Mahatma’s Mantra to Save the Planet

Published: 28.02.2016
Updated: 28.02.2016

India Abroad


 

Mahatma’s Mantra to Save the Planet

Pankaj Jain believes the Gandhian principle of non-violence is the panacea for all ecological ills.

An eminent scholar recently came to our university campus and spoke about the role of diverse religious communities of the world and their attitudes toward the environment. He showed examples from indigenous communities of North America, South America, Africa, and Asia. But when he referred to the traditions of India, he used these words: ‘India has the most bizarre culture in the world where even a cobra is worshipped. This is a bit of an overshoot.’

What amazed me was that even in this supposedly globalized world, India continues to mystify scholars. While most Americans are familiar with the terms yoga and Bollywood, Indian perspectives toward the ecology seem to be largely unknown.

It is true that cobras are worshipped by many Hindus, especially on a specific festival dedicated to them (just as there are specific festivals for mountains, rivers, cows, trees, and hundreds of other gods and goddesses through-out India). Mahatma Gandhi had a brief encounter with a cobra at his ashram once and he too did not want it to be killed by his colleagues. This is one of the examples of Indian environmentalism, not an ‘overshoot.’

Several scientific studies have pointed out that every being in nature is intrinsically valuable because it is directly or indirectly dependent on the other’s survival; this is the fundamental motivation of scientists and environmentalists to save the biodiversity on our planet. So, even a cobra has the right to survive. Moreover, other beings have an intrinsic duty to protect it as long as it is not a threat to them.

Over 2,500 years ago in India, Mahavira and Buddha taught the same concept, although in a different framework of philosophy, spirituality, and ethics. Mahavira, the last great teacher of Jainism, even proclaimed that ahimsa (non-violence) is the greatest dharma. Several Hindu and Buddhist texts also propound the same principle in different languages.

According to most of these texts, ahimsa improves one’s karma. For observant Hindus, Jains, and Buddhists, hurting or harming another being damages one’s karma and obstructs advancement toward moksha (liberation). To prevent the accrual of bad karma, they are instructed to avoid activities associated with violence and to follow a vegetarian diet. They also oppose the institutionalized breeding and killing of animals, birds, and fish for human consumption.

Although yoga is widely known in the West, yet people are oblivious to the fact that yoga is a system of eight ‘limbs’ or components. The very first step of the first limb of yoga is ahimsa. Unless one is firmly rooted in ahimsa in one’s thoughts, speech, and actions, true practice of yoga cannot begin. In addition, since Gandhi was a dedicated practitioner of ahimsa, he can be called a great yogi even though he might not have practiced in all the stretching exercises that we commonly refer to as yoga.

It is this practice of yoga that develops one’s harmony with and reverence for nature in which even a cobra is not to be killed. When I first mentioned this to my students recently, one immediately questioned me and asked if Indians in India are not following the principles of Gandhi, how can we expect others? I partially agreed with her. India is enthusiastically aping the West with its ever-expanding economy and ever-shrinking natural resources.

In May 2011, my book based on the research of three communities in India and the Diaspora with several ecological practices inspired by the Indic traditions, was published. I was also asked recently at a conference on world religions and ecology, what do the non-Western countries expect of the Western countries?

If the rest of the world is eager to make the same mistakes as the West did, what route should the West now take to ensure the planet’s survival? Perhaps, one answer could be to embrace Gandhi and his ecological practices.

If the West is to remain the intellectual leader of the world, the quicker it reforms and transforms itself, the better for our planet. While the West continues to crave more natural resources without changing its lifestyle, it will continue to lack the moral authority to preach to other cultures.

It was the West, which has led the world with its modern scientific and technological innovations for the last several centuries. It will have to be the West that emerges as a new ecological leader, with Gandhi as the foundation of its lifestyle. All voices to save the planet’s ecology are hollow rhetoric until that happens.

There cannot be a separate war on terrorism, climate change, drugs, corruption, obesity and so on. Our physical, mental, and spiritual health, the environment, global security, international peace and social justice will get a great boost if we first become non-violent in our most basic activity: eating and surviving.

We are what we eat, it is such a simple statement and yet is so widely ignored all over the world. This is the way Gandhi lived everyday and his protest against the imperial power was influential because it was based on his own life unlike many contemporary activists whose own lives are nowhere close to the Mahatma’s.

Gandhi’s life can be seen as an ecological treatise. This is one life in which every minute act, emotion or thought functioned much like an ecosystem: his small meals of nuts and fruits, his everyday bodily practices, his periodic observances of silence, his morning walks, his cultivation of the small as much as of the big, his spinning wheel, his abhorrence of waste, his resorting to basic Hindu and Jain values of truth, non-violence, celibacy and fasting.

As an alternative perspective on contemporary India, despite all the recent advances in India’s economy and consumerism, Gandhi’s inspiration still thrives in modern India.

Some contemporary environmental activists and dharmic leaders who have modeled their lives taking their inspirations from dharmic teachings of India or have resisted the global consumerist pressure in various other ways include, Sunderlal Bahuguna (now in his 80s, leader of the famous Chipko Movement in North India), Medha Patkar (a strong voice against big dams in Central India), Dr Vandana Shiva (fierce critic of Western-style globalism and capitalism), Anna Hazare (social activist, also famous for his ecological experiments in his village in Maharashtra), Pandurang Hegde (who is leading a Chipko-style movement in South India), the late Pandurang Shastri Athavale (I have written about his global Swadhyaya Parivar in my book), the late Anil Agarwal (founder, Center for Science and Environment), Dr Ramachandra Guha (a fierce critic of Western style consumerism, capitalism, and Western style environmentalism including deep ecology), and hundreds of smaller voices spread all over India are making it the land of the biggest environmental movement on the planet (as noted by Dr Christopher Chapple in his book Hinduism and Ecology, published by Harvard University). There are institutions in several Indian towns founded by Gandhi himself that are still flourishing with their own small-scale production of textiles and agriculture. In addition, almost every Indian political party must use at least the rhetoric based on Gandhi’s values whenever there is a discussion on taking technology or any kind of help from the USA, UK, France or other major Western powers. Finally, there are several recent major Bollywood block-busters with several Gandhi-like figures reminding the audience of non-violence and civil disobedience.

Yes, Gandhi’s immortal soul and other dharmic traditions of India are still vibrant even in the 21st century globalized consumerist society. Several decades ago, in his non-violent movement for civil rights, Dr Martin Luther King said, ‘Christ furnished the spirit and motivation, while Gandhi furnished the method.’ It is time again to go back to these cherished values propounded by Christ, Gandhi, and Dr King, non-violence not just toward other human beings but also toward the earth. „


Dr Pankaj Jain is an assistant professor of Indian Religions and Ecology at the University of North Texas. He has taught Indian films, Sanskrit, Hindi and Urdu languages and literature at North Carolina State University, Rutgers, Kean University, Jersey City University, and the University of Iowa.

 

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