When producer Namit Malhotra began explaining the Ramayana to Hans Zimmer, the legendary composer cut him off:
āYou donāt have to explain it to me. Something that has lasted thousands of years clearly has meaning. Letās just do our best. Itās beyond us.ā
Malhotra took this as reverence. In fact, it was erasure.
No serious Western artist would score The Ten Commandments or Schindlerās List without knowing the story. Imagine a composer saying, āDonāt explain the Illiad to me, itās beyond me.ā Theyād be fired. But when it comes to Indian epics? The bar is subterranean. Thatās not reverence.
Thatās: Iām Western, Iām famous, Iām here for the cheque; not the history. The tragedy isnāt Zimmerās line. Itās Malhotraās awe. A Westerner shrugs off our most sacred text, and we call it wisdom. Thatās not cultural pride. Thatās civilizational confusion. Itās a pattern. Many elite Indians are fluent in the language of Islamic grievance; but tone-deaf to Western condescension.
Divide and rule still works:
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Hindus thank the British for āfreeingā them from Muslim rule
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Muslims thank the British for āprotectingā them from Hindu majoritarianism
Meanwhile, the West shrugs at our stories and we applaud.
Shravan Monday at the New England Temple

Continue reading Hans Zimmer and the Polite Dismissal of the Ramayana
