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Personally,
I am no advocate of violence. But violence, too, has its rightful
place in life, life does not preclude death. The average Indian
has been moulded into a particular national mentality of quixotic
tolerance. His attitude is shaped into its distinct pattern
by the ideologies and moralities preached in our national
literature. And no single work in our classics has gained
such a wide influence on our people as the Bhagawad Gita:
and in, this century, no other single message had such a universal
appeal to our countrymen as the single line, "Ahimsa
Paramo Dharmah" -- "Non - Violence is the greatest
Dharma."
This
line in its over - emphasis, has sapped both initiative and
energy in our millions, and, instead of making us all irresistible
moral giants, we have been reduced to poltroons and cowards.
And banking on this cowardly resignation of the majority,
a handful of fanatics have been perpetrating crimes which
even the most barbarous cave dwellers would have avenged.
To clothe our weaknesses, we attribute to them glorious names
and purposefully persuade ourselves to believe that they are
brilliant ideologists !
Let
us for a moment go to the original sacred verse and investigate
the significances of the moral precept: Ahimsa Paramo Dharmah.
This is the opening line of a stanza, and the very next line
reads: Dharma himsaa tathaiva cha. "So too is all righteous
violence." Indeed, non - violence is the supreme policy
to be adopted by man to foster enduring peace in the world;
but there are certain dire moments in the life of individuals,
as of nations, when we will have to meet force with force
in order that justice be done.
To
every individual his mother, wife and children are the nearest
dependents and to guard their honour and life is the unavoidable
first moral duty of each head of the family. This is an obligation
whether the victim be a member of the majority or of the minority
class within a country, province or city.
By
the over - emphasis laid on non - violence we have come to
witness the pathetic situation of today, when thousands, in
cowardly fear take to precipitate flight, leaving their innocent
children to be butchered and their unarmed helpless women
to be dishonoured or converted or killed. Under the cloak
of glorified non - violence, an entire nation of cowards fly
from their homes, when a small sect of fanatic barbarians
boldly stalk in and out of their open undefended thresholds
to kill, to rape, and to loot. When will we learn to fully
interpret our Vedas, scriptures and Upanishads. If only we
all learn that dharma - himsa is equally noble as ahimsa.
To
me it seems that the only solution for the day's internal
chaos is to bring home to the people the significance of the
much neglected teaching of dharma - himsa. As it is, a misled
and over - excited minority in the country has the sole monopoly
of violence; and non - violence is a dangerous folly. However
ideal a moral precept may be, so long as, in a society, innocent
children, helpless women and defenceless old are left to be
butchered dishonoured and tortured, while the youth of the
land is made to watch impassionately the hellish scene, we
are to conclude that either the idea is a dangerous one, or
that we have not rightly understood the full meaning of the
precept.
Under
the present available scheme of chaos in this country, when
under the planned instigation of a few power blind, reckless
men, a minority community is rendered into a murderous gang
of fanatics, it is the duty of the majority to win back the
erring thousands. The cure depends upon the disease; the potency
of the medicine is decided upon the virulence of the illness.
Today when looting, arson and rape are the dharma of a few,
it is rank cowardice for the many to suffer the tyranny of
the unprovoked violence in meek submission. In the battlefield,
when violence is rampant, it is the dharma of everyone to
meet that maniacal violence with determined, restrained, violence
not only in self - defence but also to convince the aggressive
vicious few that 'it rarely pays to be violent.'
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