جزییات کتاب
The concept of Secularism as known to the modern West is dreaded, derided and denounced in the strongest terms by the foundational doctrines of Christianity and Islam. Both of these doctrines prescribe Theocracy under which the State serves as the secular arm of the Church or the Ummah, and society is regimented by the Sacred Canon or the Shariat. It is, therefore, intriguing that the most fanatical and fundamentalist adherents of Christianity and Islam in India -Christian missionaries and Muslim mullahs - cry themselves hoarse in defence of Indian Secularism, the same way as the votaries of Communist totalitarianism coming out vociferously in defence of Democracy. The puzzle stands solved when we learn from the post-independence writings and speeches of Pandit Nehru, the father of Indian Secularism, that he had borrowed from the modern West only the word and not its meaning in Western political parlance. Secularism in the West had risen as a revolt against the closed creed of Christianity and had meant, for more than 150 years, a freeing of the State from the clutches of the Church. In the Indian context it should have meant a revolt against the closed creed of Islam as well, and keeping the state aloof from the influence of mullahs. Pandit Nehru, however, turned Secularism in India into a poisonous slogan for the use of a Muslim-Communist-Christian combine which he had forged in order to keep the national majority down. At the same time, Pandit Nehru had encouraged his courtiers, particularly the Gandhians, to provide the window-dressing to this formidable fraud. They defined Indian Secularism as sarva-dharma-samabhava -equal respect for all religions -as expounded by Mahatma Gandhi. The court cases and other articles in Section I of this book bear ample testimony that the Indian State has become a Theocracy for all practical purposes with sarva-dharma-samabhava serving as its official dogma. The twist given by Pandit Nehru and all other parties to the word secularism, has turned Indian Secularism into a shield for protecting creeds and cults hostile to Hindus, and also into a sword for wounding and maiming Hinduism which has always stood for an open society and religious pluralism. Section II of this book reproduces twelve reviews of the book, Why I Am Not A Muslim by Ibn Warraq, published in the U.S.A. in 1995, and an article by Shabir Akhtar spelling out what Islam means vis-a-vis freedom of expression. It is true that there Is no dearth of apologists for Islam in the Western democracies. Moreover, a new cult called Multiculturism has also surfaced in the West after the Second World War, particularly after the flow of fabulous Muslim finance from the oil-rich Middle East. The votaries of this cult frown, sometimes in very strong language, on those who examine Islam on rationalist and humanist grounds. Western universities and a large part of the Western media remain their strongholds, as in the case of India. Even so, there is Western media which refuses to be dictated by Multiculturism, or cowed down by Islamic terrorism.
Table of Contents:-
Preface
Section I: Secular Theocracy
The Case of Inder Sain Sharma
The Case of Sita Ram Goel
The Case of Surya Kant Bali
The Case of Sachchidanand Sakshi
The Case of Sadhvi Ritambhara
Islam Imposes an Emergency on India
Statement of Intellectuals and Writers in Protest Against the Arrest of Sita Ram Goel
Arrest of Sita Ram Goel Resented
Editor's Arrest Over Islamic Study Flayed
Fomenting Reaction
The Point We Always Evade
Swords to Sell a God
Statement by Indian intellectuals on Syed Shahabuddin's attempt to make the authorities impose a ban on the book Hindu View of Christianity and Islam by Ram Swarup
How Should We Respond?
Ban This Book
Section II: Liberal Democracy
Courageous Author Puts His Life on the Line
Standing Up to Scrutinize Islam
Roll Over, Rushdie
Goes for the Jugular
Turning Away From Mecca
Was Mohammed a Liar?
A Religion Incompatible With Human Rights
Demystifying Islamhe Jugular
The Problem Is Not Islamic Fundamentalism but Islam Itself
The Koranic View of Government
Islam Is Religious Fascism
Far More Dangerous Than Nazism
Perspective: Ex-Defender of the Faith
References