and circumstances of living in a multicultural
society, the fundamental differences among sects
found in India were reestablished in Guyana. The
most popular traditions in Guyana remain VAISH-
NAVISM and SHAIVISM. The largest Hindu organiza-
tion in the country, Guyana Sanathan Dharma
Maha Sabha, sustains most of the temples. Other
organizations such as the Guyana Pandits Soci-
ety maintain the tradition of Hindu orthodoxy
in Guyana. In the Vaishnaivite tradition, the
Ramayana is the main text of Hindus in Guyana;
it supports devotion to the deity HANUMAN and
an annual observance of Ramayan YAJNA. Among
Shaivite practitioners, daily observances include
bathing a SHIVA LINGAM. Small shrines and prayer
houses appear in front of homes throughout the
country. Temples are the sites of chanting, MEDITA-
TION, ritual, and worship.
As in Trinidad, DIVALI, the festival of lights, is
a national holiday in Guyana. Families and com-
munities prepare special foods and decorate their
homes and neighborhoods. Another Hindu cel-
ebration, HOLI, is also a national holiday. The holi-
day commemorates the lore about a traditional
king who was killed by his son. It represents the
triumph of good over evil and features the throw-
ing of red dye on family and friends, representing
the blood of the king.
Smaller groups following the Hindu faith have
emerged over recent decades, including the INTER-
NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR KRISHNA CONSCIOUSNESS, the
SAT YA SAI BABA movement, and the ARYA SAMAJ.
Most notable is the Guyana Sevashram Sangha,
which was established in the mid-20th century
by Swami Purnananda (no dates). Purnananda
went to Guyana to foster Hinduism by teaching
the Hare Krishna mantra and publishing Aum Hin-
dutvam, a book to help guide Hindus in Guyana.
The Guyana Sevashram Sangha serves as the only
institution in the Caribbean that trains young
brahmacharis (spiritual students; see BRAHMACHA-
RYA) and is the first to produce its own swami,
Swami Vidyarand.
Approximately 280,000 Hindus make Guyana
their home. It is the second largest religion in the
country, after Christianity.Further reading: D. A. Bisnauth, The Settlement of Indi-
ans in Guyana, 1890ā1930 (London: Peepul Tree, 2000);
Hugh Desmond Hoyte, Hinduism, Religious Diversity
and Social Cohesion: The Guyana Experience (George-
town, British Guyana: Dynamic Graphics, 1987); Clem
Seecharan, India and the Shaping of the Indo-Guyanese
Imagination, 1890sā1920s (Leeds: Peepal Tree, 1993);
Steven Vertovec, The Hindu Diaspora: Comparative Pat-
terns (New York: Routledge, 2000).Guyana 175 J