hinduism in the world and the world of hinduism 1.pdf · • what we think of as “hinduism”...

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Hinduism

1

Hinduism and India

2

Concept of “Hinduism”

12th Century by the Persians

Originally intended to designate “Indians”

3

• Recall that when Columbus discovered America they were

looking for India

• And called the Native Americans

• Indians

4

Mistaken Impression

• That Hinduism is a Monolithic Religion

• Similar to the Roman Catholic Church

5

Sanatana Dharma

• Sanattana = “Eternal”

• Dharma = “Religion” = “Teaching”

6

• What we think of as “Hinduism”

encompasses many different sometimes conflicting beliefs and practices

7

Concept of “India”

• Suggests greater unity and cohesiveness than

there really is

8

Great Diversity

• Socially • Religiously

• Economically • Geographically

9

• + 1 Billion People • Host of racial and ethnic

stocks • 16 major languages • Hundreds of dialects • 850 languages daily

10

Religious Pluralism

80% Hindu 12% Islam

2.5% Christian 2% Sikhism

1% Buddhism 11

The Early Cultures of India

• What we call Hinduism is an amalgamation

of elements from several cultural sources

12

2 Major Contributors

• The Indus Valley Civilization

• The Aryans

13

The Indus Valley Civilization

• Highly sophisticated ancient society

• Rediscovered by the British in the 19th Century, while

building railroads 14

• Most evidence is based upon archaeological findings

• Civilization flourished between 3000-1500 B.C.

15

16

Bronze Age

• 3000 B.C. – 1200 B.C.

• Ancient Near East • Egyptian Culture • Early Dynastic Period • Age of the Pyramids

17

• 70 cities have been unearthed

• High degree of organization and central planning

18

• Civilization spanned about 1 million square miles

• Some cities had populations of 40,000

19

Flood Control Culture • Like Egypt with Nile River • Agriculture • Significant industry and trade - Roughly contemporary with

Egypt and Mesopotamia

20

Sources

• Literate Culture we cannot fully understand

their writing

21

writing on bricks and seals

did not use paper or clay tablets

22

“Unicorn” seal + writing 23

More seals 24

…and more seals... 25

Seated “yogi” : early Shiva? 26

Major Cities

• Harappa and Mohenjo-daro

surrounded by smaller cities, towns, and villages

27

Major Cities

• 1 situated in the north • 1 situated in the south

28

Harappan society and its neighbors, ca. 2000 B.C.E.

29

Harappan Culture • Indus valley

–well-watered and heavily forested

30

Harappan Culture

• 500 miles along the river valley

–10-20 times larger than Mesopotamia or Egypt

31

Foundations of Harappan Society

• The Indus River

– Silt-enriched water from mountain ranges

32

Foundations of Harappan Society

• Major society built by Dravidian peoples, 3000-2500 BC

33

Foundations of Harappan Society

– Cultivation of cotton before 5000 BC,

- Early cultivation of poultry

– Decline after 1900 BC

34

35

36

37

Mohenjo-Daro Ruins

• Population c. 40,000 • Regional center

–Layout, architecture suggests public purpose

–Broad streets, citadel, pool, sewage

38

• Standardized weights evident throughout region

• Specialized labor

• Trade

39

Grid map of Mohenjo-daro

40

41

Mohenjo-daro : aerial view 42

Mohenjo-daro: View of the “Citadel” 43

The “Great Bath” 44

another view of the “Great Bath” 45

view of a small, side street 46

looks like a small tower, but actually it is a neighborhood well

47

A bathroom on a private residence 48

A public well in Harappa, or perhaps an ancient laundromat...

49

A large drain or sewer 50

51

52

53

Granary 54

Monumental architecture

• very-large scale building • walled cites, with fortified

citadels • planned economy

55

Cities

• very densely populated

• houses: two to three stories

• every house is laid out the same

56

Culture and Society

• advanced agriculture

• surplus production

• textiles: wool and cotton

• domesticated animals and fish

57

Religion

• dominated by priests ?

• power base: fertility ?

• deities: male and female, both nude

• bull worship and phallic symbols

58

A priest? A bull

59

Decline

Combination of Changes

• climate shift: the monsoon patterns

• flooding

60

Decline

• destruction of the forests

• migrations of new peoples: The Aryans

61

The Aryan Invasion

62

• Most scholars believe that the Indus Civilization came to an end around 1500 B.C.

• when the Aryans migrated into the Indian subcontinent

63

• There is no archaeological evidence of a conquest

• There is evidence of a co-existence for some time

• But eventually the Aryan Culture became dominant

64

• Aryans, lighter-skinned invaders from the north

• Dravidians, darker-skinned sedentary inhabitants of India

• Color / Racial Bias

65

Possible route of the Aryan invasions 66

The Aryans

• not to be confused with Hitler’s “Aryans”

67

The Aryans, cont.

• these Aryans speak an Indo-European dialect

• related to other languages like Greek and Latin

68

The Aryans, con’t

• they called themselves “Aryans”

• their land: “Aryavarta” –land of the Aryans

69

The Early Aryans • Religious and Literary works: • The Vedas

–Sanskrit: sacred tongue

70

The Vedas

• Represent the perspective of the priestly class

• We cannot be certain how widespread these views were

71

The Vedas

• Divided into 4 Collections • “Samhitas”

• Each dealing with a different aspect of ritual

72

Veda = Teaching / Wisdom

• Rig-veda • Yajur-veda • Sama-veda

• Atharva-veda

73

Rig Veda

• Oldest and most important • 1,000 songs to various gods and

goddesses • “Rig” = Praise

• Written between 2300-1200 B.C.

74

Yajur Veda

• Instruction for Sacrifices

75

Sama Veda

• Contains melodies

• Sacrificial songs had to be sung at just the right pitch to

be effective

76

Atharva Veda

• Spells and incantations for healing rituals

77

The Vedic Worldview:

• The Physical World • The Divine World • The Human World

78

“Triloka” (3 Places)

• Reality is divided into 3 levels

• Earth • Mid-Space

• Svarga (home of the gods and ancestors)

79

“Rita”

• The abstract, impersonal principle of harmony and

order which kept the universe intact and preserved unity

80

“Rita”

• Also regulated moral order and the order of ritual

81

• Even the gods were subject to Rita

82

“Rita”

• Also regulated

• The Moral Order

• Order of Ritual

83

Rita

Right Right / Wrong Human Rights

Rite Ritual

84

Rita

• Provides the relationship between the

Cosmic order and the

Moral order

85

Creation Stories

• Several different accounts • Sometimes at odds with each

other • Does not seem to be a

problem

86

Sanskrit words for God

20 different words

Most common is

“Deva”

87

Deva

• Means

• Shiny

• Exalted

88

Deva

• Divine being • Supernatural power

• But not necessarily an omniscient or omnipotent

being 89

Devas

• Not moral exemplars or lawgivers

• They were created after the world and are subject to its laws

• Including the Law of Rita 90

Vedic Gods

• Indra = God of War

• 25% of the hymns of the Rig Veda are devoted Indra

91

Agni

• The Fire God

• 20% of the hymns of the Rig Veda devoted to Agni

92

Varuna

• Custodian of Rita

93

Soma

• Manifested in particular plants used in rituals

• Induces ecstatic experiences

94

Other Gods and Goddesses

95

The Hindu Trinity • Brahma = Creator God married to

Sarasvati

• Vishnu = Preserver and protector of creation married to Laxsmi

• Shiva = Destroyer and is married to Shakti / Parvati

96

Kali

97

Kali

• The Dark Mother Goddess

• Consort of Shiva

• Goddess of time and change 98

Vedic Tradition

• Aryan had strong emphasis on ritual over doctrine and belief

99

Axial Age

• Jarl Jaspers

• Transformation in world thought

• 800 B.C. – 200 B.C.

100

Axial Age • Jewish Prophets (800-500 B.C.) • Taoism (Lao-Tzo) 575 B.C. • Confucianism (Confucius) 551 B.C. • Buddhism (Buddha (560-480 B.C.) • Greek Philosophy • Socrates (470-399 B.C.) • Plato (427-348 B.C.) • Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)

101

102

The Upanishads

• (End of the Vedas)

• (800-300 BC)

• Most Philosophical Writings

103

Major Philosophical Tradition:

• “Advaita Vedanta”

• Shankara (750 AD)

• “Advaita” = Non-Dualism

• “Vedanta” = Summation of the Vedas

104

Summary: • 1. Everything that exists is Brahman

• 2. Brahman can be interpreted as

• (God): Impersonal Force Supreme Principle

105

3. Creation is the Dance of Brahman

“Lila”

106

4. Atman is the Soul of the Individual

5. Atman and Brahman are One and the Same

107

6. Brahman is not to be confused with

• Brahma = a Hindu god

• Brahmin = Hindu Priest or Caste

108

• 7. Why do we not understand that Brahman = Atman?

• MAYA = Illusion

109

8. Our goal in life is Liberation from the cycle of Samsara

• Samsara = Reincarnation

110

9. And reach “Moksha”

• Moksha = Nirvana (Buddhism)

111

10. This is when the individual soul (Atman) in absorbed into

Brahman

• “Like a drop of rain being absorbed into a lake”

112

11.The Law of Karma

• Governs the cycle of samara

Karma • The good and bad deeds that

we do

113

• Good deeds

• better rebirth into this world • a god

• a human • an animal • an insect

114

• Bad deeds

• worse rebirth into this world

Dharma

• During the transition from the Vedic tradition to Classical Hinduism

• The concept of dharma evolves

• The caste system becomes more deeply established in Hindu life

115

• Distinctions between good and bad karma are determined by dharma

• Dharma has both moral and cosmological dimensions

116

• Dharma as a moral principle was rather abstract and required practical application to people’s daily lives

• Accordingly, the genre of literature known as dharma-sastras emerged to specify and codify the dharma

117

• The cosmological element implies that • the moral order is rooted in the nature of

reality, not on human whim

118

The Laws of Manu

• The most important and influential dharma – sastras

• Written around the time of Christ

• Reflect an earlier oral tradition

119

• These laws assign different dharmas to each stratum of Hindu society

120

The Hindu Caste System

• Social • Economic • Political • Religious

121

• The caste system was founded on the Vedic stratification of society

• Acquired its characteristic features during the classical period of Hinduism

122

Caste Assumptions

• All people are not created equal

• We are all born with innate differences derived from actions in previous lives

• This is the Law of Karma

123

• Caste entails both a

• Division of labor

• Hierarchy of spiritual purity

124

“Caste”

• Word is of Portuguese origin

• Imprecisely refers to what Hindus call

• Varna • Jati

125

Varna

Color

Jati

Birth Birth group

126

Varna

• The varna system is the division of labor composed of the four categories of Aryan society

127

Brahmins

• Priests

• Top of the purity hierarchy

128

Ksatriyas

• The Warriors • Administrators

129

Vaisyas

• Merchants • Farmers • Artisans

130

Sudras

• Peasants • Common folks

131

“Outcastes”

• Outside the varna system

• “Untouchables”

• “Hari-jans” (Children of God)

132

Untouchables

• Handlers of leather • Morticians

• Toilet cleaners • Scavengers

• Their ritual impurity cannot be removed by

standard procedures of purification

133

• Live outside villages

• Cannot use the same public facilities as caste members

• Technically outlawed by the constitution, the practice remains a part of daily Hindu life

134

Jati

• Birth Group existing within the larger varna groupings

• One’s subcaste is determined by birth and it cannot be left except under rare circumstances

135

• Unlike the varnas which are pan-Hindu

• Jatis are local groups

• Total number has not been determined

• + 3000

• There are hundreds if jatis ranked within each varna

• Local ranking is not always the same

• Although little or no individual social mobility exists in the caste system

• There is some mobility for sub-castes

• There is much scholarly speculation on the relationship between varna and jatis

• Many believe that jatis were indigenous to the Indus Valley Civilization

• Varna were superimposed by the Aryans

Caste Dynamics

• Marital restrictions

• Food one can eat

• People you associate with

Enforcement

• Caste strictures are ordinarily enforced by family and intra-caste pressure

• Not by the upper castes enforcing rules on the lower castes

• There are caste councils which discuss caste interests

Caste Dharma

• Dharma of each caste carries specific duties and responsibilities

Karma and Dharma

• Karma is determined by one’s adherence to one’s caste duties

Laws of Manu

• Specify cast duties

Brahmin Caste

• Teaching • Studying

• Sacrificing • Receiving gifts

Ksatriyas

• Warriors / Administrators

• Protection of country • From foreign enemies

• Maintaining caste system • Social and cosmic order

Vaisyas

• Merchants / Farmers / Artisans

• Taking a wife • Keeping cattle

• Knowing the worth of valuable materials • Farm duties

Sudras

• Peasants / Common folks

• Serving the Brahmins and the other upper castes with humility

Outcastes

• No dharma according to the Laws of Manu

Stages of Life

• Laws of Manu

• Outline particular regulations for the livies of men and women and their relationship

Ideal life stages

• These principles express the “ideal” life patterns for upper caste men and women

• Do not necessarily describe the life cycle of each and every member of Hindu society

151

4 Stage for Men

• 1. Student • 2. Householder • 3. Forest-dweller • 4. Sannyasa (Renunciation)

152

Student Stage

• Leaves home to: • Study the Vedas • Religious Rituals

• A Trade • How to be productive member of Cast

• With a Guru, Teacher, at School

153

Householder Stage

• Expected to marry • Raise a family • Pursue an occupation appropriate to his caste • Establish himself as a financially independent

responsible contributor to society

154

• Marriage was regarded as the natural state for adult men and women

• Shameful to deviate from it

155

Forest-Dweller Stage

• A men and possibly his wife moved to a more modest dwelling

• Usually at the edge of the village near the forest

• Must become more devoted to the life of the spirit

156

• This could occur only after a man had • raised a family • Earned an income • Discharged his obligations to society

157

Sannyasa (Renunciation) Stage

• Great rigor and austerity

• Not all men would embark upon it

158

• Must renounce their former identity and everything with it:

• Name • Wife

• Family • All Material Goods

• Live out remaining days as a wondering, solitary ascetic

159

3 Stages for Women

• 1. Girlhood • 2. Householder • 3. Widowhood

• Each stage defined by the protecting male

160

Girlhood Stage

• Not allowed the same freedom as boys because they could not leave their father’s protection

• What education from their parents

• Domestic skills and religious rituals

161

Householder Stage

• Marriage marked the female’s entrance into the householder stage

• Marriages in India have historically been alliances between families

• reproduction and economic stability

162

• Because marriages were arranged,

• bride and groom often did not meet until the actual wedding

163

• Girls married early in life

• Frequently because of the great concern for their virginity

• They often married much older men

164

• Bride lives with her husband’s family

• Extended families

165

• The new bride was expected to obey her mother-in-law

• She was expected to live up to the ideals of the “good wife”

166

• If a women gave birth to a son,

• her status was greatly increased

167

Death of Husband

• Crisis for every Hindu wife

• Marked entrance into the 3rd stage of life

168

Sati

• Means “going with”

• The wife was expected to jump on her husband’s funeral pyre

• Many women were thrown on the burning pyre against their wills

169

• Practice outlawed by British in 19th Century

• Reports as recently as 1987 and 2002

170

Widows

• Very difficult situation

• Viewed as dangerous and the embodiment of all negative qualities in women

• Generally not permitted to marry even though many in their 20’s and 30’s

171

• They were expected to wear the white sari for the rest of their lives

• because white is the color of morning in India

• Sometimes expected to shave their heads to be unattractive to men

172

• Usually given the hardest household tasks

• Forbidden to eat with the rest of the family

173

Today

• The roles of Hindu men and women are changing, perhaps more today than ever before in India’s history.

• But social change in India evolve slowly, because patterns of behavior are etched deeply into the soul of Hindu India

174

175

The Ethics of Hinduism

• 4 Ways or Paths to Good Karma

4 “Goods” of Life

• First = Dharma or duty

• Second = Atha = wealth and material acquisition

• Third = Kama = pleasure and enjoyment of the senses

• Fourth = Moksha = Highest good / release from

176

Moksha

• To achieve moksha, one must be willing to give up the other three goods

• because even though doing one’s duty and pursuing wealth and enjoyment are viewed positively within one’s caste

• they also keep one bound to the samsara

177

Religious Life

• For those who are not yet prepared to abandon a life of

• duty, material acquisition, and enjoyments,

• The religious life means doing one’s best to improve this life and future lives

178

The Way of Meditation

• “Raja Marga”

• The Path of Mental Concentration

179

Raja Marga • Intense meditation focusing upon

the truth of Brahman

• Overcoming Maya

• Achieving inner peace and tranquility

180

“Asanas”

• Physical Postures used to develop the mind’s ability to concentrate

• Breathing exercises

181

Mantras • Chants

• Repetitive words, sound, etc

• Expresses the Divine in the form of sounds

• “OM”

182

183

The Way of Activity “Karma Marga”

• Emphasis upon “good works”

• Offerings and sacrifices to gods

• Helping the poor

Karma Marga

• Service is given without any interest in the personal benefits of one’s labor

• This consciousness leads to liberation from self in the midst of work

184

Karma Marga • The steadily devoted soul attains

unadulterated peace because he offers the results of all activity to Me; whereas a person who is not in harmony with the divine, who is greedy for the fruits of his labor, becomes entangled

• - p. 83 185

186

The Way of Knowledge

• “Jnana Marga”

• The Path of Rational Inquiry • Study

Jnana Marga • Employs the rational mind instead

of trying to transcend it by concentration practices

• Ignorance is the root of all problems

• Being separate from the Absolute

187

Jnana Marga • Seeks to develop spiritual values

• Calmness • Restraint

• Renunciation • Resignation

• Concentration • Faith

188

Jana Marga

• Spiritual knowledge is the only thing that can destroy our miseries for ever; any other knowledge removes wants only for a time

• - 83 189

190

The Way of Devotion

• “Bhakti Marga”

• Personal devotion to a particular god

• (Avatar)

“Bhakti” • Means = “To share” = “To share a relationship with a personal deity”

191

Post-Classical Period

• New texts added to the canon of Hindu writings

• very important in shaping Hindu piety in the bhakti movement

192

2 Great Epics

• Mahabharata

• Ramayana

• 400 B.C. – 200 A.D.

193

Puranas • Collection of poems about the

major Gods

• 6 – Vishnu • 6 – Brahma • 6 – Shiva

• (500-1500 A.D.) 194

Bhagavad-Gita

• “The Song of God”

• Part of the Mahabharata

• 400 B.C. – 100 A.D. • Authors unknown

195

• Dialogue between Krishna (avatara of Vishnu) and warrior named Arjuna

• Takes place on the battlefield

• Between the Pandavas and the Kauravas (Both Royal Families)

196

• Through a crooked dice game

• The Kauravas get the rights to the kingdom for 13 years

197

• The Pandavas are exiled to the forest

• The Kauravas refuse to return the kingdom to the Pandavas

198

• War is inevitable

• Arjuna does not want to fight is relatives

199

• Krishna is disguised as Arjuna’s chariot driver

• Krishna counsels Arjuna on the greater idea of dharma or universal harmony and duty.

200

• He explains that the soul (Atman) is eternal and immortal.

• Any 'death' on the battlefield would involve only the shedding of the body

• but the soul is permanent.

201

• Arjuna receives several lessons from the Upanishads

• Including the ultimate meaninglessness of birth and death

• and action without attachment or aversion to keep from creating bad karma

202

• As the dialogue proceeds, Krishna’s lessons begin gradually to focus upon himself

• Becoming increasingly characteristic of the path of bhakti

203

• Krishna encourages Arjuna to focus his mind, will, and heart on god and let all else go

• For bhakti practice, what is done is not as important as how it is done

204

• All that matters is to do things with faith and devotion to the god

• And to follow one’s dharma

205

• On a climactic moment

• Arjuna asks Krishna to grant him an extremely rare blessing

• the ability to see Krishna in his full glory as god

206

• Krishna grants Arjuna a divine eye with which to gaze on the god’s form

207

• After his vision

• Arjuna arises and goes into battle

• claiming that his doubts have been dispelled

208

• The Gita ends before we come to know about the battle itself

• But the war was not the real issue

209

• The war is a metaphor for:

• Our soul • Our self • Our mind • Our Struggle with dharma (duty)

210

211

Popular Bhakti Gods • Krishna

• Brahma = Creator • Vishnu = Preserver • Shiva = Destroyer

• Etc

212

• Also other world religious leaders are viewed as Hindu Avatars

• Christ • Allah • Tao • Etc.

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