[Building New
Solidarities | Economic and
Political Weekly Editorials. Vol
- XLVII No. 44, November 03, 2012. Public
religious festivals are a ready resource for reactionary politics. Can they be
secularised?
Perhaps
precisely because of this, it is necessary to develop a critique – both
intellectual as well as political/practical – of the public religious festival.
Some earlier attempts, like those of Tagore in Bengal ,
Gora in Andhra Pradesh and Periyar in Tamil Nadu, to critique them and move
away to other, non-religious public festivities, have been unsuccessful,
despite their initial promise…
Is
it possible for radical and progressive forces to find forms of public
festivities which can rival the public religious festival? Is it possible to
build a popular culture which does not rely on religion and communal
identities? We will not know the answer till the battle is truly joined.]
[VAAD-PRATIVAAD:
SECULARISM IS IMPORTANT TO A MODERN INDIA III CRI (Round I here and Round II here). FOR THE MOTION: Harsh Gupta
Not
a nation where one cannot badmouth the Bhagwad Gita or disparagingly paint
Goddess Sita. India does
not need a proactive Hindu vanguard in the Abrahamic mould because this will
end up making India more
divided and Hinduism less universal. Instead we need to take identity
completely out of our policies, our schools, our jobs, our tax code, our
personal code – and this must include caste identity politics also over time. 2:31 PM]
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