From Manu’s Brahminism, to Nietzsche, to Hitler
Dr. BR Ambedkar
Published on: July 2, 2016
First published on: March 28, 2016
From left to right: Manu who
inspired Friedrich Nietzsche who inspired Adolf Hitler.
In his writings, Dr BR Ambekar unravelled the unholy ideological link between Manu who inspired Nietzsche, who in turn inspired Hitler, who in turn (along with Mussolini) inspired the most revered Manuwadis of the Hindu Mahasabha and the RSS: Balakrishna Shivram Moonje, Keshav Baliram Hedgewar and Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar.
In his writings, Dr BR Ambekar unravelled the unholy ideological link between Manu who inspired Nietzsche, who in turn inspired Hitler, who in turn (along with Mussolini) inspired the most revered Manuwadis of the Hindu Mahasabha and the RSS: Balakrishna Shivram Moonje, Keshav Baliram Hedgewar and Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar.
The foregoing
analysis of the religious revolution showed that religious ideas as forms of
divine governance for human society fall into two classes, one in which society
is the center and the other in which the individual is the
center. The same analysis showed that for the former the appropriate test of
what is good and what is right, i.e., the test of the moral order is utility
while for the latter the test is justice.
Now the reason why the philosophy
of Hinduism does not answer the test of utility or of justice is because the
religious ideal of Hinduism for divine governance of human society is an ideal
which falls into a separate class by itself. It is an ideal in which the
individual is not the center. The center of the ideal is neither individual nor
society. It is a class — the class of Supermen called Brahmins.
Those who will bear the dominant
and devastating fact in mind will understand why the philosophy of Hinduism is
not founded on individual justice or social utility. The philosophy of Hinduism
is founded on a totally different principle. To the question what is right and
what is good the answer which the philosophy of Hinduism gives is remarkable.
It holds that to be right and good the act must serve the interests of this
class of Supermen, namely, the Brahmins.
Oscar Wilde said that to be
intelligible is to be found out. Indeed Manu does not leave it to be found out.
He expresses his view in resonant and majestic notes as who are the Supermen
and anything which serves the interest of the Supermen is alone entitled to be
called right and good. Let me quote Manu.
Manu’s is a degraded and
degenerate philosophy of Superman as compared with that of Nietzsche [Hitler’s
guru] and therefore far more odious and loathsome than the philosophy of
Nietzsche – Dr. BR Ambedkar.
X. 3. “On account of his
pre-eminence, on account of the superiority of his origin, on account of his
observance of (particular) restrictive rules, and on account of his particular
sanctification the Brahman is the Lord of (all) Varnas.”
He proceeds to amplify his reasons and does so in the
following characteristic manner —
I. 93. “As the Brahmana sprang from (Prajapati’s, i.e.
God’s) mouth, as he was first–born and as he possesses the Veda, he is by right
the Lord of this whole creation.”
I. 94. For the self–existent (Svayambhu, i.e., God), having
performed austerities, produced him first from his own mouth, in order that
offerings might be conveyed to the Gods and Manes and that this universe might
be preserved.”
I. 95. “What created being can surpass him, through whose
mouth the Gods continually consume the sacrificial viands and the manes the
offerings to the dead?”
I. 96. “Of created beings the most excellent are said to be
those which are animated; of the animated, those who subsist by intelligence;
of the intelligent, mankind; and of the men, the Brahmanas.”
Besides the reason given by Manu the Brahmin is first in
rank because he was produced by God from his mouth, in order that the offerings
might be conveyed to the Gods and manes. Manu gives another reason for the
supremacy of the Brahmins. He says —
I. 98. “The very birth of a Brahmana is an eternal
incarnation of the sacred Law (Veda); for he is born to (fulfill) the sacred
law, and becomes one with Brahman (God).”
I. 99. “A Brahmana, coming into existence, is born as the
highest on earth, the lord of all created beings, for the protection of the
treasury of the Law.”
Manu concludes by saying that —
I. 101. “The Brahman eats but his own food, wears but his
own apparel, bestows but his own in alms; other mortals subsist through the
benevolence of the Brahmana.”
Because according to Manu —
II. 100. “Whatever exists in the world is the property of
the Brahmana; on account of the excellence of his origin the Brahmana is,
indeed, entitled to it all.”
Manu directs —
VII. 36. “Let the King, after rising early in the morning,
worship Brahmans who are well versed in the three-fold sacred science and
learned (in polity), and follow their advice.”
VII. 38. “Let him daily worship aged Brahmans who know the
Veda and are pure...”
VII. 37. “Let the king, having risen at early dawn,
respectfully attend to Brahman, learned in the three Vedas and in the science
of ethics and by their decision let him abide.”
VII. 38. “Constantly must he show respect to Brahmans, who
have grown old, both in years and in piety, who know the scriptures, who in
body and mind are pure; for he, who honours the aged, will perpetually be honoured
even by cruel demons.”
IX. 313. “Let him not, although in the greatest distress for
money, provoke Brahmans to anger by taking their property; for they, once
enraged, could immediately by sacrifices and imprecations destroy him with his
troops, elephants, horses and cars.”
Finally Manu says —
XI. 35. “The Brahman is (hereby) declared (to be) the
creator (of the world), the punisher, the teacher, (and hence) a benefactor (of
all created beings); to him let no man say anything unpropitious; nor use any
harsh words.”
To conclude and complete the theory of supermen and of what
is right and good let me reproduce the following two texts from Manu —
X. 122. “But let a Shudra serve Brahmans, either for the
sake of heaven or with a view of both this life and the next, for he who is
called the servant of a Brahman thereby gains all his ends.
X. 123. The service of the Brahmana alone is declared to be
as excellent occupation for a Shudra; for whatever else besides this he may
perform will bear no fruit.
And Manu adds —
X. 129. No collection of wealth must be made by a Shudra,
even though he be able to do it; for a Shudra who has acquired wealth gives
pain to Brahman.
Nietzsche’s supermen were supermen by reason of their worth.
Manu’s supermen were supermen by reason of their birth. Nietzsche was a genuine
disinterested philosopher. Manu on the contrary was a hireling engaged to
propound a philosophy which served the interests of a class born in a group and
whose title to being supermen was not to be lost even if they lost their
virtue.
The above texts from Manu disclose the core and the heart of
the philosophy of Hinduism. Hinduism is the gospel of the Superman and it
teaches that what is right for the Superman is the only thing which is called
morally right and morally good.
Is there any parallel to this philosophy? I hate to suggest
it. But is so obvious. The parallel to this philosophy of Hinduism is to be
found in Nietzsche. The Hindus will be angry at this suggestion.
It is quite natural. For the philosophy of Nietzsche stands
in great odium. It never took roots. In his own words he was “sometimes deified
as the philosopher of the aristocracy and squirearchy, sometimes hooted as,
sometimes pitied and sometimes boycotted as an inhuman being.”
Nietzsche’s philosophy had become identified with will to
power, violence, denial of spiritual values, Superman and the sacrifice,
servility and debasement of the common man. His philosophy with these high
spots had created a certain loathsomeness and horror in the minds of the people
of his own generation. He was utterly neglected if not shunned and Nietzsche
himself took comfort by placing himself among the “posthumous men”.
He foresaw for himself a remote public, centuries after his
own time to appreciate him. Here too Nietzsche was destined to be disappointed.
Instead of there being any appreciation of his philosophy, the lapse of time
has only augmented the horror and loathing which people of his generation felt
for Nietzsche. This is principally due to the revelation that the philosophy of
Nietzsche is capable of producing Nazism. His friends have vehemently protested
against such a construction (M. P. Nicolas, “From Nietzsche Down to Hitler”
1938). But it is not difficult to see that his philosophy can be as easily
applied to evolve a super state as to Superman. This is what the Nazis have
done.
MS Golwalkar (left) and KB Hedgewar: Inspired equally by
Manu and Hitler
At any rate the Nazis trace their ancestry from Nietzsche
and regard him as their spiritual parent. Hitler has himself photographed
beside a bust of Nietzsche; he takes the manuscripts of the master under his
own special guardianship; extracts are chosen from Nietzsche’s writings and
loudly proclaimed at the ceremonies of Nazism, as the New German Faith.
Nor is the claim by the Nazis of spiritual ancestry with
Nietzsche denied by his near relations. Nietzsche’s own cousin Richard Ochler
approvingly says that Nietzsche’s thought is Hitler in action and that
Nietzsche was the foremost pioneer of the Nazi accession to power. Nietzsche’s
own sister, few months before her death, thanks the Fuehrer for the honour he
graciously bestows on her brother declaring that she sees in him that
incarnation of the “Superman” foretold by Zarathustra.
To identify Nietzsche, whose name and whose philosophy
excites so much horror and so much loathing, with Manu is sure to cause
astonishment and resentment in the mind of the Hindus. But of the fact itself
there can be no doubt. Nietzsche himself has openly declared that in his
philosophy he only following the scheme of Manu. In his Anti-Christ this is
what Nietzsche says —
“After all, the question is, to what end are falsehoods
perpetrated? The fact that, in Christianity, ‘holy’ ends are entirely absent,
constitutes my objection to the means it employs. Its ends are only bad ends;
the poisoning, the calumniation and the denial of life, the contempt of the
body, the degradation and self-pollution of man by virtue of the concept of
sin, — consequently its means are bad as well. My feelings are quite the
reverse.
“When I read the law book of Manu, an incomparably
intellectual and superior work, it would be a sin against the spirit even to
mention in the same breath with the Bible. You will guess immediately why; it
has a genuine philosophy behind it, in it, not merely an evil-smelling Jewish
distillation of Rabbinism and superstition — it gives something to chew even to
the most fastidious psychologist.
“And, not to forget the most important point of all, it is
fundamentally different from every kind of Bible: by means of it the noble
classes, the philosophers and the warriors guard and guide the masses; it is
replete with noble values, it is filled with a feeling of perfection, with
saying yea to life, and triumphant sense of well–being in regard to itself and
to life — the Sun shines upon the whole book.
“All those things which Christianity smothers with its
bottomless vulgarity, procreation, woman, marriage, are here treated with
earnestness, with reverence, with love and confidence. How can one possibly
place in the hands of children and women, a book that contains those vile
words: ‘to avoid fornication, let every man have his own wife, and let every
woman have her own husband... it is better to marry than to burn.’ And is it
decent to be a Christian so long as the very origin of man is Christianised,
that is to say, befouled, by the idea of the immaculate conception?...
“I know of no book in which so many delicate and kindly
things are said to woman, as in the Law Book of Manu; these old grey–beards and
saints have a manner of being gallant to woman which, perhaps, cannot be
surpassed. ‘The mouth of a woman,’ says Manu on one occasion, ‘the breast of a
maiden, the prayer of a child, and the smoke of the sacrifice, are always
pure’. And finally perhaps this is also a holy lie — ‘all the openings of the
body above the navel are pure, all those below the navel are impure. Only in a
maiden is the whole body pure.’”
This leaves no doubt that Zarathustra is a new name for Manu
and that Thus Spake Zarathustra is a new edition of Manu Smriti.
If there is any difference between Manu and Nietzsche it
lies in this. Nietzsche was genuinely interested in creating a new race of men
which will be a race of supermen as compared with the existing race of men.
Manu on the other hand was interested in maintaining the privileges of a class
who had come to arrogate to itself the claim of being supermen.
Nietzsche’s supermen were supermen by reason of their worth.
Manu’s supermen were supermen by reason of their birth. Nietzsche was a genuine
disinterested philosopher. Manu on the contrary was a hireling engaged to
propound a philosophy which served the interests of a class born in a group and
whose title to being supermen was not to be lost even if they lost their
virtue.
Compare the following texts from Manu.
X. 81. “Yet a Brahman, unable to subsist by his duties just
mentioned, may live by the duty of a soldier; for that is the next rank.”
X.82. “If it be asked, how he must live, should he be unable
to get a subsistence by either of those employments; the answer is, he may
subsist as a mercantile man, applying himself into tillage and attendance on
cattle”.
Manu adds:
IX. 317. “A Brahmana, be he ignorant or learned, is a great
divinity, just as the fire, whether carried forth (for the performance of a
burnt oblation) or not carried forth, is a great divinity.”
IX. 323. “Thus, though the Brahmans employ themselves in all
(sorts) of mean occupation, they must be honoured in every way; (for each of)
them is a very great deity.”
Thus Manu’s is a degraded and degenerate philosophy of
Superman as compared with that of Nietzsche and therefore far more odious and
loathsome than the philosophy of Nietzsche.
This explains why the philosophy of Hinduism does not
satisfy the test of justice or of utility. Hinduism is not interested in the
common man. Hinduism is not interested in society as a whole. The centre of its
interest lies in a class and its philosophy is concerned in sustaining and
supporting the rights of that class. That is why in the philosophy of Hinduism
the interests of the common man as well as of society are denied, suppressed
and sacrificed to the interest of this class of Superman…
It is therefore incontrovertible that notwithstanding the
Hindu Code of Ethics, notwithstanding the philosophy of the Upanishads not a
little, not a jot, did abate from the philosophy of Hinduism as propounded by
Manu. They were ineffective and powerless to erase the infamy preached by Manu
in the name of religion. Notwithstanding their existence one can still say,
“Hinduism! They name is inequality!”
(From Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Writings & Speeches, Volume
3, published by the education department, government of Maharashtra, pages
72-87).
(This article has been archived from the May 2000 issue of
Communalism Combat. The cover story, “India’s Shame” traced how even 50 years
after the Constitution proclaimed equality for all, over 160 million Dalits
continue to be victims of a ‘hidden apartheid’, treated as untouchables and
worse)
ఇప్పుడు రాస్తున్న
వ్యాసం
సాంప్రదాయ
మనువాదం – ఆధునిక మనువాదం
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