https://scroll.in/article/850780/why-was-bjp-s-ram-madhav-stunned-to-hear-that-nalanda-had-politics-of-yoga-taught-by-a-foreigner

Why was BJP's Ram Madhav stunned to hear that Nalanda had 'Politics of
Yoga' taught by a foreigner?
The American scholar defends her course at the University which, the BJP
national general secretary tweeted last week to say, had been ‘abolished’.

by  Patricia Sauthoff
Published 4 hours ago
Why was BJP's Ram Madhav stunned to hear that Nalanda had 'Politics of
Yoga' taught by a foreigner?

Patricia Sauthoff (fourth from right) with her colleagues and students at
Nalanda University in April. (Photo credit: Nalanda University/Facebook). |
Nalanda University/Facebook

>From the very beginning I knew that government interference into the
curriculum at Nalanda University was a very real possibility. Nearly a year
before I moved to Bihar to teach a course in the History and Politics of
Yoga at the university’s School of Buddhist Studies, Philosophy and
Comparative Religions, its founding chancellor, Amartya Sen, published a
piece in the New York Review of Books describing his resignation as
chancellor amid government interference of academic leadership throughout
India.

However, by the time I arrived at Nalanda in late July 2016, George Yeo of
Singapore had been named as chancellor, which led me to believe that the
spirit of academic independence would remain strong and that the university
would thrive to be an academic powerhouse in Asia.

Challenges at Nalanda
The challenges of starting a new university in a poor and rural part of
India with inadequate transportation links was clear from the outset.
Healthcare was non-existent, food quality poor, and living conditions for
faculty and students unhealthy due to mould and damp, as well as the lack
of basics such as access to cooking facilities.

Students were asked to persevere, and they and the faculty worked together
to try to bring these issues to the attention of the administration and
offer solutions. We expected these growing pains and tolerated them because
we had academic freedom and believed in what we were doing. We were told
that we had autonomy.

Last November, at the end of my first term at the university, the
government chose not to extend Vice Chancellor Gopa Sabharwal’s contract
and dissolved the governing board, which led to the resignation of Yeo, who
accused the government of failing to maintain the autonomy he was promised.
It appeared Hindutva was about to knock at my own front door. I believed
there would be no better time to discuss the history of yoga with my
students than this one.

Yoga studies
The 15-week History and Politics of Yoga course began as many yoga studies
do, with the Yoga Sutras. I believe it is important to read the source
material for oneself as well as to examine the various contexts in which
such materials are interpreted over time. David Gordon White’s biography of
the text demonstrates that even today, academics and yoga practitioners
read the text in very different ways. Through this lens my class was able
to discuss the text in terms of its influence on Indian philosophy, the
response of British colonial translators, and the teachings of thinkers
such as Swami Vivekananda.

Already we began to find politics. British translations helped to spread
yogic knowledge throughout the West. These translators, able to access yoga
teachings because of British rule, helped to shape yoga going forward. For
example, in the documentary West Meets East (or Mystical Journey: Kumbh
Mela as it was called in America), Sanskrit and yoga scholar Sir James
Mallinson (note: Mallinson is one of my academic supervisors) states that
the British were wary of gatherings such as the Kumbh Mela because of the
risk of the spread of disease, and because such gatherings were often a
platform for insurrection and nationalist propaganda. Its practitioners
responded by developing the myth of the four kumbhs, which reinterpreted
and expanded upon an ancient myth, to protect the mela.

Though the myth is now taken as ancient it does not appear in any
pre-colonial texts. Learning this history does not undermine the belief in
the story but merely adds context to how beliefs develop over time.

Play
The documentary 'West meets East.'

Media outlets around the world, from Foreign Affairs and Forbes in the
United States, Sydney Morning Herald in Australia, and The Indian Express
have described Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s push to spread yoga
throughout the world as “yoga diplomacy”. Events such as International Yoga
Day (June 21) are a prime example of the use of soft power to influence the
behaviour and beliefs of others. By projecting yoga as, in the words of
Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev to the United Nations, “India’s gift to the world,”
yoga is defined as Indian first but accessible to all. This gives the
impression that yoga is open to interpretation and leads the way for such
innovation as Christian yoga, aerial yoga, nude yoga, and so on. I asked my
students to think about these forms of yoga, how they grew from yoga
practice in India and whether we could define them as authentic experiences
of yoga. We also discussed the implications of myself, an American of
non-Indian descent, teaching such a course.

(Photo credit: PIB).

That politicians such as Modi work to encourage the spread of yoga outside
of India makes it inherently political. Further, during the course of the
semester Modi appointed Yogi Adityanath, the chief priest of the Gorakhnath
temple, as chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state.
Adityanath’s appointment ties yoga and politics together in no uncertain
terms. His asceticism is as much a part of his image as his politics.
Though academia often takes time to keep up with current events, we
acknowledged Adityanath’s rise in my class and discussed how his role as a
priest as well as a politician might have an impact on his tenure as chief
minister. For instance, as soon as he took charge he shut down
slaughterhouses, a major source of income for Muslims in the state. His
past rhetoric, which we did not discuss in class, has included statements
saying that Hindu idols should be installed in every mosque in India, that
anyone who opposed surya namaskar (the sun salutation, a yoga sequence)
should drown themselves in the sea, and that those who wish to avoid yoga
can “leave Hindustan”.

Not only does it seem that yoga is for everyone who wants it but also, at
least within India, those who might not. I cannot help but wonder if those
critical of my discussion of yoga and politics would cheer if instead I had
taught a course on the History and Politics of Islam during the Mughal
empire.

Similarly, one of India’s most prominent yogis, Baba Ramdev, involves
himself in politics regularly, appearing frequently onstage with Modi.
Ramdev not only supported Modi’s decision to demonetise old
high-denomination currency notes overnight in November, he claims he had
himself been calling for such a move for years. As a businessman, he has
been hugely effective. He owns the Patanjali brand and his face is
ubiquitous in much of North India.

 Adityanath (left) and Ramdev. (Photo credit: MYogiAdityanath/Facebook).

Selective controversy
Of course, the history of yoga is also the development of practice,
innovation in the understandings of supernatural powers, new medical
regimes, and a rich textual and visual tradition that reinterprets the
tenets of beliefs and explanations of the world. While these often have
political implications, to only focus on that would have been a disservice
to my students and insulting to the rich ideas practitioners of yoga have
developed over the course of hundreds of years. Much more of our time was
spent discussing the fine points of kaivalya (perfect isolation or absolute
unity), various meditative practices, and how texts such as the Hatha Yoga
Pradipika came into being.

Unfortunately, the controversy surrounding my course ignores the history
part of the syllabus and focuses only on the political. That I am a
foreigner adds fuel to the fire as this allows those who object to the
course to let their imaginations regarding my background and intentions run
wild. However, the biggest issue is not that I, a non-Indian, taught
Sanskrit and Yoga at Nalanda. It is that the academic freedom of the
institution has been trampled. Nalanda’s current vice-chancellor Sunaina
Singh told The Telegraph newspaper that, “the very title of the course is
problematic”.

But no one ever discussed any problems with the course with me before,
during, or after I taught it. The course began in January, after Yeo’s
resignation and ran till the end of the academic year in May. When I left
Rajgir at the end of the term, my contract was set to expire in July. In
mid-June I received a letter from the university inquiring about my
intention to continue. A week later another letter arrived, rescinding the
previous letter, thanking me for my service to the university, and assuring
me that I would be paid through the end of my contract.

To say that the course had been “abolished”, as BJP national general
secretary Ram Madhav claimed in a tweet last week that went viral, is an
assault against not only intellectual freedom but puts my students and
colleagues in danger. Some of the replies to Madhav’s tweet called for a
purge of all foreigners from Indian universities, sexually degrading
remarks about me, and calls for investigations into ideas at universities
across the country. Recent threats and acts of violence against academics
and journalists in India indicate that people are willing to take action
against those with whom they disagree. It is not difficult to spot members
of the university in Rajgir and I fear Madhav’s tweet could make those in
the Nalanda community targets.

Stunned to hear dat Amartya Sen's Nalanda Univ regime had a course on
'Politics of Yoga' taught by a foreigner. Now course abolished
— Ram Madhav (@rammadhavbjp) September 9, 2017

Finally, I also wonder what is to become of my students, who have paid tens
of thousands of rupees after being promised a world class education, and
who instead find their instructors fleeing due to academic interference,
and their programme a shell of what it once was?

Stunned that a high level government official has chosen to spread
misinformation about my class. https://t.co/RtcIDtW6qD

— Patricia Sauthoff (@gitagovinda) September 12, 2017


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