Communism = Religion?
February 29, 2008
Today did a bit of research on the world’s independent and not really common religions – Zoroastrianism and Baha’ism.
Well, Zoroastr turned out to be something like what we were told in school – everything started with Zoroaster, who believed in one God, and used fire in rituals. We still have the remainders of that religion in our Kazakh culture – we burn some special dried grass over heads of kids if we think that evil eye has disturbed them.
But Baha’ism was quite a new thing for me. I have never heard about this religion until recently, when I got to know that the person I thought was Muslim is Baha’i. The religion has started with Shi’a Islam but then was introduced to world as a non-Muslim religion. It practices the 12 principles, some of which are Unity of God, Unity of mankind, Unity of religion, Equality of genders. Sounds good huh. And then I read further – universal compulsory education, universal language. And it somehow resembled communism or socialism to me. Something like what we had in USSR. Everyone to be educated, everyone to speak one language and everyone to believe in only one set of rules and to be treated equally, regardless of gender, race and descendants.
And it sounds so awkward in the same time – communism does not allow any religion to be in place. But in the same time, if you think carefully, you realise that actually communism by itself can be a religion. I believe there always will be that superior person at the top of the country, which practices communism. Without strong leader people do not seem to act in order and to obey the rules. They have to have that punishing power to keep them equal.
I believe that all of us have equal rights, but not equal opportunities. And some people can’t have those rights at all, as it might harm others (e.g. criminals or psychos who threaten lifes of others). And I don’t think that people have to speak one and only language. It is just wrong. Because language has that authentic cultural flavour in it and if person does not speak the language of his race then he’s simply losing his roots, his own past. And that’s the beauty of the mankind – everyone having their own cultures to share, to learn, to be thrilled by.
But of course, education point is very understandable to me. Education is the way for the person to excell in future. It gives you the tools to operate your life, the understanding of the world beyond your doorstep, to learn the world critically. Some people do drop out from schools and unis, but I’m sure they’ve regretted about that, though they would never admit.
April 7, 2008 at 3:12 pm
nice blog…
April 9, 2008 at 12:08 pm
thanks!
October 9, 2008 at 4:48 pm
Hi, fellow Turk. Am a Uyghur coming from Urumqi, XinJiang & study in Monash Sunway. I have no problem with Baha’i despite its roots in Shi’ite Islam.
Although there’s a sentiment that calls XinJiang to seperate from China just like Tibet, but Han & Uyghur still live each other here in Urumqi. In fact, my best friend is Han Chinese. Nice blog you have there.