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Hinduism
Hinduism : An Overview
by Neria Harish Hebbar, MD
Introduction
If looked
at in the historical perspective, all the religions have an interesting
beginning and development. Also looking at all the religions in the
historical context makes it easier to understand and tolerate. Sri
Aurobindo wrote that all religions have two aspects. One is the Truth or
the core essence of the religion. The second is the unimportant part that
is only relevant to the time the scriptures were written. Thus the Gita
is a sermon on the battlefield. The battlefield is not important.
Similarly the Koran was revealed over many years during tumultuous years
with tribal infighting in Mecca and Medina. That context of the Koran,
with its violence and death is not important and significant only for the
contemporary period. Similarly one religion does not hold an answer to
all the questions. One religion does not hold a monopoly on Truth. In
the end one will only extract what one is capable of from any scripture.
If we get bogged down in the social constraints or customs of the time
when the scriptures were written, they are bound to appear ordinary today.
Hinduism is a belief
and not a scripted practice. Belief in the basic tenets of Hindu Dharma
is all that is needed. The rest is up to the individual. Despite the
noisy celebration with loud conches and raucous bells, the essence of
practice of Hinduism is a quiet introspection and contemplative
meditation. A Hindu's quest is to purify his 'self' called jiva-atman.
It is possible for every Hindu to do this by following the path of
Dharma. No Hindu can be denied this right.
Action is inevitable
in life. There are distinctively two kinds of actions - good and bad. A
Hindu is encouraged to show moral judgment in all his actions. This is
especially so because of the karma doctrine. There is accountability for
all actions. The goal is to accumulate good karma through many births.
Because Hindus believe atman is indestructible, it is believed that the
same atman is transferred from one birth to another. But the karma is
never forgotten and carried by the jiva-atman like a shroud around a naked
soul, form birth to birth.
This is a strong
incentive for Hindus to lead a life of virtue. Life is a learning
process, an opportunity to gather knowledge. Like a student in school,
some students taking longer to comprehend and finish school than others,
but always finishing school, Hinduism gives everyone ample time to succeed
in releasing oneself from the cycles of rebirth. It gives them many
lifetimes to do so. Everyone goes about doing this at his or her own
speed. The scriptures give us suggestions as to how this process can be
hastened but does not compel us to do it one way or another.
Some Definitions
Dharma
translates to
righteousness and is a code of conduct that is expected of everyone though
in Hinduism it is without compulsion. Laws of Manu (Manuva Shastra or
Manusmriti) form the basis of Hindu conduct.
Karma
is a retributive justice that is carried with the atman into the
afterlife It is the imprint of one's deeds in this life. A human being
is born already with a heavy baggage that is the memory of the karma from
previous births. In the current life he is in full control of his deeds
and hence is capable of accumulating good karma throughout this life. This
is like a balance sheet. Good karma cancels out the bad karma. When
enough good karma is accumulated over many lifetimes, the jiva-atman
is released from this eternal cycle of samsara and attains moksha.
Samsara
is the repeated cycles
of births and deaths. A human is destined to be born many times until his
soul is purified. He is given a chance to accumulate good karma so that
the endless cycle of rebirths can be broken. It is believed that as more
and more good karma is accumulated it can be seen in one's life as he
becomes more and more illuminated and austere. Thus we say that the
learned guru, for example has an aura around him. The avatars or the
prophets perhaps are the ultimate examples of humans who have accumulated
enough good karma to be on the verge of release from the repetitive cycle
of samsara. This in Hinduism is called Moksha or Realization of
Truth.
Punarjanma and
Punarmrutyu
are repeated births and deaths. The aim of a Hindu is to seek release
from this endless cycle.
Moksha
is attained when the jiva-atman is released from the cycle of
samsara. This is not different from the terms Nirvana of
Buddhism or Mukti of Jainism. It is also referred to as
Realization of Truth, and identifying with the Eternal Self or Brahman.
Brahman
is the Universal Self or World Soul or Parama-atman. IT is the Supreme
God of the Upanishads, who is characterless, shapeless, without
limitations and without any attributes (nirguna, nirakara, nirupadhika
and nirvishesha). In the Upanishads Brahman is described as an
amorphous, omnipresent, omnipotent all-pervading power. However, for
practical purposes and for the sake of worship, nirguna Brahman was
given shape and characteristics. This is the Saguna Brahman.
Jiva-atman
is the self (soul) within every human. It is the ego and is molded after
Brahman. Different Vedanta philosophies differ as to how closely aligned
jiva-atman is with parama-atman.
Antaratman
is a deeper
soul that is hidden deep within. However, layers of ignorance cover
antaratman. The purpose of Hindu is to uncover the shades and let
antaratman shine in all its glory. Only by gathering knowledge the
covering around antaratman can be removed.
Goodness is present in
every human soul. This is the basis of treating other humans with
respect. Divinity rests in every soul of every human. The practice of
greeting another human being with the palms brought together in front of
the heart signifies the fact that we recognize the divinity in their
souls. It is the sign prayer to God.
Scriptures of Hinduism
To understand a religion and its philosophy it is important to know the
scriptures that gave it form and strength. Scriptures of Hinduism come
from the Sanatana Dharma and mostly were written more than two thousand
years ago. The more modern literature (written in the medieval period) is
mainly commentaries on the ancient literature.
Written in Sanskrit language, the Hindu literature is
considered to be authoritative by the Hindus. They can broadly be
classified as six orthodox and four secular categories.
The orthodox section contains:
Shruti -
That which is heard.
This is the direct edict of the gods as heard by the Vedic seers. The
Vedas fall under this category. Rig, Sama, Yajur and Atharva. Each Veda
is again divided into four parts. Samhitas are the hymns praising God.
Brahmanas are details of Vedic rituals and rites. Aranyakas or forest
books are a prelude to Upanishads, a guidebook for the forest dweller
(during the Vanaprastha ashrama). Upanishads are the philosophical aspect
of the Vedas. There are more than one hundred Upanishads attached to
different Vedas, but about 13 of them are important because later teachers
have commented them upon.
Smriti -
That which is
remembered. These are the law texts, moral stories and the epics
written and remembered. These include Sutras and Shastras (e.g. Brahma
Sutra and Dharma Shastra). Vedangas (Limbs of Vedas) and Upa-Vedas are
also included here.
Jyotisha falls under Vedanga whereas Sthapathya veda (vastu shilpa) and
Ayurveda are classified under Upa-vedas.
Puranas/Upapuranas -
There are
eighteen Puranas of Vyasa and fourteen upa-Puranas.
There are mainly three groups of Puranas, i.e. Brahma, Vaishnava and
Shaiva Puranas.
Ithihasas -
Mahabharata and
Ramayana.
Agamas -
Texts of rituals and
rites of worship.
They include Mantra, Tantra and Yantra. Agama texts also fall under three
sections; Vaishnava, Shaiva and Shakta. These are treatises that explain
the physical worship of God in a temple setting.
Darshanas -
The six philosophical
doctrines of salvation:
Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Sankhya, Yoga, Mimamsa and Vedanta. Vedanta means
culmination of Vedas. It is the study of three philosophical texts namely
Brahma Sutra, Bhagavad-Gita and the Upanishads, collectively called
Prasthana Traya.
The secular section has four categories:
Subhashitas -
Wise
sayings: Pachatantra and Hitopadesha belong to this
category.
Kavyas -
Scholarly poetry and
prose: Kalidasa's Raghuvamsha and Kumarasambhava are
examples of poetry and Banabhatta's works are the greatest examples of
prose literature.
Natakas -
Scholarly dramas:
Examples are Kalidasa's Shakunthala and Vishakadatta's
Mudrarakshasa.
Alankara -
Composition of
elegance and ornamental language includes such works as Mammata's
Kavyaprakasha and Jagannatha's Rasagangadhara.
The heterodox literatures are those that did not view Vedas as authoritative. These are Buddhist, Jaina and Charvaka systems.
Who is a Hindu?
In simple terms, 'He who accepts the Scriptures (Shruti and Smriti) as the basis of his religion, and follows its rule of conduct (or Dharma), and he who believes in one Supreme God (Brahman), in the Law of retributive justice (or Karma), and in reincarnation (punarjanma), is a Hindu.'
History of Hinduism
Sanatana Dharma was
brought to Northwest India first around 1500 B.C. From its inception
reform of the Dharma took place continuously. There was a mixture of
cultures in the Indus Valley civilization, which existed for at least a
thousand years before the arrival of Aryans. The Aryans brought with them
the oral tradition of Vedas. Rig Veda was introduced first. Until 600
B.C. the various Vedas were accumulated. The form of worship was mainly
sacrificial. Nature Gods like Indra, Varuna, Surya were recognized. Man
considers himself capable of joining the ranks of gods by performing
sacrificial rituals. It was the age of the assimilation of great Vedas
and it ended with the revelation of Aranyakas and Upanishads. This is
referred to as the Vedic Period. Brahman of the Upanishads
replaced Prajapati, the Creator God of Rig Veda.
Following this period
the rigidity of caste systems developed. Power and corruption led to
dissenting thought process by the likes of Buddha and Mahavira. This was
the period when skepticism, materialism (Charvaka), Shaivism and
Vaishnavism developed. There were several other philosophers, who put
forth their own unique philosophies, during the next 800 or so years.
This was the most fertile period in the history of India. Called the
Epic Period , when epics like Mahabharata and Ramayana were written,
other significant works like Dharmashastra-the moral, social and ethical
doctrine that forms the foundation of Hinduism even today, were also
written. This was also the golden period of other religions like Buddhism
and Jainism.
The third period in
the history is called the Sutra Period . Short aphorisms called
sutras were written during this period, in the early centuries of the
Christian era. Most significant of them were the Brahma Sutra of
Badarayana, which were commentaries on the Vedas and Upanishads. The six
philosophical systems called Darshanas were also written during this
period.
The fourth period is
called Scholastic Period . Commentaries were written on the
Sutras. Based on the Vedas and the Sutras, new systems and thought
process developed. Shankara's Advaita, Ramanuja's Vishistadvaita and
Madhva's Dvaita philosophies took permanent place in Hinduism. However,
after the sixteenth century, because of occupation by foreign rulers,
Hinduism went into decay and no significant thought process occurred until
late in 19th century when Sri Aurobindo and Vivekananda helped
in the renaissance of the religion.
Now let us see what
happened to the sacrificial Sanatana Dharma first introduced by the
Aryans. The Nirguna Brahman of the philosophical Upanishad was now given
character and form. Saguna Brahman was given many shapes and attributes.
The Trinity of Gods ' Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva ' gained prominence.
Orthodox Hinduism developed. A great impetus to revive Hinduism in the
face of challenge from Buddhism occurred during Gupta dynasty around 300
A.D. Vikramaditya's glorious rule saw a great increase in art and
cultrure. Secular literature like Kalidasa's work and other natakas and
subhashitas were written.
Buddhism slowly took a
backbench but Hinduism was in danger into splintering into various
factions like Vaishnavism, Shaivism and Shaktaism. Then around 800 A.D.
came a saint Shankaracharya who brought together these various factions
under the big umbrella of Hinduism. He reformed the form of worship and
forwarded his Advaita philosophy. Advaita drew its strength from Sankya
philosophy and resembled Buddhism somewhat. Later came Ramanuja and
Madhva with different ideas, but not completely dissociating from the core
philosophy laid down in the Upanishads.
Philosophy of Hinduism
Only by studying the philosophy as written in the Upanishads
this question can be answered. To explain them in more detail, there are
seven fundamental characteristics of Indian philosophy.
First and foremost the philosophy concentrates on
spirituality.
The second aspect of Indian philosophy is that it is
socio-spiritual. It is not merely an exercise to seek knowledge for
the sake of knowledge. This is to be lived and experienced. The
philosophy is to be used to change one's life and seek the Truth. This
experience is to be seen as in Darshan and not merely known.
The third aspect is knowing oneself by introspection ,
is more important than knowing the physical world. Though science,
astrology progressed at breakneck speed in India, it is the atma-vidya
that is believed to lead a Hindu to realize the Truth. This in turn is a
highly personal endeavor.
The fourth fact is that the philosophy is monistic.
Despite the appearance of conflicting images of various gods and forms of
worship, basic thought is that there is only one ultimate reality.
Fifth and perhaps one of the most important characteristics
of the philosophy is intuition. Reasoning may be important to
demonstrate the Truth but will not always discover it. It is a process of
knowing or sensing without rationalization.
Sixth important fact is the acceptance of authority.
Here comes the guru concept. The Vedic seers are accepted as the ones who
had known the ultimate Truth and realized it. Buddha and Mahavira are
also accepted as ones who had intuitive experience and thus realized the
Truth.
The seventh characteristic is the ability to synthesize
the different aspects of philosophical thought process. It is the thought
that God is one but man calls Him by many names that helped to bring all
the disparate philosophies under one tent.
Purpose and Practice
The only purpose of man's life on earth is to identify
himself with the eternal Self-called Brahman and unite with it through
knowledge (jnana), service (karma) and/or devotion (bhakti).
The well-educated upper echelon of the society can take the
path of jnana yoga to realize the Truth by studying scriptures.
However, Upanishads give us other means of doing this if one
is not familiar with the scriptures or is unable to comprehend them. For
ordinary folks it is possible to seek the Truth by intense devotion to a
personal God. This is called bhakti yoga. Any object or
manifestation can be chosen to show one's devotion. This has led to
hundreds of perceived manifestations of Brahman, as envisaged by the
devotees. But the underlying theme is that all these are manifestations
of a single God. It is basically monistic. On the surface it may appear
to be polytheistic with many gods and objects worshipped in various
forms. But they are all manifestations of Brahman, the one and only
Supreme Being. At one time, the religion was close to becoming
polytheistic with belief in many gods, but Sharkaracharya reformed this.
For still others there is the karma Yoga, exalted in
the Bhagavad-Gita. Service of humanity without the expectation of fruits
or rewards is another method of gaining knowledge. If every human has an
antaratman that resembles Brahman, then service of human is
akin to service of God. This is the premise of Karma Yoga.
Customs and Classes
Most of the codes of conduct are laid down in Manu Smriti texts. The four
castes developed as a result of people's profession rather than by birth.
Upanishads repeatedly give examples of this but however in practicality
the society was divided into Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vashya and Shudra
classes. The higher classes controlled the lower classes but this became
more pronounced after the Muslim take over of India. The earlier Muslim
rulers craftily divided the Hindu society by taxing only certain classes
and giving certain privileges to Brahmins. This resulted in resentment
among the other classes.
Though samsara is a burden on the jiva-atman, that constantly
seeks release from it, life is not to be wasted in inactivity. There are
responsibilities one must meet, including an assurance of continuation of
one's progeny. A Hindu's lifetime is divided into four stations (ashramas).
Earlier Brahmachari, a student living with his guru, subsisting on hand
outs from neighbors and studying the Vedas.
Next he enters grahasthashrama, when he marries and raises
his family. During this period he is urged to earn an honest living and
follow righteousness. Dharma, artha and kama are to be practiced. Kama
is an essential part of grahastha, not merely to continue one's progeny.
Active participation in sex and mutual gratification is stressed.
When the children are well settled and the grandchildren are
old enough to enter Brahmachari ashrama, it is time to enter Vanaprastha
ashrama. Man renounces worldly pleasures and resides in the forest with
or without his wife. He begins to undertake the study of the scriptures.
The final stage is Sanyasa ashrama, when the man renounces
everything including his family and wanders around immersing himself in
the study of scriptures.
The samhitas are for the Brahmachari. The Brahmanas are for
the Grahastha to follow Vedic rituals. Aranyakas help in introducing the
Vanaprastha ashrami to start dwelling into the philososphy of the Vedas.
Upanishads are for the Sanyasi to study in depth the scriptures.
Starting from before his birth a Hindu goes through many
stages when different samskaras or rituals to purify the soul. Of the
more than forty such samskaras, sixteen called (Shodasha samskara) are
still popular today. It starts at the time of conception with the
samskara of Garabadana. Others include Seemantonayana, Jatakarma,
Namakarana, Annaprashana, Upanayana, and Vivaha to name a few. It ends in
the end of life in the Antyeshti samskara.
During his lifetime a Hindu is encouraged to practice eight
moral rules to enhance his atma-vidya. These include compassion,
forgiveness, cleanliness, absence of jealousy, altruism, absence of greed,
auspiciousness and absence of mental strain. These eight characteristics
called ashtaguna will help build character in a Hindu and propel
him towards his goal of achieving moksha.
Conclusion
Hinduism is the longest surviving religion in the world. That is not to
say that it has not changed over the millennia. Sanatana Dharma has
changed significantly from the Vedic period to now. In fact it has
continually changed over many centuries and has been modified as new
challenges appeared. Starting with Buddha and Mahavira, the establishment
of rigid caste system was questioned. For about three to five hundred
years even the Upanishads were questioned. Charavaka system of complete
materialism with atheism went a step further than Buddha's atheistic but
spiritual teachings.
Around 600 B.C. after
about one thousand years after its uninterrupted practice, Buddha,
Mahavira and Goshala challenged the hierarchy. Over the next 800 years
Buddhism made steady progress, aided by the great Maurya king Ashoka and
ensuing kingdoms. Kanishka helped export Buddhism to China and Japan.
The Darshana literature with Nyaya, Yoga and Sankhya and
Vedanta were popular. Royal patronage came again later when Guptas two
to three hundred years after Christ, uplifted the religion. Hinduism itself slowly
transformed from the sacrificial ritual to bhakti ritual.
A glorious period of religion and art followed. Starting
about the 7th century A. D. permanent temples were built in
stone to house Hindu gods. By now the gods had changed from the nature
gods to the three Trinity of Gods, namely Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva.
Nirguna Brahman of the Upanishads was only mentioned in the philosophical
discussions. For practical matters, Saguna Brahman was visible
everywhere.
While Guptas effectively revived Hinduism it was another
Saint half a millennium later that permanently brought all the factions of
Hinduism under one umbrella. There was a danger of schism, as the
followers of Vishnu and Shiva and other gods failed to see that their
philosophy originated from the same source called the Vedas.
Shankaracharya in the 8th century helped in the synthesis and
refined the ritualistic Hinduism. He also advanced strict monism (advaita)
based on the Sankhya philosophy as well as the Upanishads. He saw a dual
nature in the phenomenal world. Maya or illusion was how he
explained the daily chores and happenings on earth. But he was pointing
to another higher level where human intellect needed to go to attain
moksha.
Later Vedantis disputed this and put forward their own
theories, again based on the interpretations of the Upanishads and Brahma
sutra. Notably, Madhvacharya advocated dvaita philosophy, saying
that the jiva-atman and parama- atman are two separate entities and can
never be joined. Moreover, the phenomenal world is real and not maya,
(as Shankara had proposed) and Vishnu is the Supreme God.
It is truly a wonder how Hinduism that appears to be a
combination of many religions tied together, has stayed as one religion.
From the Vedic sacrificial religion to the current day bhakti cult, they
appear to be at two ends of the scale. However, the sanctity of Vedas and
a willingness to be reformed as well as an extraordinary tolerance of
other religions has made Hinduism remarkable. No wonder it is called
Sanatana Dharma, a religion without a beginning or ending.
Where does the future take us?
One cannot forget what was taught so well in the Bhagavad-Gita. It
teaches us that paths to Truth are many. Thus it does not discount other
philosophies that may show a different path. It is better to follow the
faith one is born to than to change or convert to another. Thus the
tolerance of Hindus for other religions is unique. It is the only
religion that is inclusive, respectful of other religious thoughts and
philosophy. Hinduism is the only religion that can be adopted
universally.
Hinduism demonstrated
its willingness to accept others early when it adopted Buddha as one of
Vishnu's avatars. It is conceivable that if Vishnu is to have more than
ten avatars, both Jesus and Muhammad could be accepted willingly as
avatars. After all, Buddha who did not believe in the sanctity of the
Vedas was included as one of the avatars, replacing Balram (in order to
keep the total at ten). Hinduism has shown remarkable resiliency and
adaptability. Is it possible to add newer prophets to the list of
avatars?
March 9, 2003