Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Nationalism for the Universalists?

Over the past few days I have been researching the movement for a separate Sikh state in the Punjab. Before presenting my opinion, I would like to say that there is no denying the numerous hardships the Sikhs have faced. Their land was carved up during the partition. Those on the Pakistani side endured the violent resettlement of 1949. The Indian government has taken the region's water while giving little in return. When the discontentment spawned separatist paramilitaries, the Indian government reacted by bringing martial law to the Punjab and attacking the holiest spot on earth for Sikhs, the Golden Temple. When Indira Gandhi was killed by her Sikh bodyguards in response to the attack, a systematic slaughter of Sikhs took place in Dehli.

I spent some time reading the separatist website www.khalistan.com. The articles I perused seemed rooted in fear. According to the authors, the only way the Sikhs can thrive is to establish an independent nation. Israel was given as the example of a state thriving from its religious identity. Should the Sikhs emulate a state entwined in a massive civil war with little end in sight?

A former Sikh political leader was oft quoted as saying that no one can be a Sikh if he is not in favor of the independent state. This is reminiscent of Catholic bishops refusing communion to pro-choice politicians. Should doctrinal religious rules define political preferences?

I understand the Sikh path as a recognition that there is one God, and that all are brothers on the path to experiencing God. It was founded in the recognition of human dignity and brotherhood in the faces of the regimented caste system and Islamic sharia. A Sikh is a soldier of God, emanating hope and delivering justice when all else is faltering. Injustices have occurred, but the religion should not be transformed into a reactionary movement against said atrocities.

In a world shrinking daily through instant media and McDonalds in every country, coexistence is the sole solution to disaster.
No state can exist that defines itself on exclusion.

1 comment:

Harimander said...

"No state can exist that defines itself on exclusion."

Well said.

With the apparent direction that Earthlings are traveling, our spiraling into novelty, I don't expect anything other than exponential increases in chao (that's a single unit of chaos... ;) ) . Certainly, beautifully orchestrated, but a freneticism nonetheless. The mindset of 'exclusivity' is one that uses resistance as it's modus operandi.

When the frequency of the planet is changing so rapidly anything other than acceptance and flexibility seem to be like trying to swim up a waterfall.

Good luck to these lovely people! For they shall soon go INSANE!

Instead of putting up more walls it's time that they be broken down, before the bricks with which we build are torn from our own bloody hands. May these souls, in times of pressure, and pressurization, be blessed by the infinite that they may find their way into love. We all see by the light of the same Sun.

Sat Nam.

In gratitude by the grace of God,
Harimander

To quote a little known film (or paraphrase the Siri Guru): "Resistance is futile."