Current Events
Let Us Educate America:
But How?
LAURIE L. PATTON
Access to the Gurdwara in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, USA, is still restricted
as police search for clues to the unspeakable violence that occurred
there last Sunday. But across the country, other gurdwaras are
responding to the shooting not by shutting their doors, but by opening
them.
The gurdwara in San Jose, California, held an open house and gave
out free head coverings. Over five hundred people gathered for a vigil
at the gurdwara in Plymouth, a suburb of Detroit, Michigan. This
weekend, many gurdwaras have issued an open invitation to all to come
and worship, in a concerted effort to welcome and educate America about
their traditions.
Hospitality is a key element o the Sikh tradition. All four doors of
a gurdwara are meant to be open, symbolizing the fact that everyone,
regardless of faith, is welcome. The Sikh tradition of langar is perhaps
the most dramatic symbol of radical hospitality: every visitor to the
gurdwara is fed in the “Guru’s free kitchen.” Langar is based on the
idea, begun by Nanak, the first Sikh Guru, that feeding and clothing
people is the most fundamental human transaction of all. To feed people
is seva—voluntary, selfless service.
A Sikh community in Medford, Massachusetts, Gurdwara Guru Nanak
Darbar, is typical of many Sikh places of worship in this tradition of
hospitality. On Sunday, August 12, the Gurdwara is holding a vigil for
those injured or killed in the Oak Creek shootings. Everyone in the
community is welcome, and non-Sikhs are invited to show their
solidarity.
Just underneath that announcement of welcome, the “Law Enforcement
Training Video On Sikhism” is posted. The description of the video
reads:
Awareness of cultural and religious observations,
including those of Sikhism, can help avoid misunderstanding and tension
-- assisting the public in understanding the challenges and realizing
the contributions of the Sikh community in America.
The need for this video indicates the deep price of such open
hospitality -- a kind of vulnerability that many minority communities
still face -- especially when they become religiously organized.
Indeed,
when one or two Sikhs lived in a town, they may have been the town’s
“quirky” exceptions, the strangers that were token symbols of tolerance.
But when a community of Sikhs began to gather amongst themselves, and
to build buildings, they could easily become different kinds of targets
of hate crimes. They became group targets by virtue of the fact that
they were, indeed, now no longer an exception, but an integrated thread
in the larger fabric of the town.
As a result, and especially after a tragedy, each minority religious
community that suffers discrimination must pay a cultural tax -- the
extra burden of educating the rest of the country about its traditions,
its rituals, and its cultures. After 9-11, there was a massive
outpouring of videos, blogs, and articles by Muslim leaders aiming to
educate Americans about Islam. In the various radio appearances by Sikh
leaders this week, all of them articulated the need for education about
Sikhism.
To be sure, this is part of the bedrock upon which American society
is built. Minority religious communities should have the right and
freedom to represent themselves and their traditions -- however,
wherever, and whenever they choose.
But something is deeply wrong when the burden remains exclusively on
the community itself to conduct all of the outreach, to articulate its
values and defend its contributions to the rest of society. There is a
deep isolation, not to mention exhaustion, in that “cultural tax” --
especially after a tragedy.
Do we as Americans simply leave the community to articulate itself
to its neighbors? Do we ask them to teach us at the same time as they
are burying their dead? Or are there ways that fellow travelers can
participate in the educational process?
"First I Must Help Mourn Our Dead"
This is an old debate in
the study of religions -- how and in what circumstances should an
“outsider” to a tradition actually teach that tradition. The history of
teaching about Asian religions in the USA began with Anglo-American
scholars who became knowledgeable and the history and languages of
Sikhism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and many others. But as more immigrants
arrived to the United States after the 1965 immigration act, that
situation began to shift.
By the 1990s, two key trends emerged: there were many communities
who preferred that they teach about their own traditions, and not leave
it only to university professors who did not experience the tradition
themselves. Second, several communities, including Sikhs, had been in
the USA long enough to send their own children to receive PhDs in the
study of these traditions. And students from abroad came to American
universities study their own traditions as well.
During the 1990s and early 2000s, the debate raged: should insiders
or outsiders have final authority in the representation of a tradition?
And what about all of those in between, who might be insiders but not
with university PhDs? Or who might be outsiders who have devoted their
lives to the study of a tradition’s sacred texts? There are a myriad
possibilities and definitions of who constituted an “insider” and who an
“outsider,” and how one judged their relative authority to speak. And
communities and scholars argued about them all.
And yet, as this debate raged, attacks on religious minorities kept
happening. And the cultural tax of religious minorities to explain
themselves, and to do all the educating alone, has remained. As one Sikh
colleague said to me this week, “Yes, I want to educate even more
actively than I have already been doing. But first I must help mourn our
dead.”
In light of this most horrifying incident, just one among so many
mass shootings in the U.S, it is time for us to build a new paradigm for
education about religious minorities: one of partnership and alliance.
It is no longer enough to be mired in an endless, fruitless debate about
the relative status of insiders and outsiders. Rather, we should be
asking a different question: How can we help each minority community
alleviate the cultural tax that it so often has to pay in the wake of a
tragedy?
What if the gurdwaras had not only government law enforcement videos
on their websites, but Sikhs and non-Sikhs educating together about the
Sikh tradition in primary school, secondary school, and university
classrooms?
Such alliances would not be simply “token” appearances of
“representative” Sikhs, but rather long term engagements between Sikh
and non-Sikh educators on a variety of projects. They would involve
mutual correction, and an honest exploration of key differences as well
as similarities in religious and educational approaches to the world.
Long-term alliances between religious institutions, and the mutual
engagement between different forms of expertise, are essential to this
paradigm.
Steven Prothero rightly has pointed out the profound religious
illiteracy of most American citizens, and has called for an educational
curriculum that includes the study of religion as a prerequisite for
21st century citizenship. Even more important for us now is to imagine
the mechanisms by which we build such an educational vision. No
community can, in isolation, educate an entire country about itself. No
community should bear that cultural tax alone.
There was a moving moment in the announcement of the deaths of the
Sikh community members in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. The police chief knew
that he would not sufficiently honor the dead if he tried to pronounce
the names by himself. So he turned to a leader of the community to read
the names properly.
This was a small moment, but one which acknowledges the
interdependence of our educational burden. We need to continue to
explore and deepen such interdependence in the months and years after a
tragedy of this horrific magnitude. Perhaps then the United States will
have finally lived up to its reputation for hospitality -- a welcoming
of the stranger that the Sikh community has exemplified so powerfully
this week.
Laurie L. Patton is Professor of South Asian Religion and Dean
of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Duke University. She is the
author or editor of eight books about early Indian myth and ritual, and
two books of poetry. She has also translated the Bhagavad Gita for
Penguin University classics series. She has written and lectured widely
on interfaith issues, and religion, conflict and peace-building. She
writes regularly for Religion Dispatches.
[Courtesy: Religion Dispatches]
August 10, 2012
Conversation about this article
1: Irvinder Singh and Veena Babra (Brampton, Ontario, Canada), August 10, 2012, 10:17 PM.
Excellent article. The bottom line is Sikhs and Sikhism are gifts to humanity, civilization. As Professor Laurie Patton says, Sikhs and hospitality go hand in hand, which is a fact. With so much of wisdom provided and available now on Sikhs, by the non-Sikhs, the future is better than before. Thank you, Laurie.
2: Arvi (USA), August 14, 2012, 12:11 PM.
Why is it so difficult to educate America about the Sikh religion, or any other religion, I wonder. It is very simple. American schools should educate children at an early age so that they learn to accept other religions like their own. In India - though not a model in any way - even a 2nd grader knows about all religions, be it Christianity, Hinduism,Buddhism, Islam or Sikhism. So why not in America? Why are Americans so obsessed with the idea of being the best in everything, be it democracy, technology or American culture? People should learn to educate themselves rather than by others with the right kind of education they receive all their lives. Believe me, it is not such a difficult task.


