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Proof of anti-hindu bias in CA textbooks

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Academic Hinduphobia

 

How religions are treated in California textbooks

 

Topic Islam Judaism Cristianity Hinduism

 

Women are shown equal to men? Yes Yes Yes No

 

Oppression of certain groups is discussed? No No No Yes

 

Beliefs are considered as historical fact? Yes Yes Yes No

 

Own leaders' interpretations are emphasized? Yes Yes Yes No

 

Treated as a world religion without social/political issues of any

foreign country? Yes Yes Yes No

 

The sixth-grade classroom in America has become the battle ground for

geo-politically charged fights where the anti-Hindu biases of the

academicians are ruling the roost. Is the sixth-grade classroom the

right place to prosecute an American minority culture or a foreign

nation?

RAJIV MALHOTRA AND VIDHI JHUNJHUNWALA

 

The recent California Department of Education's hearings on sixth-

grade textbook portrayals of religions and cultures have triggered

conflicts between the Hindu Diaspora and a group of academicians

claiming to be "the experts" on Hinduism. Every religion has good

sides and bad sides, its "enemies" and its "victims". However, eleven-

year olds are too young and naïve, and most of their teachers are too

ignorant, to be subject to incoherent scholarly controversies on

foreign politics. Most sixth graders are unlikely to study these

religions ever again in their lives. Hence, the impressions created

by these textbooks will have a lasting effect in shaping the future

of American society.

 

The table below compares how California textbooks treat Hinduism and

other major religions.

 

How religions are treated in California textbooks

 

Topic Islam Judaism Cristianity Hinduism

 

Women are shown equal to men? Yes Yes Yes No

 

Oppression of certain groups is discussed? No No No Yes

 

Beliefs are considered as historical fact? Yes Yes Yes No

 

Own leaders' interpretations are emphasized? Yes Yes Yes No

 

Treated as a world religion without social/political issues of any

foreign country? Yes Yes Yes No

 

 

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I: Islam J: Judaism C: Christianity H: Hinduism

 

 

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For example, take the current 'cartoon controversy'. The Danish media

claims to be exercising its "intellectual freedom," but their

cartoons, it could justifiably be argued, have hurt the sentiments of

Muslims worldwide. The sentiments and actual hurt have been hijacked

by cynical local and global politics and this has played into the

hands of Islamic radicals: violent world-wide protests are on,

embassies have been burnt and death threats given. All this has

further exacerbated what many call the "clash of civilizations "

between Islam and the West. This is not the first time it has

happened either. But do the discussions on Islam, in these sixth

grade text-books, for example, talk about such violent deeds

committed in the name of Islam? No, and that is the way it should be.

 

Likewise, when Hindus' sentiments are routinely hurt in far worse

ways, especially as a part of America's formal education system, it

naturally adds fuel to religious politics. Since liberal

intellectuals - rightfully - respect Muslim sentiments and do not

demand "scientific proof" for Islamic beliefs, does it not follow

that they should apply the same approach towards Hinduism?

 

This article merely argues for equal treatment of Hinduism, no more

and no less, and shows that this is presently lacking due to a double

standard.

 

Intellectual honesty demands that we ask whether one religion's

aggression against "idols" devastates another religion's respect for

its murtis. Does canonized condemnation of "infidels" and "false

religions" not then qualify as hate speech? Surely it is reasonable

to demand that the same standards be applied to all religions when

discussing textual references that are against women, persons of

lower socioeconomic strata, non-believers of the given faith, and

other faiths' symbols and practices as well? Either such textual

references should be included for all religions or none. Why should

Hinduism be singled out?

 

Selective condemnations of religion X while appeasing religion Y is a

dangerous political game. One must courageously confront the

fashionable academic bandwagons and expose their facile politics

 

It is also essential for all religions to be presented on an equal

footing using the same pedagogy and standards. Therefore, someone has

to choose the information that is to be taught to sixth-graders, and

there must be transparent rules on how this is to be achieved.

 

California's official educational standards contain specific policies

on this, which assert,

 

"No religious belief or practice may be held up to ridicule and no

religious group may be portrayed as inferior,"

 

and that,

 

"Textbooks should instill a sense of pride in every child in his or

her heritage."

 

As the above table demonstrates, the textbooks do not comply with the

California standards in the case of Hinduism.

 

For instance, the textbooks say that Hinduism considers women to be

inferior to men, but ignore biases against women in Islam,

Christianity and Judaism. The textbooks focus on "Hindu atrocities"

against certain groups, but do not point out that Islamic, Christian

and Jewish societies have similar issues. The clergy in Islam,

Christianity and Judaism are treated as credible experts and their

religious texts are assumed to be stating historical facts, while

Hindu texts are depicted through the pejorative lenses of critics and

called "myths."

 

The California Board of Education conducts a public review of its

textbooks every six years with a goal to remove unfair and biased

representations. Islamic, Christian, and Jewish groups have been

successfully involved in this review process for many years,

constantly removing any negative portrayals of their respective

religions. Surprisingly, the recent involvement of Hindu American

groups to participate in the public hearings with the educational

authorities is being fiercely condemned by academicians who

gracefully accept the changes proposed by other religious groups.

American academicians who are known for their Hinduphobia have

launched a vicious attack. They rallied instant support from many

Indian academicians to do the dirty work, in a manner similar to the

way in which British colonizers used Indian sepoys to shoot at their

fellow Indians. Interestingly, most of the academicians who joined

are not experts in the academic field of religion, and are not even

members of the Hinduism Unit of the American Academy of Religion,

which is the official academic body of Hinduism Studies.

 

The attack has relied upon maligning Hindu groups and branding them

as "fascists", "extremists", "fundamentalists", "chauvinists" etc.

The attackers allege links between overseas violence and Hindu

Americans, and use sensationalized warnings that accepting the Hindus

on par with the Islamic and Christian groups would encourage

international terrorism. In an educational review the subject of

discussion should be the content of the textbooks, California's

published educational standards, and the effects of religious

representation on America's next generation. But in this case, an

American religious minority is being labeled as a threat to

international security just because it wants an equitable depiction

of its religion. The scholars involved have failed both as defenders

of intellectual freedom and as practitioners of independent critical

inquiry.

 

Furthermore, the California authorities, in a move which is now being

challenged legally, heard a parade of anti-Hindu voices as "expert

witness," while there were no similar dissenting voices invited to

criticize Islam, Christianity or Judaism. The academicians fighting

the Hindu Diaspora frantically arranged to fly in witnesses from far

away places to testify about the horrors of Hinduism, while no

similar witnesses were summoned to testify against the horrors of

Islam, Christianity or Judaism.- such as, for example, Kashmiri

Pandits, Hindus raped in Pakistan, Muslim women complaining against

forced burqas, or the innocent children who have been victims of

pedophile Christian priests.

 

Only in the case of Hinduism was the politics from the mother country

dragged into the California proceedings What they overlooked is that

Hinduism is a world religion with followers in many parts of the

planet besides India. India's social-political problems do not

reflect on the second-generation Indian Americans, the millions of

Euro-Americans practicing yoga/meditation who claim Hindu or quasi-

Hindu identities, or on millions of overseas Hindus living elsewhere.

The scholars failed to decouple Hinduism from Indian politics, while

no other religion got coupled to geopolitics.

 

 

 

How the California process has worked

 

 

Public Process I J C H

 

Organized community groups are lobbying for change? Yes Yes Yes Yes

 

Have academics protested against the community's activism? No No No

Yes

 

Did Education Board bring hostile academics as advisors? No No No Yes

 

Are advocates of the religion being branded

as "chauvinists", "fundamentalists", "nationalists"…? No No No Yes

 

Is politics from the mother country driving the academic scholars? No

No N/A Yes

 

 

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I: Islam J: Judaism C: Christianity H: Hinduism

 

 

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----------

 

 

The academicians should first confront the mandate of California's

Social Studies Standards which requires that, "Textbooks should

instill a sense of pride in every child in his or her heritage". In

this regard, textbooks should also include Hinduism's major

contributions to America: yoga, vegetarianism, the transcendentalist

literary movement in the 19th century, and the many positive

influences on American pop music, cuisine, film, dance, etc.

 

While attempts are being made to teach about "Hindu horrors" against

minorities, the same academicians are not lobbying to add textbook

sections on "Islamic genocides" in South Asia, "Islamic terrorism"

worldwide, or "Christian holocausts" of Native Americans: The non-

Hindu religions are coddled with political correctness

and "sensitivity." In order to be true to their field of study,

academicians should apply the same "human rights" criteria to all

religions equally.

 

The academicians are approaching Indian society as a patient waiting

to be cured of maladies in the hands of America. But they have not

addressed the following issues: Does America have a superior human

rights record? Are American institutions accountable as doctors and

qualified to "cure" Indian society? What is the past track record of

American powers intervening in third-world domestic issues and curing

them of their societal maladies? Are American agendas constructing

categories of "cultural crimes"?

 

The sixth-grade classroom has become the battle ground for these

geopolitically charged fights. Is the sixth-grade classroom the right

place to prosecute an American minority culture or a foreign nation?

Among these California children, less than one percent will pursue

careers as Christian evangelists slandering Hindus to convert, or as

US government officials using "human rights" as a weapon to gain

leverage against India. For this tiny number of potential

specialists, there will be other opportunities in higher studies to

embark upon a comprehensive study of India's positive and negative

social qualities.

 

The political activism of a cartel of elitist academicians is

invading the psyche of innocent children: It harasses the Indian

students in class, making them feel embarrassed and ashamed of their

ancestry. Challenging history is one thing, but intentionally

undermining self-respect at an impressionable age is a form of

psychological child abuse. It handicaps the non-Indian students who

will grow up to work in a world in which India must be taken

seriously and not dismissed as a patient to be exposed, subjected to

licensed condescension, or "cured" by the West.

 

The controversy of the Mohammed cartoons should compel concerned

citizens everywhere to balance intellectual freedom with intellectual

responsibility. Whatever may be one's position in this debate, it

must be equally applied to all religions or else it would be

hypocrisy.

 

 

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Rajiv Malhotra is a public intellectual living in Princeton, New

Jersey, who runs his own non-profit Infinity Foundation on a full-

time basis. Some of his on-line writings are available at

Sulekha.com

 

Vidhi Jhunjhunwala is a student at Boston University:

http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?

fodname=20060210&fname=hinduphobia&sid=1

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