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Some characteristics
unite Indians. The most visible is our opportunism.
Why don’t Hindus worship
Brahma? Hinduism teaches that he’s part of the Hindu
trinity as the creator, but Hindus worship Vishnu,
manager of the cosmos, and Shiva, its eventual
destroyer. The answer lies not in religion, but in
culture. But in what way does our religion shape our
culture?
Weber explained the success of capitalism in the US,
Germany and Britain as coming from their populations’
Christian – especially Protestant faith. This ethic, or
culture, was missing from the Catholic populations of
South America, Italy and Spain. Protestants, Weber said,
extended Christianity’s message of doing good deeds, to
doing work well. Industry and enterprise had an ultimate
motive: public good. That explains the philanthropists
of the US, from John D. Rockefeller to Andrew Carnegie
to Bill Gates. What explains the behaviour of Indians?
What explains the anarchy of our cities?
To find out, we must ask how our behaviour is different.
Some characteristics unite Indians. The most visible is
our opportunism. One good way to judge a society is to
see it in motion. On the road, we observe the
opportunism in the behaviour of the Indian driver. Where
traffic halts on one side of the road in India,
motorists will encroach the oncoming side because there
is space available there. If that leads to both sides
being blocked, that is fine, as long as we maintain our
advantage over people behind us or next to us. This is
because the other man cannot be trusted to stay in his
place.
The Indian’s instinct is to jump the traffic light if he
is convinced that the signal is not policed. If he gets
flagged down by the police, his instinct is to bolt. In
an accident, his instinct is to flee. Fatal motoring
cases in India are a grim record of how the driver ran
over people and drove away.
We show the pattern of what is called a Hobbesian
society: one in which there is low trust between people.
This instinct of me-versus-the-world leads to irrational
behaviour, demonstrated when Indians board flights. We
form a mob at the entrance, and as the flight is
announced, scramble for the plane even though all
tickets are numbered. Airlines modify their boarding
announcements for Indians taking international flights.
Our opportunism necessarily means that we do not
understand collective good. Indians will litter if they
are not policed. Someone else will always pick up the
rubbish we throw. Thailand’s toilets are used by as many
people as India’s toilets are, but they are likely to be
not just clean but spotless. This is because that’s how
the users leave them, not the cleaners.
The Indian’s reluctance to embrace collective good hurts
his state. A study of income-tax compliance between 1965
and1993 in India (Elsevier Science/Das Gupta, Lahiri and
Mookherjee) concluded that “declining assessment
intensity had a significant negative effect” on
compliance, while “traditional enforcement tools
(searches, penalties and prosecution activity) had only
a limited effect” on Indians. The authors puzzled over
the fact that “India’s income tax performance (was)
below the average of countries with similar GDP per
capita”.
We do not think stealing from the state is a bad thing,
and our ambiguity extends to corruption, which also we
do not view in absolute terms. Political parties in
India understand this and corruption is not an issue in
Indian politics. Politicians, who are demonstrably
corrupt, recorded on camera taking a bribe or saying
appalling things, or convicted by a court, can hold
legitimate hope of a comeback - unthinkable in the West.
The opportunist is necessarily good at adapting, and
that explains the success of Indians abroad. We can
follow someone else’s rules well, even if we can’t
enforce them at home ourselves. The Indian in the US is
peerless at the Spelling Bee because the formula of
committing things to memory, which in India passes for
knowledge, comes naturally to him. But this talent for
adapting and memorizing is not the same as a talent for
creation.
The question is: Why are we opportunists?
In his great work Crowds and Power, Elias Canetti
observed that the rewards religions promised their
faithful were all far off, in the afterlife. This is
because a short goal would demand demonstration from god
and create sceptics instead of believers. There is an
exception to this in Hinduism. Hinduism is not about the
other world. There is no afterlife in Hinduism and
rebirth is always on earth. The goal is to be released
entirely and our death rites and beliefs — funeral in
Kashi — seek freedom from rebirth.
Christianity and Islam are about how to enter heaven;
Hinduism is about how not to return to earth, because
it’s a rotten place. Naipaul opens his finest novel with
the words “The world is what it is”, and Wittgenstein
(“The world is all that is the case”) opens his
Tractatus similarly. Hinduism recognizes that the world
is irredeemable: It is what it is. Perhaps this is where
the Hindu gets his world view — which is zero-sum —
from. We might say that he takes the pessimistic view of
society and of his fellow man.
But why?
The Hindu devotee’s relationship with God is
transactional: I give you this, you give me that. God
must be petitioned and placated to swing the universe’s
blessings towards you. God gives you something not
through the miracle, and this is what makes Hinduism
different, but by swinging that something away from
someone else. This is the primary lesson of the Vedic
fire sacrifice. There is no benefit to one without loss
to another. Religion is about bending god’s influence
towards you through pleas, and appeasement, through
offerings.
Society has no role in your advancement and there is no
reason to give back to it (in any way, including leaving
the toilets clean behind you) because it hasn’t given
you anything in the first place.
That is why Indian industrialists are not
philanthropists. Rockefeller always gave a tenth of his
earnings to the Church, and then donated hundreds of
millions, fighting hookworm and educating black women.
Bill Gates gave $25 billion (around Rs1.2 trillion), and
his cause is fighting malaria, which does not even
affect Americans. Warren Buffett gave away $30 billion,
almost his entire fortune. Andrew Carnegie built 2,500
libraries. Dhirubhai Ambani International School has
annual fees starting at Rs.47,500 (with a Rs.24,000
admission fee) and Mukesh Ambani’s daughter was made
head girl.
An interesting thing to know is this: Has our culture
shaped our faith or has our faith shaped our culture? I
cannot say.
To return to the question we started with: Why is Brahma
not worshipped? The answer is obvious: He has nothing to
offer to a Hindu believer. What he could do for his
believers, create the universe, he already has. There is
no gain in petitioning him now.
(Coutesy: LiveMint; This article first appeared in
LiveMint on July 3, 2009)
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