Fundamentalism
Saturday October 2 2004 07:55 IST
By Karmayogi
Where POWER acts in
freedom, man is uncompromising. The employer will be merciless if there is no
law restraining him and if the workers are timid and unorganised.
The workers will not be reasonable if the courts take their side. How far these
expressions of power – assertions – will go has been seen in different decades.
When the situations change, it will be a sight to see the parties on their own
switching sides and becoming rational.
There was a time when a mother-in-law asserted against her daughter-in-law for
having used eight chillies instead of six. She was asked to drink that chilli
powder as a punishment. The daughter-in-law died. Society practised a culture
of silence.
The great extent of opposition – resentment, denunciation, terrorism – to which
religious fundamentalists can go is often flimsy as well as ridiculous.
If in any country this resentment is at its height, it is in America.
Strangely it is in the same country that most of the nations of the world are
richly represented by a substantial minority. Historians, economic historians,
social anthropologists who have studied this phenomenon wonder how they live in
amity in that nation, known as the New World.
One such author describes the stratification there of the Irish Catholics,
effervescent Italians, British Protestants, Nordic liberals, Russian Jews, and
Hispanics as an exact parallel to the Indian caste system. Presently in India, these tensions arise at an explosive temperature, especially during elections.
In the USA, economic opportunities, opportunities for upward
social mobility are there for the asking. Settlers who arrived in New York in 1920 or even in
1870 in a matter of weeks rose to the position of middle class with an
apartment and sometimes with a car.
The maximum they stayed in the slums was seven years, the average less than one
year. That a nobody on the street can become a respectable citizen by hard,
intelligent work is a SOLVENT of ethnic conflicts and tensions.
Prosperity dissolves human perversity. Fundamentalism goes to the rear, the
dollar sign ($) beckons. It is not so much money as the keen urge for progress
as an individual, the desire to educate one's children, the longing to be
a respected member of the community, in short, the awakening of the individual
that wipes out the evil of indiscriminate violence.
Indian prosperity will be the bedrock and foundation of peace in public life. As
a lone individual, if one HONESTLY rises in status, and raises his income, he
is a worker for Peace.