Over the last four decades, India has witnessed a disturbing rise in the intimidation and targeting of religious minorities. Following the demolition of the Babri Masjid, the country saw unprecedented violence in Mumbai, leading to the loss of nearly one thousand lives. In 1999, one of the most horrific incidents occurred when Pastor Graham Staines was burnt alive—an act described by then-President Dr. K.R. Narayanan as “the most ghastly incident from the inventory of black deeds.”
The 2002 Gujarat carnage, orchestrated under the pretext of the Godhra train burning, led to massive communal polarization and a subsequent electoral victory for the BJP. Similarly, the 2008 Kandhamal violence, triggered by the murder of Swami Lakshmanananda (wrongly blamed on Christians though claimed by Maoists), led to brutal attacks on churches and loss of life. Other major communal incidents include the Muzaffarnagar riots in 2013 and the Delhi violence of 2020.
These are not isolated events. Violence in the name of cow protection, and the manufactured narrative of “love jihad,” have fueled anti-minority hatred. The enactment of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) further marginalized the Muslim community. Attacks on Christian prayer meetings, often under the false pretext of forced conversions, have intensified in recent years, contributing to an increasingly hostile atmosphere for minorities.
Freedom of religion in India is under severe strain. So-called "Freedom of Religion" laws—ironically titled—have been implemented recklessly in various states. Rather than protecting religious freedom, these laws serve as significant obstacles to the free practice of faith. Combined with growing hate propaganda, they have led to a climate of fear and intimidation for religious minorities. The use of hate speech during the 2024 national elections, continued demolitions of Muslim homes, and the push to implement the CAA (especially when linked with the National Register of Citizens or NRC) risk rendering millions stateless and without legal protection.
These developments have severely tarnished India’s international image. Global human rights indices have reflected this decline in freedom and democratic values. In response, the Indian government, led by the BJP and guided ideologically by the RSS, has attempted to dismiss such criticism as interference in "internal matters." Ironically, this same government vocally protests the persecution of Hindus in neighboring countries—an important issue, no doubt, but one that reveals a clear double standard.
Now, in an apparent effort to reframe the discourse on religious freedom, RSS-BJP leader Ram Madhav has argued that criticism of India’s record is based on a Eurocentric lens. In a recent article, he cites a report by a US-based think tank titled “Changing the Conversation about Religious Freedom: An Integral Human Development Approach.” This report claims that “a crucial component of overall human flourishing and sustainable development must be based on Integral Humanism.” Madhav argues that religious freedom should not be seen merely as a human rights issue. (Indian Express, June 14.) This is a strategic move to dilute the concept of religious freedom and to justify the ongoing erosion of minority rights in India.
Madhav blames the Mughal rulers for persecuting Hindus and attributes the Partition solely to the Muslim League. In contrast, leaders like Mahatma Gandhi saw India as a land of diverse faiths living in harmony. Jawaharlal Nehru viewed India as a syncretic civilization, famously describing it as “an ancient palimpsest on which layer upon layer of thought and reverie had been inscribed, and yet no succeeding layer had completely hidden or erased what had been written previously.”
Madhav invokes the concept of ‘Integral Humanism,’ first proposed by Catholic thinker Jacques Maritain in 1936. Maritain’s version sought to elevate the material, ethical, moral, and spiritual well-being of individuals above sectarian interests. Rooted in the context of Catholic Christianity, it opposed sectarianism and emphasized democratic freedoms. In India, however, the term was adopted and redefined by Deendayal Upadhyaya, a key ideologue of the RSS and BJP, to serve a very different agenda.
Upadhyaya’s Integral Humanism, articulated in four major lectures in 1965, is closely aligned with the idea of a Hindu Rashtra. It challenges India's federal structure, promotes the concept of ‘Dharma Raj’ (rule of dharma), and suggests that dharma is above parliamentary democracy. This ideological framework implicitly upholds the caste-based varna system by assigning pre-determined roles to individuals and advocates maintaining the social status quo. While Maritain championed Christian democracy, Upadhyaya's version supports the vision of a Hindu nation.
Despite claiming to transcend religion, the Indian version of Integral Humanism has in practice adopted the values of Brahminical Hinduism. It has manifested in political campaigns focused on issues like temple restoration (often involving the demolition of mosques), cow protection (leading to lynchings), “love jihad,” and religious conversions—none of which align with the pluralistic ethos of the Indian Constitution.
Integral Humanism is now being used as a sophisticated ideological cover to undermine constitutional values and suppress the rights of minorities, Dalits, and women. It is essentially a euphemism for the Hindu Rashtra agenda—an idea fundamentally at odds with the Indian Constitution.
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