What
Constitutes Idolatry and What Does Not
Dr.
Amartya Kumar Bhattacharya
BCE
(Hons.) ( Jadavpur ), MTech ( Civil ) ( IIT Kharagpur ), PhD ( Civil
) ( IIT Kharagpur ), Cert.MTERM ( AIT Bangkok ), CEng(I), FIE,
FACCE(I), FISH, FIWRS, FIPHE, FIAH, FAE, MIGS, MIGS – Kolkata
Chapter, MIGS – Chennai Chapter, MISTE, MAHI, MISCA, MIAHS, MISTAM,
MNSFMFP, MIIBE, MICI, MIEES, MCITP, MISRS, MISRMTT, MAGGS, MCSI,
MIAENG, MMBSI, MBMSM
Chairman
and Managing Director,
MultiSpectra
Consultants,
23,
Biplabi Ambika Chakraborty Sarani,
Kolkata
– 700029, West Bengal, INDIA.
E-mail:
dramartyakumar@gmail.com
Website:
https://multispectraconsultants.com
Since
I was born in an ultra-orthodox Buddhist family and Lord Buddha did
not believe in gods, the issue of what constitutes idolatry was
always very important to me from my childhood.
As
a result, the definition of idolatry was taught to me at a very early
age. I went to Don Bosco School, Park Circus, Kolkata, where I saw
statues of Mary and a bust of Don Bosco. I also saw a number of
pictures of Jesus Christ. Yet, the Christian priests who ran the
school were Roman Catholics and owed allegiance to the Pope in Rome.
It was at Don Bosco that I learnt that the Pope is to be addressed as
Your Holiness and the Cardinals, who occupy, collectively, a position
just below the Pope in the Roman Catholic hierarchy, are to be
addressed as Your Eminence. But Christians are not idolaters and are
opposed to idolatry.
Many
Hindus live in Kolkata as well and they are indubitably idolaters.
There is a Hindu slum just near my home and it is a hotbed of Hindu
fanaticism, extremism and gangsterism. There are a number of Hindu
temples in the slum and each also serves as a storehouse of weapons
under the very noses of the police, most of whom are also Hindus. In
fact, our home was subject to attack by Hindu gangsters because we
are Buddhists.
Hindu
extremism is by no means limited to Kolkata. Indian government forces
battled Hindu guerillas in Assam starting in the late 1970s. The
Hindu guerrillas fought under the banner of AASU and AGP. Partition
in 1947 had left India with a 'chicken's neck' between Nepal and what
is now Bangladesh and Assam is the largest Indian state to the east
of the 'chicken's neck'. At its peak, Hindu terrorists gunned down
Surendra Paul of the Apeejay Group. The Hindu guerrillas were
motivated by real or perceived discrimination by the Indian
government towards Assam. Caught in the crossfire between the Indian
government forces and the Hindu guerrillas, millions of people were
rendered homeless. The turmoil continued for a few years.
Eventually,
Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi signed an agreement with the Hindu
leaders spearheading the guerrilla warfare. This agreement was known
as the Assam Accord. Amongst other things, Rajiv Gandhi conceded the
demand of the Hindu guerrillas for the establishment of an IIT at
Guwahati in Assam. Thus, IIT Guwahati became India's first
'political' IIT. This was the start of the dilution of the IIT brand,
a process which is now complete with the conversion of University of
Roorkee and ISM into IITs and the mushrooming of new IITs.
In
the south also, a Hindu terrorist killed Rajiv Gandhi in 1991. The
same Hindu terrorist group killed and caused mayhem in Sri Lanka
extensively.
Coming
back to the issue of idolatry, so long as a man keeps a statue or a
picture of a real human being, whether deceased or living, in his
home or anywhere else, he does not commit any idolatry whatsoever.
For example, he may keep a statue of Lord Buddha, Jesus Christ, Mary,
Asanga, or for that matter, Abraham Lincoln, in his home and most
emphatically not be an idolater.
But
if a man keeps and worships a statue or picture of a fictitious god
or goddess, as all Hindus do, idolatry is committed. In this way,
Hindus are guilty of idolatry.
©
Bhattacharya International Buddhist Foundation, 2020.
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