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Home Weekly Perspective

Marxism and Mysticism: A Plea for a Dialogue(II)

Kashmir Pen by Kashmir Pen
4 years ago
in Perspective, Weekly
Reading Time: 10 mins read
Marxism and Mysticism: A Plea for a Dialogue(II)
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BY DR.MOHAMMAD MAROOF SHAH

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Why is religion perceived as enemy of a socialist or communist state? It is an opium. It lulls workers to sleep. It is thus antirevolutionary. It is complicit with capitalism. It too exploits in the name of God when it extracts wealth from gullible masses. It creates false substitutes like the goods of the otherworld so that people don’t take the problems of this world very seriously. It encourages detachment that conflicts with the spirit of active involvement needed for changing the order of the world. It reconciles people to present ills by attributing them to fate or karma. It says resist not evil and believes that change of heart in the capitalist will do the needful. It is false consciousness or inverted view of the world. It merely provides consolation and not real help. It is not against private property per se. Brief comments on all these points are in order:
First of all let it be made clear that we need to distinguish between religion and mysticism and it is the later which is here defended and it is also assumed (but not argued as that is a separate issue) that it represents the core of religion. We also need to distinguish between sentimental mysticism and intellectual mysticism. Guenon has remarked that there is no mysticism in the traditional East. Sentimentalism is modern phenomenon and associated with exoteric Christianity. Mysticism is based on Intellect as distinguished from reason and its discoveries are absolutely certain as there is no role of individual, his feelings and psychical processes in intellectual intuition. Ideally one shouldn’t talk of mysticism but of metaphysics – not the post-Aristotelian and Cartesian one but the one that concerns itself with the supraphenomenal but not the abstract by means of a supraindividual suprarational faculty called Nous or Intellect, is not speculation but experience and is as precise a science as mathematics with as concrete an applications as physics in all the domains of life from arts and crafts to sciences and cultural expressions. Schuon’s Survey of Esoterism and Metaphysics is a representative work and must be read before one comments on mysticism and metaphysics. The West has no metaphysics or incomplete metaphysics and modern thought has substituted pseudometaphysics for traditional metaphysics. It is rational metaphysics rather than intellectual counterpart that has been a subject of study and critique in western philosophy. In traditionalist perennialist revaluation of Western philosophy Kant hardly deserves the name of a philosopher and Descartes is an ignoramus arrogant man, Bergson a spokesperson of subrational rather than intellectual or suprarational intuition. Theology should be autology otherwise it is wide off the mark. Theism is far from the pure truth of metaphysics. The existence of personal God is hardly an issue. Buddha is the metaphysician. The Supreme Principle is not Being but something that transcends being or existence.
There are other differences between (exoteric) religion and mysticism Where religion posits a beyond or the otherworld mysticism focuses on the present moment. For it heaven and hell also are now or never. Where exoteric religion posits a God removed from life mysticism posits no God other than Life and ever changing and newer manifestations of Reality. Where religion divides, mysticism unites, where religion kills people or kill in the name of it, mysticism spreads smiles. Nietzsche fulminated against the instinct for the beyond even if he himself died a martyr seeking that beyond vainly. The beyond of which the religion talks mysticism brings here and now, in history. It is the whisperings of the Holy Ghost or Spirit that make all of us worshippers of beauty, truth, love and justice.
History refutes the assertion that religion lulls people to sleep. Perhaps all great revolutions in history could be traced to the influence of religion. Prophets have been, generally speaking, social rebels, politically dangerous and that is why mostly mocked if not executed. They have challenge the establishment and existing socio-political-economic set up while standing for the oppressed, the sinners, the masses. The same is the case with mystics. They have been persecuted by both the paid officials of exoteric religion and the State. They have denounced riches and in many cases taken arms against the State. They have preached if not fought against the haves, the ruling class. Of course religion degenerates soon and as Stalin replaces Marx so a pope replaces Christ and Yazeed replaces Umer. Religion is hardly anywhere in sight today. In a generation only one or two live it in its true spirit as Simone Weil observed. In the degenerated populist form of Marxism Marx would not have counted as a Marxist as Christ is imprisoned rather than welcome when he arrives on earth in Dostoevsky’s novel. It is in the name of religion that people have dethroned many regimes. Jihad is an instrument to forcefully implement revolutionary spirit of religion. By definition it is directed against oppressors regardless of creed or colour or region. Any struggle carried for the sake of justice and freedom from oppression without any selfish motive can qualify as Jihad.
Religions have tolerated limited private property as Marxism has practically done though ideally both are against the possessive, hoarding, grabbing mentality. It is impossible to outlaw all personal possessions. Man has a distinct individuality or tastes and all men are not created with the same capacities and differ. Some must excel in one field and some in others. Psychologically people are not made to live in eternity but need to take serial time seriously. If genetics has a role and environment has a role in development of personality, one can’t expect uniformitarianism. Given equal opportunities people will exert differently and differences will result. All labour is not equally productive or equally important for society. So wages will differ. Religion’s toleration of private property as that of Marxism is to be understood in light of these realities. Competition extracts the best from man. Industrial and scientific advancement of the erstwhile USSR are attributable to a great extent to its taking seriously the challenge from the capitalist world and wishing to excel or compete against them. The world would be terribly dull and boring where man’s sense of individuality and nature’s love for diversity is loathed. There will be little progress if the instinct to excel is suppressed in the name of collectivism. Healthy progressive society is an organism rather than a collection of individuals mechanically and uniformly made one. The differences are important and without them no social life is possible. If thinkers like Marx and writers like Premchand and artists like Picasso were not provided freedom by society the world including the world of proletariat would be much poorer. Thinking too is a labour and mankind has made great progress because of thinking class. Workers would be condemned to more degrading drudgery and their work will look more suffocating if thinking class, artistic class and mystics were not there. Monks are not parasites but safeguard the health of society by demonstrating the treasures of solitude and other vitalizing powers of spirit. Those who reject the institution of monkery are advised to provide alternatives to it. What the life of contemplation means may be gleaned from reading Merton. Japan would look much poorer without its Zen monasteries. The highest joys are accessible in contemplative life. Marxists would resent closing of theatre and entertainment industry but they don’t recognize the intellectual pleasures which even Epicurus rated higher than merely somatic pleasures are available to humans in contemplative life institutionalized by religion in monasteries and that too without many side effects which other forms of entertainment and pleasure seeking may have. God is Anand and denying man this supreme pleasure is like castrating men and deny them the orgasmic joy. Those who have not tasted the pleasures of contemplation are impotent men according to mystics. But mystical ecstasies are hallucinations according to its critics. For mystics who have often been exceptionally smart intellectually the world of form and colour that ordinarily is taken to be real or the reality is made of the stuff of dreams. I think we shall agree that the blind are no judge of colours. Those who have not had mystical visions can’t condemn those who had them. Of course one can criticize the attitude that overemphasis on life of contemplation that may harm social life but that doesn’t mean one can outlaw mysticism. But Marxist states have been so hostile to all expressions of religion and mysticism. Those who have not seen God have not seen anything as one mystic has said. God is a percept rather than a concept. Those who have cleansed the doors of perception or who have escaped the conditioning of the ordinary modes of perception and opened wide the eye of the heart have seen or experienced God, tasted God. Mystics would pity their Marxist critics for their blindness. Marxists would pity them for their incurable defects of perception and imagination. Let us tolerate both and not outlaw mystical activities in the Marxist State.
Mysticism has actively struggled against the self that seeks private property. Mystics have been reported to sell everything for society even when society in turn made no commitment to share its wealth with him. Jesus rejected private property as did his Russian disciple Tolstoy. Prophet’s companions shared everything with their brothers. Augustine identified charity as the essence of scripture. Buddhism prefers begging to hoarding.
Priestly class has often been complicit with exploiting ruling class. That is why prophets like Jesus denounced them. Both mystics and Marxists have common enemy to fight and Marxist mode of fighting is more effective.
Of course mystics have been pacifists and have not advocated violence in meeting enemies. Marxism is more effective in meeting an enemy which understands no language other than violence. But mysticism can act as a counterforce against indiscriminate use of violence. If Lenin and Stalin were mystics as well they would not have allowed so much violence to be unleashed. Mystics do well to make us remember that it is after all life which should count above everything. If politicians cared about purity of means as well, the world would have been a different place. Violence achieves only short term results. The change of heart achieves great results. Ashoka’s change of heart meant much for many people. Marxism imagines only war but mysticism believes that peace too can be an option sometimes to achieve the result. Psychology tells us that violence breeds reaction and thus more violence. If the world can’t be converted in the name of love it can’t be ever peaceful. Peace can’t endure there. We must war against capitalism with full force but we must work for transformation of the culprit self that ultimately makes capitalist a capitalist. That people could be transformed on large scale and make the world a better place is evidenced in history. This is what the Prophet of Islam achieved though Marxist reading would see only immoral calculative business mentality everywhere even in the self denying martyrs and mystics and prophets.
Marxist critics have straight away dismissed what they call as Oriental indifference or detachment towards social concerns. But how can they explain that Krishna urges Arjuna to fight, Rama is a great warrior, karma yoga and hatha yoga have been Oriental inventions. The life of action is not incompatible with the life of detachment at spiritual plane. Witnessing consciousness or spirit is not involved in action but transcend action. But efficient self is the agent of action and efficient and appreciative selves, to use the terminology used by Iqbal, are one self really. The famous parable of two birds from the Upanisads and other traditions makes the point of two selves admirably well. Detachment in spirit is not incompatible with involvement of body and soul in the world of action. Salvation itself needs great effort or involvement. Nothing is unreal or unimportant for a struggling soul. Buddha is actively involved in making his vision realizable for others. His nirvana doesn’t make him uncritical regarding oppression of Brahmins etc. Some mystics have led active military life. Vivekananda, Aurobindo and many other great names in contemporary Indian mysticism were all action centric. Reform movements have been launched by mystics. Many active resistance movements in history have been spearheaded or masterminded by mystics.
The doctrine of fate has been gloriously misunderstood by Caudwell and other Marxist critics. Far from reconciling people to their present sorry state it presupposes freedom to transform one’s condition for the better. It is scientific statement of the law of action and reaction at moral plane. It is largely verifiable by recourse to insights of psychology. There is no permanent soul or personality named So and so that could reincarnate in Oriental religions. Lord is the only transmigrant as Shankara says according to orthodox belief. Animistic conception of rebirth is foreign to traditional religion. Nondualism clearly implies that there can be no real bondage to karma. It is all illusory when seen from the perspective of a liberated soul. Even if karma is understood in populist sense it can be read to goad one to action as it asserts importance of action, either good or bad. Higher fatalism is there even in Nietzsche and Marxism in a way. The thing to affirm life despite perception of economic determinism and this is what Marxism preaches. Fate understood in metaphysical terms is the inward reach of a thing, a designation for latent or potential possibilities. It is realization of inner riches. It is unfolding of spirit in history in accordance with a law of its own development. Fatalism cannot be an excuse for sloth or indifference. Consistent nondualism sees neither sin nor karma nor fate. It is extremely subtle position that mystical traditions maintain which even scholars trained in traditional thought may miss not to speak of Marxist critics who have prior assurance that all doctrines are at the service of ruling class or capitalist or pious fraud or invented to console one’s felt impotence at the face of hostile reality. How casual one can be in understanding the other is illustrated in Marxist dismissal of religion. Marx was not so casual and so unsympathetic as his later followers.
Religion has no need to be apologetic about its key claims. It asserts them with absolute certitude and conviction. The Quran asserts that God is irresistible. None can resist him, not even an atheist Nietzsche or a Marx. God can’t possibly be doubted. God is manifest truth. The problem is that few people understand what stands for and why to be a skeptic is to be as fool. Either we have to state that the Bible and the Quran are stating a plain lie or attempt to understand what they mean by the term God. In simple terms God is the witnessing consciousness, the elusive thing inside us that asserts “I.” God is also synonymous with Reality/ Truth. The problem is that, as Coomaraswamy states:
Religion has been offered to modern men in nauseatingly sentimental terms (“Be good, sweet child,” etc.), and no longer as an intellectual challenge that so many have been revolted, thinking that that “is all there is to” religion. Such an emphasis on ethics (and, incidentally, forgetfulness that Christian doctrine has as much to do with art, i.e. manufacture, making, what and how, as it has to do with behavior) plays into the skeptic’s hands; for the desirability and convenience of the social virtues is such and so evident that it is felt that if that is all that religion means, why bring in a God to sanction forms of conduct of which no one denies the propriety? Why indeed? At the same time this excessive emphasis upon the moral, and neglect of the intellectual virtues (which last alone, in orthodox Christian teaching, are held to survive our dissolution) invite the retorts of the rationalists who maintain that religion has never been anything but a means of drugging the lower classes and keeping them quiet.
The cost of rejecting religion is too high to invite second thought from all those who care about mankind. Man is a religious animal. Modern anthropology is convinced of this though modernity has attempted various reductive interpretative maneuvers to explain away the undeniable. Man needs God more than he needs food. He can live for days without food but he can’t live a moment without having faith in life, in some meaning of it, in love. The moment one feels life is worse than death one despairs and that despair is hell. Consenting to live life and live it meaningfully, vibrantly, creatively is what faith signifies. Faith is not that you can dream of rejecting. Rejecting faith is rejecting life. There are degrees of this faith and an atheist and mystic differ only in degree. To man is not an option given to hide fully from God; he can imagine sometimes that he has hidden himself from the gaze of Reality but willy nilly he is summoned to face It.

….CONCLUDED

Dr. Mohammad Maroof Shah is an author and Columnist, interested in the the interface of philos¬ophy, literature, religion and mysticism

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