JAT-PAT-TODAK MANDAL OF LAHOR-XXIII
Some may not
understand what I mean by destruction of Religion; some may find the idea revolting to them and some
may find it revolutionary. Let me therefore
explain my position. I do not know whether you draw a distinction between
principles and rules. But I do. Not
only I make a distinction but I say that this
distinction is real and important. Rules are practical ; they are habitual ways of doing things according to prescription. But principles
are intellectual; they are useful methods of
judging things. Rules seek to tell an agent just what course of action to pursue. Principles do not prescribe a
specific course of action. Rules, like cooking recipes, do tell just what to do
and how to do it. A prinsiple, such as that of
justice, supplies a main head by reference to which he is to consider the bearings of his desires and purposes, it guides him
in his thinking by suggesting to him the important consideration which he should bear in mind. This difference between rules and principles makes the acts
done in pursuit of them different in quality and in content. Doing what is said
to be,
good by virtue of a rule and doing good in the light of a principle are two
different things. The principle may be wrong but the act is conscious and responsible. The rule may be right but the act is
mechanical. A religious act may not be a correct act but must at least be a
responsible act. To permit of this responsibility, Religion must mainly be a matter
of principles only. It cannot be a matter of rules. The moment it degenerates
into rules it ceases to be Religion, as it kills responsibility which is the
essence of a truly religious act. What is this
Hindu Religion ? Is it a set of principles or is it a code of rules ? Now the Hindu Religion, as contained in the Vedas and the Smritis, is nothing but a mass of sacrificial, social, political
and sanitary rules and regulations, all mixed up. What is called Religion by the Hindus is nothing but a multitude of commands and prohibitions.
Religion, in the sense of spiritual principles, truly universal, applicable to
all races, to all countries, to all times, is not to be found in them, and if
it is, it does not form the governing part of a Hindu's life. That for a Hindu,
Dharma means commands
and prohibitions is clear from the way the word Dharma
is used in Vedas and the Sinritis and understood by the
commentators. The word Dharma as used in the Vedas in most cases means religious
ordinances or rites. Even Jaimini in his Purva-Mimansa defines Dharma as "a desirable goal or result that is indicated by injunctive (Vedic) passages ". To put it in plain language, what the Hindus
call Religion is really Law or at best legalized class-ethics. Frankly, I
refuse to cull this code of ordinances, as Religion. The first evil of such a
code of ordinances, misrepresented to the people as Religion, is that it tends
to deprive moral life of freedom and spontaneity
and to reduce it (for the conscientious at any rate) to a more or less anxious and servile
conformity to externally imposed rules. Under it,
there is no loyalty to ideals, there is only conformity
to commands. But the worst evil of this code of ordinances
is that the laws it contains must be the same yesterday, today and forever.
They are iniquitous in that they are not the same
for one class as for another. But this iniquity is made perpetual in that they
are prescribed to be the same for all generations.
The objectionable part of such a scheme is not that they are made by certain persons called Prophets or Law-givers. The
objectionable part is that this code has been invested with the character of
finality and fixity. Happiness notoriously varies with the conditions and
circumstances of a person, as well as with the
conditions of different people and epochs. That being the case, how can
humanity endure this code of eternal laws, without being cramped and without
being crippled ? I have, therefore, no hesitation
in saying that such a religion must be destroyed and I say, there is nothing
irreligious in working for the destruction of such
a religion. Indeed I hold that it is your bounden duty to tear the mask, to remove the
misrepresentation that as caused by misnaming this Law as Religion. This is an
essential step for you. Once you clear the minds of the people of this
misconception and enable them to realize that what they are told as Religion is
not Religion but that it is really Law, you will be in a position to urge for
its amendment or abolition. So long as people look upon it as Religion they
will not be ready for a change, because the idea of Religion is generally
speaking not associated with the idea of change. But the idea of law is
associated with the idea of change and when people
come to know that what is called Religion is
really Law, old and archaic, they will be ready for a change, for people know
and accept that law can be changed.
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