*Are Goan Catholics Culturally Hindu?*

*Ram Puniyani*



Identity issues are at the fore in current times. Those basing their
politics on the identity issues have lot of assertions about who the
‘others’ are. There is a constant ongoing attempt to assimilate them in the
umbrella of their religion and culture. Current times, where religious
nationalism dominates, the scene is that amongst all our multiple
identities, the religious one is kept at the fore. In this attempt one
recalls that it was Murli Manohar Joshi of RSS-BJP who coined the term
Ahmadiya Hindus for Muslims and Christi Hindu for the Christians. Not only
this is meant to assimilate the other religious minorities, RSS has also
been saying that Sikhism is just a sect of Hinduism not a religion by
itself. There are multiple assertions at different times; the goal is to
somehow label all the people under the umbrella of Hinduism, to label most
as Hindus, either on the ground of religion or culture. Sometimes Muslims
are told that their ancestors were Hindus and so what has changed is just
the mode of worship.



On the same pattern the Goan Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar is the latest
one in this direction of appropriation of the ‘other’.  In an interview he
put forward his take on the issue of culture of Goan Catholics. Talking to
the New York Times India blog (06, Sept 2013) he said that Catholics in Goa
are culturally Hindu and that India is a Hindu nation in cultural sense.



What is this Hindu culture Parrikar is talking about? Let us understand
there is no uniform Hindu culture. Amongst Hindus the cultural variations
are vast; they are affected by the region, the area in which they live,
caste and economic status amongst other things. The hall mark of the
society is that culture is basically diverse and most affected by region,
so culture generally is not labeled with religious prefix. Diversity is the
core of culture of the society. Parikkar does say that culture of a Goan
Catholic is different from the one in Brazil. Let’s remind him that culture
of Catholics in every country is different. Within the same country it is
again not uniform. To say that there is something like Hindu culture out
there is an attempt to hegemonize, to impose some sort of homogeneity on
something whose life breath is diversity.



There have been the theorists who argued that as different cultures meet
they will merge into uniformity, what is popularly called as the ‘melting
pot’ model. This is not what the society has seen. What has been observed
is the ‘mosaic model’ or a ‘salad bawl’ model, where different shades,
colors remain and add to the beauty of the whole. In cultural arena a
dynamic interaction and some synthesis does take place while the different
shades also continue to add their essence to the whole. There are many
Hindus who will visit the Dargah of a Peer or Sufi saint and many Muslims
who follow the Hindu saints of medieval times. Many a time’s food habits
also become important ingredient of culture. While currently it is
projected that eating beef is against Hindu practices there have been large
number of Hindu communities eating beef. At personal level one recently
came across a Hindu family on a tour to Europe, which was longing to relish
beef. The tour operators had organized a vegetarian- non beef meal for the
Indian tourists. This family made their own arrangement to eat beef
somehow. Anthropological survey had identified large number of Hindu
communities consuming beef. Now how will Parikkar handle the fact that Goan
Catholics consume beef as well as pork, will he call it a ‘Hindu culture’?
Currently cow is one of the major tool-symbol of Parrikar brand of
politics, the one of Hindutva. How will Parrikar engage with Catholics
eating beef?



Catholics of Goa may not have much in common with Catholics of other
countries but that does not make them part of ‘Hindu culture’, if at all
such a category can be coined. The core point is cultures cannot be
restricted to religious categories. There are nearly 56 Muslim majority
countries in the World, and their culture is as diverse as the cultural
diversity within India. There is a vast range. Hinduism has been mostly
restricted to India, there are Hindu communities in different parts of the
World to be sure, but culturally they are as diverse as any other religious
community.



So why is RSS swayamsevak Parikkar trying to appropriate the Catholics into
Hindu cultural fold? The idea is that RSS-Parrikar politics is founded on
the premise that India is a Hindu nation. So something Hindu has to be
tagged on to other religious communities to claim their support at
electoral level. There is a complex policy towards minorities as far as RSS
progeny is concerned. At electoral level their support has to be won over,
so some sort of Hindu label is to be put on them. There is also an attempt
to impose Hindu norms on them, so some times they are called Ahmadiya
Hindus or Christi Hindus. This gives RSS politics a scope to force them to
adopt Hindu deities over a period of time. At the level of Governance and
social politics, the idea is to subjugate them through violence and
marginalization. We have seen enough propaganda-blames on Christians and
Muslims, blames about conversion, beef eating, loyalty to other nations
etc., the propaganda which is the base of ‘Hate other’ ideology, and
communal violence.  The burning alive of Pastors, rape of nuns, burning of
Churches, violence against Muslims and Christians has been stalking the
country. At the level of Governance, in the political arena the Parrikar
parivar agenda is to oppose affirmative action for religious minorities or
even to the socially disadvantaged people.



Indian Constitution and norms of United Nations do recognize and value the
diversity of culture of people. The sectarian political tendencies all
over, Parrikar included, begin with labeling them in their own hegemonic
version of culture and politics and then go on to impose the same on
‘others’. The cleverness and shrewd maneuvers don’t end here.
Simultaneously they can go on with anti minority propaganda and their
marginalization in the social-economic terrain.

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