Literature
Is there a god? The debate continues (Book Review)
By
By M.R. Narayan SwamyTitle: On Religion; Author: Khushwant Singh (with Humra Quraishi); Publisher: Rupa; Pages: 206; Price: Rs.250
Title:
50 Spiritual Appetizers; Compiled and Edited by: Vinod Dhawan;
Publisher: Partridge (A Penguin Random Book Company); Pages: 204; Price:
Not given
If celebrated journalist-writer Khushwant Singh is to
be believed, there is no god; the concept of karma is all hogwash. One
reason for his insistence is that no one, at any time, has seen god.
"Even if I came face to face with Him, I would not recognise him," he
says in this collection of writings. And that's why, he says proudly, he
is an agnostic.
If god did exist, would there be so much
injustice in this world? asks Khushwant Singh, who died last year. He
has more questions: how many paid the penalty for killing innocent Sikhs
in 1984? How many were punished for razing the Babri mosque? Without
hesitation, the man shared his doubts regarding god with the Dalai Lama
and Hindu holy personalities.
Khushwant Singh concedes that
reason and logic have their limitations and cannot probe the ultimate
mysteries of our existence. Still, he won't grant that god exists
although he is clearly sympathetic to the Sikh religion.
"Believers
would have us fly across to god on the magic carpet of faith. We
agnostics would like a solid, concrete bridge of reason to cross over
from the known to the unknown. Till then, their religion for them, our
doubts to us."
If you want to know how the agnostics think, read this book.
Journalist
Vinod Dhawan is on the spiritual path. His work is a compilation of 50
brief writings by mostly known spiritual giants, neatly divided into 13
sections. The subjects deal with devotion, death, suffering, god, guru,
mind and ego, even science and more.
Swami Ramdas (1884-1963)
cautions those embracing spirituality not to be bound to any
institution. Ronald Henry Nixon (1898-1965), a British spiritual
aspirant who visited India in the early 20th century and came to be
known as Srikrishna Prem, wonders if Hindu god Krishna will take birth
again to destroy present-day evil.
There are also writings by Adi
Shankaracharya, Swami Vivekananda, Paramhansa Yogananda and Paramhans
Ramakrishna besides a host of lesser-known Indian and Western seekers.
This slim book is for those who believe - unlike Khushwant Singh - that
god exists.
(M.R. Narayan Swamy can be reached on [email protected]. The views expressed are personal.)