Dharma, Colonisation & a
Democratic Framework of Decision

Swami Bodhananda
in an email response to Jayant Kalawar

Sent: Monday, August 04, 2003 9:59 AM
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SAMBODH
Copyright©2000-2005Sambodh Foundation New Delhi
Email <info@sambodh.org>

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... I returned from the retreat yesterday.

Let me try to state some definitions of Dharma:
1) that which sustains,
2) the natural/moral order that exists,
3) the individual and collective conduct that secures material and spiritual fulfillment,
4) duty dictated by one's innate nature and station in life,
5) non-injury/co-existence/multi-dimensionality,
6) God's Law/ Dharmasya prabhu achyutah,
7) contemplative engagement,
8) moral choice,
9) personal responsibility,
10) the law of cause and consequence.

'Colonization' is not a law written on stone. 'Decolonization' should
not become a cliché, a kind of obsessive compulsive reaction.

Remember the adage: 'once bitten twice shy'. It is true that the white race taking
advantage of their superiority in rational thought (S&T) did expand their
influence globally. But that wave is plateauing out.

It is time for us, the rest versus the west, to engage the Judo-Christian, Greco-Roman,
Anglo-Saxon mind set and civilization constructively in our effort to create new
modalities of thinking, being and living.

Colonization is a collective experience that the east and the west went through.
It is our collective heritage. You can identify different layers and hierarchies in the
colonial pyramid. It is not the 1000 civil servants that ruled 350 millions of
Indians for 250 years. The rich Indians colonized the poor Indians,
the upper caste the lower cast, the north the south, the white the black, the
zamindar the tenant, the literate the illiterate, the bully the benign,
the strong the weak, the city the village, man colonized women.. the list goes
on and on.

We have to purge the colonial mind set from all of us.
When you use the term 'western categories' and dump a whole lot of our
collective experience in that box it reeks of an irrational value judgment
and is denial of a part of our own unconscious. With that attitude we will
never learn. The title, 'Heathen in his blindness' reminds me of a story of
a Nambudiri Brahmin who scolded and cursed a crocodile
which was dragging his wife into the dept of the waters.

As far as I can see the important task is to build institutions, frame
works, code of conduct, checks and balances to unleash the creative
potentials of individuals, groups and communities. A wide based democratic
frame work of decision making is the only mechanism for this task.

Jayant, we will continue this dialogue.

Love,
Swami Bodhananda.