Dinkoism
Dinkoism | |
---|---|
Dinkoism (മ: ഡിങ്കോയിസം) (/ˈdɪnkɔɪzəm/), or the Dinkoist religion, is a religion and a social movement that emerged and evolved on social networks[1] organized by independent welfare groups in the Indian state of Kerala. Although adherents describe Dinkoism as a genuine religion, it is described in the media as a parody religion.
History
According to a report in India Today, the mock religion[1] was established in 2008 in the state of Kerala by a group of rationalists, with the intention of ridiculing "the absurdity of blind religious faith."[2] There are plans for the community to "actively involve themselves in politics."[3] A report in The New Indian Express suggested that Dinkoism is gaining members through Facebook.[1] The British Broadcasting Corporation described Dinkoism in 2016 as an atheist movement with significant growth in the social media.[4]
Lord Dinkan
The religion purports to worship the great Dinkan, a comic book creation.[5] Dinkoists celebrate the fictional mouse character as their God for the supposed purpose of exposing the fallacies and practices of traditional religions.[6] Dinkan is a comic superhero mouse which appeared in 1983 in a no-longer active children's magazine Balamangalam.[7]
Events and protests
While the concept of Dinkoism has been spreading through social media, the movement has organized events in which real people turned up at protests. For example, when the film Professor Dinkan appeared, Dinkoists staged a "mock protest" in front of an actor's restaurant as a way of taking a "gentle pot-shot" at the idea of religion in general.[8] In April 2016, 25,000 Dinkoists were expected to gather for a convention called a "Dinkamatha Maha Sammelanam" to "present their rights as a minority community," according to one report.[3] Dinkoists have received threatening messages as well as opposition from believers of other religions.[1]
Balamangalam magazine
Dinkan was originally published in the Balamangalam children's magazine in Kerala, India. Later Nambolan, another superhero character was introduced to Balamangalam and it too became very popular. From late 1990s, Balamangalam suffered from high competition from other children's publications in Malayalam(such as Balarama). The magazine still had a strong market share and they expanded out with a kindergarten kids magazine Kalicheppu and a comic book Balamangalam - Chitrakatha.[9] But Dinkan continued to be Balamangalam's most popular comics series. In October 2012, Mangalam Publications, owners of Balamangalam announced that the magazine will stop publication due to poor sales. The news created a furore in social media websites and prompted the publishers to clarify that "the closure is just temporary and Balamangalam may return soon."[10][11]
Character biography
Dinkan was born in Pankila forest, somewhere in Kerala, India. He was a naughty mouse, who wasn't disciplined. During one of his escapades, Dinkan was abducted by aliens from an unknown planet. They conducted experiments on him which ended up giving him superior strength, enhanced senses and the ability to fly. Somehow Dinkan found himself back in Pankila forest and he decided to use his powers for the well-being of animals in the forest. Dinkoism has emerged as a parody religion on social networks organized by independent social welfare groups in Kerala, India. This religion celebrates Dinkan as their God in an attempt to bring awareness of the fallacies and practices of traditional religions.[12]
Restaurant march
On January 30, 2016, a group of Dinkoists, under the banner of Mooshikasena (Rat army) held a mock protest in front of Dhe Puttu restaurant owned by popular Malayalam actor Dileep alleging that his upcoming film 'Professor Dinkan' hurt their religious sentiments. It was a mockery on similar protests happening worldwide.[13] Earlier Dinkoism was in news when an NRI Dinkoist from California had obtained a license plate with the inscription DINKAN for his car, out of his devotion for Dinkan.[14] Recently, noted author J Devika wrote an article on how the concept of Dinkoism is in tune with the logic of the market.[15] New Age Dinkoists are very rigorous in their criticism of mainstream religions. They oppose child marriage, patriarchy and polygamy. They are against a narcissist Abrahamic God.[16]
Calicut conference
Dinkoists of Kozhikode organized a conference at the Sports Council Hall, Mananchira on March 20, 2016. They organized a variety of entertainments based on Tapioca theme. Rationalists like E.A. Jabbar said that Dinkoism was a religion worth following.[17]
BBC coverage
British Broadcasting Corporation covered the Dinkoist religion in its BBCTrending Programme. BBC reported Dinkoism as an atheist movement with significant growth in the social media. The report was presented by BBC video journalist Alvaro A Ricciardelli.[18]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d Express News Service (21 March 2016). "'Dinkoists' Gather Under a Troll Tree". New Indian Express. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
...threatening calls and opposition from staunch religious followers... the social media religion, 'Dinkoists' here on Sunday. ... no official registration ... attention entirely through Facebook....
- ^ KC Archana (5 April 2016). "What is Dinkoism? Why are many Keralites worshipping a superhero mouse? Dinkoism is a mock religion which started in Kerala and it ridicules the absurdity of blind religious faith. Here's an animated video which explains concept in just 60 seconds". India Today. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
...Dinkoism, a mock religion established by a group of rationalists in Kerela in 2008, aims to ridicule the absurdity of blind religious faith. ... The Dinkoists worship a fictional mouse called Dinkan, ...
- ^ a b "Dinkoists gear up for 'Maha Sammelanam': 25,000 followers of comic superhero to meet on Sunday in Kozhikode". Deccan Chronicle. 19 March 2016. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
...Around 25,000 Dinkoists, the followers of comic superhero Dinkan, will hold a convention, 'Dinkamatha Maha Sammelanam,' ... actively involve themselves in politics, ahead of the Assembly polls....
- ^ BBC, 11 April 2016, BBC Trending, The mouse messiah bringing salvation to India's atheists, Retrieved August 12, 2016
- ^ "They gather in the name of great 'Dinkan': Dinkoists throng Kozhikode to show strength of new 'religion'". Deccan Chronicle. 21 March 2016. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
......
- ^ "The mouse messiah bringing salvation to India's atheists". BBC News. 11 April 2016. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ^ TNN (21 March 2016). "Fans of Mallu comic superhero seek 'minority' tag". Times of India. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
...The Dinkoists are a group of people that challenge superstition and religious orthodoxy ... popular in social media ... Dinkan is a comic superhero mouse, who first appeared in 1983 in a now-defunct Malayalam children's magazine `Balamangalam'....
- ^ "Time to look into Dinkan's ire: A mock protest against a Dileep film takes a potshot at religious groups". The Hindu. 7 February 2016. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
...So, it was refreshing to see a group under the banner of the fake religion called 'Dinkoism' holding a mock protest in front of actor Dileep's restaurant in Kochi this past week, over his new film 'Professor Dinkan.' The idea of such a religion was floated online sometime ago as a way to take gentle pot-shots at various religious groups that takes offence at the drop of a hat....
- ^ "Mangalam Publications". Mangalam.com. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
- ^ "Pressure mounts for Dinkan's return". Archived from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ http://article.wn.com/view/2012/10/07/Pressure_mounts_for_Dinkan_s_return/
- ^ "The mouse messiah bringing salvation to India's atheists". BBC News. 11 April 2016. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ^ http://www.onlookersmedia.in/latestnews/protest-upcoming-dileep-film-named-professor-dinkan
- ^ http://www.marunadanmalayali.com/scitech/cyber-space/dinkan-car-license-plates-i-got-a-special-license-plate-in-the-name-of-my-god-36456
- ^ J Devika. "If You Can't Beat Them, Join 'em – Or, Ente Dinkeswara!". Kafila.org. Archived from the original on 11 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
{{cite web}}
:|archive-date=
/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 9 February 2016 suggested (help) - ^ http://www.folomojo.com/dinkoism-not-a-spoof-but-an-eye-opener/
- ^ http://www.deccanchronicle.com/nation/current-affairs/210316/they-gather-in-the-name-of-great-dinkan.html
- ^ http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-36001999