The History of Hindu India - A Textbook of All Ages
The History of Hindu India - A Textbook of All Ages
The History of Hindu India - A Textbook of All Ages
Kailasanathar Temple, Ellora carved into the rock face of Charanandri Hills in the eighth century
Mahatma Gandhi 1869-1948 Saint Tiruvalluvar 200 bce Diwaii, the Festival of Lights 2010 HIMALAYAN ACADEMY PUBLICATIONS INDIA/USA
Authors
THE EDITORS OF HINDUISM TODAY MAGAZINE
HINDUISM TODAY magazine was founded in 1979 to inform and educate Hindus and non-Hindus alike about Hinduism. The material in this book was created over a period of four years in collaboration with Dr. Shiva Bajpai. It has been reviewed by a panel of academic experts and Hindu community consultants. In addition to HINDUISM TODAY, Himalayan Academy publishes numerous books, including What Is Hinduism?, Loving Ganesha, How to Become a Hindu, Weavers Wisdom, and the series Dancing with Siva, Living with Siva and Merging with Siva. It also publishes educational materials and storybooks for children.
Academic Reviewers
Dr. Klaus Klostermaier Professor of Religious Studies University of Manitoba Winnipeg, Manitoba Dr. Jerey D. Long Chair, Department of Religious Studies Elizabethtown College Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania Dr. Anantanand Rambachan Professor of Religion St. Olaf College Northeld, Minnesota Dr. T.S. Rukmani (chapters 1 through 4) Professor and Chair in Hindu Studies Concordia University Montreal, Quebec Dr. Michael K. Ward Visiting Lecturer in History California State University Northridge, California
Community Consultants
Dr. Ved P. Chaudhary President, Educators Society for the Heritage of India (ESHI) Morganville, New Jersey Suhag A. Shukla, Esq. Co-Founder/Managing Director Hindu American Foundation Washington, DC
Educational Reviewer
Justin Stein, M.A., Ph.D. student Former New York middle school teacher University of Toronto, Ontario
First Edition Copyright 2011 Himalayan Academy The History of Hindu India is published by Himalayan Academy. All rights are reserved. This book may be reproduced only with the publishers prior written consent. Designed, typeset and illustrated by the editorial sta of Himalayan Academy, publishers of HINDUISM TODAY magazine, 107 Kaholalele Road, Kapaa, Hawaii 96746-9304 USA. Also available in various eBook formats at himalayanacademy.com/history/
PRINTED IN USA Library of Congress Control Number: 2011938171 ISBN 978-1-934145-38-8 (hardcover) ISBN 978-1-934145-41-8 (eBook)
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Contents
CHAPTER
3 4 5
CHAPTER
1 2
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
CHAPTER
vi
CHAPTER CHAPTER
Hindu Festivals
Ganesha Chaturthi: Honoring the Lord of Beginnings . . . . . . . . . . 102 Navaratri: Dedicating Nine Nights to the Goddess . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 Diwali: Celebrating the Triumph of Goodness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Mahasivaratri: Sivas Great Night . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Holi: Splashed with Colors of Friendship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
RESOURCES
India Maps: Geographical. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 Political. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 Glossary: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 Index: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
This young priest is conducting a re ceremony just as was done in ancient times.
The largest civilization in the ancient world developed in the Indus Valley of India over 5,000 years ago. In the thousands of years that followed, India produced many great empires under which science, art and philosophy ourished. Out of this rich history developed the Hindu religion, today the third largest in the world.
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history of ancient india history of ancient india
SECTION
Origins of Hinduism
If YOU lived then...
Your house is built on a wide, waterless riverbed. Your father tells you it was once the giant Sarasvati River, ve kilometers across. There is not enough rain to provide for the familys crops and cattle. Travelers tell of another great river, the Ganga, hundreds of miles away. Your father and other villagers decide they must move.
A figurine of a married woman shows a red powder called sindur in the part of her hair. Hindu women today follow this same custom as a sign of their married status. The pipal tree and banyan tree are depicted often. These remain sacred to Hindus to this day. The Vedas The central holy books of Hinduism are the four Vedas. Hindus regard them as spoken by God. They are in Sanskrit. The Vedas were not written down but memorized. Students might spend twelve years learning these scriptures. Some would memorize one Veda, others all four. Even today there are priests who can chant an entire Vedaas many as 10,500 versesfrom memory. The relationship between the people of the Indus-Sarasvati civilization and those who composed the Vedas is not clearly understood. We know that the Rig Veda describes the Sarasvati as the most mighty of rivers flowing from the Himalayan
mountains to the ocean. Therefore, the holy texts had to be composed well before 2000 bceby which time the river had dried up. The Vedas describe a powerful and spiritual people, their clans, kings and emperors. Their society was complex. The economy included agriculture, industry, trade, commerce and cattle raising. The Vedas contain thousands of hymns in praise of God and the Gods. They describe a form of fire worship, yajna, around a specially-built brick fire altar. In several Indus-Sarasvati cities archeologists have unearthed what look like fire altars. The Aryan Invasion Theory Many school books present an Aryan Invasion of India. It is the theory that Aryan invaders came from central Asia in 1500 bce and conquered the indigenous IndusSarasvati civilization. It was these foreigners, the theory states, who wrote the Rig Veda in Sanskrit. The theory was proposed in the 19th century by scholars in Europe,
HINDU SYMBOLS
The banyan tree is a symbol of Hinduism because it gives shelter to all who approach
THE IMPACT
Today
Key Terms
Indus and Sarasvati rivers, p. 2; Vedas, p. 3; Sanskrit, p. 3
The disputed Aryan Invasion theory is still taught as fact in most books on India
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This clay gure of a woman has red sindur in the hair parta custom followed by married Hindu women to this day
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based on language studies. In part, it tried to explain why Sanskrit is so closely related to European languages, including English. Many scholars now dispute this theory because all the evidence for it is questionable. Additionally, modern scientists have found no biological evidence, such as DNA, that people came from outside India in significant numbers since at least 6,000 bce. Many common explanations about Indian history and culture are based on the Aryan Invasion theory. Those who defend it claim that Sanskrit, the caste system and Hindu ways of worship came from outside India. If you are studying India in school, you may read about this outdated theory. Hinduism Emerges As the Indus-Sarasvati culture declined, many of its people migrated to other places. They settled mostly in north and central India, especially along the Ganga River system. They interacted with tribes who had lived in those areas from ancient times. Around 1000 bce, the Tamil-speaking Dravidian people in the South had separately developed a sophisticated language and
culture. Because of inadequate archeological research, we do not know a lot about this period. However, by 600 bce, India had developed a common culture from north to south and east to west. By this time the social, religious and philosophical ideas and practices central to Hinduism are fully evident. These are in continuity with the religion of the Indus-Sarasvati culture, the teachings of the Vedas, Dravidian culture and elements of the tribal religions. Hindu public worship, described in the Vedas, took place in temporary shelters built for that purpose. The earliest mention of permanent temples for the worship of God is in the Grihya Sutras, around 600 bce.
HINDU SYMBOLS
The sacred re altar of the ancient Vedic rites. To this day Hindu weddings and other rites are conducted around re altars.
Indian Society A distinctive feature of India at this time was ACADEMIC VOCABULARY the varna or class system. Society was clascontinuity sified into groups with specific occupations. unbroken conThese groups tended to become hereditary. nection or line of There were four broad classespriests, war- development riors, merchants and workers (including hereditary craftsmen). The system provided order and passed from parstability to society. Later on, the varnas dients to children vided into hundreds of sub-sections called jatis (castes). Individual jatis developed a
strong identity and pride in their occupation. From time to time people would move from one caste to another, or establish new ones. The evolving caste system became unfair to the people at the very bottom of the social order. Though caste is still an important factor in arranging marriages, caste discrimination is illegal in modern India. Women have always been held in high regard in India. Some of Indias foremost religious and political leaders are women. Hinduism is the only major religion in which God is worshiped in female form. Life in ancient times was hard work for both men and women. The women were responsible for running the household; the men for their craft or farm, as well as security. In general, women had fewer property rights than men, but received lighter punishments for crimes and paid fewer taxes. They participated equally with their husband in religious ceremonies and festival celebrations. Some women were highly educated, and a few even composed several of the holy Vedic hymns. The period from 1000 bce through the Gupta period up to the mid-6th century ce was a time of great advancement. Hindus discovered the zero and established the counting method, including the decimal system, we use today. Their astronomers knew that the Earth orbits the Sun and calculated the length of a year with great precision. rec ecis cis isio sio on n. . Sushruta
Medicine was so advanced that doctors were performing complex surgery not equaled in Europe until the 18th century. In ancient times India was one of the most advanced and wealthy nations on Earth. Since ancient times, a quarter of the worlds people have lived in India.
Section 1 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. a. Explain What happened to the Sarasvati River? b. Analyze What customs from modern Hinduism are depicted in artifacts of the Indus-Sarasvati civilization? 2. Elaborate What are the advantages of a hereditary occupation? What are the disadvantages? 3. a. Summarize How are women regarded in Hindu society? b. Recall What are some of the great scientic achievements in ancient India? 4. a. Explain How were the Vedas preserved? b. List What kind of information is in the Vedas? c. Explain Why is it important that the Rig Veda mentions the Sarasvati River as a mighty river?
FOCUS ON WRITING
5. Analyze What does your school history book say about the Aryan Invasion? How does this lesson dier?
2600-2000 BCE
Height of Indus-Sarasvati civilization. The city of Lothal includes large buildings and an enclosed harbor.
321 BCE
Foundation of the panIndian Maurya Empire. Time of great advancement in science, statecraft, economy, architecture, music and art.
Gupta Art
5000 BCE
2500 BCE
1000 BCE
500 BCE
200 0 BCE 00
2000 BCE
Sarasvati River dries up. People move to North and Central India.
600 BCE BC
India is a unied culture at this time. Large cities ourish in the Gangetic Plains. Indian physician Sushruta develops complex methods of surgery. Tamil language ourishes in the South. First mention of temple worship appears in the Grihya Sutras.
500 BC BCE E
Magadha Empire in the North and Pandyan Kingdom in the South ourish. Buddhism and Jainism, oshoots of Hinduism, become prominent religions.
200 BCE E
Tiruvalluvar commmposes Tirukural, one e of Indias greatest t scriptures on ethics s
s. rajam
320 CE
Gupta Empire reigns over most of India, with Tamil kingdoms in far south. This is the Golden Age of India and Hinduism, with respect and tolerance for all religions.
Lothal
4
history of ancient india
h a r r a pa n . c o m
SECTION
The Big Idea Hindus believe every soul will ultimately achieve God Realization.
Key Terms
Sanatana Dharma, p. 6 Brahman, p. 6 deva, p. 7 puja, p. 8 karma, p. 8 reincarnation, p. 8
the physical universe. As immanent, His divine form pervades all nature and humanity. In Hinduism, the soul is called atman. God exists within each soul. The Chandogya Upanishad explains it like this: What you see when you look into another persons eyes, that is atman, immortal, beyond fear; that is God. Hinduism has different branches with varying beliefs and practices. The four major branches are Saiva, Shakta, Vaishnava and Smarta. Saivas and Shaktas call the Supreme God Siva, though Shaktas worship the female aspect of God. Vaishnavas call Him Vishnu. Smartas may choose one of six Deities to worship as the Supreme. By whichever name or form, He is the same, one Supreme God. The Rig Veda says, The seers call in many ways that which is One. Hindus may also worship Gods and Goddesses, called devas, such as Ganesha and Sarasvati. In Sanskrit, deva means shining one. In some ways, these divine beings who live in the heaven worlds are like the
angels and archangels in Western religions. Some Hindus consider the Gods and Goddesses as alternative forms of the Supreme God, and not as individual divine beings. Each God and Goddess has particular powers and areas of responsibility. For example, Ganesha is the Lord of Obstacles. Before beginning a new project, a Hindu may pray to Ganesha to remove any obstacles blocking his way. In the Vaishnava tradition, Lord Vishnu appears on Earth as a divine personality, or avatar, from time to time to restore morally right living. Of Vishnus ten avatars, Lord Rama and Lord Krishna are the most important. Rama and Krishna are not separate Gods. They are two forms of the one Supreme God. In temples and shrines, the Supreme God and the Gods and Goddesses are worshiped in a ritual called puja. Puja is a ceremony in which the ringing of bells, passing of flames, chanting and presenting of flowers, incense and other offerings
HINDU SYMBOLS
A kalasha is a husked coconut set in a brass pot with mango leaves. It is used in worship to represent the Supreme God or any of the Gods or Goddesses.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
subordinate lower in rank, less important pervade to be present throughout encompass to surround and hold within
Ganesha is the God prayed to before beginning any task or worship. His elephant head makes Him easy to recognize.
In the Bhagavad Gita Lord Krishna shows Arjuna His universal form as the Supreme God encompassing all the other Gods
history of ancient india
LINKING TO TODAY
NONVIOLENCE
The Hindu principle of ahimsa, or nonviolence, is important today. Mahatma Gandhi, a devout Hindu, said, Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man. By nonviolent means Gandhi largely won Indias independence, using peaceful protests, boycotts, strikes and speeches. In the 1950s, Martin Luther King, Jr. studied Gandhis methods and went to India to meet his followers. He learned how Indias nonviolent movement worked and applied the same methods to ght for and win civil rights for Americas black minority. Aung San Suu Kyi, a devout Buddhist, has campaigned without violence for years to win democracy for the people of her native Myanmar (Burma). In 1991 she won the Nobel Peace Prize for her peaceful struggle against the countrys military dictatorship. Another example is Cesar Chavez, who won rights for California farm workers using nonviolent methods.
b l a c k s ta r p h o t o s / f l i p s c h u l k e
ANALYSIS
man, is reborn in a new body, experiencing many lifetimes. The purpose of rebirth is to progressively achieve spiritual maturity and God Realization. Eventually each soul learns to live by religious principles and avoid creating negative karma. The process of reincarnation continues through many lives until the soul achieves liberation. Hinduisms Sacred Scriptures The four Vedas are the holiest scriptures for all Hindus. The Upanishads, an important part of the Vedas, explain the Hindu philosophy. The next most important scriptures, also in Sanskrit, are the Agamas. There are specific Agamas for each major tradition in HinduismSaiva, Shakta and Vaishnava. The Agamas explain philosophy, personal conduct, worship and temple construction. There are hundreds of other scriptural texts dealing with religious and secular law, government, social order, economics, ecology, health, architecture, science, music, astronomy and many other subjects. The Puranas are encyclopedic accounts of the forms and avatars of God, the many subordinate Gods and divine beings, creation, spiritual teachings, historical traditions, geography and culture. The Tirukural is a Tamil masterpiece on ethics and moral living. The Yoga Sutras of Patan-
SKILL
ANALYZING INFORMATION A
What are the advantages of nonviolence over violence in bringing about social change?
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
invoke the Divine beings, who then come to bless and help the devotees. During the consecrated puja, through holy chants, gestures and samade sacred through ceremony cred ritual, highly trained priests guide the worship. The priests treat the Deity with invoke utmost care, attending to Him as the King summon a Deity; of kings. The purpose of the puja is to creappeal to ate a high religious vibration and communicate with God or a deva through the murti, HINDU SYMBOLS or consecrated statue, that is the focus of worship. Deity is the proper English word for murti. The word idol is often used, but it is incorrect. Hindus also practice internal worship of God. Sitting quietly, they may repeat the The orange or red name of God while counting on beads. Othbanner is the ag ers may chant, sing or meditate upon God. of Hinduism, which ies above temples, In Hinduism, there are many ways to worat festivals and in ship the Divine.
parades
Dharma, Karma and Reincarnation Dharma means righteousness, divine law, ethics, religion, duty, justice and truth. Dharma means the proper way one should live ones life. To follow dharma, one should be religious, truthful, kind, honest and generous. Dharma includes the practice of nonviolence, called ahimsa in Sanskrit. It is the ideal of not injuring others in thought, word or action. Karma, a central Hindu belief, is the law of cause and effect. It means that anything you do will eventually return to you in this or future lives. If we do something selfish or hateful, we will in time experience the same pain and suffering we caused to others. If our acts are good and kind, we will receive goodness and kindness. Reincarnation means literally to re-enter the flesh. It is the belief that the soul, at-
jali explore yoga and meditation. The Ramayana and Mahabharata are two sacred epic histories of India. The Ramayana is the story of Lord Rama, who is the seventh incarnation of Lord Vishnu, and his divine wife Sita. This 24,000-verse poem describes Prince Ramas birth, His banishment to a forest for 14 years, the abduction of Sita by the demon Ravana and Ramas victory over Ravana. The Ramayana remains immensely popular to this day in India and Southeast Asia. The Mahabharata, Great India, is a 78,000-verse story of a massive war that took place in ancient times between the Pandavas and their cousins, the Kauravas, for the throne of a great kingdom. It also describes the nature of self and the world, karma, important family lineages of India, human loyalties, saints and sages, devotion to God and the ideals of dharma. Lord Krishna, the eighth incarnation of Lord Vishnu, is a key figure in the epic. A central episode called the Bhagavad Gita narrates Krishnas dialogue with the Pandava archer, Arjuna, on the day of the battle. It is one of the most popular and revered among Vaishnava and Smarta scriptures. Hindu sacred music, dance, drama and the arts draw heavily on the Ramayana, the Mahabharata and the many Puranas.
HINDU SYMBOLS
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r e u t e r s / a p i c h a r t w e e r aw o n g
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
secular activities or things not related to religion
Section 2 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. a. Dene What is Sanatana Dharma? b. Explain What is a deva? CRITICAL THINKING c. Elaborate What are the two key terms used by Hindus to 6. Evaluate Why do Hindus believe that there are many describe the Supreme God? ways to approach the Supreme God? 2. Categorize What are the four main branches of Hinduism? 3. a. Recall Why do Hindus pray rst to Lord Ganesha? f b. Identify What are the two most popular incarnations of FOCUS ON WRITING Lord Vishnu? 7. Understanding 7 U d di nonviolence i l c. Explain What is the purpose of the Hindu puja? Write a paragraph explaining your way to deal with the 4. a. Explain What is karma? tax increase example given on page six. Do you think a b. Illustrate What are some examples of following dharma? nonviolent approach would succeed? c. Explain What is the purpose of reincarnation? 5. Summarize Make a list of Hindu scriptures, starting with the Vedas.
Sacred Texts
from the
Upanishads
GUIDED READING
Word Help
philosophy a theory or attitude that guides behavior vain excessively proud mysterious unknown consume to destroy completely, as by re
The Upanishads are the part of the Vedas that teach philosophy. The word upanishad means sitting by devotedly, as a student sits near his guru to learn. This excerpt is taken from the Kena Upanishad. It explains the nature of the Supreme God, called Brahman in Sanskrit.
AS YOU READ
1 This verse says that the Gods were vain. What test did the Supreme God put them through?
Once the Gods won a victory over the demons, and though they had done so only through the power of Brahman, they were exceedingly vain. They thought to themselves, It was we who beat our enemies, and the glory is ours. Brahman saw their vanity and appeared before them as a nature spirit. But they did not recognize Him. 1 Then the other Gods said to the God of fire, Fire, find out for us who this mysterious nature spirit is. Yes, said the God of fire, and approached the spirit. The spirit said to him: Who are you? I am the God of fire. As a matter of fact, I am very widely known. And what power do you wield? I can burn anything on Earth. Burn this, said the spirit, placing a straw before him. The God of fire fell upon it with all his might, but could not consume it. So he ran back to the other Gods and said, I cannot discover who this mysterious spirit is. Then said the other Gods to the God of wind: Wind, can you find out for us who he is? Yes, said the God of wind, and approached the spirit. The
The Vedas and Upanishads are written in Sanskrit, spirit said to him: Who a language that is thousands of years old are you? I am the God of wind. As a matter of fact, I am very widely known. I fly swiftly through the heavens. And what power do you wield? I can blow away anything on Earth. Blow this away, said the spirit, placing a straw before him. The God of wind fell upon it with all his might, but was unable to move it. So he ran back to the other Gods and said, I cannot discover who this mysterious spirit is. Then said the other Gods to Indra, greatest of them all, O respected one, find out for us, we pray you, who he is. Yes, said Indra and humbly approached the spirit. But the 2 spirit vanished, and in his place stood Goddess Uma, well adorned and of exceeding beauty. Beholding her, Indra asked: Who was the spirit that appeared to us? That, answered Uma, was Brahman. Through Him it was, not of yourselves, that you attained your victory and your glory. Thus did Indra, and the God of fire, and the God of wind, come to recognize Brahman, the Supreme God.
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The sacred sound aum is chanted at the beginning and end of most prayers
GUIDED READING
Word Help
adorned beautifully dressed beholding looking at something remarkable attained won; achieved
2 Indra took a dierent approach to nding out who the spirit was. Why did he succeed when the others failed?
10
11
SECTION
Hinduism in Practice
If YOU lived then...
You are born in Fiji in 1910. Your parents were brought from India by the British to work in the sugarcane elds as indentured laborers. Now they are free of debt and own farmland. The public school is OK, but your parents want you to go to the best private school. The principal there says you must leave Hinduism and convert to his religion before you can enroll.
CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES
AFRICA
SOUTHEAST ASIA INDIAN MALAYSIA SUBCONTINENT INDONESIA MAURITIUS REUNION AUSTRALIA NEW ZEALAND
SOUTH AMERICA
KENYA
SOUTH AFRICA
FIJI
m o u n ta i n h i g h m a p s
BUILDING BACKGROUND Hinduism is the only major religion from the distant past that is still vibrant today. It survived because of its tradition of home-centered worship, because of its rich teachings and many religious leaders, and because it is not merely tolerant of other religions but respects the validity of all spiritual paths.
men at the temple or on ceremonial occasions. This forehead mark symbolizes many things, especially spiritual vision. Worship in the Home Every Hindu home has a place of worship. It may be as simple as a shelf with pictures of God or an entire room dedicated to worship. Many families have a spiritual guide or guru whose picture is displayed in the shrine. There, the family may light a lamp, ring a bell and pray daily. The most devout hold a formal morning worship ritual. They offer flowers, incense, lights and food to God while chanting sacred verses. Individual members will often go to the shrine for blessings before leaving for school or work. At other times one may sit alone in the shrine, pray and chant the names of God, read from scripture, meditate silently or sing devotional songs. Temple Worship Hindus prefer to live within a days journey of a temple. The temple is a special building, revered as the home of God. The main Deity is enshrined in the temples central sanctum. In India, there are hundreds of
Hinduism has spread outside of India in several waves. First it was adopted by cultures throughout Southeast Asia through the 12th century ce. Second, in the 19th century many Hindus moved to the various European colonies, such as South Africa, the Caribbean and Fiji. And most recently, Hindus migrated to more than 150 countries in the 20th century.
Key Terms
samskara, p. 12 bindi, p. 12 puja, p. 13 swami, p. 14 Kumbha Mela, p. 15
thousands of temples, most quite ancient. Temples in India can be enormous, covering many acres, having vast pillared hallways that can accommodate 500,000 devotees during a festival. Often one or more families of priests oversee the temple and conduct the worship over many generations. When Hindus migrate outside India, they build a temple as soon as possible. At first, community leaders themselves conduct the daily rituals. Later, professional priests are hired. There are now hundreds of Hindu temples in America. The largest are in New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Texas and California. The temple worship ceremony, or puja, is usually performed by a priest from India. During the ceremony, he worships God by chanting Sanskrit verses from the scriptures and performing arati. Arati is the waving of an oil lamp in front of the Deity while bells are rung. The priest also offers flowers, sweets and fruit. These offerings are then distributed to the devotees as a blessing from God. Hindus may visit the temple throughout the day to worship and meditate.
THE IMPACT
TODAY
Th are Hi There Hindu d temples in nearly every country of the world
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
indentured under contract to work for a certain number of years austerity a dicult practice of self-denial and discipline meditate think deeply about, go within yourself or seek God within
12
13
LINKING TO TODAY
FESTIVALS
The biggest Hindu festival of the year is Diwali, or Dipavali, the Festival of Lights, celebrating the victory of good over evil, light over darkness. It takes place for ve days around the new moon in October/November. It also honors the return of Lord Rama to Ayodhya after 14 years in exile. Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth is invoked for prosperity, and Her presence is felt in every home. Hindus thoroughly clean the house, take a special bath and put on new clothes. Thousands of small lamps, including traditional clay oil lamps (pictured at right), are placed everywhere and reworks signal hope for mankind. It is a national holiday in India and in many countries with large Hindu populations. Some Hindu festivals take place mostly at home, such as Raksha Bandhan, which is on the full moon in July/August. Sisters tie a rakhi, or colored thread, around the wrist of their brothers. In return, the brother gives his sister a present and promises to protect her. The rakhi can also be given to anyone chosen as an adopted brother.
ANALYSIS
ism. Instead, there are thousands of independent spiritual traditions, monastic orders and religious institutions. The Yearly Festival Cycle There are many religious festivals celebrated by Hindus each year. They are observed at home, in temples and public places. Most Hindu festivals are observed according to an ancient solar-lunar calendar. Several festivals honor the avatars of Lord Vishnu. For example, Ram Navami celebrates the birth of Lord Rama in March/April. Krishna Janmashtami, in July/August, celebrates the birth of Lord Krishna. Mahasivaratri takes place in February/ March, when devotees fast and worship the transcendent Lord Siva all night in the temple. Diwali, or Dipavali, is the biggest festival of the year. It is dedicated to Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth, and takes place in October/November. Navaratri is the second largest festival. It lasts nine days and takes place in September/October. It is dedicated to the worship of the Goddess, Shakti in her three forms: Durga, the Goddess of Protection; Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth, and Sarasvati, the Goddess of Knowledge. Holi, in March/April, is a highly spirited festival where everyone sprinkles each other with colored water and powders. It
signifies the triumph of good over evil and marks the beginning of the winter crop harvest. Vaikasi Visakham (May/June) is sacred to Hindus, Buddhists and Sikhs. Guru Purnima is a special festival to honor ones spiritual teacher, or guru. It takes place on the full moon day in July. There are also many social festivals in India, such as Pongal. It is held in January and celebrates the incoming harvest. One special festival, the Kumbha Mela, takes place in a twelve-year cycle. Hindu saints and millions of devotees travel to certain sacred rivers at an auspicious time for worship. The 2001 Kumbha Mela was held at Prayag (modern Allahabad) in North India. It was attended by 70 million people, including 30 million on January 24 alone. This was the largest religious gathering ever held on the Earth.
HINDU SYMBOLS
The sacred oil lamp is used in the home and temple. Many Hindu events begin with the lighting of the lamp.
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ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
auspicious a favorable time for the Mela, as determined by the Hindu calendar
SKILL How do festivals help remind people to be more kind and generous to one another?
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ANALYZING INFORMATION A
SUMMARY
Hinduism is the oldest world religion. It accepts that there are many ways to worship God. It has endured for so long because the religion and culture have instilled in each Hindu a unique and strong sense of identity and community. The Rig Veda concludes, Let there be everlasting unity and peace among all human beings.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
mendicant a holy person who lives by begging
HINDU SYMBOLS
The bell is used in Hindu worship because it can be heard in the world of the Gods
Hinduisms Saints, Teachers and Swamis Hinduism has a rich history of saints and sages, both men and women. Their lives are educational and inspiring. They come from all castes. Some saints, such as Adi Shankara, have written detailed explanations of the Vedas and other scriptures. Other saints, such as Mirabai, Tukaram and Sambandar, taught through devotional songs. Recent saints include Sri Ramakrishna and Anandamayi Ma. Their deeply religious lives have uplifted millions of Hindus and others worldwide. There are hundreds of thousands of religious scholars and teachers, both men and women, known as pundits. Some give spellbinding discourses on sacred scriptures, including Ramayana and Mahabharata. Tens of thousands may attend such gatherings, which include storytelling, preaching, devotional singing and drama. These events often go on for days or even a month.
Hinduism has millions of swamis and other holy persons. Swamis are unmarried men (and some women) who have taken up spiritual life full time. Swami means he who knows himself. Some live in monasteries; others wander as homeless mendicants. Swamis are the religious ministers of Hinduism. Many swamis teach, others run large institutions that perform social service for their communities, and still others live alone and meditate long hours each day in their pursuit of divine enlightenment. Special among these are the holy gurus. Gu means darkness and ru means remover. So guru literally means the one who removes darkness. These men and women are great religious teachers, some with millions of followers. Several gurus have popularized the Hindu practice of yoga by establishing training centers all over the world. No one person or institution is in charge of Hindu-
Section 3 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. a. List What are the ve basic practices of Hinduism? b. Dene What does the bindi, red dot, signify? c. Explain How do Hindus use their home shrine room? 2. List What are the various kinds of priests and holy men and women in Hinduism? 3. a. Explain What is the years biggest Hindu festival? b. Dene What is the meaning of the rakhi bracelet? c. Recall What is special about the Kumbha Mela? d. Elaborate Why has Hinduism lasted so long? 4. List Make a list of three columns. In the rst column write the name of a major Hindu festival. In the second, put the time of year it occurs. In the third list, what it celebrates.
FOCUS ON WRITING
5. Understanding Hindu practices Why do you think Hindus want to live near a temple?
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A VISUAL HISTORY
Indias Kumbha Mela, a spectacular religious festival, is the largest human gathering in history
The Ganga River ows past the bathing steps at Haridwar in north India. In 1998, ten million pilgrims worshiped here during the months-long festival. The Kumbha Mela at Prayag in 2001 drew over 60 million Hindus.
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m e l a p r e s s b u r e au
m e l a p r e s s b u r e au
d e v r a j a g a r wa l
Hindu monks parade through narrow streets of Haridwar on their way to the river Ganga for a sacred, purifying bath.
Swami Avdheshanand Giri, under the umbrella, heads a monastic order of hundreds of thousands of sadhus.
During the festival, a vast tent city is set up along the river to house the sadhus. Here, devotees can meet and mingle with these holy monks, many of whom live alone in remote areas of the Himalayas.
t h o m a s k e l ly
All devotees eagerly immerse themselves three times in the sacred water. They hold on to steel chains to avoid slipping into the swift-owing river.
t h o m a s k e l ly
Two girls hold clay oil lamps on metal trays at the 2004 Kumbha Mela in Ujjain, one of Hinduisms Seven Sacred Cities. These lamps will be used in the worship of the Kshipra River owing behind them. Hindus often
attend the Mela in large family groups composed of kids, parents, aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents. There is something for everyone in the traditional worship and festive ceremonies.
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d e v r a j a g a r wa l
t h o m a s k e l ly
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CHAPTER
Standards Assessment
8 Hi 8. ind n us u b el lie ieve ve that tha hat t the the devas, de eva vas, as, s such suc u h as s Lord Lor ord d Hindus believe Ga an ne esh s ao or rG odde od d ss de ss Lakshmi, Lak aksh sh hm mi i, are are like: ar li l ike k : Ganesha Goddess A Arch Ar rch chan ange an ge g els s Archangels B Na N ture tu r s re p ri pi r ts ts Nature spirits C My Myth thic th ical ic al l heroes her eroe o s oe Mythical D Imaginary Im mag a in inar ar ry pe peop ople op people 9. Which Whic Wh hic ch of t he h ef ol o llo ow wi in ng gi s no not t us sed i n no n nv vio iole le ent n p ro ote test sts? ? the following is used in nonviolent protests? A Peaceful Peac Pe a eful ac ef ful rallies ral alli l es li s B Bo Boyc yo yc ot tts Boycotts C Strikes S ri St rike kes ke s D V Va and da al lis lis ism m Vandalism 10 0. T h H he in ndu d s c ip cr iptu ture res s in nclud lud ude: e e: 10. The Hindu scriptures include: A Th T e Ve Veda das, da sU s, pa pani ani n sh had ads sa nd Bibl B Bi ibl be The Vedas, Upanishads and Bible B Th T he e Ve ed da as, Ra R ama ma aya y na a nd Qu nd ur ran a an The Vedas Ramayana and Quran C Th The e Veda Ve eda d s, U pani pa nishad ni sh had ds, sR amay am ay yan na a nd d Ma Maha habh ha bh b h har a at ar ta Vedas, Upanishads, Ramayana and Mahabharata D Th The he Ma M aha habh bhar bh aa ar at ta a nd n dt h Il he Ilia ia ad Mahabharata and the Iliad 11. 11 . Hindus Hin ndus dus believe du be eli liev ev ve that th hat a every ev ve ery y other oth t er r religion: rel elig igio ig ion: io n: A Is an an acceptable ac cce c p pt ta ab bl le e way way yt o ap a ppr proa oac oa ch hG od to approach God B Is wrong C Is useful, but only Hindus go to heaven D Is not as good because Hinduism is older 12. How many countries do Hindus live in today? A 20 B 50 C 100 D More than 150 13. The saints of Hinduism are: A Primarily high-caste men B Only people who lived a long time ago C Men and women of all castes D Mostly great scholars 14. The biggest religious event in the world is: A The Kumbha Mela B Easter Sunday in Rome C The annual pilgrimage to Mecca D Christmas in New York City
CHAPTER
DIRECTIONS: READ EACH QUESTION AND CIRCLE THE LETTER OF THE BEST RESPONSE 1. . Ev Evid Evidence den e ce c for for r what wha hat t form form fo rm of of worship wo w or rs shi hip in nt the he Ve he V Vedas da d as was was a foun fo und d by archaeologists arc r ha h eo olo ogi gs st ts in nt he r he ui u ins ns o f th he In nd du usussfound the ruins of the IndusS Sa ra asv s at ti ci ivi vili li iza zati t on ti on? ? Sarasvati civilization? A Te Temp emp ple ew or o rsh ship ip p Temple worship B Wo W rshi rs h p at hi at r e al a t r ta rs s Worship re altars C De Devo v ti vo tio on nal singing sin ingi ngi g ng g Devotional D Sa acr cred ed d dancing dan a cing cing ci Sacred 2 . The Th he Indus-Sarasvati In ndu duss-Sa Sara Sa rasv ra svat sv a i ci at c vili vi liza liza zati t on ti o e nd n ded b e au ec use se: : 2. civilization ended because: A Aryans A ya Ar y ns c on nqu quer ered er ed di t conquered it B The The Sarasvati Th S rasv Sa ra asv s at ti Ri R ive v r dr ve d ied ie d up p River dried C There Th her ere e was wa as a gr g eat ea t fa fami m ne mi great famine D Th T e pe p op o ple d i do ie of fp lagu la gu g ue The people died plague 3. . The The Aryan Ar ryan yan In ya nva vasi sion si on t heor he ory wa or ory was s ba ase ed up po on n: Invasion theory based upon: A Biological Bi B iol iol o og ogic ical ic a e al vi ide enc nce, e, s u h as D uc NA N A evidence, such DNA B Archeological Ar rch heo olo logi gica gi c l di ca disc scov over ov er erie rie ies s discoveries C La ang ngua uage ua ge es tu udy Language study D Ancient Anci An cien ci en nt hist h hi istor tor orie ies ie s histories 4 Which 4. W ic Wh i h di d scov sc over ov er ry wa as not no ot ma made de e in n an anci ci cien ie en nt In Indi di ia? ? discovery was ancient India? f zero A The concept of B Surgery C That the Earth orbits the Sun D The moons of Jupiter 5. Evidence of Hindu temple worship can be as early as: A 1200 bce B 600 bce C 300 ce D 900 ce 6. Which of these descriptions does not apply to women in ancient India? A Had fewer property rights than men B Were never educated C Wrote parts of the Vedas D Paid fewer taxes 7. Which of these words does not describe the Hindu concept of the Supreme God? A Creator of the universe B Transcendent C Immanent D Jealous of other Gods
This is an 8th century South Indian bronze of Supreme God Siva as Nataraja. This divine dance depicts His ve cosmic powers of creation, preservation, dissolution, veiling grace and revealing grace.
During these eight centuries, empires, religion, commerce, science, technology, literature and art flourished in India. In ways vitally important to Hindus to this day, the Hindu faith was advanced by temple building, the Bhakti Movement, holy texts and great philosophers, saints and sages.
history of ancient india
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Takshashila
SECTION
Ghazni
Afghanistan
Multan
SI N U DH RI VE R
INDIA: GEOGRAPHY
YA
UN
Ind
o-
ER Mathura Kannauj Ka
RI
Himalayas Nepal
GA NG AR IVE R
B RA H M A PU TR A RI V ER
Ga
ng
eti
Ujjain
VINDHYA RANGE
c P lai n
Kashi
Valabhi Somnath
D A R IV
ER
Ellora
Deccan Plateau
KRIS HNA
Puri
D AV AR IR IV
Arabian Sea
Manyakheta a Badami
ER
R RIVE
Amaravati
Bay of Bengal
Understanding India
The triangle-shaped Indian subcontinent is naturally bounded by ocean on two sides and the high Himalayan mountains on the third. Hindu tradition, scriptures and the Sanskrit language link people from one end to the other of this immense and fertile area. Our period, 300 to 1100 ce, was a golden age in India. There was widespread prosperity and remarkable social stability. Advances were made in science, medicine and technology. Many Hindu saints lived during this time and magnificent temples were built. Hinduism as practiced today evolved over this glorious period of Indian history. Geographical regions There are three major geographical regions in India. The first region is the Indo-Gangetic Plain. This vast, fertile region stretches northeast and southwest along the base of the Himalayas. During our period, this area was heavily forested. The second region is the Deccan Plateau, bounded by the Vindhya mountain range in the north and the Nilgiri Hills in the south. It contains several major rivers and is rich in minerals. The third region is South India, the area south of the Nilgiri Hills extending to Kanyakumari at the tip of India. It has rich agricultural farm lands.
This satellite photo shows Indias three major regions, its principal rivers and the major cities of the period 300 to 1100. India lay at the center of the bustling sea and land trade routes to Europe, Arabia, Persia, China and Southeast Asia
South India
Madurai Kanyakumari
Kanchipuram
Sri Lanka
Empires and regional kingdoms In 300 ce, an estimated 42 million people lived in India, 23% of the worlds population of 180 million. Approximately 60% of the Indian people lived in the Indo-Gangetic Plain. There were many towns and cities, but more than 90% of the population lived in villages. As our period began, the Indo-Gangetic Plain again became the most important region of India, as it had been in the past. From 300 to 550, the Imperial Guptas established an extensive empire from the Himalayas deep into the south of India. Samudra Gupta (335-370) was the most heroic conqueror. The reign of his son, Chandra Gupta II Vikramaditya (375-414), was the most brilliant in the entire Hindu history.
Language areas India is divided linguistically into two major regions. In the north are mainly Sanskritbased languages, such as Hindi. In the south are the Dravidian languages, such as Tamil, which include many Sanskrit words. This division cuts across the middle of the Deccan Plateau. Often today when people speak of South India, they mean the Dravidian-speaking areas. These are the modern-day states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu. During our period, regional dialects developed within both the Sanskrit and Dravidian areas. Sanskrit was the language of religion, law and government throughout India. Travelers could use Sanskrit to communicate wherever they went on the subcontinent.
Sanskrit
Dravidian
Linguistic Regions
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
imperial of, or relating to, an empire
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The Gupta kings granted local and regional autonomy. The frontier states were nearly independent. The empire was responsible for security, major roads, irrigation projects and common welfare. The Guptas created both political and cultural pan-India unity. India made original literary, religious, artistic and scientific contributions that benefitted the entire known world. Chinese Buddhist monk Fa-hsien (Faxian) reported in the early 5th century, In the cities and towns of this country, the people are rich and prosperous. Hinduism thrived under the Guptas, taking forms which endure until today. Gupta culture and economy influenced much of Eurasia, notably China and Southeast Asia. The Gupta Empire declined in the late 5th century because of internal strife and invasions by fierce Central Asian Hunas who ruled areas west of the Indus. The Hunas were driven back in the mid-6th century by emerging Hindu rulers. During his 17-year journey through India, 7th century Chinese monk-scholar Hsuantsang (Xuanzang) wrote that there were about 70 regional powers. Many were part of the empire of King Harsha in the North
and the major empires of the South. In the 8th century, the Rashtrakutas Pataliputra took control of the entire Deccan, parts of West Central India and much of the South. Between the 8th and 10th centuries, they competed with the Pratiharas and Palas for pan-India dominance. The Gupta Empire: 300-550, with its Pratiharas at their peak ruled much of capital at Patalinorthern India. They were the first to putra (present-day Patna) effectively stop Arab Muslim invasions into western India, holding them in check ACADEMIC until the 10th century. The Palas, a BudVOCABULARY dhist dynasty centered in eastern India, autonomy reached their zenith in the early ninth cen- self-rule, independence tury. Then the Pratiharas displaced them pan-India from much of the Gangetic Plain. relating to the There were several large Hindu kingwhole of India doms in the Deccan and South India in empire our period. They included the Vakatakas, a group of Chalukyas, Pallavas and Pandyas. Rajendra kingdoms under Chola I, who ruled from 1014-1044, unified one authority the entire South. The Cholas had a large plunder army and navy. In an effort to protect their property seized by violence trade routes, they subdued kingdoms as sack far away as Malaysia and Indonesia. Their to seize all expeditions are unique in Indian history. The Cholas dominated trade between South valuables and destroy buildings India and the Middle East and Europe in the the West, th W and Southeast Asia and China
in the East. Indian traders brought Hindu religion and classical culture to Southeast Asia. Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms arose in present-day Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia and South Vietnam. Government and legal system The kingdoms of India were guided by the Shastras, Hindu legal texts written in Sanskrit. The Dharma Shastras, such as Manu and Yajnavalkya, recorded laws and customs regarding family, marriage, inheritance and occupation, as well as suggested punishments for crimes. The Artha Shastra and Niti Shastras offered rules and advice on the kings behavior, war, justice, administration and business regulation. People believed that when the king was brave and just, the kingdom prospered. Shastras, local customs, advice of the wise and sound judgment of the king together produced sophisticated, stable and enlightened government. Muslim invasions Arabia, where the new religion of Islam began in 610 ce, had long traded with India. Arab merchants belonging to Islam settled peacefully in South India in the early 7th century. By 711 Arab Muslim armies had conquered North Africa, Spain and the Persian empire. They attacked Indias frontiers as well. Arab Muslims conquered Sindh (now in southern Pakistan) in 712. Their further
invasions were stopped by the Pratiharas, who confined Muslim rule to the Sindh region. Northwestern India remained stable under Hindu rule until the Turkish King, Mahmud of Ghazni (in modern Afghanistan), invaded India for plunder and the expansion of Islam. Ruling from 998-1030, Mahmud raided the country 17 times, wreaking large-scale destruction of temples, cities and palaces. The sack of the famed Siva temple of Somanatha in 1025 was the most horrific, involving the massacre of 50,000 defenders and the theft of fabulous wealth. This battle marked the beginning of Muslim domination of northwestern India.
Section 1 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. List: What are Indias major geographic regions? 2. Describe: Where did most Indians live in 300ce? What was it like? Who ruled this area at that time? 3. Explain: How did the Cholas succeed in unifying South India and spreading Hindu culture overseas? 4. Apply: What do you think are some rules and advice that the Shastras should give for kings? 5. Evaluate: If you ruled a kingdom that was attacked by a more powerful empire, would you ght back or try to join the empire? Why?
FOCUS ON WRITING
7. Analyze: Describe the Indian empires of the time and explain why they were attacked by Mahmud of Ghazni.
1025 500
Bhakti Movement begins, gaining strength over the next thousand years. It was led by saints such as Sambandar of South India (at right with God Siva and Goddess Parvati) 500 600
712
Arab Muslims conquer the Sindh region of western India. Their further advance is halted by Hindu armies. No further conquests occur for nearly 300 years. 700 800 900
s. rajam shutterstock
Chola dynasty is at its height. Its inuence extends across Southeast Asia. Builds great temples at Thanjavur and creates world-famous bronze statues of Siva Nataraja.
Thanjavur Temple
1000 1100
300-1000
World-famous Ajanta and Ellora Caves are created
476
Rome falls. Indian trading shifts from Europe to Arabia and the Middle East while continuing with China
542
Hindu kings defeat Hunas and end their brutal rule in central and northern India
802
Jayavarman II founds Indianized kingdom of Kambuja in what is now Cambodia, with capital at Angkor
1025
british museum
Harsha, ruler of much of north India, establishes diplomatic relations with China
Mahmud of Ghazni sacks Somanatha temple in western India as part of his campaigns to plunder the fabulous wealth of India and expand Islam
Somanatha Ruins
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SECTION
Throughout the period from 300 to 1100, India was a wealthy country. It produced a large amount of food, manufactured goods and various items for domestic and foreign trade. The nation made advances in medicine, mathematics, astronomy and metallurgy. People enjoyed prosperity, peace and freedom and achieved unprecedented artistic and culture excellence. The richest nation in the world for over 1,000 years Economic historians estimate that between the first and eleventh century ce, India produced roughly 30% of the worlds Gross Domestic Product, or GDP. The GDP is the total value (the gross) of everything a country or region produces. It includes the value of food, manufactured items (such as cloth, jewelry, tools and pottery) and services (such as the incomes of doctors, teachers, authors and artists). India had the highest GDP in the world for this entire period. China was the next highest, with 25% of the worlds GDP. By comparison, in 1,000 ce Europes GDP was just 11%. Cities: centers of wealth and culture The Indian subcontinents population in the fifth century is estimated d at 50 million, of which perhaps five million lived in cities and towns.
The capitals where the kings lived were usually the biggest. Cities and towns grew up along important trade routes, at sea and inland river ports and adjacent to major temples and pilgrimage centers. Temples had become an important focus of life in cities and villages. They served as places of worship, scholarship, education and performing arts. City life was dynamic, diverse and fulfilling, as seen in the excerpt from an ancient poem, The Ankle Bracelet, on pages 10 and 11. Larger houses were two- or three-story structures with tile roofs, built around an open-air, central courtyard. The homes of wealthy citizens had attached gardens. Cities maintained public gardens, parks and groves. Prosperous citizens were expected to be highly sophisticated and to lead an active social and cultural life. Ordinary citizens lived in humbler circumstances. Then, as now, the Hindu calendar was filled with home celebrations and public festivals. Some festivals, such as Sivaratri, took place in temples. Others, like Diwali, Holi and Ramnavami, were held city-wide.
Singing, dancing and gambling were available in special city areas throughout the year. Traveling troupes of musicians, acrobats, storytellers and magicians provided entertainment. Cities served as centers of commerce and were largely self-governing. A four-person ruling council included a representative from the big business community, the smaller merchants and the guilds of artisans. The fourth member, the chief clerk, was responsible for making and keeping records, ACADEMIC such as land deeds. VOCABULARY The wealth of the region depended commerce upon the abundant agricultural harvests buying and and the diverse products of many artisans. selling of goods It was in the city that this wealth was sophisticated concentrated. The king and well-to-do educated and rened citizens actively supported the fine arts, including literature, music, dance and drama. They promoted medicine, technology and science. They patronized the skilled jewelers, weavers, painters, metalworkers and sculptors.
ARTISTIC ACHIEVEMENT
The artisans of India produced masterpieces which included huge temples, metal and stone statues and ornate gold coins.
HINDUISM TODAYS
TEACHING STANDARDS
5. Explain how India was the worlds richest country during this period. 6. Describe the main features of town and village life. 7. Explain the principal advances in art, science, technology and mathematics, especially the decimal system.
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This Gupta-era gold coin (actual size) has a horse on one side and Goddess Lakshmi on the other. It weighs about eight grams.
Sarasvati, Hindu Goddess of knowledge, music and the arts, was also worshiped in the Jain religion
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Three Chola-era bronze statues: Lord Vishnu (center), Bhudevi, the Earth Goddess (left), and Lakshmi, Goddess of Prosperity (right)
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
shunya eka dvi tri chatur pancha shash sapta ashta nava
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Find a few English words or parts of words that are related to the Sanskrit numbers. For example, the tri in triangle is related to Sanskrit tri, 3.
Understanding the village The villages, where 90 percent of the ACADEMIC VOCABULARY people lived, were usually surrounded by agricultural land. Each had for common foundry a workshop for use a pond or water reservoir, wells, grazcasting metal ing grounds and at least one temple. The guild year-round warm climate and monsoon an association of rains allowed farmers to produce two crops craftsmen who a year. The villages enjoyed a food surplus, cooperate in the except when struck by natural disaster. The production and villages had priests, doctors and barbers sale of goods and skilled craftsmen, such as carpenters, barter blacksmiths, potters, oil pressers and weavexchange of goods or services ers. Some villages specialized in one or for other goods or more trades, which were organized into services (without guilds, or shrenis. There were daily and using money) weekly markets in the villages and nearby towns to barter and sell goods. Hindu society evolved into many jatis,
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history of ancient india
based on specific occupations. The jatis are called castes in English. Jatis are grouped under the four-fold class division, or varna: priests, warriors, merchants and workers. A fifth group gradually developed that included scavengers, leather workers, butchers, undertakers and some tribal people. This group, about ten percent of the population, was considered untouchable and lived outside the city or village. The Chinese pilgrim Fa-hsien reported that when a member of one of these castes entered a city, he had to clap two sticks together to announce his presence. Because the jatis were hereditary, the families became expert farmers, craftsmen, merchants, etc. Each family in the village interacted with all other jatis and were bound together in a permanent relationship.
dinodia
SKILL
ANALYZING INFORMATION A
There would be a family barber, washerman, priest, doctor, carpenter, etc., routinely serving the family needs. Thus the village was an interlocked economic unit. Each village was self-governed by an assembly of five elders, called the panchayat. The central unit of the town and village was the joint family, as it is today among many Hindus. Father, mother, sons and their wives, unmarried daughters and grandchildren all lived under one roof. Land and finances were held in common, and everyone worked for the advancement of the family. Marriages were often arranged by the parents. The boy and girl had little say in the matter, but if a couple eloped, the marriage was recognized. In the system called swayamvara, a woman, usually a princess, could choose her husband from a group of assembled suitors. Villages were interconnected with one another, due in part to arranged marriages. The girl often came from a different village, one not more than a days journey away. A days journey (on foot or by bullock cart) was about 60 kilometers. Visits to relatives created an interlocking communications network through which news, technology and ideas freely flowed. Merchants, Hindu holy men and women, storytellers and pilgrims added to this network of communication and to cultural enrichment. Such itinerants often traveled long distances throughout India. Each village along the way offered abundant hospitality. Science, technology and art Indias enduring prosperity allowed for great progress in science, technology and the arts. The most visible examples are the great stone temples that stand today. These temples were expertly carved using simple iron chisels and hammers. Knowledge was taught in many schools. The worlds first universities were built,
including Takshashila, Nalanda, Vikramashila and Vallabhi. Students entered Takshashila at age 16 and studied the Vedas and the eighteen arts and sciences, which included medicine, surgery, astronomy, agriculture, accounting, archery and elephant lore. One could later specialize in medicine, law or military strategy. Nalanda was described by Hsuan-tsang as a center of advanced studies with 10,000 students and 2,000 teachers. Indian medicine, ayurveda, developed sophisticated systems of disease prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Widely practiced today, this holistic system aims to create and preserve health, rather than just cure disease. From the Gupta Empire onward, India witnessed a vast outpouring of literature in the form of plays, poems, songs and epics. Performing arts were noted for portraying the nine rasas, or emotions: love, humor, compassion, anger, heroism, fear, disgust, tranquility and wonder. All these achievements created what historians call a classical age. India developed strong moral values and noble ethical principles. High standards of intellectual and artistic sophistication and refined patterns of living were set that served as models for following generations.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
elope to run away and get married without parents consent itinerant one who travels from place to place ayurveda Literally, science of life, a system of health and prevention of disease
d o na l e e h o u s t o n
Section 2 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. a. Dene: What is Gross Domestic Product? b. Identify: What country had the biggest GDP in the world for 1,000 years? What country was next richest? 2. a. Explain: Where were cities and towns located? b. Analyze: Who ran the city? Do you think this was a good system? Why? c. Contrast: Give three ways that Indian villages were dierent from the cities. 3. a. Evaluate: Do you think the system of jatis was a good system? How is it dierent from modern life?
FOCUS ON WRITING
4 Analyze: l Wh Why i is thi this ti time a classical age in India? 4. A 29
Original Source
Translation by Alain Danielou The Ankle Bracelet is an ancient Tamil poem. This excerpt describes the port city of Puhar during an annual Hindu festival. Puhar was typical of the port cities of our period.
GUIDED READING
Word Help
Tamil Ancient language of South India Puhar A port city 240 kilometers south of modern Chennai unguent an ointment bazaar a large marketplace
1 Greek merchants had homes in the city of Puhar. Why do you think they were wealthy?
The Sun appeared, peering over the eastern hills. He tore off the mantle of night, spread his warm and friendly rays over the pale Earth. The sunshine lighted up the open terraces, the harbor docks, the towers with their arched windows like the eyes of deer. In various quarters of the city the homes of 1 wealthy Greeks were seen. Near the harbor, seamen from faroff lands appeared at home. In the streets hawkers were selling unguents, bath powders, cooling oils, flowers, perfume, incense. Weavers brought their fine silks and all kinds of fabrics made of wool or cotton. There were special streets for merchants of coral, sandalwood, myrrh, jewelry, faultless pearls, pure gold and precious gems. In another quarter lived grain merchants, their stocks piled up in mounds. Washermen, bakers, vintners, fishermen and dealers in salt crowded the shops, where they bought betel nuts, perfume, sheep, oil, meat and bronzes. One could see coppersmiths, carpenters, goldsmiths, tailors, shoemakers and clever craftsmen making toys out of cork or rags, and expert musicians, who demonstrated their mastery in the seven-tone scale on the flute and the harp. Workmen displayed their skills in hundreds of small crafts. Each trade had its own street in the workers quarter of the city. At the center of the city were the wide royal street, the street of temple cars, the bazaar and the main street, where rich merchants had their mansions with high towers. There was a
street for priests, one for doctors, one for astrologers, one for peasants. In a wide passage lived the craftsmen who pierce gems and pearls for the jewelers. Nearby were those who make trinkets out of polished sea shells. In another quarter lived the coachmen, bards, dancers, astronomers, clowns, actresses, florists, betelsellers, servants, nadaswaram players, drummers, jugglers and acrobats. On the first day of spring, when the full moon is in Virgo, offerings of rice, cakes of sesame and brown sugar, meat, paddy, flowers and incense were brought by young girls, splendidly dressed, to the altar of the God who, at the bidding of Indra, king of heaven, had settled in the town to drive away all perils. As they went away from the altar, the dancers cried, May the king and his vast empire never know famine, disease or dissension. May we be blessed with wealthand when the season comes, with rains. The people made merry on Indras chosen day. Great rituals were performed in the temples of the Unborn Siva, of Murugan, the beauteous god of Youth, of Valiyon, brother of Krishna, of the dark Vishnu and of Indra himself, with His strings of pearls and His victorious parasol. A festive crowd invaded the precincts of the temple, where Vedic rituals, once revealed by the God Brahma, were faultlessly performed. The four orders of the Gods, the eighteen hosts of paradise and other celestial spirits were honored and worshiped. Temples of the Jains and 2 their charitable institutions could be seen in the city. In public squares, priests were recounting stories from the scriptures of the ancient Puranas.
This 19th-century painting portrays a typical Indian food market. About 50 dierent items are for sale. How many can you identify?
GUIDED READING
Word Help
nadaswaram a high-pitched, doublereed wooden horn paddy unhusked rice famine extreme shortage of food parasol here, a highly decorated, ceremonial umbrella
2 The city had both Hindu and Jain temples. How does this show religious tolerance on the part of the citizens?
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indra sharma
Lord Krishna, depicted at center with blue complexion, celebrates the Holi festival with friends in Vrindavan, a town of his youth
Key Terms
religious harmony, p. 32 Bhakti Movement, p. 33 puja, p. 33 Agama, p. 34 Purana, p. 34
HINDUISM TODAYS
TEACHING STANDARDS
8. Explain how Hindu kings maintained religious harmony. 9. Describe the Bhakti Movement and the importance of the Puranas, Ramayana and Mahabharata. 10. Describe the importance of the Agamas and the development of temple worship during this period.
mented meditation and yoga, offering an all-embracing means to enlightenment and liberation from birth and rebirth THE IMPACT TODAY through divine grace. The most famous early saints of the Hindu temple worship Bhakti Movement are the Vaishnavite continues to be Alvars and the Saivite Nayanars. They performed in came from all castes and were a voice modern times, using Sanskrit for equality. Four of the Nayanars enjoy chanting and prominence to this day: Appar, Sundarar, following Sambandar and Manikkavasagar. instructions from the Agama While pilgrimaging from temple to scriptures. temple, the Nayanars composed poems and songs in praise of the loving God Siva. These became part of a massive ACADEMIC body of scripture called the Tirumurai. VOCABULARY These passionate hymns, composed in adoration the Tamil language, remain popular today deep love and in South India. Saints emerged all over respect India composing devotional songs to Siva, Saivite Vishnu, Krishna, Rama and Devi in local worshiper of Siva languages. There was a massive response Vaishnavite to this stirring call of divine bliss. worshiper of Great teachers and philosophers, such as Vishnu Ramanuja and Yamunacharya, were critical to the Bhakti Movement. They explained how to relate to God through worship.
history of ancient india
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TEMPLE WONDER
ROCK-CUT TEMPLE
The Kailasanatha Temple to Lord Siva at Ellora, Maharashtra, in West India, was begun in the 8th century by Rashtrakuta King Krishna I and completed by his successor. Amazingly, it was carved out of a solid mountain of rock. It took the stone workers 100 years to remove 200,000 tons of rock. The temple, measuring 160 feet by 280 feet, was created in the South Indian style by architects of that region. It was designed to resemble Mount Kailasa, the Himalayan home of God Siva. Along the same rock cli are 34 caves that were excavated from the solid rock between the 5th and 10th centuries. They served as monasteries and temples. Twelve were built for the Buddhists, 17 for Hindus and ve for Jains. The fact that these were all built in the same complex testies to the religious harmony and diversity of the period.
ANALYSIS
to the famous temples. This flow of visitors helped the local economy and spread cultural practices and religious belief. The Purana Scriptures Puranas are dedicated to a particular Deity. Each contains a description of the origin of the universe, lists of kings, Hindu philosophy and traditional stories about the Gods and Goddesses. Among the most important Puranas are the Bhagavata, Vishnu, Siva and the Markandeya, especially for its Devi Mahatmya section. The Bhagavata narrates the greatness of Lord Vishnu and His ten avatars, of whom the two most important are Lord Rama and Lord Krishna. The Siva Purana extols the four-fold path leading to oneness with Lord Siva: service, worship, yoga and wisdom. It also explains Namah Sivaya, regarded by Saivites as the most sacred of mantras. The Puranas record an important feature of Hinduism, the assimilation of different ethnic and religious groups. They tell us that earlier migrants into India, such as the Greeks, Persians and central Asian peoples, including the Hunas, had been completely absorbed into Indian society and Hindu religion. Various tribes were also brought into the mainstream and their beliefs and practices assimilated. The stories of these people are recorded in the Puranas. Ramayana and Mahabharata You read in chapter one about the two great historical tales of India, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. These epics were revised into their present form and gained popularity all over India, and beyond, during our period. They played a crucial role in the development of devotional Hinduism. Unlike the Vedas, which could be understood only by those who studied Sanskrit, the epics were retold into local languages. Drama, dance, song, painting and sculpture
based on the epics became the main means of teaching the Hindu way of life. During our period, Hinduism and Buddhism spread to Burma, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand. It was made popular in these countries through the epics and other Sanskrit texts.
THE IMPACT
TODAY
The Ramayana and Mahabharata continue to enrich religious life. They have even been made into popular movies and TV programs.
shutterstock
CHAPTER SUMMARY
The time from 300 to 1100 ce was a golden age in India. Its prosperity, stability and religious harmony encouraged scientific and artistic achievements that set standards for the entire world. Devotional Hinduism developed in a powerful manner. Through songs and stories, it brought Hindu principles and values into the languages of the common people. Temples became popular centers for worship of Gods and Goddesses. The Puranas, Ramayana and Mahabharata provided an abundant library of history, philosophy, religious practices and moral teachings in stories that were passed from generation to generation. This great devotional tradition inspired and sustained the people in their daily life, as it continues to do today.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
yoga practices that bring union with God mantra sacred sound assimilation the absorption and integration of a people, idea, religion or culture into a society epic a long poem about herioc deeds and people
SKILL
ANALYZING INFORMATION A
Why do you think the king went to so much time and expense to build this large temple?
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
Adi Shankara The guru Adi Shankara (788-820) developed the philosophy of Advaita Vedanta guru during this time. In summary, his philosoteacher phy can be stated as: Brahman (the Suavatar preme Being) is the only truth. The world is the Supreme an appearance. There is ultimately no difBeing appearing ference between Brahman and the atma, or in human form individual soul. He taught this philosophy across India. He established four monastic centers which remain influential today. His teachings and the Bhakti Movement together brought back many Jains and Buddhists to Hinduism. Temple Worship All over India great Hindu temples were built or expanded between 300 and 1100 ce. Many are at the center of large cities, such as Varanasi on the Ganga in the North, and Madurai in the South, and remain powerful places of worship. In the temples, the people worshiped
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history of ancient india
their chosen Deity with great devotion and paid respects to the many other enshrined Deities. The priest conducted the holy rituals, but did not stand between the devotee and God. Temple worship was defined in great detail in the Agamas and parts of the Puranas. The refined art of building with stone, brick and other materials was the subject of the Vastu Shastras. These books on architecture cover temple design, town planning and house construction. All these texts are in Sanskrit. The Agamas include rituals and Sanskrit chants for every act connected with the temple, from its conception and construction to the details of daily worship. Temples were central to the social and economic life of the community. Large temples also served as centers for education and training in music and dance. Over the centuries, many temples acquired agricultural land and great wealth. During festivals, thousands of people pilgrimaged
Section 3 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. a. Explain: How did Hindu rulers show tolerance? b. Dene: What is bhakti? c. Elaborate: What is the purpose of the temple priest? 2. List: Name three important Puranas. 3. a. Explain: What does assimilation mean? b. List: What peoples were assimilated into Hindu society? 4. a. Explain: What is the Bhakti Movement? b. Explain: What caste did its saints belong to? c. Elaborate: What are the ways the Ramayana and Mahabharata are presented today?
FOCUS ON WRITING
5. Explain: Why do you think the Bhakti Movement became popular all across India?
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A VISUAL HISTORY
Hindus celebrate more festivals each year than followers of any other religion. Lets visit a few of them.
photos: dinodia.com
KRISHNA JANMASHTAMI: On Lord Krishnas birthday, two teams in Mumbai compete to break pots full of red-dyed yogurt hung high above the street. They are celebrating a favorite story of Krishnas childhood. He once climbed up to steal yogurt from the pot His mother had hung high in the kitchen to keep away from the children. The scene is shown in the Suvidha banners on the lamp posts at left and right. The team in yellow is getting close to the pot and a big cash prize. Thousands of such contests are held across Mumbai during the festival.
A winning reach results in a shower of colored yogurt upon the human pyramid below.
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photos: dinodia.com
2 A variety of childrens water guns are put to colorful use upon family and friends during Holi.
These teens are targeting each other, but any bystander, including complete strangers, could be next.
A temple courtyard is deluged with colored water and powders as hundreds of devotees play Holi.
dinodia.com
This biggest festival of the year is celebrated across India and everywhere Hindus live in the world today. It is held in October-November. Oil lamps are lit and placed in and all around the home, new clothes put
on and gifts exchanged. In parts of India it also marks the beginning of the New Year. Various stories are told of its origins, all involving the victory of light over darkness, good over evil.
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dinodia.com
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CHAPTER
Standards Assessment
8. 8 . Hindu Hi ind n u villages vi vill i la ag ges ges es were wer ere e in close clo os se e contact co on nta t ct tb ecau ec ecau a se se: : because: A Ru R n er nn ers s daily dail da il ly delivered de eli live vere ve red re ed news news ws f r mv ro vi il ll lag ge t to ov illa il lla age ge Runners from village village B Ma M any ny women wom omen e married mar arri r ed into in nt to to fa fami m li mi lies e o f ne near ar rby v illa il la age ges s Many families of nearby villages C Pe P ople op le wrote wro r te e letters let ette ters te rs s to to each each ch other oth t er frequently fre requ quen qu en ntl tly y People D Villages Vill Vi llag ll ages ag es s met met monthly mo on nth hly y 9 Why 9. W y wa Wh w s ou o r ti time me p me erio er io iod od co c n id ns der e ed ed a cl las a si sica c l age? ca ag ge? ? was our period considered classical A Gr G e ks r ee u ed ul e I nd dia t h ou hr ough ghou gh out ou t this th t his t im me Greeks ruled India throughout time B Gr Grea e t Hind ea H ind du ki k ing ngs s co conq nque que uere red re d ar a ea e as ou outs t id ts de of o I nd dia Great Hindu kings conquered areas outside India C Indias Ind dia ias s s advances adv dvan a c ce es in k no owled wled wl e ge ea nd knowledge and d de v lo ve opm ment en nt of of r en e n e p ed at ttern te e ns of l iv vin ng development re ned patterns living D The Th T he land he land la n was was v e y pr er ros o pe p ro rous us s very prosperous 10 0. T h c he it i ty of P u ar uh rd es scr crib ib bed ed i n th he p po oem em, , An Ankl kle kl e Bracelet B acel Br ac cel elet let e: 10. The city Puhar described in the poem, Ankle A Was Was a city c ty ci y intolerant in nt tol oler e an nt of o r e ig el igio ions o ther th er t h nH ha Hi ind ndui u sm religions other than Hinduism B Wa Was s an nu nder nd e de er eve v lo ope ed ci c ty underdeveloped city C Was Wa as home home m to to many many ma y merchants mer e ch chan ants an ts sa n craftsmen nd cr ra aft ftsm ftsm men and D Had Had li Ha itt ttle le et o o oe e r by way way a of f entertainment ente en tert te rtai tai a nm men ent little to er 11 1. Which Whi hich ch o ch f th t es se religious reli re li ig gi iou us gr g o ps ou sw e e we er w lc com med i n In Indi di ia? 11. of these groups were welcomed in India? A Mu M s im sl ms Muslims B Je J ws s and nd C hris hr ist is tian ti ns Jews Christians C Parsis D All of the above 12. Why is the Kailasa Temple in Ellora unusual? A It was built from 10,000 granite blocks B It was carved out of solid rock C It was the largest clay brick structure in India D Though made of wood, it lasted 500 years 13. The Bhakti Movement was based on: A Rules set by the brahmin caste B Temple worship, scriptures and devotional songs C The religions of Buddhism and Jainism D A royal command of the Rashtrakuta rulers 14. The Ramayana and Mahabharata inuenced: A Mainly the community of merchants B Only the people of the IndoGangetic Plain region of India C Mostly South India D All of India and countries in Southeast Asia
CHAPTER
DIRECTIONS: READ EACH QUESTION AND CIRCLE THE LETTER OF THE BEST RESPONSE 1 The 1. The Indian In ndi d an subcontinent sub ubco cont co ntin nt inen nen ent tw wa was as u un united nit ited ed a as s a on o one e co country oun ntr try y by b by: : A Hi H nd du re el li igi gion on o n, cu ust to om ms an a nd th t e Sa Sans ns skr krit it l angu an guag gu age ag e Hindu religion, customs and the Sanskrit language B The The Bu Th udd dhi hist s P st a a ki al k ng ngs gs of fN o th or thea east ea st tI ndia nd ia a Buddhist Pala kings Northeast India C Outside O ts Ou tsid ide id e invaders in nva vade de ers s who who ho conquered con onqu q er qu e ed d the the he subcontinent sub bco ont tin nen e t D A confederation conf co nf fed eder erat atio ion io n of o r uler ul ers er s rulers 2. Fr rom m3 0 t 00 o 11 1 00 0 0c e, I ndia nd dia c om o mpr prised pris e a bout bo ut t From 300 to 1100 ce, India comprised about wh w hat at percent per erce ce ent to f th t e wo orl rdp po opu pul lati la tion on o n? what of the world population? A 5% 5 B 15 15% % C 25 2 % 25% D 35 5% 35% 3 What 3. What tw er re th the e Gu Gupt p as pt sn ot f amou am ou o us fo for? r? were Guptas not famous A Advances A va Ad anc ces i n ar art t, s cien ci e ce en ce a nd t nd e hn ec h o ol log o y in art, science and technology B Crea C Cr rea e ti t ng a p a -I an In nd dian ia an em empi pi p ire Creating pan-Indian empire C Suppressing Su upp p re ess s ing in ng the th he Buddhist Bu udd ddhi hist hi s and st an nd d Jain Jai a n religions reli re li ligi igi gion on ns D A prosperous p os pr ospe pero pe r us ro s economy eco cono nomy my with my wit ith h strong stro st rong ro ng n g foreign for orei eign gn trade tra rade de 4 Why 4. Why di did d Ma M hm mud of of Ghazni G az Gh azni zni n invade inv nvad vad ade e India? In ndi d a? Mahmud A T To or emov em ove ov e unju un nju ust tH i du k in in ngs sf ro rom om po powe wer we remove unjust Hindu kings from power B To To e stab abli ab lish li sh hh is so w pan wn an Ind n ia e mpir mp ire e establish his own pan-India empire C To seek revenge for an Indian invasion of his country D For plunder and the expansion of Islam 5. Which is the correct list of GDPs for our period? A India 50%, China 25%, Europe 5% B India 20%, China 20%, Europe 20% C India 11%, China 25%, Europe 30% D India 30%, China 25%, Europe 11% 6. The cities of India were ruled by whom? A A council representing the major interest groups B A council elected by vote of all residents C A hereditary ruler D A military general 7. What is a jati? A A priest, warrior, merchant or worker B A group following the same hereditary occupation C A group of foreign sailors D A group assigned to an occupation by the king
The Rajput princess Mirabai devoted her life to the joyful worship of Lord Krishna. The poet saint danced and sang throughout North India.
India responded to centuries of Muslim invasion and rule and later British colonization by both armed resistance and spiritual resolve. The country remained overwhelming Hindu despite foreign domination and religious oppression. India was one of the very few ancient societies to survive into modern times with its religion and social structure largely intact.
history of ancient india
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s. rajam
SECTION
Spread of Islam
The Gradual Conquest of India Muslim Arab attacks upon India began in 636 ce, soon after Islam was founded. The first successful conquest was of the Sindh region in 712, with the fall of the temple towns of Debal and Multan. By 870, Arabs conquered the Hindu kingdoms of southwestern Afghanistan, then were stopped by the kings of north and northwest India. There were three types of conquerors during this time. Some simply raided a city, robbed its wealth and left. Others defeated a kingdom, reinstated the defeated king and ordered him to pay regular tribute. The third and most effective conqueror annexed the captured territory to his own kingdom. The next wave of invasions began around 1000. These attacks were not by Arabs, but by Turks from central Asia who had converted to Islam. One Turkic leader, Mahmud of Ghazni, raided India 17 times between 1001 and 1027. In each city, he looted and destroyed temples, and killed or enslaved inhabitants. Mahmuds successors periodically raided northern India, but generations of Rajput rulers denied the invaders a permanent foothold. One of the great historians of India, A.L. Basham, wrote that warfare among Hindus was governed by a chivalrous and humane ethical code, which discouraged such ruthless aspects of war as the sacking of cities and the slaughter of prisoners and noncombatants. The Islamic invasions introduced a brutal form of warfare which destroyed, killed and enslaved enemies at will. In 1192, Muhammad of Ghur, also Turkic, finally succeeded in defeating Hindu rulers of the Delhi-Ajmer region and the Ganga valley. This conquest led to the establishment of the Delhi Sultanate in 1206. By 1300, the Sultanate had secured stable rule around their main strongholds of the North, and sent armies to raid as far
Ghur
Kabul Ghazni
Ind
us
Riv
er
Kandahar
Lahore Multan an n
SIK HS
Sindh
P RAJ UTS
Mathura ATS
r
Nepal
Patna Nalanda Ga B Banaras Banara n Murshidabad ga R
G BEN AL AHO M
Ajmer
Debal
ive
ORI
SSA
Pune Pandharpur p Satara Golgunda Hyd yde d raba b Bijapur Hyderabad Goa (Portuguese) se) se
Y VIJA ANA GAR A
Capitals
MAJOR POWERS
Regions
Madras (British) 500 km
MYS ALA
Thanjavur Madurai
south as Thanjavur and Madurai. But these regions were not annexed. Hindu rule generally continued in Rajasthan, Gujarat and thrived in the entire South, notably within the Vijayanagar Empire (1336-1665). Areas with natural protective boundaries, such as Kashmir, Nepal, Assam, Orissa and Kerala, were less subject to raids. By 1220, the Mongol emperor Genghis Khan had created the largest empire the world had ever seen, conquering Asia from China to Iran. In 1398, a Muslim descendant, Timur, attacked Delhi because he felt its Muslim ruler was too tolerant of
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
subjugation to bring under control by force reconciliation to restore friendly relations famine extreme shortage of food tribute payment made by one ruler to another
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Hindus. In just one instance alone, he killed 100,000 Hindu captives. In 1504, Babur, a descendent of both Genghis Khan and Timur, seized Kabul. This gave him a base to attack India. He overwhelmed both the sultan of Delhi (in 1526) and the Rajput confederacy (in 1527) to found the Mughal Empire. His army was the first in India to use matchlocks and field cannons. Baburs grandson, Akbar, became emperor in 1556. He expanded the Mughal Empire over northern India and part of the Deccan by entering into alliances with Hindu kings, particularly the fierce Rajputs. Akbars rule was noted for its religious harmony. Unfortunately, his successors did not inherit his tolerance. Akbars great-grandson, Aurangzeb, destroyed temples and reimposed the jizya religious tax on Hindus. By the mid-eighteenth century, the Mughal Empire had declined. The Sikhs, Jats, Rajputs, Marathas and the Empires own provincial governors (called nawabs) had asserted their independence, leaving no strong central government in India. The regional Muslim rulers continued to oppress Hindus, but less harshly than the centralized Muslim governments of Delhi had.
The Colonial Period In 1600 a group of English merchants set up the East India Company to buy and sell goods between Britain, India and other eastern countries. They arrived in India as businessmen, not conquerors, and built major trading posts at Surat, Bombay, Madras and Calcutta. Over time, they fortified their posts and developed private armies for defense, paid for with the immense profits of their trade. They hired Hindus and Muslims as soldiers, called sepoys, who served under British officers. Emboldened by their strength, the British proceeded to meddle in local politics. They gained power and profit by playing one rival against another. The French, especially in South India, did the same. If one king was supported by the French, the Company would back his rival as a way of weakening the French position. But they wanted still more. Robert Clive, commander of the Companys army, conspired to overthrow the Nawab of Bengal, which led to the Nawabs defeat in the Battle of Plassey in 1757. Mir Jafar, the new Muslim ruler of Bengal rewarded Clives support with huge gifts and a promise to favor the Company. But things
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
matchlock an early type of rie fortify to build walls, towers and gates to protect from attack meddle to interfere in someone elses aairs alliance an agreement to work together puppet ruler a state ruler who is actually controlled by another ruler
did not go well, and following the battle of Buxar in 1764 the Company gained control of Bengals revenues. A few years later they became the direct rulers and ruined the region with heavy taxes, unfair trade restrictions and corrupt practices. The Company seldom launched a direct attack to conquer a region of India. Rather, they entered into treaties, alliances and other deals with local rulers, exploiting the divisions among them. Along the way, they defeated several heroic kings, such as the Muslim king Tipu Sultan of Mysore, and eventually conquered the powerful Marathas and Sikhs after many battles. In this manner, by 1857, they achieved direct rule over much of India and controlled the rest through puppet rulers. Why Did the Muslims and the British Win? Most historians agree that the Hindu kings simply failed to realize the danger they faced and thus did not mount a common defense. Historians also blame the caste system, saying that people relied solely on the warrior caste to do the fighting. Basham shows this explanation to be inaccurate, as all castes were present in Indian armies. Also, he points out, Muslim kingdoms themselves were overrun by subsequent invaders, such as Timur and Nadir Shah, putting up no better defense than the earlier Hindu kings.
Basham explains that each new invader succeeded by virtue of superior military organization, strategy, training, weapons, horses and mobility. With these they overpowered the large but cumbersome Indian armies, Hindu and Muslim alike, which failed to adapt to new methods of warfare. The British also possessed great military skill and modern weapons, a result of their wars in Europe at the time. The Indian rulers failed to recognize and counter the brilliant British strategy and tactic of conquering a region by exploiting internal divisions among its rulers and only occasionally using its own armed forces in an outright invasion.
Section 1 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Explain: How do we know so much about the destruction in India under the Muslims and British? 2. Describe: What are three dierent ways that invading forces could prot from their conquests? 3. Contrast: How was the Muslim style of warfare dierent from that of the Hindus? 4. Synthesize: How could Indian kings have better fought the Muslim invaders and the British empire builders?
FOCUS ON WRITING
5. Analyze: How can studying the history of violence in India be useful in helping to bring about a more peaceful world today?
1688 1398
Kabir is born; Guru Nanak 1469 preaches Guru Nanak, founder unity of all of Sikhism, is born religions 700 1500 Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb 1574 1 demolishes Tulsidasa writes T all temples in popular Hindi p Mathura, said to version of v number 1,000, and Ramayana R many in Varanasi 800 1600
1835 17801830 1
Golden era of G Carnatic music C under Tyagaraja, u Muthuswami M Dikshitar and D Syama Sastri
123060
Surya Temple is built in Konark, Orissa, for the Sun God, Surya
Appaya Dikshitar, South Indian philosophersaint, compiles a priest manual still used today
1834
The rst indentured Indians are sent to British plantations abroad: Mauritius, Guyana and the West Indies 1800
Tulsidasa
1541
Tyagaraja
1700
Lord Macaulay makes English the ocial language of schools in India; the teaching of Sanskrit was drastically curtailed 1857
600 1400
1030
Arab scholar Al-Biruni writes extensive account of Indian religion, science and geography
1221
Invading Mongols under Genghis Khan reach Indias border; Mongol raids continue into 14th century
1270
Maratha Vaishnava saint Jnaneshvara and Namdeva are born
1398
Turkic warrior Timur conquers Delhi, killing tens of thousands of residents and carrying o great wealth and many slaves
1674
Shivaji founds Maratha Empire; frees large areas from Muslim control
1699
Guru Gobind Singh founds Sikh Khalsa order, militarizing his followers
1764
1857
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Jnaneshvara
history of hindu india
Jesuit missionary St. Francis Xavier arrives in Goa; eventually calls for an Inquisition which leads to many deaths and forced conversions
British East India Hundreds of thousands of Indian Company takes direct soldiers revolt in widespread rule of Bengal; a uprising called Indias First devasating famine War of Independence or the occurs in 1770 Sepoy Mutiny. After brutal suppression, the British Crown takes formal control of India
history of hindu india
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SECTION
In a joyous festival, the Deity is paraded in a giant chariot, pulled by men holding two thick ropes. Hindus delight in sacred festivities, which bless the community and strengthen their shared faith.
Key Terms
polytheism, p. 48 Susm, p. 49 Ajlafs, p. 49
als could perform on their own. By sitting alone under a tree and chanting the name of Rama, singing bhajana or meditating on God, the common Hindu could find the spiritual strength to endure hardship and persecution. The great philosophers Madhva (1017-1137) and Ramanuja (1238-1317) were forerunners of popular saints during our period who strengthened Hindus and discouraged conversion. An early Vaishnava saint, Jayadeva (c. 1200), wrote the famous Gita Govinda, popular in Orissa and Bengal. Among the Vaishnava saints from Maharashtra were Jnaneshvara (1275-1296), Namdeva (1270-1350), Eknatha (1548-1600), Tukarama (1598-1649) and Samartha Ramdasa (1606-1682). In North India, Swami Ramananda (ca 14001470) promoted the worship of Lord Rama, praising him as Hari, a name of Vishnu. Ramananda discouraged caste, saying, Let no one ask about anothers caste or with whom he eats; he who worships Hari is Haris own. Two traditions arose from Ramanandas popular teachings. One group, including Nimbarka (13th century), Chaitanya (1486-1534), Surdasa (1483-1563), Mirabai (1503-1573) and Tulsidasa (1532-1623), emphasized worship
of the personal God. They were enlightened persons filled with a sense of divine ecstasy. Vaishnavas especially revere Chaitanya and Mirabai as divine beings. A second tradition began with Ramanandas disciple Kabir (1398-1518). He was adopted as a child and raised by a low-caste Muslim, a weaver. He wrote hundreds of spiritual poems in Hindi, the language of the people (rather than Sanskrit). His poems are easy to understand, even today, and millions still follow his teachings. Kabirs philosophy, mostly drawn from Hinduism, was simple and direct. It appealed both to Hindus and Muslims. He rejected the caste system and ridiculed many Hindu and Muslim religious practices. Seeking to promote religious harmony, Kabir taught that there is only one God for all religions. The Sikh religion was also a powerful force. Its founder, Guru Nanak (14691539), taught, Realization of Truth is higher than all else. Higher still is truthful living. He emphasized the continuous recitation of Gods name and declared that meditation is the means to see God, who
THE IMPACT
TODAY
Tolerance for religious dierences has greatly increased around the world in modern times, in part because of the growing inuence of Hindu ideals.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
persecution to be treated with hostility because of ones beliefs ecstasy feeling or expressing overwhelming joy in God
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BIOGRAPHY
ghal Emperor Aurangzeb, who sent a series of large armies to attack him. But Shivajis smaller, fast-moving and well-armed forces proved dicult to overcome. Unlike earlier Hindu kings, Shivaji made use of modern means of warfare and even developed a navy. In 1674, he founded the Maratha Empire. Seventy years after his death in 1680, the Maratha armies pushed Mughal forces out of much of central India, leaving the Mughal Empire permanently weakened. Shivajis guru, Samartha Ramdasa, gave him spiritual advice and helped inspire the Maratha people toward freedom. Ramdasa had 1,100 disciples, each an excellent preacher, including 300 women. Ramdasa taught devotion to Lord Rama, especially through chanting the mantra Shree Ram, Jaya Ram, Jaya Jaya RamVictory to Lord Rama. By one account, Shivaji oered Ramdasa his entire kingdom, which Ramdasa returned to him to rule in the name of Lord Rama. German scholar Max Weber wrote in the 19th century, Shivaji was no bigot and allowed equal freedom to all faiths. He was served as zealously by the Muslims as by the Hindus. He built a mosque opposite his palace for the use of his Muslim subjects. While Shivaji was not above sacking an enemys city if he needed the money, he did not kill noncombatants, take slaves or damage Muslim holy sites.
Chapter One, Hindus see no contradiction in believing in One Supreme God while also worshiping the Gods and Goddesses. But this is unacceptable to Muslims and Christians, and resulted in dreadful persecution and killing during this period. Centuries of Conversion Attempts Before the Arabs, all foreign invaders, including the Greeks and Huns, were eventually absorbed into mainstream Hindu society. This was also true of many tribal communities within India. The Muslim rulerswith the exceptions of Akbar and some othersmade great effort to convert their Hindu subjects. They used persuasion, heavy taxes, legal discrimination and force, but had only limited success. Christian conversion efforts in India, though sustained and sometimes vigorous, were not very successful. The East India Company found missionary efforts bad for business and did not encourage them. At their worst, invaders and later rulers destroyed Hindu temples and killed those who would not convert. According to the Muslim accounts of the time, thousands of temples were looted and torn down, including hundreds at major pilgrimage destinations, such as Somnath, Mathura, Vrindavan and Varanasi. Many mosques were built on the same sites from the temple materials. Among the Muslims, the Sufi preachers were most responsible for making converts. Sufism is a mystical tradition within Islam, with some elements similar to the Bhakti Movement. Sufism was much stronger during this period than it is today. Sufis worked closely with Muslims rulers and helped secure their rule by converting conquered people to Islam. Many persons captured and enslaved during raids on Hindu towns and villages converted to Islam knowing they would be treated better or even released. The caste system was a main obstacle
to conversion. It guaranteed to Hindus a secure identity and place in their community, which they would lose by converting. Also, other religions did not appeal to them either philosophically or culturally. Some low-caste Hindus were tempted to convert to improve their social status. But, in fact, converts to both Christianity and Islam retained their caste position. Even today, Indian Muslims who claim foreign ancestrythe descendants of Arabs, Turks, Afghans, etc.are called Ashrafs and have a higher status than Hindu converts, who are called Ajlafs. The Ajlafs are divided into occupational castes, just as are Hindus. Likewise, Christian converts retained their caste status. The lowestthe Untouchables, or Dalitseven have separate churches and graveyards. The Common Mans Plight Altogether, the common Hindu did not fare well during this time. He faced military attacks, discrimination as a kafir, oppressive taxes and sustained pressure to convert. Hindu rulers collected from farmers a tax of one-sixth of their crop. Under Muslim and British rule, taxes soared to as much as one-half, plunging the people of the once wealthy country of India into poverty. .
THE IMPACT
TODAY
Religious tension still surrounds some sites where mosques were built over destroyed temples, such as in Varanasi, where the Gyanvapi Mosque was built atop the demolished Kashi Vishwanath Temple in the 11th century.
a. manivel
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
mystical concerned with the soul or spirit, rather than material things pilgrimage to travel to a special religious place
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
omnipresent existing everywhere at once, said of God ourish to grow well and thrive polytheist one who believes in or worships more than one God
is omnipresent. Like Kabir and Ramananda, Guru Nanak discouraged ritual worship and caste discrimination. Nine Sikh gurus followed Nanak. The eighth, Tegh Bahadur (1621-1675), was executed by Aurangzeb for defending religious freedom. His son and successor, Gobind Singh, transformed the Sikhs into a warrior community called the Khalsa. Gobind Singh decreed that he was the last Sikh guru and after his death the Guru Granth Sahib, their holy scripture, would be the guide. From that time forward, the Sikhs have been an influential political and military force in North India. As you have studied, South India largely escaped the oppressive Muslim domination of North and Central India. To this day the South retains the most ancient Hindu culture and has many grand temples. Influential saints of the time include Meykandar, Arunagirinathar, Tayumanavar, Vallabhacharya and Kumaraguruparar. Other religious movements also
flourished during this period such as Kashmir Saivism, Natha saints and the Gorakha Panthi yogis. They all were part of Indias ongoing vibrant religious spirit. The Conquerors Religious Goals The Arab and Turkic Muslim invaders who swept across the Middle East, Africa, Central and South Asia were intent on religious domination, demanding conversion from those they conquered. They made an exception for People of the Book, Christians and Jews, because certain parts of the Torah and the Bible are regarded as revealed scripture by the Muslims as well. They did not force Christians and Jews to convert, but humiliated them and imposed the jizya tax. The Muslims treated Hindus as kafirs, lowly non-believers. The Christians judged Hindus to be polytheists, and some, as in Goa, used violence to convert them. Muslims and Christians both consider monotheism (the belief that there is only one God) to be the right conviction. As explained in
Section 2 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Explain: What evidence do we have that Hinduism in 1030 was similar to todays Hinduism? 2. Analyze: What are some reasons for Kabirs continued popularity in India? 3. Explain: How did Shivajis faith and religious tolerance help him lead the Maratha people against the Mughals? 4. Analyze: Why do Hindus see no contradiction between worshiping the Supreme God and revering many Gods?
FOCUS ON WRITING
E h threatened, th t d many Hi 5. Even when Hindus refused to convert to another religion. Why did they choose to resist?
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70
69
68
67
66
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dull qualities 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63
active qualities
good qualities
plane of creation
plane of Siva
plane of Vishnu
plane of bliss
plane of nature
ego 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46
plane of air
plane of light
plane of truth
positive intellect
negative intellect
happiness
darkness
plane of devotion 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45
plane of water
plane of violence
earth
plane of austerity
River Ganga
River Yamuna
Goddess of Wisdom
conscience
wisdom 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28
plane of energy
plane of elimination
plane of circulation
creative plane
plane of fire
human birth
false knowledge
right knowledge
clarity 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
netherworld
plane of flavor
plane of fragrance
plane of devas
nature spirits
good tendencies
false faith
true faith 27
plane of karma 18 17 16 15 14 13 12
giving
atonement
plane of dharma
heavenly plane
bad company
good company
sorrow 11
selfless service 10
plane of joy 1 2 3 4 5 6
mercy
jealousy
underworld
envy 7
devas of music 8
purification 9
birth
illusion
anger
greed
earth plane
delusion
conceit or vanity
avarice
plane of sensuality
a. manivel
Hindu Games
50
The Western childrens game Snakes and Ladders, or Chutes and Ladders, comes from the Indian game for adults called Gyan Chaupar, the Game of Knowledge. Gyan Chaupar teaches the Hindu spiritual path to moksha, which is liberation from reincarnation. There are 72 numbered squares on the board listing various virtues, vices, states of consciousness and planes of existence. The ladders start from squares with virtues, such as devotion, and move the player up the board. Snakes are found on squares of vices, such as jealousy, and take the player back down the board. Play begins at square one in the lower left corner. In the old days, the player threw six cowrie shells on the floor. The number of shells that landed upright indicated the number of squares to
51
SECTION
Artistic Achievements
Key Terms
bhajana, p. 52 katha, p. 53 raga, p. 53 tala, p. 53 mudras, p. 55
Art within Hindu India was already highly developed prior to the Arab, Turkic and Mughal invasions. Some art forms, such as music and dance, were less affected by these invasions, especially in the South where Hindu rule was the norm. In the North, Persian building design, with its arches and domes, became common, and in painting, the Mughal emperors stimulated a harmonious blending of composition and method, thus creating the Indo-Islamic art style. A Rich History of Music India has always had an extraordinarily diverse musical scene. This ranges from the complex works of the classical tradition to the villagers simple work songs and devotional hymns in local languages. Temple stone workers, for example, sing together to coordinate the effort of moving a heavy stone. At a certain point in the song, all apply perfectly timed force to their iron pry bars. In this way, stones weighing tons can be moved by hand. To this day, Hindu men and women sing devotional songs to accompany and ease their daily tasks. There is within Hinduism a long tradition of bhajana and kirtana, call-and-response devotional singing of simple songs, usually in small groups with musical accompaniment. Katha is a popular form of storytelling, occurring in multiple sessions, often spanning many
days. A highly skilled storyteller will recount episodes from sacred texts, such as the Ramayana, then lead the audience in singing related bhajanas. Alongside these basic musical traditions is Indias classical Carnatic music. Three great innovators of this ancient system lived in South India in the late 18th and early 19th centuries: Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar and Syama Sastri. They systematized and improved upon the existing framework of raga and tala, the essentials of Indian music. Hindustani is a related musical system that arose in the North as musicians blended Persian elements into the Indian tradition. First, the composer selects a raga in which to write his song. A raga is a pattern of notes upon which a melody is made. Ragas include notes from the seven-note Indian scale (sa, ri, ga, ma, pa, dha, ni) as well as microtones, which are like the sharps and flats of Western music, only more numerous. This multiplicity of tones allows for the creation of thousands of ragas. Next, the composer selects a tala, or rhythmic pattern. Talas
range from the simple and most common eight-beat Adi tala to elaborate rhythms such as the Dhamar tala, composed of 14 beats divided as 5, 2, 3 and 4. Songs were written in Sanskrit and increasingly in the regional languages, such as Hindi, Telegu and Tamil. Singers and musicians improvise upon the basic melody while keeping within the chosen raga and tala. The results are always creative, akin to the improvisations in Western jazz. This is one key way that Indian classical music differs from Western classical music, which is usually played exactly as it was composed. A Meeting of Art Styles The Mughal emperors were responsible for a major advancement in painting which eventually influenced much of India. Earlier Muslim rulers started the process by bringing artists to India to illustrate the elaborate handwritten books of the time (see top left on page 14). These painters had been influenced earlier by Chinese artists who were brought to Persia by conquering Mongols.
THE IMPACT
TODAY
Modern katha performers attract crowds of thousands in the US and England, and hundreds of thousands in India.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
systematize to arrange in an orderly fashion improvise in music, to create and perform spontaneously
HINDUISM TODAYS
TEACHING STANDARDS
8. Describe the relationship between Hinduism and traditional forms of Indian art, including music, dance, drama, painting and architecture. 9. Explain how the Muslim conquests in the subcontinent inuenced the painting and architectural styles of northern and central India.
52
Tyagaraja, Muthuswami Dikshitar and Syama Sastri. At left is the Sarasvati Vina, with 24 frets, four playing strings and three drone strings. The other two instruments are the four-stringed tambura. In the background are the Divinities of music.
The shehnai, a popular, oboe-like, North Indian reed instrument, is similar to the larger nadaswaram of South India
53
v&a museum
v&a museum
dmitry rukhlenko
A Bharatanayam dancer in the pose of Siva Nataraja; (left) hand gestures, called mudras: picking owers, greeting, lotus
c o u r t e s y k a n i s h k a pat e l
in design with many Hindu elements. Completed in 1653, it took 20,000 craftsmen working 22 years to build and was a great drain on the treasury. Shah Jahan was overthrown and imprisoned by his son, Aurangzeb, shortly after its completion.
not break down under rule, kd d the h alien l l so the social structure remained stable. Most Hindus did not convert to Islam, despite heavy pressure. The arrival of the East India Company changed the political situation. By force and skillful tactics, the British slowly gained complete control of India.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
Nataraja King of Dance, a form of Lord Siva
ehrenfeld collection
CHAPTER SUMMARY
Beginning in 1100, Muslim armies conquered vast regions of India. Despite repeated defeats, the Rajput and other Hindu rulers refused to surrender. South India, far from the Muslim capitals of Delhi and Agra, escaped the unceasing warfare and foreign dominance that beset North India, suffering only periodic raids. Wherever Hindus were conquered, resistance continued, mainly on a social and religious level. The caste system did
Section 3 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Describe: What are the roles of raga, tala and improvisation in Indian classical music? 2. Analyze: What were some of the advancements made in painting under the Mughals? What made these advancements possible? 3. Contrast: How did the architecture of this period dier in North and South India and why?
Top left: a page from a 1330 ce Persian manuscript in the style Akbar encouraged. Top right: a watercolor painting of a scene from the Ramayana from Bengal is typical of the twodimensional, at style of most earlier Indian art. Above: this portrait of Rajput Raja Aniruddha Singha, painted in Rajasthan in the early 1700s, is typical of the Mughal school which evolved from the blending of earlier styles.
FOCUS ON WRITING
4 Synthesize: S th i H How d does the h mixing of cultures result in 4. new artistic styles? Give examples from your society. 55
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A VISUAL HISTORY
This is Pung Cholom, a dance from Manipur, in Indias northeastern corner. These boys rst learned to play the double-headed pung drum, then how to dance while playing ita complex feat indeed! This is one of Indias most energetic dances.
dinodia.com
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EMOTIONS IN DANCE
Most Indian dances include the nine basic emotions: love, joy, wonder, peace, anger, courage, compassion, fear and disgust. At right a Bharata Natyam dancer demonstrates ve of them.
fear
wonder
compassion
peace
disgust
GOI
dinodia.com
Dance Tradition
1. Interpret: Why do you imagine India developed such a rich array of dance forms? 2. Discuss: What advantages would watching a religious dance drama have over reading the drama in a book? 3. Explain: How do a dancers facial expressions and hand gestures help tell a story? 4. Analyze and debate: What role does dance play in conveying Hinduism from one generation to the next?
KATHAKALI: This dance form from Kerala is famous for its elaborate costumes and makeup, which take hours to apply. The lamp in front is always present (in the old days it helped illuminate the dance). The stools are
props used during the performance. The singer in the back is narrating the story. The dance dramas are often taken from the epic Mahabharata. Performances used to run all night, but are now about three hours long.
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na r aya n i p e e d a m
59
CHAPTER
Standards Assessment
8. 8 . Which W ic Wh ich h of ft h f he ollo ol ollo lowi wing wi ng w as N OT a h OT ards ar d hi ds hp the following was NOT hardship en nd du ured red by b H indu in d sd du du uri ring ng gt his peri his hi pe eri riod o ? od endured Hindus during this period? A The Th he heavy hea he av vy religious reli re ligi li giou gi iou ous s ta ax tax B Th T e de d st s tru ruct ct tio ion n of t e pl em p es s The destruction temples C Th The e po owe w rf rful ul lB ha h akt k i Mo Move ve eme m nt nt powerful Bhakti Movement D Be ein ng regarded rega re ga gard ard rded ed as ed as ka kars r Being 9. Why Why Wh hy di d d th he Br B it tis ish h Ea ast I n ia C nd ompa om pa any not not t did the British East India Company e en co our urag age ag e mi miss ssio ss io i ona nary r e ry or o rts t o co c onv n ert nv er rt Hi H ndus nd us? ? encourage missionary e orts to convert Hindus? A Th They ey yf ound ou nd dt he h ese s e or rts ts t o be eb ad f or rb usines us usin in nes ess s found these e orts to bad for business B Th T ey c on nsi side de ere red dH Hi ind ndus us st o be e People Peop Pe op ple eo f the th he Bo Book ok k They considered Hindus to of Book C T Th hey hey yf o nd ou dt he m he issi is si ion onar a ie ar ies s m etho et hods ho d u ds neth ne th hic cal a They found the missionaries methods unethical D They They y thought tho houg ught ug ht H indu in d is sm was w s a be wa b tter tt er r elig el ig gio ion Hinduism better religion 10. 10 . The The game gam me of Gyan Gy ya an Ch C aupa au par pa r was w s in wa inte te t end nded ed t o o: Chaupar intended to: A Te T eac ac ch the t e path th path h to to spiritual spir sp irit i ua ual l liberation libe li be b era r tion ti ion Teach B Be B entertaining ent ter e ta tain in inin ning g for for children fo ch c hil ildr dren en C Conv C Co onv ver ert t Hi Hind nd dus u t o Ch hrist st s tiani nity ty Convert Hindus to Christianity D Sh S ow t hat ha tg go oin ng to oh ea ave v n is is n o t ot he eg o l of l oa if fe Show that going heaven not the goal life 11. When 11 Whe h n di d d Hi Hind nd dus u m ake ak e an a d en e njo jo oy mu m usi s c? did Hindus make and enjoy music? A In formal concerts with musicians B During their work day C At the special events called kathas D All of the above 12. What terms best describe Indian music? A Improvisation B Raga C Tala D All of the above 13. Which Indian art forms changed during Muslim times? A Music and dance B Painting and architecture C Music and painting D All of the above 14. Why did India remain mostly Hindu? A The caste system B Loyalty to the Hindu religion C The personal nature of Bhakti worship D All of the above
CHAPTER
DIRECTIONS: READ EACH QUESTION AND CIRCLE THE LETTER OF THE BEST RESPONSE 1 We need 1. nee ed to understand und nder e st er s an nd even ev ve en n unpleasant unp nple leas le asan as an nt hi h history st stor tor ory y be b because: caus ca u e: us e A We c an nt he hen en pu p nish ni sh ht he p eopl eo p e re r resp esp spon on onsi ns bl be can then punish the people responsible B It h elps el p u ps s le earn to ol ive iv e in i p e ce t ea oday od ay ay helps us learn live peace today C It t helps hel e ps ps us us see see that that th at some som o e religions reli re li igi gion ons on s ar a e ba bad d are D We We should sho oul ld never ne eve ver r forgive f rg fo gi iv ve our ou ur attackers at tta tack cker ck ers er s 2. What W at Wh tm ilit il itar it a y ad ar dva vant ntag nt age ag e di did d Mu M sl lim mi nvad nv a er ad ers s ha h ve? ve ? military advantage Muslim invaders have? A Support Supp Su p or pp rt from from people fr pe eo opl p e in n the the invaded inv vad a ed regions reg egio io ons B Ma M ny more mor ore e soldiers s ld so die iers rs than than ha an the the Indian I di In dian an n kings kin ings g gs Many C Bigger Bigg Bi g er gg e elephants ele eph phan ants an ts a nd n dm or re of t h m he and more them D Horses, H rs Ho r es es, , better be ett ter er weapons, wea e po pons ns, s tactics tact ta c ic ct ics s and a d training an trai tr a ni ai ing g 3 . Why Why is st he er ul u le of M ug ugha gha hal l Em E mp pe ero or Akbar Akba Ak b r 3. the rule Mughal Emperor r re m mb me mber ered as as exceptional? ex xce c pt ptio iona io nal? na l? ? remembered A He H d e tr es t oy oyed ed m any an y Hi H nd ndu du te em mp ple es destroyed many Hindu temples B He ec reat re a ed at ed t he h el arge ar est s e m ir mp i e in nt he w he orld or ld d created the largest empire the world C He He was was st o er ol e an nt of of o ther th er r elig el ig gio on ns s tolerant other religions D He H formed for orme me ed strong st tro r ng ng alliances all lia anc nces es with wi it th British B it Br i ish is sh merchants merc me rcha rc hant ha nts nt s 4 Ho 4. H w did di id the t e British th Br rit itis ish is h Ea East st I nd dia a Company Com ompa pany pa n ny How India ga ain n control con ontr to ol lo fI In ndi dia? a a? gain of India? A They set up puppet rulers under their control B They created their own army C They played one ruler against another D All of the above 5. How did the Bhakti Movement help preserve Hinduism? A It strongly supported the caste system B Followers were exempt from the religious tax (jizya) C Its devotional practices made each Hindu strong D It organized military resistance to the Muslims 6. Converts to Islam and Christianity found themselves A Welcomed as equals B At the same social level as before their conversion C Still subject to the religious tax D All of the above 7. When Shivaji oered his guru the kingdom, the guru A Took over the kingdom and moved into the palace B Told Shivaji to rule it in the name of Lord Rama C Refused to accept it D Divided the kingdom among his followers
4
myers brothers
Mumbais Gateway of India, pictured here in 1924, was just started when King George V and Queen Mary arrived at this spot in 1911. The last British soldiers left through it in 1948.
The British Crown took over direct control of India from the East India Company in 1858. Economic exploitation increased. A determined and mostly nonviolent freedom movement emerged and finally succeeded, resulting in the formation of modern India and Muslim Pakistan in 1947.
history of hindu india
60
61
SECTION
BUILDING BACKGROUND: Nationalism or patriotism is love and devotion to ones country. Before the 19th century, people felt loyalty to their regional ruler and culture. They were less concerned about the country they shared with others. Starting in the 19th century, people developed political sentiments for their country as a whole and promoted a national identity.
The red areas were under direct British control. The yellow areas, called Princely States, had local Indian rulers who answered to the British.
Understanding Colonialism
As we learned in the last lesson, the British East India Company came to dominate India through its clever use of political strategy, intrigue and military force. In 1858 India became a colony of the British Empire. Powerful nations, including England, Spain, Portugal, France and Holland, had used their financial and military power to establish colonies in Asia, Africa and the Americas. Many colonies, such as in North America and in Australia, were created by military conquest. The conquerors drove out or killed the native peoples, whom they regarded as subhuman. They then settled the land with immigrants from their own countries. Other colonies, such as India, were first opened through trade and commerce which eventually led to their foreign economic domination and political control. Englands colonies included India, Burma, Ceylon, Malaysia, Singapore and hundreds of other territories large and small worldwide. The English defended their conquests by claiming that they were a superior race with a noble mission: to spread Western civilization. This sounds very racist today. But it was then a firm belief of most Englishmen. While England profited from its colonies, the colonies suffered oppression and disease. In the 19th century, the British did bring notable advances of the Industrial Revolution to India. But a century
joined forces against the British. Many landlords, left impoverished, joined the rebellion. Within a year, the British ruthlessly crushed the revolt, killing hundreds of thousands (some say millions) of soldiers and civilians. Stories (some true, some false) of British women and children being killed by the rebels inflamed public opinion in England. Charles Dickens, author of A Christmas Carol and other famous stories, wrote that if he were commander-in-chief in India he would strike that Oriental Race . . . proceeding, with merciful swiftness of execution, to blot it out of mankind and raze it off the face of the Earth. Although Dickens championed the poor in England and opposed slavery in America, he held a rabidly racist view of Indians. The British were shocked by the uprising, which recalled the American Revolution. To protect their power, investment and income, they tightened their grip on the subcontinent by transferring rule from the East India Company to the British government.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
intrigue secret planning to harm another mutiny a revolt by soldiers or sailors against their ocers iname to cause strong emotions raze to destroy completely rabid extreme or fanatical support of a belief
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The British Raj The new government of India was called the Raj, a Sanskrit word meaning to reign or rule. Its first steps were to ensure that no future rebellion would take place. The ratio of English soldiers in the army was greatly increased. Sepoys of various castes, religions and regions were assigned to separate units to prevent possible conspiracy. The population was disarmed. Ownership of guns was allowed by license only. Generally, Indians had no rights and no voice in their own rule. The Raj expanded the rail and road system which allowed duty-free British products to be sold all over India. This, unfortunately, caused the collapse of major native industries such as cotton textiles. Tax revenues from agriculture and industry that should have benefitted India instead went to England. Between 1770 and 1857, mismanagement worsened the effects of twelve major famines and many minor ones. According to official figures, 28 million Indians starved to death between 1854 and 1901. Indias share of world income shrank from 22.6% in 1700 to 3.8% in 1952. As early as the 1820s, many Indians wrote about the need to end British rule in
India. The peaceful demand for freedom by nationalist political organizations continued decade after decade, at times turning into violent but unsuccessful uprisings. The British improved Indias legal, justice and civil service systems, introduced better military training, built a few universities and created telegraph, postal, rail and road networks. They did so primarily for their own political and economic gain, not to benefit the Indian people. The Road to Independence Mohandas K. Gandhi, born in 1869, is honored in India as the father of the nation. After becoming a lawyer in England, he moved to South Africa. There he won political rights for Indian immigrants by nonviolent means. In 1915 he returned home to India and joined the freedom struggle. On April 13, 1919, British General Dyer led an attack upon a peaceful political meeting of unarmed men, women and children at Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar. In ten minutes, 400 people were shot dead and 1,200 seriously injured. Instead of being punished for his crime, Dyer was honored as a hero. The ruthless massacre in Amritsar
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
conspiracy secret plotting by a group duty free being exempt from import and other taxes famine extreme shortage of food ruthless cruel; lacking pity for others suering partition to set o or divide from
convinced Gandhi that only a mass struggle against foreign rule would save India. From 1920 on, he led a national movement for freedom based on his philosophy of nonviolent resistance called satyagraha, force of truth. Indian nationalists stopped cooperating with the government, refused to pay taxes and burned English goods in public. Gandhi and his followers were repeatedly beaten and jailed. During the freedom movement, Hindus and Muslims disagreed about the democratic government they hoped to build. Muslims did not want to be a permanent minority in India and demanded their own country, an idea that Gandhi opposed. World War II began in 1939 as Germany and Japan sought to add countries to their empires by force, just as Britain had done a century earlier. The war put Britain in the awkward position of defending its own freedom and democracy against Germany while continuing to deprive India of hers. The Quit India movement was launched in 1942. Soon afterwards, Gandhi and other leaders were arrested. The movement became violent at some places, with hundreds shot and killed by police. Britains military force in India was composed of Indian soldiers and sailors commanded by British officers. By the 1940s, the loyalty of these hired servicemen to their foreign masters diminished as the demand for freedom swept over India. A 1946
mutiny by Indian sailors of the Royal Indian Navy convinced the British that it was only a matter of time before the entire military might revolt. Crippled by World War II and nearly bankrupt, Britain gave up India and other colonies, including Burma and Ceylon. Indias transition to freedom on August 15, 1947, brought with it a terrible tragedy. Pakistan was partitioned from India on the basis of religion. A huge relocation followed as 7.5 million Muslims moved to Pakistan from India and an equal number of Hindus and Sikhs fled Pakistan. A million died from hardship, attacks and riots. On January 30, 1948, a Hindu, enraged over the partition, assassinated Mahatma Gandhi.
Section 1 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Identify: How did England justify its colonial empire? How did India fare as a British colony? 2. Report: What sparked the uprisings of 1857? 3. Describe: What changes did England impose as a result of these uprisings? 4. Explain: Why were there so many huge famines in India under the Raj?
FOCUS ON WRITING
5. Analyze: How did Gandhi and his followers ght for independence? Why did he choose to use nonviolent means?
1869
Birth of Mohandas K. Gandhi who won Indias independence by nonviolent means
gandhi museum
1876-1890
Fifty-volume Sacred Books of the East is published, English translations of Indian and other Eastern scriptures
1896
Lokmanya B. G. Tilak starts Ganesha and Shivaji festivals in Bombay to mobilize mass Indian nationalism
s a nata n . o r g
1910
B. G. Tilak declares, Independence is our birthright
1918
17 million people, 5% of Indias population, die in Spanish u pandemic; 50 million perish worldwide 1920
time magazine
1930
Gandhi named Time Magazine Man of the Year as his fame grows in the West following the successful Salt March
1943
Three million Bengalis die in famine caused by British negligence
Mahatma Gandhi
1870 1880 500 1890 600 1900 700
B.G. Tilak
800 1910
1857
British government suppresses widespread uprising and begins formal imperial rule of India
1863
Birth of Swami Vivekananda, Indias rst Hindu missionary to the West
1876
Queen Victoria of England is proclaimed Empress of India
1885
Indian National Congress is founded to voice Indian concerns to the British government
1893
Swami Vivekananda represents Hinduism at the Parliament of the Worlds Religions in Chicago
1900
Indias population is 290 million, 18% of the worlds people
1919
General Dyer orders troops to re on an unarmed political gathering, killing hundreds; Gandhi begins noncooperation movement
1921
Subhash Chandra Bose advocates armed rebellion. In 1943 he forms the Indian National Army of 40,000 troops which fought against British troops in Burma.
1939
Beginning of World War II, which ultimately results in the death of 60 million people
1947
India gains independence. Pakistan is divided o along religious lines for Muslims.
rk mission
Vivekananda
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PRIMARY SOURCE
SWAMI VIVEKANANDAS ADDRESS TO THE PARLIAMENT OF THE WORLDS RELIGIONS
On September 11, 1893, Swami Vivekananda began his address with the words, sisters and brothers of America, resulting in a two-minute standing ovation. He continued, It lls my heart with joy unspeakable to rise in response to the warm and cordial welcome which you have given us. I thank you in the name of the millions and millions of Hindu people of all classes and sects. I am proud to belong to a religion which has taught the world both tolerance and universal acceptance. We believe not only in universal toleration, but we accept all religions to be true. I am proud to belong to a nation which has sheltered the persecuted and the refugees of all religions and all nations of the earth. I will quote to you, brethren, a few lines from a hymn which I remember to have
r a m a k r i s h na m i s s i o n
repeated from my earliest boyhood, which is every day repeated by millions of human beings: As the dierent streams, having their sources in dierent places, all mingle their water in the sea, O Lord, so the dierent paths which men take through dierent tendencies, various though they appear, crooked or straight, all lead to Thee. Sectarianism, bigotry and its horrible descendant, fanaticism, have possessed long this beautiful earth. It has lled the earth with violence, drenched it often with human blood, destroyed civilization and sent whole nations to despair. Had it not been for this horrible demon, human society would be far more advanced than it is now. But its time has come, and I fervently hope that the bell that tolled this morning in honor of this convention will be the deathknell to all persecutions with the sword or the pen, and to all uncharitable feelings between persons wending their way to the same goal.
Key Terms
satyagraha, p. 68 colonized mind, p. 69
Ramakrishna as his guru and was trained by him for the next five years. After Ramakrishnas death, Narendra took vows as a Hindu monk, becoming Swami Vivekananda. He gave up his further education and instead set off on pilgrimage across India. He deeply impressed many people in Madras. They raised money door to door to pay for his travel to America for the 1893 Parliament of the Worlds Religions. At that interfaith congress in Chicago, the cultured and eloquent 30-year-old swami was well received. In his opening talk, he declared, We believe not only in universal toleration, but we accept all religions to be true. The popularity of this Hindu message of respect and tolerance alarmed some Christian participants who had hoped the Parliament would prove their religion superior to others. The New York Herald reported at the time, Vivekananda is undoubtedly the greatest figure in the Parliament of Religions. After hearing him, we feel how foolish it is to send missionaries to this learned nation. Another reporter
wrote, The impertinence of sending halfeducated theological students to instruct the wise and erudite Orientals was never brought home to an English-speaking audience more forcibly. Vivekananda returned to India a hero. He aroused a new pride among Hindus and kindled in Indias youth a nationalist spirit. Vivekananda founded the Ramakrishna Mission as a religious and educational institution to address Indias social problems. He died on July 4, 1902, at age 39. Freedom fighter Subhash Chandra Bose aptly called Swami the maker of modern India. Vivekananda was not the first Indian religious and social reformer of the 19th century. Raja Ram Mohan Roy sought to counter the criticisms of Hinduism made by the British missionaries. He founded the Brahmo Samaj in 1828 as a new religion with Christian-style services. Swami Dayananda Saraswati was a Hindu traditionalist. He began the Arya Samaj in
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
desegregate allow equal access to public places for all races pilgrimage to travel to a sacred place for worship eloquent pleasant, uent, convincing in speech impertinence lack of respect, rudeness theological having to do with the study of religious concepts erudite scholarly; having great learning
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THE IMPACT
In 1930 Gandhi led a march to challenge laws that taxed salt and imposed burdens on the poor. His public spectacle of breaking the law by collecting salt at the sea was a turning point for the organized opposition to Britains tyranny.
1875 to revive Vedic society and religion. He believed Hinduism could be purified ACADEMIC by a return to the teachings and practices VOCABULARY of the Vedas. Both the Brahmo Samaj and egalitarian Arya Samaj encouraged Indians to be egalithe principle tarian and do more social service for the that all people poor. deserve equal Vivekananda, on the other hand, had a rights and powerful impact both on India and the opportunities West. In particular, he introduced the callous Hindu idea that all religions deserve respect lacking mercy as valid paths to God, an idea now firmly tyranny cruel and unjust established in America. In 2008, polls use of power or found that while 76% of Americans identify authority themselves as Christian, 65% believe that many paths other than my own can lead to eternal life. How different from Vivekanandas time, when most Americans were staunch Christians who believed theirs was the only way to God! Satyagraha: Fighting without Violence Mahatma Gandhi was a devout Hindu, a skilled lawyer and a master politician. His
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strategy to gain Indias freedom was satyagraha, truth force, the application of righteous and moral force in politics. Satyagraha is based on Hindu principles, including nonviolence, the ultimate goodness of the soul and a belief in the existence of God everywhere and in everyone. Satyagraha requires a core group of self-sacrificing and disciplined activists. To be successful, it must have widespread publicity, generating national concern and international pressure. Since Gandhis time, satyagraha has been used to win civil rights for blacks in America, improve conditions for California farm workers, end apartheid in South Africa and publicize human rights abuses in Myanmar. Gandhi used the power of satyagraha to oppose the British salt tax to tighten its stranglehold on Indias economy. The Raj imposed strict controls on salt production and a stiff tax on its sale. People could be arrested for making or selling salt. This callous tax on a basic necessity of life especially burdened the poor. To Gandhi, the
salt tax symbolized the tyranny of the Raj. Gandhis dramatic revolt, the Salt March, began on March 12, 1930. Tens of thousands of people cheered as he walked 390 kilometers from his Sabarmati Ashram in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, to Dandi Beach. After morning prayers on April 6, he collected salt on the seashore and proclaimed, With this, I am shaking the foundations of the British Empire. Hearing this, people all across India freely collected and sold salt. Tens of thousands were arrested, including 18,000 women. The march was closely covered by the international press, making Gandhi famous in Europe and America. Six weeks later, hundreds of marchers attempted to take over the Dharasana Saltworks, 300 kilometers north of Bombay. The ensuing clash was reported worldwide by Webb Miller of United Press International: Police charged [the marchers], swinging their clubs and belaboring the raiders on all sides. The volunteers made no resistance. As the police swung hastily with their sticks, the natives simply dropped in their tracks. Less than 100 yards away I could hear the dull impact of clubs against bodies. The watching crowds gasped, or sometimes cheered, as the volunteers crumpled before the police without even raising their arms to ward off the blows. Professor Richard Johnson wrote, It is widely believed that the Salt Campaign turned the tide in India. All the violence was committed by the British and their Indian soldiers. The legitimacy of the Raj was never reestablished for the majority of Indians and an ever increasing number of British subjects. The independence struggle was now truly a mass movement. In a similar way, in 1963 Martin Luther King forced the desegregation of Birmingham, Alabama. Civil rights activists were arrested by the hundreds as they attempted to peacefully integrate the citys restaurants,
shops and churches. Violent attacks by police on unarmed, nonresisting marchers attracted worldwide attention. The United States was shamed and embarrassed as a result. New laws were soon passed requiring equal rights for all. The Colonized Mind The nonviolent strategies of satyagraha helped Indians and black Americans attain freedom after centuries of domination. But decades later, they and their descendants still felt inferior to white people. This condition, called the colonized mind, can persist long after physical freedom is won. Many of Indias colonized people, especially those educated in English schools, came to believe that everything about themselves was inferior to that of the British. Thus they considered English superior to any Indian language, English manners better than Indian manners, a suit and tie better than a kurta shirt and pants, and white skin better than brown skin. Overcoming, or decolonizing, the colonized mind requires a multicultural education, self-examination and rejection of externally created ideas of inferiority. The colonized mind is the most lasting negative impact of colonialism.
TODAY
In accepting the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, President Obama said, As someone who stands here as a direct consequence of Dr. Kings life work, I am living testimony to the moral force of nonviolence. I know theres nothing weak, nothing passive, nothing naive in the creed and lives of Gandhi and King.
nat i o na l g a n d h i m u s e u m
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
belabor to beat severely civil rights political and social freedom and equality integrate to end the separation of people by race naive innocent; lacking experience
Section 2 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Describe: What did British missionaries and colonists believe about their culture compared to Indian culture? 2. Interpret: How did American journalists react to Swami Vivekanandas speech at the 1893 Chicago Parliament? 3. Identify: Where has Gandhis strategy of satyagraha been used outside of India? 4. Explain: How did nonviolent protests turn the tide for Indian freedom and the American civil rights movement?
FOCUS ON WRITING
Wh t Hi d id l were promoted t by Swami Vivekananda 5. What Hindu ideals and Gandhi? How have they inuenced todays world?
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Hindu Vegetarianism
9. mango pickle
1. salt
The vegetarian meal at the right may look like a feast, but 13. spicy soup skilled ammas (mothers) prepare some variation of it every day for their families. This traditional South Indian spread is centered around rice. North Indians enjoy wheat-based flatbreads in place of or along with their rice, but the other dishes are similar. Lots of spices are used, including coriander, fenugreek, 14. banana cumin, cayenne, cardamom, ginger, cloves, chili pepper, black pepper and cinnamon. Depending on the region, spicing may be mild to very hot. The meal is served in several courses on a banana leaf freshly cut and washed or, more commonly today, on a round metal plate. After washing your hands, you proceed to eat with 3. banana chips the fingers of your right hand by taking a small amount of one or two of the vegetable items, mixing them with some rice and 10. fried okra with peppers popping them in your mouth. Seconds are automatic. In fact, 11. spiced cabbage you can only get the host to stop serving more food by covering the leaf with your hands. Water or a cool beverage, such as lassi (a salted or fruit-juice-sweetened yogurt drink), may be served at the end. When finished, you fold your leaf in 12. deep fried 15. parboiled rice with lentil wafer half, top to bottom. In the villages, the leaves, complete with Chopsticks have a venerable history, spicy bean sauce leftovers, are fed to appreciative cows. Nothing goes to waste, dating back to 1200 bce. Forks were introduced to Europe in the 11th 2. sweet made with chickpeas, and no plates to wash! After the meal, water is brought for sugar, claried butter century ce by a Byzantine princess cleaning your hands. (Items are numbered in the order they are served) who married an Italian. She outFingers, Forks and Chopsticks raged the Italians by refusing to eat There are three methods of eating in the world: with forks, with her hands. A Catholic priest Understanding Other Customs with fingers and with chopsticks. Forks predominate in pointed out that God in his wisEurope, Australia and North America. Chopsticks are used 1. Compare: After reading about a traditional South 2. Evaluate: How do you usually eat food: dom has provided man with natural Indian lunch and looking at the images above, compare with ngers, chopsticks or forks? List some in East Asia. Fingers are the most widespread eating imple- forkshis fingers. The rest of Euand contrast it with lunch in your own culture. How are advantages and disadvantages of these dierent ment, prevailing in India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, the Middle rope was slow to adopt forks. Many your food and customs similar? How are they dierent? ways of eating. East and much of Africa. Globally, fork-feeders are outnum- royalty, including Queen Elizabeth bered more than two to one. I and Louis XIV, used their fingers.
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Solid food is given to the baby by its father six months after birth in the first-feeding ritual. Head-shaving, symbolizing purity, is performed for both boys and girls at a temple, usually at the end of the first year. At age four, a ceremony marking the beginning of education is done in which children write their first letter in a tray of rice. Ear-piercing, for health and wealth, is performed for girls and boys between the first and eighth year. Girls are adorned with gold earrings, bangles and anklets; boys receive earrings and a gold chain. The upanayana, or sacred thread ceremony, is the final ceremony of childhood. It marks the formal beginning of student life. Students begin religious instruction and secular education appropriate to their intended occupation. In artisan communities, a similar ceremony is held for boys to formally accept them into their family craft tradition. The Coming of Age Ceremony The community celebrates a girls entrance into puberty with the ritu kala samskara, a
home ceremony conducted by the family and close relatives. In the Tamil tradition of South India, for example, the girl bathes and then dresses in her first sari. The family invokes Goddess Lakshmi to bless the young woman with happiness and wealth. She is given many gifts, the first of which is always made of gold. Even today, this samskara is a major event for Hindu girls. It is a joyous time of gift-giving, yet serious as well. A vow of chastity until marriage may be taken at the same time. The Rites of Marriage Hindu weddings are conducted before a sacred fire. This practice dates back thousands of years to Vedic times. Agni, the God of Fire, is called to serve as divine witness to the marriage vows. Weddings are held in special halls. A Hindu wedding can be an elaborate affair spread out over several days attended by many hundreds of guests. The wedding ceremony is performed by a priest, who invokes Agni by building a small fire in an open brick altar on the ground.
THE IMPACT
TODAY
In recent times demands for a costly dowry have led to violence and even murder of women in India
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
adorn to add beauty; decorate chastity sexual abstinence
Key Terms
samskara, p. 72 disksha, p. 73 Agni, p. 73 mantra, p. 74
HINDUISM TODAYS
TEACHING STANDARDS
8. Describe the important rites of passage for Hindus, including the samskaras of childhood, (especially for education) puberty and marriage and death. 9. Explain the importance of initiation for the religious practices of mantra recitation (japa) and monasticism.
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dinodia
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At left, a brother and sister both have the samskaras of head shaving and ear piercing (yes, it hurts) at a South Indian temple; at right a couple in Maharashtra State take seven steps around the sacred re to complete their marriage ceremony
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The elaborate rituals normally take hours. Close relatives are brought forward to participate and bless the couple. The groom puts sindur, red coloring, on the part in his brides hair, indicating her new status as a married woman. The final moment comes when the bride and groom take seven steps together around the fire to symbolize the journey of life they will take together. The first step is for strength, the second for health, the third for wealth, the fourth for happiness, the fifth for children, the sixth for a long marriage and the seventh for loyalty and everlasting friendship. The bride and groom usually go to a temple for blessings after the wedding.
courtesy baps
Sannyas diksha is the initiation that makes one a swami or sannyasin. A female swami is called a swamini. These monastics are spiritual leaders and examples for Hindus. This initiation is conducted by a guru after years of training and qualication.
Typically the rites include the shaving of the head, discarding all possessions and thereafter dressing in simple orange robes. In order to be closer to God, the initiate lets go of all worldly things: family life, career, worldly desires and personal ambition. The monastic takes lifetime vows proclaiming his spiritual goal of God Realization. Now born anew, he receives a new name. In some traditions, the initiate symbolically conducts his own funeral ceremony before the sacred re. This symbolizes the death of his past and personal ego. Many Hindu monks live in spiritual communities called ashrams. Others wander alone throughout India, begging for their food and spending no more than three days in one place. There are dozens of monastic orders in India, some with hundreds of thousands of monks.
Young men, some born outside India, are initiated as swamis of the BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha, November 4, 2005, in New Delhi
(above) Wrapping a silk sari in nivi style: 1) the plain end is held at the right waist and the rest is passed around the back; 2) seven to twelve pleats are made; 3)the remaining material is passed around the back; 4)the decorative end is draped up and over the left shoulder. (below left) A Saivite does japa while visualizing Lord Siva; (below right) boys receive the sacred thread during the upanayana samskara.
Death and Cremation When a person is close to death, relatives gather around. They sit for hours with him or her, singing religious songs, reading scripture and chanting prayers to create a spiritual environment and ease the loved-ones departure. After death, the body is bathed and wrapped in white cloth, then taken to the cremation grounds and placed on a wood pyre which is lit by the eldest son. The funeral ceremony also requires Agni, God of Fire. He is called upon to consume the body. Cremation swiftly releases the soul from this incarnation and frees it for the next. The following day, the family collects the ashes, to be scattered later in a sacred river or other chosen place. Home rituals honor the departed soul on the 10th and 13th days after death and yearly thereafter during the two-week period dedicated to honoring ones ancestors each fall. These rites help console loved ones and invite the soul to reincarnate back into the family in the future. Religious Initiations A mantra is a sacred word or phrase, usually in Sanskrit. Mantra diksha is the most common Hindu initiation. It authorizes the repetition of a mantra as a daily spiritual practice. Aum Namo Narayanaya is a mantra chanted in the Vaishnavite tradition. It means Homage to Lord Vishnu. Aum Namah
a.manivel
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dinodia
Sivaya is of the Saivite tradition. At the high point of the sacred thread ceremony, students are initiated in a mantra prayer to the Sun God requesting Him to guide their thinking. Japa is a form of meditation in which God is visualized while chanting a mantra, silently or aloud, 108 times. The repetitions are counted on a strand of sacred beads called a mala. Mantra initiation gives power to japa. One teacher explained, Chanting a mantra without initiation is like writing a check without money in the bank. Mantra diksha may be given as early as age six or later in life when a guru is chosen. After initiation, the devotee is obligated to perform japa each day as an important part of spiritual practice, called sadhana. Vishesha diksha is initiation into personal daily worship called puja. It requires learning the rites, including chanting the prayers in Sanskrit, knowing the meaning of each part of the ritual and vowing to perform it each day in ones home shrine. This is a private worship, different from the public puja performed by priests in temples.
CHAPTER SUMMARY
The uprising of 1857 brought India under formal British imperial rule. Exploitation of the country continued. Mahatma Gandhis efforts, the threat of revolt and changes in world affairs forced the British to free India in 1947. Before leaving, the British divided Pakistan from India along religious lines. The nation was left impoverished, through a new middle class had come into existence. Traditional religious beliefs and social practices were little changed by colonial rule. ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
pyre a pile of wood for burning a dead body monastic a monk or nun under religious vows
photos: dinodia
Section 3 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Dene: What is a rite of passage? 2. Analyze: Why do Hindus cremate their dead? 3. Explain: Why does an initiate to a monastic order perform his or her own funeral ceremony? 4. Identify: What Hindu ceremony must be performed before one can eectively practice japa?
FOCUS ON WRITING
5 Apply: A l H How d do you think hi k these h ceremonies helped 5. Hinduism survive centuries of foreign rule?
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A VISUAL HISTORY
Monuments to two saintsone ancient, one modernproudly stand at Indias southern tip
Two memorials stand on islands o the coast at Indias southernmost point, Kanyakumari. On the opposite page is the Vivekananda Rock Memorial. In 1892, Swami Vivekananda, at the time a wandering monk, swam thousands of yards out to this island. After fasting and meditating there for three days, he had a vision of his lifes
mission. He saw how to overcome the terrible impact of British colonization on Hindu self-esteem. Above is the 133-foot-tall granite statue of a saint named Tiruvalluvar. He lived 2,000 years ago and wrote the Tirukural, a work of 1,330 couplets about religion, friendship, vegetarianism, moral living, business, government and even war.
h i n d u i s m t o d ay
t h o m a s k e l ly
Kanyakumari
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Using a massive chisel, workers shape a large granite stone weighing several tons
Blacksmiths at the worksite manually sharpen steel chisels by the hundreds every day for the stone carvers
A stone mason puts nishing touches on one of the saints enormous feet
r a m a k r i s h na m i s s i o n
ehrenfeld collection
5 Saint Tiruvalluvars face is 19 feet high. Each stone was lifted into place with ropes and pulleys xed to a scaold of strong palm trees.
6 Every worker, rock and piece of equipment had to be ferried to the small island by boat. In the 1999 photo above, the grand statue was nearly nished. Its total cost: 1.4 million US dollars.
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CHAPTER
Standards Assessment
8. 8 . What W at Wh at w as t he m ain ai n re resu su ult to f th t e Sa Salt lt tS atya at y gr ya rah aha a? a? was the main result of the Satyagraha? A T he ei ndep nd epen ep en nde d nc n e st stru rugg ru ggle gg le e The independence struggle be eca came me e a mass mas ss movement mo ove em me ent t became B Th T eB Br rit itis itis sh po p lice li c w ce e e pu er puni nish ni hed e The British police were punished C The The Raj Ra aj apologized a ol ap olog ogiz og ized iz ed df or t he eb ru uta tali lity ty y for the brutality D Al A ll of o t he ea bove bo ve ve All the above 9. Th The he te term rm m co olo oni ize zed dm mi ind d refers refe re fers fe rs s to: to: colonized mind A A co colo lo loni onize nize zed d pe p peo eople l s ss ense en se eo f in nfe f ri rior or rit ty colonized peoples sense of inferiority B A psychological ps p syc cho holo lo ogi gica ca c al as asse sse s ss sme m nt to f in inte te ell llig ig gen nce c assessment of intelligence C The T e advantages Th ad a dva ant ntag ages ag es g a ne ai ned d th thro roug roug ro ugh h En Engl g is gl ish h ed du uc cat a io ion n gained through English education D T Th he t he th hinki in nking king o f Br rit itis is sh Ra R aj o ci cial als al s The thinking of British Raj cials 10 0. T o re ef fu use em o e fo or ood dd u in ur ing an I n ia nd i n me ea al ly ou us ho oul uld: ld: d: 10. To refuse more food during Indian meal you should: A Po P li ite t ly yt e l yo el our h os st yo y u ha ave h ad e no noug oug u h Politely tell your host you have had enough B Sh S hak ake ak ey yo our ur h ead ea d wh when en na p ro pp oac ache hed d wi with th s th ec e conds onds on Shake your head approached seconds C Co Cove v r th ve he bana ba ana ana na l e f wi ea with th b ot o th hand th ha ands nd ds Cover the banana leaf both hands D Quie Q Qu uie et tl ly leave leav le ave av e the the dining dini di ning ni g area are ea Quietly 11 1. A r ite it eo of fp assa as sa age i s s: 11. rite passage is: A A sh hor ortc tcut tc ut tb et tw we een e t w I wo ndia nd ia an vi vill llag ag ges shortcut between two Indian villages B A type of temple ritual held annually C A ceremony that marks an important stage of life D Arranging a marriage for a young adult 12. Mantra diksha is: A A ceremony performed during a funeral B An initiation to chant a particular mantra daily C A type of mantra for Vaishnavites D The daily performance of puja at home 13. At the ritu kala ceremony, a girl is given: A A bath B Her rst sari C Gold jewelry D All of the above 14. At the initiation into sannyas, the monk A Is given simple, orange robes B Shaves his head and takes a new name C Gives up all possessions D All of the above
CHAPTER
DIRECTIONS: READ EACH QUESTION AND CIRCLE THE LETTER OF THE BEST RESPONSE 1 Countries 1. Coun Co un ntr t ie i s ju just justi sti st i e ed d co colonies olo onies ies sb because e au ec ause t ause they he ey be b believed: liev li eved ev ed d: A Th T ei ir pe p o le op ew er ere re su supe peri rior ri or rt o th t he e na n tive ti ves ve s Their people were superior to the natives B They They Th yc ould ou l o ld er er rab et ette tte ter r ci c v li vi iza ati tion on n could o better civilization C Th T e nati n na ati t ve es we were ere s ub u bhuma hu uma m n The natives subhuman D Al All l of ft he a bove bo ve the above 2. What W at Wh ts pa ark ked dt he h e1 857 85 7 up upri risi ri si ing g? sparked the 1857 uprising? A Co Corr rrup rr up ption ti io on ni n the th he Br B ri it tis ish sh co cour u ts ur sa nd dp o ic ol ce Corruption in British courts and police B Attempts A te At temp mpts mp ts to to convert c nv co ver ert t the th he sepoys se sepo epo oys y t o Is sla lam m to Islam C Commanding Com o ma m nd din ing g the the sepoys sepo se epo oy ys st o us use e ca cart rtri rt rtri ridg ge es s to cartridges lubr lu br ric icat at a ted d with wit ith h beef be b ee ef fa n p nd o k fa or fat t lubricated and pork D Al ll of ft he ea bove bo ve e All the above 3 Fr 3. From F rom o 1 85 54 to 1 901, 90 1 h 1, ow m any an y In ndi dian ans an s di d ed di n fa ami ine es? s 1854 1901, how many Indians died in famines? A 6 mi m il llio l on million B 12 m illi il lion lion million C 28 8m illi il li ion million D 47 m i li il ion n million 4 What 4. What h ap ppe p ne ed to to G ener en eral er al D al yer? ye er? ? happened General Dyer? A He e was was a c ou urt rt-m t-m mar a ti ial a ed da nd p nd ut i n ja j il court-martialed and put in jail B He was praised as a hero by the British C He committed suicide D He was quietly discharged from the army 5. Why did the Muslims want a separate country? A They felt they could be more prosperous B They did not want to be a minority in India C The British insisted they move out of India D World opinion favored the partition 6. What idea did Swami Vivekananda bring to the Parliament of the Worlds Religions in 1893? A Only Hindus go to heaven B Hindu religion is the worlds only true faith C Hindus respect all religions D Hindus are seeking the respect of other faiths 7. How did Martin Luther King dene satyagraha? A Truth force B Passive resistance C Civil disobedience D Nonviolent direct action
The magnicent Akshardham Temple was built in 2005 on a 90-acre site along the Yamuna River in Indias capital, New Delhi
India was suppressed by centuries of Muslim and British foreign rule. But after independence in 1947, its founders succeeded in welding together the ancient land into a strong, united, modern nation. The Hindu religion survived intact and thrives today in the worlds largest democracy.
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Indias Constitutional Structure ak tP Nepal es W In 1947, a committee was formed East to create Indias constitution. It was India Pakistan headed by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar of the Bay of Bengal Mahar caste (an Untouchable ComIndian munity), who was one of Indias foreOcean most legal scholars. The constitutional Sri Lanka Partitioned India committee carefully studied the British, US and French governments, as well as traditional Indian political systems, choosing ACADEMIC elements they felt were suitable for modern VOCABULARY India. They unified the country by estabutterance expression, a voice lishing a strong central government and to speak setting a single pattern for state and local partition governments. They sought to ensure social divide into parts; equality and justice for every citizen. when capitalized, The committees draft was debated and the separation of revised over the next two years and finally Muslim-majority adopted on November 26, 1949. At 400 Pakistan from the pages, it is the longest national constitution rest of British India in the world, because it includes many laws sovereign that in other countries were set by their independent legislature or courts after a constitution socialist in this context: was adopted. The preamble begins: We, the people of equal economic opportunity for all India, having solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign, socialist, secu- secular not based on lar, democratic republic and to secure to religion; treating all its citizens: Justice, social, economic and all religions the political; Liberty of thought, expression, same under the belief, faith and worship; Equality of status law
history of hindu india
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a d i t ya a r ya a r c h i v e / k u lwa n t r o y
(left to right) Jawaharlal Nehru, Mahatma Gandhi and Sardar Patel consult in 1946 on the shape of Indias new government
The Princely States Newly independent India was diverse: 800 languages and dialects were spoken among 2,000 ethnic groups. Bringing unity to the ancient land after Partition was an amazing accomplishment by Indias leaders. Within Indias borders were 17 provinces formerly under direct British rule and 562 virtually independent princely states. These states were also granted independence in 1947. In theory, each could have become a new country. In practice, however, those within newly-formed Pakistan were expected to join it, and the rest to become part of India. With Mahatma Gandhis blessings, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel took on the job of negotiaing with the princely states. Patel contacted each prince or princess and explained the options: join India or stay independent. He then offered them all the time in the world to think about itso goes the popular storyas long as he had their decision by that evening! The rulers had little choice. They had only held power because of British backing. The citizens of their realms were expecting the same freedoms as the rest of the country. In the end, the few who resisted were compelled to join. The princely state of Jammu and Kashmir in northwest India was a different matter. Maharaja Hari Singh, the Hindu ruler of this Muslim-majority state, delayed in making a decision about which country to join until after independence. On October 22, 1947, militant Muslim tribals and Pakistani troops invaded the state. On October 26, Maharaj Singh agreed to join India. The Indian army was sent to defend Kashmir against the invaders, beginning the first of Indias several indecisive wars with Pakistan.
and of opportunity; and to promote among them all Fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual and the unity and integrity of the nation. By comparison, the US constitution fits on four large pages, setting out only the spirit of the nation and the basic structure of the federal government. Individual US states have their own constitutions. Indias constitution details the structure of government right down to the village panchayat, or ruling council. The powers and responsibilities of government are assigned either to the Central Government or to the state governments, or shared. Powers not specifically given to the states are kept by the Central Government. In contrast, in the US Constitution, powers not specifically given to the federal government are kept by the states. At both central and state levels, Indias government follows the British parliamentary system. The president is head of state, elected by the parliament. He or she serves for five years. The position is largely ceremonial, like that of the British monarch. In India, elections are held every five years. The leader of the political party that commands a majority of seats in parliament
fraternity friendship and support within a group Establishing Indias States A key power of Indias constitution permits Central Government the Central Government to merge or divide Indias term for states as it sees fit. It used this power to what is called reorganize the nation along linguistic lines. the federal government Areas where most of the people spoke the same language became one or more states. in the US monarch For example, the Tamil-speaking area of a royal head of South India became Tamil Nadu. The state, especially Hindi-speaking region was split into several a king, queen or states. Having a single language made gov- emperor erning each state much easier. Today India linguistic has 28 states. It also has seven Union Terhaving to do with ritories, which are ruled directly by the language Central Government. separatist a person or International Relations group seeking to separate one India was a founder of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) of nations. These nations, territory from another, usually mostly of Asia, Africa and Central and based on ethnicity South America, sided with neither the US or religion nor the Soviet Union during the decadesautonomy long Cold War after World War II. Prime self government
becomes prime minister and forms a government with the approval of the president. If the party loses its majority, the government falls and new elections are called.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
Minister Nehru was respected worldwide as one of NAMs strongest voices for peace and freedom. But peace was a challenge on Indias own borders. The hasty Partition left the subcontinent unstable. Pakistans invasion of Kashmir in 1947 led to two years of open war with India. Indias appeal to the UN resulted in a cease-fire. Since then, Kashmir has been divided by the Line of Control, separating Pakistan-occupied territory from Indias Kashmir. War broke out again in 1965 and also ended in stalemate. In 1989 Pakistan-backed Islamic separatists and infiltrators resumed violent attacks and riots. Since then, they have driven hundreds of thousands of Hindus out of Kashmir and worsened the security situation in the state. In 1962 India lost a brief war with China over their disputed and ill-defined border in the Himalayas. The war was a deep personal shock to Nehru. He had taken at face value the Chinese governments promise not to attack, even when warned by members of NAM to not be so trusting. India was badly prepared to defend against the Chinese and had to appeal to the US for support, which was a humiliating compromise of NAM principles. Indias failure in the Chinese border war caused a complete rethinking of military strategy. Nehrus successors, especially his daughter Indira Gandhi, turned India into a major modern military power armed with missiles and nuclear weapons.
Bangladesh Since independence, citizens in Bengali-speaking East Pakistan felt neglected by their rulers, who were mostly Urdu-speaking people based in West Pakistan. East Pakistan demanded economic and political autonomy. A nationalist upheaval followed. West Pakistan responded in 1971 by sending 100,000 troops to brutally put down what they regarded as an outright revolt. Civil war followed. Ten million refugees fled to India forcing India to come to East Pakistans aid. In December, West Pakistans forces surrendered to the Indian army. East Pakistan became the independent nation of Bangladesh, and the refugees returned.
Section 1 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. Dene: What event in Indias history is called the Partition? Why is it called the Partition? 2. Explain: How was Kashmir dierent from other states at independence? What has occurred as a result? 3. Compare: How does Indias government dier from that of the US at the federal and state levels? 4. Explain: How did India reorganize its states? How did the strategy help improve state government?
FOCUS ON WRITING
5. Analyze: What was the Non-Aligned Movement? How was India involved in NAM?
1950
Indias constitution goes into force on January 26, Indias Republic Day
1950s
India launches land reform to redistribute to farmers hereditary holdings of large landowners
1960s
Sitarist Ravi Shankars tours in the West help popularize Indian music
1969
India becomes self-sucient in food as its population reaches 500 million 1970
1974
India explodes nuclear device in test at Pokhran
1990
300,000 Hindus ee Kashmir region as Muslim militants seek separation from India
1991
India begins economic reforms to loosen state management of its economy
1998
India develops a nuclear strike force
2010
US government report ranks India as the worlds third most powerful nation
1950
1980
1990
2000
1948
Gandhi is assassinated by a Hindu fanatic over payment of huge sums of money to Pakistan as agreed to at the time of Partition
1950
China occupies, then eectively colonizes Tibet; the Dalai Lama ees to India in 1959
1954
A.L. Basham publishes The Wonder That Was Indiastill one of the best histories of early India
1960s
Indian swamis begin coming to the West to teach meditation and hatha yoga
1962
Border war with China causes India to modernize and strengthen its military
1971
East Pakistan declares independence as Bangladesh
1984
Indira Gandhi is assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards in revenge for armys attack on Sikh separatists in the Golden Temple
2001
Worlds largest religious gathering ever: Kumbha Mela with 60 million pilgrims at Prayag, the conuence of Ganga and Yamuna rivers
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SECTION
Himachal Pradesh
Punjab
Pilgrims India
Arunachal Pradesh Assam
Kamakhya
shutterstock
Haryana
Delhi
Uttarakhand
Kapilavastu (Nepal) Lumbini Set Mahet Kushinagar Ayodhya
Rajasthan
Mathura
Uttar Pradesh
Prayag Varanasi
Pawapuri Sarnath Nalanda Meghalaya Shillong Bodhgaya Rajgir Gaya Tripura Baidyanath Prasnath Peak
Bihar
Gujarat
Dwarka Girnar Satrunjaya Hill Somnath Nasik
Ujjain
Madhya Pradesh
Girodpuri
Omkareshwar
Amarkanta Kawardha
Chhattisgarh
Champaranya Rajim
Maharashtra
Pandharpur
Odisha
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
treacherous having hidden and unpredictable dangers ethnic of a specic place, race, culture or religious origin nationalize government takeover of a business, such as a bank or railroad import duty a tax on goods brought into the country infrastructure the basic facilities of a nation such as roads, dams, bridges, phone systems, airports, railways
Goa
Sringeri Tirupati
Udupi
Shravanabelagola Kanchipuram
Key Terms
democracy, p. 86 secular, p. 88 pilgrimage, p. 89
Kerala
Guruvayur
Tamil Nadu
Palani Sabarimala Madurai
Chidambaram
armed separatist movements because they have seen little economic improvement in their region. Local police and government forces struggle to control these militant groups. Economic Development During Indias first decades, the economy was a mixture of state control and free enterprise. Prime Minister Nehru began a series of five-year plans, setting economic goals for agriculture, manufacturing, etc., to be met
with government support. To prevent excessive profit-taking, the government set maximum prices for important goods. A few key industries were nationalized, such as banks. Heavy industries requiring large capital investment, such as steel and military arms manufacturing, were established and run by the government. Overseas investment was regulated. Indias years as a colony made her wary of letting foreign investors control any vital industry. Import duties were kept high, making it expensive to bring in foreign goods. India wanted to be self-sufficient and build its own economic infrastructure to meet the demands of its growing cities and villages. A major issue was food. India was not producing enough to feed her ever-increasing population and had to import nearly ten million tons of food yearly from the US. The technological advancements of the
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PILGRIMAGE TODAY
THE IMPACT
Green Revolution resulted in Indias complete self-sufficiency in food by 1969. For some Indian states, such as Indias growth for the first 30 years was Kerala and Uttar slow, but the economy was stable and urban Pradesh, the unemployment low. By the 1980s and 90s, economic activity generated by however, the world had changed. Internapilgrimage is a tional trade and cooperation had increased. signicant percent Countries with totally state-controlled of the states total economy. economiessuch as the Soviet Union and Chinastarted having serious problems. In 1991, the Soviet Union broke up into many countries. Seeing a similar threat to its own ACADEMIC economy, India began easing restrictions on VOCABULARY industries and encouraging private business, urban cities and towns, free trade and foreign investment. The results were dramatic (see chart in contrast to below). Indias rate of growth went from villages a low 3.5% to a healthy 7.5%. Its middle virtually almost or nearly class rose from less than 5% of the populathe same as tion in 1950 to more than 17% today. The pilgrimage middle class is projected to reach 40% in travel to a 2025. India has evolved into a major world holy place power through scientific and technological for a religious advancement, development of industries purpose and defense build-up.
labyrinth a complex network of passageways lore knowledge and belief held by a group and passed on by word of mouth
TODAY
Indias constitution proclaims the country a secular state. Yet India does not treat all religions the same, as other secular governments do. For example, Indian state governments seized management of Hindu temples and control their income, yet they allow other religions the freedom to manage their own places of worship, including mosques and churches. The resulting oddity is that Hindu temple priests are virtually government employees. In addition, the laws regarding inheritance, marriage, divorce, adoption and other family issues are different for Hindus, Muslims and Christians. (For legal purposes, the term Hindu is defined to include Sikhs, Jains and Buddhistsall religions founded in India.) In truly secular nations, all religions follow the same laws and freely manage their own religious property. The unequal treatment of religions in India is an ongoing source of conflict. It is ironic that Hinduism, the majority religion, has fewer rights than minority faiths. The Power of Pilgrimage One religious practice unites India as a nation: pilgrimage. There are hundreds of national pilgrimage destinations across India, and thousands at the regional level. The holy city of Varanasi welcomes 100,000 pilgrims a day, and a single temple, Tirupati, hosts 50,000 and more each day. Pilgrimage to religious sites is so popular that families plan their vacations around them. In India a vacation is not only for relaxation and fun; it is also a religious experience and opportunity for cultural interaction. Throughout Indian history, the movement of pilgrims has had significant impact on the religious and cultural unity of the country. Pilgrims create a continuous religious conversation as they travel about the land. Religious discussions form a bond among travelers and promote a sense of belonging
RAMESWARAM
The huge Rameswaram temple near the southern tip of India is a prime pilgrimage destination for Hindus of all sects. Here Lord Rama established a shrine to Siva upon Ramas successful rescue of his wife Sita in Lanka, as recorded in the Ramayana. The central practice here is ritual bathing, a common practice at many pilgrimage destinationsHaridwar and Varanasi, for example. This doesnt mean bathing with soap, but immersing oneself fully clothed in a river or lake as a blessing. Ritual bathing is found in Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam and other religions. The bath-
ing may be full immersion, sprinkling or washing hands and feet. At Rameswaram, there is not just one ritual bath, but 22, beginning in the nearby ocean. From that salty dip, you and your fellow pilgrims walk, completely soaked, to the temple. There a temple helper leads you to a courtyard inside the entrance where he drops a bucket 20 feet into the rst well, pulls it back up by a rope and pours the holy water over your head. He then leads you rapidly, sometimes running, from well to well. You lose all sense of direction as you zig-zag through the stone corridors and courtyards of this ancient, labyrinthine temple. Despite the wells being so close together, their waters are of dierent tastes and temperatures. According to temple lore, the water of each cleanses the pilgrim of a specic sin. Devout pilgrims hold a past transgression rmly in mind while being doused by each bucketful of water, which they believe cleanses them of that particular karma. Skeptics are present, naturally, even among pilgrims. But few depart the 22nd well without a feeling that something quite extraordinary and purifying has happened to them during those two hours.
Religious and Social Development India today is 81% Hindu, 13.4% Muslim, 2.3% Christian and 1.9% Sikh. It has the third largest population of Muslims in the world161 million, after Indonesia and Pakistan. Relations between religions are generally peaceful, especially at a personal level. However, several religious riots and attacks have occurred at great loss of life. 1950
300 30 3.8% 3.5% 50% <5% 12%
INDIAS PROGRESS
Population (millions): Life Expectancy (years): Percent of World Income: Annual Rate of Growth: Living in Poverty: Percent in Middle Class: Literacy Rate (adults over 15): (15 to 24 years old): 88
history of hindu india
2010
1,027 61 6.3% 7.5% 27% 17% 68% 82%
to the country and religion. Such interactions are such as Amarnath Cave. It is located 12,700 feet repeated at thousands of destinations each year. high in the Himalayas, in Jammu and Kashmir. The map on page seven shows the most imporEvery summer 400,000 pilgrims walk on a narrow, tant Hindu pilgrimage sites in India, as well as rocky trail for four or five days to reach this sacred those significant to Jains, Buddhists and Sikhs. shrine to Lord Siva. Prominent sites, such as Varanasi, Mathura, Section 2 Assessment Ayodhya, Ujjain and Rameswaram, attract huge crowds year around. Most sites, howREVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE ever, are crowded with devotees only during 1. Explain: How did Indias economy change in the 1990s? Why? annual festivals. For example, hundreds of 2. Evaluate: Is life for the average Indian better today than thousands attend the summer festival at the it was before independence? Provide several examples. Jagannath Temple in Puri, Odisha. Three 3. Elaborate: Why do you think family laws are dierent huge chariots carrying the temple Deities for Hindus, Christians and Muslims in India? Describe: What do pilgrims do at Rameswaram 4. are pulled through the streets by crowds tugtemple? How does it aect their lives? ging on ropes a foot in diameter. Similarly, devotees of Lord Krishna flock to the towns FOCUS ON WRITING of Vrindavan and Mathura during Krishna Analyze: l How does H d the th practice ti of pilgrimage 5. A Janmashtami and other major festivals. help unify Indias diverse peoples? Several pilgrimages require serious effort,
history of hindu india
p h o t o s : t h o m a s k e l ly
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SECTION
we will explore how Hindu metaphysics (the study of reality beyond our five senses) came to the West. Hindu theology, yoga, meditation and ayurveda found a receptive audience. Hindu Ideas Spread to the West Hindu metaphysics arrived in America and Europe early in the 19th century in translations of Hindu scripturesthe Vedas, Upanishads and Bhagavad Gita. Scholars, writers and poets immediately found value in the concepts of karma, dharma, reincarnation and the divinity of the soul. They marveled at the Hindu concept of God as not only personal, but also immanent, (pervading all nature and humanity) and transcendent (beyond the physical universe). Americas 19th-century freethinkers deeply appreciated the Hindu openness to many religious paths and its freedom to choose one without condemning others as wrong. All these ideas are prominent in the writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman and Henry David Thoreau. They influenced generations of writers and scholars, notably
HINDUISM TODAYS
TEACHING STANDARDS
8. Dene soft and hard power and apply these concepts to India. 9. Analyze the inuence of Hindu metaphysics, theology, yoga and meditation in the Western world today. 10. Describe how Indian culture found its way to the West, including medicine, movies and food.
In our modern world, Hindu ideas have spread far and wide from their origin in India. In Chapter Four (covering 1850 to 1947), we spoke of two of these ideas: respect for all religions and political change by nonviolent methods. In 2009, the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life conducted a poll in which they asked Americans about their belief in a few Eastern concepts. The results showed that 24% believe in reincarnation, 23% in yoga not just as exercise but as a spiritual practice and 26% in spiritual energy located in physical things like mountains, trees, crystals. This is nothing new: polls of Americans show similar numbers of believers, at least in reincarnation, as far back as the 1950s. When did these ideas come to America? Many Native American tribes believe in reincarnation and spiritual energy located in physical things. While traveling in the American West in the 1890s, Swami Vivekananda was astonished to meet a cowboy who said he firmly believed in reincarnation. He may have learned the idea from the Native Americans, or perhaps discovered it on his own. These spiritual concepts shared by many faiths throughout the world tend to be identified as Eastern or specifically Hindu, because it is within the Hindu tradition that they are logically and clearly explained and their theological foundations clarified. In this section
Herman Melville, William James, T. S. Eliot, ACADEMIC Aldous Huxley and Christopher Isherwood. VOCABULARY Hindu teachers first came to the West in theology the late 19th century. Many were promithe systematic nent, but Swami Vivekananda (see Chapter study of the Four) was by far the most influential. He nature of God and other swamis and yoga teachers were and religious popular with the educated and artistic com- belief munities, including famous scholars and yoga actors. In the 1940s and 50s, Swami Praunion, physical bhavananda translated the Bhagavad Gita and mental practices and Upanishads with the help of American intended to devotees who were skilled writers. His clear awaken spiritual and approachable books became popular, qualities bringing these Hindu texts to millions in ayurveda the West. Paramahansa Yoganandas classic Indias ancient Autobiography of a Yogi, published in 1946, medical science introduced the idea of a life of spiritual New Age striving and experience in story form. a Western The 1960s brought a wave of Hindu teach- spiritual ers to the West. Their teachings were eagerly movement welcomed by the youth of the New Age. Since drawing on Eastern thought then, karma, reincarnation and other Hindu ideas have become common in the songs, movies, art and novels of the West.
(Clockwise from above) Henry David Thoreau (18171862), writer and Transcendentalist philosopher; Swami Prabhavananda (1893-1976), translator of Hindu scripture; Swami Satchidananda (1914-2002), religious teacher and hatha yogi, addressing the famed Woodstock music festival in 1969; Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1912-2008), teacher of Transcendental Meditation; B.K.S. Iyengar (born 1918), inuential yoga master
v e d a n ta s o c i e t y o f s . c a l i f . a r c h i v e s
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Jehan Lalkaka and Shamika Desai of Mumbai, both 16, demonstrate the 12 sequential poses of Surya Namaskara
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11
12
SURYA NAMASKARA
Hatha means sun-moon and is the name of the popular yoga exercises so common around the world. The name comes from the aim of balancing the male (the sun part) and female (the moon part) currents, mentioned in our next section on chakras. Each pose has a specic eect upon the nerve system. The most famous set of poses is Surya Namaskarathe Sun Salutation, or greeting the Sun God. It tunes mind and body, while being a good workout! In India you can see people alone or in groups performing Surya Namasksara to the rising Sun.
CHAPTER SUMMARY
Following independence, India rebuilt itself. It succeeded, improving its economy, halving the rate of poverty, doubling life expectancy and improving literacy six-fold. India is still a developing nation but is on track to be a superpower in the decades ahead. Indias heritage of spirituality and religious thought continues to dramatically influence the world, as it has for centuries. Scholar Stephen Cohen said, India has become a global cultural superpower. Its soft power is second to none. Whether at the highest level of philosophy or the lower level of Bollywood, Indian culture is spreading. Even in terms of hard power, India is already impressive. According to a 2010 report by the US government, India is today the third most powerful country in the world in terms of gross domestic product, defense spending, population and technology. The
report says that as of 2010 the US holds 22% of global power, China 12% and India 8%. Japan, Russia and Brazil each hold less than 5%. By 2025, the report predicts, US power will decline to 18%, Chinas will rise to 16% and Indias to 10%. The future of modern India appears bright as she overcomes centuries of suffering to resume her historic position as a leading nation in the world.
ACADEMIC VOCABULARY
holistic based on the idea that the parts of a whole are interconnected
Section 3 Assessment
REVIEWING IDEAS, TERMS AND PEOPLE
1. List: What key Hindu concepts are popular in the West? 2. Explain: How did Hindu ideas come to America in the 19th and 20th centuries? 3. Describe: How do hatha yoga and meditation impact y What is the p p the body? purpose of breath control?
FOCUS ON WRITING
4 D Debate: eb bat te: A few students want to start a yoga class as part of 4. phys-ed. Others object, arguing that it is a religious practice which should not be allowed. Which side do you take? Why?
In ayurvedic pulse diagnosis the doctor doesnt just count the number of beats per minute. He feels for subtle variations in the pulse which give clues about the state of the patients health.
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Hindu Metaphysics
A painting of the three nadis and the seven chakras, showing their location and the associated letter/ sound of the Sanskrit alphabet. Within and behind the man are the ve elements: earth, water, re, air and space.
5) Divine Love
Word Help
consciousness thought, awareness, perception direct cognition knowing something immediately through intuition, rather than through the senses or reason enlightenment the highest human experience; realization of Divinity mystic a person who lives in the chakras of higher consciousness, seeking direct knowledge of God
4) Direct Cognition
Spiritual Current
3) Willpower
2) Reason
1) Memory
p i e t e r w e lt e v r e d e
Masculine Current
Feminine Current
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A VISUAL HISTORY
Hindu people and Hindu ideas can be found today in nearly every country of the world
Hawaii: 700
Netherlands 175,000 UK: 966,000 Germany: 98,000 Canada: 685,000 France: 65,800 Belgium: 7,600 Austria: 9,600 Spain: 23,000 United States: Portugal: 56,000 2,400,000 Greece: 6,000 Lebanon: 10,000 Cuba: 24,000 Martinique and Egypt: 1,000 Guadaloupe Gulf States: 3,877,000 50,000 Ethiopia: 4,000 Jamaica Libya: 10,000 Trinidad: 402,000 31,000 Guyana: 318,000 Panama: 10,000 Suriname: 144,000 French Guyana: 2,900 Nigeria: 20,000 Colombia: 9,000 Uganda: 254,000 Brazil: 3,000 Zambia: 39,000 Malavi: 30,000 Botswana: 7,000 Ghana: 12,000 Zimbabwe: 13,000 Mozambique: 43,000 Rwanda: 11,600
Norway: 25,000 Sweden: 11,000 Slovakia: 5,400 Russia: 15,000 Denmark: 6,000 Switzerland: 30,000 Ukraine: 46,000 Uzbekistan: 3,000 Kazakhstan: 3,300 Iran: 15,000 Nepal: 23,000,000
Pakistan 3,500,000
India 974,000,000
Argentina 5,000
WHERE ONE BILLION HINDUS LIVE: Hinduism originated in the Indian subcontinentnow the modern nations of India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka. Most of the worlds Hindus live in these countries today. A thousand years ago, Hinduism spread across Southeast Asia to Vietnam and the Indonesian islands.
Then in the 19th century, Hindus were taken as workers to European colonies such as Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname, Reunion, Mauritius and South Africa. In modern times, Hindus have migrated to most countries of the world. Once settled, they have built temples for public worship to strengthen their religious life and express their faith.
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hi
nd
ui
sm
Sri Lanka 3,100,000 Yemen: 157,000 Malaysia 1,737,000 Somalia: 2,900 Singapore Kenya: 386,000 203,000 Tanzania: 389,000 Mauritius: 640,000 Reunion: 177,000 Madagascar: 20,700 South Africa: 805,000 Seychelles: 4,000
Hong Kong: 41,000 Japan: 8,000 Bhutan: 167,000 Cambodia: 40,000 Bangladesh: 15,800,000 Myanmar: 2,336,000 China: 16,000 Vietnam: 5,500 Thailand: 68,000 Philippines:47,000 Indonesia: 5,200,000 Brunei: 6,000 Fiji: 293,000 Australia: 158,000
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IN OUR WORLD
Hindu philosophy teaches a deep tolerance and allencompassing respect for other faiths. This attitude has a natural appeal in todays world, where people seek to live in peace with one another.
z u m aw i r e w o r l d p h o t o s
Lisa Millers 2009 Newsweek article detailed Americas shift to Hindu ideals, such as respect for all religions.
The Hindu practice of yoga is common in Western schools and many public centers for exercise, health and relaxation.
global forum
newsweek
Delegates from 60 nations at the 1988 Global Forum in Oxford, England, discussed the future of our planet. The contributions of the Eastern religions, including Hinduism and Buddhism, were given equal importance with those of the West.
God is, in truth, the whole universe: what was, what is and what beyond shall ever be. He is in all. Krishna Yajur Veda, Shvetashvatara Upanishad 3.15-16
Whatever deed he does, that he will reap. Shukla Yajur Veda Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.4.5
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art: s. rajam
1. Discuss: What is important about a political leader visiting a religious place or celebrating a religious festival? 2. Discuss: What is the dierence between respecting another religion and tolerating it? 3. Explore: How do other religions express the concepts
in our list of six key Hindu ideas? Which ideas would be acceptable to people with no religion? 4. Analyze and Defend: What role do you think religion should play in todays world?
c o u r i e r- j o u r na l . c o m
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CHAPTER
Standards Assessment
8. What unites India as one religious landscape? A Control by one denomination of Hinduism B Pilgrimage destinations throughout the country C Everyone speaks the same language D Everyone is of the same ethnic group 9. What is the purpose of bathing at Rameswarams wells? A To nd release from past misdeeds B To guarantee entry to heaven C To be entered into the Hindu faith D To cleanse the body 10. Which of the following is not governed by a chakra? A Divine sight B Willpower C Sushumna nadi D Memory 11. Soft power is dened as: A Spiritual energy and force B Economic inuence C Diplomacy D Cultural inuence 12. What fraction of Americans believe in reincarnation? A one-sixteenth B one-eighth C one-quarter D one-half 13. What spiritual leader brought Hindu ideas to the West? A Swami Prabhavananda B Maharishi Mahesh Yogi C B.K.S. Iyengar D All of the above 14. How does India rank in power among the worlds nations? A Second B Third C Fourth D Sixth
basil sage
References
DIRECTIONS: READ EACH QUESTION AND CIRCLE THE LETTER OF THE BEST RESPONSE 1. Which were consequences of the Partition? A Pakistan attacked Kashmir B 15 million people moved to or from Pakistan C One million people died in riots and from hardships D All of the above 2. How were the states of India reorganized? A Following the boundaries of the princely states B On the basis of population C On the basis of linguistic groups D Along important rivers and mountain ranges 3. A state has what powers in the Indian political system? A Only those specied in the national constitution B All those not granted to the Central Government C The same powers it had as a princely state D Those granted by its state constitution 4. What did Indias early leaders emphasize? A Making every citizen part of the political process B Achieving national economic self-suciency C Guaranteed higher education opportunities and jobs for lower castes and tribes D All of the above 5. How did India change its economic policies in the 1990s? A Raised import duties on foreign goods B Eased restrictions on industries and encouraged private business and foreign investment C Became self-sucient in food which made it possible to spend those funds within the country D Invested in foreign markets 6. How has the poverty rate in India changed since 1947? A From 50% to 10% B From 50% to 25% C From 50% to 40% D Not at all 7. What is one way Indias secularism is unlike the Wests? A State governments control Hindu temples B Government ocials must belong to one religion C Only members of some religions can vote D State governments control all religious sites
induism is celebratory by nature. Hindus miss no opportunity to set mundane matters aside and join with family, friends, neighbors and strangers alike to feast and have fun, to renew the home and the heart and, most importantly, draw nearer to God. Festivals are perhaps more impressive and varied in Hinduism than in any other religion. The devout Hindu knows these are times of profound mysticism, when God and the Gods touch our world, revitalize our souls, lighten karmas and bless our families. Yet festivals do even more than this: they are essential to the perpetuation of religion, periodically reigniting the spark of zeal and devotion in the community. They provide the spiritual public square where Hindus engage with one another, afrming shared values and enjoying lifes intersections. Before each celebration, vows are taken, scriptures are studied, pilgrimages are trodden and fasts observed
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in preparationall individual acts of intimate devotion that bring the devotee closer to the Gods and keep him on the path to his inmost Self. As each festival begins, solitary adoration becomes a collective ritual, with millions of people taking their places in an ad-hoc choreography. Tradition is followed but the result is never the same; every festival is special and unforgettable in its own way. Thus the Hindu is reminded of his faith
by the sounds, scents and the wild medley of tastes laid out for the feast. His mind and emotions are imbued with Hinduism as sacred mantra prayers are intoned, the spiritual teachings are recounted by saints and the Gods are praised in melodious bhajans. Each state of India, indeed each village, lends a little of its unique culture to how a festival is celebrated, creating almost endless variations. But recently, with the growing Hindu population outside of India, festivals have acquired an international dimension. They provide a window into Hinduism for the non-Hindu populations in countries as far ung as Norway, Chile and Canada. At the same time, for Hindus immersed in foreign and often very alien cultures, festivals are the most visible and memorable sign of their heritage. Celebrated with unmatched fervor but with paced regularity, festivals serve as a reminder of ones identity and allegiance to Hindu traditions and ideals.
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Modaka Sweets
These rich, deep fried, uffy, sweet dollops are the Mangalorean equivalent of the Tamil kollukattai. It is the all-time favorite of Lord Ganesha, who is described as Modaka Hasta, one with the modaka in His hand. Preparation time: 10 minutes. Cooking time: 30 minutes Makes 20 pieces Cooking equipment: A wok or deep saucepan, a perforated ladle, a lined colander to drain excess oil, a mixing bowl and serving plate. Ingredients 4 cups thin beaten rice (poha); 1 cup semolina (rava) our, 1 cup rice our, 1 cup slightly over-ripe bananas, mashed, 1 cup powdered jaggery (or brown sugar), 1/8 tsp salt oil to deep fry Method 1. Mix all the ingredients together except the oil. 2. Add a little water and knead the mixture gently into a thick paste. 3. Heat the oil in the wok. 4. Drop tablespoonfuls of the batter into moderately hot oil and fry till rich brown. Drain and cool, then enjoy!
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Ganesha Chaturthi
Honoring the Lord of Beginnings
uring Ganesha Chaturthi, a ten-day festival in August/September, elaborate puja ceremonies are held in Hindu temples around the world honoring Ganesha, the benevolent, elephant-faced Lord of Obstacles. In millions of home shrines, worship is also offered to a
clay image of Ganesha that the family makes or obtains. At the end of ten days, Hindus join in a grand parade, called visarjana in Sanskrit, to a river, temple tank, lake or seashore, where His image is ceremonially immersed, symbolizing Ganeshas merging into universal consciousness.
Who is Ganesha? Perennially happy, playful, unperturbed and wise, this rotund Deity removes obstacles to good endeavors and obstructs negative ventures, thus guiding and protecting the lives of devotees. He is the patron of art and science, the God inhabiting all entryways, the gatekeeper who blesses all beginnings. When initiating anythingwhether learning, business, weddings, travel, building and moreHindus seek His grace for success. He is undoubtedly the most endearing, popular and widely worshiped of all the Hindu Deities. Ganesha Chaturthi (also called Vinayaka Chaturthi) falls on the fourth day in the waxing fortnight of the month of Bhadrapada in the sacred Hindu lunar calendar, which translates to a certain day in AugustSeptember. It is essentially a birthday celebrating Ganeshas divine appearance. What do people do on Ganesha Chaturthi? Devotees often fashion or purchase a Ganesha statue out of unbaked clay. Many sculpt Him out of a special mixture of turmeric, sandalwood paste, cow dung, soil from an anthill and palm sugar. The Deity image
is placed in the home shrine amongst traditional decorations. A rite of worship and prayer, called puja, is conducted daily, invoking the energies of the Deity and inviting Him to reside in the clay image. Mantras are chanted and offerings are made throughout the puja, including incense, lighted lamps, cooked food (naivedya) , fruits, durva grass, tulasi and pomegranate leavesand owers, especially red ones. After ten days, a simple puja is performed before the statue is taken for a formal departure (visarjana). Often entire communities, from dozens to tens of thousands of devotees, gather each year for this nal day ceremony. The icons on o c of e em er mon ony. y. T he i cons co ns are are r carried car a ri ied e o n an
ornate metal traylarger images are borne on a palanquin by several strong mento a lake, a river or the sea. There Ganesha is consigned to the water after removing non-degradable paraphernalia.
What foods are oered? Sumptuous foods are specially prepared for Ganesha, keeping in mind His elephantine nature and prodigious appetite. People offer several varieties of fruits such as mangos, bananas and sugarcane. Sweets are the elephant-headed Deitys delight, so to express their love families take great pains to make special tasty treats. Each family has its recipes. it ts re reci cipe ci pes. s
changes occur in their lives as they move from old established patterns into new ones. He is always there to steady the minds of devotees and open the proper doors as they evolve and progress. FACT: There is not just one path to God Why is He worshiped rst? Lord BrahRealization in Hinduism, but many. Tens of ma declared that any worship conducted What makes Him distinctive? thousands of distinct teaching lineages prescribe without seeking Ganeshas blessings would Aside from His unique and endearing varying combinations of prayer, rites and rituals, be fruitless. He is considered a loving, elephant head, Ganesha carries an elmeditation, chanting and the many yogas to playful, protective Deity whose blessings ephant goad to prod us along the right guide followers in their spiritual evolution. would grace any endeavor. He is therefore path. He holds a noose to lasso foes of FICTION: Many wrongly believe that Hindus ceremonially invoked before weddings, dharma and to draw devotees close housewarmings, taking an important exam, when they venture off the spiritual worship cows. Hindus dont worship cows. They starting a new business and other impor- path. His mount is a mouse. His big respect, honor and adore the cow. By honoring tant events. belly is said to contain the fullness of this gentle animal, who gives more than she the cosmos. In His hand is a modaka, takes, Hindus honor all creatures. What is His mystical work? Lord Ga- fruit or other sweet, symbolic of ennesha is the God Hindus pray to when lightened attainments.
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How are Shaktis forms worshiped? In South India the rst three days are dedicated to Goddess Durga, the erce Mother who decimates negative forces. For the next three days, Lakshmi, the Goddess of prosperity, is revered. The last three days are dedicated to Sarasvati, the Goddess of learning and wisdom. In this way, Hindus honor women as the protectors of the family, extol their powers of fertility and endurance, venerate them as the source of good fortune and revere them as repositories of culture and learning. In North India one of the nine aspects of Durga is venerated each day. These nine days are celebratby communities East India Durga ed db y co comm mmun mm u itie un itie it es in in E as st In nd di ia as ia as D urga ur g
Puja, treating the Goddess as the Daughter who has come to her maternal home for an annual visit.
What is the nal day? Vijaya Dashami, triumphant tenth day, celebrates Durgas legendary victory over Mahishasura, a powerful being fraught with ignorance and selshness. On the same day many celebrate Ramas victory over the evil Ravana. The celebration is a reminder to persist in the challenges we face in life. Local traditions vary widely, and this day is known by other names, including Dussehra, Dasara and an d Dashain. Dash Da sh hai ain. n n.
Sundal
This is a high-protein, low-oil dish made from steamed or boiled whole chickpeas. Preparation time: Approx. 1 hour Serves: 6 Equipment: A pressure cooker, a ladle, a wok or saucepan and a dish Ingredients 1 cup chickpeas, tsp turmeric powder, 3 tbsp to cup grated coconut, 1 tsp black mustard seeds, broken dried red chillies (to taste), tsp asafoetida powder, sliced green chillies (optional), curry leaves, salt Method 1. Beforehand, soak the chickpeas for 12 hours. Cook with the turmeric powder and salt in a pressure cooker (1:2 ratio of beans to water) until soft but rm, not mushy. Drain and set aside. 2. Heat ghee; add the mustard seeds and let them pop. 3. Add the curry leaves, chillies and asafoetida; roast the mixture slightly. 4. Add the cooked chickpeas. Stir gently over a low ame, taking care not to mash them. 5. Add grated coconut and salt to taste. Mix well. 6. Enjoy!
Navaratri
What special events occur on Maha Navami, the ninth day? Books, musical instruments, equipment and tools are placed before Goddess Sarasvati for blessings, seeking Her gifts of talent, ability and inspiration. This rite, called Ayudha (weapon or tool) Puja, began when the kings of ancient India had their weapons blessed. Today any tool of ones trade may be consecrated: craftsmens tools, books, ofces, vehicles, computers, even iPhones! Devotees reect on their skills, strengths, goals and needs. A key rite of passage for children ages three to ve is performed on this day. Called vidyarambha, beginning of learning, it marks the start of a childs formal education.
illions of Hindu women consider Navaratri the years central festival, the one they most deeply connect to. These nine days dedicated to Shakti, the Goddess, provide an opportunity to seek blessings and commune with their own divinity. It is a time for sacred gatherings, austerities, seless acts and intimate prayers. But Navaratri is not just for the ladies; everyone turns out for the joyous worship, festivities, plays, feasting and danceall venerating God as the loving Mother Spirit that gives life to everything.
What do Hindus do for Navaratri? Navaratri starts on the new moon of September/ October. On the rst day, it is customary to plant seeds in a clay pot which will sprout over the next nine days. In some communities, women prepare a specially decorated kalasha , a vessel symbolizing the fertile womb, representing the Goddess. Especially in cities in Tamil Nadu, families create elaborate shelf displays, called kolu, of handmade clay dolls. Adding new dolls each year and handing the collection down to the next generation results in some grand displays. How is Navaratri observed in homes? Each night, the Goddess holds court, and special food offerings are presented as prayers eulogizing Her powers are chanted. Guests are invited to showcase their artistic skills, and all enjoy sweets and other treats. Women dress up and visit female friends and relatives, taking a tray of offerings which includes the betel leaf and nut that bear the gravity of a formal contract of friendship and loyalty. Other items on the traybeauty accessories, fresh turmeric root and coconutsymbolize goodwill and fertility. They fast, pray morning and evening, and give food and cooking pots to the poor. Some families formally honor a prepubescent girl each day, giving her new clothes, treating her to a sumptuous lunch, and pampering her, afrming her femininity and afnity with the Goddess.
Are there group festivities? In the evenings, devotees gather to dance in halls and public squares. The Garba, Gujarats popular folk dance, is a vigorous dance performed in circles while twirling, jumping, ailing the arms, clapping rhythmically and stepping in sync. In the Dandiya-Ras, sticks are part of the choreography. Dancing is a community expression of joy and togetherness.
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FICTION: Many wrongly believe that Hindu women are prohibited from learning,
performing rites, ritual and prayer. Hindu women are not oppressed or considered unequal to men, but honored and respected. Hinduism is the only major religion to honor Gods feminine power!
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Diwali
Carrot Halwa Preparation time: 20 minutes Cooking time: 60 minutes Serves: 6-8 Equipment: A small wok or roundbottomed pan, a ladle and a serving dish. king who ruled Sri Lanka and kidnapped Ramas pious wife, Sita. It also celebrates Krishnas victory over Narakasura, the demon of ignorance. Rama and Krishna are earthly incarnations, or avatars, of Vishnu.
Does ritual bathing play a part? Diwali marks the conquest of negative forces. To wipe away all traces of lifes struggle, the negative and draining energies of strife, Hindus invoke the waters of Indias holiest riversGanga, Yamuna, Godavari, Sarasvati, Narmada, Indus and Kaveriinto water v va ati t , Na ti N rm mad da, a I ndus nd us sa nd dK av ver eri ri in into to w ater at er
f you rolled a bit of Christmas, New Years Eve and the Fourth of July all into one, then catered the affair with mountains of sweets and savory snacks, you would have a taste of what it means to celebrate Diwali, Indias best-known festival. It is a day of Hindu solidarity, when
all Hindus gather in love and trust. It is observed by lighting rows of oil lamps and exchanging greeting cards, clothing and other gifts. Family bonds are strengthened and forgiveness sought. For many, Diwali marks the beginning of the new year. Joyous festivities and parties abound.
new jewelry. Girls and women decorate their hands with henna designs.
What does lamp-lighting signify? In Hindu culture, light is a powerful metaphor for knowledge and consciousness. It is a reminder of the preciousness of education, self-inquiry and improvement, which bring harmony to the individual, the community and between communities. By honoring light, we afrm the fact that from knowing arises respect for and acceptance of others. Lighting lamps reminds Hindus to keep on the right path, to dispel darkness from their hearts and minds, and to embrace knowledge and goodness. What legends are associated with Diwali? In the sacred text Ramayana, Diwali marks the return of Rama to his kingdom after defeating Ravana, the demon
collected in urns in preparation for an ablution after an oil massage. The special bath cleanses the physical and auric energies of the individual. Fragrant powders of dried lentils, roots, aromatic seeds, leaves and owers are used to remove the oil. Families then don ne new clothes, beautiful patterns are drawn on the ground, and lamps are lit until entire streets glow. Even the White House in Washington, D.C., is illumined by the gentle glow of oil lamps during its annual Diwali observances.
Ingredients 4 cups/1 kg grated carrots, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups milk, 1 ladles ghee, a few cashews and raisins, 2 cardamom pods Method 1. Wash, peel and grate the carrots. 2. Fry the cashews, raisins and cardamom in ghee and set aside. 3. Heat a ladle of ghee in the pan. Add the grated carrots and saut. 4. Add enough milk to soak the carrots and cook on low heat, stirring occasionally, until carrots are soft. Keep adding milk, a ladle at a time, and cook until the milk thickens, then stir in the sugar. 5. Cook over low heat until everything blends together into a rm mass that separates from the sides of the pan. 6. Garnish with the fried cashews, cardamom and raisins. Top with a little ghee and pistachio slivers for extra avor.
What occurs on Diwali? Diwali (or Deepavali, row of lights) is celebrated by Hindus worldwide to commemorate the triumph of good over evil, knowledge over ignorance, hope over despair. Oil-wick lamps are lit in every household, along with colorful strings of electric lights, causing the home, village and community to sparkle with dancing ames. The festival falls on the day before the new moon in the month of Ashwin (October/November). Communities spare nothing in celebration. Lavish spreads of sweets and treats reflect unfettered partying. Diwali lehyam a potent concoction made with ginger, pepper, ghee and moreis provided to help gourmands digest the sumptuous feast. Families reach out to each other with gifts of sweets, dried fruit and crunchy, salty treats. Everyone wears colorful new clothing and many even
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Are there customs for the day after Diwali? The following day, families offer special prayers to Lakshmi for a prosperous year. This ritual worship is also directed to Kubera,
FICTION: Many people wrongly believe that Hindus, being proud of their religion,
may disdain other cultures. In fact, Hindus fully accept the spiritual ecacy of other paths and never proselytize.
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is mystically understood as His manifest energy, inseparable from Him. The ancient Tirumantiram scripture says of Siva, Himself creates. Himself preserves. Himself destroys. Himself conceals. Himself all of this He does and then grants liberationHimself the all-pervading Lord.
What happens on Mahasivaratri? Many Hindus perform an all-night vigil, plunging the soul into its own essence, led by Siva, the supreme yogi, who is both the guide and the goal of the search. Staying awake through the night is a sacrice and a break from lifes normal routine, a time out of time to be with God within, to reach for the realization of our true, immortal Self. Siva is known as Abhisheka Priya, He who loves sacred ablutions, and thus many temples and home shrines have water always dripping on the Sivalinga. On this special night, Sivalingas are bathed with special substances, sometimes several times. Mahasivaratri occurs on the night before the new moon in February/March. What is the Sivalinga? Linga means mark, token or sign. A Sivalinga, representing Siva, is found in virtually all of His temples. The Sivalinga is the simplest and most ancient symbol
of the Divine. It is especially evocative of Parasiva, God beyond all forms and qualities, the unmanifested Absolute. Sivalingas are commonly made of stone, but may also be of metal, precious gems, crystal, wood, earth or even transitory materials like sand or ice. Ardent devotees make special Sivalingas worship during Mahasivaratri. vali va in ng gas to to wo ors shi h p du duri ri ing ng M ah a has asiv i ar iv arat at tri ri.
Is there a special mantra for Siva? Namah Sivaya is among the foremost Vedic mantras. It means adoration to Siva and is called the Panchakshara, or ve-letters. The ve elements, too, are embodied in this ancient formula for invocation. Na is earth, Ma is water, Si is re, Va is air, and ether, or space. a an nd Ya Ya is s et ethe her, r, o r sp pac ce. e
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When does the color fun begin? On the day of Holi, people celebrate by playing, dancing and running in the streets. Water pistols are lled with colored water and squirted on family, friends and strangers alike. Dye powders and water balloons are a big part of the play. The wise wear old clothes, usually white, in anticipation of the mess! Virtually anything goes, including humor, practical jokes and teasingall excused with the saying, Dont mind, its Holi! (Hindi: Bura na mano, Holi hai.) Men are at the playful mercy of women, who dance with them. Especially in North India, people celebrate with abandon, even splashing color on their homes as a prelude to the more sober custom of renewing the paint with shell-based white. Deities and images of ancestors are hand-painted and placed in beautiful altars. Dramatic events
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feature devotional songs and the retelling of the love epic of Radha and Krishna. Bonds are renewed, particularly among inlaws and the extended family. Etiquette on Holi requires that one accept all overtures with an open heart, burying grievances to begin relationships afresh. People of all walks of life mingle and greet, applying vermilion on each others foreheads in an uninhibited exchange of goodwill.
What are the delicacies of this festival? Special sweet and savory treats including mathri, puran poli and vadai are made. Many communities make an intoxicating, cooling drink, called thandai, made of puried water, sugar, seeds of watermelon, muskmelon and lotus, along with nuts, cardamom, fennel, white pepper, saffron and rose petals.
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Holi
hug each other and smile with such child-like joy that it makes one wonder where so much happiness comes from! No religious festival in the world compares to Holi in terms of engaging young and old alike. It is a celebration of love, forgiveness, hope and just plain fun.
What is Holi? Holi is a communitys exuberant expression of joy to welcome the warmth of spring. In a reection of natures abundance, Hindus celebrate with bursts of color, camaraderie and shared abandon. It begins on Purnima, full moon day, in the Hindu month of Phalguni (February/March) and lasts for as long as 16 days. How does the festival start? Many communities create a central bonre on the night before Holi, starting with kindling and logs and adding organic debris as they clean up their property. The re symbolizes the torching of negative or troublesome experiences and memories. An efgy of Holika, a demoness personifying negativity, is consigned to the ames, and freshly harvested barley and oats are offered. The embers are collected to light sacred fires, and the ashes are used to mark the forehead as a blessing.
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FICTION: Hinduism is rich with stories of the Gods and their wives.
Yet, on a deeper, philosophical level, it is widely regarded as a ction that the Gods are married. The Supreme Being and the Gods are neither male nor female and are therefore not married.
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Glossary
Gods: when plural, one of the divine beings created by the Supreme Being (p. 7) guru: one who removes darkness, a teacher (p. 14)
L
Lakshmi: Goddess of wealth (p.15)
A
Advaita Vedanta: a non-dualist philosophy taught by Adi Shankara (p. 34) Agamas: Hindu scriptures explaining philosophy, personal conduct, worship and temple construction (p. 9) ahimsa: nonviolence (p. 8) Alvars: Vaishnavite saints of the Bhakti Movement (p. 33) annex: to add a conquered country to ones own (p. 43) arati: waving of an oil lamp in front of the Deity during worship (p. 13) ashram: a Hindu spiritual community (p. 75) ashtanga yoga: eight-limbed yoga, a Hindu spiritual practice which includes hatha yoga (p. 92) atman: God within man (p. 7) austerity: dicult practice of self-denial and discipline (p. 12) ayurveda: ancient Indian medical system (p. 29)
H
Hindi: fourth most spoken language in the world; related to ancient Sanskrit (p. 23) Hinduism: the majority religion of India, followed by 1.1 billion people worldwide; called Sanatana Dharma, eternal religion, in Sanskrit (p. 32) holistic: based on the idea that the parts of a whole are interconnected (p. 92)
M
mantra: a sacred word or phrase, usually in Sanskrit (p. 74) meditation: practice of quieting the mind to enter a higher state of awareness (p. 92) mela: a large gathering of people; a fair (p. 15) mendicant: a holy person who lives by begging (p. 14) metaphysics: the inner study of reality beyond the ve senses (p. 94) missionary: a person of one religion sent to convert people of another religion (p. 49) monk: a male member of a religious community under vows (p. 75) mudra: a hand gesture with a specic meaning (p. 55) murti: Sanskrit term for the consecrated statue in a Hindu temple; best translated as Deity in English (p. 8) mystical: concerned with the soul or spirit, rather than material things (p. 49)
D
Dalits: lowest caste of Hindus, also Untouchables (p. 49) Deity: the Supreme God or a God (p. 8) deva: a divine being (p. 7) Devi: a name of the Goddess (p. 33) dharma: a key Hindu concept which includes the ideas of righteousness, divine law, ethics, religion, duty, justice and truth (p. 8) diksha: an initiation or rite of passage (p. 72) Dravidian: a family of languages spoken in South India and Sri Lanka, or the people who speak them (p. 4)
I
immanent: present everywhere and in all things (p. 7) imperial: of or relating to an empire (p. 23) initiation: a ceremony given by a priest, teacher or guru to bring a person into a new level of education, religious practice and spiritual awareness (p. 7274) Inquisition: a movement within the Catholic Church to identify and punish heretics (p. 46)
E
ecstasy: feeling or expressing overwhelming joy in God (p. 47) egalitarian: the principle that all people deserve equal rights and opportunities (p. 68) empire: a group of countries under a single ruler (p. 65) ethics: moral principles that govern behavior (p. 8)
B
bhajana: call-and-response devotional singing (p. 52) Bhakti Movement: popular devotional movement within Hindusm, started around the fth century ce (p. 33) Bharatanatyam: ancient temple dance of India (p. 55) British Raj: the government of India from 1858 to 1947 (p. 64)
J
Jainism: a religion founded in India in the 6th century bce by Mahavira (p. 32) japa: repetition of a sacred sound, such as Aum (p. 75) jati: a community or tribe in India usually holding a particular occupation (p. 4) jizya: a tax on non-Muslim citizens of an Islamic state (p. 44)
N
nadaswaram: a high pitched, double-reed wooden horn (p. 31) nadi: in yoga, an energy channel within the body (p. 94) namaste: I bow to you; traditional Hindu greeting usually said with the hands pressed together (p. 2) Nataraja: King of Dance; a form of Lord Siva (p. 21) nationalism: patriotic feelings, principles or eorts (p. 62) New Age: a Western spiritual movement drawing on Eastern thought (p. 91)
F
famine: extreme scarcity of food (p. 42) Freethought: a movement strong in the 1900s valuing science, logic and reason over authority or tradition (p. 91)
C
Carnatic: classical music system of India (p. 53) Central Government: the national government of India (p. 84) chakra: a center of energy and consciousness in the spiritual body (p. 94) colonize: to take control of another country and settle it with immigrants from ones own (p. 62) colonized mind: the feeling of inferiority which persists in a colonized people long after independence (p. 6971) consciousness: thought, awareness, perception (p. 94) conversion: to change ones religion (p. 47) 114
G
Ganesha: Hindu God who is Lord of Obstacles, recognizable by His elephant head (p. 7) God: the Supreme God, transcendent and immanent; or one of the Gods (p. 6) Goddess: the Supreme God when regarded as feminine; or one of the female Deities (p. 6)
K
kar: in Islam, a term for a non-believer 48) karma: the law of cause and eect (p. 8) kirtana: call-and-response devotional singing (p. 52) Krishna: one of Lord Vishnus ten avatars, or appearances upon Earth as a divine personality (p. 7)
P
paddy: unhusked rice (p. 31) panchayat: a village council (p. 29) Partition: the division of British India into modern India and Pakistan (p. 65) patriot: a person who vigorously supports their country and is 115
Index
prepared to defend it (p. 62) polytheist: one who believes in or worships more than one God (p. 48) puja: a ceremony to invoke God with the ringing of bells, passing of ames, chanting, and presention of owers, incense and other oerings (p. 7) Puranas: Hindu scriptures with stories of God and the Gods as well as spiritual teachings, historical traditions, geography and culture (p. 9) brought to a marriage by the bride (p. 72) Surya Namaskara: greetings to the Sun; a series of hatha yoga poses (p. 93) swami: a Hindu monk (p. 14)
T
tala: a rhythmic pattern in Indian music systems (p. 53) theology: the systematic study of the nature of God and religious belief (p. 91) tolerance: willingness to allow beliefs, opinions or behavior that one does not necessarily agree with (p. 32) transcendent: existing beyond the physical universe, said of God (p. 6) Transcendentalist: an idealistic philosophy teaching that Divinity pervades all of nature and humanity (p. 91)
R
raga: a pattern of notes used in musical composition (p. 53) reincarnation: rebirth of the soul in a new body (p. 8) reservations: In modern India, a program of armative action for disadvantaged groups (p. 86) rites of passage: social and religious ceremonies marking important stages in a persons life (p. 72)
U
Upanishads: Hindu scriptures that are part of the Vedas; mostly about philosophy (p. 91)
of India, 88 cities: example of Puhar, 30; how governed, 27 Adi Shankara: philosopher, 34 civil rights: and Gandhi, 6971 Agamas: scripture, 9; temple worship, 34 class system: see varna Akshardham Temple: Delhi, 81 Clive, Robert: Battle of Plassey, 44 Angkor Wat: photograph, 5 colonialism: in 19th century, 62; India Ankle Bracelet: Tamil poem, 30 helped end, 82 architecture: temple, 54 colonized mind: explained, 6971 art: development, 53 coming of age: rite of passage, 7375 Aryabhata: mathematician, 28 constitution: of India, 83 Aryan Invasion Theory: explained, 3 cremation: in Hinduism, 7475 atman: God within, 7 cuisine: of India, 92 ayurveda: medicine, 29; Indian medical system, 92
F
Fa-hsien: Buddhist monk, 24 famines: increased under British Raj, 64 festivals: Hindu, 14; home and public, 27; of Hinduism, 36; yearly cycle, 15 ne arts: supported by kings, 27 re ceremony: photo, 1; symbol, 4; in Hinduism, 33 foreign invaders: absorbed by Hinduism, 49 funeral: rites, 7475
S
salvation: in Western religions, the belief one is saved by God from the eect of sin and allowed into a divine afterlife; similar to Hindu idea of moksha, or release from rebirth (p. 6) samskara: a rite of passage, such as name-giving or rst feeding (p. 12) Sanatana Dharma: Eternal Truth, the ancient name for what is now called the Hindu religion (p. 6) sannyasin: a Hindu monk (p. 75) Sanskrit: the ancient and sacred language of India (p. 3) satyagraha: truth force, Gandhis method of passive political resistance (p. 65) sepoy: an Indian soldier in the British army (p. 44) Shakta: a denomination of Hinduism worshiping the female aspect of God (p. 7) Shakti: name of God in feminine form (p. 15) shastra: Hindu legal texts written in Sanskrit (p. 25) Sikh: a religion of India founded by Guru Nanak in the 15th century (p. 47) sindur: a red powder traditionally worn by married women in the part of their hair (p. 74) Siva: the Supreme God (p. 2) Smarta: a major denomination of Hinduism (p. 7) sthree dhana: womans wealth; jewelry or other valuables 116
history of hindu india
G
Gandhi, Mahatma: nonviolence, 8; satyagraha campaign, 6870; story of, 64 Ganesha: as Lord of Obstacles, 7 Ganesha Chaturthi: festival, 39 Ganga River: at Haridwar, 17; early settlement along, 4 Gateway of India: Mumbai, 61 Global Forum: Oxford, 1988, 99 global power: Indias share of today, 93 God: in Hinduism, 6 Gupta Empire: decline, 24 Guptas: empire of, 23 guru: dened, 14
B
Bangladesh: formation of, 85 Bhagavad Gita: sacred text, 9 Bhakti Movement: development, 33; in response to invasions, 46 Bharatanatyam: arrival in Europe, 55 Brahman: SeeGod British: reasons for political success, 45 British Raj: establishment, 64 business: eased restrictions in modern India, 88
V
Vaishnava: a major denomination of Hinduism (p. 7) varna: a division of society into four broad classespriests, warriors, merchants and workers (p. 4) Vastu: Hindu architecture and town planning (p. 34) Veda: sacred texts of Hinduism (p. 3) Vedanta: a Hindu philosophy based on the Upanishads (p. 34) Vishnu: the Supreme God in the Vaishnavite tradition (p. 7)
dance: Bharatanatyam, 55; of India, 5659 Deccan Plateau: region of India, 22 Deity: consecrated statue, 8 Delhi Iron Pillar: doesnt rust, 28 Delhi Sultanate: establishment, 43 dharma: explained, 8 Diwali: festival, 14, 38 dowry: in marriage, 7274 Dravidian: linguistic region of India, 23 Dravidian people: early history, 4
W
worldly: of or concerned with material values or ordinary life rather than a spiritual existence (p. 75)
C
caste: as obstacles to conversion, 49; See: jati; varna chakras, seven: explained, 94 chastity: vow of, 7375 China: Indias border war with, 85 Chola: empire, 24 Christian: conversion eorts, 49 converts retained jati, 49; percentage
E
East India Company: and colonization, 62; end of, 63; founding, 44; how gained control of India, 45 economic development: and ve-year plans, 87 emotion: nine in drama and dance, 29, 58 English education: unintended impact in India, 63
H
hard power: Indias, 90 Hindu: calendar, 27; legal denition, 88; migration, 13; percentage in India, 88 Hindu ideas: six key, 98 Hinduism: historical assimilation of various groups, 35; four branches, 7;
Y
yajna: Hindu re ceremony (p. 3)
117
key beliefs, 6; thriving today, 12 Hindu temples: controlled by Indian government, 88; in America, 13 Holi: festival, 38 horse: in India, 42
M
Mahabharata: epic history, 9, 35 Mahmud of Ghazni: plunder of Somnatha Temple, 25; raids on India, 43 map: Hindu population by country, 97 marriage: arranged, 29; rites, 7375 massacre: of Jallianwala Bagh, 64 meditation: impact in West, 92 metaphysics: and religion, 94; Hindu, in the West, 91 monastic vows: in Hinduism, 75 Mughal Empire: art, 53, decline, 54; founding, 44 murti: see Deity music: of India, 52 Muslim: percentage of India, 88 Muslim invasions: death of 10% of population, 46; early history, 25; reason for success, 45; records of, 42
I
India: geography, 22; historical population of, 23; linguistic division of, 23: Muslim conquest of, 43; wealth (300 to 1100 ce), 26; worlds largest democracy, 86 Indian painting: development of, 54 Indian subcontinent: boundaries, 22 Indo-Gangetic Plain: region of India, 22 Indus-Sarasvati civilization: decline of, 4; main entry, 2 initiation: in Hinduism, 72-75
held in Chicago in 1893, 67 Partition: described, 82; of India, 65 Patel, Sardar Vallabhbhai: and princely states, 83 pilgrimage: sites in India, 87-88 population: Hindus by country, 97 Princely States: in free India, 83 puja: in temples, 13; evolution of, 33; Hindu worship ceremony, 7 Puranas: contents, 35; scriptures, 9
Q
Queen Elizabeth II: at Hindu temple, 99
R
Raksha Bandhan: festival, 14 Ramakrishna, Sri: guru of Swami Vivekananda, 66; Hindu saint, 14 Ramanuja: and Bhakti Movement, 33 Ramayana: epic history, 9; growing popularity, 35 Rameswaram: pilgrimage to, 89 rasas: see emotion Rashtrakuta: empire, 24; kings patronized all religions, 32 reincarnation: belief in America, 90; explained, 8; reservations: and lower castes, 86 Revolt of 1857: causes and consequences, 63 rites of passage: in Hinduism, 7274
J
jati: described, 4; in the village, 28 jizya: religious tax on non-Muslims, 44, 48
satyagraha: and Gandhi, 65; use against Raj, 6870 science: in early India, 29 sepoys: losing loyalty to British, 65 Shakta: branch of Hinduism, 7 Shankara, Adi: Hindu saint, 14 Shastras: Hindu legal texts, 25 Shivaji: story of, 48 Sikhism: founded, 47; percentage of India, 88 Siva: in Indus-Sarasvati civilizaton, 2 Smarta: branch of Hinduism, 7 Snakes and Ladders: game, 50 soft power: Indias, 90, 93 Somanatha Temple: plundered in 1025, 25 soul: in Hinduism, 7 South India: region, 22 states: formed on linguistic lines, 84 Surya Namaskara: photos, 93 swami: holy person, 14
varna: class or caste system, 4 Vedas: described, 3; Hindu scriptures, 9 vegetarian meal: of South India, 7071 Vijayanagar Empire: of South India, 43 village: daily religious life, 32; structure, 29 Vivekananda Rock Memorial: photos, 77 Vivekananda, Swami: address to Parliament of the Worlds Religions, 67; inuence, 91; photos 79; story of, 66
W
women: status in Hinduism, 5 worship: at home, 13; in the temple, 13
Y
yajna: see re worship yoga: impact in West, 92; in Western schools, 98
N
namaste: in Indus-Sarasvati civilization, 2 Nataraja: photo, 21 native industries: collapse under Raj, 64 Nehru, Jawaharlal: rst prime minister, 82 New Age: and Hinduism, 91 Non-Aligned Movement: and India, 84
T
Tamils: early development, 4 temple worship: from 300 to 1100 ce, 34 Thoreau, Henry David: inuenced by Hinduism, 91 Timur: attack on Delhi, 43 Tiruvalluvar: statue of, 7779 towns: daily religious life, 32 Truth is one: from Rig Veda, 32
K
Kailasanatha Temple: described, 34 karma: explained, 8 Kashmir: Line of Control, 85; war with Pakistan, 83 Kathak: dance of India, 59 Kathakali: dance of India, 58 Kena Upanishad: excerpt from, 10 King, Jr., Dr. Martin Luther: Birmingham protests, 6668 Krishna: and Holi, 33 Krishna Janmashtami: festival, 36 Kumbha Mela: festival, 15; pictorial, 16, 18
O
Obama, Barack: and Diwali, 99
S
Saiva: branch of Hinduism, 7 salt tax: protest, 68 Sanatana Dharma: see Hinduism Sanskrit: language of Vedas, 3; regions of India, 23; songs, 53 Sarasvati River: described, 2; in Rig Veda, 3
U
universities: worlds rst built in India, 29 Upanishads: part of Vedas, 9
P
pancha nitya karmas: ve basic practices, 12 Parliament of the Worlds Religions:
V
Vaishnava: branch of Hinduism, 7
history of hindu india
118
119
The history of todays Hindus, one-sixth of our human race, extends back beyond recorded history. In this book, we pick up the threads of Hindu practice evident in the Indus-Sarasvati civilization, which was the largest and in many ways the most advanced of the ancient civilizations. From there we trace the development of Hinduism through the early empires of India, a time of great advances in science, architecture, art and literatureduring which Europe was experiencing the Middle Ages. Then came the years of trial by invasion, followed by colonization and nally, in the 20th century, independence from the British Crown. Throughout these periods of history, we highlight the people, philosophical ideas and religious practices that are key to the Hindu religion today. While the text is written for sixth grade social studies classes in US schools, it is also suitable for high school classes. It has even been used in college course work, due to its refreshingly accurate, terse but comprehensive presentation of the worlds most ancient faith.
CHAPTER
Section 1 Origins of Hinduism Section 2 Hindu Beliefs and Scriptures Section 3 Hinduism in Practice
CHAPTER
Section 1 British Rules Mixed Blessings Section 2 The Challenge of Ideas Section 3 Rites of Passage and Initiations
CHAPTER
Section 1 Of Kings and Prosperity Section 2 Society, Science and the Arts Section 3 Learning a Sacred Life
CHAPTER
Section 1 The Worlds Largest Democracy Is Born Section 2 Building a Unied Nation Section 3 The Impact of Hindu Ideas Today
CHAPTER
Section 1 The Invasion Centuries Section 2 Surviving a Time of Trial Section 3 Music, Art, Dance and Architecture
CHAPTER
Hindu Festivals
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