Read Gita Press and the Making of Hindu India Online
Authors: Akshaya Mukul
Dhadda said the real intention behind the new legislation was not to secure the physical and mental security of a woman but to ‘arrest the growth of population’. He supported the idea of resorting to artificial birth-control measures, but to justify ‘infanticide is a dangerous idea and needs a serious rethinking’. He asked the votaries of abortion how many women died in the process of getting their child aborted. Using the Gandhian idiom of non-violence, he made a fervent plea that the ‘sanctity of life should not be sacrificed at the altar of trivial selfish goals’.
Gita Press continues its serious engagement against abortion even today. The book
Garbhpat: Uchit Ya Anuchit, Faisla Aapka
(Abortion: Right or Wrong, You Decide) first published in the 1990s by Jain Book Agency, a noted publisher of government Acts, statutes, the Constitution of India and other legal documents, was brought under the aegis of the Gita Press in 2011 and reworked. Penned by Gopinath Aggarwal, author of a series of similar moral texts, the work has gone into thirty- eight editions and sold more than 300,000 copies in its earlier and current versions.
Quoting varied sources in support, from Mahatma Gandhi’s ‘God alone can take life because he alone gives it’ to the Supreme Court’s ‘the foetus is regarded as a human life from the moment of fertilization’, the monograph through illustrations (of poor quality) explains the stages of gradual growth of the fetus inside the mother’s womb.
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The narrative is laced with tales from the epics, the most common being the story of Abhimanyu learning the art of breaking the circular formation (chakravyuh) of the enemy’s army in his mother’s womb. Such tales are mixed with medical expert opinions and descriptions of the ‘violence’ involved in various methods of abortion.
A contribution by Shailendra Kumar Jain explains the dangers to the mother while aborting the child. These range from haemorrhage to infection, damage to the cervix, perforation of the uterus and perforation of the bowel; the long-term implications are even more serious—impaired childbearing ability, giving birth to stillborn or handicapped children, suffering miscarriages, premature births, low birthweight of child and ectopic pregnancies. Jain refers to Japan’s Nagode Survey of 1968, according to which more than 30 per cent of women who had undergone abortions were found to be suffering from mental problems. Citing a report in the
Hindustan Times
, Jain says that, of the fifty million abortions worldwide, nearly half were illegal and resulted in the death of 200,000 women. Jain also estimates that between six and eight million women become ill for lifetime as a result of undergoing abortion.
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The book blames the rise in abortion on sex-determination tests being conducted by birth clinics. Aggarwal says prenatal testing began with the intention of detecting chronic illness in the fetus or other abnormal characteristics—it can comprehend seventy-two kinds of chronic and hereditary diseases in a yet-to-be born child and thus helps in their prenatal treatment. But it soon degenerated into sex detection that led to many a girl child being aborted. Aggarwal writes that not only have sex-detection clinics become common throughout the country, but authoritative figures suggest that they are sites of female feticide, 97 per cent of aborted fetuses being female.
The book states that despite specific laws by many states to ban prenatal diagnostic techniques, the scourge has not been arrested as people are getting the sex of their to-be-born child determined in one way or another. Through interviews with doctors, Aggarwal shows how such tests are also not risk-free as there is danger of damage to the fetus and placenta; besides, they do not always give accurate results.
Aggarwal makes a moral pitch for gender equality and tells mothers that a girl child is as much a part of them as a son. Spinning out a long list of great women, including Sita, Rani Lakshmi Bai, Mother Teresa and others, Aggarwal reminds everyone of the saying ‘there is a woman behind every successful man’. He says it is illogical to believe that a male child would take care of his parents in their old age, whereas a girl child would only be a cause for major expenditure on her marriage and dowry. Aggarwal cites cases he knows of where the daughters have taken better care of their old parents than the sons. It is worth noting that the argument of giving equal status to sons and daughters and arguing that a daughter will look after her parents in their old age would not have gone down well with Poddar. He would have considered it as contradicting the tenets of the shastras, and hence blasphemy.
The continuity that characterizes Gita Press’s ideology also extends to its business model. The economics of the organization has not changed much. At present, Gita Press runs primarily on Gobind Bhawan’s cloth business, the income from subscriptions to
Kalyan
and
Kalyana
-
Kalpataru
and from the sale of books, and contributions from patrons and trustees. The newsprint business closed a long time ago. The subscription-based circulation of
Kalyan
is over 200,000 while that of
Kalyana
-
Kalpataru
is over 100,000. In addition, a few thousand copies of these journals are sold at counters in different parts of the country. Facing the fast-changing world in which religion and spiritualism have fallen to the diktats of the market and packaging, Gita Press has refused to change its rules, especially the promise made to Gandhi that it would not accept advertisements. However, Khemka acknowledges: ‘We are not able to get new customers. With limited resources I do not know for how long we will survive.’
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Khemka’s despondency stems from the battle Gita Press is fighting in a liberal economy, taking small steps to keep pace with new trends in business. In 2012, Gobind Bhawan Karyalaya tested its economic worth through ICRA, a top credit-rating agency. ICRA gave a BB rating to the ‘Rs 8.5 crore of fund-based limits of Gobind Bhawan Karyalaya’, stating that the ‘outlook on the long-term rating is stable’.
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The rating factored in the ‘modest scale of operations of Gobind Bhawan Karyalaya, subdued profitability on account of non-profit making aim of the society and high working capital intensity due to high inventory days’. The practice of utilizing most of the cash towards capital expenditure has resulted in limited cash balances. In 2013, Gobind Bhawan Karyalaya made a profit of Rs 0.5 million on its operating income of Rs 859.8 million, a slight improvement from the profit of Rs 0.4 million on an operating income of Rs 792.9 million in 2012.
ICRA’s contention that Gobind Bhawan Karyalaya has a stable future may be of some solace to Khemka. Stability stems from its ‘strong presence for almost nine decades with established brand in religious books like Shrimad Bhagwadgita, Ramayana, etc., strong distribution network throughout India and market position supported by limited publications by peers in similar price bands’
.
Although books are sold at negative margins, there is a steady flow of income from other businesses—selling food, cloth and Ayurvedic medicines—which augurs well for the world of Gita Press.
As Gita Press stands within striking distance of a century, the only organization that may be said to parallel its success is the Bible Society. No other publishing house in India has marketed religion so successfully. And despite claiming to maintain a safe distance from politics, Gita Press has regularly taken political stands. Not only has it played a pivotal role in ‘popular efforts to proclaim Hindu solidarity (sangathan), pious self-identity and normative cultural values’,
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as a player in the theatre of Hindu nationalism it has also stood side by side with the majoritarian narrative of the RSS, Hindu Mahasabha, Jana Sangh and BJP at every critical juncture since 1923. And in times of intense communal division,
Kalyan
has exchanged the sobriety of a religious journal for the language of hate and religious identity. The fact that its publications reach even secular Hindu homes adds to the might and mystique of Gita Press. And as Indian politics becomes more polarized with a definite right turn, organizations like Gita Press may get their second wind. If Goyandka and Poddar are watching as their publishing house persists in pursuing its larger goal of protecting and propagating sanatan Hindu dharma, they must indeed be a proud pair.