By David Frawley (Pandit Vamadeva
Shastri)
First Published in Hindu
Voice UK
Hinduism and Sanatana Dharma
Sanatana Dharma, which means the eternal or universal
tradition, is the ancient name for what we today call the Hindu religion. It
refers to a dharma, a teaching, law or truth that exists in perpetuity, that is
all-encompassing, embracing the full spectrum of human spiritual experience,
culminating in the direct realization of the Divine as one’s own true Self.
Through the course of time and human limitations,
Hinduism may have taken on various elements which do not reflect this eternal
essence of universal truth. However, the power of Sanatana Dharma continues
behind the Hindu tradition, particularly in its Yoga and Vedanta spiritual
forms, providing it with a depth, breadth and vitality that perhaps no other
spiritual tradition on Earth is able to sustain.
One can find in Hinduism all the main religious teachings
of the world from nature worship, to theism, to the formless Absolute. One can
find practices of devotion, yoga, mantra and meditation in a great plethora of
expressions, including the world’s most sophisticated spiritual philosophies of
Self-realization. Hinduism is not anchored to any single prophet, book or
historical revelation that can tie down the expanse of its vision. It does not
subordinate the individual to an outer religious authority, but encourages
everyone to discover the Divine within their own awareness.
Indeed, if one were to synthesize all the existing
religions of the world, one would end up with a teaching much like Hindu
Dharma. Hinduism has the devotional theism of western religions, the karma
theory and meditation practices of Buddhism, and the nature worship of native
traditions, all unified at a deep philosophical and experiential level into one
harmonious fabric. Hinduism appears like the common root from which these
various religious expressions have diversified or perhaps, departed.
Global Sanatana Dharma and Hinduism in
India
Yet though Hinduism has been its main expression through
history, Sanatana Dharma as a universal and eternal tradition cannot be reduced
to the forms of Hinduism or to a tradition belonging only to India. Sanatana
Dharma has counterparts in other lands and traditions. In fact, one can argue,
wherever the higher truth is recognized, that is Sanatana Dharma, regardless of
the names, forms or personalities involved.
If we look at the ancient world prior to the predominance
of western monotheistic traditions, we find much that resembles Hinduism and Sanatana
Dharma, whether among the ancient Egyptians, Babylonians, Greeks, Celts,
Persians, Chinese or Mayas to name but a few. India is the land in which
Sanatana Dharma has taken the deepest root and maintained its best continuity.
Hinduism is the religion in which Sanatana Dharma has best survived. But
Santana Dharma is relevant to all peoples and must be recognized throughout the
world for the planet to achieve its real potential for the unfoldment of
consciousness.
One then may ask, “If Hinduism is an expression of
Sanatana Dharma, why does it appear to be limited to India like a local ethnic
religion, rather than a universal approach?” The first thing to realize in this
regard is that a universal approach will always seek to create local forms. For
example, a universal approach to diet will encourage people to eat the local
food that has the best nutritional content. It will not emphasize the same food
items for people in all lands and climates.
Sanatana Dharma will always create a great diversity of
local forms, and never aim at uniformity. Uniformity is not a sign if
universality, but of artificiality. Dharma is not a set of fixed beliefs or
practices but a way of adaptation to the living truth that is always changing
in form though one in law and principle. Even in India we see a great deal of
local diversity in how Hinduism is presented and expressed in the different
parts of the country. This variety that exists within Hinduism is probably
greater than the variety found within any other religion. Yet through all of
this diversity there remains a clear unity of Hindu thought and culture.
Sanatana Dharma is central to the soul of India as a
nation. India’s place in human history is to function as the global guru or
spiritual guide rooted in Sanatana Dharma as Sri Aurobindo once eloquently
proclaimed. The traditional culture of India is infused with yoga, meditation
and experiential spirituality of all types. This means that India cannot
flourish as a country without a recognition of Sanatana Dharma and an honoring
of its values on all levels of India’s culture.
However, besides its connection to Sanatana Dharma, India
has another side, much like many other countries and cultures. There are
divisive forces that deny this dharmic cultural unity, whether in the name of
political ideologies like Marxism, other religious traditions like Christianity
and Islam, or sectarian trends within Hinduism itself. Even in Hindu society,
we too frequently see an emphasis on clan, family, and community that overrides
any greater national interests or even the greater needs of Hinduism itself.
This narrow vision can reduce Hindu Dharma to an Indian tradition only, or it
can emphasize one Hindu sect or guru while ignoring the greater background of
Sanatana Dharma.
One encounters this problem particularly when non-Indians
seek to become Hindus. They are often told that one must be born a Hindu and
cannot convert to Hinduism, which is not true historically or Hinduism could
have never spread so far as it has. We also see this problem with Hindus who
have migrated outside of India. They form their own religious communities,
which is admirable, but do not make much of an effort to bring non-Indians into
these, even when such individuals may approach them seeking to join Hindu
Dharma. This further gives the impression that Hinduism is a religion for a
particular ethnic group only, not a universal path. It can turn away westerners
who have a genuine receptivity to Sanatana Dharma.
The Revival of Hinduism through
Sanatana Dharma
To counter such attempts to limit Hinduism and to bring
its teachings out for the benefit of all, we need a revival of Hinduism as
Sanatana Dharma, the eternal or universal tradition, for the entire planet.
Such a global projection of Sanatana Dharma does not deny the importance of
Hinduism as central to India, its culture, its past and its future. But it
emphasizes a global and expansive Hinduism, not one that contracts itself
according to geographical or ethnic boundaries.
Such a bold assertion of Sanatana Dharma makes Hinduism
relevant to all peoples, all religions and all cultures. It removes Hinduism
from being restricted to local forms or controlled by the dictates of any
particular group. This expansive Sanatana Dharma will naturally honor India and
seek a revival of Hinduism in India. But it will do so with a global vision and
a linking up with Hindus and dharmic groups worldwide.
There have already been important movements in this in
direction. In fact, one can argue that the global spread of Hindu teachings
like Yoga, Vedanta and Ayurveda is a sign of Sanatana Dharma arising at a
global level. Gurus from India and their teachings have spread to all
countries.
Unfortunately, many modern teachers from India have left
the greater portion of Hinduism behind in their attempt to gain a broader
recognition, to the extent of denying their Hindu roots and not educating their
disciples in the greater Hindu tradition, its importance and its values.
Instead of honoring the Hindu connection with Sanatana Dharma, they promote an
artificial unity of all religions that puts Hindu views and practices in the
background or ignores them altogether.
Such teachers state that people can add the spiritual
practices of the Hindu tradition, like Yoga and Vedanta, on to any other
cultural or religious foundation. They do not encourage people to study and
honor the Hindu tradition itself but rather to stay within their own culture’s
religious tradition, even if it is anti-Hindu. They do not emphasize Hinduism’s
special connection to Sanatana Dharma, but try to make Hindus feel that all
other religions are the same as their own and no real differences exist between
them.
In this regard, such teachers of universal spirituality
are making a mistake in their understanding of dharma. Sanatana Dharma is not
just a spiritual path or what is called a Moksha Dharma, a way of liberation.
Sanatana Dharma shows a dharmic way for all aspects of life starting with
personal life-style practices, to the family, education, business, intellectual
culture and even politics (all the spheres of dharma, artha, kama and moksha).
Unfortunately, the teachers who try to universalize the
Moksha Dharma of Hinduism and apply it to all religions leave out the other
aspects of Dharma, which includes the dharmic foundation for both social and
individual life. A new resurgent global Hinduism or Sanatana Dharma will
project all aspects of dharma and not be limited to a Moksha Dharma. It is
important that we replace this “radical universalism” of all religions being
the same, which is a misinterpretation and diminution of Sanatana Dharma, with
a global Hindu and dharmic resurgence that affirms Sanatana Dharma as both a
spiritual path and a way of life on all levels.
It is not only Yoga and Vedanta that have universal
value, so does the foundation of Hindu Dharma on all levels. This includes
Hindu rituals, which are a science of interacting with the cosmic forces, Hindu
temples and holy places which are conduits for cosmic energy, Vedic sciences
like Ayurveda, Vedic astrology and Vastu, Hindu music and dance and other Hindu
art forms. These outer aspects of Hindu or dharmic living can be developed and
adapted in different cultural contexts but their basic principles are as
enduring as the great truth of Vedanta that there is only one Self in all
beings.
On this foundation of dharmic living, both in terms of
our outer culture and our inner spiritual practices, people from all lands and
cultures can embrace Sanatana Dharma. They can find in Hindu thought a model
for an authentic dharmic culture and spirituality that addresses their own individual,
social and environmental needs, which they can use to restructure their lives
as way of Self-realization. In that dharmic approach, all divisive religious
identities will disappear into a greater unity of consciousness, not only with
other human beings, but with the entire universe.
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