Udhayanidhi Stalin Takes Oath as Tamil Nadu’s New Deputy Chief Minister

Speculation about the elevation of M.K. Stalin’s son had been rife in the state for some time.

New Delhi: Newly appointed deputy chief minister of Tamil Nadu, Udhayanidhi Stalin, has taken oath at Chennai’s Raj Bhavan today, September 29.

Speculation about his elevation as deputy CM had been rife in the state for some time. Before his appointment, he was sports minister of the state. Udhayanidhi will also be the state minister for planning and development.

Chief minister M.K. Stalin had said a few days before his elevation, according to PTI, “There will be no disappointment, there will be change.” Udhayanidhi is M.K. Stalin’s son.

Along with Udhayanidhi, four more DMK leaders were added to the cabinet. This include V Senthil Balaji who was last week given bail by the Supreme Court, Dr Govi Chezhiaan, R. Rajendran and S.M. Nasar.

Balaji was included in the cabinet after the Supreme Court granted him bail two days ago in a money laundering case in connection with which he had spent 15 months in jail. He was arrested in a cash-for-jobs scam by the Enforcement Directorate when he was a minister in the previous AIADMK government.

“The case which was initiated against me was a fake case and was just a political vendetta. I will overcome and win this fake case legally by facing court. I am obliged to DMK president and Tamil Nadu chief minister MK Stalin and DMK youth wing secretary Udhayanidhi Stalin,” Hindustan Times reported as Balaji saying.

Dr K Ponmudy, who earlier served as higher education minister, will now be the minister for forests, Times of India reported.

Three ministers have also been dropped from the cabinet. These are T Mano Thangaraj (Minister of Milk and Dairy Development), Gingee KS Masthan (Minister of Minorities Welfare and Non-Resident Tamils Welfare) and K Ramachandran (Minister of Tourism), India Today reported.

Sanatana Dharma Case: ‘Should’ve Known the Consequences,’ SC Tells Udhayanidhi Stalin

The remark came while the Supreme Court was hearing Stalin’s petition to club the FIRs against him in the matter.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday (March 4) rebuked Tamil Nadu minister Udhayanidhi Stalin for his remarks on the ‘sanatana dharma’ while hearing his petition to club the FIRs against him in the matter.

Stalin, who had compared sanatana dharma to a disease during a speech in September, 2023, has been booked in six states, including Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Jammu and Kashmir, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka.

The bench, consisting of Justices Sanjiv Khanna and Dipankar Datta, while addressing the petition, asked him to move the respective high courts and said, “”You abuse your Article 19(1)(a) right. You abuse your Article 25 right. Now you are exercising your Article 32 right? Do you not know the consequences of what you said?”

Stalin’s counsel, senior advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi, replied “I have to move six high courts, I’ll constantly be tied up in this…This is persecution before the prosecution.”

Justice Datta then reiterated his disapproval of Stalin’s comments, saying, “You are not a layman. You are a minister. You should know the consequences.”

Singhvi relied on precedents involving Amish Devgan, Arnab Goswami, Nupur Sharma, and Mohammed Zubair, where the Supreme Court allowed the consolidation of FIRs in multiple states. 

The counsel argued that the cause of action in the FIRs was the same, stemming from the Tamil Nadu minister’s controversial remarks.

After much persuasion, the bench agreed to examine the plea and scheduled the next hearing for the following Friday, asking Singhvi to present relevant precedents.

Stalin’s remark

Stalin, a DMK leader and son of Tamil Nadu chief minister MK Stalin, got mired in controversy last September for comparing sanatana dharma to diseases like ‘malaria’ and ‘dengue.’ 

In addition to triggering a political uproar, the comment led to several criminal complaints and PILs seeking action against him. 

The Supreme Court ultimately had to consolidate related petitions to address concerns about the volume of PILs filed over the minister’s remarks.

‘Not in Agreement’ With Ram Temple Built After Mosque Demolition: DMK’s Udhayanidhi Stalin

‘We don’t have a problem with a temple coming up there. We are not in agreement with the construction of a temple after demolishing a mosque,’ the DMK leader said.

New Delhi: Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) leader and Tamil Nadu minister Udhayanidhi Stalin on January 18 (Thursday) said the party is not in agreement with the temple that was constructed after demolishing a mosque.

He said his grandfather, M.K. Karunanidhi, had said the DMK wasn’t against any particular religion or faith.

“We don’t have a problem with a temple coming up there. We are not in agreement with the construction of a temple after demolishing a mosque,” the DMK Youth Wing chief said, referring to the demolition of the Babri Masjid in 1992, PTI reported.

Udhayanidhi, the son of Tamil Nadu chief minister M.K. Stalin, said that religion shouldn’t be mixed with politics, Hindustan Times reported.

“Our Treasurer (T.R. Baalu) has already said that spiritualism and politics should not be mixed,” he said.

In September 2023, his comments on the need to eradicate sanatan dharma were criticised by the Bharatiya Janata Party. He had said there is a need to challenge superstitions and continue the fight for social justice.

“We have a need to challenge superstitions, blind beliefs and remain committed to social justice. Like the change we saw in Tamil Nadu 2021, we have to see a change of power in Delhi in 2024,” he had said.

However, despite criticism, he stood by his comments.

The Ram Lalla ‘Pran Pratishtha’ ceremony in Ayodhya will be held on January 22.

Several opposition parties, including Congress, CPI(M) and Trinamool Congress (TMC), have turned down the invitation to the event, saying it is being used for electoral gain.

TMC chief and West Bengal chief minster will lead a rally on January 22, covering mosques, temples, churches, and gurdwaras along the way.

The top spiritual leaders in Sanatan Hindu Dharma, Jagatguru Shankaracharyas, also won’t be part of the ceremony to inaugurate the Ram Temple in Ayodhya. They have raised concerns over Prime Minister Narendra Modi being the “chief host” in the programme.

They feel that this places him at the forefront of the event, potentially undermining the traditional rituals dictated by the Sanatan Shastras.

The BJP Can Only ‘Defend’ an Orthodox Position of Sanatana Dharma Where ‘Meanings’ Do Not Matter

The sharp exchange between Udhayanidhi Stalin and the BJP points to the wide gap between the pre-19th century meaning of Sanatana Dharma and its 19th-century position as a signifier of orthodoxy.

Udhayanidhi Stalin and the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) confrontation over remarks on Sanatana Dharma made by the former has triggered a raging controversy and much has been written on this. The heading of this interview of Karthick Ram Manoharan expresses how the BJP may defend sanatana dharma without defining it.

The logical question that arises is, how can one defend something not knowing what they are defending? But this is exactly how the BJP is defending its position in this controversy.

This, in fact, was the position of a particular brand of Hinduism that emerged in the 19th-century history of India, where orthodoxy became a signifier of such a brand. The BJP seems to be asserting that particular position of sanatana dharma, a position that captures an orthodoxy and regressiveness in the name of tradition, and one that the Sangh parivar is so anxious to preserve.

It should come as no surprise that for the BJP, it is this position of orthodoxy that matters; sanatana dharma’s meanings and definitions do not.

The sharp exchange between Udhayanidhi and the BJP, particularly of their IT cell chief Amit Malviya on this issue, foregrounds a meaning-position dichotomy of the phrase ‘sanatana dharma’ – i.e. it points up the wide gap between the understanding of the pre-19th century meaning of the phrase and its 19th century position as a signifier of orthodoxy.

Knowing that this position is embarrassing to defend, sanatana dharma is often couched in terms of moral values and defended by maintaining an elevated tone.

Recently, a judge of the Madras high court, Justice N. Seshasayee, seems to have adopted such a tone in the wake of the present controversy, while posing a series of rhetorical questions as:  “Should not a citizen love his country? Is he not under a duty to serve his nation? Should not the parents be cared for?”

A package of such common sense human values, responsibilities of an individual and standards of behaviour and conduct is brought forward, labelled as sanatana dharma and then defended.

Also Read: What Is Sanatana Dharma?

Udhayanidhi’s sharp criticism of sanatana dharma was definitely not against such values, but was actually directed against the position of orthodoxy, a position that underlies the politics of Hindu nationalism or the Hindu rashtra.

It would be significant to understand the kinds of meanings associated with this phrase ‘sanatana dharma’, very briefly, and see the distinction between this understanding and the position adopted by the Hindu orthodoxy of the 19th century, in which the phrase got appropriated to refer to Hinduism in its entirety.

Meanings of sanatana dharma

Vaishali Jayaraman, a scholar, has given an exhaustive coverage of the various meanings of sanatana dharma and the contexts of its use from her study of Sanskrit classical literature like the Mahabharata, the Ramayana, the Puranas and the Dharmashastras.

Even she, who appears to be favourably oriented towards this pre-19th century concept of sanatana dharma, notes that the concept is “vague in the extent of its definition”, and doesn’t find a uniform meaning in her analysis of classical texts. Further, the phrase has never been used as a self-description or characterisation of any one religious group or tradition among many in these texts.

There is a wide range of connotation of the phrase ‘sanatana dharma’ in these classical texts, and the following marks its semantic variations (for a detailed textual analysis of meaning one can see here. I just list out some):

a) Social etiquette

b) Denotes a list of duties of the king with several dos and don’ts he should follow. The protection of varnashrama dharma (a rigid social order of four castes where the lowest, the shudra, serves the three higher castes – brahmin, kshatriya and vaishya) is one of his very important duties.

c) It is constituted by a mix of different dharmas

d) Principles of a specific concept, like truth

e) A social norm that enables one to act according to a set of rules

f) A general principle or a universally accepted value for an individual to follow

g) A general way of the world, an observation or truth

h) Duties and responsibilities of an individual at both a personal and professional level.

Also Read: Saakhi: Sanatana Dharma on Caste, Dissent and Democracy

However, the Mahabharata doesn’t provide a synoptic account of sanatana dharma. This phrase, as a philosophical and ethical concept, was also not taken up for critical reflection.

In the classical literature of earlier times, sanatana dharma carries various connotations, with emphasis on the idea of the rigid social hierarchical order of caste. Later, in the 19th century, the sanatani movement gained significance from the traditionalist’s encounter with the missionaries and the Hindu reformers.

Orthodoxy of Sanatana Dharma

In the classical literature, Sanatana Dharma was never a term of self-description or self-assertion signifying a religious identity. Nor does this phrase mark a constituency holding a certain religious position before the late 19th century.

Pandit Shraddha Ram Phillauri and Pandit Din Dayalu Sharma were the two leaders who pitched aggressively the idea of the orthodox brand of Hinduism as sanatana dharma. Their opponents were, primarily, Hindu reformists and Christian missionaries. As Kenneth W. Jones, a distinguished scholar of South Asian history, notes in his essay, “Two Sanatan Dharma Leaders and Swami Vivekananda: A Comparison”:

“During the nineteenth century, there arose throughout British India a series of religious movements that can loosely be labelled as defensive of the various religious traditions then dominant.

Among Hindus such groups were classed as ‘Sanatanists’, defenders of sanatana dharma, the Eternal Religion. They saw themselves as champions of orthodoxy who fought all attempts at religious and social reform. Sanatanists have also been labelled as opponents of change, enemies of ‘modernisation’ and Westernisation, thus reactionaries attempting to stem the tide of history.”

Shraddha Ram very strongly advocated for the caste system and also the idea of untouchability that follows from it. He uses the term “dwij dharm” for the three upper castes and “neech admi” for the shudras. The extent of his extremely toxic and regressive views can be gauged from what he says in one instance:

“Meeting, touching, eating, drinking with them is forbidden in our shastras. Should we meet them through force, or need or error, then doing prayaschit [atonement] is necessary. Then as far as possible we Hindus should remain distant from them.” (quoted from the above essay of Kenneth W. Jones).

The views of Sharma, the other leader, in this regard are no different. This was the orthodox position that was defended as sanatana dharma. The signifier was the orthodoxy and not the eternal values – as it is sometimes made out to be by appealing to the etymology of the phrase. It is this position that the movement assumes is predominant than the meaning.

As John Zavos, a scholar of South Asian religions, argues, this idea or position is a “prominent feature of modern Hinduism in accounts of political and social history”. That position was one of traditional orthodoxy. The Dharma Sabhas of the nineteenth century were primarily instrumental in creating and nurturing the force of orthodoxy.

This orthodoxy became an important constituency, politically, in articulating modern Hindusim of the orthodox kind (of the Dharma Sabhas) in the public colonial space, as against the reformist kind of modern Hinduism of the Samajas (primarily the Arya Samaj and the Brahma Samaj). Sanatana dharma thus became a signifier of orthodoxy, as Zavos contends.

One has to note that there is a major shift in the meaning of sanatana dharma, from the one laid out in the classical literature to the one that finds expression in the discourse of 19th-century orthodox Hinduism. In this discourse, the phrase was used as a self-description of one’s religious tradition. In this self-description, it becomes important how others perceive this tradition.

Also Read: Sanatan Dharma: An Ideology or the Entire Hindu Community?

The idea of sanatana encapsulates the idea of ancientness, eternality, permanence and universalism. Dharma was some kind of law that holds a universal order which subsumes the social order. In their mode of self-representation and self-description, these characteristics were drawn upon only to project the idea of the greatness of this religion that has persisted over a long period of time.

Sanatana dharma becomes a signifier of a position of, as Zavos terms it, “amorphous homogeneity”, but underlying this homogeneity is the rigid and regressive orthodoxy.

It emerged as a symbol of orthodoxy in the Dharma Sabhas’ articulation of its own brand of Hinduism, and as Zavos further argues, without developing a “doctrinally coherent and universally recognisable set of beliefs”.

Such a position of the orthodoxy of the 19th-century focused on practices and structures which clearly upheld caste hierarchy, the subjugation of women and all other regressive ideas. These elements came together to stand for tradition, and the Dharma Sabhas of 19th-century India aggressively supported it under the umbrella of sanatana dharma.

Eradication of regressive orthodoxy, not genocide

Udhayanidhi called for an eradication of the regressive orthodoxy of the kind that prevailed in the 19th-century  , because it was clearly discriminatory. Amit Malviya leaps from this remark by Udhayanidhi on sanatana dharma – that it must be eradicated and not merely opposed – to claim that “he is calling for genocide of 80% population of Bharat, who follow Sanatan Dharma”.

Genocide is a word coined by Raphael Lemkin, by whose indefatigable lobbying the UN adopted the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide (1948). In its definition, genocide is an act intended “to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group”.

If Malviya terms Udhayanidhi’s calling for eradication as genocide, then his (Malviya’s) understanding presupposed that sanatana dharma is a religious group, which he further follows up by saying that 80% of the population of Bharat are followers of this dharma.

Also Read: The Challenge to Sanatana Dharma from a Radical Politics of Emancipation

It is here that one needs to question Malviya’s or the BJP’s understanding of the phrase. Do they subscribe to a very specific meaning of sanatana dharma, or to a positional sense of the orthodoxy of the Dharma Sabhas?

It appears from the presupposition of his statement that it is the latter, because it is in this sense that it is represented as a constituency, and Malviya’s statement referring to 80% of the population being its followers also clearly demarcates an identifiable sense of religious constituency.

If this be the case, then the implication is clear that it is the position of the orthodoxy of the 19th-century Dharma Sabhas’ type that the BJP supports in its defence of sanatana dharma.

Further, it is significant to note that this notion of Hindu orthodoxy was later transformed politically in the hands of V.D. Savarkar as Hindu nationalism calling for a Hindu rashtra. So when Udhayanidhi calls for the eradication of sanatana dharma, it is not only the regressive orthodoxy, but also this idea behind the politics of a Hindu rashtra that he is calling for the eradication of. It is in this way that his statement has to be viewed.

S.K. Arun Murthi has taught philosophy in the Humanities and the Social Sciences department, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali, Punjab.

Opposition to Sanatan Dharma in India Is as Old as the Dharma Itself

Prime Minister Narendra Modi should come out clean and say that his supreme allegiance is to sanatan dharma – and not the Constitution.

Few weeks have passed since Udhayanidhi Stalin, the Tamil Nadu sports minister, condemned sanatan dharma vociferously and gave a call for its eradication, equating it to deadly infectious diseases. Unlike many other sensational statements routinely made by politicians that barely last a news cycle, this issue has lingered on.

Although Udhayanidhi’s original commentary was a stinging rebuke of a social evil that perpetrates inequality rather than a political attack, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) wasted no time in owning sanatana dharma and throwing itself lock, stock and barrel into defending a dharma that is considered to be the bedrock of Hinduism. So much so that Prime Minister Narendra Modi took it upon himself to exhort his ministers to give a “proper response” to Udhayanidhi’s critique.

While some observers saw this as a folly on part of the INDIA coalition that Udhayanidhi’s party DMK belongs to, as it gives electoral fodder to the Viswaguru, this in fact is an existential debate that has a lasting impact longer than any five-year election cycle because it impacts the millions that wallow under the weight of sanatan dharma knowingly or unknowingly, owing to their birth into a particular social order. It is much bigger than India itself, as it has its origins in our history that pre-dates the idea of India.

The ruling dispensation might interpret this statement as a vindication of Bharat, but that is not the intent here. Sanatan dharma has been criticised for its divisive and oppressive nature since time immemorial. To look at the long list of its critics, one has to start with Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha himself. His all-inclusive Sangha was born in stark contrast to the rigid birth-based discriminatory caste system and subjugation of women proscribed by sanatana dharm. After Buddha, King Asoka proved to be a formidable foe to sanatan sharma – so much so that his ascent to the throne of the Magadha empire was opposed tooth and nail by the sanatanis of the day. Historical books talk about multiple attempts on his life made by sacrificial Brahmins as he sought to put an end to ritualism and chose merit over birth-based hegemony. His embrace of Buddhism made it the predominant religion of the day and was a direct threat to sanatan dharma. This was dealt with with brute force in post-Asoka years by the sanatanis when the Mauryan dynasty was essentially ended by Pushyamitra Sunga, a Brahmin warrior who killed Brihadrath, the last Mauryan king, while being his commander-in-chief.

Also read: The RSS Chief Has Taken the Lead in Critiquing Sanatan Dharma. Why Can’t Opposition Follow?

Subsequently, sanatan dharma flourished again in the Indian subcontinent at the expense of Buddhism, a religion that was embraced by every country that it touched east of India but has been reduced to a mere shadow of its former glory days in its birthplace. A systematic violent pogrom perpetrated by Pushyamitra was behind this relegation of Buddhism to the annals of history in India. Thus, as rightly pointed out by Dr B.R. Ambedkar, “The history of India is nothing but a history of mortal conflict between Buddhism and Brahmanism.” But opposition to sanatan dharma did not die down with the elimination of Buddhism from India. A long line of thinkers and proponents of equality and social justice emerged from varied places in the landmass of India at different time points in history. To name a few prominent figures among them, Kabir, Basavanna, Akka Mahadevi, Narayana guru, Jyothirao Phule, Birsa Munda, Periyar and Ambedkar all rallied against the injustice that is inherent to sanatan dharma in their own might. This brief historical perspective proves it beyond doubt that critique and opposition to sanatan dharma is as much a part of India as this dharma itself.

Udhayanidhi has been clear about his stance – he opposes sanatan dharma because of its practices rooted in caste-based societal division and oppression. On the contrary, proponents of sanatan dharma have promulgated death threats against Udhayanidhi, twisted his arguments claiming that he called for a genocide and circulated videos of Hindu devotees stomping on his photos used as doormats in front of temples. Learned ministers mocked him for not calling out other religions. None of these chosen methods really explain to us what is it in their sanatan dharma that they are proud of. How is Udhayanidhi wrong in proclaiming his stand of working towards eradication of a dharma that is divisive to the core? Criticising sanatan dharma is by no means an endorsement of regressive measures adopted by other religions. This happens to be our concern because it affects millions that live amongst us. If the followers of the said dharma are supporters of birth-based caste demarcation and discrimination, they should state their stance rather than rabble-rouse. If their allegiance is to an inequitable system designed to benefit a few and oppress the many rather than to a Constitution that treats all as equals, then they should come clean about it. Rather than venerate Ambedkar on one hand and on the other hand thwart the constitution at every available opportunity – be it by performing religious rites in the Parliament building or by dog-whistling against religious minorities during election rallies – Modi should declare that his allegiance to sanatan dharma is overarching.

Also read: Sanatan Dharma: An Ideology or the Entire Hindu Community?

As already made evident, this debate, however, is much larger than Modi himself. Even though the BJP has taken on the mantle of protector of sanatan dharma today, social reformers and thought leaders have battled much mightier foes. In fact, one might even argue that soft Hindutva is much more of a threat by not speaking up against the subjugation in-built in sanatan dharma and in many ways has therefore become a precursor to hard Hindutva. Years of such a soft Hindutva approach that chooses to remain silent in the face of crass discrimination has only pushed more and more gullible masses into the fold of sanatan dharma – to an extent that today many of them fail to recognise that they are the oppressed and have rather become the foot-soldiers of hard Hindutva.

In essence, it is a sad reality that opponents of sanatan dharma today are having to fight the same pitched battles that were once fought by the likes of Asoka the great more than 2,000 years ago. That shows the staying power of regressive social practices. It is a testament to the society that we live in that is still mired in the stench of caste and religion while at the same time proclaiming success over sending spaceships to the moon. Nevertheless, whether scripted or not, remarks by Udhayanidhi have brought the much needed limelight on to this topic that is the bane of our existence and needs to be tackled head on if India is to ever move on to the progressive world order.

G. Naveen is a Telugu physician by profession and rationalist by passion. His articles are devoted towards voicing the concerns of downtrodden and marginalised communities.

‘We Need to Challenge Superstitions, Remain Committed to Social Justice’: Udhayanidhi Stalin

The Tamil Nadu minister and DMK leader stood by statements he had made about sanatan dharma.

New Delhi: DMK youth wing leader and Tamil Nadu sports minister Udhayanidhi Stalin, who has stuck by remarks he made recently about the need to eradicate sanatan dharma after being widely criticised by the Bharatiya Janata Party, said on Sunday (September 10) that there is a need to challenge superstitions and continue the fight for social justice.

“I still stand by my comments on Sanatana Dharma. BJP leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah, have twisted my speech and also spread rumours and hatred only to derive political mileage. We have a need to challenge superstitions, blind beliefs and remain committed to social justice. Like the change we saw in Tamil Nadu 2021, we have to see a change of power in Delhi in 2024,” Udhayanidhi said, according to The New Indian Express.

The DMK leader was speaking at the wedding of Neyveli MLA Saba Rajendran’s son.

Also read: Interview: The BJP May Defend ‘Sanatan Dharma’, But Can’t Define What it Means

Chief minister M.K. Stalin also spoke at the occasion, though via video conferencing. He told party workers that hard work is ahead as the 2024 general elections come closer.

“For the well-being of the nation, all 39 Lok Sabha constituencies in Tamil Nadu and the lone constituency in Puducherry should be won by the DMK and its allies. Only a huge victory in all 40 seats will help the DMK play a significant role in the new dispensation at the Centre following the parliamentary polls. Party workers should unite and strive for a resounding victory, echoing the slogan ‘Naarpathum Namathe, Nadum Namathe’ (All 40 seats are ours, and the country too),” he stated.

On September 2, speaking at a conference titled ‘Sanatana Ozhippu Maanaadu’ [‘Sanatana Abolition Conclave’] organised by the Tamil Nadu Progressive Writers and Artists Association to critique the concept of sanatana dharma, Udhayanidhi said, “I congratulate the organisers for calling the conference as ‘eradication of sanatana dharma’ instead of ‘opposing sanatana dharma’…”

“There are certain things which we have to eradicate and we cannot merely oppose. Mosquitoes, dengue, corona and malaria are things which we cannot oppose, we have to eradicate them. Sanatanam is also like this. Eradication and not opposing sanatanam has to be our first task,” he continued.

The statement triggered a backlash from the BJP rank and file, with its IT cell head Amit Malviya interpreting Udhayanidhi’s remarks as a “call for [the] genocide” of sanatanis, who he claimed comprise “80% [of the] population of Bharat”.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi responded by saying that ministers need to “deliver a proper response” to the Tamil Nadu minister.

The chief minister has stood by his son, saying, “Udhayanidhi Stalin expressed certain comments about inhuman principles preached by Sanatan. He expressed his views on Sanatan principles that discriminate against Scheduled Castes, tribals, and women, with no intention to offend any religion or religious beliefs.” He also accused Modi of spreading lies about what Udhayanidhi had said.

4.27 Reasons Why the BJP is Panicky About Caste Consciousness

The threat to the BJP’s hegemony is dire, as caste assertion threatens to break through the Hindutva patina. The RSS somersaulting from “social review” of reservation to anxiety regarding the Maratha quota agitation betrays its nervousness.

New Delhi: The rapidity with which the BJP’s Maharashtra deputy chief minister Devendra Fadnavis apologised for the lathi charge in order to quell the Jalna Maratha agitation and then promised to recognise Nizam-era Kunbi documentation for Maratha reservations, combined with RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat suddenly saying the RSS supports reservations “as provided in the constitution”, reveal the anxiety about caste consciousness upending the BJP applecart.

In 2015, before the Bihar elections which the Mahagathbandhan won handsomely, Bhagwat had said the opposite, calling for a “social review” of the reservation policy in an interview to mouthpieces Organiser and Panchjanya.

So, what’s up?

There are 4.27 points on why caste and social justice are the big challenges haunting the BJP in the run-up to the 2024 elections.

Having registered a decent OBC vote share that has risen sharply from 2009, the party remains in a quandary on how to reconcile Mandal with the primary kamandal agenda.

In its original worldview, caste is to be pushed under the carpet with ‘integral humanism’ and other shibboleths providing reasons for ‘social stability’, keeping all castes in place. Notions of ‘duty’ (or ‘kartavya’) being above rights, as outlined by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, make the BJP’s position on caste abundantly clear.

New realities

As the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies reported from its post-poll surveys, the BJP’s vote share among OBCs rose sharply from less than one-fourth (22%) in the 2009 general election to over one-third (34%) in 2014. In 2019, it shot to an even higher figure of 44%.

So how does the BJP now handle expectations generated within its OBC voter-base while still being the Hindutva party? Some recent developments have increased its headaches.

Justice Gorla Rohini, namesake of the Rohini Commission. Photo: Telangana High Court.

1. Set up in 2017 with a single judge to look at how dominant OBCs may be cornering quotas for the whole group, the Rohini Commission was asked to consider ‘sub-categories’ in the 27% national list of OBCs. After it sought and was granted 16 extensions, its report has finally made it to the government.

The Hindustan Times on Saturday (September 2) reported citing sources that the sub-categorisation “is likely to be three or four where the castes with similar access to benefits compete with each other.”

“It could be three bands – those that have got no benefits could get 10%, those with some benefits 10%, and those with maximum benefits 7% – or there could also be four bands,” it said.

But the Modi government is silent on it. Nothing is public. The dilemma is that slicing the OBC quota would alienate dominant castes which are now with the BJP, or whom the BJP is now anxious to appropriate. It would in effect open a Pandora’s box, which may upset the BJP’s applecart of appeasing all OBC segments without any real action on social justice.

Already, a former chairperson of the National Commission for Backward Classes has expressed his views, saying any suggestion of a slicing or data would be meaningless without a caste census.

2. The caste census demands getting louder and normalised across opposition political parties have further compounded the BJP’s problems.

The Congress blew the conch in Rahul Gandhi’s Kolar rally on April 17, before the polls for the Karnataka assembly, where he said, “Jitni aabadi, utna haq[Hindi for ‘more the population, more the rights’]. Reports saw it as Rahul firming up the caste line and linking it to income disparity, making a call for social justice integral to his politics.

The Modi government’s anxiety to not be seen holding back the caste census in Bihar (where the state BJP has been going along with the RJD-JD(U) position on it) caused it to quickly withdraw its original affidavit on the question in the Supreme Court.

What changed was the removal of a certain paragraph which had ‘inadvertently crept in’ and said, “No other body under the Constitution or otherwise is entitled to conduct the exercise of either census or any action akin to census.”

Bihar has completed the survey, and a similar drive is ongoing in Odisha.

Also Read: Need of the Hour: A Selfie Called Caste Census – India Must Confront its Truth

3. The offensive on the sanatan dharma issue by the BJP is being watched carefully. This came as a response to comments made by DMK minister and son of Tamil Nadu chief minister M.K. Stalin, Udhayanidhi Stalin.

To be pitched as standing for ‘sanatan dharma’ can push the BJP back into a corner as being an upper caste party – as it was known as earlier – taking away clever grafts in the past thirty years. ‘Sanatan dharma’ and calls of an eternal, orthodox faith have been seen by scholars as directly ranged against the politics of social justice.

There are reports that the PM has asked ministers to base their responses to it “on facts, not rhetoric”“Do not go into history”, India Today reports the PM as telling ministers, as the history on this is complicated and has the BJP on the backfoot.

The BJP in Tamil Nadu is muted and its ally, the AIADMK, has said it is “above caste and religion”, saying instead that this is a popularity gimmick by Udhayanidhi.

Overt defence of ‘sanatan dharma’ can make unhappy large sections of the Lingayat community, who are the bulwark of its support in neighbouring Karnataka and have been pressing to be recognised as separate, outside the Hindu fold itself.

How much to raise this to rally support in the cow-belt for the forthcoming assembly polls and how to mute this in the rest of the country is a tough one.

Gujarat’s Botad, which witnessed an angry stand-off between sanatanis and followers of Swaminarayan leading to a criminal case, three arrests and 11 angry resolutions, also drove home the presence of divisions in the PM’s home state (which is also the oldest state to be described as a ‘Hindutva laboratory’).

In the name of sanatan dharma, Harshad Gadhvi attacked controversial murals in a Swaminarayan temple in Gujarat. Photo: Screenshot from X (Twitter)/@DeshGujarat.

4. The BJP’s drive, related to its micro-strategy, of wanting to win over numerically-smaller communities and generate support by ‘honouring’ icons from the past with specific caste associations is leading to more trouble for and anger towards it.

The case of Mihir Bhoj in Haryana’s Kaithal has dragged it to court, with Gurjars and Rajputs both angry. The Haryana government on August 4 agreed before the Punjab and Haryana high court to constitute a committee of representatives from the two communities and historians “to find an amicable solution”.

4.27 In UP – the state the BJP relies on the most for getting a set amount of seats as no NDA government has ever been possible without sweeping the state – a social justice committee headed by retired Allahabad high court judge Raghvendra Kumar had in October 2018 submitted a report to the Adityanath government recommending a split in the 27% OBC quota into three categories.

They would be the pichda varg (backward class), who get 7%; the ati pichda (more backward), who get 11%; and the atyant pichda (most backward), who get 9%.

The Samajwadi Party, with its PDA combine, makes it clear that underlining the varnish of saffron, the BJP would be hurt with any talk of individual caste groups – not only on a larger point of Hindutva, but in electoral terms too.

Earlier, not being hopeful of dominant caste votes, it had banked on non-dominant OBCs and announced the committee. Now, after the death of Mulayam Singh Yadav and the broad consolidation of Jat votes under the Hindutva umbrella, the BJP is tethered by its recommendations.

The politics of Hindutva speaks of “accommodation” and “space” for non-Forwards, but the framework remains distinctly one of adjustment, not social justice.

Being the political hegemon now and distributing positions (but not power) may run its course if calls for social justice, as raised by INDIA nationally or even the Samajwadi Party’s PDA (Pichda, Dalit and Alpasankhyak – Hindi for ‘Backwards, Dalits and Minorities’) can complicate the political mood and create aspirations that the BJP would find hard to bottle up.

Tamil Nadu CM M.K. Stalin Defends Son Amid ‘Sanatan Dharma’ Row, Criticises PM Modi’s Response

Udhayanidhi Stalin had made a statement about eradicating ‘Sanatan Dharma’, to which PM Modi responded by saying that ministers need to “deliver a proper response” to the Tamil Nadu minister.

New Delhi: Tamil Nadu chief minister M.K. Stalin on Thursday, September 7, defended his son, Udhayanidhi Stalin, in a controversy related to the ‘Sanatan Dharma’.

The chief minister also criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi for saying that the remark “needs a proper response”.

Udhayanidhi Stalin had made a statement about eradicating ‘Sanatan Dharma’, to which Prime Minister Modi responded by saying that ministers need to “deliver a proper response” to the Tamil Nadu minister.

Udhayanidhi Stalin serves as the state minister for youth welfare and sports development.

“So, is the prime minister speaking unaware of the lies spread… or does he do so knowingly?” said M.K. Stalin, emphasising that he had the resources to verify the real meaning of what the Tamil Nadu minister said.

“[The] INDIA alliance by parties opposed to BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] seems to have rattled the prime minister. He is proposing ‘One Nation, One Election’ out of fear… BJP is not genuinely concerned about discriminatory practices in ‘Sanatan’,” he said.

The chief minister, while defending his son, said: “Udhayanidhi Stalin expressed certain comments about inhuman principles preached by Sanatan. He expressed his views on Sanatan principles that discriminate against Scheduled Castes, tribals, and women, with no intention to offend any religion or religious beliefs.”

He further said that several leaders such as Thanthai Periyar, Mahatma Phule, and B.R. Ambedkar have spoken out against Varnasrama, Manuvad, and Sanatan ideologies, which justify discrimination based on one’s birth and oppression of women.

“Even as we launch Chandrayaan to the Moon, some people continue to propagate caste discrimination, emphasising social stratification based on Varnashrama principles and citing sastras and other ancients texts to support sectarian claims. Notably, a governor has openly supported child marriage, and claimed his own marriage was a child marriage…Some individuals still denigrate women on spiritual platforms, arguing women should not work, widowed women should not remarry…,”  said chief minister Stalin in a written statement.

“They use the term ‘Sanatan’ to perpetuate oppression of women, who make up more than half of humankind. Udhayanidhi only spoke against such oppressive ideologies and called (for the) eradication of practices based on those ideologies,” he wrote.

‘Sanatana Dharma’ Row: TN Police File Counter FIRs Against BJP’s Amit Malviya, Ayodhya Priest

Paramhans Das was booked for allegedly issuing death threats to Udhayanidhi while Malviya has been accused of triggering tension and inciting violence against the minister.

New Delhi: A day after Uttar Pradesh police booked Tamil Nadu minister Udhayanidi Stalin and Karnataka minister Priyank Kharge over the ‘Sanatana Dharma’ remark controversy, the Tamil Nadu police has filed counter FIRs against Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) IT cell leader Amit Malviya and Ayodhya priest Paramhans Das on Wednesday (September 6). 

Das was booked for allegedly issuing death threats to Udhayanidhi while Malviya has been accused of triggering tension and inciting violence against the minister. The two face charges under multiple sections of IPC, including provocation to cause a riot, promoting enmity, and criminal intimidation, the Indian Express reported

An FIR against Udhayanidhi and Kharge was registered in UP’s Rampur on Tuesday (September 6) by one Ram Singh Lodhi, a lawyer, who alleged that his religious sentiments had been hurt by the statements made against sanatana dharma. 

Udhayanidhi, while attending an event titled ‘Sanatana Ozhippu Maanaadu’ [‘Sanatana Abolition Conclave’] organised by the Tamil Nadu Progressive Writers and Artists Association to critique the concept of sanatana dharma, had said, “I congratulate the organisers for calling the conference as ‘eradication of sanatana dharma’ instead of ‘opposing sanatana dharma’…There are certain things which we have to eradicate and we cannot merely oppose. Mosquitoes, dengue, corona and malaria are things which we cannot oppose, we have to eradicate them. Sanatanam is also like this. Eradication and not opposing sanatanam has to be our first task.” 

The statement sparked a controversy after Malviya interpreted the remarks as a “call for [the] genocide” of sanatanis, who he claimed comprise “80% [of the] population of Bharat”.

Commenting on Udhayanidhi’s remarks, Kharge had said, “…Any religion that does not have equal rights and does not treat you as a human being is as good as a disease.”

In a statement on Wednesday, Tamil Nadu police said Das had announced a reward of Rs 10 crore for anyone who could behead Udhayanidhi. According to the complainant, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam’s (DMK’s) Madurai city unit legal adviser J. Devasenan, the Ayodhya religious leader had said that if no one came forward, he would take on the task himself.

“This brazen threat was followed by the release of a video where a photo of the minister was symbolically pierced with a sword,” the statement said. It said the video led to “widespread fear and religious tension” among people in Tamil Nadu.

“Malviya is said to have distorted the essence of (Udayanidhi’s) speech. Malviya purportedly suggested that the minister incited violence against those practising Sanatan Dharma…. Udhayanidhi clarified his stand, stating he had never incited any form of violence…that he had always stood up against social injustices perpetrated by certain elements within religious frameworks, drawing parallels with societal harm caused by diseases,” the police was quoted by the Indian Express as saying.

 

What Is Sanatana Dharma?

Dr B.R. Ambedkar must be our guiding light in understanding what “sanatana dharma” is today – nothing more than a re-branding of the inhuman and anti-social caste system, intended to maintain and strengthen it. 

Udayanidhi Stalin’s remark that “Sanatana dharma should not be opposed, but should be eradicated like dengue and malaria” has greatly enraged Hindutva forces. They have interpreted Stalin’s remarks as a call for genocide of Hindus.

What is sanatana dharma?

Dharma refers to the values, beliefs, institutions and systems on which life, and the universe itself stands (“dharayati iti Dharma”). As sanatana means “eternal” in Sanskrit, “Sanatana Dharma” refers to an “eternal Dharma”, the unchanging order of the universe.

What is the eternal, unchanging order of the universe (sanatana dharma) according to scriptures which are accepted as authoritative by those who believe in Sanatana Dharma as a religion?

Manu states that Veda, Smriti, Sadachara and Atma Tushti are the four constitutive elements (lakshanas) of Dharma (वेद : स्मृति सदाचार स्वस्य च प्रियमात्मन:/एतश्चतुर्विदं प्राहुः साक्षाद् धर्मस्य लक्षणम् Manu Smriti, 2. 12). Manusmriti defines Sadachara as the traditional practice of Varnashrama Dharma that has been all along practiced in Aryavarta (aka Brahmavarta). Manu mandates that svadharma is varnadharma (वरं स्वधर्मो विगुणः न पारक्यः स्वनुष्ठितः/परधर्मेण जीवन्  हि सध्यः पतति जातितः ‘Manu. 10. 97).

The Bhagavada Puranam makes it clear that dharma is Varnashrama Dharma (वर्णाश्रमवतां धर्मे नष्टे वेदपथे नृणां (12.2.12)). It says that those born  from the ‘higher’ organs of Virat Purusha are exalted and those born from inferior body parts of Virat Purusha are lowly (वर्णानामाश्रमाणां च जन्मभूम्यनुसारिणी:/आसन् प्रकृतयो नृणां नीचैर्निचोत्तमोत्तमः 11. 17. 15 ).

What is varnashrama dharma?

Says Manusmriti, “Varnasharama is the hereditary order of the four varnas and those who are products of permitted inter-Varna relationships (i.e., antaralas, the product of anuloma relationships)” (तस्मिन् देशे य आचार: पारम्पर्य क्रमागतः/वर्णानां सान्तरालानां स सदाचार उच्यते, Manusmriti 2.18).

Varnashrama dharma imposes specific roles and duties on each varna. According to the Manusmriti, the Brahmin’s swadharma is study, teaching, yaajanam (receipt of gifts) and yajna (यज्ञ ). In contrast, the duty of the Shudra is service of the Dvijas (द्विजाति शुश्रूषा ). A Shudra does not have the right to accumulate wealth or to engage in learning or any other activity. Chandalas (including out-castes, the vast majority of our people) who  are considered by authors of  Dharmashastra as “walking graveyards”.

Vyavahara Mala (there are various versions, this reference is to the version in the Thiruvananthapuram Ancient Manuscripts Library) treats the performance of occupations assigned to one’s varna as Dharma. It says that every one must engage only in the occupation of their varna. Performing the occupation of other varnas will only invite disaster (सर्वेषामेव वर्णानां एवं धर्म्यो धनागमः/विपर्यादधर्मस्यान्न चेदापद् गरीयसी ). As varna is acquired by birth, Vyavahara Mala holds that acquisition of a varna different from that into which one is born, by performing the occupation of a different varna, is a punishable offence. It commands kings to punish Shudras who wear sacred threads like Brahmins (तान् सर्वान् खादयेद्राजा शूद्रांश्च द्विज लिंगिनः)

Shankaracharya’s Advaita philosophy, much admired as enlightened, accepts Chaturvanya. While interpreting the revelation in the Bhagvad Gita that God created chaturvanya” (“चातुर्वर्ण्यं मया सृष्टं”), Shankaracharya says in his Gita Bhashyam that the Purusha Sukta in the Rg Veda is correct — that humans are created by God in four varnas born from various organs of Virat Purusha in order of merit, “brahmins from the face, etc”., leaving out the rest as sub-human (चत्वार एव वर्णा : चातुर्वर्ण्यं मया इश्वरेण सृष्टं उत्पादितं व्राह्मणो स्य मुखमासीद् इत्यादि श्रुतेः). In Shankacharya’sBrihadaranyaka Upanishad Shankara Bhashyam, he accepts the varnashrama division and interprets the word “Brahma” as meaning ‘the source of protection of the pride of the Brahmin caste’ (ब्राहमण जात्यभिमानात् ब्रह्मेत्यभिधीयते, 1. 4. 11).

Arthashastra warns that if this dharma is violated, the result will be a world with abhorrent hybrid and impure races (तस्याति क्रमे लोकः सङकरादुच्छिध्येते).Manu holds that varna hybridisation occurs through prohibited intermarriage and inter-relationships between varnas where the varna order is abandoned (व्यभिचारेण वर्णानामवेद्या वेदनेन च/स्वकर्माणां च त्यागेन जायन्ते वर्ण सङकराः). Manu also holds that wherever there is inter-mingling of varnas, the purity of varna is destroyed and the country will perish along with the inhabitants of the country (यत्र त्वेते परिध्वंसा जायन्ते वर्ण दुषकाः/राष्ट्रिकैः सह तद्राष्ट्रं क्षिप्रमेव विनश्यति  Manu . 10. 16 ). In the Bhagwad Gita, Arjuna also worries that the caste will perish due to marriages that violate the caste order (Gita, 1.40). The Bhagavada Puranam says that Lord Vasudeva will reincarnate to protect varnashramadharma when it starts to be destroyed (तावहत्यै कलेरन्ते  वासुदेवानु शिक्षितौ/वर्णाश्रमयुतं धर्मं पूर्ववत्प्रथयिष्यते, 12. 3 . 38).

It is therefore beyond question that what the Dharmashastra and Purana texts define and interpret as Dharma, and what is meant by sanatana dharma, is varnashrama dharma, the duty to eternally maintain the varnashrama social order and world-view.

In a January 1950 lecture delivered in Sivagiri, Kerala, the renowned Kerala social reformer and thinker “Sahodaran” Ayyappan, disciple of Narayana Guru, specifically warned that the caste system is being promoted under the guise of “Dharma”. Ayyappan wrote in his poem ‘Parivatanam (Change)’ that what goes under names such as “sanatana dharma” and “varnashrama” dharma is the religion built by the Brahmins which lowers the other (those who are not Savarnas) as inferior. In an address presented to Mahatma Gandhi during Gandhi’s visit to Kerala in 1934, Sahodaran said that it is this “cruel” dharma called varnashramadharma that makes people in India destitute. Dr B.R. Ambedkar wrote, “Vedas and Shastras, which reject rationality and reject morality, should be destroyed with dynamite,” because the Vedas and Dharmashastras are the foundational precepts of maintaining the caste-violent hierarchical social system of varnashrama dharma.

Narayana Guru, Sahodaran Ayyappan, Periyar and Ambedkar courageously rejected the attempt to strengthen the caste system by disguising it as a ‘glorious’ “sanatana” tradition. Having embraced Buddhism along with his lakhs of followers, Ambedkar totally rejected sanatana dharma, unfazed by violent attacks by Brahmanist ideology.

Ambedkar must be our guiding light in understanding what “sanatana dharma” is today – nothing more than a re-branding of the inhuman and anti-social caste system, intended to maintain and strengthen it.

Dr T.S. Syam Kumar holds a doctorate in Sanskrit Literature from the Sree Sankaracharya Sanskrit University, Kalady, Kerala.

The Malayalam version of this article was first published by Suprabhaatham.