TOWARDS THE MILLENIUM
By: Dr. Moojan Momen
This article was prepared for publication in a newspaper
in Bangladesh. No further bibliographic information about this newspaper
is available, but the article also appeared at http://ireland.iol.ie/~isp/y2k
If we go back two hundred years in almost any of the world's cultures, we
find that society had at its core a religion. It was religion that was
the cohesive force within the society and it was religion that provided the
society with its morality and its vision. Reality itself was, for the
people of each society, constructed on a religious basis. For people
from the Christian West and the Islamic world, for example, the cosmos
consisted of an earthly plane, above which was the sky and stars and
beyond that was heaven, while below the earth was hell.
Religion was the source for the construction of reality and so everything
in the conceptual world of the individuals in that society was seen
through the lens of religion. It was not just that religion was the
ideology of the society, but that no other way of looking at the world
was conceivable. Thus all of the arts and literature of a society could do
nothing other than to reflect this religious view of the cosmos because
no other view was available.
This situation lasted until about two hundred years ago. Since then,
beginning in the West but spreading to every part of the world, there has
been a break-down in this traditional construction of reality. Beginning
at first in the West, other ways of seeing reality arose. Scientific
discoveries, at first in the realm of astronomy and later in the areas of
biology and physics arose to challenge the religious conceptualization
of reality. Starting with Copernicus and Galileo, astronomical findings
disproved the traditional religious cosmology. Then, in the nineteenth
century, the evolutionary ideas of Darwin questioned traditional religious
views of human development and the place of humanity in the cosmos.
Religions have traditionally considered that they have access to a
source of absolute truth. During this century, advances in physics have
challenged the whole concept that there is any access for human beings
to absolute truth; all the truth to which human beings have access is
relative truth. As these scientific discoveries progressed, so they
brought into being new ways of looking at the cosmos. Whereas religion
had previously been the only way of looking at the cosmos, now it was
also possible to look at the cosmos from a scientific and materialistic
viewpoint.
As these new ways of looking at the cosmos became more successful and
became the basis for enormous strides in scientific and technological
progress, so the traditional religious viewpoint became discredited at
the intellectual level and religion began to be discounted at the social
level. It ceased to be relevant to society. This situation gradually
spread, especially during this century, from the West to other parts of
the world. While religion continues at the personal level to be a source
for individual inspiration for many, it has gradually ceased to be of
importance as a source from which a society can create social policy and
build its social vision. Politicians and social administrators no longer
think in terms of religious principles when they are formulating policy or
trying to create answers to the social problems with which they are faced.
Human society, however, needs something at its centre to act as a focal
point and source of social vision. There needs to be some vision upon
which all the citizens of that society are agreed and which thus forms the
basis for social cohesion. We can call this central focus of a society its
ideology. Previously religion was the ideology of each society. During the
course of the twentieth century, religion has gradually been pushed aside
from this central role, as we have described above. This has led to a
vacuum at heart of society which a number of man-made ideologies have
attempted to fill. Most notably, these ideologies have included
nationalism, racism and communism. Each of these has held itself up to be
a suitable replacement for religion at the heart of society, creating a
vision around which the people can unite and a basis for political and
social policy. Because of the way in which these ideologies have replaced
religion at the heart of society, some have called them pseudo-religions.
In many countries where these ideologies have been rigorously applied,
they have indeed tried to take the place of religion even to the point of
trying to make the arts and literature subservient to the ideology.
From the West, these ideologies spread to other parts of the world during
the twentieth century and many have been attracted to them. In country
after country as the people have moved from being a traditional society
towards entering the modern world, the same process has occurred. Religion
has been displaced at the heart of society and one or other of these
ideologies has been adopted. Thus for example, many countries naturally
adopted a nationalistic ideology after they won their independence from
colonial rule. In many, after decades of nationalism produced no
improvement in the situation of the ordinary people of the country, they
have also tried socialism or communism for a time.
During the twentieth century, as well as the rise of these ideologies,
however, we have also witnessed their fall. During this century, these
ideologies have been seen to have become the source of great human misery.
In the West, for example, nationalism was the source of the first World
War that laid waste the continent of Europe and caused the Western
European powers to fall from their pre-eminent place among the nations of
the world. The second World War was caused by the racist ideology of Nazi
Germany and caused an even more wide-spread destruction in Europe, Asia
and the Pacific. And, more recently, in the last decade, we have witnessed
the fall of communism, leaving behind a devastated landscape of ruined
economies and polluted environments in Europe and Asia. In many other
parts of the world, also, people are wondering when these ideologies are
going to produce the improvements in the social condition of ordinary
people that they promised. Thus, these man-made ideologies that looked
so promising and held such sway earlier in the century have become
discredited.
And so at the end of the twentieth century, as we approach the Millennium,
we are in a very interesting situation where we have a vacuum at the
heart of many societies. Religion has been discarded decades ago and the
ideologies that took its place have become discredited. But without an
ideology to act as a centre and a cohesive force, society is in danger of
falling apart. And so people are desperately looking about for something
to fill this vacuum and act as the source of unity.
As we face the new Millennium, there appear to be three candidates that
present themselves as alternative ways forward from the present situation:
religious fundamentalism, free-market capitalism, and the adoption of a
new ideology.
Some have advocated that, with the failure of the modern man-made
ideologies, the answer is to return to the past situation in which
traditional religion was the central ideology of society. Most of the
failings of modern society (corruption, lack of sexual morality, crime,
drugs, etc.) would, they assert, be solved if religious standards are more
rigorously applied. This call for a return to religious fundamentals is
very appealing to many, particularly in those societies which had religion
as their social core until recently and so many of the older members of
the population can still look back with nostalgia at the certainties and
securities of traditional society. Unfortunately for those who advocate
this route, there are a number of problems with this pathway. First, it is
not possible to turn the clock back and re-create the situation of two
hundred years ago when religion was not only the ideology of a society but
no other ideology was even conceivable. Then, the religious construction
of reality was reality for all of the people. Once people have seen that
there are alternative realities and when they are using those alternative
realities for the technological improvements that they rely on for their
daily life, it is impossible to re-create the situation where there are no
alternative realities. Second, this programme fails to address the reason
that religion was rejected in the first place: the fact that it was no
longer seen to be relevant to the problems of the time nor in keeping
with the world-view presented by the modern world. Third, those societies
that have tried a return to a fundamentalist religious agenda, in Iran for
example, have not witnessed any great improvement either in the economic
fortunes of the ordinary people or even in the level of corruption in
society.
The economic theory which now predominates since the fall of communism is
free-market capitalism. Many countries have adopted it for their economic
basis. As a theory, however, it is not really capable of forming an
alternate social ideology since its is based on an individualistic
philosophy that is the very antithesis of all concepts of society. The
individualism that underlies free-market capitalism dictates that social
restrictions should be removed in order to allow the free operation of
market forces. This philosophy relies on the greed and ambition of the
individual as its motivating power. Some of its most ardent advocates have
even asserted that there is no such thing as society and there are only
individuals in competition with each other. Naturally it is impossible
to build any form of social cohesion on the basis of such a philosophy.
Indeed in those societies in which this type of philosophy has been most
actively applied have witnessed a loss of social cohesion and a resultant
rise in social disaffection and alienation as witnessed by increasing
vandalism, drug addiction, and gang warfare. Human beings are social
animals and need a sense of belonging to a social group. If their society
adopts an ideology that is destructive of this sense of social cohesion,
then those who are at the fringes of the society demonstrate their
disaffection by vandalism and crime and create their own social
groupings such as gangs.
The third of the three options open to people is to adopt a new way of
thinking that can provide an ideology for modern society. The requirements
for such an ideology would include: a need to think in global terms, a
need to transcend the differences in culture, nationality, religion and
social class that presently act as a divisive force in the world, and
the ability to give people a vision of a future direction that is both
cohesive and progressive. To fulfill such requirements, some people have
advocated a renewal or reform of the traditional religion of their
culture. They have proposed a re-interpretation of their religion in ways
that are relevant to the modern world. They focus for example on the
role of religion in ameliorating the condition of the poor and on
open-mindedness and tolerance towards other religions. Unfortunately
many
of these reformers disagree with each other on the exact path that they
should take in this process of reform. For the present writer, the
requirements for an ideology for the modern world are fulfilled in the
Baha'i Faith. First, it is a religion and so it is capable of inspiring
the individual and providing the individual with the spiritual
fulfillment
that religion has always provided. Second, it has, as its central social
principle the need for the peoples of the world to come together, to put
aside their differences and to unite in order to overcome the problems
that the world faces. Writing over one hundred years ago, Baha'u'llah
the founder of the Baha'i Faith, foresaw that the problems that humanity
faced could only be tackled at a global level. And so he called upon the
governments of the world to come together to agree to maintain the peace
of the world and to co-operate over the solution to the problems that
humanity faces. Since the time of Baha'u'llah, problems such as wars,
social conflicts, world poverty, and environmental pollution have
multiplied and become more intractable. It is difficult to see how the
problems that face the world today can be solved except along the lines
that Baha'u'llah has advocated. Thus the Baha'i Faith presents itself as
a religion and an ideology that can both act as a religion for the
individual and a progressive ideology for society. By acting as an
ideology for society, it provides a focal point of unity and social
cohesion. Beyond this, it addresses the problems that the world as a whole
faces and proposes solutions to these problems at the global level.
As we approach the Millennium, our thoughts are naturally turned towards
the future and we contemplate in what direction we would like to see
humanity going. Baha'is advocate that this direction should be that of
increasing unity, peace, and the spiritualisation of our society and our
world. Towards this goal. the Baha'i teachings contain a practical
programme which millions of Baha'is around the world are pursuing at the
present time. It is the hope of the present writer that others will join
the Baha'is in the pursuit of these goals.
©Copyright 1997, Dr. Moojan Momen
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