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Punjab: Battleground Anew

by I.J. SINGH

 

I must confess that I was appalled when I first read reports of Christians targeting Punjab, Madhya Pradesh and other regions of India for massive conversions to Christianity.  Punjab is the land of my religion - Sikhism - and that bothered me even more.

How could they do this, I wondered?   Is it even legal in India?  Isn't there a law against conversions on the books in India?

Then I thought some more.

Muslims invaded India a millennium ago, and uncounted millions converted to Islam -  many at the point of a gun.  During an earlier era, millions escaped the stultifying embrace (change that to a boa's death-grip) of caste-riven Hinduism by becoming Buddhists - until a resurgent Hinduism decimated Buddhism in India.

Sikhism arose in India just over 500 years ago.  Many Hindus and Muslims flocked to its progressive ideals and became converts.  The distinct identity of Sikhism does not sit well or comfortably with many Hindus, even today.

St. Thomas, one of the original apostles, is reputed to have taken Christianity to India; Brahmins perceived him a danger to Hinduism and probably killed him there. 

Punjab has had two prominent and historic citadels of Christianity - in Ludhiana and Batala.  The British, perhaps, felt then that if Punjab could convert to Christianity (much as a large swath of South India had done) then surely Punjab, and even greater India, would remain securely within the British Empire, maybe forever. 

This is not the time or place to delve into the colorful history of the Holy Roman Empire, but don't forget that Christianity and political power were rarely and only briefly separate and distinct.  Until recent times, they were seamlessly merged.  The founders of the United States did separate church and state, but the minds of George W. Bush and many of his ilk continue to conflate the two.

When, after the British annexation of the Sikh Raj just over 100 years ago, Christian proselytization raised its ugly head in Punjab, it was then that Sikhs woke up with a start. 

This marked the beginning of a reform within Sikhism and the rise of the Singh Sabha. This movement effectively put a stop to Christian conversions in Punjab.  This extraordinary achievement came not by protest and public display of angst, but by a methodical and remarkable awakening amongst the common people led by the Singh Sabha.

Conversions have been happening all over the world, including Punjab.  They are not likely to cease; after all, there is a smorgasbord of religions in the growing and global free marketplace out there.

But why all this emphasis on the small state of Punjab?

Keep in mind that there is real geopolitik at work here.  The global realities are such that, to a West under siege, a powerful India is the only Asian counterweight to an increasingly muscular China and, as a nuclear power, the only one that can stem the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism at the same time. 

Punjab sits astride what has been the passageway to India for centuries, and it also abuts Kashmir as well as a nuclear Pakistan, two powerful powder kegs ever ready to blow.  India today is a critical geographical and political presence.  Strategic imperatives and economic interests of the Western world are closely intertwined with the realities of Punjab.  For the Western nations, a Christianized Punjab is perceived as a potential bulwark and a dependable ally  -  not unlike the way Timor has recently been cultivated in the heart of Islamic Southeast Asia..

We Sikhs, like Hindus and Buddhists, welcome converts but do not go out to actively proselytize others, and nor does Judaism.  But the two derivatives of Judaism -  Christianity and Islam - seem absolutely convinced of the self-righteous idea that no human can be saved but by joining one of their movements. 

Keep in mind that this hubris not only extends to these glorious traditions when they view others, but to each other as well.  The only saving grace now is that conversions are no longer at the point of a gun as they used to be, and believers of other faiths not burned at the stake as they once were.

Sikhism, on the other hand, refuses to beguile people with promises of unmatched pleasures in the here and the hereafter if they join the faith, or frighten them with the eternal wrath of God if they don't. 

Besides the "carrot and stick" idea of eternal reward and punishment, how does Christianity sell its product and go about converting people?  

And from this we can learn.

There was a time when political power sustained the Christian message.  And now, again, with the political ascendance of George W. Bush and the evangelicals, this model seems to be enjoying a second life, but with a difference.  Now it is not raw power that comes from a gun, but it is economic colonization of a people.

Much of the world is still developing and has a long way to go before it can even feed its own people, much less turn their lives sublime.  India is a prime example. 

Most churches come with schools.  People flock to them because education promises to lead them out of poverty.  Many of my readers today, I am certain, are grateful products (alumni) of such schools, not because they fed us Christianity, but because they were academically good.  They empowered us.

Many Christian centers also provide adult education, vocational training centers, a meeting place and often, if limited, medical care.  These remain luxuries in contemporary Indian rural society, but they are essential to survival; they are the fundamentals of a life of hope.

On the other hand, the caste system still continues to define Indian society by placing Indians in a rigid hierarchy where every aspect of their life is defined for them, and where every move upwards meets a strongly resistant, almost unbreakable glass ceiling.  This is doubly true of India's rural millions - the majority of the Indian population.

Christianity has found a niche in India by refusing to pander to the Indian caste-system.  Imagine how liberating that idea is to a low-caste person - an untouchable -  in Indian society.

Rejection of the caste-system and repudiation of the second-class status of women were cardinal lessons that the Gurus hammered into us when they made us Sikhs.  It took them over 200 years to do so, but hardheaded as we are, these are not lessons that are etched in our bones yet.  Our ties to the traditional Indian practices still bind us and control us.

I have to marvel at the management of this project of bringing Christianity to Punjab by the missionaries - I mean one can't but admire their technology and farsighted goal of building a church in each postal zone.  This really means placing a simple church within walking distance of every Punjabi.

This reminds me of the FDR goal, following the depression era of the 1930's, of a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage as a way to focus on economic recovery of the United States.

Isn't a church in every village, along with its developmental services, going to be more effective than building huge marble mausoleums, admittedly with Guru Granth in each, but inaccessible to any but the rich?  But this is what we commonly do when we build gurdwaras, and then we rue when they seem to have so little lasting impact on the lives of ordinary Sikhs.

Remember when gurdwaras were centers of education and community centers?  People will go where they can get the help they need.

Remember the Singh Sabha?  In Punjab or away from India, anger needs to be harnessed and channeled; progress methodically pursued and measured.

We know that Sikhi is a beautiful system of how to design a life.  But like a salesman who is hawking GM cars in this day and age, we are supremely insecure and uncomfortable driving the product ourselves. If the GM salesman is personally lusting after the BMW, what is the probability, then, that he would sell well?

It seems to me an unassailable truism that all efforts must start with the individual.  We can never teach others what we ourselves do not know.  So that's where we start.  That is essential but not sufficient to stem the rot.

One cannot miss the fact that the leaders of the church-building initiative in Punjab seem to be from the local areas.  They are Punjabis; certainly at the people-to-people level; they are not imported from United States, Canada, Great Britain or similar lands with a stake in the program.

So, I would say, look not to the political structure of Punjab, the SGPC or the dysfunctional Sikh institutions in the diaspora, for lighting our path. Think not of people (Sikhs or otherwise) coming from elsewhere to come and save us.  We tried that once with importing Dayanand to Punjab at the beginning of the Singh Sabha, and he was a disaster who haunts us to this day.   

Keep in mind, as a moral lesson, the fate of Gyani Ditt Singh - a stalwart of those days - whom we would not fully embrace because he had come to us from a "low caste".  Look not to laws in India or elsewhere to come to our rescue.  This is not their job.  

A measured, sustained response is necessary; the race is not necessarily to the swift.

Some backbone needs to replace the siege mentality that often surfaces whenever we sense danger.  The first step is a focus on self-development.

The second step would be inevitable, once the first is initiated, and the two will progress in tandem. 

Institutions will and need to crop up to reverse the rot. 

A new Singh Sabha!

Can it be done?  Why am I optimistic that it will be done?  Because history and Sikhi tell me so.  We have been down that road many times before.  It's a battle that must be fought; it is a battle that will be won.

A sports icon of yesteryear, Billie Jean King, who put women's tennis on the map, and revolutionized the place of women in professional sports, has just written a new book, Pressure is a Privilege

Isn't that how we define "Chardi Kalaa"

The book's title says it all.    All we need to do is to transform a pressing matter into an opportunity.

Recommends Guru Nanak (GGS, p 474): "aapan hathee apnaa aape hee kaj savariyae"  - he asks us to put our minds to grappling with, and resolving, our own needs.

 

[To read more about the situation in Punjab, please click here: http://sikhchic.com/article-detail.php?id=585&cat=18 ]

ijs1@nyu.edu

September 23, 2008

Conversation about this article

1: Satinder Gill (Khanna, Punjab), September 23, 2008, 9:20 PM.

Did we not have enough problems of our own without having to contend with this now? Our division into factions within Sikhism spell doom for us in Punjab, the only ray of hope being some educated and sensible voices, a majority of them dwelling outside India. For the first time in my life I feel ashamed of my convent education in India which I had always held in high esteem. My fellow Sikhs must put aside their political leanings and other dividing factors aside for once and unite against this outrageous move.

2: Ravinder Singh (Sydney, Australia), September 24, 2008, 2:36 AM.

Who had started the Singh Sabha? How did they manage to unite and inspire all the Sikhs? Who will lead the effort anew? These are things that we urgently need to look at today ...

3: Jasdeep (Moga, Punjab), September 24, 2008, 6:17 AM.

Actually the ground realities of christian conversions are: If not all, most of the conversions are by the people from dalit background/weaker economic sections. Now, why they turn to Christianity: 1. The Sikh bodies are mostly controlled by either Jat Sikh or Arora Sikh, so definitely there is discrimination against the dalits in Sikh shrines. To have a different identity, they (a majority of them Dalits) find solace in another faith or sect, be it a Dera, Radhasoami, Chrisitianity, etc. 2. Having their own temple/church/gurduara gives them a sense of economic/social independence from the economically stronger sections. But since the Christian prosleytizing organizations pump in money, it is easy for them to have there own shrine. But, on the other side. the funding in Sikhism is bottom driven and SGPC, being dominated by Jat Sikhs, don't/won't provide any funds to Dalits for their gurdwaras. These are the key reasons why Dalits are easily lured into membership in other sects and belief systems, despite the vested interests the latter invariably have. Sikhism has been neglecting them. In its earlier times, Sikhism was a social revolution. But nowdays, it has forgotten its mission. Where the emphasis is on building a different identity rather building a healthy social system. If you chant Guru Granth Sahib verses like mantras without telling their meanings, then there is no point in saying 'Ham Hindu Nahin'.

4: Satinder Gill (Khanna, Punjab), September 24, 2008, 9:22 AM.

Well said,Jasdeep. You have hit the nail on the head by your accurate observations.Your last line sums it all up. My dad always says that chanting without knowing or telling the meaning is similar to playing the flute for a buffalo ... that is the literal translation.

5: Happy Singh (California, U.S.A.), September 24, 2008, 2:55 PM.

Great article. Excellent historical analysis and background. I.J. Singh's words provide hope and inspiration. I pray that others will be similarly moved and motivated by the importance of self-development.

6: Suzy Kaur (Oxford, England), September 24, 2008, 5:23 PM.

Jasdeep from Mogra nails the truth completely. This is the harsh truth. Too harsh for some to take, because dealing with it involves introspection, and dealing with the evil and backward caste disease amongst Sikhs, and the marginalisation and wicked attitude towards dalit Sikhs by the so called 'higher castes'. It would also mean examining the structures and attitudes of ourselves, and our own families. For a panth of supposed brave warriors, it seems we are not brave enough to examine this, we are too cowardly to look at ourselves and deal with the roots of the problems that cause this division.

7: Gurpal Singh (Wolverhampton, U.K.), September 24, 2008, 5:25 PM.

Here in the UK we don't have a single free Sikh satellite TV channel - however there are a dozen free Muslim channels, a free Hindu channel (Aaastha) which has some Gurbani and yoga to interest Sikhs and an Asian Christian free channel called Glory TV. These free channels are watched by thousands of Sikhs, particularly the elderly who can't afford the more commercial Alpha ETC Punjabi channel. You may be interested to know that Glory TV had 3/4 programmes on recently and I'm sure if I watched them, others did too. Firstly, a Giddha programme called 'Masihi Geet' which featured Punjabi Christian women from Southall baptist Church doing the most fantastic giddha I've seen on TV; the boliyan were all praises to jesus and came after songs done with dholaki and chimte to traditional Sikh folk-kirtan tunes. A second programme had an interview with a London based Dalit-Sikh turned Christian who spoke about the limitations of Sikhism and how Christianity answers all his questions. A third programme was from a Sikh lady who became Christian from being drawn into these programmes and being influenced by them; she ws shown making pranthas and saying prayers. A fourth programme showed Christian worship carried out in a Punjabi village; the room was packed with turban wearing ex-Sikh men and ladies, doing kirtan to Jesus. The fifth programme showed an ex-Hindu Christian preacher preaching to a wealthy urban audience - the audience included turbanned Sikh men and boys. I know of Sikhs turned into Christians in most UK cities. My wife and in-laws became quite worried about the number of such programmes I began to watch. Ironically, I have a lot of teacher colleagues and older students who regularly say they want to become Sikh! More about that another time!

8: Zorawar Singh (Richmond Hill, New York, U.S.A.), September 25, 2008, 7:27 PM.

My comment on this article is simply that we should get rid of the age-old caste system and make sure that the youngsters (between 18 to 37) are getting involved in the gurdwara commitees, elections, etc. One thing I have noted is that the younger generation is more educated and less likely to resort to caste practices.

9: Harjinder Singh (Barnala, Punjab), September 25, 2008, 10:54 PM.

Undoubtedly, these missionaries are better equipped, have more resources at their disposal but what they lack is morality, truthfulness and honesty. Targeting a person in need and taking undue advantage of his or her sorrows, poverty, sickness, etc. is outrageous. Backlash is here for all to see. It must be admitted that evangelists are infiltrating all nooks and corners of India and especially Punjab. If ever they are able to make inroads in Punjab, it will be because of our deep slumber and failure to live Sikhi in letter and spirit. Sikh relgious, social and political leadership is blameworthy but how long can we keep playing the blame game. It is time we the people stood up and got counted. Let us all set an example of a true Sikh and see for ourselves if we can check the invasion of this new latest wave of unprincipled preachers and "brahmins".

10: Bhupinder Singh Ghai (New Delhi, India), September 26, 2008, 2:13 AM.

Jasdeep has indeed reported the picture form Ground Zero(Punjab). The reason for people to look for alternative spiritual routes to salvation indicates the total failure of our gurdwaras and the SGPC. The evangelists thrive due to the vaccum that we have allowed to be created. Just think of the Punjabi youth who have nothing else to do. Most of them do not and cannot relate to gurbani being recited in village gurdwaras. What Christian missionaries promise them is a better life. One, they give them education which is much better than village govt. schools. Second, a Christian last name gives them a veneer of respect and, whether we like it or not, a lure of better job prospects, better visa prospects, etc. This is the reality and we canot escape from it. What I would request from the Cyber Khalsa is a deliberation, debate and a roadmap for KHALSA 2028. Where should the Khalsa be in Year 2028. A second VAISAKHI 1699 is required!

11: Clarence McMullen (Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada), October 04, 2008, 11:35 AM.

I worked at Baring Union Christian College, Batala - one of the missionary 'citadels' for 32 year. I taught sociology and was director of Christian Institute of Religious Studies. I organised numerous seminars at the Institute on interfaith issues. These were attended by Sikh, Hindu and Muslims scholars. Dr. J.S. Neki, Prof. Ganda Singh, Prof. Gurbachan Singh Talib, Dr. Taran Singh, Dr. J.S. Ahulwalia, Dr. J.S. Grewal were just a few of those who participated. Even Namdharis, like Swaran Singh Snehi and Nirankaris, like Dr. Man Singh Nirankari participated. Ahemadiyyas along with other Muslims attended. None of these people were converted. I did not even think of converting anyone. The more I learned about the Sikh tradition the more I admired it. The real issue is not the missionaries. But the Sikhs themselves. Most of them who could make a difference for the Sikh community have gone to greener pastures. The writer of the article is a good example. When I worked in Punjab, the great Sikh minds were there. Now they are in Canada, USA and other western countires. I went to work in Punjab from Canada because I wanted to do something more and better with my life. To blame others for your woes is the easy way out. It is acutally an effective method to get rid of your guilt. The right and courageous way is to accept and do something to change the situation. The Sikhs are in power in Punjab. They should reach out to the Christian minorities and dalits and do something for them. You should ask, why the dalit converts to Sikhism are still refered to as 'mazhabi' Sikhs.

12: Satinder Gill (Khanna, Punjab), October 06, 2008, 12:50 AM.

In her post, Clarence says that most of the Sikhs who could make a difference have moved on to greener pastures. I totally agree with that observation as I have observed this acutely. The politicians are having a field day breaking every rule in the book while our distinguished fraternity can just lament from far.

13: I.J. Singh (New York, U.S.A.), October 06, 2008, 5:55 PM.

I appreciate the comments of the many readers. Clarence McMullen's points are well taken. That's why the crux of my column is that any progress starts with self-development, and the Christians bring with them many things we need - schools, social development as well as a total rejection of the caste system. I don't think blaming others here is a policy that I would recommend. Incidentally, is this the same person who had published an interesting and useful book on a survey of Sikhs of the Punjab and what little they seem to know of their own religion. Someone has stolen my copy - and that is an excellent recommendation of it.

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