Hindi-Hindu-Hindustan Model is Now Real
Syed Ali
Mujtaba
The new Pew Research Center report has come out with
startling revelation as it says that for many Hindus, national identity,
religion, and language are closely connected. Nearly, 76% of Hindus say being
Hindu is very important to be truly Indian. Nearly two-thirds of Hindus say
it is very important to speak Hindi to be truly Indian.
The new Pew Research Center report is based on a face-to-face
survey of 29,999 Indian adults fielded between late 2019 and early 2020. This
was before the COVID-19 pandemic. The survey takes a closer look at religious
identity, nationalism, and tolerance in Indian society. The survey was conducted
by local interviewers in 17 languages and covered nearly all of India’s states
and union territories.
Hindus who strongly link Hindu and Indian identities express
a keen desire for religious segregation. They say they do not have much in
common with members of other religious groups. Most of the 86% of India’s large
Hindu population, says their close friends come mainly or entirely from their
own religious community.
Hindus who strongly link Hindu and Indian identities feel it
is very important to stop Hindu women from marrying into another religion. Roughly
two-thirds of Hindus say it is very important to stop Hindu women (67%) and
Hindu men (65%) from marrying into other religious communities. Even those who
place less importance on Hinduism’s role in national identity, hold the same
view about inter-religious marriages.
Among Hindus who say it is very important to be Hindu to be
truly Indian, 80% of them also say it is very important to speak Hindi to be
truly Indian. Most Hindus in India say being able to speak Hindi is very
important to be ‘truly’ Indian. Moreover, Hindus in the Northern (69%) and
Central (83%) strongly link Hindi with national identity. Together, the
Northern and Central regions cover the country’s “Hindi belt,” where Hindi is
most prevalent. The vast majority of Hindus in these regions strongly link
Indian identity with being able to speak Hindi.
Majority of Hindus say a person who eats beef cannot be a
Hindu. Dietary laws are central to Indians’ religious identity. Hindus
traditionally view cows as sacred, and laws on cow slaughter have recently been
a flashpoint in India. Nearly three-quarters of Hindus (72%) in India say a
person cannot be Hindu if they eat beef. This is larger than the shares of
Hindus, who say a person cannot be Hindu if they do not believe in God (49%) or
never go to a temple (48%).
Among Hindus, views of national identity, go hand-in-hand
with politics. Support for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is greater
among Hindus who closely associate their religious identity and the Hindi
language with being truly Indian.
In the 2019 national elections, 60% of Hindu voters who think
it is very important to be Hindu and to speak Hindi to be truly Indian cast
their vote for the BJP. In comparison, only 33% of Hindu voters feel less
strongly about both these aspects of national identity.
These views also map onto regional support for the BJP, which
tends to be much higher in the Northern and Central parts of the country than
in the South.
India’s caste system, an ancient system of social hierarchy continues
to dominate Indian society. A large
majority of Indians overall (70%), say that most or all of their close friends
share the same caste.
Large shares of Indians (64%) say it is very important to
stop women of their caste from marrying into other castes. Similarly, about the
same share (62%) say it is very important to stop the men in their caste from
marrying into other castes. Across the different castes, all object to
interreligious marriages.
The survey finds that three-quarters of Muslims (74%) supporting
having access to the existing system of Islamic courts. To this followers of
other religions are less supportive and don’t concur with Muslims having access
to this separate court system.
According to a Pew report, Religious conversion is not alarming
as it is made out to be. Among Hindus, for instance, any conversion out of the
group is matched by conversion into the group. So Hindus gain as many people as
they lose. As far as Christians are
concerned there are some net gains from conversion.
These are inchoate images of changing India. India is making a decisive change from the Nehruvian era to a Hindi Hindu Hindustan identity, the call given by V.D Savarkar. Nehruvian India aspired for an inclusive society. There was no connection between the state and religion. Indian nationalism and Hindu nationalism were poles apart. Hindi was not a synonym for Indian nationalism. There were 14 other languages that enjoyed equal status with Hindi. It's precisely because of the diversity of languages in India, Hindi could not become the national language of the country. Nehruvian India aspired for a casteless society. It encouraged inter-caste marriages to break the barriers of caste hierarchy. Inter-religious marriages were encouraged in Nehruvian India to bridge the social tension between the religious communities in the country.
The new Pew Research Center report amply points all these ideals of India that were envisioned in Nehruvian India are set aside. India has moved to the ‘Post- Truth era and Indians are living in 'The Brand New Republic.’
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Syed Ali Mujtaba is a journalist based in Chennai. His
forthcoming book is ‘Post- Truth India, The Brand New Republic.’ He can be contacted at syedalimujtaba2007@gmail.com
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