Debate: The ‘Sacrifice’ of Thinking and the Altar of Unreason

When cultural shifts that encourage superstition, and are decidedly discriminatory, emerge leading to extreme acts such as human sacrifices, the field that needs to respond swiftly is that of the liberal arts.

The Elanthoor sacrifices understandably restoked the fires of the religiosity versus secular debate. Theologians and socio-political commentators denounced the act:

while influential “intellectuals” are interested only in literature and not in promoting scientific temper, the media too failed in this battle against superstition because they no longer promote “critical thinking”.

Literature promotes critical thinking because it forces us to confront humans unlike us, that ‘human’ is a plural category and everyone within the category has the right to be treated equally. Everything hinges on how we define the human, and this is the task not of anatomists or political scientists alone, but of literature which shows us this diversity. But we shall get to literature and humanities in a while.

Mohammed Shafi, one of the accused in the Elanthoor ‘human sacrifice’ case, being produced at court, in Kochi. Photo: PTI

Languages of religiosity

The language of ‘faith’ and ‘religion’ when employed to speak of contemporary India is positioned as antagonistic to ‘secular’ and ‘modern’. This antagonism is fuelled by the language of the state itself. Claiming ‘scientific’ achievements for ancient times, reclaiming versions of ‘discoveries’ and technologies as native – and as a matter of faith – the state constructs a discourse that feeds readily into the above antagonism.

When state discourse enters the public language and public imaginary – a shift from the 1980s and even the 1990s India – it also invokes other, less pleasant, subtextual aspects of ancient beliefs and rituals, including practices such as human sacrifice. For how does one disentangle, from the discourse of ‘ancient glories’, strands of thought that are empowering and egalitarian from those that are sexist or anti-rights?

Sociologist-philosopher Jurgen Habermas cautioned that the validity claims of any religion must ‘adapt to the authority of the sciences’. He also conceded that individuals may retain a sense of religious belonging but without abandoning their autonomy (or, by extension, free will). But what we see now – and not just in India, let us not forget the ‘intelligent design’ debate across the US, critiqued by Richard Dawkins in The God Delusion – is not a disowning of this authority of the sciences, an authority constructed and not without its own politics. Rather it is an appropriation of all sciences as always already ‘ours’.

Such discourses propose a divide between knowledge forms: native and ancient versus ‘western’ and modern, almost as though there are monolithic ‘native’ or ‘western’ beliefs (would ‘western belief’ be Catholic, Protestant or Eastern Orthodox?). Overlaps also occur even within attitudes of intolerance and offended sentiments: Saba Mahmood noted the same iconophilic strains within both religions:

the kind of relationship that many pious Muslims feel toward Muhammad, which was partly at stake in the Danish cartoon controversy, surely it is recognizable to scholars of Christianity (with its long and rich tradition of the Eucharist and Corpus Christi), Eastern Orthodox Christianity, and late Antiquity?

Mahmood went on to argue that we need to think (and speak)

critically about whether the sense of injury that derives from this sort of religiosity is translatable into a language of rights, and whether understanding this sense of injury is something worthy for the ethical and political life of a religiously diverse society.

The ‘language of rights’ is precisely what has been abandoned in toto with the rise of the language of hurt sentiments but also because in the era of mythic pasts and post-truth.

What counts as religion itself has been constructed in specific contexts and for particular reasons, notes Talal Asad:

It was late nineteenth-century anthropological and theological thought that rendered a variety of overlapping social usages rooted in changing and heterogeneous forms of life into a single immutable essence, and claimed it to be the object of a universal human experience called “religious”.

He further argued that when we speak of religions we need to ask ‘questions about what the definition includes and what it excludes – how, by whom, for what purpose, and so on’. These are questions, in our context of the widespread use of exclusionary rhetoric, we need to ask now for clearly, some humans can be sacrificed.

Several of these questions are the province of fields in the human sciences, intellectual history, even discourse studies and of course literature. Here we find the eschewing of hagiographies and instead a focus on histories of religious thought, complete with anthropological inquiry.

Also Read: Whither, in the Name of Religion, Goes the Voice of Reason?

‘Values’ and cultural change

The sociologist Max Weber noted:

Every increase of rationalism in empirical science increasingly pushes religion from the rational into the irrational realm; but only today does religion become the irrational or anti-rational supra-human power.

This categorisation of religion as ‘irrational’ moved religion into the realm of the private as well. But the World Values Survey is illustrative. For the 2017-2022 period, people of many countries agreed that religion was ‘very important’ to their daily lives. In terms of percentages, 37% of Americans agreed. Indonesia, Nigeria, Egypt and numerous countries showed more than 50% of the population agreeing. Only in the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Lithuania, South Korea, Iceland, Hungary, Denmark, Austria, Azerbaijan, Australia and a few other nations was this percentage less than 20%. In their comment on this ‘cultural map’, political scientists Ronald Inglehart and Christian Welzel noted two major dimensions of cross-cultural variation in the world: traditional values versus secular-rational values; survival values versus self-expression values. They defined Traditional values as

Emphasiz[ing] the importance of religion, parent-child ties, deference to authority and traditional family values. People who embrace these values also reject divorce, abortion, euthanasia and suicide. These societies have high levels of national pride and a nationalistic outlook.

They noted :

On the traditional/secular dimension, the United States ranks far below other rich societies, with levels of religiosity and national pride comparable with those found in some developing societies… The Swedes, the Dutch, and the Australians are closer to the cutting edge of cultural change than the Americans…

‘The cutting edge of cultural change’ is an apposite phrase because with the rise of the discourse of ancient traditions and their glories what is lost is the capacity for cultural change, unfitting our next generations for a rapidly changing world when they are asked to return to roots and supposedly stable values.

And yet, in the past, faced with crises and extreme events, even theologians have responded in interesting ways. One thinks of Pope Francis’s Laudato Si’ (2015), with its subtitle, ‘on care for our common home’, in which he pronounced ‘Climate [is] a common good’, and the Islamic Declaration on Global Climate Change (2015) as examples. Just as the scientists drew our urgent attention to the climate crisis, so did religious leaders. Calling for changes in the way we live – especially fossil fuel consumption – these tracts were attempting to effect cultural changes. They were not just spouting back-to-scriptures rhetoric, but actively promoting critical thinking and an environmental consciousness that is humanistic in spirit.

When cultural shifts that encourage superstition, and are decidedly discriminatory, emerge leading to extreme acts such as human sacrifices, the field that needs to respond swiftly is that of the liberal arts.

Pope Francis speaks to journalists aboard the papal plane on his flight back after visiting Canada, July 29, 2022. Photo: Reuters/Guglielmo Mangiapane

Knowledge shifts and critical thinking

For cultural change ‘critical thinking’ is indispensable. The language of rights, dignity and autonomy helps rethink what it means to be human, a citizen, a community. In Heidi Bostic’s pithy phrasing, humanities explore the ‘basic issues of meaning, purpose, and value’ and ‘fundamental questions at the heart of humanistic inquiry: questions that the humanities confront….Who are we and how ought we to live?’ Following from these, how have returns to mythic pasts, the designation of some people as nonpersons and disposable persons, are matters of concern for the Humanities because it concerns how we as a people ought to live.

Those sacrificed were treated as disposable humans, and this is where our myths have something to answer for: how did we retrieve beliefs that, in the age of science and democracy, enabled some to consign fellow humans to the category of the disposable? What have we imparted as frames of perception? How have we manufactured memory in terms of cultural heritage management that congeals the public imaginary around ‘us’ and ‘them’?

Such a management is the organisation of perception which can lead, as Diana Taylor argues about the collective refusal to observe the cruelties around us, to percepticide. If we see the recent acts as just ‘perversions’ or ‘superstition’ then we wilfully miss how a train of thought has now appeared, valorising myths and post-truth ‘facts’ as acceptable and even respectable, and which will at some point call forth expressions of this heinous sort as well.

It is not, as Sunny Kapikad noted, an isolated incident but a reflection of a larger malaise and cultural resurgence of a certain kind. In this, Kapikad echoes the oft-repeated comments that the 2004 Abu Ghraib tortures and torturers were not just kinky individuals but a product of the American system that normalises violence and racism. The context legitimises and valorises stories and practices that then produce extreme acts, unthinkable acts that destroy the Other human. It is how we perceive the Other that allows, sanctifies and necessitates the destruction of the Other.

And it is within the liberal arts, specifically literature, that we learn how to perceive the Other, with outsiderhood.

As we set about fragmenting the disciplines into diploma and certificate courses in the name of interdisciplinarity and flexibility, preventing the young from acquiring a solid foundation in any discipline, the capacity for critical thinking is eroded. Where sustained reflection, deep reading and diversity of scholarship – the basis of the Humanities – are necessary more than ever, what we are attempting is minimising detail, shortcuts into a discipline and superficial jargon usage. There is no need, apparently, to examine the plural and sometimes problematic histories of an idea or ideology, the subtexts of a discourse.

A nation that abandons reflection for trendy myths and catchy teaching programmes that refuse groundedness in concepts, frames of perception and (untrendy) ideas of rights, when public discourse turns on emotional truth and unverifiable myths, when disciplines like the liberal arts are rendered ineffectual systematically, atavistic practices such as Elanthoor will return.

Sometimes the death of a discipline that offers the last of the grand challenges to the way we live heralds the death of the idea(l) of a nation.

Kerala ‘Human Sacrifice’ Case Revives Calls for Effective Law, Promoting Critical Thinking

Besides calls for legislation, there are also discussions on the role of religious figures, political leaders, intellectuals and media in the spread of superstition.

Kerala’s shocking ‘human sacrifice’ case, where two women were brutally assaulted and murdered in the name of superstition, has once again revived calls for comprehensive action to address the menace of harmful and deceitful practices in the name of faith. 

On Tuesday, the Kerala police arrested three persons – one person described as a “psychopath and pervert” and a couple – after unearthing the murder of two women in a suspected practice of “black magic” and “human sacrifice”. 

Human sacrifice is the act of killing one or more humans as part of a ritual, which some “black magic” practitioners falsely claim will bring material benefits. 

The murders were a result of the planning of a habitual offender – Muhammed Shafi alias Rasheed – who convinced a couple – Bhagawal Singh and Laila – that murdering a person would “please” the goddess and bring them “financial prosperity”. 

According to the police, Shafi and the couple brutally murdered two women – in separate instances, on in June and the other in September – at the couple’s house at Elanthoor in the southern district of Pathanamthitta. 

Rosly, 49, was killed in June and Padmam, 52, was killed in September. Both the women were lured and trapped by Shafi and taken to Singh’s house, where they were murdered and buried.

The primary findings of the police investigation revealed the continuing existence of dangerous and criminal practices in the name of faith in the state.

Murders for ‘prosperity’ 

According to the police probe so far, the killings took place because Shafi – against whom more than 10 cases including rape, theft and attempt to murder charges were registered – met Singh and Laila, who were willing to do anything to improve their financial condition. 

Singh and Laila were looking for ways to achieve economic prosperity. And Shafi convinced Singh that ‘human sacrifice’ would bring them what they want. Shafi was later paid by the couple for facilitating the ‘ritual’. 

Shafi used a fake ID on social media to establish contact with Singh. Shafi, who presented himself to Singh as a woman, said he knew one sorcerer named Rasheed. Later, Shafi arrived at Singh’s house as Rasheed.

The police revealed shocking details that have emerged from the probe so far. According to the investigators, Shafi and the couple severely assaulted their victims before they beheaded them and cut the dead bodies into pieces. They were later buried.

Shafi lured both Rosly and Padmam by offering them money. Both women were engaged in selling lottery tickets. Padmam was originally from Tamil Nadu. At the time of their murder, both the women were residing in Ernakulam, where Shafi, also a resident of the district, met them. 

The murders were unveiled following the police’s probe into one ‘missing complaint’ filed by Padmam’s relatives a couple of weeks ago. Padmam went missing on September 26. Earlier Rosly’s family had also filed a police complaint in August, weeks after she went missing in June.

Ernakulam city police commissioner C.H. Nagaraju briefs the media in connection with the Elanthoor human sacrifice case, in Kochi, October 12, 2022. Photo: PTI

Deceitful, harmful faith practices not rare in the state  

The murders for “faith” and “prosperity” attracted sharp condemnation from various corners, including the political leadership and religious/spiritual leaders.

Chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan, in a statement, said the twin murder shocked the human conscience. The chief minister also said the ongoing probe will bring everyone involved in the crime before the law. He added that the crime is a “challenge to civilised society” and pressed for “social awareness” to address such forms of violence. 

The state’s opposition leader V.D. Satheesan said the twin murders were “shocking”. Calling for an honest and just probe into the case, he also said had there been a “serious probe” into the first murder, the second murder, which took place three months later, could have been prevented.

P. Satheedevi, chairperson of the Kerala State Women’s Commission, said, “It is so frightening to see that brutal acts including human sacrifice are taking place in a society like ours, which boasts of high educational standards.”

However, deceitful and sometimes dangerous practices in the name of faith, often to get rid of economic woes and other difficult situations in life, are not rare in Kerala. Such practices continue to exist among sections of all the major religious communities in the state – Hindus, Muslims and Christians – even though reformists, both within and outside the religion have tried to eradicate them.

Recently, some Muslim groups launched a campaign against such practices after a minor girl died after being denied timely medical care for faith-related reasons.

Also Read: ‘No Self-Reliant India Without Freedom From Dogma, Superstitions’

Spiritual and religious leaders also unite in condemnation

Besides political leadership, some religious/spiritual leaders also strongly condemned the latest murders.

Swami Sandeepananda Giri, a well-known Hindu spiritual educator, said many in Kerala follow “numerous” forms of superstitious beliefs, such as buying ornaments on ‘Akshaya Tritiya’. “Unwanted rituals are planned and observed in the name of religion and faith,” he told The Wire. He said media platforms, such as newspapers, had a role in spreading superstitions in society.   

Responding to a question, Giri also said “everyone”, including political and religious leaders, has a role to play to address unwanted practices followed in the name of faith. 

“There is a famous quote from Plato: rulers should be philosophers. Why should rulers be philosophers? They should act as a role model in society. But, what happens if they themselves contribute superstitions? Unfortunately, our current prime minister himself is an example. He became an ‘inspiration’ in leading the public to different malpractices. This is a very saddening thing,” he said, in a possible reference to some public statements made by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the pandemic. Quoting from the Bhagavad Gita, Giri said that influential people should be cautious in their actions because they could influence ordinary people.

Notably, the Kerala ‘human sacrifice’ incident has a man with a Muslim name as the key accused. He convinced a couple from another faith that they could live a better life if they killed other human beings. 

Muslim scholars view such killings and similar harmful ‘rituals’ as both ‘un-Islamic’ and deeply condemnable. 

Professor Shamsuddeen Palakkod, a senior Muslim scholar and community activist, said if religious and spiritual leaders begin to use their wisdom and knowledge on the “right path”, believers will be “saved” and will get rid of the evil practices like ‘human sacrifice’.

Quoting from the Qura’n (9:34), Palakkod said many spiritual leaders are actually misleading the faithful and gaining wealth. He said believers should realise there is “no space for superstition in real religion”. He said, “There is no original or fake sorcerer. Every sorcerer is fake.”

Some commentators also see the latest murders in the name of superstition as part of a larger social problem – the commercialisation of faith.

N.P. Chekkutty, a senior journalist and socio-political commentator, said religious leaders, political leaders, mass media and even intellectuals had a role in the spread of superstition in the society. He said money has become an important driving factor for all institutions, including religion, through globalisation which began in the 1990s. This has negatively influenced even religions and religious practices, he said. In most superstitious practices, the practitioner is paid quite well. In the latest twin murders too, Shafi was paid more than Rs 3 lakh by the couple, according to the police.  

Chekkutty said while influential “intellectuals” are interested only in literature and not in promoting scientific temper, the media too failed in this battle against superstition because they no longer promote “critical thinking”. “They do not even publish a letter from readers that is critical [of some dominant negative ideas],” he said.

Representative image. Illustration: The Wire

Laws to ban superstitious practices

Notably, a draft law meant to tackle “inhuman” practices and exploitation in the name of superstition has been waiting for the approval of the Kerala legislative assembly. 

The Kerala Prevention and Eradication of Inhuman Evil Practices, Sorcery and Black Magic Bill, 2019 was drafted and submitted to the state government three years ago. In light of the latest twin murders, reports say the government is likely to speed up the process to enact the law.

Some states have already enacted similar laws to address the social menace of such practices. The rationalist Narendra Dabholkar played a crucial role in Maharashtra adopting an Act which criminalised practices related to black magic, human sacrifices, the use of magic remedies to cure ailments and other such acts which may exploit superstitions. Dabholkar himself was murdered, allegedly by members of a radical right-wing group.

Terrifying stories of human sacrifices have been reported from different parts of the country in the past few years. Last year, a two-year-old baby was killed by family members in Uttar Pradesh. A woman from Telangana murdered her own child for a similar reason last year. And in 2018, the entire country was shocked by the gruesome tale that emerged from a house in Delhi’s Burari, where 11 members of a family died by suicide as part of a ritual. Activists had pointed out that thousands have lost their lives due to superstitious beliefs in the country in the recent past. 

Muhammed Sabith is a journalist and researcher. Twitter: @MuhemmadSabith.