Concise Encyclopedia of Hinduism

(Michael S) #1

H


induism has no known founder, no known historic beginnings, no

central authority, no common creed. It has many founders of

diverse schools and sects, many spiritual leaders, many scriptures, many

expressions. Hinduism is an overwhelming reality in today’s India: it is

visible in thousands of temple cities, audible in exuberant festivals, alive

in hundreds of millions of people.

The word ‘Hindü’ was not created by the Hindus themselves. It

probably was a designation coined by the ancient Persians for the people

who lived beyond the Indus river, the eastern border of the outermost

province of Persia. The term ‘Hinduism’ is an invention of eighteenth-

century European scholars who were fond of ‘-isms’ and had no expo-

sure to the reality of Indian religions. By now, however, the designation

‘Hindü’ has been taken over by the Hindus themselves, and while it

may be impossible to define Hinduism as one ‘religion’, it makes sense

to use the term to describe a family of religions that developed over the

past several thousand years in South Asia which have much in common

and share many historic roots.

Hindus are fond of saying that Hinduism is more than a religion: it

is a way of life. As such it suffuses all aspects of public and private life,

it is part of India’s social fabric as well as of its entire culture. On the

one hand, that makes Hinduism so fascinating and so ‘real’, while on

the other it makes it difficult to describe to outsiders. Instead of mere-

ly interpreting a scripture or unfolding a set of doctrines we have to

look at the geography and the history of India that brought forth such

a unique phenomenon as Hinduism.

The Geography of Hinduism

India, the homeland of the Hindus, is a vast subcontinent with a great

variety of geographic regions inhabited by a multitude of different

Introduction


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