Published On: Sat, Feb 15th, 2014

On Wendy Doniger’s alternative history

Note: This is a reprint of Aseem Shukla’s 2010 essay. Also appended is the exchange he had with Wendy Doniger.

History empowers and history emasculates. History, like art, is beautiful or odious to the beholder. There are winners and losers when history is assessed, and there are protagonists and antagonists. Historians recognize the onerous burden of their profession in these times when a spare use of the word “genocide” in the House of Representatives to describe events in Armenia decades ago led Turkey to recall its ambassador. And politics infuses the narratives of history. Anti-Semitism, Marxism, white supremacy, all are known to prejudice renditions of peoples, cultures and religions.

Historian Wendy Doniger, professor of the History of Religion at the University of Chicago Divinity School, finds herself in the midst of a history book kerfufflle of her own. Doniger, long enjoying exalted status as the doyen of Hindu studies in the American academy, faces scrutiny now in an unfolding drama involving her latest book, “The Hindus: An Alternative History.” An online petition asking Penguin Press, the publishers of the book, to hold publication and demand revisions is approaching 10,000 signatures. And when the book was nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award, Hindu activists staged a rare protest outside the award ceremony last week (the book did not win).

Hindus know that Doniger was derailed before. In 2003, Microsoft retracted a chapter on Hinduism written by Doniger for its online encyclopedia after a heavily publicized internet campaign protested factual and interpretive errors in her essay. In the end, a Hindu writer, providing the emic, or insider’s perspective, wrote an entry that depicted Hinduism in the light that practitioners would actually recognize.

This latest “alternative” history book was released a year ago, but opposition has escalated after a newer edition was released in India a few weeks ago and the book was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle award (she didn’t win).

That there would be trouble was apparent right from the preface of her book. There, Doniger asserts that hers is not a history of how Hinduism is lived today, but rather offers a “narrative alternative” to the one found in Hinduism’s holiest scriptures. This 780-page tome is set as Doniger’s rendering of Hinduism’s history based–we are to assume–on her own interpretations of scripture, her own biases and inclinations. Infamous for her penchant to sexualize, eroticize and exoticise passages from some of the holiest Hindu epics and scriptures–often invoking a Freudian psychoanalytic lens–Doniger has been accused of knowingly polarizing and inflaming. She does not disappoint.

I revisit her work now not just because Doniger provokes so many of us in the Hindu American community. Doniger represents what many believe to be a fundamental flaw in the academic study of Hinduism: that Hindu studies is too often the last refuge of idiosyncratic and irreligious academics presenting themselves as “experts” on a faith that they study without the insight, recognition or reverence of, in this case, a practicing Hindu or even non-Hindu–striving to study Hinduism from the insider’s perspective–would offer.

As a surgeon working in the medical school of a large university, I hold my academic freedom as sacrosanct. My own writings, even here on OnFaith, are a reflection of the liberty I presume and cannot compromise. But this freedom comes with a sober responsibility. When I publish manuscripts and books, I am personally responsible for the veracity of the contents, statistical calculations, and scientific conclusions. These are not always empirical, and much editorializing is demanded. But my freedom is predicated on the accuracy of my work and the fairness of my conclusions. And errors, or playing fast and loose with editorial privilege in fact, if purposeful, can lead to harsh legal and ethical repercussions.

An “alternative” rendering is, of course, Doniger’s right. But when venturing into the alternate, if the factual is deprecated and editorializing privileged, if the treatment of a religion adhered to by over a billion is rendered unrecognizable in its iteration, a door is opened to bias, spin and errors. Over the last year, these are what many believe to have uncovered, and the ramifications are real.

“Tell me where I have interpreted something wrong,” Doniger challenged her critics and the gauntlet was picked up. Factual inaccuracies in her latest book were detailed in a prominent Indian media outlet, and a lay historian, Vishal Agarwal, posted a detailed, chapter by chapter riposte to Doniger’s history that has been widely circulated. Not phrased in the niceties of academic parlance, perhaps, but Agarwal’s methodical work opens the door to questions about Doniger’s research, attention to detail, methodology, and more disturbingly, intentions behind her latest venture. Another detailed rebuttal to a single chapter spanning over twenty-two pages was posted by another writer this week.

Parallelisms in her book conjure up obsolete anecdotes comparing the sacred stone linga representing Lord Shiva to a leather strap-on sex toy, and Lord Rama, one of the most widely worshiped deities, is psychoanalyzed to have acted out of fear that he was becoming a sex-addict like his father. As Agarwal shows, Doniger’s prose is replete with cutesy, perhaps, but offensive and jejune turns of phrases such as, “If the motto of Watergate was ‘Follow the money’, the motto of the history of Hinduism could well be ‘Follow the monkey’ or, more often ‘Follow the horse’.” And in another section, her interpretations of the Rig Veda, the most ancient of the Vedas that Hindus consider sacred, Doniger sees incest and adultery with a pregnant woman in a verse praying to God for protection and safe delivery.

A Danish cartoonist would be hard pressed to match the disturbing parodies of a believer’s faith that Doniger offers throughout the book. The great Hindu yogi, Patanjali, cautioned in the 2nd century BCE against falling into the trap of false “meaning making” when reading scriptures that contain subtle, esoteric meanings as well as moral edicts. Doniger’s book, then, could be read as an idiosyncratic exposition that is “meaning making” out of profound revelations perhaps not meant for the spiritually untrained, untempered, and non-seeking mind.

It is not just that there are documented errors in fact predicated on errors in interpretation and context, but Hindus argue that Doniger seems to delight in celebrating the most obscure and arcane of anecdotes or stories from the hoary expanse of Hindu epics and scriptures. Privileging the absurd–dissembling it as an alternative–comes across as a specious exercise of a motivated author seeking spice to sell books.

It would seem a given that a book on religious history–intertwined with all of the inherent faith, emotion, and sensibilities that religion evokes in believers–would be approached with a modicum of restraint and sensitivity, if not deference. But instead, Doniger delights in inverting the filial into the incestuous, devotion into eroticism, and pride into chauvinism.

Whether such a licentious foray into Hinduism studies is protected by free speech is not the question. Doniger can write and believe what she wishes. But Hindus are asking if publishers should bear responsiblity for copious factual and interpretive errors.

This demand from Hindus to combat Doniger’s view of their religion cannot be reduced to an unhinged ban-the-book crusade. Asking a publisher to hold publishing of a book until errors are corrected carries strong recent precedent. Recall that publication of the Jewel of Medina was abruptly dropped by Random House last year when fear grew that a story about one of the wives of the prophet Muhammad would spark violence from the Muslim community, and just last week, publisher Holt and Company halted publication of Last Train from Hiroshima when factual errors were uncovered in critical parts of the book.

Doniger’s alternate version of Hindu history, now playing in over 700 libraries in North America and Europe, raises a real fear that her “alternative” will become the mainstream. This issue is important to a minority striving to take control of its own narrative–a struggle repeated by generations of Americans as their voice grows and progeny prospers.

It remains to be seen if Hindus will prove their latest case against Doniger in the court of public opinion, but analagous allegations of academic bias are well known. The Southern Poverty Law Center continues to wage a public campaign against an anti-Semitic professor at Cal State Long Beach, and open protests continue against a faculty member holding white supremacy views at the University of Vermont. Each professor has academic freedom, but an agitating laity is wondering if institutions must support the mendacity of bigoted players devaluing that freedom.

Doniger has tended to dismiss criticisms from Hindus as politically motivated, chauvinistic, sexist, casteist–the list is long. It is as Vamsee Julluri, Professor of Media Studies at the University of San Francisco, wrote:

“The academy has gone almost directly from the Orientalist myth of Hindu superstition to the postmodern concern about Hindu fundamentalism, without even a notice of the great Hindu religion in between, and what it means to its followers and admirers. The academy must engage with Hinduism more positively.”

Academic freedom is sacrosanct. But academic legitimacy in the eyes of the public sets a much higher bar.

Appendix: Exchange between Aseem Shukla (referred to as “My response”) and Wendy Doniger

This essay was shared with Prof. Wendy Doniger prior to its publication. Her response to some lines from Dr. Shukla’s post are as follows:

Doniger:
 The Indian Edition was published originally in October, 2009. Just for the record, it was #1 on the best-selling list in India for non-fiction for a while and has received numerous positive reviews in Indian journals and newspapers; I’m told it has sold over10,000 copies in India, but I haven’t verified this.

Of course I did not say that my narrative was alternative “to the one found in Hinduism’s holiest scriptures.” No one would say that even if it were true, which of course it is not. What I said was this:

First, it highlights a narrative alternative to the one constituted by the most famous texts in Sanskrit (the literary language of ancient India) and represented in most surveys in English. It tells a story that incorporates the narratives of and about alternative people–people who, from the standpoint of most high-caste Hindu males, are alternative in the sense of otherness, people of other religions, or cultures, or castes, or species (animals), or gender (women).

That is, my criterion was not holiness but the representation of texts in English-language surveys.

My response:
 The English language surveys Doniger refers to are, in fact, commentaries on Hindu scripture that are holy to nearly a billion. Holiness cannot be divorced from scripture, and to presume to present an alternative perspective–that of women, other religions or animals (?) would requires a balanced presentation of varied aspects of Hindu tradition not presented in this book. Doniger chose lines from scripture, often out of context, and then took unlimited literary license to deconstruct verses, anecdotes and stories to suit her biases and predilections.

Doniger: [Regarding this line in the essay]:

…Lord Rama, one of the most widely worshipped deities, is psychoanalyzed to have acted out of fear that he was becoming a sex-addict like his father.

Correction: There is no psychoanalysis in the discussion, just ordinary literary interpretation, nor did I say that Rama was afraid he was become a sex-addict; on the contrary, I said he was acting because he feared that people would think, wrongly, that this was the case. What I said, on p. 225, was:

Rama said, “Sita had to enter the purifying fire in front of everyone, because she had lived so long in Ravana’s bedrooms. Had I not purified her, good people would have said of me, ‘That Rama, Dasharatha’s son, is certainly lustful and childish.’ But I knew that she was always true to me.” Then Rama was united with his beloved and experienced the happiness that he deserved. [6.103-6]

“Dasharatha’s son is certainly lustful” is a key phrase. Rama knows all too well what people said about Dasharatha; when Lakshmana learns that Rama has been exiled, he says, “The king is perverse, old, and addicted to sex, driven by lust.”[2.18.3] Rama says as much himself: “He’s an old man, and with me away he is so besotted by Kaikeyi that he is completely in her power, and capable of doing anything. The king has lost his mind. I think sex (kama) is much more potent than either artha or dharma. For what man, even an idiot like father, would give up a good son like me for the sake of a pretty woman?” [2.47.8-10] Thus Rama invokes the traditional ranking of dharma over sex and politics (kama and artha) and accuses his father of valuing them in the wrong way, of being addicted to sex. He then takes pains to show that, where Dasharatha made a political and religious mistake because he desired his wife too much (kama over artha and dharma), he, Rama, cares for Sita only as a political pawn and an unassailably chaste wife (artha and dharma over kama).

My response: A response to this very contention was published here. This response highlights one of the interpretive errors that I argue are widespread throughout the text. And these clear errors are serious for together they constitute a sad mockery of a faith. Take the example of her interpretation of the Sanskrit word kama to mean “sex.” This sheer blunder in interpretation is repeated throughout her translations of scripture. In fact, kama is understood by every Hindu to mean “wish, love or desire.” Love or desire for a woman or man is just one type of kama. A man may have kama for his wife, and one must ask if Doniger considers that love a sex addiction. Defining kama to mean sex is an offensive simplification that debases the subtle passions implied in the term . Applied to a depiction of Lord Rama, an incarnation of God to Hindus, the outrage over this passage is obvious.

Doniger: I do not “see” incest and adultery in the hymn referred to above; I quote the hymn, on p. 124, which refers not only to protection and safe delivery but to incest and adultery:

Some spells, like this spell to protect the embryo, are directed against evil powers but addressed to human beings, in this case the pregnant woman: The one whose name is evil, who lies with disease upon your embryo, your womb, the flesh-eater; the one who kills the embryo as it settles, as it rests, as it stirs, who wishes to kill it when it is born–we will drive him away from here. The one who spreads apart your two thighs, who lies between the married pair, who licks the inside of your womb–we will drive him away from here. The one who by changing into a brother, or husband, or lover lies with you, who wishes to kill your offspring–we will drive him away from here. The one who bewitches you with sleep or darkness and lies with you–we will drive him away from here. [10.162]

There is precise human observation here of what we would call the three trimesters of pregnancy (when the embryo settles, rests, and stirs). Though the danger ultimately comes from supernatural creatures, ogres, such creatures act through humans, by impersonating the husband (or lover! or brother!) of the pregnant woman.

My response: Doniger’s own response omits the next few sentences in this very paragraph on page 124 in her book. Referring to ‘this poem’ (Rigveda 10.162), she says:

More substantial is the early evidence in this poem of a form of rape that came to be regarded as a bad, but legitimate, form of marriage: having sex with a sleeping or drugged woman. It appears that a woman’s brother too is someone she might expect to find in her bed, though the Rig Veda severely condemns sibling incest.

So, Doniger does see ‘evidence of rape and incest’ mentioned in this verse. Actually, though, translating directly from Sanskrit, the verse does not state that the brother or anyone lies with the pregnant woman in her bed. Scholars studying this Mandala section of the Rig Vedas know that many items are addressed as human beings – herbs, amulets, gems, animals, malevolent spirits, germs, etc. So I believe strongly that Doniger misrepresents this particular verse and arrives on a conclusion not intended in its writing. It speaks to a disturbing pattern of surmising the most provocative, outrageous and sexual out of verses, texts and scriptures holy to a billion people globally. That would be objectionable enough, but being wrong in these interpretations makes it that much worse.

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  1. Wendy Doniger’s book
    The Ghost of Indian Subcontinent
    The Hindus; is a new vision for the mind set mental slavery of Indian subcontinent with a great scientific heritage of Indus Valley and Vedas. It has been sacrificed on the name of Hindu, which was never a religion like Muslim or Christian, and ghost of Indian subcontinent buried silently to check the thinking on Hinduism with compromise. She has compared it with ‘Watergate scandal for money and Hinduism is race for power like monkey or horse. The Victorian British rule has corrupted modern Indian society with opium of religion on the name of this Hindu or that Hindu in the race of power politics.
    Her humorous remark “If the motto of the Watergate was ‘Follow the money’, the motto of the history of Hinduism could well be ‘Follow the monkey’ or, more often ‘Follow the horse’ (p. 40). I’m not a Christian, I’m a Jew!” Of course, it is unfortunate that the puritanical mores of Victorian British rule have corrupted modern Hindu society, restricting the open acceptance of sex and sexuality. It reflects her deep sentiments for India above superstition of religion.
    The Wendy has tried to awaken the Indians against organized Christians. She has opened a new vista on’ Hindus’ Alternate History above superstition, and faith in God? It has ruined the country with British conspiracy on the name of the so called religion. It is natural way of life.
    No Indian has dared to challenge British Lord and Mcaulley for mental slavery of India, but she has done a great job to explore mental slavery of India, who are searching their identity in religion and superstition to fight against organized religious fundamentalism. Sarasvati is not a river earthly river. Purush and Prakrati is symbolic union at molecular level.
    The Brahma is cosmic principle and Sarasvati speech is life principle as ‘incest’ To cite an example from Physics: The products of a nuclear fission reaction are routinely described as daughter products and some of them actually recombine later to the understanding of nuclear phenomena, and sex as natural process. The Vedic metaphors and riddles are beyond the reach of scholars.
    The ‘Mantra’ is power of Sarasvati, which infuse germ of life. The Kunti was having this Mantra power for conception learned from a seer. With this she has tried to high light the science in Vedas, but without accepting the supremacy of Vedas.
    It is very interesting that Bhagwat Geeta says “God is without attribute and character, he is away from sins, and can not share the sins of any one, No body can kill the indestructible supreme, The God and Soul are one and the same. Geeta establish the supremacy of nature with ethics above superstition, and religion. The Geeta has convinced Arjuna to fight with ‘might is right’ and for self duty in nature. Other wise it was impossible to convince Arjuna in any way.

  2. The Hindus; A new vision

    Dr. Wendy Doniger has impressive credentials with two doctorates, in Sanskrit and Indian Studies, from Harvard and Oxford universities. She has taught at University of London and University of California (Berkeley). She has written many books on Hinduism and has translated some well known Sanskrit books. Her present book, The Hindus, An Alternative History. She is a Sanskrit scholar, who has devoted all her life studying Hindu scriptures.
    To give comment on this book require equal caliber with equal to her, otherwise superficial comments are plenty to justify the faith. Mostly the Sanskrit scholars are unaware about vastness of Sanskrit literature and Vedas.
    She claims in her book, “… I intend to go on celebrating the diversity and pluralism, not to mention the worldly wisdom and sensuality, of the Hindus that I have loved for about fifty years now and still counting (p. 16).”
    Her humorous remark compared the superficial concept of Hindu and Hinduism with water gate scandal. “If the motto of the Watergate was ‘Follow the money’, the motto of the history of Hinduism could well be ‘Follow the monkey’ or, more often ‘Follow the horse’ (p. 40).
    The withdrawal of a book by Penguin Books has made her a ‘Hero’ on Hinduism., ” the complaint declares that her “approach is of a woman hungry of sex.” She became victim of fundamentalists; with out of-Court settlement, by saying “My favourite one on Amazon accuses me of being a Christian fundamentalist and my book a defence of Christianity against Hinduism. And of course, I’m not a Christian, I’m a Jew!” Of course, it is unfortunate that the puritanical mores of Victorian British rule have corrupted modern Hindu society, restricting the open acceptance of sex and sexuality. It reflects her deep sentiments for India above superstition of religion.
    It is a pitiable condition of India in modern world, where India is searching its religious identity in ‘Hindu’ or non Hindu. It was never a religion like Christian or Muslim, prior to arrival of British, India was having caste based society with indigenous faith of the caste. How it can be denied?
    The resident of ‘Hindustan’ is ‘Hindu’ to divide Indian subcontinent between the converted and non converted Indians, the British have coined the term ‘Hindu religion’, and mostly Indians are moving round the same to establish their supremacy with Sanskrit and traditions without any deep knowledge.
    During all this episode and publication of the book since 2009 has provoked rapes and women exploitation all over India at a length. It has advocated free sex, and the rift between upper and lower caste with ‘this or that Hindu’. Since the ethical barrenness over flowed. The head lines of news papers flowed with corruption, poverty, dysfunction, criminalization of homosexuals, and recent unethical act of MPs with a brawl inside the parliament, during which a Law maker used a can of pepper spray against his colleagues.
    The out of court settlement is intellectual snobbery to violate sentiments and en cash popularity and fame from all sides. The book has explored that India needs a Dharma of ethics not the superstitious faith only on the name of religion. The Supreme Court of India recently referred the issue to seven judge bench to review a petition on ‘Hindu’ that ‘Hindu’ is not a religion, it is the way of life.
    The eminent scholar has deeply explored the ethical barrenness of Indian society with superstitious faith and belief. The most pitiable condition is that Sanskrit is devalued as religious language only, and Sanskrit scholars are unaware about its vastness above religious significance. They are unable to grasp the Vedas, but impose they know all by reciting like parrot. These so called scholars have created the rift between ‘This Hindu and that Hindu, It is the matter of superficial politics in India. The political parties are custodians to devalue the great scientific culture to superstitious faith.
    They are moving round the western scholars to accept their belief system only to link Hindu and Hinduism? Otherwise she has explored silent points to rethink on ‘Hindu’ and Hinduism, which has divided Indian subcontinent and pushed India in dark tunnel of religious fundamentalism.
    Sri Aurobindo encountered such flawed (and motivated) scholarship in his own time. He cautioned that these scholars lacked the background necessary to properly understand core Hindu texts. He has clarified that the Vedas are books of Science. The consciousness within us is not an illusion, but a real fact with which we are living life on the earth. But it is beyond explanation and has no boundary, and moved search its scientific solution.
    Intentionally, she has targeted Mahabharat and Geeta “The Complicity of God in the Destruction of Human Race” Doniger is said to have mentioned[8] to an audience of about 150, “The Bhagavad Gita is not as nice a book as some Americans think. Throughout the Mahabharata, the enormous Hindu epic of which the Gita is a small part, Krishna goads human beings into all sorts of murderous and self-destructive behavior such as war in order to relieve “mother Earth” of its burdensome human population and the many demons disguised as humans…. The Gita is a dishonest book; it justifies war.”
    It is just to explore the fact about the movement of non violence flourished in India, which has given the way for invaders and blind faith in Gods and Goddesses. In mundane matters Lord Krishna acts as a worldly man not as superstitious God, and establish ‘Swa Dharma’ self duty in the nature. He has inspired Aruna to fight for right, otherwise ‘Might is right’ may have ruined the country. The God is without attribute and character. The indestructible supreme is devoid of any senses; he is away from your sins and deeds. Otherwise, it was impossible to convince Arjuna.
    Doniger claims that her present book is about women, lower caste Hindus, horses, cows and dogs. She states that the horses, cows and dogs stand for power, purity and pollution in Hinduism (p.40) It should not be the matter of only superstitious faith, they have significance above faith.
    The Sanskrit scholars are unaware about its vastness, and unable to decode the Vedas, they are moving round the Aryan invasion and the seers have compiled the Rig-Veda at the bank of Sarasvati River.
    She interprets the union of Brahma (the divinity promulgating Vedas, the knowledge in the form of Sound) and Saraswati (the divinity of Speech) as ‘incest’. To cite an example from Physics: The products of a nuclear fission reaction are routinely described as daughter products and some of them actually recombine later to the understanding of nuclear phenomena, and sex as natural process. The Aryan means well cultured, and Dasu demon means uncultured, On page 116,
    Her intention is that the Aryan means well cultured and Dasyu means un-cultured and Saraswati is life stream as speech, the horse is metaphor for the life power, and the scholars are searching these symbols in Indus Valley in wrong direction to challenge European scholars.
    In Chapter 5 “Unbelievers and infidels, as well as Pariah and women, were forbidden to learn the Vedas, because they might defile or injure the power of the words, pollute it…” (p. 105) It is commonly known that the women were forbidden to learn the Vedas once in the history.
    She calls the Vedic Mantras as “poems ” she do not consider Vedas ‘Apaurusheya, divine and beyond the mundane. It has been taught to India by the European scholar’s also long back. She has tried to explore the Vedic notion of death merely as return to the five elements with Eternal life. In all she want to convey that the Vedas are not religious scriptures, and not confined to superstitious faith in gods.

    The European scholars are fully influenced by religious animal instincts and faith on supernatural miracles of Bible. They are unable to think above sex, and their interpretations are restricted to sex. How they can understand Krishna Geeta, Shiva and Ganesh with symbolic stories, with only superficial knowledge of Sanskrit and Vedas, and tried to trace history of Mahabharat, and said that the great epic Mahabharat is History of Indian culture, “The Bhagavad Gita is not as nice a book as some Americans think, God in the Destruction of the Human Race.”
    She accepts the ‘Mantra Power’ of Kunti for conception, and wrongly mentioned as rape? (p.295). With this she has tried to high light the science in Vedas, and the Vedic metaphors and riddles are beyond the reach of scholars.
    All her special works have revolved around the subject of sex in Sanskrit texts ranging from Siva: with the sculptures at Khajuraho and Konark,
    Geeta established the swa Dharma self duty in life above ‘Might is Right’ and faith on God or soul. Lord Krishna established the supremacy of nature above all. The Ganesh represent the advancement of biotechnology to implant head on human body. The Shiva lingam is symbol of the creator. It explore the origin of vital energy of the creation from the cosmos, all is part of vital energy; the half part hidden in the earth linked it with unfathomed cosmos. The multi face snake over it signifies the magnetosphere around earth. The shape of OM is synonym to Magnetoshere. It has given the way for life on the earth.
    The Vishnu is the symbol of visible light, and Lakshmi, sitting in his feet is chemical energy of photosynthesis, which feed the creation with food and wealth.
    The book has opened a new vista, radical rethinking on Indian culture. The history goes back 11 thousand years. The experiments were performed at Grand Canyon, N. America, before 11 thousand years ago at the bank of Colorado River in deep sea by the Vedic Scientists. The related instruments, artifacts are lying with Smithsonian Institute of America.
    The underground cave city at Grand Canyon explore its live evidence with most advanced technology to build temples and palaces in the caves with advance robotic and DNA technology to develop giants of 7 to 14 feet in height, and animal gliders for travel in space.
    10 August 1891an incredible article that was printed back in Phoenix Gazette on April 5, 1909 The New York Times reported that scientists from the Smithsonian Institution had discovered several large “pyramidal monuments” It was a Vedic culture, where evolution of the creation from zero to infinity traced scientifically.

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