JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

HINDUISM IN AMERICA

by

20090902

In June of 2006, Pres­i­dent of the US, Barack Oba­ma, said of his coun­try: "What­ev­er we once were, we are no longer a Chris­t­ian na­tion–at least not just. We are al­so a Jew­ish na­tion, a Mus­lim na­tion, a Bud­dhist na­tion and a Hin­du na­tion and a na­tion of non­be­liev­ers."

Oba­ma made a sim­i­lar state­ment in an e-mail re­sponse to CBN's David Brody in 2007: "What­ev­er we once were, we're no longer just a Chris­t­ian na­tion; we are al­so a Jew­ish na­tion, a Mus­lim na­tion, a Bud­dhist na­tion, a Hin­du na­tion and a na­tion of non­be­liev­ers." Here­un­der is an ar­ti­cle, "We are all Hin­dus now," writ­ten by Lisa Miller from Newsweek mag­a­zine, Au­gust 31 is­sue:

Amer­i­ca is not a Chris­t­ian na­tion. We are, it is true, a na­tion found­ed by Chris­tians and ac­cord­ing to a 2008 sur­vey, 76 per cent of us con­tin­ue to iden­ti­fy as Chris­t­ian (still, that's the low­est per­cent­age in Amer­i­can his­to­ry). Of course, we are not a Hin­du–or Mus­lim, or Jew­ish, or Wic­can–na­tion, ei­ther.

A mil­lion-plus Hin­dus live in the Unit­ed States, a frac­tion of the bil­lion who live on Earth. But re­cent poll da­ta show that con­cep­tu­al­ly, at least, we are slow­ly be­com­ing more like Hin­dus and less like tra­di­tion­al Chris­tians in the ways we think about God, our­selves, each oth­er and eter­ni­ty. The Rig Ve­da, the most an­cient Hin­du scrip­ture, says this: "Truth is One, but the sages speak of it by many names." A Hin­du be­lieves there are many paths to God. Je­sus is one way, the Qur'an is an­oth­er, and yo­ga prac­tice is a third. None is bet­ter than any oth­er; all are equal. The most tra­di­tion­al, con­ser­v­a­tive Chris­tians have not been taught to think like this. They learn in Sun­day school that their re­li­gion is true and oth­ers are false. Je­sus said, "I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Fa­ther ex­cept through me."

Amer­i­cans are no longer buy­ing it. Ac­cord­ing to a 2008 Pew Fo­rum sur­vey, 65 per cent of us be­lieve that "many re­li­gions can lead to eter­nal life"–in­clud­ing 37 per cent of white evan­gel­i­cals, the group most like­ly to be­lieve that sal­va­tion is theirs alone. Al­so, the num­ber of peo­ple who seek spir­i­tu­al truth out­side church is grow­ing.

Thir­ty per cent of Amer­i­cans call them­selves "spir­i­tu­al, not re­li­gious," ac­cord­ing to a 2009 Newsweek poll, up from 24 per cent in 2005. Stephen Prothero, re­li­gion pro­fes­sor at Boston Uni­ver­si­ty, has long framed the Amer­i­can propen­si­ty for "the di­vine-deli-cafe­te­ria re­li­gion" as "very much in the spir­it of Hin­duism. You're not pick­ing and choos­ing from dif­fer­ent re­li­gions, be­cause they're all the same," he says. "It isn't about or­tho­doxy. It's about what­ev­er works. If go­ing to yo­ga works, great–and if go­ing to Catholic Mass works, great, And if go­ing to Catholic Mass plus the yo­ga plus the Bud­dhist re­treat works, that's great too."

Then there's the ques­tion of what hap­pens when you die. Chris­tians tra­di­tion­al­ly be­lieve that bod­ies and souls are sa­cred, that to­geth­er they com­prise the "self" and that at the end of time they will be re­unit­ed in the Res­ur­rec­tion. You need both, in oth­er words, and you need them for­ev­er. Hin­dus be­lieve no such thing. At death, the body burns on a pyre, while the spir­it–where iden­ti­ty re­sides–es­capes. In rein­car­na­tion, cen­tral to Hin­duism, selves come back to Earth again and again in dif­fer­ent bod­ies. So here is an­oth­er way in which Amer­i­cans are be­com­ing more Hin­du: 24 per cent of Amer­i­cans say they be­lieve in rein­car­na­tion, ac­cord­ing to a 2008 Har­ris poll.

So ag­nos­tic are we about ul­ti­mate fates of our bod­ies that we're burn­ing them–like Hin­dus–af­ter death. More than a third of Amer­i­cans now choose cre­ma­tion, ac­cord­ing to the Cre­ma­tion As­so­ci­a­tion of North Amer­i­ca, up from six per cent in 1975. "I do think the more spir­i­tu­al role of re­li­gion tends to de-em­pha­sise some of the more stark­ly lit­er­al in­ter­pre­ta­tions of the Res­ur­rec­tion," agrees Di­ana Eck, pro­fes­sor of com­par­a­tive re­li­gion at Har­vard. So let us all say om.

Hin­duism has not on­ly cap­tured the imag­i­na­tion and fol­low­ing of Amer­i­cans, with­out the gun and bay­o­net, it has qui­et­ly spread its re­li­gious phi­los­o­phy across 125 coun­tries world­wide. Pre­vi­ous­ly on­ly coun­tries that im­port­ed In­di­an in­den­tured labour­ers had pock­ets of Hin­dus. South Africa, Mau­ri­tius, Fi­ji, Suri­name, Guyana and T&T could boast of large pock­ets of Hin­du fol­low­ers. In all these coun­tries and es­pe­cial­ly T&T, every ef­fort was made by the State and colo­nial au­thor­i­ties to strip Hin­dus of their re­li­gion and cul­ture. Hin­dus were forced to aban­don their an­cient be­lief, cul­ture and God as a trade for west­ern ed­u­ca­tion. In T&T the Cana­di­an Pres­by­te­ri­ans were giv­en the task of "civil­is­ing the coolies."

To­day we are charged with the re­spon­si­bil­i­ty of tak­ing Hin­duism and its off-shoot, Bud­dhism (Lord Bud­dha is an Avatar of the Hin­du man­i­fest­ed Gods) to 125 coun­tries. Many of Hin­duism's great tem­ples are spread among the ma­jor cities of the world–Lon­don, Hawaii, across the US and Can-ada, Syd­ney and the Caribbean.

? Sat­narayan Ma­haraj is the sec­re­tary gen­er­al of the

Sanatan Dhar­ma Ma­ha Sab­ha


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored