Importance of Interfaith Dialogue for Social Harmony
Neelakanta Radhakrishnan
It
has to be admitted that the venom of caste and communal feelings has spread to
almost all layers of our social and political life and several long-term and
short-term policies are to be evolved and implemented both at the national and
local levels in order to stem the rising tide of communal frenzy which has
unfortunately blinded considerable section of our country’s population
particularly the youth.
The problem should not be looked at
from the angle of majority or minority rights and privileges but one of
national importance.
Suggestions
for consideration
The
following might be useful suggestion when a national initiative is thought
about to combat these evils and involve students and youth at various levels in
creative activities which would make learning an enjoyable process :
1. Promotion of right understanding
of religions and stressing the common core of all religions, as emphasized by
Mahatma Gandhi. Gandhi’s concept of equal respect for all religions is to be
stressed through inter-religious dialogues and exchange of ideas.
2. Adopting educational measures for
promoting inter-religious unity which may include prayer, meditation, imparting
of moral education, establishment of inter-religious groups and stressing the
importance of sharing and communion both at the formal and non-formal levels.
3. Teaching of history in schools and
colleges needs revision. The present pattern and the books hardly create any
harmony.
The
ancient period of Indian history was identified as Hindu and Buddhist period,
the medieval period as Muslim period and the later period up to 1947 as British
period. This communal way of presenting Indian history is thoroughly misleading
and it invariably tends to bias the mind.
It
is argued that the teaching of Indian history in secular government schools in
free India also instead of creating harmony very often assumes the overtones of
communalism and casteism. Social and cultural changes are practically ignored
in their accounts. The religious bigotry and fanatic zeal of certain rulers find a prominent
mention. The ethnic divisions of Muslim rulers such as Mongols, Afghans, Turks,
Persians,Arabs are virtually blurred. The caste system of Hindus is rightly
emphasized and condemned, but the caste divisions among the Muslims are
practically ignored and underplayed.
4. Teachers also need orientation on
how to stress unity and common goals and exercise an integrative and formative
influence on the younger generation.
5. Another major step we should
contemplate is the removal of suspicion of alienating the young from the older
generation on the ground that these ostensibly secular moves on the part of the
Hindu dominated Government could be a subterfuge to submerge the separate
identity of the Muslims as Muslims and wean away their children from Islam.
6. Organizing inter-religious youth
camps and exchange programmes affording opportunities to youth from different
religious groups for staying together and working together animated by the
spirit of the basic unity of all religions and sections of people. Taking steps to see that the mass media are
not used to promote communal hatred and inter-religious feuds and to use the
force of religion to combat violence prompted by the abuse of alcohol and
improper use of drugs.
8. Enlisting the co-operation of all
sections of the society for carrying out these programmes. Special emphasis may
be laid on the role of religious leaders, teachers and parents, scientists, journalists,
youth, women and voluntary organizations so that,
a) Religious leaders and leaders of
caste based organizations realize that
their duty is to stress the positive role of religion for promoting peace and
understanding.
b) Journalists should make an attempt
to stress the positive role of religion and highlight constructive efforts made
be organizations and others in promoting harmony and good-will instead of going
after sensational news.
c) Women and women’s organizations
have to play a very important and
specific role in promoting peace. This, they can do by educating children at home as also by participating in
all programmes, especially those meant to give an idea of the havoc wrought
by war. They should also lend strong
support to protests against the misuse of
the mass media.
9. Text-books should carefully be
selected in schools and colleges. Books containing negative ideas that militate
against religious harmony should be
discarded and only those with
positive integrating ideas should be encouraged.
10. Good books from different
religions in one language may be translated into other languages.
11.Study of comparative religions be
introduced in the curricula at all levels.
12. Research on comparative religions
may be promoted. Projects which come
under this umbrella be suitably assisted.
13. Lectures be arranged and symposia
and seminars held frequently on religious faiths and strengthening of
secularism.
14. Steps to celebrate all religious
festivals by all sections together be thought about. Exchange of gifts, mutual
invitations and visits during important religious festivals be encouraged.
15. The activities of Youth Movements
like the Shanti Sena of Gandhi which strives to promote religious tolerance and
training of youth in nonviolence be studied and if possible similar efforts
initiated on a larger basis both in the educational institutions and outside.
16. Youth camps be organized on a
regular basis and attendance at these camps may suitably recognized
17. Sports and games will help greatly to bring
about emotional integration of people. Hence, they should be encouraged.
Greater emphasis should be given to organize such activities on inter-state
basis.
18. Inter-religious prayers may be
organized, if possible in universities and colleges in which songs from
different religions may be sung and passages from different scriptures read.
19. The students may be encouraged to
visit different places of worship of all religions. These should be accompanied
by due explanations of special features.
20. Discussions, debates, and groups
singing bring the students closer physically and emotionally and thus help to
understand each other better should be encouraged in educational institutions.
21. Group singing has become almost a
rare phenomenon. Singing together brings people together. Hence group singing
should be arranged. The UGC’s initiative to set-up music choir groups in each
college be taken advantage of.
22. Efforts to offer
courses/programmes on inter-religious, inter-communal harmony be encouraged.
23. A new type of education is needed
for developing a better integrated
learner by revision of courses of study and formulation of schemes of
national education from the lowest to the highest, with the purpose of
promoting study other religions.
24. Establishment of cells for
combating ideas which militate against religious tolerance.
25. Insistence of norms or codes of
conduct for religious head, parents, teachers, for students for members of
political parties and indeed for citizens of every class for promotion of all
ideas which produce unities amidst diversities in religion and culture.
26. A restructure of the education
system in order to make it a genuine vehicle of individual transformation and
societal change might be a pious wish in the light of the tremendous and
imponderable factors. Without demanding any such thing can’t we think in terms
of introducing within the existing system programmes that would facilitate
teacher-taught dialogue.
27. The Japanese and Chinese system
of education holds out hope so far as it would help the young minds shed sloth
and aversion to physical labour.
Gandhi’s words in this context are worth
remembering. ‘ The first step in the practice of socialism is to learn to
use your hands and feet. It is the only way to eradicate violence and
exploitation from society’.
28. The school and college should
become the springboard of every kind of artistic innovations which would in the
long run reduce the tyranny of text books about which students keep on
complaining.
29. A three-way partnership between
the school, the home and community should be the aim and we have the extremely
valuable experiences of countries which gained tremendously from fostering this
partnership. These countries have demonstrated how the school, home and community
were to be made responsible for a specific part of the educational task.
Schools and colleges, if they have to become functional centres of learning, have
to become the nerve centres of the aspirations of the community. The
responsibility of parents and others in joining whichever way the efforts of
teachers and other education experts is to be stressed and creative involvement
of community is to be encouraged.
30.The Shantisena and the Gandhi Peace
clubs in educational institutios:the joint initiative of Indian Council of
Gandhian Studies, The Shanti Sena Centre in Trivandrum, and the Yuvsatta of Chandigarh to set up Gandhi Peace Clubs/Shantikendras
in educational institutions is found to be a very laudable initiative which needs
to be examined for wider adoption by national agencies and governments.
What the younger brother of former President of the US President John F Kennedy said should inspire us to go forward with undaunted courage and conviction: ‘Let no one be discouraged by the belief there is nothing one man or one woman can do against the enormous array of the world’s ills – against misery and ignorance, injustice and violence… Few will have the greatness to bend history itself; but each of us can work to change a small portion of events, and in the total of all those acts will be written the history of this generation.
What the younger brother of former President of the US President John F Kennedy said should inspire us to go forward with undaunted courage and conviction: ‘Let no one be discouraged by the belief there is nothing one man or one woman can do against the enormous array of the world’s ills – against misery and ignorance, injustice and violence… Few will have the greatness to bend history itself; but each of us can work to change a small portion of events, and in the total of all those acts will be written the history of this generation.
It is from the numberless
diverse acts of courage and belief that human history is shaped. Each time a
man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes
out against injustice, he sends a tiny ripple of hope and crossing each from a
million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current
which can sweep down mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.
I would like to
close this discussion by citing a poem by the Persian Poet-Philosopher Hafiz
I
Have
Learned
So
much from God
That I
can no longer
Call
Myself
A
Christian, a Hindu, a Muslim,
A
Buddhist, a Jew.
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