Easter season seems to be
full of pagan rituals in this part of the world. I am not sure if some of them
came into vogue only in the recent decades but the people here love and
participate in them enthusiastically. I admit they are fun and give these people
the feeling that they are engaging in traditional activities (the Czech folk
consider themselves a traditional lot) but keeping in mind the colonial
writings on India I feel like (for fun) engaging in an activity that we Indians
(and some Czech people) at the Department of Religious Studies like to do every
now and then in Pardubice.
To a non-academic, the very phrase
‘colonial writing’ may sound boring but trust me some of them are really funny
and as Indians we would find even the non-funny accounts very entertaining. Even before we were colonised travellers from all over wrote about India. The ones from Europe in particular draw my interest. For
example, Ludovico de Varthema, one of the first traveller/writers to describe
India wrote many things that were instrumental in forming the basis of the
European understanding of India. Among some other things he seemed to have been scandalised by the sexual practices of India (they were extremely
preoccupied in criticising everything sexual in India or so you would think
considering the number of accounts written on it). In this excerpt he describes what he thinks
is yet another (probably common) feature of Indian sexual practices of the
place he is in, which is Calicut (Kozhikode) in Kerala. He is talking about
wife-swapping.
The Pagan gentlemen and merchants have this custom
amongst them. There will sometimes be two merchants who will be great friends,
and each will have a wife; and one merchant will say to the other in this
wise:“Langal perganal monaton ondo?” that is, “So-and-So, have we been a long
time friends?” The other will answer: “Hognam perga manaton ondo;” that is,
“Yes, I have for a long time been your friend.” The other says: “Nipatanga
ciolli?” that is, “Do you speak the truth that you are my friend?” The other
will answer, and say: “Ho;” that is, “Yes.” Says the other one: “Tamarani?”
that is, “By God?” The other replies: “Tamarani!” that is, “By God!” One says:
“In penna tonda gnan penna cortu;” that is, “Let us exchange wives, give me
your wife and I will give you mine.” The other answers: “Ni pantagocciolli?”
that is, “Do you speak from your heart?” The other says: “Tamarani!” that is,
“Yes, by God!” His compan- ion answers, and says: “Biti Banno;” that is “Come
to my house.” And when he has arrived at his house he calls his wife and says
to her: “Penna, ingaba idocon dopoi;” that is “Wife, come here, go with this
man, for he is your husband.” The wife answers: “E indi?” that is, “Wherefore?
Dost thou speak the truth, by God,Tamarani?”The Husband replies: “Ho gran
patangociolli;” that is, “I speak the truth.” Says the wife: “Perga manno;”
that is, “It pleases me.” “Gnan poi;” that is, “I go.” And so she goes away
with his companion to his house. The friend then tells his wife to go with the
other, and in this manner they exchange their wives...
This
particular excerpt was read out in class in M.A. from the book The Heathen in his Blindness...": Asia, the West and the Dynamic of Religion, which is the only handbook on cultural difference available in the current market and it was my first encounter with
a European account of India. When we heard it we weren’t sure whether to laugh (which
we did) or to feel really annoyed. The question was not whether the account was
true but the nonsensical and (to us the seemingly) callous way in which it was
written. While we were surprised, irritated and amused by what we read, we had
our first insight into the kind of framework these writers came from in order
to be able to write something, which, for no fault of theirs appears to be a
factual description but to us seems to be preposterous. We were amused because
their understanding of the world was so different from ours. We were enraged
because their understanding became the basis for the general understanding of
India and it’s culture. Over the next few centuries their attitude towards this
beautiful culture remained unchanged and became so prevalent that we began to think
of our culture the same way they do. How many people have you met who say “I am
ashamed that I am from such a backward culture”?
Anyway,
I’ll come back to my fun exercise. What I’m going to do is talk about random
things that happen here and describe them through an Indian pair of eyes
(because I cannot possibly see it through a Chinese or a Russian pair). Also,
because I am an ‘empowered, educated and modern woman’ who ate and drank
Feminism during her days of Bachelor studies, has high ‘morals’ and was taught
modernism, egalitarianism, functionalism, Orientalism, postmodernism and many
other isms that the western world
gave us, which is now taught in the Masters degree in Literature (that I did) and
all social sciences, and because I am inspired by the powerful moral
convictions with which article upon article are being written on the state of
elections, psychological analysis of electoral candidates and other events that
are currently happening in India, I am going to adopt the same tone and hurl
the same kind of accusations at the things I see here. I do this armed with the
weapons that two years of doing Literature filled my brain with, namely, all
these isms (whether I really
understood them or not is out of question) and the training I received to use
big words and produce ludicrous ideas.
Certain
things may sound exaggerated but whatever I mention will definitely have some factual
truth in it. Why am I doing this? Well, honestly, at least a hundred different
customs are followed in my own little Changampuzha Nagar in Kochi and neither
have they interrupted my life nor have I cared to question the reason behind
their existence but reading what the Europeans painstakingly wrote about our
customs centuries ago and the way the West continues to look at us I cannot help
being frustrated. Probably this is going to be an inconsequential exercise but
perhaps it may help to look at things from a different perspective.
This
is an account of how an Indian girl sees the world she lives in-
In this country of the
Czechs where people only make up half the population of Mumbai and call their land
religion-less it is strange that they take no less effort to celebrate
Christmas and Easter. While like many westerners they give the excuse that
these two days were actually important on the Pagan calendar, which is why they
are important even if you take Christianity out of the equation, at which point
they will assert that their country got Christianised only by as late as the 8th
century, I suspect that such is not the case. While one cannot deny the
influence of Paganism in their rituals I have strong reasons to believe that
every action of theirs and every value they live by are guided by Christian
morals. This can also be seen in the way a section of them who call themselves
proud Neo-Pagans talk about themselves, nature and their world-view. While they
refuse to accept the biblical God, their devotion towards ‘the Invisible
Power’, ‘Magic’, ‘Esotericism’ and a range of other things bear identical
resemblance to the devotion of a Czech Christian towards the biblical God.
Pardubice,
one of the big cities of Czech Republic is where I live. It has 7% more land
area than Andheri and the inhabitants constitute less than 6% of the population
of Andheri. While a good place to live in, some of the features of this city
include scanty traffic and walking paths almost devoid of people. Intriguingly
some of its people find life in this city very fast and flee to their cottages
in the mountains or other places in the countryside during holidays. Their idea
of a comfortable and normal-paced life seems to be deluded and it would be
interesting to see how they would survive in Mumbai. The city goes to sleep
after 6 pm and looks almost vacant during the weekends.
The
workforce here has many peculiar properties. The sales people lack the skill of
selling and sometimes due to this you are forced to not buy things that you
want. They mean business when they call it a weekend. A weekend is a weekend
and you dare not think of even as much as sending them a text message on those
two days. As my Indian friend put it, perhaps they don’t even make love on
weekends.
It is a pity
to see how Europe is now coping with the loss of ‘God’ that it created in the
first place by replacing it with anything that gives it a sense of The Divine.
Some say “Science is my religion” while some others say “Yoga is my religion”.
How or why Science and Yoga would be considered as religions is beyond my
understanding. They seem to be attached to nature (mountains, rivers, etc.) or
at least the idea of ‘being in the nature’ as they call it. The nature of this
attachment seems strange and unlike anything we feel towards even the trees
that grow in our backyard in India. A source says that this attachment was one
of the reasons Paganism was revived in Europe. Some Neo-Pagans can be found
doing rituals in the forests- beating drums, dancing under the influence of
some herbal substances and doing things that they call mental exercises.
They have many
queer customs here. One of them is celebrated on the occasion of Easter. During
this season I was surprised to find wooden sticks with colourful ribbons
attached on one end being sold on the streets and shops. On asking, the locals
told me that on Easter Monday young men and boys go from door to door beating girls
with the sticks. It is their tradition. In order to escape the beatings or
sometimes after the beatings have been meted, the girls give them Easter eggs.
They explain that the eggs symbolise fertility. If such practices were
conducted in India the Feminists would have said that these are regressive
practices and must be done away with. They would have said that even today
women are deemed important only for their reproducing capabilities and that the
people who engage in such activities are young and impressionable therefore it is
evident that such attitudes are instilled in them at a very tender age. The presence of such practices in Europe is
not only not questioned but also celebrated.
One wonders if this is the same continent where women first raised their
voice against patriarchy and feminism was born.
Witch
hunting was something that regularly featured in the societal purification
drive of the Catholic and Protestant churches in Europe in the Middle Ages. While
many Europeans today would say that the killing of scores of thousands of men
and women suspected of having engaged with witchcraft was a very bad thing to
happen they would still celebrate it by making festivals out of it. So on some
special days a particular place would be chosen, a structure of wood made which
is to be burnt later and there would be plenty of stalls selling witching artefacts and costumes. How absurd is that! On one hand you are condemning witchcraft and
on the other you are making business out of witching merchandise? The burning
would bring to one’s mind the burning of Ravan’s effigy on Dussehra or Holika
on the night before Holi. But the burning of Holika is a good thing compared to the yearly reenactment of the burning of these women which was brutal (as
agreed now). This is completely strange.
I can go on and on. The point is Europe has had as
many or more bizarre rituals as it may have encountered in India. Some of them
might have got integrated into religion, some discontinued and some probably
revived but because they thought that the rituals in India surely had something
to do with our many deities (as may be the case) and nothing to do with The
True God (the very idea of which is almost incomprehensible to us) they saw
these rituals as immoral. And therefore western writings are teeming with
descriptions of immoral practices of Indians who are heathens and worshippers
of Devil. Today, only the words of the descriptions are different but the
attitude towards our culture remains the same.
P.S. It is not my intention to ridicule Czech practices or offend my
Czech friends. All descriptions were made in the spirit of the exercise.
7 comments:
Well, Varthema is not a colonial. In fact, it is the post colonial writers who argue that colonial power/nexus led to all evils. In opposition to postcolonial camp stands the stance of "comparative science of cultures (comscicul)": it is in the nature of western culture to single out these things: (a) (Im)morality; (b) religion. False religion entails immorality. Western culture is obsesed with religion and morality, because western culture itself is a secular phenomenon that is brought forth by Christianity as a religion.
So, this has nothing to do with 'colonization'. Or, not every invasion is a colonization: only certain kind of invasions are colonizations. For instance, Roman kings invaded other kingdoms, invited their people to settle in Rome, elsewhere: here, invasion did not lead to colonization. Colonization comes into picture based on the culture that invades.
Dear Blaoism,
I wrote after the Varthema quote that " it was my first encounter with any colonial account". My bad. Yes, he was not a colonial. The point I was trying to draw attention to is what makes one culture see something in another that the Other does not see in itself. The exercise also was based on that.
Thank you for pointing it out.
Tess.
Varthema is not colonial if the word refers to conquest and invasion. He is colonial in the sense that he is at the root of what 'comscicul' calls colonialism.
@anon 14:18,
Just because Varthema was describing his cultural experience, how does it become colonial? After all, Varthema died in 1517; he did not come during British Raj.
Some thing becomes Colonial because it was described by a colonial power; and this description is a knowledge that helps to keep this power. This explanation resonates with many people.
Tess,
You need to study the dynamic of the triad sacred (religious) - profane (idolatrous) - secular. I mean, historically.
At t1, you can split into three spheres: r1-i1-s1 (religous-idolatrous-secular), where t1 is time
At t2, r2-i2-s2
At t3, r3-i3-s3
Over the time, many practices shifted their bins--religious, idolatrous and secular. Today in the western world, there is no talk of idolatrous: so, it just boils down to religious-secular. Read Balu's latest paper on the secular-sacred distinction. And also the latter chapters of Heathen where Bulgarian practices like wearing trousers is discussed in the context of secular-sacred.
This is one your funniest posts!
I think you should just start another blog along these lines. AND a Youtube channel. There are now enough Indians out there who talk about India (e.g. Superwoman) but I am yet to come across what other cultures look like through the eyes of an Indian.
Enough reading comments- go and start working on your next post!
I remember Polly ma'am read us this same excerpt in an Orientalism class and we had the same reaction as yours.
Anyway getting back to your post, it reminded me of Christopher Hope's Darkest England. Have you read that book? It is awesomely hilarious. An African bushman critiques England...I never laughed so much. In fact, I read it as part of post-colonial literature during MA. You must have too, if you took that paper. Point being your argument on Varthema, if seen in the colonial context, is not wrong. Because such writings reinforced the oriental myth, and had an important role in how the colonial powers saw us. It furthered they designs to invade. Good work Tess!
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