BACK
"Fundamentalism,"
"Modernity" : Sikhism A Tertium Quid
NOEL Q KING
"Fundamentalism" in its strictest technical
use refers to a movement within American Protestant Evangelicalism
of fairly recent origin. The word has come to be linked with
various literalist, evangelical and charismatic groups and televangelists.
Thence it has been applied to religious extremists who claim
to be returning to fundamentals. We find the media and some
scholars using it of the Pire pinis cargo cultists of yesterday
in Sepik River, New Guinea, onwards to the Babri masjid/Ram
janam-bhoomi folk in today's India. Recently in his Defenders
of God, the Fundamentalist Revolt against the Modern Age, Bruce
B. Lawrence with great scholarly care and erudition defines
terms and deals mainly with what he considers prime examples-
American -style Protestant Fundamentalists, the lthna- ashariya
Shia of Iran and such defenders of "The Jewish collectivity"
as Gush Emunim. He refers the movements back to some of the
major concepts of modern world history as it has developed since
World War I. We will turn back to this shortly.
"Modernity" and "Modernism" refer to a tendency
among religions to update themselves by accepting concepts and
techniques from the modern secular world .around them. The words
are sometimes used as a kind of second part in a dichotomy-"Fundamentalism
versus Modernity/Modernism". They easily fit into the academic
discussion on the "modernization" of religions like
Islam or the influence of modern America of the Third Republic
in France on their own Roman Catholicism early in the century.
But easily the concepts elide towards association with western
dominance and the Great Western Transmutation (abbreviated to
GWT) by which the world was transformed between 1492 and 1947.
Here it is necessary for our purposes to interject that the
word "fundamentalist" has been applied to Sikhism
too by both media and scholars especially in the time leading
up to and since the tragic Operation Blue Star. Recent examples
include Angela Dietrich's "The Khalsa Resurrected: Sikh
Fundamentalism in the Punjab. In this article which struggles
to be sympathetic and respectful, the essay on the Sikhs rubs
shoulders with those on Fundamentalist Muslims in West Africa,
Iran and Egypt, Secularists in Turkey, Sri Lankan Hindus in
Britain, Protestant Tamils in Madras, as well as the American
Moral Majority. Again, late in 1989 at a meeting of the American
Academy of Religion at Anaheim in California, a panel discussed
these issues in connection with Sikhism. A paper which has not
to date been published and which requests it be not quoted for
it had not been finalized, was read by Professor Harjot Oberoi
of Vancouver. It was entitled "Sikh Fundamentalism: Ways
of Turning Things Over?"
In the discussion generated it became clear that though a religion
which used a mool-mantra and was given to mulvad obviously got
down to fundamentals, the word "Fundamentalist" could,
hardly be used in the same way as it was of American Fundamentalists.
There was also considerable objection to the way in which by
the use of social science and Marxist historical methods it
was to be supposed that Sikhs were mainly peasants who were
led along by a few people who drew them out from the main body
of Hinduistic Indians. The idea was also hotly contested that
deep changes in Sikh History from 1699 onwards came in response
to outer stimuli on the part of a body in which it was alleged
increasingly Jats had taken over leadership from Khatris. If
we reject such explanations of evolution into modernity and
other similary based arguments and hypotheses, what better propositions
can we put forward to explain the Sikh situation today? In answering
it is necessary to note that modernizing thought since the so-called
Enlightenment, a European movement especially reflected in philosophy
of the eighteenth century, has tended to discount any use of
hypotheses of explanations which include the supernatural or
that which passes human understanding. Recently some cracks
in this carapace have begun to show.
It is now possible to tune back and take up our consideration
of the position of Fundamentalism, Modernity and Sikhism over
against their background in some major trends of thinking about
World History. World History is not a modern western invention.
In the eighth century before the Common Era strata of the Jewish
Torah, building on much older West Asian and Egyptian ideas,
and the Jewish Scriptures as a whole give us a schema of how
the nations came to be and how they interact and the plan of
their history. In the Puranas Indic thinkers give us concepts
of world ages and world movements. In the eighth/fourteenth
century Ibn Khaldun gives us in his Muqaddimah a pattern which
looks back to the earlier thinking of Arabs and Jews.
It is impressive how many older Sikhs of my generation read
at High School H.G. Wells' Short History of the World which
originally came out in 1924. I have also met a good number who
have read Toynbee. Although Karl Jaspers wrote in German many
of his ideas have come to be known to users of English. Thus
a number of us take it almost for granted that there is a kind
of intellectual spirit of the age (Zeitgeist) which seems mysteriously
to affect thinkers across the world with the same kind of ideas
just as it is said new bird songs will spread from bird to bird
across an island. Jaspers especially juxtaposes the Athenian
philosophers, the Hebrew prophets, the Upanishadic seers and
the Chinese sages in an Axial Age.
Joseph Needham in his eighty-eighth year remarked that if he
had time to carry the implications of his History of Science
and Technology in China into World History he would very much
desire to trace Taoist ideas and techniques for instance with
regard to chemistry and the use of gun powder in their influence
upon Muslim scientists such as the alchemists. One could follow
this up to try to postulate a transmission of thinking even
in a perverted way between the original Chinese invention of
gunpowder and the Portuguese floating fortress. There are many
such transmissions which suggest themselves but lack of sound
historical evidence interdicts even their formulation. We turn
back to trying to trace some factors in History of Religion
which, if. not transmitted, naturally overtake or take place
in an ecclesiastical body or corpus at a certain point in her
life.
At Chicago William McNeill and Marshall Hodgson formulated ideas
which have deeply affected Bruce Lawrence whose book was mentioned
above. In her years of Empire, Muslim Civilization was according
to this hypothesis breathed through and through by q religion
which was its conscience and shaper. But during the time of
"the Great Western Transmutation" of world history,
religion was apparently not a predominant controlling factor
or an effective conscience. However, when some thinkers in great
cultures and civilizations, including western culture, see their
societies disintegrating, their young being lost to them, their
best traditions destroyed, they turn desparately to their religions
as a means of hope and a way of working for survival, recovery
and resurgence. This is a comparatively late movement which
of its own nature must come after the modernizers have brought
the threatening outside influences into their own most cherished
holies of holies. As a movement it too will use the language
and methods of the enemy in its attempt to recover the fundamentals
as it imagines them. It too will invent tradition. It too will
use science and technology and be dependent on them and indeed
be transformed by them. Broadly and approximately Fundamentalism
may be considered such a movement or a manifestation of this
tendency.
Let us turn back to Sikhism. Sikhism was presented to the world
by the first Guru who lived from 1469 to 1539. The tenth occupied
the takht from 1675 to 1708. During those centuries the Punjab
faced yet more of the Muslim invasions which had gone on since
the days of Mahmud of Ghazni, and the Europeans arrived and
began to weave India into their world web. In the nineteenth
century they broke in with full force bringing their world diseases,
economics, their philosophical, religious and political ideals
and failures. They brought their ways of education, science
and technology. Everywhere the local product seemed to be swept
away. Even their intellectual history with its tale of revolutions
in politics, literary critical method, social and gender structure,
its divorce between religion, ethics, philosophy and politics
found local supporters and exponents and some partial acceptance.
But the response in Sikhism was not just one of meeting one
emergency after another, or the evolution of an overall response
by anyone person nor of a committee nor of a group of leaders.
Rather at base it was the continued unfolding of the enseeded,
encoded nature of Sikhism as originally propounded by the first
Mahala and the other nine. After the tenth it was vested in
the Book and in the Sangat and the same Spirit told forth the
same truths as they applied to that stage of life. Let us give
but one brief example. It was not one person, however brilliant,
saying Hum Hindu nain hai late in the nineteenth century but
the First Teacher coming up from the Three Day Waters saying
Hai nain Hindu, Hai nain Mussulman which is basic. The nineteenth
century remark is but a working out of the early teaching. in
that dichotomy we find posited a third something (the tertium
quid of our title): Sikhism.
In the debate about Fundamentalism and Modernity other buzz
words are appearing. These include "primitivism,"
that is, the seeking for a primitive pure state and the attempt
to imitate it under present day conditions. This may be called
the restoration ideal or a quest for a return to the primordial,
a seeking for a renewal of a primal vision. At the same time
many are talking of ours as a post-modern age. There is growing
suspicion of western ways just as they penetrate more and more
places. A colleague brought back from former East Germany a
copy of a poster which shows an attractive young western woman
giving a cigarette in a packet labelled "West" to
a Russian official who is choking on his own cigarette. The
caption in Russian says "Try out the West" or more
snappily "Test the West." A caption in German says
"This applies in East Germany too." On the packet
there is a printed warning in English about Life in the West
with "its banal culture and brutal extremes of poverty."
In their day thinkers both Eastern, Western and from Africa
and the Pacific have done their best. We test their best, each
time the teachings of Sikh ism may seem to be fitted into their
categories. Then we find it escaping their fingers and passing
on its way. Young Sikh scholars thoroughly grounded in their
own inheritance who are encouraged and enabled to devote the
years of detailed and disciplined study to the age-long international
debate from China to California via the Punjab and Olduvai Gorge
will contribute much to a genuine theory of World History.
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