Culture
A picture of the ‘ghar wapsi’ organised in Aasan Kalan in Panipat
Whenever news of a ‘ghar wapsi’ emerges, a question that many so-called secularists and “anti-Brahminical” voices ask is: Which caste will the converts enter?
A columnist for news website The Print, in context of the recent ‘ghar wapsi’ of former Uttar Pradesh waqf board chairman Waseem Rizvi, wrote: “This ghar wapsi has posed a predicament for the Hindu religion. His becoming a Hindu can’t be as simple as converting to Islam or Christianity or Sikhism or Judaism. A Hindu must have a caste. ‘Casteless Hindu’ is an oxymoron, an impossibility.”
On Aaj Tak, news presenter Sayeed Ansari asked, “In Sanatana Dharma that believes a person is Hindu strictly by birth, can a Hindu convert a Muslim man? Does conversion to Hindu faith change one’s jaati?” (as translated by Swarajya from Hindi).
On social media, many users question the validity and procedure for ‘ghar wapsi’ and mockingly ask if organisers have figured out what jaati would the converts to Hindu fold be given.
A Twitter user from Pakistan, who routinely questions Pakistanis’ aversion to acknowledging their Hindu ancestry, too seemed clueless about the subject when he recently wrote, “…so it seems they came up with a process… btw, will gharwapsied Hindus be casteless? Or a new caste? (sic)”
What the commentators fail to understand and acknowledge is that the debate on jaati of anybody converting to Hindu faith, is an outdated one. It was relevant a hundred years ago. Today, it is hardly the case.
The modern-era ‘ghar wapsi’ (literally means homecoming but alludes to “return” of Indian-origin Christians and Muslims to the Hindu fold) has its origins in Shuddhi movement of the Arya Samaj, which was founded in 1875 by Swami Dayanand Saraswati.
From its very inception, the Arya Samaj was a vocal critic of birth-based caste hierarchy.
Swami Dayanand advocated that it is against the original message of Vedas and a later aberration. In its initial days, the Arya Samaj worked towards raising the status of the untouchables and other lower castes through Hom (yagna), Yagnopavitha (investiture with the sacred thread) and recitation of Gayatri Mantra, which were, in most cases, denied to them by birth.
It took no more than two years for the organisation to include Mohammedans and Christians in the Shuddhi mission.
In his 1915 book ‘The Arya Samaj’, Lala Lajpat Rai, who joined the movement in early 1880s, wrote that Shuddhi literally means purification, but when used by Arya Samajists, it includes reclamation and conversion. He wrote:
The first recorded instance of Shuddhi of a non-Hindu undertaken by Swami Dayanand was in 1877. There is, however, some dispute over the details.
While various Arya Samaj websites say the person was a Muslim from Dehradun, research work by Yale University scholar James Reid Graham says the person was a Christian from present-day Jalandhar (‘The Arya Samaj as a reformation in Hinduism with special reference to caste’, Yale University, 1945).
In any case, numerous works say that Arya Samaj magazines from the 1880s have several references of Muslim and Christian converts who were “purified” and “restored to their places in the Hindu society”.
The principle of Shuddhi was soon adopted by other Hindu organisations such as the Hindu Mahasabha. Iconic leaders such as Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya and Lala Lajpat Rai were early members of the Mahasabha. Another icon, Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, emerged as its prominent leader in 1920s.
Savarkar’s 1931 essay titled Seven Shackles of the Hindu Society mentioned ‘Shuddhibandi’ (disallowing reconversions to Hindu faith) as one of the shackles besides prohibitions on inter-caste dining and inter-caste marriages. He wrote:
Around the same time in 1923, some Hindu activists came together to create Bhartiya Hindu Shuddhi Sabha. They elected Swami Shraddhanand as its president. The Sabha identified reconversion of ‘Malkana Rajputs’ in the western United Provinces as one of its key aims.
The Malkanas were Rajputs mainly living in Mathura, Agra, Etah and Mainpur. Despite conversion to Islam centuries ago, they continued to observe Hindu customs.
It is estimated that Shraddhanand managed to reconvert nearly 60,000 of them.
Today, the term in popular usage is not Shuddhi but ‘ghar wapsi’.
It has been popularised by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), which was set up in 1925 after one of the Hindu Mahasabha members, Keshav Baliram Hedgewar, left the organisation to form a ‘Hindu volunteer organisation abstained from active politics’.
The question of ‘ghar wapsi’ and caste, more than 130 years later
In the 1920s, the concept of Shuddhi was adopted by several Hindu social organisations for the immediate goal of demography.
For a century now, active Hindutva organisations such as the RSS have been trying to create a singular Hindu identity against “Abrahamic religions” that is free from jaati and varna compulsions of the orthodox Chaturvarna system.
Perhaps the most noted among the RSS chiefs who campaigned against birth-based caste-discrimination was Madhukar Dattatraya Deoras, popularly known as Balasaheb Deoras. He was the third sarsanghchalak of the RSS and remained so from 1973 to 1994.
Today, there indeed has emerged a Hindu identity largely free from jaati and varna compulsions. One only needs to read case studies on Shuddhi published in Arya Samaj magazines in the 1880s, of Hindus excommunicated from their biradris, to understand the stronghold of the caste system at that time.
An 1885 edition narrates the case of a Hindu Rajput man and his Hindu wife, who “lost her caste” by “lodging with a Mussalman khansama” and thus ceased to be in the Hindu fold.
An 1884 edition tells the story of a Hindu boy who “lost his caste” by taking bread from Mohammedans under the influence of ‘bhang’.
An 1886 edition narrates how Nathu Mal was excommunicated from his biradri for eating from the hands of a Mohammedan when he was sick.
The magazines said that the Arya Samaj managed to bring each of these outcasts back into the Hindu fold (all references quoted from Graham’s work).
Excommunications over such matters are unheard of in modern times.
The change has largely come about due to reform movements, government programmes as well as natural changes in behaviours owing to technology as well as social and economic liberty.
People across castes and religions freely inter-mingle and inter-dine, barring exceptions. People eat out, caring little about who has prepared or served them food. Intercaste marriages are quite common.
An average Hindu city-dweller does not live as part of a biradri anymore. While jaati groups such as the Tyagi Sabha or Agarwal Samaj exist, he does not live in fear of excommunication anymore.
The question then is, does a Hindu, especially one living in an urban town or city, necessarily need a jaati or varna to function in the society at all?
The answer is no.
This is why many of those who do ‘ghar wapsi’ to the Hindu fold say it is their individual and personal decision, independent of their biradri. Read case studies on ‘ghar wapsi’ in recent years reported by Swarajya here, here and here.
One can offer a counter and say that during a Hindu conversion ritual, one must mention his gotra and thus, a Hindu lineage is must.
In reality, converts to Hindu faith either mention the gotra of their ancestors or adopt the gotra of their guru or the person officiating the ‘ghar wapsi’. Most Indians, including Hindu converts to Islam and Christianity, know the gotra of their ancestors. It’s a common observation that many Muslims, Christians and Sikhs still use it as part of their name.
Priest Narsinghanand who officiated the ‘ghar wapsi’ of Waseem Rizvi told the media that he has been given ‘Vatsa’ gotra. Vatsa is one of the dozen-odd gotras of the Tyagi jaati.
More than two weeks have passed since the ‘ghar wapsi’ ceremony, but no Vatsa gotra or Tyagi jaati group has raised any objection.
Who is really upset with ‘ghar wapsi’?
One must now analyse who exactly is opposed to ‘ghar wapsi’ and mocks the efforts by raking up orthodox theories that Hindus must have a jaati. For this, we should look at the critics of the original Shuddhi movement.
The first opposition came from orthodox groups and heads of various biradaris.
In 1895, a group of 15 Shuddhi activists from Moradabad was excommunicated from their biradari for accepting Ganges water from a Christian (reference from Graham’s work). The biradri forbade barbers and water-carriers from serving them.
The next big opposition came from anti-Hindutva voices such as those in the Congress, which was pushing its highly controversial version of secularism, and from openly Islamist groups.
Swami Shraddhanand’s Shuddhi mission for reconverting Malkana Rajputs did not go down well with Mahatma Gandhi. In the 1922 issue of his magazine Young India, he criticised Swami Shraddhanand in an article titled 'Hindu-Muslim-Tensions: Causes and Resistance'. Gandhi wrote:
Gandhi further accused Shuddhi pioneer Swami Dayanand of narrowing one of the most liberal and tolerant religions of the world.
The third major opposition to Shraddhanand’s Shuddhi movement came from Islamist groups. A fanatic, Abdul Rashid, killed Shraddhanand on 23 December 1926 and confessed that he did it to save Islam in the wake of Hindu conversions of Malkana Rajputs.
Interestingly, it was BR Ambedkar, a proponent of total ‘annihilation of caste’, who openly supported Shraddhanand. Ambedkar, in fact, went so far as to call Shraddhanand “the greatest and the most sincere champion of the Untouchables”.
Ambedkar also criticised Mahatma Gandhi for his failure to condemn the murder of Shraddhanand.
In his seminal 1945 work ‘Pakistan, or the Partition of India’, Ambedkar wrote:
It is pertinent to mention that another Shuddhi proponent, Swami Vedananda Tirtha, also earned the open praise of Ambedkar.
Ambedkar, who gave a preface for the book, wrote:
More than a century later, the modern-day Hindu conversion efforts continue to be criticised by the same groups even though one can determinedly say that orthodox groups have today been relegated to a fringe.
The organisations and individuals that these groups label as “Hindutva forces” are exactly those that have been vociferously pushing for social reform by rejecting caste orthodoxy. They are the ones leading the Shuddhi - now known as ‘ghar wapsi’ - efforts for 130 years.
Anybody deriding the efforts by asking ‘which caste will the converts get’ is either ignorant of the realities of the Hindu society today or represents the same forces that Ambedkar was so critical of.