Encyclopedia of Hinduism

(Darren Dugan) #1

Supported largely by volunteer staff and sales of
his products, Elan Vital is active in the United
States, Britain, and Australia.
At present, Rawat continues to give talks on
knowledge throughout the world. According to
the Elan Vital, his teachings have spread to more
than 80 countries and its publications are avail-
able in 60 languages.
Prem Rawat lives with his wife in Malibu,
California.


Further reading: Charles Cameron, Who Is Guru Maha-
raj Ji? (New York: Bantam Books, 1973); Sophia Col-
lier, Soul Rush: The Odyssey of a Young Woman of the ’70s
(New York: Morrow, 1978); James V. Downton, Sacred
Journeys: The Conversion of Young Americans to Divine
Light Mission (New York: Columbia University Press,
1979); Guru Maharaj Ji, The Living Master: Quotes
from Guru Maharaj Ji (Denver: Divine Light Mission,
1978).


rechaka See PRANAYAMA.


reincarnation/rebirth
The Indian belief in the “cycle of lives” has
ancient origin. Souls are believed to cycle through
human or animal lives until they are liberated and
merge with a higher reality. On rare occasions the
tradition refers to reincarnation into a plant or
stationary object.
The concept appears to have emerged in late
Vedic times. Some argue that the idea was present
in the Vedic tradition from the beginning, but little
evidence can be found in any of the Vedic collec-
tions of MANTRAS, and only very occasional refer-
ences are found in the BRAHMANAS, the explanatory
portions of the Vedic collections. By the time of
the UPANISHADS the notion of reincarnation seems
to have become centrally important.
Some sects in ancient times appear to have
believed that every soul must travel through a
fixed number of births; one text puts the num-


ber at 8,400,000. The Ajivika sect believed that
these births were all inevitable and could not be
escaped; one could reach liberation only after they
were all completed.
Many early sects adopted extreme ascetic
practices, avoiding any taint of worldly passion,
in order not to add to the accumulation of KARMA
that had occurred from previous lives. Later Hin-
duism, as well as Buddhism and JAINISM, made
the notion of reincarnation central to spiritual
and religious practice, enshrining the notions
of karma and SAMSARA (the round of birth and
rebirth) in Indian culture and practice.
In these traditions, reincarnation results from
one’s actions in one’s previous life, one’s karma.
In the process of time one might endure a huge
number of highly undesirable births; samsara, or
worldly existence, was thus a trap one tried to
escape.
Such escape of rebirth has been the primary
obsession of all practice in nearly all Indian tradi-
tions (except Islam) up to the present day. MOK-
SHA or NIRVANA, the liberation or release from this
cycle, became the highest goal in all the major
traditions. Release could occur in several ways.
One path was severe, world-denying asceticism;
even today there are such practitioners hidden
away in mountain caves. Meditative yoga was
seen as another way, which allowed one’s mind
or consciousness to remove itself from attach-
ment to worldly life and thereby pave the way to
liberation. Alternatively, a focus upon God could
earn the grace of the divinity and God could
help break the bonds of karma. Traditionally it
has been said in Hinduism, too, that a true GURU
can literally strip away one’s karma, and thus
devotion to gurus has become a strong feature
of Hinduism.

Further reading: C. F. Keyes and E. Valentine Daniel,
Karma: An Anthropological Inquiry (Berkeley: Univer-
sity of California Press, 1983); Wendy O’Flaherty, ed.,
Karma and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions (Berke-
ley: University of California Press, 1980).

K 364 rechaka

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