Showing posts with label God and I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God and I. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Einstein’s Theory of Happiness – tested through Veda Vyāsa’s.

Albert Einstein’s philosophical views on life are equally well-known as his scientific theories, but not much is known about what he thought constitutes happiness. A hint at this came to be known recently from a brief note he had written on a paper and handed over to a courier in Japan in 1922, as a token of his appreciation of the service rendered by the courier.

The message he has written is as follows:

“.. a quiet and modest life brings more joy than a pursuit of success bound with constant unrest”.
He has written in another blank paper “where there is a will, there is a way”, and handed over these two papers to the courier saying that these notes might become valuable to him than any tip he could offer him. Apparently he had referred to the ideas conveyed in these notes to be of guiding lights, but it turns out that the possessor of these notes is going to see a windfall as these papers are getting auctioned today (Tuesday, the 24th Oct) in Jerusalem.

Click the image to read 

The first message is of interest to us as it reflects what Einstein thought about happiness. Like his scientific theories that were tested with cross-referential tools of science and Cosmos over a period of time, his theory of Happiness also can be tested with the highly logical and cosmic theology of Vedanta, a facet of which known as Pantheism, was followed by Einstein himself.

Happiness (sukha – सुख) is the central theme of Vedic religion as any Yajna or prayer is aimed at Sukha. Even today the daily prayer of many Hindus including me is ‘lokah samastha sukhino bhavanthu’ (Let all the beings in all the worlds become happy). So I thought of putting his version into scrutiny of the Vedic thought of Happiness!

Let us first understand what Einstein says in that message.

He says, ““.. a quiet and modest life brings more joy than a pursuit of success bound with constant unrest”.

We can see two components in this message. One is that, leading a quiet and modest life brings more joy. Perhaps he refers to a modest life style with less wants and aspirations. This pertains to materialism. When one has less wants and is content with basic needs and has no cravings beyond means, life is happy!

The second part of the message talks about the strain that is caused by going after a pursuit of success. In this part, I think he could have been more explicit. Does he mean going after a goal or going after success? All of us have a goal, even Einstein had goals. Going after the goal for reaching it or achieving it does cause some stress. The same process (of going after a goal) also can be termed as going after success. So this part of the message seems to show that he is unclear about what he is coming to say. For, one can go after a goal with all its attendant stress, and still lead a modest and quiet life! And going after the goal need not make one unhappy, for, as long as one is steeped into the goal, there is no need to feel unhappy about the troubles on the way.

If success is your goal, which is interchangeable with the goal itself, then also one can remain immune to unhappiness that comes along the way as one must understand that nothing comes easy without tribulations. Even birth into this world comes with struggles and pains. It is so with all living beings (Cetana – चेतन). Even in the case of non-living beings, say in the formation and existence of cosmic entities like planets, existence became possible only with struggle to reach equilibrium (equated with success) and the struggle continues to retain that equilibrium in relation to each other. Thus we can see that there is no disharmony between the two parts in his message - of leading a modest life and pursuing a goal.

His 2nd note on will- way relationship (where there is a will there is a way), aligns with pursuing a goal (or success). This note written immediately after the first one seems to reflect a rethink on his part after writing the 1st note. Einstein seems to recognise the human tendency to pursue a goal (and therefore success of it), though laden with lot of unrest and stress, he seems to think that one must not give up. If one pursues it with a will, somehow one would find a way to achieve it.

Thus these two notes reflect an inner struggle at that moment (of writing) in Einstein’s mind – of craving for a less stressful life (which he thinks gives happiness) and a simultaneous urge to pursue a goal with its attendant problems. And what remains in his mind at the end is that one can achieve the goal (success) by a determined will. If he were to write another note after the 2nd one, perhaps he would have written that accomplishment after a great struggle gives happiness!


So his recipe for happiness is (1) quiet and modest life style, (2) pursuance of a goal beset with less struggle and (3) accomplishment of a goal (implied from his 2nd note).

Now let us do the cross-checking:

Quiet and modest living is possible, but not practical or possible for everyone. In a society with inter-dependence on each other for many goods and services, we need people who produce more, who work for others and who create wealth for oneself that go to the benefit others too. In all these, stress is an attendant component that cannot be avoided. A quiet and frugal living is viable only in the ‘vaanaprastha’ (वानप्रस्थ) stage in a person’s life when a person has completed his familial and material responsibilities. In the previous stages of life (as a family man or a societal man having some responsibilities towards society and in money- earning), there is struggle, but one can remain happy following a simple rule. That simple rule is adherence to Dharma (righteousness) in any work one does.

When one adheres to Dharma in his pursuit of regular activities, in acquisition of wealth and in matters of passion and emotions, one does not invite any adverse karma which in effect would not cause unhappiness! At all times we are doing some karma. When it is done within the parameters of Dharma, the resultant karma bestows happiness. This is best explained by Veda Vyasa at the end of Mahabharata.

Vyasa makes 4 specific statements as follows:

1. Thousands of mothers and fathers, and hundreds of sons and wives arise in the world and depart from it. Others will (arise and) similarly depart.

2. There are thousands of occasions for joy and hundreds of occasions for fear. These affect only him that is ignorant but never him that is wise.

3. With uplifted arms I am crying aloud but nobody hears me. From Righteousness is Wealth as also Pleasure. Why should not Righteousness, therefore, be courted?

4. For the sake neither of pleasure, nor of fear, nor of cupidity should any one cast off Righteousness. Indeed, for the sake of even life one should not cast off Righteousness. Righteousness is eternal. Pleasure and Pain are not eternal. Jiva is eternal. The cause, however, of Jiva’s being invested with a body is not so.



Vyasa begins the statement about the continuing life cycles of all people. There is not just one life but many lives that one goes through. This concept is valid on the logic that whatever one experiences in the current birth could not have come without a prior karma (cause) in a previous birth. The law of cause and effect is very much the basis for cyclical births and rebirths.

The second point is that since we have taken countless births, we have experienced pleasure and pain, and fear and happiness for countless number of times. So by now we must have understood why we are experiencing them. If we have understood we would not be feeling the pain and unhappiness. The one who has understood is a wise man. So what is that one has to understand?

This is explained in the 3rd point. It is Dharma that protects one from all ills and gives happiness. Dharma in any and every action, Dharma in acquisition of wealth and Dharma in matters of desire and craving (kaama) would insulate one from pain and unhappiness. Vyasa says this in a dramatic way by raising his hands and crying aloud. But alas, no one listened to him even at that time (about 5000 years ago when he lived). He shouted that one gets wealth and happiness from Dharma, but why then nobody adheres to it?

This statement can be understood on the basis of views expressed in Bhagavad Gita. A man cannot remain inactive at all times. One cannot avoid doing some work or action. There are regular chores, and works aimed at making money or earning a living and actions and activities connected with emotions, feelings and desires. If one adorns the kind of attitude that does not harm others and that is right in the given situation, one would have the satisfaction and happiness at the end of it. Even if one has failed to achieve success at the end, one would have the satisfaction that one was right in his ways.

An important feature in all these is that one must adopt an attitude of equanimity – being equal in all situations – that is, being equi-distance from success and failure, happiness and sadness, and gains and losses. All these – success, failure, happiness, sadness, gains and losses - are the result of one’s past karma. One does not have a hold on them, despite how well one might have planned and executed an action. Beyond all his actions, there is an element of an unseen karma of the past that comes into play. The one who realises this is not caught up with sorrow when things do not happen in the way he expected. Such a person is wise and is least perturbed with feelings of sorts at success or failure but continues to discharge his actions / karma with an unperturbed mind. Such a person is known as a “Karma yogi”. Such a Karma yogi crosses the boundary of cycle of rebirths, as re-birth is not needed to experience anything, as he is unperturbed by any feelings that could give rise to a fresh karma.  

In the next and last statement Vyasa says that one should never deviate from the path of Dharma at any time, even if one’s life is at risk. For, Dharma is eternal but not the pleasure and pain. We, the Atman are eternal but not the karma that binds us in this body. The realisation of this enables one to keep his cool in any situation so as not to create a fresh karma. Such a person will experience an immense calm in his mind which is nothing but eternal Bliss.

Reaching this state must be the aim of any person, according to Hindu Thought.

One might have been born with a silver spoon in his mouth and flooded with immense riches around him. That was the result of his past karma. But he has to keep up his equanimity of mind intact to get lasting happiness, for, his riches may vanish one day. Some other person may be born poor, but even in that state if he is unperturbed by pleasure and pain, he is certainly happy. At every moment of our life, we have to keep our mind not swayed by wants, desires, pleasure, pain, happiness, sorrow and fear. If we do so, we are inching towards cutting off karma. The state when Karma is no longer affecting us, we experience bliss.

Einstein did experience this state of mind when he wrote “I do not need any promise of eternity to be happy. My eternity is now. I have only one interest: to fulfill my purpose here where I am.” This is the dialogue of a Karma Yogi – one who is dedicated to his goal and works relentlessly unperturbed by failure or success.

Einstein goes on to say, “This purpose is not given (to) me by my parents or my surroundings. It is induced by some unknown factors. These factors make me a part of eternity.” (For full text read here)
The unknown factors that he mentions is his karmic path laid by past karma and he being a part of the grand design of the cosmos that keeps on going with its work relentlessly.

All of us are a part of this cosmos and its design which implies that a grand component of this cosmos of which we are a part is also a part of us! That grand component pervading this cosmos is known by various names, but it has one name given in Rig Veda – that is, Sat! In common parlance it is known as GOD. The realisation that we are part of that eternity is Knowledge which gives eternal Happiness.

Einstein was close to that realisation but fell short of expressing it coherently.


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UPDATE on 27th October 2017.

From 



Einstein’s ‘Hidden formula’ for Happiness sells for $ 1.5 million

By Laura Geggel, Senior Writer | October 25, 2017 01:31pm ET


Gal Wiener, owner and manager of the Winner's auction house in Jerusalem, holds two notes, including one on happiness, written by Albert Einstein in November 1922. Both notes were written in German on stationary from the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.
Credit: Menahem Kahana/AFP/Getty

Two advice-filled notes Albert Einstein wrote to a bellboy in Japan 95 years ago, including one that advocated for "a calm and modest life," fetched more than $1.5 million at an auction on Tuesday (Oct. 24).  

In October 1922, Einstein was traveling to Japan to deliver a series of lectures when he received a telegraph announcing that he had won the 1921 Nobel Prize in physics. The physicist was hardly ever short on groundbreaking theories, but found himself short on cash when he wanted to tip a bellboy who had delivered an item to his room at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.

In lieu of a monetary tip, Einstein gave the bellboy two thoughtful notes he had just written on hotel stationary. Einstein told the bellboy to keep the letters, "as their future value may be much higher than a standard tip," according to Winner's Auctions and Exhibitions, in Jerusalem, which auctioned the letters. [8 Ways You Can See Einstein's Theory of Relativity in Real Life]

The longer note, popularly called the "happiness letter," reads: "A calm and modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success combined with constant restlessness." (The original German reads, "Stilles bescheidenes Leben gibt mehr Glueck als erfolgreiches Streben, verbunden mit bestaendiger Unruhe.")

A bidding war for the letter lasted 25 minutes, and ended with an anonymous buyer purchasing it for $1,560,000, a price that includes an additional charge known as the buyer's premium.

The other note Einstein gave the bellboy says, "Where there's a will there's a way." (The original German says, "Wo ein Wille ist, da ist auch ein Weg.") Another anonymous buyer purchased that note for $240,000, an amount that also includes the buyer's premium, according to the auction house.

Despite an invitation to the Nobel Prize ceremony, Einstein opted to continue his journey in Japan, which is why he didn't travel to Stockholm that December to receive his award in person, auction officials said.

Original article on Live Science.








Friday, September 15, 2017

Cassini – created for Saturn, offered to Saturn!

Anything that has a beginning will have an end too. Cassini, the brainchild of mankind found its end an hour ago. It was a touching to hear the Cassini team bidding farewell to their creation that they followed meticulously for nearly 20 years.


For me, this moment of plunge of Cassini into Saturn is a reminder of the Vedic mantras. In the Vedic yajnas we make offerings to a specific deity in order to invoke the blessings of that deity. The offerings come first and then only the blessings follow. In the case of Cassini, Cassini received all about the Saturn in the first instance and finally gave itself as an offering to Saturn – swaha.

Shanaischarāya swāha/ shanascharāya idam na mama//

This was created for Saturn, was offered to Saturn. This is for Saturn, not for us! 
In the process, Saturn revealed itself to mankind through this that was offered.

For the scientific community, the gains have been tremendous through this probe.

For the Vedic culture too, there are gains. Three major revelations were gained from this probe which I have discussed in the past.

One is the knowledge about what actually the ‘exaltation of a planet’ means. Cassini probe showed that Sun’s northern sojourn on Saturn coincided with the time Saturn is supposed to move towards its exaltation (in Libra) in the astrological sense.


Saturn, due to its tilt like the earth is experiencing seasonal changes, with the movement of direct sunlight from north to south and south to north. North is auspicious in Vedic culture. The exaltation period of Saturn coinciding with Sun in the northern hemisphere of Saturn is a valuable and a surprising input for us. Without Cassini probe we would not have known this. I am tempted to extend this logic for other planets too, for their exaltation and debilitation signs though I am yet to come across corroboratory information from scientific probes to other planets.

The second revelation for us is the amazing formation of a hexagon on the North pole of Saturn, pictured by Cassini.


The hexagon is the basic design of the Yantra of Saturn upon which 2 triangles are inscribed one on each other. The same pattern can be formed in the above picture of Saturn’s hexagonal design captured by Cassini. It is shown below.

What we see as a result is the Yantra of Saturn!


As far as I know the Yantra of Saturn with this image is directly worshiped as a deity (Saturn) only in Tamilnadu in a temple at Thiru Erikkuppam near Arni, in Tiruvannamalai district. This is inscribed on a stone and dated 500 years ago.


The design of the Yantra concurring with the polar design of Saturn is really an amazing finding from the Cassini probe.

The third revelation is the discovery of hydrocarbons in Titan (satellite of Saturn) by Cassini. This raises scope for formation of pre-biotic like chemical substances in Titan sometime in a distant future. In other words Saturn’s satellite houses seeds of future life! 

Mosaic of Titan from Cassini's Feb 2005 fly-by. 

This is an amazing discovery from Vedic point of view, as Prajapati, the progenitor of life and living things has been assigned to lord over Saturn in the Nakshtra Sooktha of Yajur Veda!

Today life is present in Bhu loka (earth). As everything has to come to an end, life will come to an end sometime on earth. This can re-phrased as –  anything created, has to come to an end, earth would come to an end – not LIFE!

Life is what exists always. We can’t create nor destroy Life. Life exists in its subtle form everywhere, but when circumstances become conducive, it gets manifest. There is a continuity of life from one phase to another or one stage to another. When Life’s presence on earth comes to an end, it has to move on and continue elsewhere. Perhaps from the same solar system, it might find a host in Titan and progress along with the flow and evolve someday in another space and time of the Universe.
Cassini’s core molecules were digested by now by Saturn, but its legacy has left a trail in our minds too.


Related articles:




Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Verses in Ramayana I like most! (Rama Navami musings)

Personally I have identified a few verses from Valmiki Ramayana that give me supreme satisfaction in reciting every day. These verses were mouthed by none other than Sita herself.

In her conversation with Hanuman in Ashoka vana, she gently overrules the suggestion of Hanuman that he will carry her to Rama. Instead she says that it is more apt for Rama to come to her and take her with him. In this context she praises the greatness and valour of Rama. She has personally seen the valour of Rama and praises him in four verses. Let Hanuman bring such a Rama to her, says she.

These verses gain importance not only because they eulogise Rama in the words of Sita, but also because they exactly reflect what every Jiva must aspire for. The basic symbolism of the loss of Sita in the woods and the search of Sita by Rama is that the Jivas, like Sita are lost and Rama would not keep quiet but go about in search of the Jivas and take them back into his fold.

While Rama is going about searching for Sita, Sita is waiting for him to release her from the bonds and get united with him. During her wait, she is thinking of Rama only all the time. She would not accept any other way of escape from that bondage – but wait with fervent hope that Rama would definitely come to take her back. It is because ONLY Rama and nobody else is capable of giving her release from confinement.

 This is the plea that every Jiva must make. We, the Jivas are lost in the woods of samsara – of a continuing bondage of Karma. Through all the sufferings, we have to wait with an unshakable faith that He would come to us to release us and take us back to His fold. We may think that we can make this release possible by ourselves. Infact Sita was certainly capable of getting herself released from the confinement of Ravana. Just a curse by her would finish off Ravana.  But she didn’t do that for that is not the quality of the Jiva. Sita is the personification of the Jiva.

The Jiva must know that it is bonded and can only be released by the Bhagawan. For this the Jiva must be aware that Bhagawan is indeed great and valorous. Like Sita, we must become aware of the greatness of Bhagawan. But that is not enough; we have to wait for Him to come to us, because it is not in our capacity to go to Him. It is to show us the limitation that we suffer from, that Sita remained in confinement wailing and waiting for Rama.


(Picture courtesy:- Keshav, The Hindu cartoonist)

The essence of Vedanta as written in the concluding verse of “Vedartha Sangraha” by Acharya Ramanuja  is that “His (Bhagawan’s) form does not fall within the range of perception. No one sees Him with his eyes. He, whose mind has been brought to the state of Samadhi by determined effort, sees Him who is of the nature of knowledge, through Bhakthi.”

This is the highest level attainable by the Jiva, but for ordinary beings like us, this kind of Samadhi in mind and perceiving Bhagawan in the nature of knowledge is simply out of reach. We need a physical form which we can perceive through our senses and make a connect with that form through Bhakthi. That form is Rama, the easily perceivable hero who walked amidst our ancestors. Sita shows us the way about how to reach out to Him. Her simple prescription that she herself lived through in Ashoka Vana is given in these 4 verses.

The verses are so meaningful that I recite them every day. As I keep reciting, I realise that I have no goal other than Him coming to me. There are no personal ambitions or wants that I want Him to fulfil for me. The goal itself is Him only. He must come to me and take me in His fold.


Those verses are given below:

From Valmiki Ramayana, Sundhara Khanda verses 63, 64, 65 & 66.

5-37-63:-
श्रुता हि दृष्टाः मया पराक्रमा |
महात्मनः तस्य रण अवमर्दिनः |
देव गन्धर्व भुजम्ग राक्षसा |
भवन्ति रामेण समा हि सम्युगे
|| -३७-६३

shrutaa hi dR^iShTaaH ca mayaa paraakramaa |
mahaatmanaH tasya raNa avamardinaH |
na deva gandharva bhujamga raakShasaa |
bhavanti raameNa samaa hi samyuge ||

("I have not only heard but seen myself about the strength of the high souled Rama destroying enemies in battle. Neither the celestials nor the divine musicians nor the serpent-gods nor the demons are equal to Rama in combat.")


5-37-64:-

समीक्ष्य तम् सम्यति चित्र कार्मुकम् |
महाबलम् वासव तुल्य विक्रमम् |
सलक्ष्मणम् को विषहेत राघवम् |
हुत अशनम् दीप्तम् इव अनिल ईरितम्
|| -३७-६४

samiikShya tam samyati citra kaarmukam |
mahaabalam vaasava tulya vikramam |
salakShmaNam ko viShaheta raaghavam |
huta ashanam diiptam iva anila iiritam ||

("Who can withstand seeing in battle that mighty Rama, dazzling like fire fanned by wind, wielding his conspicuous bow and having prowess equal to that of Indra the Lord of celestials, together with Lakshmana?")


5-37-65:-

सलक्ष्मणम् राघवम् आजि मर्दनम् |
दिशा गजम् मत्तम् इव व्यवस्थितम् |
सहेत को वानर मुख्य सम्युगे |
युग अन्त सूर्य प्रतिमम् शर अर्चिषम् ||
-३७-६५

salakShmaNam raaghavam aaji mardanam |
dishaa gajam mattam iva vyavasthitam |
saheta ko vaanara mukhya samyuge |
yuga anta suurya pratimam shara arciSham ||

("O the best of monkeys! In battle, who can endure Rama resembling the sun at noon-time, with his arrows resembling its rays, the destroyer in battle, stationed like a mythical elephant in rut, along with Lakshmana?)


5-37-66:-

मे हरि श्रेष्ठ सलक्ष्मणम् पतिम् |
सयूथपम् क्षिप्रम् इह उपपादय |
चिराय रामम् प्रति शोक कर्शिताम् |
कुरुष्व माम् वानर मुख्य हर्षिताम्
|| -३७-६६

sa me hari shreShTha salakShmaNam patim |
sayuuthapam kShipram iha upapaadaya |
ciraaya raamam prati shoka karshitaam |
kuruShva maam vaanara mukhya harShitaam ||

("O the excellent of monkeys! You, as such, soon bring my husband here along with Lakshmana, and the chiefs of army. O the best of monkeys! I am emaciated with grief about Rama since long. Make me now joyful.")


In the last verse Sita asks Hanuman to bring her ‘husband (pati) to her. For all the Jivas Bhagawan is the Pati. All Jivas are in the nature of women and He alone is the only Purushotthaman. 


Tuesday, November 15, 2016

What do you call a person who embraced Hinduism- - a Hindu?

Posted below is an article by Jeffery D Long, an American who has embraced Hinduism. He raises a pertinent question as to what would you call one who is not born a Hindu but follows Hinduism. Applying the yardstick of other religions which owe their growth to conversions, it can be said that one who follows Hinduism is Hindu only. But the difference is that the allegiance to Hinduism is voluntary and to put it more precisely such allegiance must come from within. One is supposed to develop thinking on the Para Brahman in order to attain Him. This is the simplest way of telling what Hinduism expects from one.

For this to happen, the beginnings are made in various ways and simple and basic ways – the most basic way being belief in a devatha. So this makes it known that mere birth into a Hindu family does not make one a Hindu. There are many Hindus – a popular example being Karunanidhi – who are born in Hindu families but never attempted to contemplate on the Almighty and never thought of the need to do so. Such being the case when someone from some remote part of the world develops interest in Hindu thought and follows it earnestly, nothing prevents him / her to be identified as a Hindu. Though this name is recent, in the world of different paths, it is necessary to stick to this easily identifiable name, Hindu.

The basic feature expected of a Hindu (a term that is best recognised as applying to one who follows Veda matham) is to connect his brain (knowledge) with heart (Thought). The knowledge is that of the Brahman which is the cause and effect of this creation and also the substratum that supports this creation and the sustenance giver as well for the created worlds. That knowledge has been captured by the Rishis in their meditation and given as means (upaya) for mankind to get benefited. All of us are drawing on those means given variously by various sages and down the ages. We get hold of it and think of it by heart. Puja, prayers, singing and chanting are all done by heart. From heart one should travel to the brain – gyana / knowledge.

This can be best explained through how a mantra is invoked.  In invoking any mantra, one touches the head while mentioning the name of the Rishi who gave that mantra, touches the nose while mentioning the metre / form of the mantra and touches the heart while mentioning the devatha (deity) meditated upon / invoked through that mantra. At the simplest level of following, this is done by taking the ideas given by the sages and praying or meditating on it at heart. The connection between brain and heart is done by the Prana that is signified by the nose.

Prana gives living or existence. Having born or birth itself is a boon that must be utilised well. Using this birth, connect the brain and heart – the knowledge of the Brahman to be meditated upon so that one attains the level of Brahman. Whoever works towards this end is a Hindu.

The difference between those who are born Hindu and those who become Hindu is that the latter do it with awareness invariably whereas not all in the former category can be said to be aware of what they have to do. Using this as the yardstick, we can say that those who embrace by choice have far better understanding of Hinduism and therefore definitely deserve to be called as Hindus.

Related articles:-



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From

My Journey to Hindu Dharma (Part One): Setting the Scene

by


       Who Cares? No matter how many times I present it in various venues, either in talks or in articles in books or on the internet, I find that there is an ongoing fascination with the story of how I came to identify myself as Hindu, and to be an active, participating member of the Hindu community in North America.  I suspect this is because my story, while it is certainly not unique, is unusual.  I also suspect it is because American culture is often perceived to be diametrically opposed to Hindu values–a perception that is both true and false, depending on which part of American culture and which part of Hindu Dharma one is comparing.  There is also an assumption that most Americans are either Christian and antagonistic to all other faiths or paths, or materialist and antagonistic or indifferent to all spirituality.  In reality, though, the situation is far more complex.

My Story in Context
A recent Pew research poll on the ethnic make-up of American religious communities[1] revealed that, while the vast majority of Hindus in America are of Asian heritage–mostly of Indian origin–a small but not insignificant number of those who identify as Hindu are from other ethnic backgrounds.  Among the roughly 2.23 million Hindus in America, the study found that 91 percent are of Asian heritage.  Of the remaining 9 percent, 2 percent self-identified as being of “mixed” heritage.  4 percent identified themselves as white, 2 percent as African American, and 1 percent as Hispanic.  This means there are roughly 89,200 white American Hindus, 44,600 African American Hindus, and 22,300 Hispanic American Hindus.

These numbers are not insignificant.  They suggest that non-Indian Hindus, while yet a small minority in the Hindu American community–and an absolutely tiny minority in the global Hindu community of almost one billion–are nevertheless a real, definite presence.  Non-Indian Hindus are now, as many of my students would say, “a thing.”  Indeed, our first Hindu representative to the US Congress, Tulsi Gabbard, is a Hindu; but she is not of Indian descent.

There have, of course, been non-Indian Hindus for many centuries.  The Hindus of Bali, a remnant of what was once a much wider Hindu presence across Southeast Asia, have been around for a very long time.  I am speaking here of Hindus in the West, and in the United States in particular, who are not part of the Indian Diaspora: Western Hindus.

Another poll, famously cited by Lisa Miller in her 2009 Newsweek essay, ‘We Are All Hindus Now,’[2] suggests that the influence of Hindu thought upon American attitudes and beliefs goes far beyond those who self-identify as Hindu.  According to this information, a majority of Americans–65 percent–believe that “many religions can lead to eternal life.” This number includes a surprising 37 percent of white evangelical Christians. This survey also indicates that 24 percent of Americans believe in reincarnation, and that 30 percent–almost a third–self-identify as “spiritual but not religious.”  And of course there are the vast numbers who practice some form or other of yoga, either as a type of exercise or as a total way of life.

It is in the context just described that my journey is best understood.  Beginning with the coming of Swami Vivekananda to the US in 1893–or even before that, if one takes into account the Transcendentalists and Theosophists of the nineteenth century, and their deep fascination with both Hindu and Buddhist thought–the spiritual seeker who turns to India for inspiration has been a feature of American society.  For some, this turning is a casual flirtation, an appropriation of a few ideas, and maybe even some practices, into a lifestyle that does not change in any fundamental way.  It may even take the form of assimilating Hindu ideas or practices into a Christian spirituality–a phenomenon that some have called ‘digestion.’  For others, the experience is more profound and life changing, leading one to orient one’s whole existence around the wisdom that one has discovered, perhaps even to the point of identifying oneself religiously as Hindu.  Finally, for a few, the experience is so profound that one goes, as it were, ‘all the way,’ and joins a monastic order, becoming a swami or a pravrajika and giving one’s life completely to the spiritual path.

I would locate myself in the middle group which I have just described: as one who has found Hindu thought and practice so compelling that it has defined the orientation of my life.  I did not go to the point of joining a monastic order, though this is certainly a path I contemplated at one point.  I did, however, marry into the tradition, though this is not how I first came to Hindu Dharma.  I was already deeply immersed in Hindu thought and practice when my wife and I first met, now more than twenty years ago.  My choice of a career was shaped by my spiritual journey, though.  I became a professional scholar and teacher of Indian traditions–or Dharma traditions–precisely because I wanted to immerse myself in knowledge of all these paths. 

The perspectives taken by scholars in an academic setting are, as is well known, not the same as those taken in a traditional setting.  There is often tension–and sometimes even hostility–between the two.  I believe, though, that one can learn from all perspectives, and that both the tradition and the academy can benefit from thoughtful and respectful mutual engagement.  I have tried, in my own small way, to be a bridge between the two.  But that is a story for another day.

Who Is a Hindu?
Some may argue that only one born into Hindu Dharma can rightfully claim to be Hindu.  If that is the case, then we, the 156,000 or so non-Indian Hindus in the US, are deceiving ourselves.  While I do not agree with this perspective, I want to conclude this particular essay by saying that I respect it.  Indeed, I know others who have been deeply influenced by Hindu traditions–who even have a guru and practice their sadhana faithfully–but who do not identify themselves as Hindu precisely because they respect the tradition and are concerned not to give offense.  Perhaps we should call ourselves something else: people inspired by Hinduism, or people who follow a Hindu philosophy or way of life.  We can also identify, as many do, with the specific Hindu tradition to which we are affiliated: with ISKCON, or with Transcendental Meditation, or with Siddha Yoga, or with the Self-Realization Fellowship, or, in my case, with the Ramakrishna Mission (known in the US as the Vedanta Society).  But when explaining our beliefs to our fellow Americans who are unfamiliar with these traditions, we inevitably end up using the word ‘Hindu.’  It is on this pragmatic basis that I so identify myself with this tradition that, for me, has changed everything.



[2] Miller, Lisa. “We All Hindus Now” (Newsweek, August 31, 2009)