What is Hinduism
Divine Life
Society Publication: - What Is Hinduism?
by Swami Krishnananda
If you ask all the Hindus,
“Tell me what is Hinduism,” they cannot tell you. They will say, “We are
Hindus.” “But tell me what is Hinduism.” That they cannot answer because they
are floating on the surface of religious outer performance and ritual, and the
in-depth significance of it has not gone into their minds. You will find this
problem everywhere. You will find it perhaps in every religion. He is a Muslim;
he is a Christian; he is a Hindu; he is a Buddhist. If you ask him, “What
essentially is the essence of your religion?” he cannot give a reply. They will
never be able to answer that question because they have not given time to think
properly.
What proof have you got that
you are a Hindu? If you say, “I believe in the Vedas,” does it mean that
whoever believes in the Vedas is a Hindu? There are great German scholars who
believe in the value of the Vedas. Do you call them Hindus? So, that definition
is not good. “I pray to Narayana.” Then, whoever prays to Narayana becomes a
Hindu? There are Muslim saints who worship Lord Krishna, and yet they are not
Hindus, so that definition is also not good. You will find it is such a
comprehensive interrelated complex that any straightjacket answer will not be sufficient.
In Hinduism you will find the
essentials of every other religion also, in some level. There are levels of
Hinduism; it is not one compact thing. At one level, you will find the idea of
Christianity is correct. At another level, you will find even Islam,
Zoroastrianism, Judaism or Taoism is correct. It all depends upon the layers of
religion; and all the levels, Hinduism accepts. The only thing is, it will not
consider any level as final. This is why it is a very comprehensive religion
and, therefore, you cannot even call it by the name Hinduism. It has no name at
all. They call it Sanatana Dharma. Sanatana Dharma means eternal religion.
Hinduism is only a
post-European concept. Europeans have given that name. We do not call ourselves
by that name. ‘Hindu’ comes from the word ‘Sindhu’. When Greeks and Persians
came to India some years before Christ – Alexander and Jerious, and other
Persian kings and Greek invaders came – they crossed the Sindhu, and they
wanted to know who these people staying in this country are. They did not know
their name. They said that river is called Sindhu, and all those people who are
on the other side are Sindhus. In Persian,‘s’ is pronounced as ‘h’, so ‘Sindh’
becomes ‘Hind’, so they pronounce it as ‘Hindu’; and in Greek it has become
‘Ind’. The word ‘India’ has come from the word ‘Sindhu’ only. ‘Sindh’ becomes
‘Hind’, ‘Hind’ becomes ‘Ind’. So the words ‘Hindu’ and ‘India’ have both been
created by these historical conditions, historical circumstances.
Really, this is Bharatvarsh.
We call it Bharatvarsh. Even now they say ‘Bharat’. It is not India. ‘India’ is
a historical exigency. Similarly, the word ‘Hinduism’ – there is no such thing
as that. It is Sanatana Dharma – eternal religion. It is eternal religion
because it accepts every level of religious thought. It does not reject any
level, but it does not consider any level as final. That is the whole point.
Excerpts from:
What Is Hinduism?
by Swami Krishnananda
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