Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Hinduism for Dummies
Asia Finest Discussion Forum > Asian Culture > India Chat
BirdFeed


currently studying hinduism. just wondering if anyone would give me some background information, beliefs, rituals, ceremonies etc.. and how it affects indian (not necessarily) culture.

today i learnt bout the origins of the swastika. i never knew the swastika had originated from india and was a symbol for good luck
Tenjikuronin
Try this website:

www.atributetohinduism.com

It has lots of information and is well referenced.
ACMILAN1983
I'd suggest http://www.hinduismtoday.com

It's got quite a lot of interesting articles but sometimes take them with a pinch of salt as not all hindus will agree (such as with vegetarianism).

These articles aren't bad....

http://www.hinduismtoday.com/archives/2007...m-schools.shtml
http://www.hinduismtoday.com/archives/2007...m-schools.shtml
http://www.hinduismtoday.com/archives/2007...m-schools.shtml
ExpressYourself
I briefly browsed the Hinduism for dummies book..I would say it's more accurate than other Western books on Hinduism out there....
spoonman3
Look at Hinduism and Sikhism on Wikipedia.

Prob the most accurate up to date look at modern India.
ACMILAN1983
QUOTE(spoonman3 @ Aug 2 2007, 05:15 AM) *
Look at Hinduism and Sikhism on Wikipedia.

Prob the most accurate up to date look at modern India.


I actually have to agree that Wiki actually has a pretty good article on Hinduism
BirdFeed
a couple of inquiries ..

i would like some information on varansai, apparently one of the holiest cities in the world. anyone know history behind that? the whole ritual with the burying and stuff, how does that work and what does it mean? has anyone encountered first hand experience from this?

what customs are there when it comes to hinduism? i know there are alot of ceremonies such as the ganji (spelling?)

i still cant really grasp the concept of the many gods, are these symbols of getting to brahma?

id like to mention is the city of khajuraho, a very beautiful city. a place i would definately want to visit


ExpressYourself
Many gods symbolize one supreme force, and serve as reincarnates.

I've gotten into arguments with religion class teachers over this, and they refused to believe me when I tried to explain that Hinduism isn't technically polytheistic. You will find a lot of sources and books that present Hinduism as polytheistic, but the truth is is that we do believe in one God at the end of the day. The different gods and goddesses help us concentrate.

It's also possible to be atheist and a Hindu.
BirdFeed
wonder if anyone could provide any more information for me
VAMAN
It is very difficult to explain Hinduism. Even most Hindus are unaware of various forms of Hinduism, because it is a very complex religion. Complexities arises because one is free to interpret Hinduism its own way. So different people have differnt ways of interpreting the same thing or create their own.

A person can be born as a Hindu but he/she is free to practice anything he/she pleases or not pleases. A person can choose to be an Advaita Vedantist or Dvaitist, a Shaivite or a Vaishnavite, an Arya Samaji or a Sanatanist and many more. Hinduism is a way of life for some, for some others it is a religion, and for many it is both.

QUOTE(ExpressYourself @ Aug 4 2007, 01:15 AM) *
Many gods symbolize one supreme force, and serve as reincarnates.

I've gotten into arguments with religion class teachers over this, and they refused to believe me when I tried to explain that Hinduism isn't technically polytheistic. You will find a lot of sources and books that present Hinduism as polytheistic, but the truth is is that we do believe in one God at the end of the day. The different gods and goddesses help us concentrate.

It's also possible to be atheist and a Hindu.

Yes @ExpressYourself I agree with you. The religious teachers don't seem to be knowledgable enough. In my opinion Hinduism is both polytheistic and monotheistic. If you get into an arguement with your religious teachers again, just tell them to read 'Rig Veda 1.164.46'.
Hafiz
Bigotry and Prejudice: the Depiction of Hinduism in the West

For the past few months, an obscure debate has been raging on about California school textbooks, which actually boils down to a vexed and important issue: Do Hindus have the right to be treated as equals with followers of other religions, or are Hindus and Hinduism to be deemed, ipso facto, inferior and objects of scorn?

'I am not for rewriting Hinduism'


The proverbial unbiased observer would, on considering the facts, suggest it is a fundamental right of a major world religion to be treated on par with other major world religions. This would stand to reason, as rational people have long since ceased to believe in the superiority of certain races, or languages, or cultures.

'I am not a Hindu hater'

However, it turns out that in the case of Hinduism, ancient prejudices are still at work. It appears that religion is the one area in which it is perfectly acceptable to be an extreme bigot. Interestingly enough, Buddhism, which in many of its basic beliefs is almost identical to Hinduism, fares much better in the respect sweepstakes.

Hindus in India live in a fools' paradise: there is constant official propaganda that 'all religions are equal', and yet, paradoxically, that so-called 'minority religions' and their followers need to be given extra consideration, state largesse and patronage as they are fragile creatures under threat. In reality, they are powerful, rich and muscular State-sponsored religions.

Saudi Arabia's holy intolerance is the most obvious (yet a recent British Midlands airline edict is an example of how this is accepted in dhimmitude), but Europe and the US provide official patronage to their faiths too.

And this extends to the citizenry as well. There are cases of pictures of Hindu deities adorning toilet covers, shoes, underwear and so forth on a regular basis; film-maker Stanley Kubrick felt free to use one of the most sacred stanzas in the Bhagavad Gita as guttural background chanting for a sexual orgy in Eyes Wide Shut I never hear of Jesus or Abraham or Semitic texts being abused with such callous abandon.

In a recent incident in Malaysia, a Hindu soldier, an Everest mountaineer and national hero, was buried as a Muslim overruling the objections of his Hindu wife, who strenuously denied claims that he had converted to Islam. The court refused to even hear the wife's views, ruling that since she was not Muslim, she could not testify in a case involving Islam! The decimation of the Hindu populations of Pakistan and Bangladesh since 1947, including the recent massacre of small Hindu children in a temple in Balochistan, (see my column on that topic) are further instances of ill-treatment.

The paradox is that religious minorities are treated shamefully in white and/or Christist countries, and Arab and/or Muslim countries. This may stem from the beliefs of these faiths and ethnicities in explicit imperialism and world conquest. In India, the numerical minorities (Christians and Muslims) are treated as minor royalty and are the ones oppressing Hindus. Yet, all the propaganda would have you believe the exact opposite.

To put it bluntly, Hindus are despised and treated as second-class citizens outside India, and they are brainwashed into believing they deserve the second-class treatment they get in India, especially under the current dispensation, which has set all-time records for mindless pandering under the stewardship of a remarkably vigorous minister. The Indian government has as its official State religion something called 'secularism'. In plain English, that means endemic State hostility towards Hindus, but tenderness for Christians, Muslims and Marxists.

On the other hand, Christian belief has a special place in the West. Although that has typically been of the nature of primus inter pares, first among equals, it is worth noting that the God in whom we trust, according to US currency notes, is very much the Christian God. With evangelical millennialists rampant, the US now sees 'intelligent design' (belief masquerading as science) and diminishing separation of Church and State.

In the UK, the sovereign apparently is the protector of the Christian faith, or to be precise, the sub-sect that is prevalent in that nation. British rule in India was indistinguishable from fervent and chauvinistic Christian rule, as has been amply documented in Subhash Chakravarthy's incisive The Raj Syndrome.

Judaism, after centuries of oppression, pogroms, genocide, and hate-crimes against its adherents, has now reached a point (partly through their wealth and clout; partly through their willingness to seek legal redress) where nobody dares to denigrate Jews or their faith. The great crimes committed against them by Christians in Germany has also created a guilt complex which means that Christians are doubly careful about not offending Jewish sentiments.

Islam, paradoxically after 9/11, has now attained the same level of kid-glove treatment in the West. This is because of three reasons: one, Leftists in Western media have bullied all would-be dissenters into censoring themselves. Two, Muslim spokespersons in the West aggressively shame or threaten would-be accusers into politically-correct speech. Three, Muslims have deliberately emphasised the commonalities between these three West Asian faiths.

In this context of respectful treatment, it is amazing how differently Hinduism is treated in the West. In several countries, Hinduism is not even recognised as a religion. In determinedly secular France, Hinduism is not officially a religion, and is therefore treated on par with various bizarre cults that speak in tongues or handle rattlesnakes. I believe this is more or less the case in others like Spain and Italy, as well.

Hinduism, like Judaism, can reasonably induce guilt because Christian colonialism has directly caused the deaths of 30 million Indians, mostly Hindus (see Mike Davis' Late Victorian Holocausts: El Nino and the Creation of the Third World), and the transfer of at least $10 trillion to Western coffers, in the process beggaring the nation. Yet, instead of tender treatment, Hindus get more oppression.

The only Hindu temple in Moscow was recently demolished, with the promise that alternate land would be provided for its reconstruction. But this promise has been reneged on: the temple is demolished and no land has been provided. And there was a broadside by one Archbishop Nikon of the Russian Orthodox Christian Church, which, among other unparliamentary things, refers to Hindu deities as devils.

It may be noted that the Indian government's -- and Parliament's -- response to this outrage was: absolutely nothing. No diplomatic letter, no expression of concern, no apology extracted, despite Indo-Russian coziness. A group of British MPs, strangely enough, are the only ones to raise their voice. http://www.hinduforum.org/

http://www.rediff.com/news/2006/feb/01rajeev.htm
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2008 Invision Power Services, Inc.