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Thursday, July 14, 2022

A new god

 The increased frequency with which comments on gods have resulted in hurting religious sensibilities makes one wonder about the exact nature of the attachment that human society has with the idea of divinity in a human-like form. Any speculation on when in prehistory and how precisely the idea of god emerged would be futile since we do not have any definite details about the underlying social or psychological processes. For instance, we do not know if the Neanderthal man or the Homo erectus had any idea of gods and whether they were identical or different. In the case of Homo sapiens, the idea may have emerged at a much later stage in their advent towards forming civilisations. What is known is that other animal species do not have prayer practices, neither do they worship icons. It is perhaps likely that gods got conceptualised after humans chose to cover their bodies, not just for protection from the cold but also out of a sense of shame. The emergence of what psychology describes as ‘alterity’ — a sense of ‘Otherness’ — is associated with the sense of shame experienced by individuals. It is the same instinctive alterity that makes one conceptualise a far more powerful Other who controls the world.

Acquisition of language some 70 million years ago helped humans articulate the imagination of a larger energy or being. This initial form of realisation of a larger power acquired the rudimentary form of collective offerings or prayers only when humans started forming society, each such social formation differing distinctly from other social formations. In short, the idea of god required a social identity that was not only accepted by its members but also a society that collectively accepted to place the responsibility of creation on an agency that was larger than and prior to humans. Since none had known in immediate experience what that unnamed agency was, it was imagined to be beyond birth and, possibly, beyond death. It got described as being created by itself — ‘omnipotent’ and ‘omnipresent’. Additionally, since it was not bound by material laws, it was also seen as entirely transcendental.

The ‘all pervading, all present, all creating’ idea of such an agency, shared by a large number of individuals in a given prehistoric or ancient society, became ‘god’. By then, humans had moved quite a long way from their pre-human, animal-like condition. They had figured out how to acquire clothing, dwelling and survival ability. They had already gathered a substantial experience of material things — what we call today the ‘laws of physics’. Their imagination of ‘god’, therefore, took the form of a craving for a domain of being/existence that was entirely free of the material, mortal world of humans. All earliest descriptions of god or gods invariably invoked the non-material aspects of their being. The transcendental was free of the constraints of the real or what Immanuel Kant termed the ‘phenomenal’. Human societies have moved ahead in history over the last few millennia trying to accommodate in their mental transactions the phenomenal as well as the transcendental as two aspects of their being and becoming. The sects that emerged over time, the godheads that came to be worshipped, the prophets claiming to represent divinity who founded various religions, have attempted to build bridges between the two world-views despite their differences.

Over the last few centuries, the advancement of thought, often propelled by the contradiction between the clergy and the ideation of the ‘omniscient’ principle, has brought humans close to proposing and generating a third kind of reality. At this juncture, we call it the virtual reality. In the domain of the virtual, space and time do not hinder movements of its inhabitant. The laws of motion and matter applicable in the phenomenal world pose no constraints to possibilities unfolded by the virtual world. Just as in the past eras the conceptualisation of the transcendental attracted societies to attempt entering the transcendental through intuition, imagination, aspiration or, at worst, through blind ritualistic imitation, in the present era, humans are attracted to the idea of entering the virtual. No individual, no field of knowledge, no society, no area of action and no State has remained untouched by the mesmerising attraction for the virtual. In the past, any degree of closeness to the transcendental was interpreted as ethically desirable. In our century, any degree of inwardness to the virtual is seen as a new mix of knowledge and power. If the invention of language and its advancement to a new order of complexity were the foundations of the transcendental, in the future the invention of a new and a complex order of silence — call it aphasia — is expected to provide the foundation for the virtual. Memory chips and digits are its building blocks and cyborgs its inhabitants. It shall not occupy any space of the phenomenal world. It shall not work within the laws of temporality surrounding human life, thought and action. Yet, it is not just another version of the transcendental. The transcendental was believed to know ‘all’, including its beginning and its end, although humans were not privy to that knowledge. The memory chips by themselves shall not know how or from where they came.

Caught in the tripartite visions of ‘reality’ — the phenomenal, the transcendental and the virtual — human societies are in a tangle that has no precedence in the entire history of man’s evolution. The inexorable and speedy drift of all in the direction of the virtual, irrespective of economic class, gender, ethnicity, language, theological affiliation and nationality, has posed a vastly profound challenge to both the transcendental view of reality as well as the phenomenal view of reality. The heightened sensitivity to gods and god-related matters is a symptom of that stress. It has also placed a tremendous stress on the phenomenal view of reality. The rather surprising eruption of ultra-sensitive nationalism at the beginning of a century initially lauded as the ‘knowledge century’ is a symptom of the stress. In the process of evolution, the formations and features that are at the end of their utility have been known in the past to have briefly bounced back with ferocity and rage before they were discarded. If one were to think, without losing one’s temper, and with a philosophical inwardness, it appears that the ideas of hyper-nationalism as well as hyper-sensitive attachment to any religion are doomed to be submerged in the avalanche of the virtual that is rapidly taking over the human world. The idea of a Hindu nation or an Islamic State has one thing in common: they cannot survive for long given the new turn that the human vision of reality has taken.

G.N. Devy is Chair, The People’s Linguistic Survey of India

Source: The Telegraph, 14/07/22

Current Affairs-July 14, 2022

 

INDIA

– President addresses Dhammacakka Day 2022 celebrations at Sarnath (UP) through video message
– PM Modi speaks with PM of the Netherlands Mark Rutte over the phone
– Cabinet approves Taranga Hill-Ambaji-Abu Road rail line for improved mobility

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) detects Customs duty evasion of around Rs 4,389 crore by mobile company Oppo India
– Delhi HC permits Vivo India to operate bank accounts frozen by ED on July 5
– No more selling of non-ISI marked items on e-commerce portals
– TCS launches TCS Pace Port Toronto, its global research & co-innovation centre in Canada
– Panasonic launches its first fully rugged laptop TOUGHBOOK 40 in India
– Lenovo launches new Yoga, IdeaPad gaming series, Legion range in India

WORLD

– World Economic Forum (WEF) releases Gender Gap Report 2022 in Geneva: Iceland first, India 135th
– Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa flees to Maldives in military aircraft
– Ukraine joins NATO’s programme of technological cooperation between armies
– Apple ends decades-long relationship with chief designer Jony Ive
– Twitter launches Unmentioning feature allowing users to quit conversations

SPORTS

– International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) World Cup at Changwon in S

The true meaning of Tantra

 There was an exhibition in town called “Tantra on Edge”. It has now moved elsewhere, from Delhi to Mumbai and will move abroad thereafter. Ajit Mookerjee wrote a lot on Tantra and those interested in the subject will have read his book, Tantra Art. (There is a later book on Yoga Art too.) A lot has been written on Tantra, not always very well-informed. Tantra is not easy to pin down and there is a Tantra tradition outside India too.

The philosophy and practice naturally influenced traditional art, motifs and symbols – the bindu, triangle, lingam, yantra, mandala, chakra, bija. Every Indian will have encountered these images, in one form or the other, even if we don’t always notice them explicitly or understand their deep mystic symbolism. For instance, Indians were, and still are, fascinated by the Beatles and the Beatles were fond of cars. George Harrison possessed expensive and fancy cars but he also had a Mini Cooper and most Beatles fans will be familiar with its psychedelic art. It is featured in Magical Mystery Tour. Subsequently, it was repainted. The original car seems to have vanished but one can still form some idea of what it must have looked like from collectable miniatures. Plus, there are images and films. When Harrison originally purchased the car, it was metallic black. The subsequent repainting was on the basis of images from Mookerjee’s book.

Inevitably, the car will be described as being painted in psychedelic colours and even Indians will not always appreciate the Tantra symbolism. Etymologically, the use of the word psychedelic isn’t wrong. But the word is often associated with drugs and reminds us of the swinging Sixties, the Vietnam War, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, transcendental meditation, Ravi Shankar, Allen Ginsberg and Woodstock. The West was attracted to the world of Tantra and our perceptions about Tantra are often shaped by what the West thought, and continues to think, about it. Therefore, a documentary film must show Kali smoking a cigarette.

As Ajit Mookerjee’s book documented, Tantra has always featured in traditional art. But following its discovery in the West, Indian artists, modern ones, started to incorporate Tantra into art forms. It was almost a new movement in modern Indian art. The exhibition I mentioned is a documentation of the work of 16 prominent Indian artists. Some incorporated elements of Tantra. Others were exclusively driven by Tantra. Some experimented, using creative licence. A few famous artists are not identified with Tantra. Nonetheless, the odd painting has been influenced by Tantra. If you have missed the exhibition, there is an accompanying book, curated by Madhu Khanna. There is a broader task of documenting our legacy, including the legacy of Tantra influencing art. Most of this is traditional. What I have mentioned is only the documentation of the work of 16 modern Indian artists. The larger task of documentation remains.

There are books galore on Tantra, popular and academic. Most — though not all — of the academic work has emanated from outside India and is also a function of whether one is writing of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, or something else. Within Hinduism, there are Vaishnava, Shaiva and Shakti strands. Within the Shaiva and Shakti strands, there are texts and practices from Kashmir and texts and practices from Bengal (and Bihar). The word Tantra is itself capable of multiple meanings. Perhaps the most acceptable definition will be that of the warp and weft that exists within the universe and within every living being.

Relatively speaking, why is there limited research that emanates from within India? The answer has many layers. But partly, it has to do with another word, “Kaula”. This word has multiple meanings too. However, fundamentally, this word underlines the tradition of knowledge about practices being passed down through a family and a lineage, not meant for dissemination to outsiders. This proposition about parampara is true of many of our knowledge systems, but it is especially true of Tantra. I take diksha into the system and use Tantra in my everyday practice. The objective is not to do research and publish academic papers and books about Tantra. That’s the reason practitioners rarely speak, or write, about Tantra and texts seem to be mysterious and esoteric. Practices are not meant to be obvious and open to everyone.

This has a flip side. There are several books on Tantra, best described as “Tantra for Dummies”. They simplify and often give Tantra a bad time, especially when one has the left-handed path (vamachara) in mind. There are practitioners who give Tantra a bad name too, proclaiming to the gullible that they can use their powers of Tantra to malign and benign effect, the former naturally directed against adversaries. Birbhum district in West Bengal is known for its Tantra practices. Recently, I met an engineer who has turned into a sanyasi and Tantrik. It was eerie, chatting with him in the middle of the night near a cremation ground, with a fire burning in front. He sought my help on a simple matter.

Couldn’t something be done to prevent fraudulent practitioners from advertising their powers on print and electronic media and fleecing the gullible and the poor? As you will appreciate, this isn’t a question of the law alone (which exists), but its enforcement. So far, I haven’t been able to do much. Tantra has always been on the edge, not necessarily part of the mainstream. That’s also the reason it is rarely taught in courses on Hindu religion.

Written by Bibek Debroy 

Source: Indian Express, 14/07/22

What is FCRA, the law related to NGO funding?

 The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has removed some crucial data from the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA) website.

The information removed includes the annual returns of NGOs and a list of NGOs whose licences have been cancelled.

The FCRA website used to maintain detailed data on NGOs granted licences; NGOs granted prior permission for receiving foreign contribution; NGOs whose licences have been cancelled, and the ones whose licences are deemed to have expired. It also had the annual returns of NGOs.

The list identifying these NGOs is no longer there and their annual returns can longer be accessed.

While the MHA has not commented on the move, officials say that the removed data was considered “unnecessary” for public viewing.

For several years, FCRA clearances have been a fraught issue, and the government has often been accused of targeting NGOs for political or ideological reasons by cancelling or not renewing their clearances.

Earlier this year, in a petition filed by the NGO Global Peace Initiative, the Supreme Court had asked thousands of NGOs to go back to the government for redressal of their grievances on non-renewal of their FCRA registrations. The registrations of about 5,900 NGOs had ceased to be active after December 31, 2021, owing to either the NGOs not applying for renewal before the due date, or the MHA refusing their renewal for alleged violation of the FCRA.

On December 25 last year, the MHA had refused to renew the FCRA registration of Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity, based on “adverse inputs”. The registration was, however, restored on January 6, and Missionaries of Charity’s FCRA certificate was made valid until the end of 2026.

What is the FCRA?

The FCRA was enacted during the Emergency in 1976 amid apprehensions that foreign powers were interfering in India’s affairs by pumping money into the country through independent organisations. These concerns were, in fact, even older — they had been expressed in Parliament as early as in 1969.

The law sought to regulate foreign donations to individuals and associations so that they functioned “in a manner consistent with the values of a sovereign democratic republic”.

An amended FCRA was enacted under the UPA government in 2010 to “consolidate the law” on utilisation of foreign funds, and “to prohibit” their use for “any activities detrimental to national interest”.

The law was amended again by the current government in 2020, giving the government tighter control and scrutiny over the receipt and utilisation of foreign funds by NGOs.

Broadly, the FCRA requires every person or NGO seeking to receive foreign donations to be (i) registered under the Act, (ii) to open a bank account for the receipt of the foreign funds in State Bank of India, Delhi, and (iii) to utilise those funds only for the purpose for which they have been received and as stipulated in the Act.

They are also required to file annual returns, and they must not transfer the funds to another NGO.

The Act prohibits the receipt of foreign funds by candidates for elections, journalists or newspaper and media broadcast companies, judges and government servants, members of legislature and political parties or their office-bearers, and organisations of a political nature.

In the first week of July this year, the MHA effected changes to FCRA rules through two gazette notifications and increased the number of compoundable offences under the Act from 7 to 12. The other key changes were exemption from intimation to the government for contributions less than Rs 10 lakh – the earlier limit was Rs 1 lakh — received from relatives abroad, and increase in time limit for intimation of opening of bank accounts.

Under the new rules, political parties, legislature members, election candidates, judges, government servants, journalists and media houses among others – all barred from receiving foreign contribution – will no longer be prosecuted if they receive foreign contribution from relatives abroad and fail to intimate the government within 90 days. However, the recipient will be required to pay 5% of the foreign contribution received.

How is FCRA registration granted?

NGOs that want to receive foreign funds must apply online in a prescribed format with the required documentation. FCRA registrations are granted to individuals or associations that have definite cultural, economic, educational, religious, and social programmes.

Following the application by the NGO, the MHA makes inquiries through the Intelligence Bureau into the antecedents of the applicant, and accordingly processes the application.

Under the FCRA, the applicant should not be fictitious or benami; and should not have been prosecuted or convicted for indulging in activities aimed at conversion through inducement or force, either directly or indirectly, from one religious faith to another.

The applicant should also not have been prosecuted for or convicted of creating communal tension or disharmony; should not have been found guilty of diversion or misutilisation of funds; and should not be engaged or likely to be engaged in the propagation of sedition.

The MHA is required to approve or reject the application within 90 days. In case of failure to process the application in the given time, the MHA is expected to inform the NGO of the reasons for the same.

For how long is approval granted?

Once granted, FCRA registration is valid for five years. NGOs are expected to apply for renewal within six months of the date of expiry of registration. In case of failure to apply for renewal, the registration is deemed to have expired, and the NGO is no longer entitled to receive foreign funds or utilise its existing funds without permission from the ministry.

The FCRA registration of close to 5,900 NGOs, including Oxfam India Trust and Indian Medical Association, lapsed on December 31 last year. According to sources, the registration of as many as 5,789 NGOs had lapsed after they failed to apply for renewal before the due date. The rest, who had applied for renewal, were refused as the MHA found their operations or accounts to be in violation of the FCRA, sources had said at the time.

According to the MHA, NGOs failing to apply before the due date can petition the ministry with cogent reasons within four months of the expiry of registration, following which their applications can be reconsidered.

Many NGOs do not apply for renewal for a variety of reasons, which include either completion of the project for which the FCRA registration had been taken or the NGO itself folding up.

On what basis is approval cancelled?

The government reserves the right to cancel the FCRA registration of any NGO if it finds it to be in violation of the Act.

Registration can be cancelled if an inquiry finds a false statement in the application; if the NGO is found to have violated any of the terms and conditions of the certificate or renewal; if it has not been engaged in any reasonable activity in its chosen field for the benefit of society for two consecutive years; or if it has become defunct.

It can also be cancelled if “in the opinion of the Central Government, it is necessary in the public interest to cancel the certificate,” the FCRA says.

Registrations are also cancelled when an audit finds irregularities in the finances of an NGO in terms of misutilisation of foreign funds.

According to FCRA, no order of cancellation of certificate can be made unless the person or NGO concerned has been given a reasonable opportunity of being heard. Once the registration of an NGO is cancelled, it is not eligible for re-registration for three years.

The ministry also has powers to suspend an NGO’s registration for 180 days pending inquiry, and can freeze its funds.
All orders of the government can be challenged in the High Court.

Which NGOs have been accused of violating FCRA provisions?

Several international and well-known NGOs such as Compassion International, Greenpeace India, Sabrang Trust, Lawyers’ Collective, Amnesty International, and Ford Foundation have come under the government’s scanner for alleged violations of FCRA.

Most have been accused of financial irregularities or “political activity” for cancellation of their registration. Amnesty was forced to shut its operation in India in 2020 following investigations launched by the Enforcement Directorate in 2018 into its financial dealings. Amnesty called the government action “witch-hunt of human-right activists…and a crackdown on dissent”.

Greenpeace India has scaled down its operations after its FCRA registration was cancelled in 2015 on grounds of opening multiple bank accounts, and movement of funds.

Lawyer Indira Jaising’s NGO Lawyers’ Collective is facing a CBI probe. In 2016, the MHA had cancelled the FCRA licence of the NGO for allegedly using foreign contributions for “political purposes”.

Activist Teesta Setalvad’s NGO Sabrang Trust had its FCRA registration cancelled in 2016 for allegedly mixing foreign and domestic funds, and for spending funds on publishing the Communalism Combat magazine.

In April 2015, the MHA put the Ford Foundation under the “prior approval category”, which meant that all funds from the organisation to recipients in India would have to be cleared by the government. The international NGO was also put on the Home Ministry’s watch list for some time in the interest of “national security”.

In 2016, Compassion International was barred by the government from funding NGOs in India over allegations of conversion.

Has the FCRA been used to target certain NGOs?

Until 2011, there were more than 40,000 NGOs registered under FCRA in India. That number now stands at 16,000.

Over the past few years, the government has faced allegations of targeting NGOs. Over the past seven years, the Narendra Modi government has cancelled the registration of more than 16,700 NGOs. Over 10,000 of these cancellations were carried out in 2015.

The previous UPA government had cracked down on NGOs following protests against the Kudankulam nuclear power project in Tamil Nadu. In 2012, the Manmohan Singh government cancelled the registration of almost 4,000 NGOs — up from just four the previous year.

It was under the UPA government that Greenpeace India first came under the scanner. Also, Amnesty International, which was first granted FCRA registration in 2000, was not allowed renewal of its registration by the UPA government.

Written by Deeptiman Tiwary

Source: Indian Express, 14/07/22

Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Quote of the Day July 13, 2022

 

“Have the courage to say no. Have the courage to face the truth. Do the right thing because it is right. These are the magic keys to living your life with integrity.”
W. Clement Stone
“ना कहने का साहस रखें। सच्चाई का सामना करने का साहस रखें। सही कार्य करें क्योंकि यह सही है। यह जीवन को सत्यनिष्ठा से जीने की जादुई चाबियां हैं।”
डब्ल्यू क्लेमैन्ट स्टोन

Current Affairs- July 12, 2022

 

INDIA

– PM unveils National Emblem cast on the roof of New Parliament Building
– India likely to surpass China, as world’s most populous country in 2023, says World Population Prospects 2022 report of UN
– Information and Broadcasting Secretary Apurva Chandra unveils new logo of country’s Public Service Broadcaster, Prasar Bharati
– West Bengal: Union Minister Smriti Irani inaugurates Sealdah Metro Station of East-West corridor
– First-ever symposium and exhibition on Artificial Intelligence in Defence held in Delhi
– Number of undernourished in India fell, obese rose in 15 years, says State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2022 report released by UN

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– RBI allows payments for cross-border trade in rupee, move to benefit trade with Russia
– Govt. announces curbs on export of wheat flour and related products
– Govt launches Jute Mark logo to promote Indian golden fibre
– Devesh Sachdev re-elected as Chairperson of MFIN (Microfinance Institutions Network)
– Govt. sacks National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL), chairman and managing director (CMD) Satish Agnihotri’ over charges of corruption
– India’s third power exchange -Hindustan Power Exchange Ltd. (HPX) – starts; promoted by PTC India Ltd, BSE & ICICI Bank

WORLD

– World Population Day celebrated on July 11
– Japan: Ruling party LDP wins majority in Upper House (House of Councillors) polls held after ex-PM Shinzo Abe’s killing
– Japan awards Ex-PM Shinzo Abe country’s highest honour – the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum — posthumously
– Bangladesh: Archaeologist Dr. Enamul Haque dies at 85 in Dhaka; awarded Padma Shri by India in 2020
– Lt Gen Mohan Subramanian appointed Force Commander of UN Mission in South Sudan

Current Affairs- July 13, 2022

 

INDIA

– Bihar: PM unveils centenary memorial pillar of the Bihar Assembly building in Patna
– Jharkhand: PM inaugurates an airport and AIIMS in Deoghar; flags off Deoghar-Kolkata IndiGo flight
– Uttarakhand becomes first state to implement Centre’s New Education Policy at pre-primary level

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– Textiles Minister Piyush Goyal inaugurates National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT) at Panchkula in Haryana
– Retail (Consumer Price Index-CPI) inflation eases slightly to 7.01% in June
– Industrial production grows 19.6% in May
– Ola Electric launches country’s first indigenously developed lithium-ion cell
– RBI approves Meena Hemchandra as part-time chairman of Karur Vysya Bank

WORLD

– NASA releases 1st full-color image from its James Webb Space Telescope; provides glimpses of what the early Universe looked like
– British composer Monty Norman, known for James Bond theme, dies at 94
– International Malala Day observed on July 12

SPORTS

– India (111/0 in 18.4) defeat England (110/10) by 10 wickets in 1st ODI of 3-match cricket series at Kennington Oval in London
– ISSF World Cup in Changwon, South Korea: Arjun Babuta wins gold medal in men’s 10m air rifle

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