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Hindus and Neo-Paganism
by Dr. Koenraad Elst
The late Ram Swarup (1920-98), definitely the most important Hindu
philosopher of independent India’s first half-century, liked to point out
that other cultures had traditions similar to Hinduism before Christianity
or Islam wiped them out. As he put it in his path-breaking study of
polytheism, The Word as Revelation (1980):
“There was a time when the old Pagan Gods were pretty fulfilling and they
inspired the best of men and women to acts of greatness, love, nobility,
sacrifice and heroism. It is, therefore, a good thing to turn to them in
thought and pay them our homage. We know pilgrimage, as ordinarily
understood, as wayfaring to visit a shrine or a holy place. But there can
also be a pilgrimage in time and we can journey back and make our offerings
of the heart to those Names and Forms and Forces which once incarnated and
expressed man’s higher life. (...) The peoples of Egypt, Persia, Greece,
Germany and the Scandinavian countries are no less ancient than the peoples
of India; but they lost their Gods, and therefore they lost their sense of
historical continuity and identity. (...) What is true of Europe is also
true of Africa and South America. The countries of these continents have
recently gained political freedom of a sort, but (...) if they wish to rise
in a deeper sense, they must recover their soul, their Gods (...) If they do
enough self-churning, then their own Gods will put forth new meanings in
response to their new needs. (...) If there is sufficient aspiration,
invoking and soliciting, there is no doubt that even Gods apparently lost
could come back again. They are there all the time.” (p.131-133)
The cultural process of self-rediscovery after centuries of Christianity is
already in full swing in many parts of Europe and North America (I have only
little information about other continents and will leave them outside the
scope of this article). In Europe, two organizations try to unite the
various national groups: the England based ‘Pagan Federation’ and the
Lithuania based ‘World Congress of Ethnic Religions’. Both have made a brief
acquaintance with Hinduism. Leading Pagan thinker Prudence Jones had a
correspondence with Ram Swarup, whose articles on polytheism have also been
published in other Pagan media, e.g. in the California based Church of All
Worlds’ magazine ‘Green Egg’. The opening conference of the WCER (Vilnius
1998 was attended by three NRI Hindus; one of them was present again this
year, and a delegation from India itself was on its way but couldn’t make it
because of Lithuania’s slowness in handling the visa applications. The
WCER’s leading ideologues Jonas Trinkunas (Lithuania) and Denis Dornoy
(French, living in Denmark) also sent a message to the Dharma Sansad, the
“religious parliament”, in February 1999:
To the delegates at the Dharma Sansad, Ahmedabad, 5-8 February 1999:
Respectful greetings,
As workers for the revival of the religion of our ancestors, and as
convenors of the World Congress of Ethnic Religions, we are happy and
honoured to communicate with the representatives of the world’s largest
surviving ancient religion, the Sanatana Dharma. We want to pay our respect
to the people who have kept alight the Vedic fire for thousands of years,
even when besieged by hostile forces, and who are currently guiding Hindu
society through the challenges of the modern age.
We wish to draw the attention of the Hindu leaders to the efforts currently
made to maintain the ancestral religions of the Native Americans, Africans,
and other “Pagan” peoples in the face of the subversion of their cultures
and aggression against their dharmic practices by agents of self-righteous
missionary religions. We support the peaceful efforts of all nations to
safeguard their cultural and spiritual heritage against subversion and
destruction. We also wish to draw your attention to the efforts to revive or
reconstruct the ancestral religions of those nations who were overwhelmed by
Christianization or Islamization in the past. By common origin or simply by
a common inspiration, these ancient religions share a lot with the Sanatana
Dharma, in both its tribal and its Sanskritic manifestations. We therefore
wish to express our hope and intention of establishing a friendly
cooperation.”
Clearly, there is a measure of common ground between Hinduism and Pagan
revivalism, both typologically (as non-Abrahamic religions) and
strategically. At Ram Swarup’s suggestion, I have done some participant
observation of this movement, or spectrum of movements, in the last couple
of years. I have made many friends in these circles, and I sympathize with
the whole idea of the revival of the wrongfully eliminated ancestral
religions. That said, I do have mixed feelings about the actual performance
of this fledgling new incarnation of the old religion, which suffers from
some serious childhood diseases. In particular, I would like to draw
attention at present to a few problems in the encounter and budding
cooperation between Hinduism and Pagan revivalism.
Lifestyle : One thing which is bound to strike Hindu newcomers in certain
neo-Pagan circles as uncomfortable, is the seeming predominance of what
Indians know all too well as hippyism, the kind of loose and undisciplined
behaviour which Western rucksack travellers have displayed while sojourning
in India. Wiccas (neo-witches) dancing naked in the moonlight may not be the
Shankaracharya’s idea of Dharma. And while nakedness as such need not be
immoral in any way, the fact is that the looser morality which Asians tend
to identify as typically modern-Western is entirely the norm in most
neo-Pagan circles. As Fred Lamond candidly admits in his must read
introduction Religion without Beliefs, Essays in Pantheist Theology,
Comparative Religion and Ethics (Janus Publ., London 1997, p.111): “Our
practical ethics are 90% the same” as those of established religions, but
“the only area where our principles differ sharply from theirs is in sexual
ethics. To Pagans, sexual intimacy before marriage is neither sinful nor
immoral (...) we regard shared sexual passion under most circumstances as a
sacrament which, far from harming our souls, can be a gateway to
self-transcendence and unity with the divine.”
The Church of All Worlds even promotes “polyamory” as an alternative to the
monogamous household. The Germanic oriented neo-Pagans (Odinism, Asatru /
“loyalty to the gods”) are more mainstream in this regard, partly because
they recruit more among working class people, who are less attracted to
artistic variations in lifestyle; nonetheless, one of their most gifted
ideologues in the 1980s, Stephen Flowers a.k.a. Edred Thorsson, subsequently
touted himself as ¾ in Freudian terms ¾ a zealous polymorphous pervert.
Hindus in India, and perhaps even more the overseas Hindus who have
experienced a close knit family structure and the concomitant “family
values” as a great asset in their professional success (Margaret Thatcher’s
“model immigrant community”), would probably feel closer to the prudish
morality of Evangelicals than to the libertine neo-pagans.
Other Hindu taboos, as on beef-eating or meat-eating in general, are equally
foreign to Western neo-Pagans. Though vegetarianism is a major trend in some
circles, others celebrate hunting and do-it-yourself slaughtering of your
next meal as part of the return to a more natural way of life. Even among
the vegetarians, the motive is more often health and ecology (meat
production requiring a much larger land surface than the production of
vegetable food with the same nutritional value) rather than Hindu
considerations such as compassion with all sentient beings and the taboo on
touching, let alone digesting, animal tissue in a state of decomposition.
From an orthodox Hindu viewpoint, most neo-Pagan groups would have a status
similar to the tribals of forested Central India. Though the tribals are
recognized as Indian fellow Pagans, Hindus by Savarkar’s definition, they
are nonetheless commonly perceived as savages because of their disregard for
certain taboos and because of their not so strict morality (as in the common
youth dormitories where sexual experimentation is encouraged). The city
jungles of the West have somehow spawned a lifestyle similar to that of the
tiger infested and snake haunted jungles of India.
Absence of a yogic tradition : Another point which neo-Pagans have in common
with the Indian tribals as compared with the literate Hindu-Buddhist
mainstream, is that they do not have an established tradition of yoga.
One of the most important fruits of civilization is a system of techniques
allowing man to reach beyond the ordinary, world-absorbed (c.q.
dream-absorbed) consciousness. This does create an inequality within the
broad category of non-Abrahamic or “Pagan” religions. I am aware that this
is bound to put some readers off as being elitist, but there is a real
difference between the systematically developed techniques of consciousness
as practised in Hindu and Buddhist monasteries (and by laymen every morning
and evening), on the one hand, and the whole spectrum of ordinary religious
experience on the other: ritual, celebration, devotional practices, even
erratic mystical experiences as anyone may have in exceptional moments (from
first love to near death experiences). The best way to realize this
difference is to meet an accomplished yogi: the quality of profound peace he
radiates is unlike anything else. This doesn’t mean that other activities,
religious and secular, are somehow bad and to be shunned. Not at all:
whereas Western adepts of yoga often deride “organized religion” with its
rituals, I have never heard of an Indian or East Asian practitioner who did
not observe some calendar of rituals (e.g. Zen as a tradition of meditation
is heavily ritualized). Advanced students of yogic techniques don’t set
themselves against the surrounding folk religion, but adapt to it and add
their own insights to it as a jewel to the crown. Both in Chinese Taoism and
in Hinduism, we see how folk religion gets transformed by having the
spiritual tradition as a point of reference in its midst. Contrary to what
early Orientalists imagined, 99% of the people in the Orient are not sages;
yet, they are aware of the existence and nearness of such a class of seers,
and this infuses their religion with a quality absent in the purely
naturalistic Pagan religions.
Did such a spiritual tradition exist within the pre-Christian religions of
Europe? In Greek and Hellenistic culture, we certainly see traces of it, but
they are usually attributed to Egyptian or Asian influence. The Druids are
usually credited with such a tradition, but as far as we can see, their
central claim to honour within Celtic society was their memorization of a
whole library of mythological and historical narratives. This was similar to
the Brahmins learning the Vedas and other classics by heart, which is part
of their “karmakanda”, “ritualism”, distinct from the “jnanakanda”, the
search for absolute knowledge developed in the younger layers of the Vedas,
the Upanishads. Moreover, as a serious blemish on their reputation as dreamy
sages, the Druids were also officiates at bloody sacrifices, allegedly even
human sacrifice, which even the robust Romans found repulsive and barbaric.
In the development of Vedic religion, we see animal sacrifice phased out in
favour of symbolic replacement sacrifices (coconuts etc.), but Druidic
religion was prevented from making such progress from barbarity to
civilization because it was killed by Roman armies and Christian
missionaries. When the neo-Druids in organizations like OBOD, the “Order of
Bards, Ovates and Druids”, practise an altogether more peaceful religion,
they can justify that (e.g. when The Times derided them on 22 June 1998 as
“milk-and-water Pagans” for not even sacrificing human virgins on Summer
Solstice in Stonehenge) by explaining that they supply the evolution which
Druidry would have gone through, had it survived through the last two
thousand years.
At any rate, a perusal of the remaining (often distorted) Pagan literature
of the Celts and also of the Germanic peoples shows a lot of celebration of
life, of courage and passion, and some insightful meditations on the
mysteries of life and death, but nothing like a yogic tradition. Neo-Pagans
who understand that something is missing make up for it by borrowing heavily
from the living traditions of Asia. Thus, the OBOD has imported a lot of
Hindu-Buddhist lore into its curriculum as a substitute for the unknown and
irretrievable doctrines which the ancient Druids must have taught. To some
extent, this is historically justified because European and Asian Pagan
traditions did have certain doctrines in common, e.g. the belief in
reincarnation is well-attested by Greco-Roman observers of the Druidic
tradition, in Virgil’s Aeneis and other European Pagan sources. But to some
extent, it may be just fantasy: it is really possible that our Celtic and
Germanic ancestors did miss out on some philosophical developments which
were taking place in more civilized parts of the world. And whatever they
did know and teach has largely been lost, or only been registered by
Christian monks who didn’t understand much of it anymore. So, either way,
neo-Pagans trying to supply the innermost teachings to a tradition of which
folklore and scanty surviving texts have only preserved a skeleton, have no
choice but to look to surviving traditions like Hinduism.
Xenophobia : Alternatively, some neo-Pagan ideologues reject any input from
Asian or other traditions. In the Netherlands, the late Noud van den
Eerenbeemt, a Germanic heathen, used to teach something he called “Runic
yoga”, meaning a series of body postures imitating the shapes of the old
Germanic alphabet signs or Runes. I think this was a bit silly, as Hatha-yogic
postures are designed to produce certain effects in the energetics of the
body, not to impersonate certain visual shapes. However, some heathens
rejected it for a wholly different reason: yoga is a non-European invention,
hence “unfit for European people”. They were apparently unaware that the
Runic alphabet itself was once imported from the south, and that the
Indo-European languages themselves, and the religious lore they carried,
were once imported from the East: at least from Russia, according to the
dominant theory, or perhaps even from Afghanistan or India.
Those are the people who reject Christianity on grounds of its foreign
origin: an “Asian religion unfit for Europeans”, just like Hinduism. That is
wholly mistaken: if Christianity was an erroneous belief system, it was
erroneous even for people in its countries of origin, just as Islam was
initially rejected even by the compatriots of the Prophet, the Arabs.
Conversely, if Christianity is true, it stands to reason that we should all
drop our ancestral religion and embrace Christianity, just like Paul did,
and Constantine, and Clovis, and Vladimir.
Hindus stand warned that a minoritarian but activist strand within the Pagan
reawakening is motivated by such xenophobia, which is largely based on
ignorance or at least on the insufficient realization of the syncretic
nature of even their own ancestral religions. Often they are people who care
little about religion and more about ethnicity, using religion only to give
some colour to their assertion of ethnic identity. My impression is that in
the Odinist movement in the USA, with its increasing racial polarization,
this “white pride” tendency is not just an embarrassing fringe, as it is in
Europe, but may well represent the mainstream. And if it isn’t that yet, it
will become predominant in the near future: as whites slip into minority
status in the USA, those whites who are on the receiving end of the social
changes (remember that Odinists are largely working-class) will probably
lose their current inhibitions about racial self-identification on the
African-American model. Whereas Christians have their own variety of white
racism (KKK, Christian Identity), the large floating mass of secularized
white Americans will increasingly find a cultural rallying-point in
European, esp. Germanic neo-Paganism. Those Odinists who take their
distances from such development will soon find themselves outnumbered by the
new recruits for whom colour is more important than religious experiences.
In Europe too we see that purely secular nationalist or racist circles
affect Pagan terminology (the Flemish group Odal, the Austrian periodical
Ostarra, the German periodical Sleipnir, the widespread use of the Celtic
Cross by Euro-nationalists), but because of the more thorough secularization
of European culture, this remains more purely a political code which does
not interfere with the actual revival of ancestral religion. Most neo-Pagan
including Odinist groups in Europe statutorily exclude neo-Nazis, Satanists
and other such fringe characters.
In efforts at cooperation, Hindus will not much come into contact with the
xenophobic faction among the Pagan revivalists, precisely because the latter
are not interested in brown immigrants, except negatively. And except for
the identification of Hinduism with the caste system, which in turn has been
identified with a kind of racial apartheid system. As you can check in David
Duke’s book My Awakening, the Bible of the racialist Right in the USA, the
Hindu caste system is widely understood as a system imposed by the “Aryan
invaders” on the “dark skinned natives” to preserve their racial purity.
That the Indo-Aryans didn’t succeed in the alleged endeavour of race
preservation and ended up brown skinned themselves is another matter; fact
is that the Vedas are regarded by ignorant Westerners as a description of
the subjugation of the browns by the whites, and as an injunction to racial
self-preservation.
In continental Europe too, there is a movement of so-called Traditionalists,
inspired by Rene’ Gue’non and Julius Evola, who take a similar view of the
caste system, and who see it as part of the Indo-European heritage, hence
relevant also for the European branches of the great Indo-European family.
Obviously, these aren’t the friends you need, and if such people approach
you, do patiently explain to them that the basis of modern science was laid
by dark skinned people like the Harappans: mathematics, astronomy, writing
etc. Perhaps that will change their outlook on racial and cultural
differences.
Monotheism vs. polytheism : A very minor philosophical point of disagreement
concerns the notion of polytheism. To many Western neo-Pagans, this is the
central point of difference with the Abrahamic religions, and so they
brandish their polytheism as the defining trait of their religion. Thus, the
Belgian periodical Antaios calls itself a medium for “polytheist studies”.
While most Hindus have no problem with polytheism, they will find the issue
in itself less important: depending how you define “god”, something can be
said for both monotheism and polytheism. The ancient Greek philosophers,
though undoubtedly Pagan, nonetheless sought for a unifying principle
underlying the whole of creation. It is only because of the Judeo-Christo-Islamic
crusade against polytheism that this has become such a crucial issue for
Westerners trying to revive their Pagan roots. As Ram Swarup puts it:
“And yet the birth of Many Gods will not herald the death of One God; on the
other hand, it will enrich and deepen our understanding of both. For One God
and Many Gods are spiritually one. (...) A purely monotheistic unity fails
to represent the living unity of the Spirit and expresses merely the
intellect’s love of the uniform and the general. Similarly, purely
polytheistic Gods without any principle of unity amongst them lose their
inner coherence. (...) The Vedic approach is probably the best. It gives
unity without sacrificing diversity. (...) Monotheism is not saved by
polytheism, nor polytheism by monotheism, but both are saved by going deep
into the life of the soul. (...) Depending on the cultures in which they
were born, mystics have given monotheistic as well as polytheistic
renderings and interpretations of their inner life and experiences.” (The
Word as Revelation: Names of Gods, 1980, p.128-133)
Is Hinduism an ethnic religion? When the WCER constituted itself, there was
a lot of discussion about how to formulate its Pagan identity. The term
Pagan or Heathen was avoided because members, esp. from Eastern Europe, said
that the term had come to sound so negative after centuries of Christian
indoctrination, that it simply carried the wrong connotations: immorality,
violence, backwardness. The term “polytheistic” was also not acceptable,
because Paganism admits also of pantheistic and even atheistic viewpoints,
and within polytheistic frameworks we find that religious practice often
takes the form of henotheism, i.e. worship of a single god chosen from among
many (what Hindus call the ishta devata, the “chosen deity”). Another
proposal was the “old religion” or the “ancestral religion”, terms already
used by some Pagan revivalist groups, esp. in Scandinavia (e.g. Forn Sidr,
“the earlier customs”). Personally, I think that would have been the best,
as it describes exactly the status of the religion being revived, regardless
of its being polytheistic or pantheistic or whatever. It would also be
similar to the Sanskrit term Sanatana Dharma, “the eternal mores / duty /
order”.
The founding conference settled for the term “ethnic”, indeed a Greek term
by which the Hellenized Jews and first Christians designated the Pagans.
Note, however, that as the equivalent of Hebrew Goyim, “the nations”, it
would nonetheless include Judaism itself, this being the ethnic religion par
excellence. The founding declaration of the WCER (see www.wcer.org) makes it
unambiguously clear that no narrow ethnic exclusivism is meant, it puts the
ethnic religions in the framework of “universalism”. This will prove
necessary, for the term “ethnic” all by itself may well attract all kinds of
cranky political ethnicists who will need to be educated about the
interwovenness of Pagan religions across ethnic frontiers. Thus, Germanic
religion is at the very least composed of the pre-Indo-European native
religion of northern Europe plus the religion of the incoming
Indo-Europeans, the latter having lots in common with the neighbouring
Baltic and Slavic religions, and even with the more distant Greek, Roman,
and Hindu religions. When we study the ancient religions, we find that they
have lots in common, e.g. their focus on the starry sky as the manifest
locus of the gods at play.
For Hindus, the question should be faced whether Hinduism qualifies as an
“ethnic” religion. Historically, that description has a point, yet Hinduism
has, starting from the riverine plains of northern India, spread to the
farthest corners of the south and the inland hills and forests, assimilating
ever new tribes or ethnic groups. It has also spread to Central and
Southeast Asia. Today, it is spreading in the West, both by migration and by
attracting spontaneous Western converts. So, that is something to think
about.
Conclusion : Hindus should welcome the revival of the pre-Christian
religions of the West, often cognate religions through the common
Indo-European origins, otherwise at least typologically related religions
which are not based on a monopolistic prophet or scripture. At the same
time, they should be watchful for impure motives and degenerative trends, or
for phenomena which may be acceptable in a multicultural framework but with
which they need not involve themselves. The ancestral religions of Europe
are at present in a formative stage, a stage of groping in the dark, of
gradual rediscovery or self-reconstitution. At this stage they attract
people with a variety of motives and divergent levels of knowledge and
understanding. Still immature, these religions often look to Hinduism for
guidance.
© Dr. Koenraad Elst, 25 September, 1999.

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