Report questioning Ram’s existence withdrawn

Secularization, Culture Wars, Holy Wars: The Clash within Civilizations, Hindu nationalism No Comments

Report on Hindu god Ram withdrawn, BBC, September 14, 2007

The Indian government has withdrawn a controversial report submitted in court earlier this week which questioned the existence of the Hindu god Ram.

The report was withdrawn after huge protests by opposition parties.

The report was presented to the Supreme Court on Wednesday in connection with a case against a proposed shipping canal project between India and Sri Lanka.

Hindu hardliners say the project will destroy what they say is a bridge built by Ram and his army of monkeys.

Scientists and archaeologists say the Ram Setu (Lord Ram’s bridge) - or Adam’s Bridge as it is sometimes called - is a natural formation of sand and stones….

In their report submitted to the court, the government and the Archaeological Survey of India questioned the belief, saying it was solely based on the Hindu mythological epic Ramayana.

Hindu nationalists outraged by assertion that there is no historical evidence that Lord Rama ever existed

Secularization, Culture Wars, Holy Wars: The Clash within Civilizations, Hindu nationalism No Comments

How the World Works: Globalization, Globalization Blogs - Salon.com, September 14, 2007

To this day, as indicated by NASA satellites, there is a detectable ridge running across the Palk strait that separates Sri Lanka from the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Known colloquially as Adam’s Bridge, the ridge is held by some faithful Hindus to be Ram Sethu, the actual structure built by Lord Rama’s mighty monkey army. Lord Rama, the epitome of a just and righteous king, an avatar of Vishnu, the Hindu Supreme Being, is one of the most cherished figures in Hindu culture. And his legacy is not to be trifled with. In 1992, Hindu nationalist activists destroyed a 500-year-old Muslim temple originally erected by the Muslim conquerer Babur, on the grounds that it had been sacrilegiously built on the site of an earlier temple to Rama that commemorated his birthplace in the north Indian city of Ayodhya.

But to more secularly-minded fellows, Adam’s Bridge is a barrier composed of sand and coral that must be cleared away in order to create a shipping lane through the Palk Strait that would shorten shipping times between the east and west coasts of India. The Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project, which may have been conceived of as early as 1860 by the British, finally received a go-ahead in June 2005 from the United Progressive Alliance government led by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. But criticism of the project on a number of fronts has continued, and several petitions have been filed with the Supreme Court of India asking that the barrier be kept intact.

There are significant non-religious reasons to oppose the project. Environmentalists believe the massive dredging involved will cause significant damage to marine life, while others are skeptical that saving just the few hours required to circumnavigate Sri Lanka is worth all the trouble. The strait is also considered to be something of a cyclone magnet.

On Wednesday, the long simmering controversy turned into a full-fledged uproar. In a joint filing with the central government, the Archaeological Survey of India filed an affidavit with India’s Supreme Court declaring that there was no historical evidence proving the existence of Lord Rama, and no archeological basis to consider Adam’s Bridge to be the mythological Ram Sethu.

Impasse in India - The New York Review of Books, June 28, 2007

Gujarat Riots, Hindu nationalism No Comments

Impasse in India - The New York Review of Books, June 28, 2007
Until 2004 the central government as well as many state governments in India were, as the philosopher Martha Nussbaum puts it in her new book,

increasingly controlled by right-wing Hindu extremists who condone and in some cases actively support violence against minorities, especially the Muslim minority. Many seek fundamental changes in India’s pluralistic democracy.

Gujarat Riots, Hindu nationalism No Comments

India: Justice, the victim - Gujarat state fails to protect women from violence - Amnesty International, 2005

Restore India’s Secular Political Culture (Human Rights Watch, 27-2-2003)

Gujarat Riots, Hindu nationalism No Comments

Restore India’s Secular Political Culture (Human Rights Watch, 27-2-2003)

India: Carnage in Gujarat Unpunished (Human Rights Watch, 27-2-2003)

Gujarat Riots No Comments

India: Carnage in Gujarat Unpunished (Human Rights Watch, 27-2-2003)

We Have No Orders to Save You, HRW Report on Gujarat Riots, 2002

Gujarat Riots No Comments

gujarat.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Hindu nationalism No Comments

Human Rights Watch, We Have No Orders to Save You: State Participation and Complicity in Communal Violence in Gujarat, 2002

Next Entries »