INTRODUCTION TO HINDUISM:
The most popular among the Aryan
religions is Hinduism. ‘Hindu’ is actually a Persian word that stands for the
inhabitants of the region beyond the Indus
Valley. However, in
common parlance, Hinduism is a blanket term for an assortment of religious
beliefs, most of which are based on the Vedas, the Upanishads and the Bhagavad
Gita.
II INTRODUCTION TO HINDU SCRIPTURES.There are several sacred scriptures of the Hindus. Among these are the
Vedas, Upanishads and the Puranas.
1. VEDAS:
1. The word Veda is derived from vid which means to know, knowledge par
excellence or (although according to their number, they amount to 1131 out of which
about a dozen are available). According to Maha Bhashya of Patanjali, there are
21 branches of Rigveda, 9 types of Atharvaveda, 101 branches of Yajurveda and
1000 of Samveda).
2. The Rigveda, the Yajurveda and the Samveda are considered to be more ancient
books and are known as Trai Viddya or the ‘Triple Sciences’. The Rigveda is the
oldest and has been compiled in three long and different periods of time. The
4th Veda is the Atharvaveda, which is of a later date.
3. There is no unanimous opinion regarding the date of compilation or
revelation of the four Vedas. According to Swami Dayanand, founder of the Arya
Samaj, the Vedas were revealed 1310 million years ago. According to other
scholars, they are not more than 4000 years old.
4. Similarly, there are differing opinions regarding the places where these
books were compiled and the Rishis to whom these Scriptures were given. Inspite
of these differences, the Vedas are considered to be the most authentic of the
Hindu Scriptures and the real foundations of the Hindu Dharma.
2. UPANISHADS:
1. The word 'Upanishad' is derived from Upa meaning near, Ni which
means down and Shad means to sit. Therefore ‘Upanishad’ means sitting down
near. Groups of pupils sit near the teacher to learn from him the secret
doctrines.
According to Samkara, ‘Upanishad’ is derived from the root word Sad which
means ‘to loosen’, ‘to reach’ or ‘to destroy’, with Upa and ni as prefix;
therefore ‘Upanishad’ means Brahma-Knowledge by which ignorance is loosened or
destroyed.
2. The number of Upanishads exceeds 200 though the Indian tradition
puts it at 108. There are 10 principal Upanishads. However, some consider them
to be more than 10, while others 18.
3. The Vedanta meant originally the Upanishads, though the word is now
used for the system of philosophy based on the Upanishad. Literally, Vedanta
means the end of the Veda, Vedasua-antah, and the conclusion as well as the
goal of Vedas. The Upanishads are the concluding portion of the Vedas and
chronologically they come at the end of the Vedic period.
4. Some Pundits consider the Upanishads to be more superior to
the Vedas.
3. PURANAS:
Next in order of authenticity are the Puranas which are the most widely read
scriptures. It is believed that the Puranas contain the history of the creation
of the universe, history of the early Aryan tribes, life stories of the divines
and deities of the Hindus. It is also believed that the Puranas are revealed
books like the Vedas, which were revealed simultaneously with the Vedas or
sometime close to it.
Maharishi Vyasa has divided the Puranas into 18 voluminous parts. He also
arranged the Vedas under various heads.
Chief among the Puranas is a book known as Bhavishya Purana. It is called so
because it is believed to give an account of future events. The Hindus consider
it to be the word of God. Maharishi yasa is considered to be just the compiler
of the book.
4. ITIHAAS:
The two epics of Hinduism are the Ramayana and the Mahabharata.
A. Ramayana:
According to Ramanuja, the great scholar of Ramayana, there are more than
300 different types of Ramayana: Tulsidas Ramayana, Kumbha Ramayana. Though the
outline of Ramayana is same, the details and contents differ.
Valmiki’s Ramayana:
Unlike the Mahabharata, the Ramayana appears to be the work of one person –
the sage Valmiki, who probably composed it in the 3rd century BC. Its
best-known recension (by Tulsi Das, 1532-1623) consists of 24,000 rhymed
couplets of 16-syllable lines organised into 7 books. The poem incorporates
many ancient legends and draws on the sacred books of the Vedas. It describes
the efforts of Kosala’s heir, Rama, to regain his throne and rescue his wife,
Sita, from the demon King of Lanka.
Valmiki's Ramayana is a Hindu epic tradition whose earliest literary version
is a Sanskrit poem attributed to the sage Valmiki. Its principal characters are
said to present ideal models of personal, familial, and social behavior and
hence are considered to exemplify Dharma, the principle of moral order.
B. Mahabharata:
The nucleus of the Mahabharata is the war of eighteen days fought between
the Kauravas, the hundred sons of Dhritarashtra and Pandavas, the five sons of
Pandu. The epic entails all the circumstances leading upto the war. Involved in
this Kurukshetra battle were almost all the kings of India joining either of the two
parties. The result of this war was the total annihilation of Kauravas and
their party. Yudhishthira, the head of the Pandavas, became the sovereign
monarch of Hastinapura. His victory is supposed to symbolise the victory of
good over evil. But with the progress of years, new matters and episodes
relating to the various aspects of human life, social, economic, political,
moral and religious as also fragments of other heroic legends came to be added
to the aforesaid nucleus and this phenomenon continued for centuries until it
acquired the present shape. The Mahabharata represents a whole literature
rather than one single and unified work, and contains many multifarious things.
C. Bhagavad Gita:
Bhagavad Gita is a part of Mahabharata. It is the advice given by Krishna to Arjun on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. It
contains the essence of the Vedas and is the most popular of all the Hindu
Scriptures. It contains 18 chapters.
The Bhagavad Gita is one of the most widely read and revered of the works
sacred to the Hindus. It is their chief devotional book, and has been for
centuries the principal source of religious inspiration for many thousands of
Hindus.
The Gita is a dramatic poem, which forms a small part of the larger epic,
the Mahabharata. It is included in the sixth book (Bhismaparvan) of the
Mahabaharata and documents one tiny event in a huge epic tale.
The Bhagavad Gita tells a story of a moral crisis faced by Arjuna, which is
solved through the interaction between Arjuna, a Pandava warrior hesitating
before battle, and Krishna, his charioteer and
teacher. The Bhagavad Gita relates a brief incident in the main story of a
rivalry and eventually a war between two branches of a royal family. In that
brief incident - a pause on the battlefield just as the battle is about to
begin - Krishna, one chief on one side (also
believed to be the Lord incarnate), is presented as responding to the doubts of
Arjuna. The poem is the dialogue through which Arjuna’s doubts were resolved by
Krishna’s teaching
sacred wisdom. There are four principal divisions of the Vedas
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