Syncretism in the Hindu right as intentionally incomplete proximity

Religious syncretism can function as an instrument of inter-group control and domination. Rather than consistently promoting cross-religious forbearance and knowledge, syncretism enables a proximity that allows forms of violence otherwise inaccessible to religious majoritarian groups. By choreograph...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Pacific affairs
Main Author: Pal, Felix (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: University of British Columbia 2022
In: Pacific affairs
Further subjects:B Hindutva
B Nationalism
B Cause
B Religion
B Marginality
B Politics
B Hindus
B Muslim
B India
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Summary:Religious syncretism can function as an instrument of inter-group control and domination. Rather than consistently promoting cross-religious forbearance and knowledge, syncretism enables a proximity that allows forms of violence otherwise inaccessible to religious majoritarian groups. By choreographing performances of syncretism between themselves and a subordinate religious community, organizations like the Indian Hindu nationalist Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) produce an intentionally incomplete proximity. This proximity draws close minority groups like the RSS’ Muslim wing, the Muslim Rashtriya Manch, but without allowing final inclusion or incorporation. Muslim proximity to the RSS becomes a spectacle of humiliation and domination rather than a measure of inclusion into the Hindu right. Muslims must perform Hindu nationalist religious rituals, while denigrating mainstream Islamic tradition. Drawing on extensive interview-based fieldwork with the RSS and the Manch, I argue that syncretism can function as domination because it reinforces ethnic hierarchies, but that this domination is not a form of hierarchical encompassment. Rather, subordinate religious groups are kept in a perpetual humiliating limbo as a way to reify the superiority of a dominant religious group. (Pac Aff / GIGA)
ISSN:1715-3379
Contains:Enthalten in: Pacific affairs
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.5509/202295127