not be weary of bringing old news to mind. And
above all, don’t let us forget India, the cradle
of the human race, or at least of that part of it to
which we belong, where first Mohammedans, and then
Christians, were most cruelly infuriated against the
adherents of the original faith of mankind. The
destruction or disfigurement of the ancient temples
and idols, a lamentable, mischievous and barbarous
act, still bears witness to the monotheistic fury
of the Mohammedans, carried on from Marmud, the Ghaznevid
of cursed memory, down to Aureng Zeb, the fratricide,
whom the Portuguese Christians have zealously imitated
by destruction of temples and the
auto de fe
of the inquisition at Goa. Don’t let us
forget the chosen people of God, who after they had,
by Jehovah’s express command, stolen from their
old and trusty friends in Egypt the gold and silver
vessels which had been lent to them, made a murderous
and plundering inroad into “the Promised Land,”
with the murderer Moses at their head, to tear it
from the rightful owners,—again, by the
same Jehovah’s express and repeated commands,
showing no mercy, exterminating the inhabitants, women,
children and all (Joshua, ch. 9 and 10). And all
this, simply because they weren’t circumcised
and didn’t know Jehovah, which was reason enough
to justify every enormity against them; just as for
the same reason, in earlier times, the infamous knavery
of the patriarch Jacob and his chosen people against
Hamor, King of Shalem, and his people, is reported
to his glory because the people were unbelievers!
(Genesis xxxiii. 18.) Truly, it is the worst side of
religions that the believers of one religion have allowed
themselves every sin again those of another, and with
the utmost ruffianism and cruelty persecuted them;
the Mohammedans against the Christians and Hindoos;
the Christians against the Hindoos, Mohammedans, American
natives, Negroes, Jews, heretics, and others.
Perhaps I go too far in saying all religions.
For the sake of truth, I must add that the fanatical
enormities perpetrated in the name of religion are
only to be put down to the adherents of monotheistic
creeds, that is, the Jewish faith and its two branches,
Christianity and Islamism. We hear of nothing
of the kind in the case of Hindoos and Buddhists.
Although it is a matter of common knowledge that about
the fifth century of our era Buddhism was driven out
by the Brahmans from its ancient home in the southernmost
part of the Indian peninsula, and afterwards spread
over the whole of the rest of Asia, as far as I know,
we have no definite account of any crimes of violence,
or wars, or cruelties, perpetrated in the course of
it.
That may, of course, be attributable to the obscurity
which veils the history of those countries; but the
exceedingly mild character of their religion, together
with their unceasing inculcation of forbearance towards
all living things, and the fact that Brahmanism by
its caste system properly admits no proselytes, allows
one to hope that their adherents may be acquitted
of shedding blood on a large scale, and of cruelty
in any form. Spence Hardy, in his excellent book
on Eastern Monachism, praises the extraordinary
tolerance of the Buddhists, and adds his assurance
that the annals of Buddhism will furnish fewer instances
of religious persecution than those of any other religion.