Let us at the outset realize that cow worship in the religious sense
is largely confined to Gujarat, Marwad, the United Provinces and
Bihar. Marwadis and Gujaratis being enterprising merchants, have
succeeded in making the greatest noise without at the same time
devoting their business talent to the solution of the very difficult
question of conserving the cattle wealth of India.
It is obviously wrong legally to enforce one's religious practice
on those who do not share that religion.
In so far as the pure economic necessity of cow protection is
concerned, it can be easily secured if the question was considered
on that ground alone. In that event all the dry cattle, the cows who
give less milk than their keep, and the aged and unfit cattle would
be slaughtered without a second thought. This soulless economy has
no place in India, although the inhabitants of this land of
paradoxes may be, indeed, are guilty of many soulless acts.
Then how can the cow be saved without having to kill her off when
she ceases to give the economic quantity of milk or when she becomes
otherwise an uneconomic burden? The answer to the question can be
summed up as follows:
By the Hindus performing their duty towards the cow and her progeny. If
they did so, our cattle would be the pride of India and the world.
The contrary is the case today.
By learning the science of cattle breeding. Today- there is perfect
anarchy in this work.
By replacing the present cruel method of castration by the humane
method practised in the West.
By thorough reform of the pinjarapoles of India which are today,
as a rule, managed ignorantly and without any plan by men who do
not know their work.
When these primary things are done, it will be found that the Muslims
will, of their own accord, recognize the necessity, if only for the
sake of their Hindu brethren, of not slaughtering cattle for beef or
otherwise.
The reader will observe that behind the foregoing requirements lies
one thing and that is Ahimsa, otherwise known as universal
compassion. If that supreme thing is realized, everything else
becomes easy. Where there is Ahimsa, there is infinite patience,
inner calm, discrimination, self-sacrifice and true knowledge. Cow
protection is not an easy thing. Much money is wasted in its name.
Nevertheless, in the absence of Ahimsa the Hindus have become
destroyers instead of saviours of the cow. It is even more difficult
than the removal of foreign rule from India.
Calcutta, 22-8-'47
[Note: The average quantity of milk that the cow in India yields is
said to be roughly 2 lbs. per day, that of New Zealand 14 lbs., of
England 15 lbs., of Holland 20 lbs. The index figure for health goes
up in proportion to the increase in the yield of milk.
23-8-'47
— M. K. G.
Harijan,
31-8-1947