradicate.
In trying to please everyone, being all things to all people, the Indian Constitution has become riddled with ambiguities. This has made India a soft state-- no decision can be taken because somebody's 'sentiments' will be hurt.
Not long ago there was a gossip that the idol of Ganesha drink milk.
now the Velakanni miracles. People are taken for a ride in the name of
religion. people should think twice in believing such supersitions.
What an Article!
God laws need to be based on Reason.
Blindly following the superstitions in the name of religion is an insult
to the religion itself that one follows.
Dear Mr. Praveen,
A well written piece highlighting the servility of the guardians of constitution and their
ineptitude to pick the "rational" side in the debate. I see the slide of Indian mindset and lack
of appreciation of its intelligentsia, a step towards dark ages. Unfortunately there is no god to
save us!
Atheists are no better than theists in this regard. Just go into any street in Tamil Nadu, and speak disrespectfully of Periyar. The Rationalists will not spare you.
Sad indeed is the trend to dupe the followers with tricks and magic orchestrated as God sent miracle; most disgusting/shameful; the layman with FAITH in GOD is taken for a ride by tricks. And the one who tried to discover the deceipt is being punished eh!
What a bad type of legislation in our country. God alone can save!
William Smith, the father of modern Geology ,(3 March 1769-28 August 1839) suceessfully challenged the belief that Creation was on the Saturday preceding the Sunday 23 October 4004 BC (the Julian calender) propgated by James Ussher,(4 January1581-21 March 1656) Archbishop of Armargh and Primate of all Ireland..Willam Smith was in an era when Reason, not blind beliefs , unsupported by facts, ruled the human mind. Just a century earlier, Galileo (1564-1642) lost his freedom and almost his life for saying that the Sun and not the Earth is the center of the Universe. Men of religious beliefs, as well as, philosophers questioned the so called God’s laws, in Islam, Christianity, Hinduism, and all religions. The Spanish Inquisition when religious bigotry was enforced by civil laws was fortunately short-lived, and perhaps the excesses gave impetus to further questioning of the so- called laws of God. One wonders how a person investigating and rationally explaining the miracles is guilty
Nice Article. Police should be arresting these God man people who cheat the society. Not rational thinkers like "Sanal Edamaraku".
"God protection laws" were created to stop religious riots resulting from Religious Radicals who spread hatred. But these religious radicals were never prosecuted by those laws any time. Instead rational thinker are the one who are persecuted.
By the way if God is so powerful can't he defend himself on his own from Sanal Edamaraku?
"Science without Religion is Lame. Religion without Science is Blind"
quoted Albert Einstein. "Human Mind" is the most powerful and advanced
tool in the known universe, which relies heavily on "Belief" in order
to function. Whether a journalist, scientist, priest or a common man,
we all believe in one thing or other to drive the purpose of our
existence. Religion is one such belief system which has been an
integral part of every human civilization known to Man. Even Athiest
has to "believe" that there is no God. To a naive philosopher, it may
appear to be self contradictory to Believe and Reason at the same
time. Infact, the purpose of Belief is to "rule-in" and Reason to
"rule-out" to reach the ultimate truth. They complement each other.
The Messenger of the One True God, Muhammed(pbuh) once said "God has
not created anything better, more beautiful or perfect than 'Reason',
the benefits which God gives are on its account and God's wrath is
caused by disregard of it". Peace.
It is Secular India - Rights to Minority Religions only and ban, discourage and criminalise all festivals, Rites, Philosphies, Thoughts and Religions of Indian Origin.
Secular India has completely submitted itself to foreign domination. Only Hindus can be criticized.
This an insult to 'human thinking and knowledge'. Shame on such a law which punishes people for debunking the superstitions. Its a disgrace to education and rational thought.
Ignorance and the true miracles of the One True God are not the same.
"Reason" and the "ability to reason" are faculties given by God the
Creator of all things. That the water source was a leak and happened
to seep from the crucifix was a happenstance. That the people thronged
to the place was pure ignorance.
Give time to yourself to think about the implications of the following
statement: "And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is
in vain and your faith is in vain," said the Apostle Paul in his
famous letter to the believers in the church at Corinth, a city
located in modern day Turkey, during the second half of the first
century AD.
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