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The God Market How Globalization is making India Hindu Author/Editor : Meera Nanda
• Educated Indians in small towns are becoming more religious than less educated villagers?
• India has more places of worship than educational institutions or health services?
• Half the total number tourist trips in a single year are for religious pilgrimages?
• State governments are selling land to temple trusts at throwaway prices?
• Corporate houses are setting up institutions for ‘value-based’ education?
The secular Indian state is constitutionally bound to have no official
religion. However, India is not free from politicized religiosity which
expresses itself in a growing sense of Hindu majoritarianism. The
rising tide of popular Hinduism is directly linked with India embracing
the gospel of free markets.
Middle-class Indians are becoming more actively religious as they are
becoming prosperous. The last decade has seen the proliferation of
powerful new god-men, a massive rise in temple rituals, the creation of
new gods, and the increased demand for priests. The state is enabling
the Hinduization with the help of the private sector. From actively
promoting religious tourism, to handing over higher education to the
private sector, some of whom use religious trusts to run the
institutions that impart ‘value-based’ education, to giving away land
at highly subsidized rates to gurus and god-men, many of the
privatization measures of the government are linked with the promotion
of Hinduism.
In this hard-hitting and controversial book, Meera Nanda uncovers the
nexus between the state, temple and corporate India to reveal the ugly
truth behind India’s leap into globalization and poses the question:
What room does this India that dreams saffron-tinged superpower
dreams have for non-Hindu minorities? What happens to the India that
Muslims, Christians, non-believers and other non-Hindus also call home
as the country begins to see itself as India@superpower.OM? Can the
country deliver on the promise of secularism without cultivating a
secular culture in a secular polity?
Price Rs. 395 |