The Holy Cow
The Holy Cow
To a long list of measures such as the attacks on churches, fraudulent conversions in the ghar wapsi campaign, exhortations to Hindu women to produce at least four children in order to “protect” Hinduism, and continuing assaults and humiliation of Muslims, the development-focused Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has added the “holy cow” from its Hindutvavadi repertoire. On 3 March, the Maharashtra government got the presidential assent to its draconian bill prescribing harsh punishments not only for killing the cow and its progeny but also for just possessing their meat in any form. As a matter of fact, Maharashtra has always had prohibitions and restrictions on certain types of bovine meats.
The Maharashtra Animal Preservation Act, 1976 provided for a total ban on the slaughter of cows, including the male or female calf of a cow. In 1995, the BJP–Shiv Sena government had passed an amendment to this act including bulls and bullocks and buffalo calves, both male and female, in the ban list and sent it for the presidential assent. However, neither the subsequent central governments, including the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) at the centre nor the Congress-led governments in the state over the next 15 years pursued it. Now that the BJP has captured power both in the state and the centre, the bill had a cakewalk, despite its controversial and harsh provisions, and set in motion competition among BJP-ruled states, Haryana having already proposed making punishment for cow slaughter equal to that for killing a human being.
Apart from violation of fundamental democratic rights of people to eat what they want, such acts, it is scarcely realised, can invite a veritable economic disaster. The country where, of the 26 million children born each year, approximately 1.83 million die before their fifth birthday, where two Dalits are murdered every day, where thousands of farmers commit suicide every year, where on an average 130 people are killed yearly in communal violence, and millions suffer the intrinsic violence embedded in the state’s anti-people policies, how come the cow assumes such a desperate priority? When did the poor cow become a holy cow? While it is true that much of the ills we suffer stem from our much eulogised Constitution, but is this ban really constitutional? Is the stereotype of Hindu majority really valid when the fact remains that Hindus are nothing but a bunch of castes, which makes India a country of minorities.
Myth of the Holy Cow
Another prominent scholar, D D Kosambi wrote in his Ancient India (1965), why “a modern orthodox Hindu would place beef-eating on the same level as cannibalism, whereas Vedic Brahmins had fattened upon a steady diet of sacrificed beef.” Even Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, in his Religion and Society, admitted that in ancient times, meat was consumed by the Brahmins too and only under the influence of Buddhism, Jainism and Vaishnavism did the practice become discredited. Indeed, many other historians and scholars have testified that Hindus, particularly Brahmins customarily ate beef. It is only in the struggle against Buddhism for supremacy, as Ambedkar claims, that Brahmins strategically assimilated certain tenets of Buddhism by becoming zealous vegetarians and worshippers of the cow. Recently, Dwijendra Narayan Jha, a professor of history at the University of Delhi, has written a full-length book titledThe Myth of the Holy Cow throwing light on the beef-eating habits of ancient Hindus, Buddhists and even early Jains. Needless to say, he has to move under police protection from threatening Hindu zealots.
Obnoxious Despotism
Ignoring the will of this vast majority, 24 states/union territories have strict laws banning the killing of cattle, which makes it difficult for households and restaurants to source, store or serve beef legally. In 2012, in protest against the ban on beef, Dalit students of the Osmania University, Hyderabad, asserted their culinary rights in public and made a political statement of the dietary habits of Dalits and Muslims by cooking and eating beef biryani on campus. I was to preside over the function but could not. It was expectedly attacked by the Hindutvavadi goons.
Economic Idiocy
The veneration of the cow comes from its utility in the ancient and medieval agricultural economies and did not have much to do with religion. Even Muslim rulers like Babar, Hyder Ali, Akbar, Jahangir, and Ahmad Shah had banned or restricted cow slaughter. The sentiment was exploited for political mobilisation of Hindus in the upper caste-led freedom movement. Gandhi, who said, “I worship it
With 57% of world’s buffaloes and 16% of the world’s cattle, India ranks first in terms of the world’s buffalo and cattle population. Although the country is also the world’s largest milk producer, with a total output of 132.4 million tonnes of milk in 2012–13, valued at over Rs 2,900 billion, higher than the combined value of other major agricultural crops like paddy, wheat and sugar cane, the average milk yield per dairy cow per year of the Indian cow is just 1,284 kg as against 6,212 kg in the European Union and 9,117 kg in the United States. Livestock production is the most important agricultural activity in the country, contributing about 24.8% to agricultural gross domestic product. Dairy farming dominates livestock production, providing 18 million people, mostly belonging to low-caste landless/marginal farmers, with direct employment and a way out of poverty. Perhaps therefore it stands singularly neglected by the government’s elitist policymakers.
Slaughtering of cows is not necessarily cruelty; keeping them alive in painful neglect is. The so-called Pink Revolution has brought India on par with Brazil as the world’s top exporter of bovine meat. With its huge bovine population, India has a natural advantage in this market. The ban on cattle slaughter not only squanders this advantage but threatens the livelihoods and ways of life of vast numbers of people, mostly belonging to the so-called lower castes, engaged in the production, distribution and consumption of beef.
With courtesy- http://www.epw.in/margin-speak/holy-cow.html
Anand Teltumbde


