“The whole world should become ahimsak”

..They demand a “hinsa,
kasaai, vyasan mukt Palitana”—sanitised of violence, butchery and vice……..Each of the 68 butchers in town has
been identified by name……
not just Muslim butchers; the
Sikligar Sikhs, who breed pigs are also under the scanner…

They are the neo-Brahmins.  Also it is the Bharatiya Jain Party (BJP).

Generally the Brahmin class has provided teachers, doctors, lawyers….people who fight with words not swords (that was reserved for Kshatriyas or Khatris). Brahmins are also not noted to be in the top economic bracket (money is in the hands of the Vaishyas or Baniyas).

Brahmins have not been either numerous or durable as rulers (there have been probably more and more long lasting Shudra rulers). Jawaharlal Nehru, who had immense contempt for religion (specifically Hinduism) nevertheless was probably the longest reigning Brahmin.

Meet Amit Shah – a Jain – the newly minted president of BJP. Jains were recently declared to be a minority by the past Congress-UPA regime (as a last-ditch vote-catching measure). Shah is expected to continue the tradition whereby India has been specially alert to the sensitivities of minorities. It is another matter that what is nectar to one community is poison to the others (see below).

As far as policies go Jains are as strict as any of the famous sons of Abraham. They also have immense wealth and they have the ear of the political establishment. Amit Shah is credited with the BJP victories in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar – critical for Mission 272 (parliamentary majority). It was Shah who memorably told the Jats of Muzaffarnagar that “this election is a fight for honor and revenge.”

In Europe there has been considerable tensions of late between the left-liberals (aligned with animal rights groups) and Jews/Muslims over kosher/halal rituals. The fight is over stunning animals before they are gored. The multi-culturalists say (with some justification) that only people who are perfect vegetarians can proclaim their moral authority on this matter, everyone else is a hypocrite and an Islamaphobe (also anti-semite).  

By this logic, Jains who introduced the concept of ahimsa to the world, have all the moral authority to over-ride objections of the filthy meat eaters….

Interestingly enough, vegetarianism is one area in which the Dharmic religions can all agree to put up an united front against the Desert religions. All our Sikh friends choose to eat vegetarian when dining out since they are actually forbidden to consume halal food.  

The only Hindus who will have serious objections to veg-only strictures are the denizens of un-India (TM)- Kerala, Bengal and Tamil Nadu. Perhaps they should be labeled apostates and barred from visiting Varanasi and Palitana.

Welcome to the land of vegetarian Iftars. Hope you enjoy the experience.
…………
Parimal, a nondescript neighbourhood in Palitana, near Bhavnagar, in
Gujarat, is much sought after for the Jain pilgrimage town’s few
Muslim-run non-vegetarian eateries. But it’s eerily deserted on what
should have been a bustling, cheerful iftaar evening.
 

Kababs and chicken
lollipops are displayed promisingly on the menus of the stalls but the
kitchens that roll them out have been shut down since the Gujarat
government promised to look at Jain leaders’ demand that the pilgrimage
town be made a vegeta­rian-only zone. 

The stall-owners are suspicious,
reluctant to talk, and refuse to give their names. A seething resentment
fills the air. “There’s nothing for us to celebrate this Ramzan,” says
Haji Ghulam Ali, offering us goodies from the vegetarian entree to his
humble iftaar meal. He’s the only one willing to be quoted. “Our
business is hit, we’re on the verge of bankruptcy, and we can’t even eat
our regular food!”



 
The government notification hasn’t yet come into effect. But in
Palitana, it’s already futile—and generally has been difficult—to find
non-veg food. The carts that used to sell omelettes and boiled or
scrambled eggs around the town’s mosque and cemetery, on the outskirts,
have vanished. 

Interestingly, this region is predominantly meat-eating.
“As high as 55-60 per cent of the population are non-vegetarians—not
just Muslims, but Kolis, Sindhis and Dalits also,” says Pravin Mishra,
an Ahmedabad-based filmmaker, artist and columnist. The Jain presence is
in a few thousands, largely a floating population of pilgrims and
ascetic, peripatetic monks and nuns. In contrast, Muslims constitute 25
per cent of the resident population. It will be worst hit if
vegetarianism is enforced.

But the monks spearheading the movement say it’s not a matter of
numbers. “Palitana is like the Mecca or Kashi of Jains,” says Virag
Sagar Maharaj, a leading monk. He invokes Jain lore. Palitana has been
visited by all 24 Jain tirthankars. The Shat­runjaya hills are clustered
with 3,000 temples and 27,000 statues. There’s the symbolic ord­eal of
3,600 steps, a 3.5 km climb that takes two to three hours. 

Jains come
here to pray for moksha. 

The sentiment runs in laity too. “It’s the
centre of our faith,” says Shireesh Kotari, international president of
the Jain Social Groups Inter­national Federation. And Janki Shah, owner
of a textiles company in Ahme­d­abad, says, “It’s one of our holiest
shri­nes—our shashwata tirtha. We believe that, whatever happens,
Palitana will never vanish from the earth. It is eternal.”



 
They draw on the concept of ahimsa, a central tenet of Jainism: you
are not meant to hurt anything, not even a fly. “It’s not merely about
preventing people from eating non-veg food. Our movement is based on the
concept of Jeevdaya and is primarily against animal slaughter,” says
Virag Sagar Maharaj. 

Although he does not justify it, sociologist
Gaurang Jani says the demand for a no-meat zone in Palitana is linked to
the strict vegetarianism Jains practise. And Vidyut Joshi, former
vice-chancellor of Bhavnagar University, says, “I guess some ethos of
the Jain religion has to be maintained at its biggest pilgrimage
centre.”



 
The posters outside the ashram of Jambudweep, a subsect of the
Shwet­ambar Jains, talk of 2,000 animals butchered every day in
Palitana, 60,000 monthly and 7 lakh annually. They demand a “hinsa,
kasaai, vyasan mukt Palitana”—sanitised of violence, butchery and vice,
that is. It’s an organised effort. Each of the 68 butchers in town has
been identified by name—and the kind of animals he slaughters. 

The
Jambudweep group claims this is the first step in their rehabilitation.
It offers butchers  a compensation of Rs 9 lakh and eatery owners Rs 5
lakh. So far, 15 butchers—the campaigners have agreeme­nts on notarised
stamp papers as proof—have agreed to give up their profession.

But Muslim residents of the Parimal area say the promises aren’t being
made good.  And, compensation or not, it’s difficult to uproot oneself
from a place or give up a trade. In Gujarat, there are hardly any
non-Muslim butchers, so the demand for vegetarianism will mostly hit one
community. Mishra says it’s a case of religion being used as a
political and electoral tool. 

But it’s not just Muslim butchers; the
Sikligar Sikhs, who breed pigs and trade in them, are also under the
Jains’ scanner. Palitana looks like a starting point. Virag Sagar
Maharaj wants to take the movement forward in all of Gujarat, and later,
Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh. “The whole
world,” he resolutely says, “should become ahimsak.”


 
What is unfolding right now is clearly a clash of faiths and opposing
ways of life. “It seems all about ‘My faith is bigger than yours’,
which defies the spirit of secularism and acceptance,” says Mishra.
Ironically, the temples atop the sacred Shatrunjaya hills tell a
different story. They reflect a history of peace and togetherness, of
cultures and religions in harmony. At one of the holiest Jain sites
here, there’s the Muslim shrine to Angar Pir, at which childless couples
of every religion—including Jains—have been seeking  blessings since
time immemorial.


 
All is not well within the Jain sect itself. There has been dissent
amongst Jain monks too. One group accuses the other of being taken in
too easily by the promises made by the administration. Monks are even
being accused of having pocketed money meant for rehabilitating
butchers. “It’s a stunt,” says Divya Shek­har Maharaj, a monk who has
distanced himself from the movement, though he himself practises a very
rigorous form of vegetarianism. “They have promised a lot but nothing
has happened.”

 The proposal has led to sharp criticism from civil society. “Ritual
slaughter is as much an act of faith for Muslims and Hindus as animal
protection is for the Jains,” says Aakar Patel, a columnist. “To ask
another faith to change to what you think is right is an imposition and
fundamental intolerance.” 

According to education consultant Manisha
Modha Patel, no group can treat a town as its private pro­­perty. At
best, proscription of non-veg food can be applied at temple complexes.
Already, since 1999, non-veg food is not allowed within 250 metres of
Taleti, the point from which the climb up Shatru­njaya hills begins. The
road leading to the Shatrunjaya river, too, is a vegetarian zone. Now,
they want vegetarianism imposed in a 9 km radius. “Tomorrow,” says
Manisha, “they may seek a ban on onion and garlic. What if Ajmer decides
to declare itself a meat-only zone?” But Virag Sagar Maharaj counters
by drawing on the example of Haridwar and Vaishno Devi, both vegetarian
zones.



 
What the Palitana movement does prove is the influence of Jains in
Gujarat. They form less than one per cent of the state’s population but
dominate the economic space, and through it wield disproportionate
influence on the social, cultural and political space. Many say the
ascendancy in the ruling BJP of Amit Shah, Modi’s right-hand man, now
slotted to be party president, is adding to their clout. Shah is a Jain.



 
Their dominance has also been creating the misperception that
Gujaratis are vegetarian. Actually, 68 per cent of the population,
according to the last census, eats meat—this includes tribals, obcs,
Muslims, Christians, Parsis and Jews.



 
Meanwhile, Bhavnagar collector P.K. Solanki says that, at the moment,
the Palitana municipality is inviting objections to the proposed move
and has received 1,980 so far. Legal opinion is also being sought. The
board of the municpality is likely to decide on July 30. The decision
will be forwarded to the state government for appropriate action. Till
then, Palitana remains in suspended animation. And iftaars will remain
dhokla-khakhra affairs.

Eggless, Meatless…


  • Haridwar, Uttarakhand. No meat, no eggs, no fishing allowed in the Ganga, no alcohol.
  • Badrinath, Kedarnath, Gangotri, Yamunotri,
    Uttarakhand. All hotels, guest houses, restaurants and eateries serve
    only vegetarian fare. There are no bars.
  • Jagannath Temple, Puri, Orissa. No sale or preparation of meat, fish, poultry, eggs in all restaurants in specific areas around the temple
  • Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh. No meat, fish, eggs or liquor except in certain parts of the city.
  • Vrindavan, Uttar Pradesh. No non-vegetarian food, smoking, drinking, no leather objects in the temple vicinity.
  • Golden Temple, Amritsar. No meat in the temple complex. No smoking in the city.
  • Katra, Jammu. Only pure vegetarian food, not even onion and garlic allowed.
  • Rameshwaram, Tamil Nadu. Only vegetarian food in the town though it is a major exporter of seafood.

………

Link: http://www.outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?291371

……..

regards

Brown Pundits