Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Fanaticism is not becoming of a Hindu

Allow me to define a Hindu.
First, there are many sects in "Hinduism" that take ownership of this religion. They are and remain just that, a sect. For the simple reason that they have defined their interpretation of God, labelled everything and are able to present a form of God that some can subscribe to. This, of course, leads to fanaticism when ‘promoting’ their god over others. The trend is also noted in all other religions.
Hinduism is a relatively new term, starting off during the Mughal reign and gaining coinage during the British Raj. This belief system has existed before this term was coined, and will continue to exist until the end of times.
Many accept the term Sanatan Dharam (Sanatana Dharma – the eternal dharma/pathway) as the right understanding for the ambiguous word Hinduism. There are five precepts of this ‘religion’ – Truth, Right Conduct, Peace, Love and Non-violence.
A follower of Sanatan Dharam sees ALL religions as paths (and all religions have that high philosophy that seeks to attain to godhood) leading to the truth – different ways to attain to the same. In fact, a follower of Sanatan Dharam sees every one as a Hindu – in this case a person who practices non-violence (Hin – violence, Du – away from).
How can, then, a follower of this Hinduism be a fanatic?
Just because we have fanatics promoting their ‘revealed’ scriptures, their idea of what god is, does not mean they are promoting Hinduism. They are promoting just an aspect of it, their understanding of it.
The other beautiful part of Sanatan Dharam is the belief that we live in an illusion, a phantasm of a universe, or, as Michael Talbot puts it so brilliantly, a holographic universe. The concept of Maya, the illusion of reality, is the basis of Sanatan Dharam.
If everything is indeed an illusion created by our minds or our collective consciousness, we are but spots of mental activity in the ongoing flow of consciousness that is the basis of the universe.
An article on the mind, and Maya here: http://www.indianweekender.co.nz/Pages/ArticleDetails/25/1774/In-focus/Manas-the-Hindu-perspective-of-the-mind
The basis of Sanatan Dharam is the belief in the oneness of all – there is only one and no other. Everything is God, that flow of consciousness from which we emanate, like wavelets on a body of water. The wave has a form, separating it from the body of water but in reality is still the water. Some ideas here: http://www.indianweekender.co.nz/Pages/ArticleDetails/25/1376/In-focus/What-I-like-about-Hinduism

http://www.indianweekender.co.nz/Pages/ArticleDetails/25/1334/In-focus/The-importance-of-Karma-and-Vivek

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