Resources for all concerned with culture of authoritarianism in society, banalisation of communalism, (also chauvinism, parochialism and identity politics) rise of the far right in India (and with occasional information on other countries of South Asia and beyond)
What makes Indian vegetarians different from Westerners who have given up meat?
In the West, it’s an act of rebellion. In India, it’s largely driven by conformity to traditional social norms.
Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters
To the world, India is often known as the land of
Gandhi, spiritualism, and yoga – three sets of beliefs and practices
closely associated with some form of vegetarianism. They have played a
role in creating the widely held assumption that Indians are
vegetarians.
Though India has the largest population of vegetarians worldwide, it is a predominantly meat-eating nation.
Nevertheless, vegetarianism is both a powerful norm, and an important
performance, both of which are central to a person’s claim to high
status in the largely caste-based Indian worldview. As a desired
attribute of so-called upper caste groups, vegetarian norms are so
desirable that they enforce periodic ritual abstinence even among
frequent meat eaters.
Vegetarianism
is also present in several societies outside India, especially in the
West where a small but increasing number of people aspire to live
without consuming meat. The roots of vegetarianism both in India and in
the West lie in a comparable time period. Vegetarianism started becoming
an aspired value in the South Asian region around the seventh century
BCE in Hindu scriptures, and a few centuries later in Jain and Buddhist
texts and practices.
In Europe, the earliest mention of
the virtues of vegetarianism is found in the works of the Greek
philosopher Pythagoras (sixth century BCE), who propagated a meatless
diet. In fact, vegetarians in Europe were called Pythagoreans until the
founding of The Vegetarian Society in Ramsgate, England in 1847, and the
American Vegetarian Society in New York City in 1850. However,
similarities between Indian and western vegetarianism end here. While
vegetarianism has been popular in India for a much longer period than in
the West, the more important difference is that vegetarianism is led
by, and leads to, very different worldviews in both places.
West: Vegetarianism for social justice
Although
19th century vegetarianism in Britain and the US was rooted in the
Bible Christian Church, it has evolved in these two countries primarily
through secular social movements. Four broad values have driven these
movements: ethics and morality, environmental concerns, animal rights,
and health and food safety. Barring the last one, the first three
concerns are comparatively altruistic, and oriented towards a shared
public good. Participants in vegetarian social movements transform
themselves both in thought and behaviour, by changing not only their
belief about food but also everyday consumption patterns. This is an
extraordinary transformation because eating habits are one of the most
resilient to change, especially those that involve excluding previously
consumed food items completely.
In the West, to be a
vegetarian is also to be against the general norms about food – it is
often seen as a rebellious act opposed to long-standing cultural norms
and expectations. Therefore, vegetarianism in the West is a lifestyle
that involves a deep commitment to self-transformation, breaking away
from everyday dietary preferences, going against the forces of
socialisation, and rebelling against cultural norms – all for the sake
of newly discovered ethics and concerns.
There is an
interesting spillover of these broad concerns when participants of
vegetarian movements are often advocates in other campaigns – such as
anti war, anti pollution, anti nuclear, and anti corporate movements. In
effect, vegetarianism in the West is part of the broader platform of
social justice from which various ethical, humanist, and egalitarian
movements emerge and evolve. A person in the West becomes a vegetarian
through a deliberate process, by questioning received knowledge about
consumption, and by painfully transforming one’s day-to-day behaviour.
Therefore, a vegetarian individual in the West is most likely to be a
progressive figure oriented towards broader ethics of social justice.
Brahmanism and vegetarianism in India
In
contrast, vegetarianism in contemporary India displays an arguable
continuity with dietary traditions and beliefs central to Brahmanism and
the caste system where communities deemed to be upper caste, barring a
few, maintain vegetarianism and the so-called lower castes are free of
such restrictions.
Vegetarianism evolved in modern India
through two pathways. The first is through conformity with Brahmanism
and caste sensibilities, especially visible within the traditionally
vegetarian upper castes. The second involves the adoption of
vegetarianism through the influence of myriad religo-spiritual cults,
headed by gurus, which have mushroomed across India over the past few
decades. While some of these cults are standalone institutions with only
local appeal, others have greater influence based on their franchisee
business models that allows them to be present across several regions.
Cable TV and social media have added to the outreach of these cults and
their influence.
Such cults purportedly facilitate the
elevation of ordinary mortals to salvation-ready entities through a set
of rituals that often includes vegetarianism. While their followers
could belong to any caste, they are especially appealing to the
so-called lower caste communities that aspire to climb the caste
hierarchy through the well-known process of Sanskritisation. Thus
vegetarianism becomes an attractive mechanism for upward social mobility
in a rigid caste hierarchy. Although these neo-vegetarians follow an
innovative path by changing their dietary preferences, the fact that
they follow traditionally established Brahminical practices undermines
the spirit of innovation. Vegetarianism in modern India is thus largely
driven by conformity to traditional social norms above any other
motivation. The many shades of being vegetarian in India: a popular forward on social media.
India: Vegetarianism without social justice
Traditional
Indian vegetarianism is also unique in relation to ethical and moral
concerns. Although Brahminical vegetarianism is rooted in the ethics of
animal welfare, the absence of any restriction on milk products makes it
substantively different from animal welfare concerns in the West. In
fact, the vegetarian diet in India places a premium on milk and milk
products such as cheese, butter and yogurt, and this has opened the
doors for the industrial use of animals unquestioningly. Thus, the
concern for animal welfare among Indian vegetarians is much weaker than
in the West. Finally, the discourse of vegetarianism is so completely
monopolised by the notions of ritual purity and pollution that concerns
for the environment and food safety have almost no space on the agenda.
This
brings us to the question: what kind of a person is the Indian
vegetarian individual? A traditionally vegetarian person in India is the
opposite of all that her counterpart in the West is. For one, a person
is largely born into vegetarianism in India. The consumptive life of a
vegetarian in India is based on the complete acceptance of received
knowledge about food taboos especially meat. Therefore being a
vegetarian in India is not as deliberate as in the West, but is mainly
about reproducing everyday norms. Couple this uncritical norm
reproduction with the strong connections that vegetarianism has with
Brahminism and caste sensibilities to see how vegetarianism is central
to making or maintaining boundaries in an unequal society. For all
practical purposes, vegetarianism in India is about maintaining the
caste system, as well as about reinforcing perceptions of superiority
and inferiority of caste based groups, based on the avoidance of meat.
While
a vegetarian American might treat the food preferences of a meat eater
with harmless contempt, in India a vegetarian’s scorn for meat-based
diets and meat-eating individuals has real consequences. This takes
place through social distancing and exclusion based on the notions of
ritual purity or pollution that are inherent to the caste system. The
vertical nature of caste-based society in India ensures that
vegetarianism is not simply a food preference, but a pathway that shapes
one’s life outcomes through social or material rewards and punishments.
In other words, vegetarianism in India is as much about the maintenance
of social inequality, than it is about anything else. Thus, a common
vegetarian individual in India is most likely a conservative figure
generally detached from the broad ideas of social egalitarianism, and
social justice. Aseem Hasnain teaches sociology and
Abhilasha Srivastava teaches economics and interdisciplinary courses at
Bridgewater State University, Massachusetts.