James B. Robinson, "Hinduism", Philadelphia, Chelsea House, 2004
James B. Robinson, "Hinduism", Philadelphia, Chelsea House, 2004
James B. Robinson, "Hinduism", Philadelphia, Chelsea House, 2004
RELIGIONS
OF THE
WORLD
BUDDHISM
CHRISTIANITY
CONFUCIANISM
HINDUISM
ISLAM
JUDAISM
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RELIGIONS
OF THE
WORLD
HINDUISM
James B. Robinson
Professor of Religion,
University of Northern Iowa
FRONTIS Its sheer size makes the Indian subcontinent a major influence in
world affairs. Because Hindus make up over 80 percent of this massive nation’s
population, Hinduism, too, is one of the world’s most populous religions.
www.chelseahouse.com
First Printing
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
Foreword vi
Preface xi
1 Introduction to Hinduism 2
2 Foundations of Hinduism 12
3 Sacred Scriptures in Hinduism 22
4 Worldview of Hinduism 37
5 Hindu Worship and Temple Practice 70
6 Growing Up Hindu 80
7 Hindu Popular Culture 96
8 Hindu Holidays 112
9 Memories 128
10 Hinduism in the World Today 141
Appendix 150
Chronology and Timeline 164
Notes 170
Glossary 1 71
Bibliography 179
Further Reading 182
Index 185
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Foreword
vi
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Foreword vii
viii Foreword
Foreword ix
much about the dreams and hopes, the fears and intentions, of
those around them.
These books, in effect, stop the procession of passersby and bid
visitors to enter those sanctuaries where communities worship.
Each book could serve as a guide to worship. Several years ago,
a book called How to Be a Perfect Stranger offered brief counsel
on how to feel and to be at home among worshipers from other
traditions. This series recognizes that we are not strangers to
each other only in sanctuaries. We carry over our attachments
to conflicting faiths where we go to work or vote or serve in the
military or have fun. These “carryovers” tend to come from the
basic stories and messages of the several faiths.
The publishers have taken great pains to assign their work to
authors of a particular sort. Had these been anti-religious or
anti – the religion about which they write, they would have
done a disservice. They would, in effect, have been blocking
the figurative doors to the faiths or smashing the furniture in
the sanctuaries. On the other hand, it would be wearying and
distorting had the assignment gone to public relations agents,
advertisers who felt called to claim “We’re Number One!”
concerning the faith about which they write.
Fair-mindedness and accuracy are the two main marks
of these authors. In rather short compass, they reach a wide
range of subjects, focusing on everything one needs to advance
basic understanding. Their books are like mini-encyclopedias,
full of information. They introduce the holidays that draw
some neighbors to be absent from work or school for a day
or a season. They include galleries of notable figures in each
faith-community.
Since most religions in the course of history develop different
ways in the many diverse places where they thrive, or because they
attract intelligent, strong-willed leaders and writers, they come up
with different emphases. They divide and split off into numberless
smaller groups: Protestant and Catholic and Orthodox Christians,
Shiite and Sunni Muslims, Orthodox and Reform Jews, and many
kinds of Buddhists and Hindus. The writers in this series do
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x Foreword
Martin E. Marty
The University of Chicago
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Preface
xi
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xii Preface
Preface xiii
xiv Preface
Introduction
to Hinduism
Introduction to Hinduism 3
ndia, the largest country in South Asia, occupies a distinct
I landmass that presses up hard against the mainland of Asia.
This geological pressure forces land upward to form the highest
mountain range in the world—the Himalayas. For this reason,
India is often referred to as a “subcontinent.” Its sheer size makes
the Indian subcontinent a place of great importance.
India is also the home of one of the major ancient civilizations
in the world and, with it, one of the world’s oldest religions—
Hinduism. Hinduism is a fascinating religious tradition but
one that differs in many ways from what people in the Western
world normally think of as religion. Indeed, Hinduism is so rich
and varied that some scholars have suggested that we ought
to think of it as a family of religions rather than as a single
religious system.
A DEFINITION OF HINDUISM
Hinduism was actually given its name by people from outside
India. Muslim invaders from the West referred to the people and
culture of India as Hindu, which literally means “those across the
Indus River”—a very important river system that runs through
northwest India and present-day Pakistan. The Indus has often
served as an informal boundary between India and Central Asia.
Adding the “-ism” simply designates the beliefs and practices of
those people called Hindus.
The Hindus themselves use the term sanatana Dharma to
describe their religion. It means “the everlasting Law.” This word
dharma, which refers to a person’s proper station in life, is one of
the key concepts of Hinduism.
Most Hindus would not define their religion in terms of a
single creed that embodies the faith because different Hindus
may believe in many different things. However, certain charac-
teristics do recur frequently within the wide spectrum of beliefs
in the Hindu religion, and this allows us to view Hinduism as
a whole.
The first characteristic that Hindus share is a regard for the
Vedas (the earliest sacred Hindu texts) as inspired and divine,
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4 HINDUISM
Introduction to Hinduism 5
6 HINDUISM
Introduction to Hinduism 7
8 HINDUISM
Introduction to Hinduism 9
one of the major religions of the world. About 760 million
people worldwide—including over 80 percent of the population
of India—are Hindu.1 This makes it the world’s third-largest
religion. (Only Islam and Christianity are larger.) Just as impor-
tant, Hinduism continues to be a vital force among people of
Indian descent living outside India. Hindus are to be found in
Africa, North and South America, and in Europe—anywhere
that people from India settled and made a home.
There are many Hindus in the United States, although they
usually keep a low cultural profile. The Pluralism Project at
Harvard University estimates that there are more than one
million Hindus in America. The same study lists approximately
680 Hindu temples in the United States. California alone has
over one hundred temples, and New York and New Jersey both
have more than fifty temples. There is at least one Hindu temple
in every state except Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South
Dakota, and Iowa. 2
10 HINDUISM
Introduction to Hinduism 11
bring about release from this world of pain and suffering. This
release is called moksha.
If the essence of Hinduism could be summarized in a few
words, those words might be “structured diversity.” We might
think of Hinduism as a rainbow in which all the different colors
are represented, but in which each of these colors has a very
distinct place in the spectrum. Both the diversity and the
structuring are essential to the Hindu outlook on life. One of
Hinduism’s most unique characteristics is its acknowledgment
that human beings are different not only from each other but at
various times within their individual lives as well. Perhaps no
other religion is so aware of the different conditions and types of
humanity. Examples of almost every type of religious activity in
the world may be found in some form somewhere in Hinduism.
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Foundations
of Hinduism
Foundations of Hinduism 13
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE VEDAS
14 HINDUISM
Foundations of Hinduism 15
favored the view that the original homeland was somewhere in
Europe, and India was the recipient rather than the source of
Indo-European language and culture. According to this model,
the Indo-Europeans who settled in India were part of a vast
movement of tribes out of the homeland, fanning out in all
directions. These migrating tribes would eventually become the
people we know as the Greeks, Latins, Celts, Germans, and Slavs.
According to the standard Western reconstruction of India’s
history, one group of Indo-European-speaking people traveled
even farther from the original homeland. They traveled south and
east to an area near the Caspian Sea, where they settled for an
unknown amount of time before resuming their migration south-
ward and eastward. One branch of this group moved into what is
now India around the middle of the second millennium B.C., while
another branch settled in what is now Iran. Both branches called
themselves the Aryans, meaning “the noble people.” Indeed, Iran
comes from the same root as Aryan. Scholars refer to the branch
that entered India as the “Indo-Aryans.” They are presumed to
have been tall and light-skinned, similar to modern Europeans.
The Indo-Aryans were warriors and nomads. They had horse-
drawn chariots, cows, sheep, goats, and dogs. They overran the
indigenous people of India, whom they called Dasas. It is not
known for sure who the Dasas were, but some scholars think
they were the remnants of the Indus Valley Civilization, which
thrived between 2500 and 1500 B.C.
The invading Indo-Aryans brought with them the religious
beliefs and practices described in the Vedas. In other words,
according to the Western reconstruction of India’s history,
the Vedas arrived late in India, and reflected a nonindigenous
religion. Vedic religion incorporated some elements of the
indigenous religious beliefs as it developed in India, but its core
was of foreign origin.
16 HINDUISM
Foundations of Hinduism 17
are clay and soapstone seals. They are usually flat and square or
rectangular sections of soapstone or shaped clay averaging about
an inch on each side. They have scenes and inscriptions upon
them that provide most of the samples of the script.
One intriguing figure appears on several of the seals. This
figure wears a trident-shaped headdress, sits in a yogic posture,
and is surrounded by animals. Though there are variant inter-
pretations, the figure may have three faces, two of which are
shown in profile. He appears to have an erect phallus (in Hindu
terminology, a lingam).
Some scholars believe this figure may be a prototype for the
later popular Hindu god Shiva. Shiva carries the trident sug-
gested by the headdress. Shiva is called “Lord of Animals,” which
may correspond to the animals shown on the seals. Shiva is often
shown sitting in a yogic posture as the figure on the seal seems
to be doing. Shiva’s religious emblem is the lingam. Thus, this
figure is frequently called the “proto-Shiva” because many of the
attributes of this Indus Valley figure might somehow have been
transferred to the later Hindu god, Shiva.
18 HINDUISM
Tapas (ardor), rta (order), and satya (truth) are important Hindu
concepts. Tapas is the second to last hymn of the Rig Veda. Tapas means
“ardor,” “ascetic fire,” “arduous penance,” and “concentration.”
In this hymn, tapas is the energy that gives birth to cosmic order
and to truth.
Rta is the structure or formal principle of reality. Satya is the content,
the substance, the material principle of reality. Owing to rta, the world
is a cosmos rather than a chaos, an ordered and harmonious whole
rather than a jumbled, archaic soup. Owing to satya, the world is not
merely a game or a deception. Satya is not primarily an epistemic truth
but an ontic truthfulness—it is being what one appears to be. No reality
can emerge without these two principles of rta and satya, of harmony
and consistency.
The ocean represents space, and the year represents time. Once
there is space and time, life (all that “blinks the eye”) can appear,
along with sun and moon, heaven and earth, etc.
In Hinduism, the renunciant who spends his days meditating is
said to be performing tapas. The meditator is not idle; he is an active
collaborator in the maintenance of the world. His ardor, energy, and
power of concentration are believed to be capable of both creating
and destroying the world.
Source: Raimon Panikkar, The Vedic Experience. Available online at
http://www.himalayanacademy.com/books/vedic_experience/Part1/VEPartIChA.html.
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Foundations of Hinduism 19
model, the Indo-Aryans were the upper class during the Vedic
period. A wife and mother had authority over the household
children and servants. She co-celebrated the domestic rites with
her husband. Daughters were not censured for remaining unmar-
ried, and they participated in the selection of a husband and the
shaping of the marriage contract. 3
Between 1500 and 500 B.C., the Vedas, originally oral literature,
were gradually written down. During this same time period,
public rites and sacrifices became more and more complicated.
Philosophical speculation probed questions concerning the origins
of the universe and its order. Although the Indo-Aryans did not
have the rigid caste system of later India, the names of the four
varna (“social classes”: Brahmins, Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudra)
appear in a Vedic hymn celebrating the creation of the cosmos. 4
VEDIC RELIGION
The names of many deities, both male and female, appear in the
Rig Veda. Most frequently mentioned is Indra, a god of war who
was also associated with storms, especially the monsoon rains.
He held in his hands a thunderbolt called a vajra.
Rudra was a mountain god associated with the destructive
storms that swept down from the Himalayas. Awestruck, people
beseeched him to be auspicious (shiva) rather than harmful.
Indeed, Rudra did have a merciful side. In his mountain terrain,
he presided over medicinal plants, and appeared at times as a
gentle healer. In later Hinduism, the great god Shiva would
inherit these complex, contradictory characteristics.
Other Vedic deities included Varuna, who upheld the laws of
nature and the moral law, Vayu (the wind), and Surya (one of
several sun gods). Agni, the fire god, served as the intermediary
between the gods and humans through the sacrificial offering.
There were female deities as well: Ushas (the dawn), the rivers
Saraswati and Ganga, and Vac (the ritual power of speech).
Although Indra is the most frequently mentioned deity, the
Vedic pantheon had no hierarchical order. Indeed, from the van-
tage point of Western theology, one of the most confusing things
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20 HINDUISM
INDRA
Although later supplanted by Vishnu and Shiva, Indra was a king of
the gods during the Vedic Age. He was the god of thunder and storms,
and a great warrior. He defended the heavens and the earth against
the forces of evil. It was said he could revive warriors who had fallen
in battle. His weapon was the vajra (“lightning bolt”).
Indra’s wife was Indrani, and his attendants were the Maruts. Two
hundred fifty Rig Vedic hymns are dedicated to him, more than to any
other god.
Indra’s heavenly court was known as Svarga. It was located in the
clouds surrounding the sacred mountain Meru, but Indra’s heaven could
move anywhere at his command. Svarga included an enormous hall where
slain warriors went after death. Apsaras and Gandharvas danced and
entertained the court. There were games and athletic contests as well.
Indra’s most famous exploit was his victory over the demon Vrtra.
Vrtra, who had assumed the form of a mighty dragon, had sealed off
all the water in the world. This caused a terrible drought. Indra vowed
to get back the life-giving waters. He rode forth to grapple with Vrtra.
Indra had to destroy Vrtra’s ninety-nine fortresses to find the dragon.
The two clashed in a long battle, but Indra emerged the victor. The
waters once again fell from the skies, and Indra became a great hero.
The gods elected him to be their king.
Source: “Indra.” Encyclopedia Mythica from Encyclopedia Mythica Online,
http://www.pantheon.org/articles/i/indioa.html.
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Foundations of Hinduism 21
AN ALTERNATE INTERPRETATION OF THE VEDIC AGE
The aforementioned outline of ancient Indian history is
found in all standard textbooks on the subject. Nonetheless,
it is being challenged in India. A large element of the general
populace, and a small but increasing number of Indian scholars,
claim that the Vedic period ended around 3000 B.C., thereby
preceding rather than following the Indus Valley Civilization
(c. 2500–1500 B.C.). They also deny that there was an Indo-Aryan
invasion. According to this group of scholars, both the Vedas and
Vedic culture were indigenous to India. Hence, proponents of
this model have been labeled “Indigenists.”
This has become a highly politicized debate. Western Indol-
ogists, for the most part, do not take the Indigenist position
seriously. They believe that claims of an indigenous Vedic
culture are based on nationalism rather than on scholarship.
Indigenist scholars, for their part, say that Western scholarship’s
refusal to seriously consider the Indigenist position is evidence
of neocolonialist sentiments.
Edwin F. Bryant of Rutgers University has recently published
the results of his efforts to disentangle the genuine scholarship
from the polemics in this debate. 5 Although he is not at all
certain that it will ever be substantiated, Bryant believes that the
indigenous Aryan position cannot be ignored. Western scholars
need to concede that it merits “a place at the table.” On the other
hand, Bryant believes that the Aryan invasion theory remains a
reasonable way to account for much of the available evidence.
In sum, Bryant believes that both models can accommodate
much of the evidence which is currently available. However, if
the script on the Indus Valley seals is ever deciphered, that would
tip the scales in one direction or the other. If the language on the
seals is Indo-European, it would lend support to the Indigenist
claim that Indo-Aryans were in India prior to the Indus Valley
Civilization. If the language is not Indo-European, that would
lend weight to the Indo-Aryan invasion hypothesis.
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Sacred Scriptures
in Hinduism
24 HINDUISM
3. Through Agni man obtaineth wealth, yea, plenty waxing day by day,
Most rich in heroes, glorious.
Ritual Texts
The central religious activity in the Vedic religion is sacrifice.
Sacrifice is a basic impulse that can be found in practice all over
the world. To offer something to someone, even at a purely social
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26 HINDUISM
The Upanishads
Upanishads, which might be best translated as “private sessions,”
are texts containing what were once secret doctrines and
practices passed down from a teacher (guru) to his disciples.
Now these doctrines and practices are available to everyone.
They were composed between 600 and 400 B.C., during a time
when there was a radical shift in thinking, not only in India
but all over the world. Some historians have called this
“the axial age,” meaning a time when the human mind
turned, as on an axis, away from archaic, mythic thinking to
more rational philosophical thought.
The Upanishads were not focused on the many Vedic gods
in the Samhitas and the sacrifices offered to them. Because of
this, they went beyond the sort of religion found in the earlier
Vedic literature. Since the Upanishad texts are considered
the culmination of the Vedic literature, they are called the
Vedanta—the “end” or “pinnacle” of the Vedas—and the influ-
ential Vedanta philosophy, associated with the great thinker
Shankara (788 – 820), is based on the Upanishads. Of all the
Vedic texts, the Upanishads have been the most influential in
both classical and modern Hinduism. English translations of
them are readily available.
As in other parts of the world, Upanishadic men—and, again,
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28 HINDUISM
KENA-UPANISHAD:
First Khanda
1. The Pupil asks: “At whose wish does the mind sent forth
proceed on its errand? At whose command does the first
breath go forth? At whose wish do we utter this speech?
What god directs the eye, or the ear?”
2. The Teacher replies: “It is the ear of the ear, the mind of the
mind, the speech of speech, the breath of breath, and the
eye of the eye. When freed (from the senses) the wise, on
departing from this world, become immortal.
6. “That which does not think by mind, and by which, they say,
mind is thought, that alone know as Brahman, not that
which people here adore.
7. “That which does not see by the eye, and by which one sees
(the work of) the eyes, that alone know as Brahman, not
that which people here adore.
8. “That which does not hear by the ear, and by which the
ear is heard, that alone know as Brahman, not that which
people here adore.
* Source: The Teachings of Sri Ramana Maharshi, ed. David Godman. Available online at
http://www.hinduism.co.za/creation.htm#Creation.
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30 HINDUISM
GREETINGS
Like members of other religious and cultural traditions, Hindus have
particular methods of greeting one another in public. When meeting
a friend or when showing respect to a holy person, elder, or god, a
Hindu person will join his or her hands, placing the palms together in
a gesture of humility. He or she then bows before the other person
and says, “Namaskar,” “Namaste,” or “Pranam,” which means
“Reverent Salutations.”
Hindus believe that the Infinite Spirit, Brahman, lives within the
heart of every individual. Therefore, when they join their hands, it is
a symbol of the concept of the meeting of two separate persons, as
the “self” meets “itself.” Combined with the words namaskar or
namaste, the joining of the hands in greeting is intended to impart to
the person, something to the effect of “I bow to God in you; I love
you and I respect you, as there is no one like you.”
Source: Available online at http://www.hindunet.org/namaste/index.htm.
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32 HINDUISM
34 HINDUISM
THE RAMAYANA
The other Hindu epic is the Ramayana. Like the Mahabharata, it
tells the story of a prince who is sent into exile. This time, the
prince is named Rama, and he is forced to leave his capital city
with his beautiful wife, Sita. The demon king, Ravana, sees Sita
and, lusting after her, kidnaps her and takes her to his fortress on
Sri Lanka, the large island off the southeastern coast of India.
Rama searches for his wife and is able to locate her with the aid of
the monkey king, Hanuman, who has his monkeys form a bridge
across the sea to Sri Lanka. Rama, his brother, and their army are
able to cross and lay siege to Ravana’s fortress. Eventually, Rama
and Ravana engage in one-on-one combat and Ravana is killed.
Rama is then reunited with his wife.
Sita maintains that she never yielded to Ravana, and Rama, of
course, believes her. But when he returns to his kingdom, which
now welcomes him, there are many who doubt Sita’s virtue. She
had been the prisoner of Ravana for a year, and, for all his
demonic attributes, Ravana was actually a handsome man who
would have been attractive to many women. To prove her virtue,
Sita throws herself on a fire and remains unscathed. This act
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DEVOTIONAL LITERATURE
Theistic Hindus (those who are devotees of one of the great gods
or the Goddess) generated extensive devotional literature. The
eighteen great Puranas (“ancient texts”) contain India’s great
mythic stories about Hinduism’s many gods and goddesses. The
Agamas, another set of popular devotional writings, are divided
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36 HINDUISM
PURANAS
The Puranas, which probably achieved their current form around
A.D. 500, are considered perhaps the richest collection of mythology in
the world. Before they were finalized in their written form, they were
passed on orally, since as far back as about 1500 B.C.
There are eighteen major Puranas. Each of these long books
contains different stories about the Hindu gods and goddesses, along
with hymns, rules of life, details of rituals, and information about
Indian history.
The most influential of the Puranas are the Shiva Purana, the
Vishnu Purana, and the Markendeya Purana, which is dedicated to
the Goddess. Krishna worshipers are particularly devoted to the
Bhagavata Purana.
The Puranas are some of the most often used scriptural texts within
the Hindu tradition. Because their encyclopedic format covers so many
topics, they serve almost as guide books for all of life and society.
Source: Available online at http://www.hindunet.org/puranas/index.htm.
Worldview
of Hinduism
38 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 39
Finally, we will turn our attention to Hinduism’s prescription
for uniting the human being with the Divine. There are three
main ways to accomplish this, and each is called a “yoga.” We will
consider, in turn, Karma Yoga (the Way of Works), Jnana Yoga
(the Way of Knowledge), and Bhakti Yoga (the Way of Devotion).
40 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 41
Consequently, there is no injustice in being born in a lower
caste. One should do one’s duty, act virtuously, and live in the
awareness that one is playing a role, performing a function, in a
structure and pattern much larger than self and even society at
any given historical moment.
The doctrine of karma answers seemingly unanswerable
questions: Why do the virtuous suffer? Why do bad things
happen to good people? Given the perspective of one lifetime,
such suffering might appear meaningless, but given the perspec-
tive of many lifetimes, the virtuous may be suffering for deeds
done in previous lifetimes. But is present virtue of no avail?
Quite the contrary! The virtuous will be rewarded, perhaps in
their present lifetime, but if not, then in a future lifetime. The
wicked who prosper in this life are living off karmic capital from
previous virtue. Their time will come, if not in this life, then in
later lives. Many take comfort in this idea. The doctrine of karma
assures them that there is justice in the world.
Human Aspirations
Life on this earth allows human beings to work toward many
different goals. Hindus categorize human aspirations by recog-
nizing four main goals for which one can live: pleasure, profit,
duty, and moksha.
The first goal for which one might live is kama (pleasure).
Kama is the enjoyment of anything which can be experienced
through the senses. As in the West, “pleasure” often carries
the connotation of sexual desire, but it is certainly not limited
to that. It includes aesthetic appreciation, eating fine food, or
rejoicing in anything associated with good living. The kind of
pleasure which one pursues is related to one’s karma.
Hindus believe there is nothing wrong with pleasure in its
proper place, but one must also recognize its limitations. A
pleasurable lifestyle is not possible for everyone. Perhaps one
does not have the resources to maintain it. Even if one has
sufficient resources, one may not always be in circumstances
where pleasure is accessible. One must recognize as well that the
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42 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 43
but it is also a source of disappointment. We cannot rely on it to
provide our true happiness. Even if I get what I want, my desires
may change because my internal world is not permanent. Or,
even if I get what I want, I may as quickly lose it, because the
external world is not permanent either. There are no guarantees
in this world, no promises that I can get what I want, nor that
what I wanted will make me happy when I get it, nor that I can
keep anything that I currently have and love.
Virtually everything in the Hindu worldview flows from the
awareness that all things change, both internally and externally,
while what we truly desire is that our happiness should be
permanent. Only the unchanging can secure our happiness.
Everything else is “here today, gone tomorrow.”
44 HINDUISM
These gods and goddesses are not all equal by any means. Some
of them are very minor and play a role only in small communi-
ties or villages. Others are more important and are worshiped in
a larger area. The most significant would be acknowledged and
honored throughout India.
The devas are continually being challenged by demonic beings
called asuras. The devas are generally able to keep the asuras at
bay, but more than occasionally an asura arises whose power is
beyond that of the devas, forcing them to seek the help of higher
divine beings.
Surprisingly, devas and asuras sometimes cooperate to accom-
plish some divine purpose. One of the most famous Hindu
myths tells of the “churning of the ocean of milk.” There was
once a great ocean of milk which, if churned, would produce
many blessings, the chief of which was Amrita, the potion of
immortality. In order to churn the ocean of milk, the devas and
asuras used Vishnu’s serpent, Shesha, as a churning rope. The
devas held on to the head, and the asuras held on to the tail. Back
and forth they tugged and pulled, and the various blessings came
forth, including the potion of immortality.
The most important of the devas, such as Indra and Varuna,
are said to have their own heavenly palaces, where men and
women with good karma reside for thousands of years between
human lifetimes. Dwellers in these heavenly residences enjoy a
wonderful lifestyle reminiscent of the South Sea Islands. Every-
thing that one could ever desire grows on trees. Here one finds
the most delicious food, the most beautiful of clothes and
houses, and the most delightful of heavenly attendants, eager
to please. The females attendants are called apsaras. They are
portrayed as slender-waisted young women with voluptuous
figures. Their male counterparts are the gandharvas, tall well-
muscled “beach-boy” types who play guitar-like instruments
and serenade guests.
The virtuous are thus rewarded with an enjoyable afterlife. All
one has to do to win thousands of years of residence in these
realms is to perform good deeds, and to carry out one’s various
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Worldview of Hinduism 45
household and social duties. What could possibly be wrong with
such a destiny?
Living a life of pleasure for ten thousand years is most enjoy-
able—until one’s ten thousand years is up. These heavenly
realms of the devas, indeed, the devas themselves, are in the
final analysis impermanent. Even Indra and Varuna, not to
mention the rest, will pass away only to be reborn in other states
of existence, and so also will be the fate of all who dwell within
their realms.
There are hellish counterparts to the heavenly realms. Those
who have done wicked deeds will be reborn in realms as horri-
ble and painful as the heavens are pleasurable. There souls suffer
extremes of heat and cold, and the pain of burning and cutting.
This also may go on for a thousand years but, in the end, the
hells are as impermanent as the heavens. There is no eternal
damnation in Hinduism.
There is one more set of inhabitants in these spiritual realms.
Yogins can acquire extraordinary powers and psychic abilities
through their practice of the yogas. Highly developed yogins
may ascend to various divine realms where they become god-
like. However, becoming godlike is not the same as moksha or
liberation, because, while the godlike status may persist for
long periods of time, it is ultimately temporary. Liberation or
moksha, on the other hand, is permanent.
46 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 47
suffused with a peaceful joy that exceeds all worldly forms of
human happiness.
The Upanishads are known as the Vedanta, the “end of the
48 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 49
Our everyday beliefs are quite different from the philosophical
perspective of the Vedantin. Because the world around us is
immediately present to us, we (mistakenly) take it for “reality.”
We are living our lives on false premises. We think that the Real
is the changing circumstances of our lives. The Vedantin believes
that this everyday perspective is essentially an illusion.
Ultimately, the Upanishads locate the cause of our human
discontent in our ignorance of what is real. Like a person who
stubbornly maintains that 2+2=5 and whose calculations there-
fore never come out right, we live in the stubborn belief that we
can be truly satisfied if we can just adjust the things around us
enough. In the end, such a strategy will not work.
50 HINDUISM
Q: Who is a guru?
A: One who having understood the Ultimate Reality, continues
to strive always for the welfare of the disciple.
Q: What is proper?
A: Dharma.
Q: What is toxic?
A: Disregarding the guru.
Q: What is sleep?
A: Persistent foolishness in man.
Q: What is death?
A: The condition of stupidity.
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Worldview of Hinduism 51
Q: Who is a friend?
A: The one who saves you from incurring demerits.
Q: What is an ornament?
A: Good Conduct.
52 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 53
Another of Vishnu’s incarnations revolves around a recur-
rent theme in Hindu mythology—the powerful asura who is
able, through the great power of his yogic meditation, to
challenge the gods themselves. There once was an asura who
forced the devas to grant him the following power: that he
could not be killed by man, nor god, nor beast; that he could
not be killed either by night nor by day; and that he could
not be killed either inside or outside of his house. Armed
with this power, the asura took over the world and became
a tyrant.
But this demon-king had a son named Prahlada who was
devoted to Vishnu. Prahlada worshipped Vishnu instead of his
father. His father would torment and torture his son, but he
could not get him to relinquish his faith in Vishnu.
One day Prahlada was tortured all day long, and his father
said: “What kind of a god do you worship who is nowhere
to be found?” Prahlada responded that Vishnu, the god who
pervades everything, is everywhere. His father began contemp-
tuously smashing the things in the room, saying, “Is Vishnu
here?” or “Is Vishnu there?” At each point, Prahlada answered
in the affirmative.
Finally, as the sun was going down, the dusk being neither
night nor day, the demon-king walked to the door-post of his
house so that he was neither inside it nor outside it, and he
kicked the post, saying, “Is Vishnu in there?” At this exact
moment, Vishnu in the form of a man-lion broke through the
post. A man-lion is neither a beast nor a man nor a god because
the man-lion was all three. The demon-king was killed, and
Prahlada was released. He succeeded his father on the throne
and ruled long, wisely, and well.
Prahlada’s son, Bali, succeeded his father. Unfortunately, Bali
was a greedy and arrogant king. He aspired to become like the
devas themselves. The devas realized that if he carried out one of
the most powerful Vedic sacrifices—the horse sacrifice—he
would accomplish his goal of great divine power. The devas
prayed to Vishnu to help them.
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54 HINDUISM
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Krishna, we recall, was the charioteer-instructor of Arjuna in
the Bhagavad Gita, which is part of the Mahabharata. This,
however, is only one of his many exploits and, to the devotee of
Krishna, not even the most important one. The Bhagavata
Purana contains many stories about Krishna—as a mischievous
child, as a youthful cowherd dallying with the gopis (cowgirls),
and as an adult hero engaged in mortal combat with demons
and monsters.
Krishna’s romantic adventures with the gopis, often expressed
in rather erotic terms, are the subject of much love poetry and
many songs. Such amorous imagery is quite appropriate in
devotional religion (bhakti), where the relation between God
and the soul of the devotee is described as a relation between
Lover and Beloved. Love of God is at the heart of devotionalism.
Unlike the monistic, mystical religion of the Upanishads, where
True Self and Infinite Spirit are one essential being, the theistic
religion of devotion maintains a separation between the Divine
and the human person, for it is in the very nature of personhood
to be distinct from other persons, no matter how closely and
intimately joined in love.
56 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 57
The Worship of the Goddess
The third of Hinduism’s main streams of devotion takes as its
focus the wife of Shiva, Parvati. Parvati is only one of her many
names. She is Mahadevi, “the Great Goddess”; Uma, “Light”;
Durga, “Awe-inspiring”; and Kali, “the Black One” or “Goddess
of Time.” More than anything else, she is the Divine Mother to
her devotees. Her animal vehicle is the lion. Her worshippers are
called Shaktas, and she herself is Shakti, “the woman of power.”
Shakti is the feminine energy of the cosmos, elevated to the
stature of the supreme Goddess. Shiva, her husband, is passive
and powerless without her divine energy stirring him to life. For
Shaktas, the Goddess embodies all divine power, and it is she
who is the destroyer of demons.
Once, it is said, there was a demon named Mahisha (the
“Buffalo” demon) who gained great power through his yogic
practice. He threatened to conquer not only the human world, but
also the realm of the devas. The devas, unable to stop him, created
the Goddess Durga. Armed with all the powers of the devas, the
lithe Goddess rode forth on her huge cat to do battle with Mahisha.
A famous frieze shows Mahisha retreating in the face of her confi-
dent advance. Durga cut off Mahisha’s head and stomped all over
him with her bare feet. Needless to say, Mahisha did not survive.
Another popular tale tells of a demon named Rakta-bija,
“Blood-seed,” who had a most peculiar power. Every time a drop
of his blood was spilled, a demon just like him emerged from
that drop. It seemed impossible to kill the demon without creat-
ing an army of new demons. However, Rakta-bija was defeated
by the Goddess in the form of Kali. She hacked off his head. As
his blood spilled out, thousands more like him sprang to life.
Kali, however, was equal to the task. She drank every drop of his
blood, so that none of it hit the ground. Consequently, none of
the emerging demons survived.
58 HINDUISM
answer that they are all the true God. They are all manifesta-
tions of the One Divine who reveals Him/Her/Itself in many ways
according to the inclination of the worshipper. Human beings are
different and so God is going to be different for each person.
In practice, a Hindu generally follows the worship patterns of
his or her family. Every family has a family god. If a person grows
up in a Vaishnavite family, they worship Vishnu. If one’s family
is Shaivite, one honors Shiva. However, Hindus are generally
very tolerant of family members who feel drawn to worship God
in some other form than that of the family god. This is based on
the theological premise that all the gods are ultimately one. Since
family is so important, even those who worship other deities will
always do honor to the traditional god of the family.
Ramanuja (dates uncertain, perhaps ca. A.D. 1017–1137),
the great Vaishnavite theologian, is the premier philosopher
of devotional religion. Like Shankara, the great philosopher
of monistic religion, Ramanuja based his theology on the
Upanishads. Ramanuja interpreted the Upanishads in a way
quite different from Shankara, however.
For Shankara, the world is a projection from Reality rather
than having independent existence. The world is like rays from
the sun or waves on the ocean: the only unchanging and true
reality is the sun or the ocean; the rays and the waves are insub-
stantial and very temporary forms. Individual persons and things
are like the rays and the waves—insubstantial and temporary
forms. The only True Reality, according to Shankara, is Infinite
Spirit (Brahman). Renunciation of the world and adherence to
the path of knowledge and meditation is the only true way to
obtain release from the world. Devotional religion has its value,
but it is primarily a stepping stone to mystical religion. Moksha is
essentially being absorbed into the Infinite Consciousness just as
a drop of water is absorbed into the sea.
Ramanuja argued that both God and the world were real. If
this is so, one need not turn away from life in this world in order
to fulfill one’s spiritual needs. Following the advice of the Gita,
one should carry out one’s dharma without self-interest, with no
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Worldview of Hinduism 59
investment at all in praise or blame for one’s deeds. In this
view, moksha is not being absorbed into the Infinite, but
rather, dwelling in a paradise with God and enjoying the divine
presence forever.
The Yogas
Yoga is a cognate of the English word yoke. Like yoke, it can
mean either “to join two things together” (as when two oxen
are yoked together), or “discipline” (as when one accepts the
yoke of a spiritual teaching and way of life). Yoga is a spiritual
discipline used for the purpose of attaining union with either
Brahman or God.
Yoga guides practitioners toward a direct awareness of truth,
or an experience of the Divine. Body and mind are disciplined in
order to attain higher or more profound states of consciousness.
A male who practices yoga is a yogin or yogi; a female prac-
titioner is a yogini. There are a number of different forms of
yoga. Which yoga one takes up depends upon one’s life cir-
cumstances, and upon one’s psychological traits. Hinduism
recognizes that even in the area of spirituality, it is not the
case that “one size fits all.”
There are three primary forms of yoga. The first is the Way of
Works or Karma Yoga (the root meaning of the word “karma” is
“action” or “deed”). It involves the performance of ritual, ethical,
and social duties. The second is Jnana Yoga, the Way of Knowledge.
It involves meditation, reflection, and analysis. Its goal is recogni-
tion of the divine principle (the Atman) within oneself. The third
is Bhakti Yoga, the Way of Devotion. It involves worship, honor,
and other acts of devotion directed toward one of Hinduism’s
great deities.
60 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 61
62 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 63
64 HINDUISM
Worldview of Hinduism 65
Once you realize that some see, and others do not condescend to
kneel, but stand and look with open mouth as sight and sound rush
in along with drainage from the bath, be not afraid to open wide the
door. Those who enter will eventually prostrate on the floor.
Love,
Lord Ganesha
—Vishayasuchi
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66 HINDUISM
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Way of Knowledge leads to a recognition of the non-duality
between one’s True Self and Infinite Spirit, the Way of Devotion
leads to increasing depths of love for a personal God.
Devotees first concentrate on loving God as they love a
superior person, e.g., someone who is their lord, master, father,
or mother. In the next stage of love, they relate to God as they
would to a close friend. The third type of devotional love is the
inverse of the first type. Whereas one began by imagining God as
one’s mother or father, God is now thought of as the child and
the devotee becomes the parent. Like any vulnerable, helpless
child, the image of the deity is wakened, fed, bathed, and put to
sleep. In the final stage of love, one relates to God as one would
relate to one’s beloved or spouse. In this last type of love, which
is the most intense form of devotion, God and soul are separate
but are capable of being joined just as the souls of human lovers
are knit together.
In devotional religion, one surrenders oneself to God in
faith. Release is achieved less as a result of one’s own exertions
in meditation and more through God’s act of grace. The exact
role of the believer’s own effort and works in the process of
salvation is as extensively debated in Indian theism as it is
in Christianity.
The theological division between self-effort and grace is
neatly described as the difference between “monkey-hold” and
“cat-hold” concepts of salvation. Some Hindus believe that
moksha or liberation, while always through God’s grace, may
require the believer’s cooperation just as a baby monkey must
hold onto its mother’s back as she climbs out of harm’s way. For
others, salvation is entirely God’s work with nothing left over
for the believer to accomplish. Just as the mother cat picks up
the kittens by the scruff of their necks and carries them to safety
with no effort on their part, so likewise does the deity carry his
or her devotees to moksha.
In devotional texts and practices, the Infinite Spirit recedes in
theological importance. It is far easier for something that is
above the attributes of personhood to be an object of meditation
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68 HINDUISM
WHAT IS MEDITATION?
Many seekers work or even struggle regularly with their meditations,
especially those who are just beginning. “How does one know if he is
really meditating or not?” That’s a question that a lot of people who
meditate ask themselves. When you begin to know, having left the
process of thinking, you are meditating at that point. When you sit
down and think, you are beginning the process of meditation. For
instance, if you read a metaphysical book, a deep book, and then sit
quietly, breathe and start pondering what you have been reading, well,
you’re not quite meditating. You’re in a state called concentration.
You’re organizing the subject matter. When you begin to realize the
interrelated aspects of what you have read, when you say to yourself,
“That’s right. That’s right,” when you get these inner flashes, the
process of meditation has just begun. If you sustain this intensity,
insights and knowledge will come from the inside of you. You begin to
connect all of the inner flashes together like a string of beads. You
become just one big inner flash. You know all of these new inner
things, and one insight develops into another, into another, into
another. Then you move into a deeper state, called contemplation,
where you feel these beautiful, blissful energies flow through the body
as a result of your meditation. With disciplined control of awareness,
you can go deeper and deeper into that. So, basically, meditation
begins when you move out of the process of thinking. . . .
Many people use meditation to become quieter, relaxed, or more
concentrated. For them, that is the goal, and if that is the goal, that is
what is attained, and it’s attained quite easily. However, for the deeper
philosophical student the goal is different. It’s the realization of the Self
in this life. Meditation is the conveyance of man’s individual awareness
toward that realization. Each one, according to his evolution, has his
own particular goal. If he works at it, he fulfills that goal. For example,
a musician playing the piano might be satisfied with being able to play
simple, easy tunes to entertain himself and his friends. Yet, another
musician more ambitious in the fine arts might want to play Bach and
Beethoven. He would really have to work hard at it. He would have
to be that much more dedicated, give up that much of his emotional
life, intellectual life and put that much more time into it. So it is
in meditation.
—Dhyana Kala
Source: Available online at http://www.himalayanacademy.com/books/mws/mws_ch-37.html.
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Worldview of Hinduism 69
than it is for it to be an object of devotion. The lesser devas like-
wise recede in importance in devotional Hinduism. The realms
of the lesser devas are impermanent, and their powers insignifi-
cant next to the radiance of a supreme personal God such as
Krishna or Rama, each of whom inhabits a paradise which is
permanent and where the believer can enjoy the blissful Divine
presence forever.
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Hindu Worship
and Temple
Practice
72 HINDUISM
74 HINDUISM
TEMPLE ECONOMICS
A millennium ago, temples were maintained through donations
from royalty and other wealthy patrons, who gave the temples
gold, silver, livestock, and grants of land. Donors were believed
to receive religious merit in return, shortening their journey
toward liberation (moksha).
Some temples became very wealthy. They hired priests and
suppliers of garlands, ghee (clarified butter), milk, oil, rice,
fruits, sandalwood paste, and incense. A detailed account
of those supported by Rajarajeshwara Temple at Tanjore in
A.D. 1011 listed six hundred people. They included dancing
girls, singers, drummers, conch-blowers, accountants, parasol
bearers, potters, carpenters, astrologers, and tailors. In return
for their work at the temple, these people were given land to
cultivate so they could make a living. By providing livelihoods
for such large numbers of people, the temple exercised enor-
mous influence on the economic life of the community.
76 HINDUISM
78 HINDUISM
WORSHIP IN HOMES
Worship occurs in homes as well as in temples. Every Hindu
home has a shrine in some part of the house, usually tucked
away in a private section. Here, the god or gods of the family
are given puja and worshiped. They are treated as the family
would treat an honored guest: They are bathed, fed, dressed,
and presented with offerings of flowers and incense. All of
this may strike Westerners as rather quaint, since the Western
conception of God is that of a being who is above all human
necessities, such as eating and sleeping. Hindus believe this just
as their Western counterparts do. But the essential message
here is that human beings should relate to the gods in the same
way that people relate to other people. One approaches the
deity as if the deity were one’s king, parent, judge, lover, or
friend. And just as people “go all out” to honor their parents
and friends, so should they do the same for their divine guests.
Treating the deity just as one treats those human beings one
loves signifies that the deities are never distant or remote.
Human beings are continually in their presence.
Altar furnishings are dependent upon one’s devotional
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FROM THE
HINDU
TRADITION
CH.RoW.Hin.4cTipIn.Final.q 5/1/04 1:35 PM Page B
Sita is known mainly as the wife of Rama, the hero of the epic
Ramayana. She is revered as a model Hindu wife, who, despite facing
terrible injustice, always remains loyal to her husband. In the story,
when Rama is forced by his father into exile in the forest for fourteen
years, he initially intends to leave Sita behind, so that she will not have
to bear the discomfort of the exile. She threatens to commit suicide if
Rama does not allow her to remain at his side. Later, after Rama has
ascended the throne, Sita is kidnapped by the demon Ravana. Upon her
release, the people accuse her of having had a romance with the villain,
and to please his subjects, Rama considers banishing his wife. To prove
her innocence, she throws herself upon a burning funeral pyre and
emerges unharmed. This folio from a seventeenth-century version of the
Ramayana depicts the scene in which Rama asks his brother Lakshmana
to take Sita into the forest and abandon her, as punishment for her
supposed relationship with Ravana.
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Growing Up Hindu
Growing Up Hindu 81
THE SAMSKARAS
GENDER ROLES
Hindu society is diverse, but the majority of the populace
remains traditional in outlook and values. Traditional societies in
general, whether in India or elsewhere, tend to maintain a stricter
differentiation between gender roles. Therefore, the process of
growing up Hindu is different for boys than it is for girls.
The traditional Hindu family still desires sons, as do tradi-
tional families in most parts of the world. The reasons for this
are simple: It is the sons who carry on the family name and
who labor as adults to maintain the family property, eventually
82 HINDUISM
Growing Up Hindu 83
early childhood (including birth, name giving, first taking out to
see the sun, first feeding of rice, and the first haircut), these are not
part of the individual’s conscious journey toward spiritual libera-
tion. Consequently, the first stage of life is not infancy but rather
being a student of religion. It is called “the student stage” of life.
• Annaprasana (giving the child its first solid food): This ritual
takes place during the seventh or eight month after a
child’s birth. There are detailed scriptural instructions
that govern what foods should be given to the child
and how.
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84 HINDUISM
Growing Up Hindu 85
beauty and gifts of the sun god, Savitar. Translated into English,
it says: “OM, earth, atmosphere, heaven! Let us contemplate the
lovely splendor of the god Savitar, may he stimulate our minds.”
The Gayatri mantra is to be recited daily, upon first seeing day-
light, by male members of the twice-born castes. The upanayana
ceremony concludes with a great feast to which family, friends,
and members of the community are invited.
Female children do not have an upanayana ceremony.
Marriage is the initiation into adulthood for daughters, although
it is not unusual for the women of a community to get together
to celebrate a girl’s first menstruation (men are not invited to
this ceremony).
The second stage of life is the householder state. The house-
holder’s life is oriented toward society, duty, marriage, and
progeny (having children and perpetuating the family line).
Traditionally, adult males work at their jobs and professions,
while women take care of the home and children. Recent
decades have seen the emergence of greater opportunities for
women, but most Hindus still see the dharma of women as
being centered more in the home than in a career.
Marriage is the beginning of the household life. Tradition-
ally, almost all marriages were arranged by the families of the
bride and groom. Contemporary life has changed that some-
what, but arranged marriages are still quite common. When
asked about the role of love in marriage, a Hindu man once
86 HINDUISM
Growing Up Hindu 87
“the retiree.” This stage of life is oriented to reflection and contem-
plation. The transition to this stage usually occurs relatively late
in life. According to the ancient texts called the Dharma-shastras,
it is appropriate only after the birth of one’s first grandson, that is
to say, after one has made sure that the male lineage will continue.
In this stage, the retiree is relieved of all social responsibility and
will be cared for by his or her family. Of course, the retiree has the
corresponding obligation to live simply so as not to be an undue
burden upon the family. Usually, a husband and wife will agree to
take this step together. The stage of the retiree is not required, and
some people never formally enter it, though they may informally
ease into it as they grow older. Women often become retirees upon
the death of their husbands.
The last stage, that of the sannyasin, or “renunciate,” is the
most radical. It entails making a complete break from society in
order to pursue the spiritual path. It is a status beyond family or
caste. The renunciate—who is almost always male—will leave
his former life completely behind him, leave his family and
relatives, his familiar surrounding, his home, and put himself
entirely in the care of the divine. Sannyasins are expected to beg
for their food and their simple clothing, but since it is regarded
as very meritorious to give to a sannyasin, they are usually
able to survive albeit in humble fashion. Some sannyasins are
supported by a community, usually a different one from that in
which they formerly lived. Since sannyasins are regarded as holy
men, they often have followers whom they instruct and who
will, in turn, provide for their needs.
According to the Dharma-shastras, a man can become a
sannyasin after the birth of his first grandson. However, the great
philosopher Shankara said that there were a few young men whose
spiritual development was so great that they should be permitted
to go straight from being a student to being a sannyasin.
The family may not always welcome a person’s decision to
become a sannyasin, since it is essentially a voluntary “death
while alive” to the rest of one’s relatives. There are those who do
not want to lose their loved ones to the renunciate’s life, and it is
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88 HINDUISM
not unheard of for a man simply to leave his home and become
a renunciate without telling his family. Though the life of the
renunciate is one of the four acknowledged stages, only a small
minority of people will ever enter it. It remains, however, a living
option, and, therefore, one that every Hindu must consider, even
if only to reject it.
Beyond the stages of life, Hindus also have precise rituals
governing the treatment of the dead. Hindus cremate their
dead, rather than burying them. It is considered auspicious
to die in the holy city of Banaras, and to have one’s ashes
scattered in the sacred Ganges River. Many people move
to Banaras with the express intent of dying there, and many
families are willing to travel long distances to scatter a loved
one’s ashes on the Ganges.
Growing Up Hindu 89
Christians were assigned a caste, since there was no way to
function in Hindu society without one. Though there is much
controversy in modern Hinduism about caste and its role in
today’s world, there is no denying that caste dominated the
social life of India in ages past. Although legally abolished, it
continues to be very influential, especially in the rural areas.
At the center of the caste system is the ideal of Dharma—
“that which structures” nature and society, that is, the natural
and moral order. Dharma is one of the richest words in the
Sanskrit language. It is the Cosmic Order, the laws of nature
and, by extension, the specific characteristics of things. It is the
righteous and stable social order and, by extension, the specific
roles and functions that constitute a society. Dharma for the
individual is one’s proper duty within the social order and thus
within the cosmic order.
The duties and responsibilities of the caste system are
described in the Dharma-shastras, which we might translate as
“textbooks on law and duty.” These books describe in detail how
the proper Hindu community should be structured, what duties
are expected of each person, and how each individual life should
be lived. Even though Indian society has changed greatly in the
two millennia since the time when the Dharma-shastras were
written, modern Hindus still look for ways to adapt these laws to
the contemporary world. They try to live in the spirit of the
principles of the Dharma-shastras, even when their regulations
can no longer be applied literally.
Dharma means “justice,” but it does not mean “equality.” That
may seem strange to Westerners, who are used to equating the
concepts of justice and equality. Here, justice means everything in
its proper place, but not all places are equal. In actuality, this view
of justice was once common in the West as well. It is what justice
meant to the ancient Greek philosopher Plato, for example.
Jati, usually translated as “caste,” is the vehicle by which one
fulfills Dharma. Caste is defined by sociologists as “an endoga-
mous occupational category determined by birth,” which means
one is born into a specific caste, one marries in that caste, one
(Continued on page 92)
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90 HINDUISM
Growing Up Hindu 91
12. The divine one resided in that egg during a whole year,
then he himself by his thought (alone) divided it into
two halves;
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Growing Up Hindu 93
The basic metaphor underlying the caste system is one that
likens society to the human body. As in the body, so too in society,
each part must fulfill its own proper function if the whole is to
prosper. The prosperity of the whole entails the prosperity of the
The older I grow, the better I seem to think of caste and such other
time-honored institutions of India. There was a time when I used to
think that many of them were useless and worthless, but the older
I grow, the more I seem to feel a difference in cursing any one of
them, for each one of them is the embodiment of the experience of
centuries. . . .
A child of but yesterday, destined to die the day after tomorrow,
comes to me and asks me to change all my plans and if I hear the
advice of that baby and change all my surroundings according to his
ideas I myself should be a fool, and no one else. Much of the advice
that is coming to us from different countries is similar to this. Tell
these wiseacres, “I will hear you when you have made a stable society
yourselves. You cannot hold on to one idea for two days, you quarrel
and fail; you are born like moths in the spring and die like them in five
minutes. You come up like bubbles and burst like bubbles too. First
form a stable society like ours. First make laws and institutions that
remains undiminished in their power through scores of centuries. Then
will be the time to talk on the subject with you, but till then, my friend,
you are only a giddy child.”
Caste is a very good thing. Caste is the plan we want to follow.
What caste really is, not one in a million understands. There is no
country in the world without caste. Caste is based throughout on
that principle. The plan in India is to make everybody Brahmana,
the Brahmana being the ideal of humanity. If you read the history
of India you will find that attempts have always been made to raise
the lower classes. Many are the classes that have been raised.
Many more will follow till the whole will become Brahmana. That
is the plan.
Source: Available online at http://www.sivanandadlshq.org/messages/caste.htm.
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94 HINDUISM
parts. If a part does not perform its function, then the whole is
weakened, and this is to the ultimate detriment of the parts. The
metaphor of the “social body” was common in pre-modern
Western social thought as well.
In this vision of society, everyone is important, but people
are not all equal. There are different parts with different
functions. Some parts are considered superior to others.
However, even the lowliest part has great value in its proper
place, because it is necessary for the functioning of the body.
Everyone should remain in his or her place, but there is a
place for everyone.
Just as our body has eyes, ears, arms, and legs, all different,
Growing Up Hindu 95
yet each with its own necessary function, so society has many
different types of people. We do not think of our bodily parts
as equal: the eyes, the brain, or heart are much more presti-
gious organs than, for example, liver or spleen and certainly
more than the feet. But “lower” parts are just as necessary as
“higher” ones, and a malfunction in liver or spleen can lead
to dire consequences. The goal is for the higher and the lower
to harmoniously co-exist and mutually benefit each other.
Relations among castes are governed by a network of mutual
obligations and benefits, so that each caste contributes to the
welfare of every other caste in a very real sense, even though
each caste is socially distinct.
To those content to live within the caste system, the security of
having a place is more important than social mobility. Although
there is some social mobility within the caste system, it is
limited. One may not move into a different caste, but one can
improve one’s lot in life, and earn additional wealth, by working
hard at one’s job. American society values mobility over security,
perhaps because most people assume that mobility means upward
mobility. If the United States were to experience a sustained
economic downturn, we may come to value security more, even
in our culture.
Caste is determined by karma. The specific caste of an
individual is determined by his or her deeds in previous
lives. Furthermore, how one acts in this life determines the
characteristics of one’s next incarnation. A belief in karma is
critical to a belief in the fairness of the caste system, though
one may certainly believe in karma and reincarnation with-
out being committed to traditional Indian social structure.
In modern India, caste is less rigid and less powerful than it
was in times past, though it is still a force to be reckoned with.
Personal ads in Indian newspapers often mention caste as a
prerequisite for a relationship. Many Hindus argue that the
basic elements of the caste system, if not its exact structure, are
a necessary part of any well-functioning social system.
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Hindu
Popular Culture
SCULPTURE
Hindu sculpture is prominently displayed within temples, or on
their exterior walls. The sculptures within a temple are typically
used in worship, while those adorning the exterior walls func-
tion as decoration. Whether used as an object of devotion or as
decoration, any sculpture may convey religious symbolism.
Hindu sculpture displays gods and goddesses, heroes and
heroines, animals and foliage. Deities may have animal heads, or
multiple arms or faces. While not realist, Hindu sculpture is not
schematic or abstract. The female body, complete with jewelry, is
voluptuously portrayed. Male figures, equally well proportioned,
are generally lithe and supple rather than tense and muscular.
There are also ferocious figures, which often remind one more
than anything else of a Halloween mask.
In Hinduism, sculpted figures dance. Even though carved out
of stone or metal, they convey movement and vitality.
The major gods and goddesses are the main figures portrayed
within a temple. Here, one may find Parvati, exquisitely shaped
and ornamented. She cuts a regal figure with a tall crown on her
head. Her hands and arms gesture in various mudras (symbolic
positions), soft and feminine but with clear authority. Or, perhaps
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98 HINDUISM
the eyes alight on Vishnu, also wearing a tall crown. In each of his
four arms he carries a symbol of his power. In most temples and
shrines you will find a sculpted image of Ganesha, the elephant-
headed god. He is heavyset, a rarity among Hindu deities, who
tend to be portrayed as male and female ideals. His corpulence
is the result of the sweet treats he loves to eat, offered to him
by his many devotees. Durga is often shown vanquishing the
buffalo demon, Mahishasura. Shiva dances wildly and energeti-
cally, yet with the serene face of a yogin. These are just a few of
the sculpted images one might find within a Hindu temple.
There are deities on the exterior walls of a temple as well, but
these are often minor deities. They are joined by vast numbers of
human beings. Sculptures on exterior walls may be arranged in
ascending rows, all the way up the sides of the tower. They are small,
because there are so many of them, but they are all lovingly and
gracefully carved. They often portray aspects of life which we would
call secular, for example, war, social life, and romantic encounters.
The overriding impression left by Hindu sculpture is its
sensuality. The human body may well be Hinduism’s premier
aesthetic form. Not only in sculpture, but also in theater and
dance, the body is used to evoke moods ranging from melan-
choly to exuberance to prayerful adoration.
THEATER
In ancient India, theater, music, and dance were part of a single
endeavor; they were not treated as separate disciplines. Actors
danced for the duration of a play, accompanied by musicians.
Although this ancient art form no longer exists, one could
perhaps get some idea of what it was like by watching a contem-
porary yakshagana (“celebration of the celestials”), a rural form
of stagecraft involving song, dance, and drama.
A yakshagana is performed by a team of fifteen to twenty
actors who walk from village to village carrying their costumes
and accessories on their heads. Such a troupe will travel twenty
miles in an average day.
The performers are often housed in a temple. There they will
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DANCE
Dance is one of the disciplines that grew out of the ancient form
of Indian theater. In the ancient theater tradition, the dancers
mimed the story while the singers sang the dialogue. Instrumen-
talists accompanied both dancers and singers.
Dancers were traditionally attached to the temples. This associ-
ation colored dance with a strong religious flavor. Indian religious
dance attempts to evoke different moods in the audience.
Portuguese traveler Domingo Paes journeyed through the
Vijayanagar kingdom from A.D. 1520 to 1522. He visited some
intensive training sessions for young female dancers. His journal
describes walls decorated with paintings depicting different dance
poses, designed to help the aspirants to correct their steps. The
king, Krishna Devaraya, took a keen interest in dance education
and frequently visited these training sessions. According to Paes,
the dancers were adorned with so many gold, pearl, and diamond
ornaments that they required assistance in bearing their weight.
A dance consists of mudras (hand gestures), abhinayana (face
and body expressions), and gati (footwork). Each area of India
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100 HINDUISM
has its own unique dance traditions. A few of the most popular
forms of dance are described below.
Bharata Natyam
This is one of the most important and one of the oldest of
the classical styles of Hindu dance. It is a South Indian form
of temple dance. Historically, it was used mainly in Hindu
religious ceremonies.
Devadasis (“servants of God”) are women who live in the
temples. They are the traditional performers of Bharata Natyam.
Bharata Natyam is a solo dance. It is generally performed by one
woman. A dancer will never turn her back to the gods whom she
honors with her performance. The dance begins with alarippu,
a gesture symbolizing that the body is an offering to the gods.
The movements of this dance style flow from a core pose
in which the knees are turned outward and flexed, and the
feet (also turned outward) are close together. The feet beat out
complex rhythms while movements of the eyebrows, eyes, neck,
shoulders, arms, and feet are executed in rhythmic succession.
Kathak
Kathak is the major dance style of northern India. It combines
dance styles developed in the courts of the Mughal emperors
with Hindu folk elements. It took on a distinctive form in the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, when the story of Radha and
Krishna became popular.
Kathak dancers hold their bodies straight. Intricate footwork
consisting of walks, glides, and fast pirouettes give this dance
form its vital, dazzling, and skillful appearance. Meanwhile,
eyes, eyebrows, neck, and shoulders may etch out delicate
movements. Kathak dances often express devotion to Krishna.
Kathakali
Kathakali is a dance-drama that is popular in the state of Kerala in
southwestern India. The performance is a form of worship. The
dancers act out stories from the Mahabharata and the Ramayana.
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102 HINDUISM
Dancers train for six to twenty years to learn the steps and
movements of Kathakali dance. It requires extraordinary muscle
control to contort the face to express certain emotions, and also
to perform the leaps and spins.
Kathakali performances are often held outdoors. Today a
performance may last for a few hours, but traditionally the
dancers performed throughout the night, from around 7:00 P.M.
to about 7:00 A.M.
Orissi
Orissi is a dance form from the state of Orissa in eastern India.
Sculptures dating from the second century B.C. show dancers in
poses characteristic of the Orissi dance style. Orissi developed
from musical plays was commonly performed in temples and
as village entertainment.
Once Jayadeva’s Gita Govinda made its appearance in the
twelfth century, it became the literary basis which supported
the entire superstructure of Orissan dance. The Gita Govinda
sings the praises of Radha and Krishna. Jayadeva himself sang
these hymns in the temple of Jagannath at Puri, accompanied
by a Devadasi named Padmavati. The devotees and pilgrims
who visited the temple were captivated by their music, and it
soon became the bedrock of Orissi dance.
Although it was once a group performance, Orissi today is a
solo dance form, usually performed by a woman. It uses some of
the same patterns and poses as Bharata Natyam, but in addition
it includes curved body movements and jumps. The jumps add
vitality to the Orissi style.
Manipuri
Manipur is a verdant, hilly region in extreme northeastern India.
Dance and music is a way of life here, and Manipuri dance is
very intricate and creative.
A dancer trained in the Manipuri style will bend his knees
slightly and keep his feet facing forward. His body will
form a figure eight shape, as he moves his chest and waist in
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MUSIC
Hindu music influenced the Beatles in the 1960s, and it has
maintained a following in the West ever since that time.
104 HINDUISM
NARADA
The ancient sage Narada was loved and respected by all. He traveled
about, preaching to people, uttering words of wisdom, and telling
stories with an ethical message. In the Mahabharata, Narada tells
King Yudhishthira to keep his army and weaponry ready, to be kind to
his servants and prompt in paying their wages, not to overspend his
earnings, and to provide the farmers with all the necessary facilities.
Narada appears in every Purana and all the major epics, always
as a giver of sagely advice. In ancient India, no story was complete
without him!
Yet Narada was not an advisor, an administrator, nor a teacher, in
the conventional sense of any of those words. He was a musician, and
he is said to have led many souls to salvation through his music. He
sang songs of devotion and praise. Usually Narada makes his entry in
a play or a story carrying a veena, a stringed musical instrument which
he is said to have invented.
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Musical Instruments
Of the many musical instruments native to India, the sitar and
the tabla are best known in the West. The sitar is a stringed
106 HINDUISM
RAVI SHANKAR
Ravi Shankar is a sitar player and a composer. He is known as the man
who brought Indian music to the West. Former Beatle George Harrison
calls him the “Godfather of World Music,” a reference to the fact that
his talents were not limited to Indian musical forms, but included jazz
and other forms of Western music as well.
Shankar studied Hindustani classical music under the tutelage of
Ustad Allauddin Khan. Khan was Shankar’s guru, and Shankar was
Khan’s disciple. This was the traditional way of becoming a master
musician in India.
As a young man, Shankar wrote scores for Indian ballets and
movies. In 1952, he played for virtuoso American violinist Yehudi
Menuhin in Delhi. Menuhin was impressed with both Shankar and
Indian music. This was the beginning of Shankar’s international
fame. Just ten years later, Shankar opened the Kinnara Music School
in Bombay.
Both Indian music and jazz highlight improvisation. Shankar
explored the relationship between the two musical forms in his 1962
album Improvisations. In 1966 he played his first sitar-violin duet with
Menuhin, and repeated the collaboration the following year as the
showpiece performance for the Human Rights Day celebration at the
United Nations.
His 1966 meeting with George Harrison brought him into contact
with hippie culture, and he played at Woodstock in 1969. He objected
to the drugs at Woodstock, however. While he and Harrison have
maintained their friendship through the years, Shankar refused to
appear at pop festivals after Woodstock.
Shankar continued to perform both within India and internationally
in the following decades. He has received countless honors including
eleven honorary doctorates and India’s highest civilian award (1981).
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POPULAR CULTURE
The Sacred Cow
In India, monkeys searching for food may be encountered in
temples, and even taxis take care to avoid cows wandering in
the streets. Whether in philosophy or in daily life, animal life
is not strictly separated from human life. Animals are treated
with a kindness thought sentimental in the West. Animals are
even associated with divinity. Ganesha has an elephant head;
Hanuman is a monkey. All the major gods and goddesses
have animal mounts. Hinduism’s reverence for animals is
partially due to the belief in reincarnation, which holds that
an animal may one day be reincarnated as a human being, or
even as a god.
Cows receive special veneration. From ancient times, cattle
symbolized fertility and wealth. In rural India, cows provide
milk, butter, cheese, and ghee (clarified butter used in sacrifices).
They provide fuel (dried dung) and the companionship associated
with household pets in other cultures. They are decorated and
proudly displayed on certain festival days. After one’s own mother’s
milk, they are the next source of nourishment provided to a
child. Hence they are gau mata, “mother cow,” and harming them
is considered equivalent to the harming of one’s own mother.
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108 HINDUISM
Jyotish (Astrology)
Hindu astrology (Jyotish) is a branch of Vedic knowledge, and, thus,
it is often called Vedic astrology. It is a sacred science in India. While
it shares the twelve signs of the zodiac, the planets, and the astrolog-
ical houses with Western astrology, it is unique in many other ways.
In Hindu astrology, the signs of the zodiac are strictly identical
to the constellations, so that the sign Aries begins when the sun
arrives at the constellation Aries. This is called the sidereal zodiac.
The West uses what is known as the tropical zodiac, which defines
Aries as the place of the spring equinox. Due to an astronomical
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110 HINDUISM
ASTROLOGY
Hindu, or Vedic, astrology differs somewhat from the type of
astrology practiced in the West. Although the names of the zodiacal
signs are the same in both India and the West, the gods and forces
associated with the signs are quite different.
Vedic astrology is different from Western astrology mainly
because it uses the fixed zodiac rather than the moving zodiac.
Most people’s “sun sign”—the one you can find in the newspaper
every day—is usually one sign back when the chart is refigured using
Vedic astrology. That means that, using the Vedic system, you
are most likely no longer the sign you always thought you were.
However, if you were born within about the last five days of a
Western sign month, you will probably have the same sign
under the Vedic system.
This chart illustrates the signs of the zodiac used in India.
Hindu Holidays
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120 HINDUISM
122 HINDUISM
Diwali
Diwali, probably the single most important Hindu holiday,
occurs at the end of the month of Ashwin. Even those Hindus
who are not particularly observant at other times of the year will
usually celebrate Diwali. Diwali is also one of the most widely
celebrated of Indian festivals. It is celebrated throughout India,
and in many other countries including Singapore, Thailand,
Malaysia, Kenya, and Trinidad.
Diwali, the “festival of lights,” commemorates Lakshmi, god-
dess of wealth, as well as the return of Rama and Sita from exile.
Rama’s return to the throne symbolizes the victory of good over
evil. People place lighted lamps in every window of their homes
to light the way for Rama and Sita’s return.
Decorative designs called rangolis are painted on floors and
walls. Relatives and friends gather to offer prayers and distribute
sweets. Children set off firecrackers, which contribute to the
theme of the victory of good over evil by symbolically reducing
the latter to ashes.
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Kartik (October–November)
Margashirsha (November–December)
Paus (December–January)
Magh (January–February)
Phalgun (February–March)
Chaitra (March–April)
home, Shiva cut off Ganesha’s head. When his grief-stricken wife told
him what he had done, Shiva replaced Ganesha’s head with that of an
elephant. In the end, Ganesha is blessed with super-sized wisdom.
This bizarre myth speaks of everyday situations. What father has not,
from time to time, had trouble recognizing his own rapidly growing and
changing son? What father has not been tempted to (figuratively)
behead his own son by insisting overly much upon his own authority in
his own home? On the other hand, what father has not regretted his
hasty words and actions? What father has not been willing to take
extreme measures to right his wrongdoing?
The myth insists that wisdom can be gained even in the midst of such
distorted family circumstances. Indeed, while no one would want to deny
the importance of good homes, it is true that many wise and successful
persons were raised in less than perfect homes, by less than perfect
parents. Perhaps that is because imperfect circumstances provide better
training in the removal of obstacles than do perfect circumstances.
Ganesha’s annual festival begins on the fourth day of the bright half of
the lunar month of Bhadrapada (August–September), and lasts for ten
days. Before the festival begins, clay statues of Ganesha are purchased
and installed in homes. In streets and commercial establishments, com-
munity worship is offered to a life-size or even larger image, which has
been installed on an erected platform or under a large tent.
The Ganesha images are decorated with ornaments, flowers, and
lights. Offerings of sweets, coconut pieces, fruit, and other items are
blessed and distributed among the devotees after the worship service.
On the last day of the festival, the jovial god receives a ritual sending-
off as he leaves for his celestial home. The images are carried through
the streets in procession, accompanied by singing and dancing, to be
immersed in a river or the sea.
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Memories
Memories 129
he history of Hinduism can be broadly divided into two periods.
T The first of these extends from the Vedic age until around
A.D. 1200. The second begins with the coming of the Muslims in
the early thirteenth century and extends to the present.
In the first period, Hindus developed their own civilization and
enjoyed political sovereignty within their own land. We have
already traced the broad outlines of this first period in the second
and third chapters, where we discussed, respectively, the founda-
tions of Hinduism and the development of Hindu scriptures.
In this chapter, we will discuss the second period, during
much of which Hindus lived under either Muslim or European
(primarily British) rule. Although Muslim rule began earlier
in some parts of India, historians typically date the beginning
of substantial Muslim power in India to the beginning of the
thirteenth century. Muslim power remained substantial until
the middle of the eighteenth century, although a shadow of
the Mughal Dynasty persisted for another century. The British
gained substantial power in India around 1750 and maintained
it for about two centuries. India regained her independence
from foreign rule in 1947.
We turn now to a consideration of memories from the periods
of Muslim and British rule that remain alive among Hindus today.
130 HINDUISM
Memories 131
the Islamic rulers settled in India, they soon recognized that they
would have to learn to get along with their Hindu subjects in
one way or another. Over the following centuries, Hindu and
132 HINDUISM
HINDU MEDICINE
Ayurveda, or “the science of life,” is the name for Indian medicine. It
is a holistic system that uses natural herbs and other plants to cure
diseases. It covers many of the same fields as Western medicine,
seen below with their Indian names.
• Dehavritti (physiology)
• Nidana (diagnosis)
• Salya (surgery)
• Stritantra (gynecology)
Memories 133
American scholar recently completed a book on Shivaji, a Hindu
hero who defeated the Muslims and established an independent
kingdom in the seventeenth century. The publication of his
work by Oxford University Press provoked a riot on the part of
Hindu demonstrators against what they viewed as the defama-
tion of one of their heroes.17
Because emotions on both sides of the issue run high, it is hard
to gauge the amount of negative or positive influence exerted on
India by Islam. About the best we can do is to list specific positive
contributions by both sides during the centuries of Muslim rule.
may be brought about in many ways, which are chosen based upon the
lifestyle and character of the person being treated.
Hindu physicians have made many contributions to the progress of
modern medicine, a few of which include:
134 HINDUISM
Memories 135
Nanak as trying simply to combine these religions, however.
First, Sikhs believe that Nanak received a new and separate reve-
lation from God. Second, Nanak held that both Hinduism and
Islam were only partial reflections of one truth that lay behind
them. He practiced Hinduism among Hindus and Islam among
Muslims to demonstrate that there was no real contradiction
between them, since they both proceeded from the one Divine
Source. Nanak’s Sikhism was extensively persecuted by the more
fanatical Muslim rulers, for both religious and political reasons.
However, Sikhism remains a very important religion in India
and has spread to other parts of the world as well.
136 HINDUISM
Memories 137
would inspire Mohandas Gandhi to start the movement that
would one day undo British rule in India.
The resentment that Indians, both Hindu and Muslim, felt
against the British finally exploded in 1857. In the West, the
rebellion is commonly called “the Sepoy Mutiny” (a sepoy
was an Indian soldier serving in the army of the East India
Company), but in India, it is referred to as the “First Struggle
for Independence.” In this incident, a group of sepoys refused
to use bullets that were supposedly greased with animal fat—
offensive to Hindus if it were beef grease and offensive to
both Hindus and Muslims if it were pork grease. When the
138 HINDUISM
Memories 139
The man who succeeded Annie Besant as Indian National
Congress president was an English-trained lawyer named
Mohandas K. Gandhi. Gandhi had made his reputation fighting
the unjust “passbook” laws that restricted the rights of Indians
living in South Africa. Now he wanted to apply his skills to
help win greater rights for Indians living in India. Eventually,
he came to realize that the only way Indians would be able to
achieve those rights was by gaining their full independence
from Great Britain.
Gandhi then embarked on a campaign to bring about that
independence. His methods came to be known as satyagraha,
“truth-force,” which espoused a firm but nonviolent confronta-
tion with the British authorities. Gandhi was beaten and arrested
a number of times but remained both committed and nonviolent.
Gandhi was given the title mahatma, the “great-souled one,”
or, more simply, “the saint.” In the end, thanks in part to his
efforts, the British were finally compelled to leave India.
GANDHI ON SATYAGRAHA
Satyagraha is a relentless search for truth and a determination to
search truth. . . . Satyagraha has been designed as an effective sub-
stitute for violence. . . . Satyagraha is a process of educating public
opinion, such that it covers all the elements of the society and makes
itself irresistible. . . . The fight of Satyagraha is for the strong in spirit,
not the doubter or the timid. Satyagraha teaches us the art of living
as well as dying. . . . Satyagraha, of which civil-resistance is but a
part, is to me the universal law of life. . . . Satyagraha can rid society
of all evils, political, economic, and moral. . . . A genuine Satyagraha
should never excite contempt in the opponent even when it fails to
command regard or respect. . . . The method of Satyagraha requires
that the Satyagrahi should never lose hope, so long as there is the
slightest ground left for it. . . . In the dictionary of Satyagraha, there
is no enemy. Since Satyagraha is a method of conversion and convic-
tion, it seeks never to use the slightest coercion. . . . In the code of
the Satyagrahi, there is no such thing as surrender to brute force.
140 HINDUISM
10
Hinduism in the
World Today
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APPENDIX
February 2, 1835
150
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APPENDIX
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are in the right. They have wasted the best years of life in learning
what procures for them neither bread nor respect. Surely we
might, with advantage, have saved the cost of making these
persons useless and miserable; surely, men may be brought up
to be burdens to the public and objects of contempt to their
neighbours at a somewhat smaller charge to the state. But such
is our policy. We do not even stand neuter in the contest
between truth and falsehood. We are not content to leave the
natives to the influence of their own hereditary prejudices. To
the natural difficulties which obstruct the progress of sound
science in the East, we add fresh difficulties of our own making.
Bounties and premiums, such as ought not to be given even for the
propagation of truth, we lavish on false taste and false philosophy.
By acting thus we create the very evil which we fear. We are
making that opposition which we do not find. What we spend on
the Arabic and Sanscrit colleges is not merely a dead loss to the
cause of truth; it is bounty-money paid to raise up champions of
error. It goes to form a nest, not merely of helpless place-hunters,
but of bigots prompted alike by passion and by interest to raise a
cry against every useful scheme of education. If there should
be any opposition among the natives to the change which I
recommend, that opposition will be the effect of our own system.
It will be headed by persons supported by our stipends and
trained in our colleges. The longer we persevere in our present
course, the more formidable will that opposition be. It will be every
year reinforced by recruits whom we are paying. From the native
society left to itself, we have no difficulties to apprehend; all the
murmuring will come from that oriental interest which we have,
by artificial means, called into being, and nursed into strength.
There is yet another fact, which is alone sufficient to prove that
the feeling of the native public, when left to itself, is not such as the
supporters of the old system represent it to be. The Committee
have thought fit to lay out above a lac of rupees in printing Arabic
and Sanscrit books. Those books find no purchasers. It is very
rarely that a single copy is disposed of. Twenty-three thousand
volumes, most of them folios and quartos, fill the libraries, or
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Authors. Less than half the time which enables an English youth
to read Herodotus and Sophocles, ought to enable a Hindoo to
read Hume and Milton.
To sum up what I have said, I think it clear that we are not
fettered by the Act of Parliament of 1813; that we are not fettered
by any pledge expressed or implied; that we are free to employ
our finds as we choose; that we ought to employ them in teach-
ing what is best worth knowing; that English is better worth
knowing than Sanscrit or Arabic; that the natives are desirous to
be taught English, and are not desirous to be taught Sanscrit or
Arabic; that neither as the languages of law, nor as the languages
of religion, have the Sanscrit and Arabic any peculiar claim to our
engagement; that it is possible to make natives of this country
thoroughly good English scholars, and that to this end our efforts
ought to be directed.
In one point I fully agree with the gentlemen to whose general
views I am opposed. I feel with them, that it is impossible for us,
with our limited means, to attempt to educate the body of the
people. We must at present do our best to form a class who may
be interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern;
a class of persons, Indian in blood and colour, but English in
taste, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect. To that class we may
leave it to refine the vernacular dialects of the country, to enrich
those dialects with terms of science borrowed from the Western
nomenclature, and to render them by degrees fit vehicles for
conveying knowledge to the great mass of the population.
I would strictly respect all existing interests. I would deal even
generously with all individuals who have had fair reason to
expect a pecuniary provision. But I would strike at the root of the
bad system which has hitherto been fostered by us. I would at
once stop the printing of Arabic and Sanscrit books, I would
abolish the Madrassa and the Sanscrit college at Calcutta. Benares
is the great seat of Brahmanical learning; Delhi, of Arabic
learning. If we retain the Sanscrit college at Benares and the
Mahometan college at Delhi, we do enough, and much more
than enough in my opinion, for the Eastern languages. If the
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1400 – 800 B.C. Vedic Samhitas and Vedic ritual literature take form
800 – 600 B.C. Forest Treatises and the early Upanishads developed
600 – 400 B.C. Major Upanishads are composed; cities, writing, and
coinage emerge
c. 1100 c. 1100
Muslim Sufis enter India
Muslim Sufis enter India
c. 1500 B.C. c. 1500 B.C.
c. 1000 c. 1000
Indo-Aryans Indo-Aryans
Tantric religion becomes
Tantric religion becomes
migrate to India migrate to India
part of Hinduism part of Hinduism
c. 600 c. 600
Vedanta school established
Vedanta school established
1500 1500BC AD
5001500 500
500 500
BC AD 500
1500
500 1500
1500
c. A.D. 200 c. A.D. 200
Bhagavad Gita Bhagavad Gita
finalized finalized
1206 1206
Muslim sultanate Muslim sultanate
established at Delhi established at Delhi
326 B.C. 326 B.C.
Alexander the Great Alexander the Great 1498 1498
invades Indus Valley invades IndusVasco
Valleyda Gama visitsVasco
India da Gama visits India
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1947 194
1653 1653 India wins independence
India wins independen
Taj Mahal Taj Mahal from Great Britain from Great Brita
completed completed
1500
1500 1600 1600 1750
1600 1750 1950
1750 195
195
1757 1757
Battle of Plassy 1906
Battle of Plassy 190
Muslim League Mus
founded foun
1885 1885
Indian National Indian National
Congress founded Congress founded
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CHRONOLOGY
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CHRONOLOGY
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CHRONOLOGY
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CHRONOLOGY
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NOTES
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GLOSSARY
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GLOSSARY
caste—See jati.
communalism—The idea that loyalty to one’s own local
community or to one’s fellow religionists should supercede
loyalty to the modern nation-state of India.
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GLOSSARY
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GLOSSARY
jiva—Soul; that part of the total person, along with the atman,
that transmigrates from one body to another.
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GLOSSARY
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GLOSSARY
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GLOSSARY
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GLOSSARY
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
It is difficult for a teacher of world religion courses to list all the books
from which a knowledge of Hinduism has been derived. Nevertheless,
the works listed here have been particularly helpful in the writing of
this book.
For the outline of the Hindu holidays, the following deserves special
acknowledgment: Elizabeth Breuilly, et al., Religions of the World (Facts
on File Inc., 1997). This treatment of holidays was supplemented by
articles on holidays written by Professor Ann Marie B. Bahr for the
Brookings Register in South Dakota. The Breuilly book was also very
helpful in the development of material about the Hindu temple.
Basham, Arthur. The Wonder That Was India. New York: Grove Press, 1966.
Bryant, Edwin. The Quest for the Origins of Vedic Culture. New York:
Oxford University Press, 2001.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Noss, David S. A History of the World’s Religions, 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 2003.
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FURTHER READING
PRIMARY SOURCES
Du Bary, William Theodore, et al. Sources of the Indian Tradition.
New York: Columbia University Press, 1966.
SECONDARY SOURCES
Breuilly, Elizabeth, Joanne O’Brien, and Martin Palmer. Religions of the
World. Facts on File, Inc., 1997.
Danielou, Alain. The Myths and Gods of India: The Classic Work on
Hindu Polytheism from the Princeton Bollingen Series. Rochester, Vt.:
Inner Traditions International Ltd., 1991.
Frawley, David. From the River of Heaven: Hindu and Vedic Knowledge
for the Modern Age. Twin Lakes, Wisc.: Lotus Press, 2000.
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FURTHER READING
Sharma, Arvind, ed. Modern Hindu Thought: The Essential Texts. New
York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
WEBSITES
BBC World Service Hinduism: An Introduction
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/people/features/
world_religions/hinduism.shtml
Maintained by the British Broadcasting Corporation, this site
provides an overview of Hindu beliefs and offers comparisons
with other world religions.
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FURTHER READING
Hinduism
http://www.religioustolerance.org/hinduism.htm
A site maintained by Religious Tolerance.org, it gives details about
the history and beliefs of the world’s third-largest religion.
Hindu Website
http://hinduwebsite.com/hinduindex.htm
Provides a broad overview of general Hindu history and beliefs and
offers extensive links to further information about Hinduism avail-
able on the Internet.
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INDEX
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INDEX
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INDEX
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INDEX
horoscopes Kalki, 54
and births, 109, 111 kama (“pleasure”), 41
and marriage, 86 Kansa, 96, 120
householder, 85 karma, 4, 8, 32, 39–42, 44, 78, 95
human aspirations, 38, 41–43 Karma Yoga, 39, 59–60, 67, 77
human condition, 11, 38–39 Kartik, 125–126
Kathak, 100
illusion. See maya Kathakali, 100–102
images, of deities, 71–72, 75, 114–115, Kenya, Hinduism in, 148
120, 130, 142 Keshub Chander Sen, 142
incarnations. See avatars Ketu, 111
Indian National Congress, 138, 168 kinnaras, 103
Indo-Aryans, 15–17, 19, 21, 164 knowledge, way of, 9, 39, 59–61,
Indo-European languages, 14 –15, 63–64, 67, 114, See also meditation;
21 yoga
Indra, 19–20, 25, 41, 44–45, 103 Krishna, 32–34, 52, 54–55, 69, 71,
Indus River, 3, 14 77, 99–103, 114, 120, 134, 149,
Indus Valley Civilization, 13–14, 167, 169
16–17, 21, 164–165 Kshatriyas, 5–7, 19, 73, 92, 140
Infinite Spirit. See Brahman Kumbha Mela, 78
International Parliament of the Kunti, 33
Religions, 148–149 Kuru brothers, 31
International Society of Krishna Kurukshetra, 32–33
Consciousness (ISKCON) (Hare
Krishnas), 34, 148–149 Lakshmi, 52, 75, 123–124
Ishvara (“the Lord”), 49 liberation. See moksha
Islam, 9, 13, 25, 129–131, 133–135, lingam (“erect phallus”), 17, 56,
167, See also Muslims 124–125
literature. See scriptures
Jagganath (“Lord of the World”), Lord. See Ishvara
118–119, See also Vishnu Lord of Animals. See Shiva
Jahan, Shah, 131, 134 love of God. See bhakti
Jaistha, 125, 127
Janmashtami, 120 “Macaulay Minute, The,” 136,
Jatakarma, 83 150–163, 168
jati (“caste”), 89, 92 See also caste Macaulay, Thomas Babington,
system 135–136
jiva (“soul”), 39 Magh, 124–126
Jnana Yoga, 39, 59–60, 64, 66 Mahabharata, 5, 31–32, 46, 99–100,
Jupiter, and pilgrimage, 78 104, 126
and Bhagavad Gita, 30–34, 166
Kabir, 134, 167 Mahadeva, 47, See also Shiva
Kali (“the Black One or Goddess of Mahadevi (“the Great Goddess”), 49,
Time”), 57, See also Shakti 57, See also Shakti
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PICTURE CREDITS
Page:
10: Chart adapted by the Interna- C: © Paul Seheult; Eye Ubiquitous/
tional Bulletin of Missionary CORBIS
Research, January 2003 D: © Scala/Art Resource, NY
B: © Victoria & Albert Museum, E: © Scala/Art Resource, NY
London/Art Resource, NY F: © Scala/Art Resource, NY
B: © Giraudon/Art Resource, NY G: © Art Resource, NY
C: © Charles & Josette Lenars/ H: © Art Resource, NY
CORBIS
Cover: © Royalty-Free/CORBIS
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CONTRIBUTORS
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