Buddhism in India

(sharon) #1
Navayana Buddhism and the Modern Age 257

then first the existing social, political and other institutions will have
to be destroyed (Janata25 June 1938).

Ambedkar eventually moved away from the economics of
Marxism also, calling himself a ‘social democrat’ rather than a
‘state socialist’ at the time of presenting the Indian Constitution.
As he developed his understanding of Buddhism, he increasingly
stressed it as an all-around alternative to Marxism, capable of solving
the problems of conflict and suffering as Marxism could not. In
‘The Buddha and Karl Marx’, a final essay on the issue, he summed
up his assessment by arguing that many of Marx’s theses had been
disproved, including the economic interpretation of history, the
inevitability of revolution, and the pauperisation of the proletariat.
The ‘residue of fire’ that remained, he argued, consisted of concern
for ‘reconstructing the world’, the conflict of interest between
classes, and the necessity for the abolition of private property
which was a major cause of sorrow or suffering. But, he argued, this
could be most effectively done by non-violent means through the
Buddhist Sangha, though he did not see it necessary for the state to
renounce violence. He quoted the Cakkavati suttato argue that the
Buddhist goal was, in essence, a welfare state, with a major aim of
providing wealth to the destitute. To him, Buddhism and Marxism
were similar in valuing material prosperity as good, but differed
regarding the path to equality and social justice; with Buddhism,
this happened by changing the minds of men through the Dhamma.
And he concluded with a reference to the three basic values of the
French revolution, the basic thrust of modernity:

Society has been aiming to lay a new foundation as was summarized by
the French Revolution in three words, fraternity, liberty and equality.
The French Revolution...failed to produce equality. We welcome the
Russian Revolution because it aims to produce equality. But it cannot be
too much emphasized that in producing equality society cannot afford to
sacrifice fraternity or liberty. It seems that these three can coexist only if
one follows the way of the Buddha (Ambedkar 1987: 462).

‘On the Way’ to Buddhism


Though Ambedkar’s early impression of Buddhism was marred
by the understanding of it as a kind of purified Hinduism or
Protestant Hinduism, a view given by the majority of upper-caste

As for Marxism itself, Ambedkar was both attracted and alienated
by it. According to his weekly Janata, during the 1930s he had
announced at a rally that,


I have definitely read studiously more books on the Communist
philosophy than all the Communist leaders here. However beautiful
the Communist philosophy is in those books, still it has to be seen
how useful it can be made in practice...if work is done from that
perspective, I feel that the labour and length of time needed to win
success in Russia will not be so much in India. And so, in regard to
the toilers’ class struggle, I feel the Communist philosophy to be closer
to us (Janata15 January 1938).

The power of Marxist economic analysis, the tumult of the rising
class movements of the 1930s, the evidence of depression and
crisis in capitalist countries, and the apparent developmental
achievements of the Soviet Union all exercised a powerful attraction
for Ambedkar, as it did for all other movements of the time. This
lasted through much of the 1940s, with Ambedkar calling for
nationalisation of land and basic industries, and describing himself
as a ‘state socialist’.
Nevertheless, he had major differences, and these centered
around the priority of the economic sector. The general effect of
Marxism on social movements of Dalits and non-Brahmans was to
pull them away from supposedly ‘religious’ solutions. This was
clearly happening in south India, as Iyothee Thass’ ‘Sakya
Buddhism’ died away and the Tamil non-Brahman movement
began to centre on political solutions. Ambedkar resisted this
trend, and did so with reference to the primary thesis of Marxism,
the priority of the ‘relations of production’. In a September 27,
1929 editorial in Bahishkrut Bharatentitled ‘First the Pinnacle,
then the Base’, he wrote that ‘if Lenin had been born in India, he
would have first annihilated casteism and untouchability and with-
out that he would not have brought forward the idea of revolu-
tion’. This ‘base-superstructure’ imagery was turned upside down
in a major editorial in Janata:


The base is not the building. On the basis of the economic relations a
building is erected of religious, social and political institutions. This
building has just as much reality as the base. If we want to change the
base, then first the building that has been constructed on it has to be
knocked down...if we want to change the economic relations of society,

256 Buddhism in India

Free download pdf