Saturday, August 9, 2008

With a God like this who needs Terrorists?

Bertrand Russell said that the more we try to underplay the role of religion in our lives, the stronger influence it brings to bear on them. So I can hope to shut my eyes off to all the mindless violence that is perpetrated in the name of religion, but only at the cost having the revulsion at all of it build slowly in my system. So, I am letting the bile out.

It is now common knowledge that the plethora of bombings in India (which by the way, also has a strong religious undercurrent to it, but I can appreciate the larger secessionist tendencies at play) did not claim anywhere near the number of lives as the stampede at the Naina Devi Temple. The death toll in that single accident is kinda larger than all the bombings put together. Some God that!

Oh, the Jihadis have nothing to jeer about either. Mecca claims a hearty share of its own victims every year during the 'Stoning the Satan' Ritual. Oh...did I mention the rather routine stampede at Sabarimala? There's a joke out there, about the itenary of events on that special day of Makara Sankranthi every year. Ask a 'Devasvom' Board official and he'll tell you this: First the pooja, then a small stampede, then camphor is secretly lit in the hills, then the massive stampede. Casualities vary from a dozen to a few hundreds.

Jeez...the Jihadis oughta let the saffron brigade construct the damn Ayodhya temple, sit back and twiddle thumbs. Lord Ram would work much better than any of their ammonium nitrate.

1 comments:

hodAlmighty said...

Yes I would totally agree with you though I may not have been so blunt. It's an irony that most people, use their "values", which by the way, the previous generation complains the current one lacks because of which their claim is that it the current one is an overtly materialistic one, to approximate the full meaning of the divinity in which they are supposed to believe, to one that takes considerable interest in their personal lives, though the relegions they profess to believe in themselves would want them to believe otherwise. The rush after relegion itself has a touch of competition nowadays, with many people making it a point to do special offerings as part of their exam preparations. To put it short, beliefs have become fallacies.