Hinduism in India
Hinduism in India
Hinduism in India
Hinduism in India"
MARY A. GONZALEZ
Hinduism
As a religion, Hinduism stands out among all the great re-
ligions in that it was not established by a single person—it is
the gradual development of ideas, rituals and beliefs over a span
of five thousand years, absorbing and assimilating all the reli-
gious and cultural movements of India. Thus, Hinduism is not
only a religion and a philosophy, it is the way of life of the people of
India; it is its culture, its strategy of behavior.
Its earliest form is Vedic animism, which is the worship of
Nature, presided by the powerful being, Indra. The earliest arch-
eological evidence of culture found so far is that of the site of
Mohanjo-daro. It is a Dravidian culture characterized by a mo-
ther goddess fertility cult, as was common throughout the Near
East at that times Hinduism as a religion is unusual in that
it is not God-oriented (i.e. that God is not its main conce rn ). As
Paul Thomas comments:
mals, even the Hindu gods and goddesses—for all life is an in-
tegrated whole, from the highest god to the lowest vegetable.
Corollary to the cyclic process or Samara is the belief in metem-
psychosis—that at death, the soul undergoes a transformation
into a god, Brahmin or Chandala, an animal or a tree, etc. What
decides the transformation is the Law of Karma or Action which
may be summed up in the formula: The actions of the past life
determine the statue of the present life, while the latter determines
the status of the future life. The rationale for this position is
lucidly explained by Karve:
The Law of Karma justifies the caste structure with all its
absolute hierarchy, disparate social distinction and disproportio-
nate distribution of rights, privileges and duties. At the same time,
together with the prospect of rebirth and transformation, it offers
a hope for the future.
The hope for the future is realized if one conforms to Dharma,
the social and religious duties proper to one's caste and status in
life, together with the traditional rituals, practices and habits,
one of which is the special position accorded to the cow, 11 which is
considered the "personification of the gods of the pantheon and
of the centers of pilgrimage and whose very part, including its
dung and urine are sacred." 12 There are three main attitudes to-
ward the cow: to feed and take care of the cow is a meritorious
act; to kill the cow is strictly prohibited; and to eat beef is can-
nibalism.
HINDUISM IN INDIA 15
The law codes are the source of Dharma duties and counsel.
One of the insistent counsel it gives is child marriage, and the
law speaks of terrible imprecations on parents whose daughters
have reached puberty and are unmarried. Once enforced, child
marriages became fashionable, with some carrying it into the ex-
tremes of infant marriage.
The ultimate goal of the Hindu is Moksha or salvation, which
is conceived to be the liberation from the endless cycle of life,
death and rebirth. This release is Mukti. It is in the achievement
of Mukti or release that the Hindu scholars and thinkers have
addressed themselves to.
Since Dharma teaches that one must unquestionably fulfill
the duties and functions of his caste and status into which he
is born and that it is only the upper caste who are supposed to
be priests and scholars, one concludes that Mukti is attainable
only by those who have been born into the upper caste. The lower
castes must work out their lives according to Dharma so that in
their next re-birth they may be born into the upper caste.
To attain release or Mukti, one must be able to arrive at a
stage or perfection of detachment wherein all desires are eradi-
cated. Only when one has ceased to love or hate and be person-
ally motivated can his actions be of neutral value, and thus, be
finally released. The enlightened man who seeks or attains this
stage of detachment is above common morality, but must never-
theless, conform to these norms since he must serve as the model
for the common people to follow—"You may have ceased to love
or hate, but you must support your family and punish the enemy."
Therefore, even if one should differentiate between the conceptual
codes of the upper from the lower castes, behavioral and ritualis-
tic codes are common to all Hindus. 13
Pertinent to the doctrines of cyclic nature and transmigra-
tion is the attitude of Ahimsa which is the dread of physical in-
jury and killing living organisms and the positive duty to support
and foster the life of animals and insects. This attitude found
extreme expression in the movement known as Jainism. The
attitude of Ahimsa, together with the belief of transmigra-
tion and some contingent environmental factors, makes compre-
hensible the animistic worship of the River Ganga and the sacred
cow, and the abstinence from meat among many Hindus.
16 MARY A. GONZALEZ
Hinduism, its Weltanschauung, Values and Ethical
Systems in Relation to Hindu Population's Position
And Interaction With Its Environment
Mukerjee writes:
It may be estimated that about 125 million cattle out
of a total stock of 200 million are superfluous and uneco-
nomical. There are as many as sixty-seven cattle per
one hundred acres of sown land...while the total num-
ber of working cattle is only 60 million for about 300
million cropped acres (one pair of bullocks for every one
hundred acres), a number totally inadequate for intensive
farming. 24
In the preceding paragraphs, we set forth the general out-
line of the web of interrelationships of the Indian situation. A
more precise delineation of the ecological repercussions of the two
Hindu precepts follows.
The statistics of population in human societies are not di-
rect and simple consequences of the physiological reproductive ca-
pacity. The latter is the underlying contingency on which the
cultural patterns are superimposed. The Hindu premium on child
marriage and its prohibition on widow remarriage have demogra-
phic implications which can be stated in logical inferences, but
of a total stock of 200 milion are superfluous and uneco-
marriage exploits the effective reproductive period, since human
fertility is greatest between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five
years. This would lead to a high birth rate if it were an automatic
consequence, but it is mitigated by the observation that early con-
summation is associated with lower fecundity and that the post-
ponement of childbearing to a more mature age of eighteen years
or above may enhance fecundity in the later reproductive period. 25
The prohibition of widow remarriage has certainly been a ne-
gative factor in India's birth rate. India has several million young
widows whose reproductive potentials are not allowed realization
in remarriage. Should Orthodox Hinduism allow widow remar-
riage, its effect on raising the birth rate will certainly contribute
to the critical population/food ratio.
The Ahimsa attitude expressed in the monkey, serpent and
cow cults:
The ecological relevance of the uncontrolled numbers of the
sacred mo'nkeys and snakes in terms of statistics and ratios are
not available and shall not be dealt with here, except to state that
these animals can be injurious to the human population, compete
in the food supply as crop pests and are disease-carriers.
HINDUISM IN INDIA 21
year per head and supplies about forty-five per-cent of the total
milk output.) To show its inadequacy, Spate reports that with
61 million milk cattle, Indian milk output is only about one-fifth
of the European total., which has only about 30 million milk cat-
tle. 29 Thus, a rich source of protein that the Indian diet sorely
needs and which is not prohibited by their sacred cow ethic is
unexploited. Even its prohibited meat, which should be a tre-
mendous source of animal protein, is not very edible nor palat-
able.
Even for the "unpreyed" cattle, death is inevitable and finally,
its hides and skins accrue to human benefit. The Muslims and the
untouchable caste of leatherworkers work on its hide and skin. In-
dia has been the world's foremost exporter of leather and hides.
It has been mentioned that due to the pressure of human set-
tlement and agricultural activity and the intense grazing and
browsing over thousands of years, India suffers from deforesta-
tion. The latter has set off a chain reaction which has become
a vicious circle. It has contributed to soil erosion, flooding, pre-
cipitation, run-offs, dessication due to loss of transpiration, etc.
It has effected a selective change in the animal species popula-
tion—the diminishment of the wild animal population has resulted
in their prey's multiplication: wild pigs, rodents and monkeys (last
with religions sanction) which are crop pests and disease-carriers.
Deforestation has led to a lack of humus or plant nutrients
which are needed by the soil for bacterial activity, absorption and
retention of moisture. This deficiency is reflected in the low ag-
ricultural yields. An obvious solution to this would be the appli-
cation of cow-dung, but again, the Indian situation does not allow
such simple strategies. Because of the lack of firewood cow
dung is used extensively for fuel instead of manure. Even if cow
dung were used for fertilization, it would not be adequate because
the dung of the undernourished cattle is deficient in nutrients and
concentrates. The alternative solution of developing forest growth
is not easily realized because once more we are faced with the
problems of the pressure of human and cattle populations on the
land.
If one considers the fact that cattle need . 40-50 gallons of
water per capita daily—most of which is utilized by the rumen to
process cellulose into amino acids 3°—its tremendous burden on
India's precarious water supply can only be imagined. -
HINDUISM IN INDIA 23
course, mitigated by the fact that India has also a very high in-
fant mortality, which is also indicative of the same factors, since
it is especially "the pregnant and nursing mothers, the babies and
adolescents who are especially vulnerable to the specific hungers." 34
The lack of animal protein in the Indian diet may also have
an effect in the fertility of the population. Correlation studies
have consistently come up with the statistics which show that
the most undernourished populations also have the highest birth
rates. This correlation maybe related to the interesting hypo-
thesis of Josue de Castro that a rich animal protein diet lessens
female fecundity:
....the role of the liver being to inactivate the excess
estrogens which the ovaries throw into the blood stream.
Fatty degeneration of the liver and the tendency to cirrho-
sis are...among the characteristic results of protein de-
ficiency, and are very common in the Far East and in
certain tropical areas of other continents. When dege-
ration of the liver occurs, it begins to operate less effi-
ciently, and is less effective at its job of inactivating
excess estrogens. The result is a marked increase in the
woman's reproductive capacity. 35
Conclusions
FOOTNOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
OTHER SOURCES: