I was just thinking in the first few hours of the first day of new year about some of the positive developments this year for Indians. For one, West seems to have woken up to the fact that Oil economies could be having some dysfunction which has resulted in the current crisis of terrorism in the West -and perhaps lead to a more equitable social structures in future global enviornment. Maybe this would help the one billion Indians.
 
Second, at some level Indians (who are mostly Hindus) have shown interest in school education -even at World level - this current California Textbook issue is an indicator -whatever the outcome maybe. Religion is perhaps always the quest for perfect knowledge -as Buddha wanted. So religion should surely bow to currently known facts and thus textbooks should reflect truth as is known now. Indian economy is not growing becos of its history textbooks though. However, religion is a bone of contention in the current world and may lead to a "clash of civilizations" as celebrated Harvard professor Samuel Huntington prected in his 1996 book by that name. Thus, should be dealt with utmost care and given high priority -when this knowledge is to be passed on to future generations thru school texts.
 
Hinduism and portrayal of its differing philisophies:
Professor Witzel surely seems to be having not only the currently known (historical) facts about Indian civilization but also some detailed knowledge about Indian (incl Hindu)  philosophical traditions -about Tantriks, Mimansa, animal sacrifice etc. He also accepts that Hindusim is negatively portrayed in US textbooks. And that Vedic Foundation says that Hinduism (human civilization)  started 1.9 million years ago (as does the Geeta translated by ISKCON's founder Sri Prabhupad) does not seem logical -and neither does Biblical view that world was created in in about 6000BC.
 
But his view of Hinduism is that of an outsider looking at India (and Hinduism) from outside just like my view has been of Christianity in US. Perhaps my revised view of Christianity -after seeing it in practice in US - would reflect the worry Prof. Witzel has about Hinduism portrayal in India.
 
His weighty argument is that Hinduism does not present itself to a narrow definiton of belief in one God and in only one set of ideologies --and thus US textbooks should reflect this as should all the defects therein such as casteism and treatment of women -perhaps US school texts also mention about slavery in Bible (King David was son of a slave etc) and Genesis notion why women must be subservient to men.
 
Differing faiths within Christianity:
After seeing so many variations of Christianity in the West -such as Quakers, Unitarian Universalists (who believe in trueness of other faiths also) and polygamist Mormons and that even the Bible has four different verisons of Christ's teachings -as four Gospels. Which one is correct? As per Discovery Channel and History Channel (as I saw during this Christmas break) two more Gospels have been discovered by 1940s -of Mary Magdelene and Thomas -called Apocryphal Gospels.
Mary M.:
 
 
Thomas: The Kingdom of God is within you and around you (as in Geeta for Hindus - but unlike regular Bible sayings)
 
Both texts have been dated and believed to be older than those mentioned in the Bible currently (King James' eidition I believe).  Thomas's Gospel says that Jesus never preached that he was the one and only son of God or that he was a messiah or that he was resurrected after dying on the cross.He preached that truth seekers should seek God (as Hindus believe -for God realization) . Mary Magadelene - Jesus's disciple - who is labelled as a prostitute earlier - says in her Gospel that he even kissed her -hinting at a romantic side of Jesus -and comes to fore as his foremost disciple who understood him better than the 12 apostles -but was sidelined by Peter -the main apostle of the bible-who mentioned her as a slut.
 
Despite all these controversies and currently existing sects and Gospels-- I believe that in US -as in India -Christianity is taught as seen socially acceptable - as Jesus being a messiah and believed by his followers to be son of God who rose from his death on the third day of his death thru crucifiction and had no romantic interest in any woman. Also that Christians do not believe in polygamy or slavery-or perhaps omit mentioning this issue altogether.
 
Conclusion: Just as Hindus need to look at an outsider's perspective to improve upon how they portray themselves (as originating 1.9 million years ago etc) -- similarly outsiders should also realize that only the wearer knows where the shoe pinches or that you have to be a pregnant woman undergoing normal child birth to understand the pain -which no man can really realize.
 
So outsiders writing about Hindusim also must take pains to learn Hindu point of view before declaring their verdict on it. That Hindus do have many differing philosophies but most agree that there is one God/Ishwar/Brahm/Bhagwan and the importance of Yoga, fasting, reincarnation and ability to meet God through meditation/Yoga etc (God realization/Moksha or Nirwana perhaps as in Buddhism) -many of these things run contrary to Western faiths, though .
 
And that  Ofcourse through dialogue the differing points of view can be reconciled - and a new level of understanding can be reached.
This interview itself clarifies many points of contention -which maybe be addressed in future interactions.
 
Umesh
 

umesh sharma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The Rediff Interview/Harvard Professor Michael Witzel

'I am not a Hindu hater'
http://ia.rediff.com/news/2005/dec/30inter1.htm?q=sp&file=.htm
December 30, 2005

Professor Michael Witzel, Wales Professor of Sanskrit in the Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies at Harvard University, shot off a letter to the California Board of Education on November 8 after coming to know what he described was US-based Hindu groups's attempt to have sections of school textbooks relating to information on ancient India, Hindu religion and culture altered to conform to their views.
Professor Witzel warned in the letter, co-signed, among others, by Stanley Wolpert, Professor Emeritus at the University of California at Los Angeles, a pre-eminent American specialist on Indian history, and Romila Thapar, India's most famous historian on ancient India and a recent Kluge Fellow at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, that the textbook changes proposed by these groups would lead to an international educational scandal if accepted by California's Board of Education.
Following the letter, Professor Witzel, who has lived and taught Mimamsa philosophy in Nepal for more than five years and held many positions in the US and Germany, was retained by the Curriculum Commission along with Professor Wolpert to revisit the changes/edits approved by the ad hoc committee.
After the commission, an advisory body, decided by vote to accept only a dozen or so of the 58 recommendations made by the Witzel panel, Professor Witzel spoke to rediff India Abroad Senior Editor Suman Guha Mozumder explaining the reasons for his panel's opposition to the corrections proposed by the Hindu groups.
Why did you choose to write to the Board of Education almost at the end of the process? What issues were you and other scholars on India uncomfortable with?
It was the whole approach these two Foundations -- the Hindu Education Foundation and the Vedic Foundation -- took on the issue of textbooks. As we mentioned, the agenda of these groups proposing these
changes is familiar to all specialists on Indian history who have recently won a long battle to prevent exactly these kinds of changes from finding a permanent place in history textbooks in India.
 
The proposed revisions are not of a scholarly but of a religious-political nature and promoted by Hindutva supporters and non-specialist academics who write on issues outside their areas of expertise.
Could you elaborate?
I must perhaps say that school textbooks are never perfect, and are always behind the curve. But now what these two Foundations have done with their proposed changes is to make the textbooks even worse for the school children of California.
Why do you think so?
The reasons are twofold.
First of all, it is a rewriting of Hinduism. Academics discuss Hinduism, among all religions, keeping in mind that there are so many diverse groups. If you read their edits, it would seem like Hinduism is a monotheistic religion, like Christianity or Judaism, with God spelt with a capital G.
It is a very narrow sectarian approach and that is being inserted into textbooks.
I have no preference, but you see there are tantriks, lingayets and others who too are Hindus, but all of them are missing (in the groups' opinion of Hinduism) and you get only one particular, sectarian and religiously-motivated point of view.
What is the second reason?
Number two is that history too has also been rewritten seriously. If you had gone to the Vedic Foundation web site, you will be happy to see that Indian civilisation is 1.9 million years old. I wonder who was around that time in India but anyway they say it is that old.
I believe you and your panel objected to as many as 58 proposals approved by the ad hoc committee. What were the main ones?
I do not know (because) there are so many. The main ones are on the side of philosophy and religion. They talk only in terms of God and cut out other gods and goddesses. Then there are many historical inaccuracies. They would say that Hinduism is just Vedic.
If it was just Vedic then many things like the worship of goddess Kali would not be part of present day Hinduism. Or they would say that the ancient sacrifices or jagnas did not involve any animal sacrifice. As if nobody knows what goes on in Kalighat (a temple in Kolkata where goats used to be sacrificed until a few years ago) or Kathmandu (capital of Nepal, the only Hindu kingdom in the world) every day.
They say the same things for the early Vedic period. There are historical inaccuracies all over the place.
I believe your panel had objections about the corrections relating to the caste system.
It is always complicated. First of all, the textbooks authors had confused caste and class although that has been corrected. But they say the caste system developed in the last few centuries or so. But the fact that the caste system was there before the British came to rule India is denied by them.
To come back to our point, what they are doing is misrepresentation of both history and religion.
Your panel also had objections on women's rights.
Young women would be happy to learn that, as the edits suggest, that their rights were different from the rights of men in India like the slave owners and slaves had. Schools children will learn that, although it contradicts what the ancient Indian texts say.
A very famous quote from Manu says 'a woman should be guarded at all stages of her life -- as a child at home by her father, as a married woman by her husband and as a widow by her son.' Thank you very much for the protection, but these things are never mentioned. Only that women and men had different rights.
The Shruti says, for example in the Satapatha Brahmana, that in war one should not kill women.
But the next sentence says one should just rob them. It shows the rights of women, but it also shows the position of women, too!
Could this be out of ignorance of history?
You know, I would agree with them as far as the ultimate cause is concerned because Hindus and others living in the US notice that their religion gets misrepresented and there is a need to correct the image. I agree with that.
But the question is how to go about it?
The intention of the Vedic Foundation and Hindu Education Foundation was good but the way they are doing it, as I said, is sectarian, narrow and historically wrong.
If they had consulted scholars in the US -- and most of them are South Asians -- then they would have got a balanced proposal.
Of course, scholars would not always agree with the religious people and the religious people would not agree with each other, but at least you would have got a balanced set of proposals.
That has not happened. Instead, you get narrow, sectarian points of views. I am hundred percent in favour of rewriting these books but not in this way.
I believe most of the recommendations made by the ad hoc committee have been upheld despite the suggestions/alterations suggested by you. Does it surprise you, given the fact that you and Professor Wolpert made suggestions?
I have several reports from that meeting from people who were present. The proceedings were incorrect. They did not follow the mandate that they had but made it up themselves. I mean the Curriculum Commission made up their own mandate. The meeting was taken over by one of the commissioners. In simple American language, it was really a mess.
This is something for the Californians to sort out. It was not done properly by this ad hoc committee and it was dominated by one commissioner who pushed for a sectarian, unhistorical narrow approach to corrections. They also did not take into account other Hindu voices, forget about us.
Do you think...
You see the main aim is to present India in the best light which is fine. They are really trying to erase things that are negative. But there are negative things. I just do not understand why does one have to do such things? Just praise what is good. But that is never done.
Why not say we (India) had early development of maths, good surgeons and good philosophy 2000 years ago, things that are factually correct?
I always get misrepresented that I am a Hindu hater, but I am not.
I hate people who misrepresent history.
Do you agree with the perception in certain quarters that it is a victory of sorts for Hindus in America?
That is a very doubtful characterisation (laughs) if you follow this particular issue. You might be angry if you know anything about history and might not be happy.





Umesh Sharma
5121 Lackwanna ST
College Park, MD 20740

1-202-215-4328 [Cell Phone]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005


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