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1 Beyond Friend-Enemy Patterns Towards a Non-Violent Freedom Struggle of Dalits and Tribals in India This article was published in Vidyajyoti - Journal of Theological Reflection 76, no. 9 (September 2012). Our global village witnesses various forms of extremism and terrorism every day. Because of the impacts of media and communication violence is more and more globalized. Very often we are terrified with new threats of war and mass destruction. The more we advance in science and technology, the more horrifying become the weapons of warfare. However, if we observe the sequence of violent attacks very closely, be it local or global, there seems to be a friend-enemy pattern underlying them. Violence breaks out almost always from antagonism rooted in enmity and hatred towards the other. At this juncture, this paper attempts to unearth the anthropological roots of this pattern from the perspective of the mimetic theory of René Girard, one of the leading anthropologists of our times. From this approach it analyzes the logic and ethic of retaliation and defence, with a special reference to the politics of identity. And finally, it suggests the non-violent means of forgiveness and reconciliation as the only way to come out of this pattern which leads to mimetic cycle of violence. Against this background, the need for a non-violent freedom struggle of the Dalits and Tribals, in the Indian context is also emphasized. Hence it has three parts. 1. Mimetic theory 1.1 Mimetic Desire 1.2 Scapegoat Mechanism 1.3 Mimetic and Violent Contagion 1.4 The Biblical Difference 2. War of Retaliation and Defence 2.1 Moral Order and Violence 2.2 Identity Politics of Antagonism 3. Transcending Friend-Enemy Patterns 3.1 The Poor and the Non-Poor 3.2 The Dalits and the Other Castes 3.3 The State and the Tribals 3.4 Nature and Humankind 3.5 Love and Justice

Beyond Friend-Enemy Patterns: Towards a Non-Violent Freedom Struggle of Dalits and Tribals in India

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Our global village witnesses various forms of extremism and terrorism every day. Because of the impacts of media and communication violence is more and more globalized. Very often we are terrified with new threats of war and mass destruction. The more we advance in science and technology, the more horrifying become the weapons of warfare. However, if we observe the sequence of violent attacks very closely, be it local or global, there seems to be a friend-enemy pattern underlying them. Violence breaks out almost always from antagonism rooted in enmity and hatred towards the other. At this juncture, this paper attempts to unearth the anthropological roots of this pattern from the perspective of the mimetic theory of René Girard, one of the leading anthropologists of our times. From this approach it analyzes the logic and ethic of retaliation and defence, with a special reference to the politics of identity. And finally, it suggests the non-violent means of forgiveness and reconciliation as the only way to come out of this pattern which leads to mimetic cycle of violence. Against this background, the need for a non-violent freedom struggle of the Dalits and Tribals, in the Indian context is also emphasized.

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    Beyond Friend-Enemy Patterns

    Towards a Non-Violent Freedom Struggle of Dalits and Tribals in India

    This article was published in Vidyajyoti - Journal of Theological Reflection 76, no. 9 (September 2012).

    Our global village witnesses various forms of extremism and terrorism every day. Because of

    the impacts of media and communication violence is more and more globalized. Very often we

    are terrified with new threats of war and mass destruction. The more we advance in science and

    technology, the more horrifying become the weapons of warfare. However, if we observe the

    sequence of violent attacks very closely, be it local or global, there seems to be a friend-enemy

    pattern underlying them. Violence breaks out almost always from antagonism rooted in enmity

    and hatred towards the other. At this juncture, this paper attempts to unearth the

    anthropological roots of this pattern from the perspective of the mimetic theory of Ren Girard,

    one of the leading anthropologists of our times. From this approach it analyzes the logic and

    ethic of retaliation and defence, with a special reference to the politics of identity. And finally,

    it suggests the non-violent means of forgiveness and reconciliation as the only way to come out

    of this pattern which leads to mimetic cycle of violence. Against this background, the need for

    a non-violent freedom struggle of the Dalits and Tribals, in the Indian context is also

    emphasized. Hence it has three parts.

    1. Mimetic theory

    1.1 Mimetic Desire

    1.2 Scapegoat Mechanism

    1.3 Mimetic and Violent Contagion

    1.4 The Biblical Difference

    2. War of Retaliation and Defence

    2.1 Moral Order and Violence

    2.2 Identity Politics of Antagonism

    3. Transcending Friend-Enemy Patterns

    3.1 The Poor and the Non-Poor

    3.2 The Dalits and the Other Castes

    3.3 The State and the Tribals

    3.4 Nature and Humankind

    3.5 Love and Justice

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    1. Mimetic Theory

    The word mimetic comes from the Greek word, mimesis which refers to mimic or imitate. This

    theory suggests that human beings are basically mimetic. Consciously and unconsciously they

    imitate their neighbours whose proximity is the source and attraction of their imitation. This

    imitation can be positive as well as negative. And most often it turns to be negative, because

    ones neighbour not only becomes the model, but also the rival. This mimetic rivalry thus leads

    to violence among the members of the society. And in order to prevent societies from total

    disintegration, there emerges a mechanism that solves the crisis by first identifying somebody,

    guilty of poisoning the community and therefore being responsible for the disorder in the

    society; and then that person is expelled or killed, which in turn brings order back into the

    society. And therefore, the victim who is first demonized is later on divinized. This pattern of

    single victim mechanism underlies the very origin of religion and culture which are born out of

    this collective violence and sacrificial murder. This is the typical trend running across in all the

    mythical texts. Nonetheless, it is the Jewish-Christian Bible that finally exposes the deception

    of this mechanism. The Biblical texts do not offer different kind of stories other than the myths.

    They too tell the same type of stories of collective violence and murder. What distinguishes

    them from the myths is the change in perspective. The mythical stories justify the perspectives

    of the persecutors whereas the biblical texts challenge them. The myths deceive the innocence

    of the victims and the guilt of the mob. On the contrary the Biblical texts reveal both of them.

    And this theory can be explained in four parts.

    1.1 Mimetic Desire

    Girard looks at human nature and relationships in terms of desire that is learned and shaped by

    the desires of others. One is drawn from as well as driven by this desire. He or she desires not

    only the object the other desires, but also desires it in the same way the other does. And he

    therefore calls it mimetic desire1. And to emphasize this connection between desire and

    imitation Girard uses the Greek word for imitation: mimesis.2 He distinguishes between human

    beings and animals from the perspective of mimesis and also explains the greater danger among

    the human beings because of their mimetic nature.

    We are competitive rather than aggressive. In addition to the appetites we share with animals, we have a more

    problematic yearning that lacks any instinctual object: desire. We literally do not know what to desire and, in

    order to find out, we watch the people we admire: we imitate their desires. Both models and imitators of the

    same desire inevitably desire the same object and become rivals. Their rival desires literally feed on one

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    another: the imitator becomes the model of his model, and the model the imitator of his imitator. Unlike

    animal rivalries, these imitative or mimetic rivalries can become so intense and contagious that not only do

    they lead to murder but they also spread, mimetically, to entire communities. They probably would have

    annihilated our species if something had not prevented this outcome.3

    And what is that which prevented the communities from self-destruction? It is the scapegoat

    mechanism that saved and is still, to some extent, saving humankind form calamities due to the

    excessive rivalries among the human persons.

    1.2 Scapegoat Mechanism

    Tracing back its origin to the archaic societies, Girard explains its function at two levels. First

    there is a situation of crisis or disaster in the society mainly because of envy and rivalry among

    its members. But, instead of facing or finding out the real cause for the problem, somebody is

    identified to be the cause for the disaster. And secondly that person is expelled or killed, which

    suddenly brings harmony and peace into the community. However, this peace does not last for

    long, because there are always new desires and new rivalries. And therefore, there is always

    need for more and more scapegoats -later on ritual sacrifices- in order to establish order and

    peace in the society. And Girard argues:

    The persecutors dont know that their sudden harmony, like their previous discord, is the work of contagious imitation. They believe they have on their hands a dangerous person, someone evil, of whom they must rid the

    community. What could be more sincere than their hatred? Thus the mimetic ganging up of all against one, or

    the single victim mechanism, has the amazing but logically explicable property of restoring calm to a

    community so disturbed an instant earlier that nothing appeared capable of calming it down.4

    And Girard illustrates the example of the sudden unity between Pilate and Herod, which was

    brought about by the common enemy in Jesus. Though Herod and Pilate had been enemies

    before, they were reconciled that same day (of crucifixion) (Lk 23:12). However, this

    mechanism was not the invention of humankind; rather it was provided more or less readymade

    by the spontaneous course of human relations.5 It also signifies the automatic nature of its

    results, as well as the incomprehension and even the unconscious obedience of the

    participants.6 This mechanism is best expressed in the words of Caiaphas who said: You know

    nothing at all, nor do you take into account that it is expedient for you that one man die for the

    people, and that the whole nation not perish (Jn 11:49-50). It is a spontaneous and even

    charismatic reaction of a typical politician who seeks to quench the greater violence, caused by

    the destruction of social order, with a little violence of a single victim mechanism.7

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    1.3 Mimetic and Violent Contagion

    The passion narratives in the Gospels reveal the mimetic contagion that culminates in the

    crucifixion of Jesus. Peter is the most spectacular example of it. His love for Jesus is not in

    question; it is as sincere as it is profound. Yet as soon as the apostle is plunged into a crowd

    hostile to Jesus, he is unable to avoid imitating its hostility.8 Moreover the mimetic contagion

    is so powerful, that it does not even spare the rulers. Paradoxically, the sovereign powers

    submit themselves to the pressure of the crowd. Pilate is ruled by mimetic contagion. Though

    he wants to spare Jesus, for whatever reasons, he succumbs to the crowd. In like manner, in the

    case of John the Baptist, Herod also wants to save him, but he gives in to the pressure of the

    crowd (guests). And hence, it is like a plague that spreads all over. And all those who are

    involved in it are ignorant of this mechanism, because the persecutors are caught up in the

    logic of the representation of persecution from a persecutors point of view, and they cannot

    break away.9

    Being aware of this mimetic conflict, Jesus warns his disciples beforehand, you will all be

    scandalized because of me (Mk 14:27). He was more than sure that they will all succumb more

    or less to the contagion that seizes the crowd; they will all participate to some extent in the

    Passion on the side of the persecutors.10 And therefore neither the crowd nor the rulers were

    really aware of the meaning and significance of their collective action (murder). They just

    imitate one another. The best way not to be crucified is to do as everyone else and join in the

    crucifixion.11 This becomes all the more evident in Jesus prayer, Father, forgive them, for they

    do not know what they are doing (LK 23:34). And therefore the anthropology of mimetic

    contagion reveals the universal phenomenon of friend-enemy pattern transcending the anti-

    Semitic framework. For it is clearly mimetic contagion that explains the hatred of the masses

    for exceptional persons, such as Jesus and all the prophets; it is not a matter of ethnic or

    religious identity. The Gospels suggest that a mimetic process of rejection exists in all

    communities and not only among the Jews.12

    However, the Crucifixion reduces the mythology to powerlessness by exposing violent

    contagion, which is so effective in the myths that it prevents communities from ever finding

    out the truth, namely, the innocence of their victims.13 And the resurrection of Jesus empowers

    the disciples to understand this mechanism. And what distinguish the true resurrection from the

    false (of the myths) are not thematic differences in the drama preceding it, since all this is very

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    similar. The difference lies in the power of revelation14 that transforms the disciples. And the

    converted Peter affirms the ignorance of the persecutors of Jesus when he addresses the crowd

    in Jerusalem: Now, brothers, I know that you acted in ignorance, as did your leaders (Acts

    3:17). And what is revealed henceforth makes up the Biblical difference in opposition to the

    mythologies which falsify this mechanism to the detriment of victims and to the advantage of

    persecutors of the victim.15

    1.4 The Biblical Difference

    Girard observes these stereotypes of the scapegoat mechanism in all the myths he analyzed.

    And only in the biblical texts he finds them finally exposed. Since the Bible, unlike myths,

    reveals the deceptiveness of this mechanism, by just telling the truth, Christian revelation, for

    him, demystifies religion-in the archaic sense. The Gospels reverse the verdict of the crowd in

    myths: the victim is innocent, and the mob is guilty.16 The believing community of the

    disciples, constituted by the resurrection experience, identifies the divinity of Jesus not only

    with his resurrection but also with his victimhood on the cross. Therefore, the decisive point in

    this evolution is Christian revelation. It is a kind of divine expiation in which God through his

    Son could be seen as asking for forgiveness from human beings for having revealed the

    mechanisms of their violence so late.17

    And therefore from the perspective of Christian revelation, one can perceive the uninterrupted

    link between all cultures and epochs in terms of mimetic violence (cf. Mt 23:35), which

    threatens us today in the form of global terror.

    The root of all conflicts lies rather in competition, in mimetic rivalry between persons, countries, and cultures. Competition is the desire to imitate the other in order to obtain the same thing he or she has, by

    violence if necessary. Terrorism is undoubtedly connected to a world different than ours. But what gives rise to it is not this difference, which distances it most from us and renders it beyond our comprehension. What gives rise to it, on the contrary, is an exacerbated desire for convergence and resemblance. Human relations are

    essentially relations of imitation and competition. What is happening today is mimetic rivalry on a global

    scale.18

    2. War of Retaliation and Defence

    When we look at wars in general and those of the last centuries in particular, they are claimed

    to be waged either for the purpose of retaliation or of defence. The 11.09.2001 terrorist attacks

    were interpreted by the protagonists as a just response to the Western politico-economic

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    hegemony, concentrated in the political, economical and defence centres of the USA. Nine

    months later (01.06.2002), the then American President George W. Bush declared during a

    Graduation speech in Washington. If we wait for threats to fully materialise, we will have

    waited too long.In the world we have entered, the only path to safety is the path of action.

    And this nation will actAnd our security will require all Americans to be forward-looking

    and resolute, to be ready for pre-emptive action when necessary to defend our liberty and to

    defend our lives.19 This idea of pre-emptive war was also actualized in Iraq and Afghanistan

    under the banner, War against Terror. And it does not seem to be over till today. However,

    from the mimetic perspective, Girard portrays these attitudes to be the war of the defender. He

    maintains: Terrorism is the culmination of what Clausewitz identified and theorised about as

    the partisans war: its efficacy comes from the primacy of defending over attacking. It is

    always justified as being only a response to aggression, and is thus based on reciprocity. The

    attacker wants peace but the defender wants war.20 This becomes evident as we are facing

    today more and more threats to security and peace at the national and international level on the

    grounds of defence or retaliation. In the context of global terrorism, Charles Taylor also

    observes: The logic is we have been unfairly treated, so we can strike out. Unfair treatment is

    invoked by most terrorist movements today.21

    2.1 Moral Order and Violence

    Taylor also goes deep into the problem of violence and explores its roots in the very moral

    order on which modern democracy is founded. He explicates the paradox in our democratic

    order. The benign context is that all peoples have a right to their identity. Where something

    goes wrong and this picture cant be carried out, it is because there is some aggression by some

    against others. We cant live our identity fully on our territory, so were being prevented by

    those who stand in our way. They are the aggressors; hence, we are victims.22 Therefore this

    moral order itself promotes war in order to sustain or defend itself. Thus the war of defence

    continues. In this connection, the idea of collective security at the international level can also

    be reflected, because it claims to maintain peace among nations even with the use of force. And

    we should keep in mind, that when we moralise or rationalise the common good or order, it

    necessarily polarises between the good and the evil and it also justifies consequentially that the

    good has to be preserved and the evil to be expelled. And it even goes to the extent of

    demonizing the evil/enemy.23 This tendency has thus promoted and sustained friend-enemy

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    patterns in social and political relationships all through the centuries in almost all cultures and

    societies.

    2.2 Identity Politics of Antagonism

    Looking from a historical perspective, this pattern has its roots in the identity-politics of enmity

    and hatred. As we go back to the political development of various nationalities, we could

    identify a close link between the formations of identity, rooted in enmity with their immediate

    neighbours. It thus becomes their identity politics. As Samuel Huntington, in his work, Clash

    of Civilization argues, people use politics not just to advance their interests but also to define

    their identity. We know who we are only when we know who we are not and often only when

    we know whom we are against.24 To cite an example, let us consider M. S. Golwalker, one the

    founders of Hindu Nationalism, who defines the Indian identity in terms of Hindu identity. He

    claims:

    They (Muslims and Christians) have also developed a feeling of identification with the enemies of this land.

    They look to some foreign lands as their holy places. They call themselves Sheikhs and Syeds. Sheikhs and Syeds are certain clans in Arabia. How then did these people come to feel that they are their descendents? That

    is because they have cut off their ancestral national moorings of this land and mentally merged themselves

    with the aggressors. They still think that they have come here only to conquer and establish their kingdoms. So

    we see that it is not merely a case of change of faith, but a change even in national identity. What else is it, if

    not treason, to join the camp of the enemy leaving their mother-nation in the lurch?25

    No doubt, this text is calling for a spirit of inculturation. But, at the depth of the message one

    can find an antagonism towards other religions, especially Christians and Muslims. He not only

    identifies Hindu identity with Indian identity but also tries to establish it from the animosity

    against other faiths. And if ones identity is so rooted in enmity with and hatred towards the

    other, to preserve his or her identity means to be always inimical with those against whom

    ones identity is constituted. It therefore even tends to justify wars and violent bloodsheds as

    the struggle for the preservation of ones identity. And when this identity-politics is mixed up

    with religious beliefs, the tendency towards violence accelerates all the more. History has

    witnessed enough holy wars. And in India, starting form cricket match with/against Pakistan up

    to the Kargil war in 1999, one can see the antagonism between the Indians-mostly Hindus and

    the Pakistanis-mostly Muslims. And the problem of the wars of retaliation or of defence

    becomes more and more complex and acute as they are being invariably globalised. The crucial

    question therefore remains: How are we going to come out of this mimetic cycle of violence

    that always wins?26

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    In order to answer this critical question, we need to consider the biblical perspective of non-

    violence. Jesus seems to have been aware of the mimetic crisis among human persons. He

    forgave the perpetrators of violence against him not only because they did not know what they

    were doing, but he also wanted to reconcile the entire humanity to the Father (cf. Rom 5:11)

    and we have in turn received the ministry of reconciliation from God (cf. 2 Cor 5:18). What

    does it mean in the age of global terror? Can we really forgive those who killed our beloved

    ones? Can we love those who have oppressed us for centuries? It is very difficult to answer

    these questions on either side. However, we have seen good many examples in the past, which

    unequivocally confirm the fact that it is painfully possible to forgive ones enemies.

    3. Transcending Friend-Enemy Patterns

    Ivan Illich, a post-modern mystic, exalts the example of the Good Samaritan in the Gospel of

    Luke, who overcomes the political enmity fostered by religion and culture. He argues:

    Perhaps the only way we could recapture it today would be to imagine the Samaritan as a

    Palestinian ministering to a wounded Jew. He is someone who not only goes outside his ethnic

    preference for taking care of his own kind, but who commits a kind of treason by caring for his

    enemy. In so doing, he exercises a freedom of choice, whose radical novelty has often been

    overlooked.27 He was not convinced by the conventional friend-enemy pattern of his society

    and could therefore go beyond it and see a kind of wounded humanity in the Jew, lying half-

    dead on the roadside, whom he cared for and whom he was expected by the culture and

    religion to hate. And therefore, the biblical invitation to forgive our enemies is not only a

    challenge but also the only hope for the survival of the humankind threatened with nuclear and

    biological weapons.

    And Wolfgang Palaver also brings into light the universality of this conventional friend-enemy

    pattern in the context of anti-Semitic readings of the scriptural texts when he articulates the

    nuances of the love command of Jesus in the Gospel of Mathew. You have heard that it was

    said, You shall love your neighbour and hate your enemy. But I say to you, Love your

    enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be children of your Father in

    heaven (Mt 5:43-45). He then argues:

    Often this passage was read in order to prove that Christianity broke completely with its Jewish past, a

    parochialism that had to give way to universalism. Such an anti-Semitic reading, however, does not do justice

    to the biblical text. Universalism did not begin with Christianity but with the Jewish prophets. The saying

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    against which Jesus puts the exhortation to love our enemies can only partly be found in the Old Testament. In

    Lev 19:18 we can find the commandment to love the neighbour but there is no Old Testament command to

    hate your enemy. What Jesus quotes has to be understood in a much broader way. It is a saying that refers to

    humanitys affinity to parochial altruism and general folk wisdom going along with it. Jesus antithesis poses a new standard for obedience to God, not in opposition to the Torah but over against conventional attitudes and

    interpretations of the Torah.28

    3.1 The Poor and the Non-Poor

    In order to overcome this conventional pattern in the context of social transformation, Michael

    Amaladoss suggests an inclusive approach which would combine the option for the poor as

    well as the option for the non-poor.29 The non-poor are not only the rich and powerful, but

    also the middleclass intellectuals and the spiritual leaders who can actively contribute to the

    transformation of the society.30 For, he believes: We cannot build up a community without

    involving everyone. We cannot struggle against the exclusion of some (the poor) by excluding

    others (the non-poor). We must include everyone in the struggle and the constructive efforts

    that follow.31 And even in the struggle against various forms of oppression and exclusion he

    suggests that the means of non-violence would accomplish the desired goals more probably and

    peacefully than the violent ones that polarise the people and provoke more and more

    antagonism among them. And the non-violent action, on the contrary, empowers the poor and

    challenges the consciences of the rich and the powerful. Taking for granted that at least most of

    the rich and the powerful, individually and as a group, are not evil, it makes them reflect.32 At

    the same time, it is not a question of appealing to the rich to be generous and charitable

    towards the poor. ...It is a demand for justice. It may have to start with confrontation, but will

    have to lead to a dialogue, negotiation, persuasion, compromise, execution and slow

    progress.33 And I do believe, this way of bridging the poles -between the powerful and the

    powerless- by means of non-violent and inclusive efforts would result in relatively more

    enduring harmony and peace.

    3.2 The Dalits and the Other Castes

    Amaladoss also pinpoints on the growing antagonism between the Dalits and the dominant

    castes in India. It tends to undermine the fact that the socio-political liberation of the Dalits

    depends on the ideological liberation of the dominant castes. One cannot be liberated without

    the other. When we look at the liberation of Dalits from this holistic perspective, it would pave

    ways and means that could reduce the heat of antagonism between the Dalits and the other

    castes and promote mutual trust and collaboration between the two groups. For, he believes,

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    without changing the views on the humans and social groups of the dominant castes we

    cannot really bring about social equality in the community. Such an attempt at the conversion

    of the non-Dalit may involve a strong self-assertion by the Dalits and a non-violent struggle to

    change the mind-set of everyone.34 After all, the rights of the Dalits are precisely human rights

    and hence we need a common platform that could unite diverse communities in creating a

    better world for all to live.

    And to move further in this direction we need to overcome the temptation of identifying people

    with evil structures, because the relationship between the evil and the evil-doer is contingent

    and it very often leads to the demonization of human persons under the grounds of retribution

    and retaliation. On the contrary, history has provided us with ample examples to prove that

    human beings are capable of overcoming the evil within and outside. When we understand the

    anthropological roots of violence -in terms of mimesis- it could also liberate us from the

    tendency to scapegoat or demonize men and women who happen to do evil, as they are caught

    up in the mimetic cycle or contagion of violence.

    This mimesis also facilitates us to understand the current trends of the Dalit Movements in

    India, which try to create a renewed sense of consciousness among the Dalits about their

    subordinate condition in socio-politico-economic-religious life. The formation of Dalit identity

    is often fostered by a kind of animosity against those of the other castes. The members of the

    dominant castes are demonized and therefore, the self-conscious Dalits very often assert, that

    they have to fight against and win them over. Though we can understand the historical reason

    behind this tendency of retaliation, in reality this approach creates more and more antagonism

    between the Dalits and the non-Dalits. And in this context, M. S. S. Pandian attempts to

    redefine the goal and path of Dalit politics.

    Our problem is not one of becoming owners of wealth or richer or crypto-Brahmin. To become owners, we

    need several workers. Likewise, to become rich, we need several poor. To become a crypto-Brahmin one needs

    a series of lower castes including the Dalits. That is why we do not need the order of domination and

    subordination. Only when the Dalit protest culture destroys this order, we shall arrive at the consciousness that

    one need not either be a crypto-Brahmin or a drudging Dalit. [Instead] let us be human beings We call those who are not bound by domination and subordination as human beings.35

    The desire for power as a solution to the powerlessness of the Dalits will only reinforce the

    mimetic rivalry leading to violence between those who are now in power and the Dalits who

    want to overthrow them by climbing up in the power ladder. And our goal is not a reversal of

    the present situation where those who are now poor will dominate and those who are rich today

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    will become poor. This will be the victory of one group over another. What we are looking

    forward to is a new community of justice, equality and peace.36

    Pedro Aruppe, the former Superior General of the Jesuits, draws our attention to the futility of

    violence as he highlights the intrinsic goodness of the human. And he also cautions us against

    the justification of violence for the sake of some good.

    In the very core of his being, man feels an impulse towards good, towards progress. He anxiously seeks his

    own happinessThe human person who pursues evil for the sake of evil does not exist. If man turns to war and violence it is because they seem to be necessary means for arriving at a truly human, just and happy,

    society. But is war the remedy for mans problems and tensions? History shows that neither war nor violent revolution have ever solved mans problem; nor will they ever. They are born of hatred and though hatred harms, it does not healThe antidote to hatred is what we call love, and the effect of love is the counter-sign of war: peace.37

    3.3 The State and the Tribals

    In this context, we also need to reflect on the growing tension and violence between the Indian

    State founded on the modern idea of democracy and the Maoists who are mostly Tribals and

    extremely poor. Though India has not waged any actual war against its neighbours/enemies in

    the last fourty years, Indian soil has been witnessing much more violence in the forms of

    Maoism and Terrorism during the past twenty years, than at the time of the freedom struggle

    against the imperial regime of the British. Notwithstanding all the causes for these types of

    terrorist violence, they exhibit a typical friend-enemy pattern of mimetic violence. According

    to many political scientists, one of the fundamental reasons for violent revolt, especially in the

    developing countries, is that the policies of the State that is very often caught up in the mimetic

    contagion of power politics and the mode of its governance, caught up in the mimetic

    contagion of corruption and criminality result in severe poverty and unemployment which in

    turn motivate and attract more and more young people towards terrorist organisations which

    demonize the State and unleash violent attacks against innocent people. Who are these innocent

    people? In my opinion, they not only constitute the common people in public places but also

    the police and military personnel who have to fight in defence of the State which is again ruled

    by the mimetic contagion of the modern idea of development. So in either side the victims are

    the innocent people who are caught up in the mimetic cycle of violence between the State and

    the Maoists.

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    The very moral nature of the democratic order, as Taylor has pointed out, polarizes between the

    good and the evil. It views the Tribals who resort to violence in the struggle for their

    fundamental rights, as enemies of the development and progress, in short, enemies of

    democracy itself. And recent examples show that even the non-violent struggles of various

    groups of people are suppressed with greater and more sophisticated military forces. And in

    this context, Amaladoss articulates the relationship between the terrorist violence and the State

    violence: The powerful, often backed up by military means will not hesitate to impose order

    in their favour. In such a situation the poor will resort to terrorist violence, as we are seeing in

    many parts of the world today. Terrorism provides an excuse for greater military oppression. In

    an era of globalisation both military might and terrorist revolt tend to take international

    dimensions.38 And at this juncture, it may also be fitting to reflect on the notion of

    development as freedom by Amartya Sen.39 He defines the quality of and criteria for

    development in terms of freedom which will be manifested in various spheres of life. And

    democracy has to ensure more public debates and discussions on the need and types of

    developmental process which would bring down the antagonism between the State and the so-

    called Maoists, in this case, the Tribals who have lost their very identity and livelihood because

    of the nature and kind of the developmental process undertaken by the State.

    3.4 Nature and Humankind

    As we go deep into the problem of Maoism, mostly affecting the central India where more than

    30 millions of Tribals live in the interior forests, social critic Arundhati Roy indicates the

    inseparable relationship between the violence done to the nature in the name of development

    and the violence done by the Maoists.40 The exploitation of the natural resources mostly for the

    sake of the profit of the big corporate capitalists, intermediated by the State, results in the

    deprivation of the fundamental rights of the Tribals. Though (their) violence can be justified

    under no circumstances, it calls us for a deeper and critical reflection on the developmental

    models which are very often inherited or blindly imitated from the developed countries. And

    ever since the Tsunami in 2004, the ecologists assert more emphatically and warn us against

    the reciprocity between the violence/exploitation against the rhythm of the nature and the

    violent reactions of the earth in terms of natural catastrophes, i.e. Tsunamis and volcanoes.

    However, we need not demonize the nature in the sense that it retaliates for the offences done

    to it by the human. Rather it is the way nature is made or functions. The human action and the

    natural re-action (of the nature) are therefore mimetic and reciprocal. And it thus throws light

  • 13

    into the interrelationship between the violence among human beings and the violence against

    nature by the human. Mimesis is therefore not confined to the human relationships and it also

    governs the cosmic order.41 Hence we see the close link between the ecological degradation

    and the deterioration of human relationships. It therefore demands a collective responsibility on

    our part to evolve developmental models and life-styles which would make us more and more

    non-violent to nature as well as to humankind.

    3.5 Love and Justice

    History has witnessed that non-violence, though extremely difficult, can be the only

    appropriate way -both from the ethical and practical point of views- to respond to the problem

    of violence and to bring about peace and harmony. And the response of non-violence cannot be

    possible without the process of forgiveness and reconciliation. And to become more and more

    aware of the mimetic contagion, operative in and around us and also rooted in friend-enemy

    patterns could take us one step ahead in this direction of non-violence. At this juncture, John

    Paul II invites us to rise to the Civilization of love. He believes: Christians know that love is

    the reason for Gods entering into relationship with man. And it is love which he awaits as

    mans response. Consequently, love is also the loftiest and most noble form of relationship

    possible between human beings. Love must thus enliven every sector of human life and extend

    to the international order. Only a humanity in which there reigns the civilization of love will

    be able to enjoy authentic and lasting peace.42

    And very often in the fight against different forms of social injustice there is a tendency to

    dichotomize love and justice, under the assumption that love tends to be passive and inactive

    whereas justice ensures prompt action and effective change. This polarization, however, does

    not help us arrive at a holistic model for freedom struggle. We need to evolve a more integral

    approach combining these two aspects. The Indian concepts of ahimsa and karuna do not

    connote non-violence in a passive sense. They aim more at active engagement of loving and

    being merciful to all beings, in other words, to promote the wellbeing of the entire cosmos-

    lokasamgraha. And any non-violent liberation struggle should take into account the

    complementary and inextricable relationship between love and justice. Love makes justice

    more human and justice makes love whole/complete. And in our struggle towards harmony and

    peace we have to overcome their separation. And John Paul II reiterates: The full truth about

    man makes it possible to move beyond a contractualistic vision of justice, which is a

  • 14

    reductionist vision, and to open up also for justice the new horizon of solidarity and love. By

    itself justice is not enough. Indeed, it can even betray itself, unless it is open to that deeper

    power of love.43 Justice requires that everyone should be able to enjoy their own goods and

    rights; this can be considered the minimum measure of love.44 And we also have to keep in

    mind that absolute justice is the fruit of moralization or rationalization and therefore it is

    limited. For, it may lead to and even justify retribution and retaliation. On the contrary, love

    can transcend hatred and lead us towards peace and harmony, the fruits of forgiveness and

    reconciliation, which facilitate our liberation from the mimetic cycle of violence rooted in the

    friend-enemy patterns. And John Paul II, very much aware of the political significance of the

    Eucharist that is capable of liberating us from enmity and hatred, concludes:

    In the light of faith, solidarity seeks to go beyond itself, to take on the specifically Christian dimension of total

    gratuity, forgiveness and reconciliation. One's neighbour is then not only a human being with his or her own

    rights and a fundamental equality with everyone else, but becomes the living image of God the Father,

    redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ and placed under the permanent action of the Holy Spirit. One's

    neighbour must therefore be loved, even if an enemy, with the same love with which the Lord loves him or

    her; and for that person's sake one must be ready for sacrifice, even the ultimate one: to lay down one's life for

    the brethren (cf. 1 Jn 3:16) (Sollicitudo rei socialis No. 40).

    Conclusion

    In the light of the mimetic theory, we can better understand the anthropological roots of

    mimetic violence which is threatening the world today. However, the theory of mimesis also

    provides us with hope. It reminds us once again that we are basically mimetic and are therefore

    capable of imitating non-rival models that renounce all forms of violence and struggle for the

    cause of truth and love through the means of non-violence. Hence the choice is crucial and

    totally ours. Are we going to respond to the problem of violence in the same language? Or are

    we going to imitate the models of non-violence and work for peace and harmony? To quench

    greater violence with the help of a little violence is the tendency that has its roots in the

    scapegoat mechanism. Only the non-violent struggles against violence itself, no matter who

    does it, can reveal the deceptive nature of violence that pretends to bring peace. And they alone

    have the power to render it meaningless and inoperative.

    For if you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Do not even the tax

    collectors do as much? And if you save your greetings for your brother, are you

    doing anything exceptional? Do not even the Gentiles do as much? You must therefore

    set no bounds to your love, just as your heavenly Father sets none to his.

    (Mt 5:46-48)

  • 15

    Notes

    1 Ren Girard, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, trans. James G. Williams (New York: Orbis Books, 2001), 10.

    2 See Wolfgang Palaver, On Violence: A Mimetic Perspective, http://www.uibk.ac.at/theol/leseraum/texte/137.html.

    3 Girard, Violence and Religion: Cause or Effect?, The Hedgehog Review 6/1 (Spring 2004): 9-10.

    4 Girard, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, 36.

    5 Girard, Violence and Religion: Cause or Effect?, 20.

    6 Girard, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, 28.

    7 Girard, The Scapegoat, trans. Yvonne Freccero (London: The Athlone Press, 1986), 113.

    8 Girard, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, 19.

    9 Girard, The Scapegoat, 39.

    10 Girard, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, 24.

    11 Girard, The Scapegoat, 155.

    12 Girard, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, 26.

    13 Ibid., 138.

    14 Ibid., 135.

    15 Ibid., 137.

    16 Girard, Violence and Religion: Cause or Effect?, 15.

    17 Girard, Battling to the End: Conversations with Benot Chantre, trans. Mary Baker (Michigan: Michigan State

    University Press, 2010), ix-x.

    18 Girard and Henri Tincq, What Is Happening Today Is Mimetic Rivalry on a Global Scale, Interview with

    Henri Tincq, South Central Review 19 (2/3) (2002): 22.

    19 George W. Bush, Graduation Speech at the 2002 Graduation Exercise of the US Military Academy, 1 June

    (2002), http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/06/20020601-3.html.

    20 Girard, Battling to the End, 10, 15.

    21 Charles Taylor, Notes on the Sources of Violence: Perennial and Modern, in Beyond Violence: Religious

    Sources of Social Transformation in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, ed. James L. Heft, S.M., 30 (New York:

    Fordham University Press, 2004).

    22 Ibid., 29.

    23 Palaver, Collective Security: Opportunities and Problems from the Perspective of Catholic Social Teaching,

    in Peace in Europe - Peace in the World: Reconciliation, Creation and International Institutions, ed. Iustitia et

    Pax - sterreichische Kommission (Iustitia et Pax Dokumentation 4), 92 (Wien: Sdwind-Verlag, 2003).

    24 Samuel P Huntington, Clash of Civilization and the Remaking of World Order (New York: Simon & Schuster,

    1996), 21.

    25 M. S. Golwalker, Bunch of Thoughts (Bangalore: Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 1996), 125-6.

    26 Girard, Battling to the End, xvii.

    27 Ivan Illich, The Rivers North of the Future: The Testament of Ivan Illich as told to David Cayley (Toronto:

    House of Anansi Press, 2005), 50-51.

  • 16

    28 Palaver, Referat zum Thema: Parochial Altruism and Christian Universalism: On the Deep Difficulties to

    Create Solidarity without Outside Enemies, 9. International Conference "Bonds and Boundaries: New

    Perspectives on Justice and Culture", Kyoto, 18.03.2010 - 20.03.2010.

    29 Michael Amaladoss, An Option for the Non-Poor, in Negotiating Borders: Theological Explorations in the

    Global Era. Essays in Honour of Prof. Felix Wilfred, edited by Patrick Gnanapragasam and Elisabeth Schssler

    Fiorenza, 575 (Delhi: ISPCK, 2008).

    30 Ibid., 579.

    31 Ibid., 581.

    32 Ibid., 578.

    33 Ibid., 581.

    34 Ibid., 583.

    35 M.S.S. Pandian, Stepping Outside Histroy? New Dalit Writings From Tamilnadu, in Wages of Freedom: Fifty

    Years of the Indian Nation State, ed. Partha Chatterjee, 308 (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1998).

    36 Amaladoss, An Option for the Non-Poor, 579.

    37 Pedro Aruppe, A Planet to heal, (Rome: 1975), quoted by Michael Amaladoss, An Option for the Non-Poor,

    576.

    38 Amaladoss, An Option for the Non-Poor, 577-78.

    39 Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 4.

    40 See Arundhati Roy, Gandhi, but with guns: Part One, The Guardian, 27 March (2010). In this essay, she

    discusses the dark side of the Indian democracy that has made the tribal people refugees in their own land, by

    depriving them of the resources of their livelihood, i.e. lands, mountains, forests, rivers, valleys, etc. in the name

    of development and progress. And she also elaborates the history of their struggle towards dignity and peace.

    41 Raimon Panikkar asserts that reality is basically trinitarian, cosmotheandric. That is, the divine, the human and

    the cosmic are inextricably interrelated to each other and hence the three dimensions of reality.

    42 John Paul II, Message for the 2004 World Day of Peace, 10.

    http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/messages/peace/documents/hf_jp-ii_mes_20031216_xxxvii-world-day-for-

    peace_en.html.

    43 Ibid. 44 Cf. Saint Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I-II, q. 99, quoted in Compendium of The Social Doctrine of

    The Church. No. 391(Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Washington, D.C.: United States Conference of

    Catholic Bishops, 2009).